Having said that, some of Bruckner's writing for the 'celli in his symphonies and Masses shows he had been on the bottle, of that I can assure you ...
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How did you come to love Beethoven?
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[QUOTE=terry;46156]Originally posted by Cocchini View PostIt
Before I leave, I want to tell you I much like your... avatar (?) with sunglasses and your nick too, because it sounds pleasant in Italian, as the plural of COCCO - COCCHINO which is an affectionate term
I don't know the translation, "darling", "pet" but in some cases it's also used in a sarcastic way (cocco di mamma, mother's pet, the favourite). Btw very funny.
ByeCocchini
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Originally posted by Philip View PostHaving said that, some of Bruckner's writing for the 'celli in his symphonies and Masses shows he had been on the bottle, of that I can assure you ...'Man know thyself'
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Originally posted by Hacko View PostHello, I am new here. Quite happy to have found this place. LvB is by far my favorite composer, though I cant remember how did I come to love him. Currently Les Adieux is in my headphones
I wont post much, but I will be around reading.'Man know thyself'
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Originally posted by Hacko View PostThanks. I feel I need to learn a lot and have little to offer.
Anyway, to give somewhat of an answer to the question here - the love was a mix of T. Mann's "lecture" on op. 111 in Faustus and Schiff Andras guardian posted "lectures" on piano sonatas. It all starts and ends with the Arietta
Do you -like me- regret you cannot listen to any of Adrian Leverkühn's compositons ?
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I do and I don't.
Mann confessed he used Schoenberg music theory for part of his character, which doesn't make me regret it On the other hand, Adrian's plan was to decompose and take away from Humanity the 9th, if I remember well. To have the perfect anti-9th would be a real musical treat, no?
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