I'd like to know how many of you love and cherish B's last piano sonatas and string quartets. On my part, I can say I do not understand any of them. Of course, this is a question for sincere people which, I think, you all are.
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Sincere people.
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And thanks to you, Preston, for being true to your opinons. Yes, I was just listening to Beethove's string quartet #14, 1st mov, and I said to myself: that's boring. But I realize I ought to do a serious effort not to miss something that time has proved to be valuable.
Above all, classical music is not sacral but, please do take notice, is not pomp either. So, I do not see the point in trying to take away the pompous out of it, on the part of those people dedicated to its diffusion.
I remember when Vivaldi was unburied by musicologists. Not matter what the actress was, she would invariably answer "My favorite composer is him". Which is F102? Maybe the wheat field, with the seagulls above?
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Originally posted by Chris View PostI do quite love the last piano sonatas, especially Op. 111 (and Op. 106, if you are counting that as one of his last). The string quartets perhaps less so, but the Grosse Fuge is definitely one of my favorite pieces.
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Originally posted by STF92 View PostI'd like to know how many of you love and cherish B's last piano sonatas and string quartets. On my part, I can say I do not understand any of them. Of course, this is a question for sincere people which, I think, you all are.'Man know thyself'
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I started with middle period Beethoven and moved on to late period after a couple of years. I turned up my nose at early Beethoven for a few more years - until I got sense and realised what amazing music he was turning out, even in the Bonn years.
Regarding the early works, the composer and Beethoven expert, Robert Simpson, put it very well when he wrote:
"We cannot get out of Opus 18 what Beethoven put into it if we listen with the same ears we use for the Grosse Fuge or even for the Razumovsky Quartets. And it is what the composer put into each work that is what we should try and find, rather than damaging the concentration of our perception by telling ourselves what it was that he was not yet able to say."
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Thanks for your post. I can enjoy the second period quartets and that's a non plus ultra for me... for the moment. I was once listening a work I had hundreds of times heard before, but the music came along all anew. It was the Orchestre Revolutionnaire et Romantique. So, if only I knew a couple of excellent ensembles playing those quartets, I know I'd begin to like them.
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