I got to wondering if there are any orchestras, ensembles, etc., conductors, or musicians/singers who specialize in Beethoven and essentially play only Beethoven's works. If so, do any have recordings on the market?
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I am probably getting too extreme in my thinking. Anyways, surely there are musicians, conductors, etc. out there who share our great love for Beethoven's music and likely have some focus on Beethoven among the other works. Those may be worth checking out."Life is too short to spend it wandering in the barren Sahara of musical trash."
--Sergei Vasilyevich Rachmaninoff
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Originally posted by Harvey View PostI am probably getting too extreme in my thinking. Anyways, surely there are musicians, conductors, etc. out there who share our great love for Beethoven's music and likely have some focus on Beethoven among the other works. Those may be worth checking out.
So that's how I think of Beethoven - the centre of my musical universe to which I always return. I did have a thread a while back on Beethoven's lesser known contemporaries and it is very interesting to listen to them to get a fuller picture of the environment Beethoven was living in. This isn't the thread I'm thinking of but it's the only one I can find! http://www.gyrix.com/forums/showthre...contemporaries'Man know thyself'
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Originally posted by Peter View PostCertainly there are performers who place Beethoven at the centre, I mean think of pianists like Schnabel. Brendel, Barenboim, Kempf who have recorded all the Beethoven sonatas whilst plenty of others are reluctant to perform just one! I think focusing on a composer or a period in music is good if it is a centre from which to explore other composers and eras rather than if it becomes a straight jacket devoid of context, that is only a very narrow and limited perspective.
So that's how I think of Beethoven - the centre of my musical universe to which I always return. I did have a thread a while back on Beethoven's lesser known contemporaries and it is very interesting to listen to them to get a fuller picture of the environment Beethoven was living in. This isn't the thread I'm thinking of but it's the only one I can find! http://www.gyrix.com/forums/showthre...contemporaries
I see what you mean Peter- I like classical music, some Baroque is ok, love the Romantic era like Chopin....but LvB soars above them for me- his music has an indefinable quality to it that answers something within me, in a way the other composers don't. Not to say the others are not brilliant, of course...just that I find Ludwig more so.
I haven't hard much of his contemporaries- that would be an interesting discovery.Ludwig van Beethoven
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Originally posted by AeolianHarp View PostI haven't hard much of his contemporaries- that would be an interesting discovery.
http://www.gyrix.com/forums/showthre...ight=forgotten'Man know thyself'
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Originally posted by Peter View PostI still can't find the thread I'm thinking of but this one has some suggestions though the links will no longer work - you'll have to check them out on youtube!
http://www.gyrix.com/forums/showthre...ight=forgotten
No worries Peter- I have plenty of books on our dear Maestro-I'm sure that they mention other composers around in his lifetime. Clementi for one. I actually heard some Clementi played on Emily Bronte's piano a few years ago!
http://www.bronte.org.uk/searchLast edited by AeolianHarp; 03-07-2014, 03:42 PM.Ludwig van Beethoven
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I have the Barry Cooper compendium (not with me right now though) and it has a section regarding those who influenced Beethoven. Besides the obvious Mozart and Haydn, there is Luigi Cherubini. Bach must have also been quite an influence too."Life is too short to spend it wandering in the barren Sahara of musical trash."
--Sergei Vasilyevich Rachmaninoff
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Originally posted by Harvey View PostI have the Barry Cooper compendium (not with me right now though) and it has a section regarding those who influenced Beethoven. Besides the obvious Mozart and Haydn, there is Luigi Cherubini. Bach must have also been quite an influence too.
Beethoven met the composer Luigi Cherubini on the latter's journey to Vienna in 1805. Cherubini, a longtime resident of Paris, was invited to mount a production of his opera Die Tage der Gefahr (or Der Wasserträger) after the success of his 1791 opera Lodoïska, which was staged by Emanuel Schikaneder on 23 March 1803 at the Theater an der Wien. Cherubini's time in Vienna was generally unhappy, but he did have the opportunity to meet Beethoven. Cherubini was in attendance for the first performances of Beethoven's opera Fidelio, to which he reacted sneeringly. He also described Beethoven's piano style as "rough", and more famously the man himself as "an unlicked bear cub". It is remarkable, therefore, that Beethoven, normally so quick to take offense, named Cherubini as the greatest contemporary composer.
Beethoven and his contemporaries, From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beethov...uigi_CherubiniLudwig van Beethoven
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Doch nicht vergessen sollten
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