Beethoven's too-strong influence? Whether this is so or not, he sets out some fascinating facts about Beethoven's effect on music I was unaware of.
http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/20...deus-ex-musica
What do you think of his opinion that classical music became sort of frozen in place after Beethoven's achievements? Personally, I can see what he is saying, but I love late Romantic music, especially Brahms and Wagner, so much that I can't see any real issue. I wish I could like the moderns as much (apart from Sibelius and Strauss, who are tonalists unlike most of the moderns), but that is hardly Beethoven's doing.
Liszt set the standard for piano solo presentation, with his dramatic profile seating. Did this cramp anyone's style or rather open up a rich vein of great performances? Did Beethoven's expansion of the orchestra limit it or open the way for the even larger orchestras, and great lush or dramatic orchestrations, of many later composers?
(Michelangelo, who IMO is similar to Beethoven in many ways, had a similar effect on art, practically singlehandedly creating the Baroque style in sculpture and painting while still himself staying within certain classical limits. Not too sure we'd want to have had that whole development not happen.)
http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/20...deus-ex-musica
What do you think of his opinion that classical music became sort of frozen in place after Beethoven's achievements? Personally, I can see what he is saying, but I love late Romantic music, especially Brahms and Wagner, so much that I can't see any real issue. I wish I could like the moderns as much (apart from Sibelius and Strauss, who are tonalists unlike most of the moderns), but that is hardly Beethoven's doing.
Liszt set the standard for piano solo presentation, with his dramatic profile seating. Did this cramp anyone's style or rather open up a rich vein of great performances? Did Beethoven's expansion of the orchestra limit it or open the way for the even larger orchestras, and great lush or dramatic orchestrations, of many later composers?
(Michelangelo, who IMO is similar to Beethoven in many ways, had a similar effect on art, practically singlehandedly creating the Baroque style in sculpture and painting while still himself staying within certain classical limits. Not too sure we'd want to have had that whole development not happen.)
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