Now that you mention it, it does sound very Beethoven-ish. So much so that I will kick myself if it is and I didn't hear it initially.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Composition Quiz
Collapse
X
-
Congratulation, Michael, yes, it is the "Glorreiche Augenblick". It is the conclusion of this wonderful Aria with choir starting at 18:25 of:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mmHXWVnbvuM
Indeed, hal9000, it does sound "very,very Beethoven-isch", actually I cannot think of anyone else who could have written it. It reminds me also of the Opferlied op.121b.
I wonder why we as friends of Beethovens, including me, have overseen this work so far...
.... enjoy also the jubilent ending starting at 30:10 :-)
Comment
-
Originally posted by gprengel View PostI wonder why we as friends of Beethovens, including me, have overseen this work so far...
.... enjoy also the jubilent ending starting at 30:10 :-)
Incidentally, the chorus at the end of the cantata includes children's voices for the first and only time in Beethoven's work!
Comment
-
It's a pity that this work has such a dated and slightly odd libretto - rather like the "Christus am ölberge" oratorio. I think that's what has held these pieces back from being more popular, although the last-mentioned was well-known in England for a while with a different text.
"The Glorious Moment" was also re-published after Beethoven's death with a new text called "Serenade to Music" but I've never been able to come across that version!
Comment
-
Originally posted by Michael View PostIt's a pity that this work has such a dated and slightly odd libretto - rather like the "Christus am ölberge" oratorio. I think that's what has held these pieces back from being more popular, although the last-mentioned was well-known in England for a while with a different text.
"The Glorious Moment" was also re-published after Beethoven's death with a new text called "Serenade to Music" but I've never been able to come across that version!'Man know thyself'
Comment
-
Well, this was fun. If you like this kind of quiz - something else?
Then whose musical language are these so beautiful pieces?
(I love it to recognise a composer even if I never have heard the work before!)
www.gerdprengel.de/piece4.mp3
www.gerdprengel.de/piece5.mp3
Gerd
Comment
-
That first piece is absolutely beautiful but I don't know who wrote it. I'll leave it to the experts with wider musical knowledge (i.e. not totally obsessed with a certain deaf composer.)
But you are really scraping the bottom of the Beethoven barrel with the second one! (For obscurity, I mean.)
Another work composed during the Congress of Vienna, it's the "Chorus for the Allied Princes."
.Last edited by Michael; 05-18-2017, 12:32 AM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by gprengel View PostWell, this was fun. If you like this kind of quiz - something else?
Then whose musical language are these so beautiful pieces?
(I love it to recognise a composer even if I never have heard the work before!)
www.gerdprengel.de/piece4.mp3
www.gerdprengel.de/piece5.mp3
Gerd'Man know thyself'
Comment
-
Classic FM have quite a tricky quiz :
http://www.classicfm.com/discover-mu...al-music-quiz/
For what it's worth, I managed 12 out of 20.'Man know thyself'
Comment
-
Originally posted by Peter View PostClassic FM have quite a tricky quiz :
http://www.classicfm.com/discover-mu...al-music-quiz/
For what it's worth, I managed 12 out of 20.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Peter View PostClassic FM have quite a tricky quiz :
http://www.classicfm.com/discover-mu...al-music-quiz/
For what it's worth, I managed 12 out of 20.
Comment
Comment