Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
What are you reading now?
Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
X
-
Jander makes the interesting suggestion that Kanne was the "learnèd theologist" who helped Beethoven on the Missa solemnis.
-
In between ghost stories, I am reading another weird novel by a writer called Dan Simmons. It is simply called "Drood" and the main characters are no less than Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins. It's a lengthy mystery thriller which presupposes that the eponymous protagonist of Dickens' unfinished last novel was an actual real-life person. The writer (who is extremely good and a favourite of mine) really knows his Dickens and the whole thing is intriguing.
It has shades of "Jack the Ripper" but that would take it out of Dickens' time frame but anything can happen in fiction.
Thankfully, the author does not attempt a nineteenth-century literary style but remains neutral and leaves the flavour of the period to the dialogue. I have no idea where this novel is going and I may pitch it out the window before I'm halfway through but it does look promising.
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by Megan View PostAt present, I am reading Sir Walter Scott's , Epic poem, Lady of the Lake.
His songs and poetry have had a big cultural impact on European Art and Literature. Walter Scott revived an interest in chivalry which was taken up by classical composers.
Two students in a library, frantically cramming for an English Literature exam.
First student: "Great Scott! My mind's gone blank. I can't remember who wrote 'Ivanhoe'!"
Second Student: "I've the same problem. Who the dickens wrote 'David Copperfield?' "
(There are probably more but I have mercifully forgotten them)
Leave a comment:
-
At present, I am reading Sir Walter Scott's , Epic poem, Lady of the Lake.
His songs and poetry have had a big cultural impact on European Art and Literature. Walter Scott revived an interest in chivalry which was taken up by classical composers.
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by PhilipDid you know, Michael (and Peter too, come to think of it) that the German 6th cannot proceed to V without producing consecutive 5ths? .
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by Michael View PostWell worth getting, Joy, if you like ghost stories. Quite a few of the stories are actually folk tales but the book is so large that there is still room for a large amount of fiction. The term "Irish" is loosely applied: some are by British writers but the story may be set in Ireland, others are by Irish authors but not necessarily set in Ireland.
The first story in the book "Green Tea" will give you the flavour of the book. Don't be put off by the first page of pseudo-scientific gobbledygook; Le Fanu is just trying to present the story as an actual occurrence that may have a rational explanation. He does this with most of his tales.
The only thing missing from this book is information about the authors but you can get all that online.
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by PhilipLikewise with the "triplet" opening of B's 5th : Peter suggests we are not hearing correctly the quaver rest. I say this : play this piece to any literate musician (without the score) and who has NEVER heard the work before, and I would bet that they imagine a triplet for the first 4 bars. Its rhythmic vagueness is only clarified in the following measures. And I would wager this was exactly intended by Beethoven.
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by PhilipAnd the above posting makes me think about Peter's comments to Preston about certain dissonances in the Eroica, and further how Peter lamented that one of his piano students could not really hear the different notes of a dissonant chord when each note was emphasized. Well, this was in part precisely my point when I mentioned that Peter (in the Eroica passage in question) heard (or rather, "read") an F major triad with added seventh, and my ears told me something quite different : an A minor chord with added 6th, which is much more clashing, or "poignant", if you will, and far better suits the progression to the dominant of E minor.
Likewise with the "triplet" opening of B's 5th : Peter suggests we are not hearing correctly the quaver rest. I say this : play this piece to any literate musician (without the score) and who has NEVER heard the work before, and I would bet that they imagine a triplet for the first 4 bars. Its rhythmic vagueness is only clarified in the following measures. And I would wager this was exactly intended by Beethoven.
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by Joy View PostIt's (Irish Ghost Stories) on Amazon.com and it's price ranges from $4.99-$10.00 so a very reasonable price tag for such a lengthy and obviously good read. Our library might even have it too.
The first story in the book "Green Tea" will give you the flavour of the book. Don't be put off by the first page of pseudo-scientific gobbledygook; Le Fanu is just trying to present the story as an actual occurrence that may have a rational explanation. He does this with most of his tales.
The only thing missing from this book is information about the authors but you can get all that online.
Leave a comment:
-
Reading the Peloponnesian war by Donald Kagan - fascinating to see the parallels with modern times, how true it is that we are doomed to repeat the mistakes of history.
Leave a comment:
Leave a comment: