mozart's piano quartet in G is quite nice. especially the first movement. i've never been particularly affected by mozart's music, for the same reason why i thought bach was boring. both are geniuses, but there are simply "too many notes" (from movie amadeus). both feel like a kind of show-off, and neither one stirs my emotions very much. such music i would categorise into the group which cannot be appreciated until you take the score and read and enjoy all the craftiness in the structure, and is a delight to perform. but after all is music a craft or an art? the function of art... what's the form for if that art cannot stir?
but the quartet in G is actually quite angry in the first movement, (and therefore sounds like beethoven a little bit). mozart's music is too pretty, except for some of his later works. i somehow feel that this clever man wasn't alive long enough to live life proper. his life ended shortly after the hedonistic youth, which he spent crafting pretty pieces, before he could experience any of the major emotions that he potentially could have exprience had he grown to be 40, 50 or 60. minimal bitterness in his composition. no frustration. not much anguish. nothing too profound. if he'd been through what beethoven did, i'm sure he could have written something brilliant. and it's indeed a pity. nevertheless, he's a genius, and above all, an interesting person, in the world of two categories of people. ah, and all interesting people are hated, all the time.
bach, was simply too successful and rich.
Friday, September 01, 2006
Cross-posting again.
filed under: european, instrumental
Posted by sangyu at 1:17 AM
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Whoa, I haven't been getting the emails from our yahoo group that the Ukelele blog has been update. You must not be on the yahoo list or something.
ReplyDeleteI have a nice small boxed set of Mozart's piano pieces. I always love those...recently I've been using them to study to, considering the studies they've done that it increases your brain capacity.
I don't know what you mean by Bach was sucessful and rich.He had always been poor in his life and his music was only regconised by the world nearly a hundred years after his death.
ReplyDeleteRegarding Mozart and Beethoven, there is an comment: Where Beethoven had struggled throughout his life to get to, Mozart was simply born there.
This comment would make sense if you listen to Beethoven's last symphony.There is no more Hemoric fighting with destiny,but only internal peace and joyfulness from heaven.And this is expressed in almost every piece from Mozart.
Personally I favor Beethoven's music more. But I have to honestly admit that Mozart's music is of a higher level spiritually, and this is unfair.
Beethoven's music is all about passion...I think he's made some of the greatest pieces of music of all time. There's just so much feeling in it that I can't helped be moved. Mozart and Beethoven were in slightly different, but close musical eras...like comparing apples and oranges.
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