As a Schoenberg fan, have you heard her version of his VC? Thoughts?
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SapphEyeR — 9 years ago(August 28, 2016 06:50 PM)
Ah, women are much the better species in all regardsexcept composing, painting, conducting, playing the piano, playing the violin, jazz piano
Not to mention mathematics, the physical sciences, and engineering.
Hey, how about that! So it's OK to say things like this on the Classical Music board now and not be called a sexist piece of beep by the P. C. Police? Times have changed.
All I ever spoke of was composing, not playing an instrument, engineering, and the rest, for which I got eviscerated. I guess I didn't say it charmingly enough. -
Eva_Yojimbo — 9 years ago(August 05, 2016 09:05 AM)
I think I'd like Mahler 2 more than I do (which is a lot) if there wasn't so much effing 'joining god in the heavens' to it.
There's very little mention of God in the lyrics, surprisingly given the subject matter. I think there's only one explicit mention in the entirety of the last movement; a few more in the one preceding it.
warriorspirit
: if the penis is used as a pencil holder we'll incur a cost. -
Jill-McBain — 9 years ago(August 05, 2016 01:09 PM)
It is the very piece that made symphony what it is and also put it on the same level of sublimity and sophisticatedness as opera. I am not surprised.
'Ne cherchez plus mon coeur, les bêtes l'ont mangé.'
Baudelaire -
fontinau — 9 years ago(August 05, 2016 11:17 PM)
At the risk of sounding like a philistine, where's Dvorak's 9th?!
Good point. Fairly recently, somebody asked me to guess the most played works by American orchestras today. I guessed either Beethoven 5 or 7 (don't remember which) and the New World Symphony. I was wright about the Beethoven - 7 was right on top, followed by 5 - but not even close on Dvorak. Maybe people are burning out on him? -
Edward_de_Vere — 9 years ago(August 09, 2016 07:05 AM)
Mahler's 3rd? Nice music movement by movement, but I feel not as convincing as a collective whole. Mahler's Symphonies 4-6 are the zenith of his symphonic output, in my opinion.
Having three Mahler symphonies out of ten on the list is a little excessive to begin with. One of his works (in my opinion the 5th or 6th) should be in the top 10, but you aren't going to convince me that three of the ten greatest symphonies ever written were Mahler's, particularly not the 3d. -
SapphEyeR — 9 years ago(August 30, 2016 09:57 AM)
I had the great pleasure of hearing it live for my first time this summer. Tanglewood Music Fellows were the performers, including the conductor. Students, but exceptionally talented, many destined for world-class careers.
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SapphEyeR — 9 years ago(September 12, 2016 07:34 AM)
I dislike "greatest" lists and ranking things, especially in the arts. But it gives people something to talk about.
I hope something by Bruckner made the top 20. Maybe I'll bother to look sometime. Either his 7th or 8th symphony should have made the top 10 in my opinion. -
Jill-McBain — 9 years ago(September 12, 2016 05:10 PM)
I dislike "greatest" lists and ranking things, especially in the arts.
I hear you and I agree with you. Nonetheless, Eroica and Ludwig Van have a special place where symphony is concerned.
'Ne cherchez plus mon coeur, les bêtes l'ont mangé.'
Baudelaire -
SapphEyeR — 9 years ago(September 13, 2016 02:21 PM)
Each conductor was asked to name his or her top three symphonies in any order before the magazine processed that into a top 20.
If the conductors answered honestly, the Eroica is highly regarded, though maybe not #1 for everyone.
I would put my two Bruckner symphonies (7 and
in the top 10, take away one Mahler and the Berlioz - just because something is scored for 20 horns and two tubas doesn't make it worthy. I think they just wanted something French on the list to balance out all the Germans and Austrians.