Mozart

Started by facehugger, April 06, 2007, 02:37:52 PM

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facehugger

i called it. this thread is mine. mine, i tell you!

anyway, mozart is awesome, no?

Mozart

Dude you forgot the clever name after Mozart like Haydn's Harem or Beethoven's Brothel.


Mozart is great.

Que

Quote from: facehugger on April 06, 2007, 02:37:52 PM
i called it. this thread is mine. mine, i tell you!

anyway, mozart is awesome, no?

Yes, Mozart is awesome... 8)

Q

Gurn Blanston

Quote from: Que on April 08, 2007, 12:29:13 AM
Yes, Mozart is awesome... 8)

Q


I don't know, "awesome" is a mighty powerful word.  He's OK though... :)

8)
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George

Quote from: Que on April 08, 2007, 12:29:13 AM
Yes, Mozart is awesome... 8)

Q


We would have made excellent Mozart groupies.  ;D

Mozart

In terms of counterpoint how does Mozart's requiem match up against earlier composers?

Mozart

The 3rd mov of pc 24 k 491 is so catchy!

scottscheule

I've been listening to the wind concerti in the Philips collection.  The clarinet concerto is the strongest composition--though at the same time it's more reflective, cooler than the others.  I love the rondos on the horn concertos, especially the second.  And the third movement from the oboe (and flute no.2, perforce) is delightful.

I started listening to them because a friend of mine performed the bassoon concerto a few weeks ago.

hornteacher

Quote from: scottscheule on April 19, 2007, 04:20:17 PM
The clarinet concerto is the strongest composition--though at the same time it's more reflective, cooler than the others.
Very true.  This is due to the fact it was one of Mozart's final compositions, completed just months before his death.  Martin Frost has an outstandingly good recording of this work on CD.


Quote from: scottscheule on April 19, 2007, 04:20:17 PM
I love the rondos on the horn concertos, especially the second.
Also agree.  I played the entire 2nd concerto on my University Recital about what seems like a million years ago.  However, if you would rather hear it performed WELL, I suggest Barry Tuckwell's CD on EMI.

springrite

For a couple of years now I only listen to Mozart's lesser known or lesser played compositions, such as the early (or otherwise lesser known) operas. I am a bit tired of the familair or catchy ones, the only exception being my favorite Mozart non-operatic composition -- the Clarinet Quintet.

Daverz

Listening to the "Szell Conducts and Plays Mozart" set.  This is some good shit.

George

Quote from: Daverz on April 19, 2007, 06:14:04 PM
Listening to the "Szell Conducts and Plays Mozart" set.  This is some good shit.

Well put.


71 dB

Quote from: springrite on April 19, 2007, 05:54:07 PM
For a couple of years now I only listen to Mozart's lesser known or lesser played compositions, such as the early (or otherwise lesser known) operas. I am a bit tired of the familair or catchy ones, the only exception being my favorite Mozart non-operatic composition -- the Clarinet Quintet.

Yeah, Mozart's lesser known works should not be ignored. For example, I found Litaniae K. 109, 125, 195 and 243 very interesting works when I listened them last years (Brilliant Classics Mozart Box). I like many of Mozart's early operas, the ones with baroque feel.

The most famous works have a tendency for catchiness (reason for the fame) that can be tiresome as you said.
Spatial distortion is a serious problem deteriorating headphone listening.
Crossfeeders reduce spatial distortion and make the sound more natural
and less tiresome in headphone listening.

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Haffner

Quote from: Mozart on April 08, 2007, 06:59:08 PM
In terms of counterpoint how does Mozart's requiem match up against earlier composers?




There are people whom will dislike me for this: I find Mozart's use of imitation (as Jochanan pointed put, it's hard to call them "fugues" for the most part) far more interesting and natural than alot of J.S. Bach. This is coming from a man for whom the Brandenburg Concertos were often his whole life in the '80's. Once I "discovered" Haydn, Beethoven, Mahler and Mozart's imaginative, blood-infused use of counterpoint (Haydn examples abound in opps. 20-77), some of Bach's WTC fugues sounded kind of mathematical and lifeless...learned, as many (besides Haydn and Mozart) would have stated in the mid to late 18th century.

I am certainly aware of the enormity of J.S. Bach's achievements (been listening to him for well over 25 years, Haydn and Mozart only 1 and a half). And my appreciation for the abovementioned B. Concertos, the Violin Concerto in D minor, and the Tocattas, etc. is truly heartfelt, profound. But I guess I've never been much of a fan of too much "mathematics" in music.

Tancata

Quote from: Haffner on June 25, 2007, 04:10:31 AM



There are people whom will dislike me for this: I find Mozart's use of imitation (as Jochanan pointed put, it's hard to call them "fugues" for the most part) far more interesting and natural than alot of J.S. Bach.

I am certainly aware of the enormity of J.S. Bach's achievements (been listening to him for well over 25 years, Haydn and Mozart only 1 and a half). And my appreciation for the abovementioned B. Concertos, the Violin Concerto in D minor, and the Tocattas, etc. is truly heartfelt, profound. But I guess I've never been much of a fan of too much "mathematics" in music.

What about Bach's vocal music? IMO, the rigour only adds to the music there...

Haffner

Quote from: Tancata on June 25, 2007, 05:29:03 AM
What about Bach's vocal music? IMO, the rigour only adds to the music there...



You found me out! I realize how many fantastic Bach works I left out; trust me, Johann Sebastian is very highly regarded by me. I'm overall quite a "fan" of his work. It's just that the other composers mentioned above (especially Mozart) just tend to seem less mathematical on the average (hey! A bit incongruous, that sentence, "mathematical, average").

Okay,I 'm very strange...

71 dB

I find the music of Bach musically exact rather than mathematical.

Mathematical music would sound like polyphonic morse code...
Spatial distortion is a serious problem deteriorating headphone listening.
Crossfeeders reduce spatial distortion and make the sound more natural
and less tiresome in headphone listening.

My Sound Cloud page <-- NEW Jan. 2024 "Harpeggiator"

Dancing Divertimentian

Quote from: Haffner on June 25, 2007, 05:32:52 AM
You found me out! I realize how many fantastic Bach works I left out; trust me, Johann Sebastian is very highly regarded by me. I'm overall quite a "fan" of his work. It's just that the other composers mentioned above (especially Mozart) just tend to seem less mathematical on the average (hey! A bit incongruous, that sentence, "mathematical, average").


Allow me to pick up on this, being a discussion board and all... :)

As far as the 'mathematical' thing, I can see where it's easy to think this. Bach is, after all, a master of proportion.

But to me getting under the skin of the music, so to speak, is where I find the greatest musical rewards. The felicities deeply buried under all that surface structure (mathematics) is where the gold lies in Bach.

And the imagination on display underneath the mathematical template to me couldn't be more pliable. Not to mention colorful. IOW, it'll put the boogie-woogie in your step! Contradictory this may sound but that's the nature of a genius. 

And yes, I'd agree it's the vocal music (cantatas, Passions, etc...) where this is most in evidence (and his greatest music).

Veit Bach-a baker who found his greatest pleasure in a little cittern which he took with him even into the mill and played while the grinding was going on. In this way he had a chance to have the rhythm drilled into him. And this was the beginning of a musical inclination in his descendants. JS Bach

Tancata

Great post, donwyn!

But as to the question that launched this little digression: I would say that Mozart could write pretty much as well as anyone in the old strict styles...well, except for one...

Bonehelm

Quote from: Tancata on June 25, 2007, 11:42:18 AM
Great post, donwyn!

But as to the question that launched this little digression: I would say that Mozart could write pretty much as well as anyone in the old strict styles...well, except for one...

I knew it. LvB.