Liberation of dissonance. Meaning, sounds you didn't previously hear in a concert hall. Listening to Schonberg, who was a brilliant teacher of music as well, is like having your ears re-educated. This piano concerto is magnificent.
I'm studying this man in my music history 344 class right now. My professor said listening to his music is like opening Pandora's box and allowing all the evils to come out. I believe him now.
@TSMLMusicLover "Part of the Power that would Always wish Evil, and always works the Good. I am the spirit, ever, that denies! And rightly so: since everything created, In turn deserves to be annihilated: Better if nothing came to be. So all that you call Sin, you see, Destruction, in short, what you’ve meant By Evil is my true element." ( Goethe, 'Faust', Part I )
schoenberg,to me,and especially this piece proves he had a deep romantic side in his music,UNIQUE,but the end of the concerto,it totally calls up love,lost,happiness,sadness,pure romanticism,HOW AMAZING,SCHOENBERG.when i first heard this,i couldn't comprehend his almost brahmsian drama,i heard he wrote it near the end of his life,is this true?,82 or something.sounds odd,but the piece tears me up,perfection in perfect ROMANTIC AURA.
I have been listening to Schoenbergs stuff +listening to others and jazz musicians grapple with Arnolds' 12 tones.
My ear still hasn't gotten used to his chromatic music. The GENIUS of his music though makes me keep listening.......my ear will eventually accept the beautiful vibes of his work.
Liberation of dissonance. Meaning, sounds you didn't previously hear in a concert hall. Listening to Schonberg, who was a brilliant teacher of music as well, is like having your ears re-educated. This piano concerto is magnificent.
paolosilv 9 months ago
I'm studying this man in my music history 344 class right now. My professor said listening to his music is like opening Pandora's box and allowing all the evils to come out. I believe him now.
TSMLMusicLover 10 months ago
CaptainBluebear08 10 months ago
I don't why, but this piece actually sounds happy.
Haedadru2 1 year ago
Hey Captain :-)
Is that a picture of Mahler on Schoenberg's wall in the background?
vanderbilt887 1 year ago
schoenberg,to me,and especially this piece proves he had a deep romantic side in his music,UNIQUE,but the end of the concerto,it totally calls up love,lost,happiness,sadness,pure romanticism,HOW AMAZING,SCHOENBERG.when i first heard this,i couldn't comprehend his almost brahmsian drama,i heard he wrote it near the end of his life,is this true?,82 or something.sounds odd,but the piece tears me up,perfection in perfect ROMANTIC AURA.
alezander666 2 years ago
Who's playing? I'd say that it's Mitsuko Uchida, am I wrong?
schnittkemozart 2 years ago
I have been listening to Schoenbergs stuff +listening to others and jazz musicians grapple with Arnolds' 12 tones.
My ear still hasn't gotten used to his chromatic music. The GENIUS of his music though makes me keep listening.......my ear will eventually accept the beautiful vibes of his work.
Captain Blue bear, thank you.
madero111 2 years ago