Added: 2 years ago
From: MannheimRocket13
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  • 3:18

    fantastic theme for this movement, Beethoven!

    dazzling and haunting

  • Can anyone tell me what symphony that Betovin did that sounded like you were in an evil factory?

    The da da da dunn da da da dummm

    that one.

  • @MrSonicblast That's No. 5.

  • @AkatsukiPR0 thanks ^+^

    I heard part of it in an animated short (Forget what it was called, but it was a speachless animation bout a dog lost in some kinda factory :P) and I ben tryin to find it :D

  • This isn't the only classical toilet humour - listen to the end of the 2nd movement of Haydn's Symphony No. 93 - watch out for the bassoon!

  • lol, in between 1:30 and 1:40 it sounds like the Psycho theme. Beautiful music though

  • it's funny because this movement was based on um... gastrointestinal difficulties that he had when he was depressed. just listen to the intro... burp, fart, rumble

  • Theres more Hadn and mozart in this symphony than there is Beethoven.Its really quite amazing how drastically his style changed from the 3rd symphony onward. That being said,its still a good piece.A nice tribute.

  • @mrbrianmccarthy Beethoven is tempering his unique style that is found in his later works, i wouldn't call this a tribute; for me this piece screams Beethoven. not the way the !st movement of his 3rd does of course

    Haydn and Mozart piggy backed initially from Bach as well to develope their own particular sounds.

  • @AbuseDaForce I'm sorry, but no about Haydn and Mozart. Even their earliest works have very little relation to Bach's. This is much closer to Mozart than Mozart ever was to Bach, but still definitely Beethoven

  • @cinnamonkitties Im sorry but yes. Just because their works don't sound much like Bach's doesn't mean he had 0% influence on them. Mozart wrote many fugues as experiments, and was influenced by Bach's unique style of counterpoint(which Mozart used more prominently post 1786.) I do agree with you that this is closer to Mozart than Mozart ever was to Bach Sr. If you notice, however, early Mozart sounds very similar to Johann Christian Bach. Not my original point, but interesting none the less.

  • @AbuseDaForce I do acknowledge that "piggy backed off of Bach initially" was probably the wrong phrasing to use.

  • @AbuseDaForce Well nobody thinks he had 0% influence, true enough. I bet the Bach sons had a lot more influence on him than Bach Sr, as you call him, though. They were the rock stars of their day, old Bach was just that, old hat. He was writing in a totally different style.

  • @cinnamonkitties yes indeed. I'm sure baroque music appeared quite old fashioned to them. No doubt CPE Bach and JC Bach had more of an influence.

  • @cinnamonkitties I guess you are correct though; the relationship between Mozart and Bach is often overemphasized and romantisized and ignores influences on Mozart such as the Gothic Revival n such.

    Ha, I guess what I was getting at was that (in my opinion) Beethoven's 2nd is much more powerful than his 1st Symphony, and is closer to the Eroica than, say, the compositions of Haydn and Mozart.

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