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The Greatest

Beethoven Beethoven Can Do The Greatest

Beethoven Can Do

HE CAN DO:

Soothing Chamber Music

Quintet in E flat major for 3 horns, oboe and bassoon / second movement

 

Absurd and Zen-like! (the Diabelli variations are in the “Piano freaks only” section)

In the second half, there is a remarkable pianissimo passage where the treble holds a chord for four full bars while the bass repeats a little three-note figure over and over, eight times, after which the melody proceeds as if nothing out of the ordinary had happened.

As if nothing out of the ordinary had happened! I love it.

Diabelli variation 3

 

Can Do: “Spooky”

The Ghost Trio was so named by Czerny because the second movement reminded him of Hamlet’s Ghost in Shakespeare. In fact, Beethoven’s notes reveal that he was working on an idea for an opera based on Macbeth, and interspersed with these notes are the sketch of a slow movement for the Trio.

Piano trio 5 in d major second movement

 

Fun, humorous, “cheeky” ala Mozart

Piano sonata 15 third movement

 

Simple/Profound

These two pieces are examples of the “simplest” pieces of music being the most difficult to play properly! He “casts a spell” with the most basic melody, and I think epitomizes claims to his being “The Greatest”

Fur Elise

 

Moonlight Sonata


Beethoven The Greatest

Beethoven – “THE GREATEST”? Just a Blog! No music

WHO is the Greatest? It’s a short list isn’t it?

Bach / Beethoven / Mozart are usually argued about and compared as the greatest composer.
Bach created “music” as we know it today. (with the introduction/elaboration of Contrapuntal)
Mozart they say is the sound of God and/or Angels.
Beethoven? The Master of everything? Symphonies. Piano. Chamber. etc.

Who else? Chopin / Liszt / Brahms / Handel / Tchaikovsky and a handful of others. But usually it’s an argument about the BIG 3!

I’m going to throw my hat in the ring and proclaim: (after a short 3 year intense period of listening to and collecting Classical Music) Beethoven as The One! The Greatest.
At this point there are only a few pieces by him (on the right side under Beethoven) but I will be adding more from now. Comments welcome!