Posted on 01/09/2011 7:12:24 AM PST by Pharmboy
YOU know that a new year has truly arrived when critics stop issuing all those lists of the best films, books, plays, recordings and whatever of the year gone by. These lists seem to be popular with readers, and they stir up lively reactions.
snip...
Yet in other fields, critics and insiders think bigger. Film institutes periodically issue lists of the greatest films of all time. (Citizen Kane seems to have a lock on the top spot.) Rock magazines routinely tally the greatest albums ever. And think of professional tennis, with its system of rankings, telling you exactly which player is No. 1 in the world, or 3, or 59.
snip..
Imagine if we could do the same in classical music, if there were ways to rank pianists, sopranos and, especially, composers. The Top 10 composers of all time. Now thats the list I have secretly wanted to compile. It would be absurd, of course, but fascinating. My thinking about this was shaken, though, last spring, when Mohammed e-mailed me. Thats Mohammed Rahman, then a freshman at Stuyvesant High School in Manhattan. He was writing a paper on why people have different musical tastes, and he wanted to interview me. His questions were so thoughtful that I met him at a cafe.
Mohammed picked my brain about how my tastes had been formed, about what I looked for in good music. Inevitably we came to the question of how it gets decided that certain music, certain composers are the best. And of course some really are. Im open-minded but not a radical relativist.
So if you were to try to compile a list of the 10 greatest composers in history, how would you go about it? For me
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
Yes, Holtz - The Planets and Hymn of Jesus.
Thank you, you know talent.
David the Psalmist
Luke the Drifter
Toy Talmadge Caldwell Jr.
Bach
Beethoven
Mozart
Wagner
Schubert
Haydn
Brahms
Handel
Verdi
Chopin
It is sad that the virtuosi today don’t compose. That used to be an expectation.
I sang Holst in ‘76.
Proof of that is Coverdale-Page, which is pitiful.
Marriage of Figaro: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5AFPiEi4WRE
Don Giovanni: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dK1_vm0FMAU&feature=related
Magic Flute (What a voice!): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ufeyarJxNQ
Handel
Messiah: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CddlwbwCiiM
Water Music: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6fa2wZEsRWM&feature=related
Vivaldi:
Dorilla in Tempe: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=waBhj5N4uRs&feature=related
Juditha Triumphans: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8jCKbHDN5os&feature=related
Gloria: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQx2TWgxX14
Verdi
Aida: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bMnl1URCH3w&feature=related
Rigoletto: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DYRZOEzoOgQ&feature=related
La Traviata (Zeffirelli, of course) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tc-PjPf-uIE
Beethoven:
Symphony 9: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c0xPjkBz6I8&feature=related
Moonlight Sonata: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VpFtKi_HYGI&feature=related
Puccini
La Boheme: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6b7VY52C82k
Turandot (Zeffirelli): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XoTa-b7cUw0&feature=related
Mahler
Symphony 2: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d6idPaGqvV8 (I think they have the whole symphony here)
Wagner
The Ring Cycle: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uOk_lqPlXQE&feature=related
Purcell:
King Arthur: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I-WTCwYYXoc
Funeral of Queen Mary http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xWRcx9LHBJU&feature=related
Bach:
Tocatta and Fugue in D minor: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ipzR9bhei_o
It’s very hard to separate “greatest” from “favorite.” A name for either list, obviously, is Bach. My faves would include Mendelssohn, Debussy, and Erik Satie.
VERDI.
I saw and heard Jimmy Page play with the Yardbirds back at the old Fillmore East before he was well known and upon hearing him said to a friend, “who is that guy, he’s great”.
Plant may have been the brains, but Page is one hellva guitar player.
It's impressive for a 13- year old if it really was written in 1768 and Wolfgang, not someone else, wrote it.
I do like Mozart. You can believe that he was the greatest composer if you like, but your statement that he is
so far beyond everyone else in greatness that words just cannot suffice.
just don't agree with what he himself said, e. g.
And maybe you can supply me with a list of Bach's greatest operas?
Oh please. Bach's passions, masses, cantatas, and motets (from which Mozart eagerly and profoundly learned)?
For me:
1. J.S. Bach, right at the top, always.
Then in no particular order:
Beethoven, Vivaldi, Bartok, Haydn, Purcell, Handel, Stravinsky, Brahms and I know I’m forgetting many.
For me:
1. J.S. Bach, right at the top, always.
Then in no particular order:
Beethoven, Vivaldi, Bartok, Haydn, Purcell, Handel, Stravinsky, Brahms and I know I’m forgetting many.
It starts out with a comment that the hills are "pure Beethoven." Bernstein goes through various elements of music: melody, harmony, rhythm, counterpoint, orchestration, and says that Beethoven was not the best any any of those, but then said:
I would rank Bach above Beethoven, but I think this is an interesting approach.
Mozart
Marriage of Figaro
Don Giovanni
Magic Flute (What a voice!)
Handel
Messiah
Water Music
Vivaldi
Dorilla in Tempe
Juditha Triumphans
Gloria
Verdi
Aida
Rigoletto
La Traviata (Zeffirelli, of course)"
Beethoven
Symphony 9
Moonlight Sonata
Puccini
La Boheme
Turandot (Zeffirelli)
Mahler
Symphony 2 (I think they have the whole symphony here)
Wagner
The Ring Cycle
Edgar Allen Poe — second symphony (The Raven)
William Falkner — the string quartets
Henry Ford — aleatory music
Abraham Linclon — two Broadway musicals (unCivil War and Pericles)
Ulysses S Grant — his whole tome
Frederich Nietzsche — piano piece (Dio è morto)
In the modern era.....
Richard Rodgers
George Gershwin
John Williams
Andrew Lloyd Webber.
Heard a radio interview with a very famous musician who stated that he hated Stravinsky's music.
.When asked why play it then, he replied..."A wife, four kids and a mortgage."
Each to his own :)
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