Very interesting review of Graham Johnson's Franz Schubert: The Complete Songs by the fine English tenor and musical scholar Ian Bostridge.
1 posted on
03/23/2015 4:53:40 PM PDT by
mojito
To: sitetest; Borges
2 posted on
03/23/2015 4:54:09 PM PDT by
mojito
(Zero, our Nero.)
To: mojito
The Winterreise cycle is pretty amazing. Great to listen to on a cold winter's night when you are alone in the house with a cracking fireplace and a bottle of port or Madeira.
To: mojito
Schubert, on the other hand, was under five feet tall, bespectacled, and pudgy, looking not like a god of music but like a harried Viennese clerk with a head-cold....
...
George Costanza.
4 posted on
03/23/2015 4:58:21 PM PDT by
Moonman62
(The US has become a government with a country, rather than a country with a government.)
To: mojito
I know I`ve heard some of his works but not being good with names, do you have any links?
5 posted on
03/23/2015 5:02:42 PM PDT by
nomad
To: mojito
For my Music History II class, I chose to write a paper on Schubert's Impromptu No. 2 in E-flat major. I loved writing about that piece of music, with its beautiful chromatic melody in triplets.
I got an A+, BTW. :-)
6 posted on
03/23/2015 5:06:24 PM PDT by
COBOL2Java
("God save America" - we are at the dawn of a new dark age)
To: Army Air Corps
10 posted on
03/23/2015 5:50:36 PM PDT by
Army Air Corps
(Four Fried Chickens and a Coke)
To: mojito
Like Mozart and Chopin, one can only wonder what they would have added to the volume of classical music had they lived longer. My favorite is his “Unfinished” Symphony.
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