Posted on 09/18/2015 5:57:59 PM PDT by AZamericonnie
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Thanks, Publius, for Rachmaninov’s “The Star Spangled Banner”.
{{HUGS}} Kathy, hope you have a restful weekend!
I’m on it sweetie!
The key of C# minor was rarely used by Beethoven; in fact, the Moonlight Sonata was the only other piece to use that as its tonic key. After a six movement quartet with very different parts, Lou decided to write a quartet that was totally integrated. This quartet is made up of seven movements, but all joined together to make one great arch of sound.
It starts with the only slow fugue that Beethoven ever wrote, marked adagio ma non troppo e molto espressivo in 2/2 time. This echoes the Moonlight, which also began with a slow movement. Its a song of mourning, and Wagner said it was the saddest thing ever said in notes. At the end the first violin reaches up to a D for the transition to the next movement...
Which is a short jig in 6/8 marked allegro molto vivace in D Major. Its a kind of highland fling, and the deep darkness turns to light. This jig is in sonatina format, which means no development section. The jig fragments lead into...
A short preface marked allegro moderato in B minor and then adagio in E Major. Its there to provide a lead-in to...
A fourth movement in theme-and-variations format marked andante ma non troppo e molto cantabile in A Major. Each variation has its own character one sounds like Goodnight Irene and one has the hilarious effect of each instrument throwing loud pizzicati at each other. Then the cello gruffly clears his throat...
For a scherzo in 2/2 time marked presto in E Major. This is a music box run amok. Every time it runs down, Lou winds it up again and sets it running. The instruments send fragments at each other for repetition to include pizzicati. At the end he uses the ghostly technique of having the musicians play on the bridges of their instruments. He cadences decisively in E Major, but then he cadences again, just as decisively, in the wrong key of G# minor...
For a preface in G# minor marked adagio quasi un poco andante that sounds at first like a Beethoven slow movement, a conversation with God. Its so sad, but you realize quickly that its too sad. Its Beethoven writing a short parody of a Beethoven slow movement and making fun of himself. Youll recognize the first movement fugue subject as the melodic material. It leads into...
A finale in C# minor and 2/2 time marked allegro which is finally a movement in sonata format! The second subject in E Major uses melodic material from the scherzo and the third variation from the prior movement. The development is based on the first subject. The recap flows seamlessly out of the development, and the second subject now appears in C# Major. The coda presents a problem. If the final C# Major chords are played in tempo, they sound trivial. Over the past two centuries the custom has arisen of playing the final chords at a faster clip for a bravura ending.
Two years after the premiere, 31 year old Franz Schubert was on his deathbed, and Beethoven had been dead for a year. The quartet that premiered this piece played it for Schubert in his room, and Frannie became so excited that the people present had to hold him down. He had just heard the future of music and realized, with no small amount of horror, that he wouldnt be there to participate.
Tomorrow night its Beethovens final quartet.
Regular weekend chores: cleaning, laundry, grocery shopping etc..blah blah blah.
Also going to try my hand at making these....
Fun right????
Good evening, Mayor, and thank you for today’s sustenance for body and soul.
The weekend is finally here! Enjoy....
"William F. Buckley - Firing Line" - Brandenburg Concerto #2 (III) - J.S. Bach
"The David Susskind Show" - Gateway to the West (Canadian Impressions) - Farnon
"The Big Story" - A Hero's Life (The Hero at Battle/The Hero's Triumph) - R. Strauss......
An easy commute...it was “traffic lite” today. :)
Unfortunately a javelina lost his life on the corner last night.
Bet he left a great dent on the offending car!
Thanks Connie!
Good evening, Ms Feather...*hugs*...the sun came out today!
Highs over the next week should be about 50 and nights are getting closer and closer to freezing.
Your hummer still showing up?
Long time no see! How are you sweetie? *Hugs*
Woohoo, Pro...we are off and running.
Enjoy your time with college boy.
Dude.....
Ok...try Satriani again. Think I’ve eradicated the bug. :)
Bad computer day Gram. Tried loading my jukeboxes at about 6:30 am & it seemed my internet connection went down.
What? No morning talk radio? My day is screwed! LOL
Did all the usual mixed bag of tricks nothing worked.
Called my ISP....outages in the area so they said.
Ran home in the afternoon to check...still no service but I denoted a slight “whine” from my modem.
As fate in my favor would have it I had a new Cisco Docsis 3.0 that I hadn’t installed at the office yet so made another trip home to install & set it up with my ISP.
VIOLA!!!!
Major crunch to try to get everything loaded & 30 minutes before posting time my Sonboy shows up & said the drive with his OS died & he needs drivers..really??? LOL
Anywhoo....an interesting puter day! :)
Dudess! How are you and yours tonight?
(HUGS)
Posted some wallerin' Beethoven for your leisure listening. Just have a glass of wine handy.
What the heck are those? Giant lighted snowballs? Made of what?
Your home computer is about 100,000 times more powerful and more complex than the computer/modem/internet, etc, which was on the lunar lander. ;-)
Besides, you should never expect perfection from a man-made device. Nature is the only entity which never fails.
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