Gavin Gorrick Posted January 22, 2008 Posted January 22, 2008 You haven't backed up again.You've just provided statements again. Back that up, instead of making me assume it IS backed up. Why does "little or no preparation for a new key" mean that was a result of poor skills? Why do the supposed faults of one composition translate to "Beethoven's works are often quite bad"? If you're going to make bizarre statements, back them up, or no-one will believe you. The opinions of a few violin players you know doesn't make Beethoven's orchestral violin writing bad. Indeed, what if they're just bad violin players? Quote
Yagan Kiely Posted January 22, 2008 Posted January 22, 2008 Why does "little or no preparation for a new key" mean that was a result of poor skills?Didn't say poor skills! Sorry![quote[Why do the supposed faults of one composition translate to "Beethoven's works are often quite bad"?[/quote[Wow, you are good. I noted you missed the words in the brackets. Well done deliberately misinterpreting! If you're going to make bizarre statements, back them up, or no-one will believe you.They are backed up. Do some research. It is well known.The opinions of a few violin players you know doesn't make Beethoven's orchestral violin writing bad.Few? Sorry mate!If you are going to say something that flys in the face of conventional wisdom like you did then you are going to have to back it up.The conventional wisdom is what I have said.1: Look at Leonore 2: Musical Times, July 1933, page 635. - Musical Times, June 1933, page 538. - Music & Letters, April 1927, page 172. Indeed, what if they're just bad violin players?Principal violinist of the WASO? The only person to get a research grant in Australia for recording music? Quote
Daniel Posted January 22, 2008 Posted January 22, 2008 Didn't say poor skills! Sorry! Just because I used a slightly different word doesn't mean I was misinterpreting. I WAS JUST USING A SLIGHTLY DIFFERENT WORD. The onus is on you to provide evidence. I will certainly check out the one article you've mentioned. Btw, it is obvious by your almost facetious deflection of points that you are not here to engage in serious discussion, and just want to come across as being right. I hereby end my part in this discussion. ;) Quote
RavingSpleen Posted January 22, 2008 Posted January 22, 2008 Does any one composer have to be the greatest? Every composer has his/her own merits and faults. So to avoid calling one better than the other, I will say that I enjoy the music of Mendelssohn most out of the Romantics working after Beethoven's death. Quote
SSC Posted January 23, 2008 Posted January 23, 2008 Beethoven's works are often quite bad (theory-wise) in terms of modulation, is orchestration was poor, especially for Violin. ... HAHAHA, oh wow! Seriously! Come on, more! Got some dirt on Dvorak or Sibelius you want to share too? Oh wow, again! Quote
Rkmajora Posted February 4, 2008 Author Posted February 4, 2008 and IMO This man had amazing skill besides the fact that he didn't chose to use his skills to the greatest extent most of the time. He was modest and fair and a true melodist. Quote
tenor10 Posted February 4, 2008 Posted February 4, 2008 I know I was shocked no one mentioned him. Quote
Yagan Kiely Posted February 4, 2008 Posted February 4, 2008 ... HAHAHA, oh wow!Seriously! Come on, more! Got some dirt on Dvorak or Sibelius you want to share too? Oh wow, again! It is well documented. I too was shocked when I first heard it. I did some research into the subject myself before denying it. Only then did I form my own opinion on it.Weber in his... one of his clarinet concertos... uses the German Aug6 wrong. He resolves it straight to chord V rather than going through I64, thus creating consecutive 5ths. Happy? Quote
nikolas Posted February 4, 2008 Posted February 4, 2008 Weber in his... one of his clarinet concertos... uses the German Aug6 wrong. He resolves it straight to chord V rather than going through I64, thus creating consecutive 5ths. Happy?I'm not familiar with the English term but if the German Aug6 is the V/V with the 5th lower (on the bass) and the 9th (which in C minor/maj would be D maj as thus : AbCEbF#) then you are not 100% correct. This chord CAN be resolved to the Vth WITH parallel coscequtive fifths, which are ALLOWED in this case. It is one of the exceptions and Mozart used the same chord progression as well.That is, if you are talking about that chord and not something else... Quote
SSC Posted February 4, 2008 Posted February 4, 2008 I heard that debussy guy does lots of parallel 5ths and stuff. He must suck at theory too. . . Though I find it hard to badmouth him now with that disgruntled photo of him staring at me. Quote
Gardener Posted February 4, 2008 Posted February 4, 2008 Yeah. This case is even named "Mozart fifths". (That is in reply to nikolas, of course.) Aside from that, theoretic rules (of counterpoint etc.) were never so much "rules" but guidelines of what was considered to "generally sound best". Using consecutive fifths and octaves can have a very powerful effect, if you use it directedly at the right place. Even Bach wrote consecutive octaves in fugues(!), when it served his musical intent. (Of course I'm not saying that Bach might not also have made a mistake once or twice. He was just a human too, after all.) By the way: Here's a nice example from Bach's E Minor fugue in the first volume of the Well-tempered piano: He certainly didn't do that by accident. Quote
Yagan Kiely Posted February 4, 2008 Posted February 4, 2008 I heard that debussy guy does lots of parallel 5ths and stuff. He must suck at theory too. . He did it on purpose. Weber and Beethoven didn't.That is, if you are talking about that chord and not something else...The only way to resolve a German Augmented 6th to V is to go through the Italian or French. The Mozart 5ths are treated differently, they are not treated as a straight GerAug6 cadence. The way the Mozart 5ths are treated hide the powerful sound of consecutive 5ths and are barely audible. A straight GerAug6 - V is easily audible.He was just a human too, after all.)Just.Even Bach wrote consecutive octaves in fugues(!), when it served his musical intent.Consecutive octaves can be seen as doubling (depending on relative music), but consecutive fifths stand out audibly way too much. Unless there is something else happening that hides the powerful sound of the consecutive 5ths, I strongly doubt Bach would have used it.There is nothing actually wrong with consecutive fifths apart from the fact that they stand out to much in relation to the rest of the music. Debussy utilizes this to his advantage, but using it in the styles before him, it is too 'loud'. Quote
Gardener Posted February 4, 2008 Posted February 4, 2008 Consecutive octaves can be seen as doubling (depending on relative music), but consecutive fifths stand out audibly way too much. I don't know how much sense the concept of doubling makes in a fugue with only two voices, which move independantly, then suddenly move in parallel octaves, then move independantly again. (Like in the example I posted.) You are right though that I can't think of an example where Bach uses consecutive fifths so blatantly as he uses the consecutive octaves here. Nevertheless, in this example even with the octaves, it is a very powerful and special effect that catches ones attention immediately. Of course we can't say for sure whether Beethoven and Weber did such things deliberately or not. But Beethoven in the least clearly had a liking for some "rough", or even blunt, effects that don't always follow what is generally considered a "balanced" sound. (Take the opening chord of the Path Quote
Guest QcCowboy Posted February 4, 2008 Posted February 4, 2008 By the way: Here's a nice example from Bach's E Minor fugue in the first volume of the Well-tempered piano: He certainly didn't do that by accident. it's also not a case of "parallel octaves". it's a phrase in unison. parallel octaves (of the "error" variety) generally only occur in pairs. If you want to see some beautiful parallel 5ths and 8ves in Bach, see how he camouflaged them in the opening of the big C minor passacaglia. He does a wonderful job of camouflaging them with suspensions. The point being, they are inaudible. Quote
nikolas Posted February 4, 2008 Posted February 4, 2008 The only way to resolve a German Augmented 6th to V is to go through the Italian or French. The Mozart 5ths are treated differently, they are not treated as a straight GerAug6 cadence. The way the Mozart 5ths are treated hide the powerful sound of consecutive 5ths and are barely audible. A straight GerAug6 - V is easily audible. I almost didn't realise it was you AW7! Ok, I took my degree in harmony at '98 which is 10 years from now, and I never practiced since then, so I will admit that I could be mistaken, BUT: We're talking about this, right?: As far as I remember this is "correct" stylisticly. Ab and Eb both NEED to be resolved to G and D respectivly. Of course the "logical" step is to go to I6/4 but I do recall that these parallel 5ths are one of the exceptions... Quote
Kamen Posted February 4, 2008 Posted February 4, 2008 I think you recall correctly and I know it the same way; Mozartian fifths (parallel fifths by a semitone). Quote
M_is_D Posted February 4, 2008 Posted February 4, 2008 Wow, those are exceptions?! *goes correct old compositions* Quote
Romanticist Posted February 4, 2008 Posted February 4, 2008 I for one would like to know why beeth is a household name and not many other composers who worked just as hard or went through just as much strife....hmm...I think tchaikovsky represented his country or heritage well as did mahler and others except tchaikovsky seems to me to be a bit...hmmm can't even think of the word..like I'd rather listen to a tchaikovsky piece than beeth... Quote
Gardener Posted February 4, 2008 Posted February 4, 2008 I don't see how it matters how hard a composer worked, how much strife he went through, and how they "represented their country or heritage"... It's about the music, isn't it? (If you'd rather listen to Tchaikovsky, that's a valid opinion of course.) Quote
Romanticist Posted February 4, 2008 Posted February 4, 2008 I don't see how it matters how hard a composer worked, how much strife he went through, and how they "represented their country or heritage"...It's about the music, isn't it? (If you'd rather listen to Tchaikovsky, that's a valid opinion of course.) well yes....but what makes beethoven so important then in that case, there were many more influencing composers before his time..... Quote
Gardener Posted February 4, 2008 Posted February 4, 2008 Many things. For one, he placed a much greater emphasis on the single piece (in contrast to groups of pieces) than most composers before him. Just compare the length of his (later) symphonies, string quartets, piano sonatas etc. to those of composers before his time. Many composers before him were "mass producers" who hadn't the intention of writing "one great symphony", but wrote lots of smaller ones relatively quickly. (See Haydn for example. Don't take me wrong though, I love Haydn!) Even most of the greater works of Mozart, like the operas, aren't really "one thing", but a series of different pieces. Beethoven managed to take a small idea and build a huge structure out of it. He was also exceptionally audacious at playing with established forms to make his very own thing. Take the beginning modulations of the first symphony. Or the sheer dimensions of the third symphony (especially the fourth movement and the development of the first), along with other peculiarities such as having no "proper" main theme in the first movement. Or the late string quartets, which are a whole different world from everything that existed in this genre so far, and for many years after Beethoven. Or his part in the development of "programmatic music" with the sixth symphony (Even though he didn't think of it as program music). Not to mention how he sought a personal expressiveness with his later music that was incomparable with anything that had been written so far. (Maybe this also comes from the fact that he was one of the first composers who managed to make a living without being regularly employed by the nobility, and was more free to "do his own thing" than most composers before him.) There are very few composers of the 19th century that weren't influenced by him. Quote
Romanticist Posted February 5, 2008 Posted February 5, 2008 Many things. For one, he placed a much greater emphasis on the single piece (in contrast to groups of pieces) than most composers before him. Just compare the length of his (later) symphonies, string quartets, piano sonatas etc. to those of composers before his time. Many composers before him were "mass producers" who hadn't the intention of writing "one great symphony", but wrote lots of smaller ones relatively quickly. (See Haydn for example. Don't take me wrong though, I love Haydn!) Even most of the greater works of Mozart, like the operas, aren't really "one thing", but a series of different pieces. Beethoven managed to take a small idea and build a huge structure out of it.He was also exceptionally audacious at playing with established forms to make his very own thing. Take the beginning modulations of the first symphony. Or the sheer dimensions of the third symphony (especially the fourth movement and the development of the first), along with other peculiarities such as having no "proper" main theme in the first movement. Or the late string quartets, which are a whole different world from everything that existed in this genre so far, and for many years after Beethoven. Or his part in the development of "programmatic music" with the sixth symphony (Even though he didn't think of it as program music). Not to mention how he sought a personal expressiveness with his later music that was incomparable with anything that had been written so far. (Maybe this also comes from the fact that he was one of the first composers who managed to make a living without being regularly employed by the nobility, and was more free to "do his own thing" than most composers before him.) There are very few composers of the 19th century that weren't influenced by him. Yes but don't get me wrong either, I love beeth and his music but, his style becomes very repetitive his music after a while bores a hole in me because it gets so boring....yes I understand what he did how many composers followed after him, but goodness I would love if he would change it around here and there but hey that's me.... Quote
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