Originally posted by richardfinegold
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BaL 26.04.14 - Haydn Symphony no. 101 "Clock"
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Roehre
Originally posted by richardfinegold View Post..... If W.A.M had lived to Haydn's lifespan, it is staggering to think of the disparity that would have emerged between the two Composers.
Do we need to further appreciation of Haydn by comparing him to WAM? They were both Creative Giants. Vive le difference!
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostOne more for the list, which I think is still available (and which I rather like), is Marc Minkowski and Les Musiciens du Louvre, although you have to buy all 12 London Symphonies if you want the CD, rather than a download.
As for Haydn vs Mozart... no one can match Haydn for inventiveness, drama, wit and storytelling; no one can match Mozart for power, depth of feeling and characterisation. Haydn never wrote anything like K516, K563 or K595 (or tried to), and Mozart never wrote anything like the 46th or 68th or 86th Symphonies (or tried to). What I'm sure we all can agree on is that between the two of them there are more masterpieces than were written during the entire Romantic era
Originally posted by Roehre View PostAnd as a consequence too it would have been Mozart and Beethoven going head to head, as pianists as well as composers
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... of course we need both. I go to Mozart for the operas, the piano concertos, the quintets, the works with clarinet ( and a lot more besides). I go to Haydn for the piano sonatas, the piano trios, the quartets, the symphonies, the Masses ( and a lot more besides). If there were a gun to my head before being sent orf to the desert isle - well, it would be Haydn.
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Perhaps we should let Haydn have the last word on Mozart:
'Before God and as an honest man I tell you that your son is the greatest composer known to me either in person or by name; he has taste, and, furthermore, the most profound knowledge of composition.'
I'm assuming he knew himself both in person and nameIt loved to happen. -- Marcus Aurelius
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostI think we're 200+ years too late for that! I've wondered whether we'd have had 1004 Haydn Symphonies had he had access to Sibelius (The Programme not the Composer).It loved to happen. -- Marcus Aurelius
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostI've always found it very moving that, on their last meeting, Haydn expressed his sadness that they would probably never see each other again. Haydn simply assumed that, since he was older than Mozart, he would die first. However, fate had another outcome planned.
.......but as you say, fate had another outcome planned: more symphonies from Papa H.
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Originally posted by waldo View PostIf only Haydn's later years could have been redistributed to other composers.........five to Mozart, five to Schubert, five to Chopin.........
.......but as you say, fate had another outcome planned: more Haydn symphonies.
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