Originally posted by Sir Stanford
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Is Haydn the new Beethoven?
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Postif you're using length as a criterion, then yes - Haydn's Symphonies are of lesser greatness than Beethoven's.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostNor did he change the face of music like Schoenberg did! He changed the face of music like Haydn did.
Originally posted by Sir Stanford View PostI'm not sure that Haydn changed the face of music like Beethoven did
Originally posted by Sir Stanford View PostI'm not sure that Haydn changed the face of music like Beethoven did Beethoven.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostNever mind the quality...https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XSYVybCi0Mo
Symphonies can be all sorts of things, I suppose, but one thing that they can be to some is an obsession, given that at least 411 of them have been composed by two living composers between them, each in his 70s and each having to his credit (if that's the correct word) more symphonies than Haydn - phew! - back on topic!...
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I have no musical education or ability to play an instrument of any sort whatsoever. I am just a humble music lover who knows what he likes. And for me, whenever I need to listen to music which is going to lift my spirits and make me feel that all is right with the world, then I turn to Haydn more than any other composer.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostSymphonies can be all sorts of things, I suppose, but one thing that they can be to some is an obsession, given that at least 411 of them have been composed by two living composers between them, each in his 70s and each having to his credit (if that's the correct word) more symphonies than Haydn - phew! - back on topic!...
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Originally posted by Daniel View PostI love Haydn but I think he may get sidelined a bit by programmers and a broader listening public, partly because his music/melodies don't seem to be headline grabbing in the way that those of Bach, Mozart, Beethoven can be*, and partly perhaps because one senses in his music a less assertive, less demanding aspect to his psyche.
Although to my ears his music overflows with melody/wit/rhythm/compassion etc, I wonder if there's something in its nature that doesn't insist one listens in quite the way that the others do. If Haydn's played correctly but without sensitivity, would its treasures be perhaps more buried than those of Bach, Mozart or Beethoven played similarly, the latter still communicating enough of themselves to stand out somehow? Subjective and lumpish generalisations, but just wondering about a possible connection between the music and its reception.
I remember seeing an Andras Schiff recital in a school gym in Amersham somewhere in the mid 70's, when he played Haydn's G major sonata (Hob XVI :40) and feeling I had never heard such a perfect thing.
*(There is Deutschland, Deutschland über alles, but that seems a slightly different case.)
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Originally posted by Tetrachord View PostI wouldn't call Bach's melodies "headline grabbing".
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Originally posted by Tetrachord View PostI wouldn't call Bach's melodies "headline grabbing".
It was only really casual speculation, but it wasn't just about melody. I was thinking of gravitational pull of the music more broadly, upon the classical-going public consciousness (and perhaps more generally). Bach in that sense seems to exert a stronger attraction than Haydn.
Though I suppose my main wonder was if it was sth in Haydn's nature that permeated the music, that caused him to be less in the spotlight than the others. Less of a desire to be there? But as I say, it was just speculation and I guess pretty simplistically so.
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