Brahms - fit for children?
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Originally posted by salymap View PostI'vefound Overtures very useful in getting young cousins interested. Things like 'Zampa' stick in the mind andafter Fantasia, which I now think was rather bad, was shown, they recognised quite a few of the works.
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amateur51
Originally posted by ahinton View PostThat reminds me of my having told someone a long time ago that, while most others at school were listening to The Beatles and the Stones, I was listening mainly to Boulez and Stockhausen...
Anyway, there's simply no telling how a child might respond to this, that or the other music although it's generally best, I think, to take them to live performances and observe their responses than see what happens when they listen to recordings. A friend once took his 6 year old son to a Boston SO concert that opened and closed with a Mozart symphony and the concerto in the first half was one of Prokofiev's two for violin (I forget which). The young lad had previously been to at least one of the big Tchaikovsky ballets and was enthralled, but I think that this was his first live orchestral concert experience. He loved the first half and was very enthusiastic about what he was hearing. The second half opened with a certain composer's Variations for Orchestra; he loved this, too and, when he saw an elderly man with a stick walking up to the rostrum to acknowledge the applause, his father explained that this was Elliott Carter, who had written the piece that had just been played. The little fellow was utterly thrilled. At the end of the symphony that followed (which he also very much enjoyed), he asked his father "but where's Mr Mozart?"...
Now I rather doubt that most people would assume that a 6 year old would be content to sit through almost half an hour of Carter, but this boy didn't just sit through it - he was clearly concentrating and taking it all in as far as he was able.
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How about Mahler - fit for children ?
My son and daughter (now aged 21 and 26) have never shown any interest in classical music,indeed they can't stand it,despite my best efforts.
Now here's a thing.
Driving my 8 year old grandson home after school one afternoon this week,just caught the last movement of Mahler 5 on Radio 3.
"This is nice music grandad" he said.
This from one who calls everything I listen to as 'wierd songs'.
When I asked him why he liked it he said it sounded like everybody in the world was happy.
Blimey,something to build on there surely!
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amateur51
Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View PostHow about Mahler - fit for children ?
My son and daughter (now aged 21 and 26) have never shown any interest in classical music,indeed they can't stand it,despite my best efforts.
Now here's a thing.
Driving my 8 year old grandson home after school one afternoon this week,just caught the last movement of Mahler 5 on Radio 3.
"This is nice music grandad" he said.
This from one who calls everything I listen to as 'wierd songs'.
When I asked him why he liked it he said it sounded like everybody in the world was happy.
Blimey,something to build on there surely!
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Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View PostWell,after the mini success with Mahler 5,Brahms 1st piano trio on Radio 3 this afternoon was apparently boring.
Still,can't win 'em all,not giving up on this.
Till then, there's always the Boss...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cReBk3wXPUI will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View PostWell,after the mini success with Mahler 5,Brahms 1st piano trio on Radio 3 this afternoon was apparently boring.
Still,can't win 'em all,not giving up on this.
Yes but did he like it ?,apparently not. not sure that this is going anywhere.
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