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I sometimes find it useful to remember : Bach listened to Vivaldi. Mozart and then Beethoven listened to Bach

submitted by Dindu to music 12 hoursMay 3, 2025 18:25:26 ago (+15/-0)     (music)

Out of all of them, I find Mozart made the least amount of things that I listen to. But he made the Requiem mass which I rank above most music. It all happened in the span of about a hundred years.

Over the following century people played Beethoven on many instruments, on many drugs. If any of them was a drunk guitarist, believe me he created nightly every type of music that blacks take credit for. And there were many of that man all over the world trying to play Beethoven drunk on a guitar. Jazz, heavy metal, you name it. It existed long before the Civil War


9 comments block


[ - ] SumerBreeze 2 points 12 hoursMay 3, 2025 19:12:03 ago (+2/-0)

There’s a lot of 19th century late romantic music that sounds “jazzy” - and made by the likes of Edward MacDowell. Then you have the jewish music critics who downplayed his contributions to music after the niggers became more popular using his and others’ ideas (because a monkey that can play piano is actually pretty incredible!) - with one Gilbert Chase, an American music historian and critic, writing in the 1950s, "When Edward MacDowell appeared on the scene, many Americans felt that here at last was 'the great American composer' awaited by the nation. But MacDowell was not a great composer. At his best he was a gifted miniaturist with an individual manner. Creatively, he looked toward the past, not toward the future. He does not mark the beginning of a new epoch in American music, but the closing of a fading era, the fin de siecle decline of the genteel tradition which had dominated American art since the days of Hopkinson and Hewitt". In the 1970s, another kike John Gillespie reaffirmed Chase's opinion by writing that MacDowell's place in time "accounts for his decreasing popularity; he does not belong with the great Romantics, Schumann and Brahms, but neither can be regarded as a precursor of twentieth century music". Other critics, such as Virgil Thomson, maintained that MacDowell's legacy would be reconsidered and regain a place proper to its significance in the history of American music - ie niggers didn’t create anything special.

[ - ] Dindu [op] 1 point 11 hoursMay 3, 2025 19:20:36 ago (+1/-0)

The first one I just heard was to a wild rose. That is exactly what they were using for soap opera theme songs 80 years later. That seems pretty significant for turn of the century.

[ - ] FacelessOne 5 points 11 hoursMay 3, 2025 19:52:38 ago (+5/-0)

Wtf m8. You stopped before Wagner. Who we have the graces of being able to read his opinions on kikes and their lack of soul being the reason they cannot create art.

[ - ] Lost_In_The_Thinking 0 points 9 minutesMay 4, 2025 07:03:42 ago (+0/-0)

Wagner gets a lot of criticism from jews for his observations, which only strengthens his argument that jews are parasites who cannot create. It's fantastic that one of his greatest works, "Die Meistersinger", features Beckmesser, a jew who is a barely competent singer. It's almost like Wagner knew what he was talking about. For those not familiar with either this great work or the character, here's an article with a lot of jewing about "muh antisemitisms".

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Die_Meistersinger_von_N%C3%BCrnberg#Criticisms_of_Beckmesser_as_a_possible_antisemitic_trope

[ - ] rhy 3 points 10 hoursMay 3, 2025 20:15:39 ago (+3/-0)

Vivaldi is so underrated!

[ - ] KosherHiveKicker 3 points 9 hoursMay 3, 2025 22:00:05 ago (+3/-0)*

"Parsifal" - by Richard Wagner

- https://youtu.be/ru__AQXyiW8?t=740
____________________________

"Das Rheingold" - by Richard Wagner

- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VsR11uFzBJg

Richard Wagner deserves your attention and respect.

[ - ] Ragnar 2 points 6 hoursMay 4, 2025 00:16:09 ago (+2/-0)

Not entirely true.
Vivaldi was a contemporary of Bach and even Handel.
If anything, Bach is the godfather of baroque and inspired classical and later the romantic era.

Bach über alles

[ - ] Lost_In_The_Thinking 0 points 4 minutesMay 4, 2025 07:08:09 ago (+0/-0)*

Correct, and Bach admired both Vivaldi and Handel. He made two attempts to meet Handel in his lifetime, but events never allowed it to happen. It would have been an incredible meeting of minds.

https://musicaldiversion.blogspot.com/2010/08/bach-and-handel-and-meeting-that-never.html

Bach über alles
Totally with you on that account. I like to think he's in paradise amusing himself by thinking about people futilely trying to play his work as well as he could. He had a mastery of style and technique no one ever matched. It's a shame the fugue went out of style shortly after his death, but it was inevitable because it's so complex, too few people can truly understand it. His counterpoint was extremely accessible, making his "easier" works, like the Brandenburg Concerti, very pleasant and memorable.

[ - ] HonkyMcNiggerSpic 0 points 5 hoursMay 4, 2025 01:26:32 ago (+0/-0)

Mozart was the mother fucking man and all those other pussies knew it.