He is so right. When I am learning pieces by other piano players I can recover from flubbed notes but when I play beethoven one wrong note can mean the entire piece falls apart and train wrecks. Its weird how that happens with his music.
@anirbanmazumder5542
Жыл бұрын
Yes it's not only about one note, the entire structure needs to be carefully thought of and speculated in order for the listener to really understand what is going on and what's happening in the mind of the composer. Every bar, Every accent,Every articulation has to be precise in order to achieve what beethoven wants to say And you know the funny thing is that no matter how hard you try to do it it just never happens. Its like a path with a destination, you keep on walking but you never reach, Every time you feel like you're about to get closer it just moves further away. Idk that's how I feel about the music I'm sure you have other opinions too. Thank you. It only gets better but not perfect. You know I guess that's the beauty of life.
@Maibrapiano
3 ай бұрын
That is really true. It will always be a reach for perfection; on earth anyway.
@billklemm7284
2 ай бұрын
I read that Beethoven suffered from lead poisoning--from the additives to his wine, medications, etc. This ailment wasn't mortal for him but would explain his loss of hearing, his difficulty focusing, his wild mood swings, etc. That makes me wonder how Beethoven would have been different if he were healthy. Would he have conformed to convential form or would he have been the bold innovator we know now? Super interesting.
@muggsspongedice6762
6 ай бұрын
Beethoven is indeed conducting the Celestial Orchestra - and Bernstein said it correct, B's masterpieces were like phoned in from G-D or Heaven
@dariobordignon7048
Ай бұрын
Bernstein you revealed to us, with your expertise, the secret of Beethoven's immensity. And I, who have been listening to it all my life, really agree with you. Thank you.
@blueskies5588
Жыл бұрын
To me Beethoven is real life. Ups and downs triumphs and tragedies. Pain, etc. I’ll take him over anyone else, as his music speaks to those of us living a flawed mammal pattern seeking life
@VinceLyle2161
3 ай бұрын
Here's the way I think about it: When you listen to Mozart, like the piano sonatas and concertos and other pieces, you can get the feeling that there isn't any pain in the world. But when you listen to Beethoven, the feeling you get is that all the pain you've ever felt is worth it, that the pain is part of you, and overcoming it allows you to feel joy.
@Ben-zh4nz
Ай бұрын
@@VinceLyle2161listen to mozarts requiem and tell me you still feel the same. He wrote that album as a song to commemorate someone’s death, as he was commissioned to write it, but it’s also a requiem to his own death.
@Ben-zh4nz
Ай бұрын
Beethovens music is very sad. Mozarts is very deep. Beethoven was a sad man but Mozart was not. They had different approaches with music and with how they handled their situations but both had pain in their life and music
@JingleJangleJam
11 күн бұрын
@@Ben-zh4nz I did, and I still prefer Beethoven, as beautiful as Mozart's sadness is, his sadness is tinged with the Elegiac sweetness of the memory of a person still on the cusps of the feelings of those they leave behind. Although it may be forgotten in time, it is an immortal sadness like the sepulchre and tomb that stands beyond the withering away of rain and winds, even in its battered and worn shape after the corrosiveness of ages gone past, but still a lingering memory, something mourning its ultimate disappearance from the world but glad to use the last motes of its strength. A new day may rise which will rekindle the cold flame in rejuvenation of the next Spring after Winter's cold, supplanting the Nocturne of the Night with the rebirth of a mysterious unbeknownst Morn beyond the paling consciousness of that which passes through to eternity. But Beethoven's form of sadness goes further, is more cavernous, not a sweet lullaby but a bombastic cataclysm of the ages not yet finished and not yet able to Eulogise its awareness of itself into forms of funeral sending us off, his is more destructive, more potent, more powerful and reaches to the very foundations of the causes of exisence at the beginnings of time when God foundered and made a mistake in properly creating the world, a sadness embittered with the rage and scorn of despised loves, injustices of history, and the blood of the tears of rage in solitude against the absurdity of many people's fates.
@Vesnicie
2 жыл бұрын
Fascinating!
@nexuennex9151
9 ай бұрын
This explains so much to me. Thanks.
@VinceLyle2161
Жыл бұрын
Just because Leonard Bernstein says it, doesn't mean it isn't condescending baloney.
@margin606
4 ай бұрын
Nor does it mean it is
@spqr369
3 ай бұрын
Bernstein is full of it!!!
@ashrafthegoat
Жыл бұрын
dude on the right lookin like beethoven in the flesh
@MehdiD.Ardebili
Ай бұрын
For me Beethoven and Bach will Always be the greatest composers for me in the entire history of music
@rc3754
9 ай бұрын
Violin Concerto in D major Opus 61 first movement contains one of the simplest but most beautiful melodies written you silly man, Leonard.
@VAMR-vc7xg
8 ай бұрын
Pathetique sonata, Ode to Joy theme, Pastoral Symphony......of course he had a gift for melody.
@treeskates
4 ай бұрын
And what about that amazing and beautiful fugue in the 2nd movement of symphony 3?
@spqr369
3 ай бұрын
Bernstein is just talking through his ass. He is full of it! He wrote absolutely nothing compared to what Beethoven wrote. Everybody knows it's all about the next note. That's what makes the melody.
@The_Reality_Filter
2 ай бұрын
@@spqr369 the correct term is "condescending baloney". Bernstein is talking a right load of condescending baloney. Bernstein wrote Fancy Free which is also a load of condescending baloney.
@joejoejoe532
Ай бұрын
Is the melody in question beautiful in isolation or is it beautiful because of its combining with harmony and place in the music?
@TheRealGnolti
10 ай бұрын
Or as LvB himself said, "Es muß sein!"
@rc3754
9 ай бұрын
Opinions are like...
@Tolstoy111
6 ай бұрын
Informed opinions are valuable. As these are.
@ArmandoFerreira-vm7wn
9 ай бұрын
This would make sense if Bernstein was drunk while saying it. His examples are extreme, juvenile and not illustrative of everything Beethoven achieved
@Tolstoy111
6 ай бұрын
Bernstein wroten an extended Socratic dialogue about this in the '50s. There's only so much you can show in this short clip but Beethoven preferred short, motivic themes that he could develop.
@EntelSidious_gamzeylmz
2 жыл бұрын
yeah sure bernie the guy wrote arguably the greatest fugue of all time
@ZERPENT-OF-GOD
Жыл бұрын
You mean BACH xD
@EntelSidious_gamzeylmz
Жыл бұрын
@@ZERPENT-OF-GOD which bach fugue?
@ZERPENT-OF-GOD
Жыл бұрын
@@EntelSidious_gamzeylmz The only one that is probably the best ever and only ever was BACH which invented the damn fugue basically.
@ZERPENT-OF-GOD
Жыл бұрын
@@EntelSidious_gamzeylmz Sorry I deleted the last comment I had which is Bach's toccata and fugue in d minor.
@michaelwu7678
Жыл бұрын
@@ZERPENT-OF-GOD that's not his best work at all. Check out fugues from his late period like Ricercare à 6 or the Contrapunctus 14
@bayreuth79
Жыл бұрын
The nonsense that Beethoven wasn’t a great melodist… The Adagio of the Pathetique. The Adagio of the Ninth. The Finale of the Sixth. And so on. These are not great melodies? I’d much rather hear these melodies than Tchaikovsky’s!
@daokayestguitaristunder2061
Жыл бұрын
Tchaikovsky’s Melodie’s are just as good as Beethoven’s, just in different ways.
@CloudyMcCloud00
6 ай бұрын
Don't forget the Immortal Beloved theme: slow movement of the Emperor Concerto!
@Tolstoy111
6 ай бұрын
He was good at hymn like melodies that have the feeling of a pebble hitting a pond and causing light ripples. But he simply didn't need traditional, long lined melodies for a lot of the pieces he produced.
@ErichLRuehs
Жыл бұрын
Genius discussing Genius. I'm lost. And yet ... I get it. I feel it.
@jamesboswell9324
2 ай бұрын
An alternative take on Bernstein's remarks: kzitem.info/news/bejne/rqCZ2mmDcXyrf2k
@c.c.krishna638
4 ай бұрын
Please note : This overture is based on a FEW CLUES found in the sketches, but it is not a BEETHOVEN's work !
@elasmojones
5 ай бұрын
kinda how I feel about David Gilmour...
@caedmonherodofficial
Ай бұрын
yeah pretty much. soycd forever
@roscodabosco81
Ай бұрын
Wow wow wow
@chrispati4435
Ай бұрын
Although I understand why he would critique Beethoven the way he does (based on his education and experience), he misses the whole point. You cannot begin to judge his melodies, arrangements, dynamics separately. It like saying a Rolls Royce could have better tires or a faster engine. The WHOLE is ALL that matters. Analyzing the various aspects of Beethoven's process and the elements that make up his compositions is pointless. It is what it is and he is right about one thing...not ONE note could be changed or be different. He was a channel for the infinite consciousness of existence to the human condition and consciousness. Beethoven is like an element. Fire, water, Air Beethoven. The true embodiment of the universal vibration of music.
@utterlyjames0
2 ай бұрын
If that thumbnail is not A.I., Eartha Kitt HAS to be a descendant of Beethoven 🤔
@nelaVanBrussel
Ай бұрын
And what did Bernstein produced ? Will we know 100 years later who he was ?
@Edvinaronson
11 ай бұрын
”fRoM gOd”
@micoveliki8729
5 ай бұрын
Triggered? 😂
@Edvinaronson
5 ай бұрын
@@micoveliki8729 yes
@Mike-xq7ib
7 ай бұрын
Is it genius if piecing it together tears you apart?
@joejoejoe532
3 ай бұрын
Depends on whether one's view of genius is based on inborn skill, "god-given" talent if you will, or if the view of genius is based on practice. Personally I don't care for the "god-given" genius idea: there is no genius I know off that didn't work their a** off to be that. The violinist/composer Sarasate was to have said more or less, "for 37 years I practiced 14 hours a day, now they call me a genius."
@Forrestlovesyou
2 ай бұрын
He didn't have modern day technology that's the only reason he wasn't able to make the impact he could have
@khurmiful
Жыл бұрын
I don’t know about other stuff but you find better melody writers than the old Ludwig.
@starsandnightvision
7 ай бұрын
Schubert rivals anyone when it comes to melody.
@Tolstoy111
6 ай бұрын
Beethoven generally preferred short, motivic themes that he could use as building blocks.
@PeveccDude
6 ай бұрын
@@starsandnightvision True but Schubert's developments are painful, the melodies colapse with every new bar which is tragic because his melodies are brilliant.
@starsandnightvision
6 ай бұрын
@@PeveccDude I think his later works are pretty much perfect,
@PeveccDude
6 ай бұрын
@@starsandnightvision Haven't listened to his later works, I'll sure give them a try
@aluuusch
8 ай бұрын
He did not "...move because he couldn't find a place he'd find nice". He was just so over the place and got kicked out so many times by the landlord because he didn't manage to pay the rent in time although he was kinda rich. Generally, that dude is talking A LOT. And he thinks of himself as a big genius point that out. But it's just not on spot what he says about BTHVN music
Пікірлер: 67