Happy birthday to me. And on my birthday, I will choose to be serenaded, by Mozart, through the magic of Jascha Heifetz. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MPFm8vN0vGE If you are curious, this is the fourth movment of a much larger work, composed by the 20-year old Mozart in 1776 for the wedding of Marie Elisabeth Haffner (the same family … Continue reading Special Birthday Edition
Author: ethanlitwin
1.618
The very first entry of this blog was devoted to how Pythagoras created the Western musical scale through the use of mathematical ratios. It is not surprising, therefore, that the most famous of all ratios--Euclid's golden ratio--would find its way into the music. While interest in the golden ratio was common in the ancient world, … Continue reading 1.618
The Real Mozart
Mozart’s music can be heard to hover: between innocence and experience, ideality and sensuousness, comedy and tragedy, sympathy and mockery, intimacy and transcendence. It offers no blind faith yet no paralyzing doubt; it is not just a longingly imperfect reach for the infinite (Schiller’s sentimental art) nor just a comfortably perfect grasp of the finite … Continue reading The Real Mozart
Classical Music II: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Let’s get this out of the way—pretty much everything you know about Mozart from the movie Amadeus is a lie. Here’s what the movie gets right: There was a guy called Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. He was a child prodigy and a remarkable composer. He lived most of his adult life in Vienna, where he composed … Continue reading Classical Music II: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Interlude: The Other Haydn at the Side of the Road
In 1783, Mozart visited Salzburg with his wife Constanze. While there, he dropped in to see his good friend, Haydn, who was in trouble. Haydn had a commission due for the Archbishop--a set of six duos for violin and viola. Four were already completed, but Haydn had taken ill and was unable to complete the … Continue reading Interlude: The Other Haydn at the Side of the Road