I love the story about the Linz symphony. The fact that Mozart arrived in Linz with no new symphony so he composed the masterpiece in 4 days. Mozart worked well under deadlines. When his father arrived in Vienna in 1785, he walked in to find Mozart still writing and handing the sheets to the copyist - for a piano concerto performance that same night. He wrote his last 3 symphonies in 3 months of one summer. That's what geniuses do. What do mediocrities do? They argue which genius is "better".
Absolutely agree ; each genius has their own ; discussing if one is better than another , besides mediocrity , shows ignorancy about what music is . I love your comment !
Mozart composed the entire overture for Don Giovanni the morning that it premiered, and the ink was still wet on the copies when the musicians performed it. Yet it remains an unrivalled masterpiece.
@@jubielhalasz295 I think Mozart worked well under the pressure of a deadline. His Don Giovanni overtire is one example. Another even more remarkable occasion he demonstrated getting it in “under the wire” was the evening he finished his D minor piano concerto K 466 that was required for performance that same night. The orchestra sight read it on performance night. By all accounts, a magnificent event. The emperor shouted “Bravo Mozart!”
@@SuperMusicizmylife I know. I was agreeing with you and adding to what you said. He was indeed incredibly good at working under immense pressure. His genius was so extensive that it could always perform to and exceed expectations, regardless of time pressure or any other external factor. He is without I doubt in my mind the greatest composer who ever lived.
I can listen to the finale over and over and over again. I printed out the score just so I could play the Timpani parts on my keyboard with the music. I can't tell you how thrilling it is for me to hear that last flourish - 16 measures before the end. So much fun. I wish I could perform in an orchestra just to play that part. The whole movement seems to imply a break-neck race to finish the piece. Mozart wrote "When we arrived at the gates of Linz, a servant was standing there to conduct us to the Old Count Thun's, where we are still living. I really cannot tell you how they overwhelm us with kindness in this house. On Thursday, the Fourth of November, I am going to give a concert in the theater, and, as I have not a single symphony by me, I am writing away over head and ears at a new one, which must be ready by then. " Now THIS recording right here is the bomb: th-cam.com/video/UIq_u4-uOwA/w-d-xo.html
well said! Thanks for the link as well. Mozart wrote his music for the people, not just the royals and courts, nor professional musicians. His music reaches everyone at the soul level, it is the true universal language. I enjoy the perspective of a musician like yourself. I am a bit of one myself and see Mozart's genius written on the page that produces such majestic sounds to all ears, trained and untrained alike.
The Thun family had known the Mozarts since 1762, very friendly with Leopold. Young Count Thun's wife was a good keyboard player and very well placed in high society - she did much to help Wolfgang when he eventually moved to Vienna;
I like 4. mov. with oriental sounds! One of my favorite Mozart's opera is "Abduction from Serail". Thanks for posting. Much appreciate detailed description.
This symphony is full of light. It is quite transparent. It is a necessray complement to the density of the four following ones. With its five last symphonies, Mozart used the whole palette of human feeelings.
Amadeus was the greatest, he wrote so many masterpieces in his short life. Some works may be more impressing than others, but he never wrote pieces of bad quality. His extraordinary piece "musikalischer Spaß" shows us what "low quality" is, but it needs a genius to write something like that. His notes are always in the right place and everyone hears when the instrumentalist makes a mistake. Therefore his music is not that easy to play. Oh yes - the Linz symphony can be counted to his late and greatest symphonies.
Anyone who burns energy debating whether Mozart is "better" than Beethoven, or vice-versa, or feels the need to determine if either of them is "the best," is missing the point of... well... basically everything. Mozart is "the best" at being Mozart. Beethoven is "the best" at being Beethoven. The End
Ok! But the best are Beethoven, Mozart, Haydn and Bach. Around the world and throughout history there is no better composers. The Germans once wrote great music ...
I am somehow growing bored to see the same useless comparisons between whichever composers… Why don’t people understand? Mozart was a Classical composer. Beethoven is widely regarded as the first Romantic composer. Beethoven greatly appreciated and was inspired by Mozart, but he gradually developed his own different style. Likewise, Mozart had Bach as a model. This simply doesn’t make any of them “better” than the other.
Thank you. We human creatures were lucky to get Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms, and a bunch of other inspired creators. Celebrate the famous masters and discover the obscure musicians. YooToob comments on symphonic videos are usually theeee worst, most annoying nonsense ever. Lots of fluffing one's own pillows if you get my drift. Just be happy this amazingness exists. I'll take the delightfulness of early Christian Cannabich symphonies to most things.
Moreover, Mozart worked under totally different conditions than Beethoven. This symphony was completed in four days! Mozart made >600 works in a 35 year life, Beethoven ~150 works in a 57 year life. Imagine what Mozart could have achieved under less economic stress and what would have come out if these two geniuses had been composing in parallel, inspiring eachother.
Our little beginners' string orchestra is playing the first movement of this masterpiece in a concert tonight! Wish us luck! Think of me toiling away on the cello during the fast bits!!! Total eye to hand connection - no brain involved! It's way too fast!
I've often found that Mozart had a way of expressing exhilerating and soulful themes with a hint of wistful melancholy that can bring one to tears from the melodious counterpoint's interraction. Whereas, Beethoven causes me to grind my teeth at times from the hints of frustration and sense of desperation one gets from the direction he often took.
wow - he wrote this in 4 days. Its like that bit in Amadeus, its almost like he took dictation and the music was already in his head just waiting to get out on ink and paper. Amazing
I can't understand all the hate for Mozart. There is no reason to compare beethoven to mozart. They were both amazing composers, both were geniuses, both made emotional, powerful music (albeit different), and both are legends. Mozart was more fun, Beethoven was more artistic, it doesn't make one better than the other. Personally, i do prefer Beethoven, but Mozart was, and always will be a musical genius and a legend.
I am very fond of all the concertos and symphonies of W.A. Mozart. Furthermore I love this one very much, as my girl friend lives in Steyr, around Linz City. Ha ha.
What a tease! I was following along but the video only showed the first two pages of the score. It would be really cool if the entire score was shared so we could follow along :-)
Mozart began to be "more serious" after his father died in 1787.It woke him up a little. Practically everything he wrote after that event is considered a masterpiece. I think we get a lot of haters out there because they realize the truth: That without Mozart, Beethoven wouldnt been the composer he was. Its about time people pay more respect to Mozart, Haydn, and Bach in regards to Beethoven. Without those composers I mentioned, the genius of Beethoven never wouldve come out.
My first experience of this masterpiece was listening to it on a set of 78 rpm records in an ancient radiogram (c. 1960). Despite the awful interruptions and the scratchy sound, it was unforgettable.
They will always be linked together..Beethoven adored Mozart and a lot of his work is based on Mozarts genius. Beethoven lovers refuse to admit, but I guarantee Beethoven would yell at anyone who bashed his idol. :)
I like what you're saying here, but I have to disagree with "Beethoven was more artistic." I believe they were both extraordinarily artistic. Each in their own right. Truly masters. To say one was more artistic than the other has no merit, in my humble opinion. That's like saying Picasso or Pollack was more artistic than Rembrandt or Da Vinci. They are all masters in the realm of human expression via art. Brilliant!
Every language has hundreds of thousands of words - there are many words that express emotions and are not vulgar. Civilized man should not use such words at all - unless it is wild - then it can use.
Finally someone who knows what they are talking about! Don't worry Chris, I feel you.. Only the smart music lovers know the truth. Beethoven would be the first to tell you that your comments are accurate.
I do not think that between Beethoven and Mozart, one can be chosen as "better". In my opinion, each of their styles is COMPLETELY different from the other. Also, this opinion that Mozart's music is "too perfect" and "not emotional" is utterly untrue. Mozart's music is very expressive. Take a better listen to his music, dig a little deeper into his catalogue of compositions! Emotion doesn't always have to be blatantly obvious, like in Beethoven's music. Mozart was the master of superb subtlety!
Mozart had not brought any sheet music with him, and the count had a splendid orchestra. Mozart was so impressed with the orchestra, that he wrote a symphony. This one. In four days. And the best thing about the count's full orchestra? It didn't have any flutes. Mozart hated them. It did however have Barytons, which were not all that unusual in orchestras of the time.
Me Boring performsnce. Mozart is exploding energy not just playing the right notes and dynamics in a classical style. Mozart is life. Each note has to be spontaneous and unexpected instead of a dead perfection..
Since music is subjective, some may prefer Mozart more and some may prefer Beethovan more. If Mozart can be likened to Jasmine, Beethovan can be likened to Rose. Each one has his own unique style of composing that is appealing to some people and therefore one group loves Mozart more and another group loves Beethovan more. We should be happy to think that nature has gifted us two magnificent all time great composers. The End.
the dogmatic and narrowminded posts here sadly reflect their authors abyssal distance to the serene and light feathered beauty of mozart's music. peace to all of us
Mi pareja tiene ansiedad no se que tan cierto es que esta sinfonía le hace bien a las personas con ansiedad pero aquí estoy dándole play si que él sepa para que >
Interesting opinion. Mozart said,"I have studied every kind of music there is." It was his answer to persons who held him to be a gifted genius. There was plenty of work on his part.
Well as a Mozart lover I have to agree that I don't think this is Mozart at his very best. Symphonies 38-41 are generally considered the finest, although I love the piano concertos the most when it comes to the large scale instrumental works - concertos 23 and 24 are two fabulous works that you may enjoy better. Happy listening.
Während ich diese Symphonie bei einem Schachspiel gegen meinen Computer hörte (sizilianische Eröffnung) gelang mir doch tatsächlich ein Sieg ... Musik kann soviel bewirken...
Jean Chalant is on the right way. Comparing composers: Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, ect...has no sens. It's totally subjective, personal, and how that music touches your deep feelings. And nobody can know how another person feels... "Who " is the best is an unending debate. Let's just respect the opinion of each other and listen to the music... Many years ago, listening to the radio a debate between critics on different interpretations and records of the Concerto de Aranguez by Joaquin Rodrigo, one of the critics said: "this piece of music worth nothing!". However, it's presently one of most popular guitar concerto!
To write a symphony like this, you have to be an absolute genius, to write a symphony like this in 4 days, you have to be Mozart!
I absolutely love the way Mozart uses the timpani in his compositions
Very Haydn esque. He learnt a lot of him!
It is surprising that Mozart composed this great work in just 4 days
A total genius
Grain of salt needed here.
1. Adagio, 3/4 - Allegro spiritoso, 4/4 0:00
2. Poco adagio, 6/8 10:35
3. Menuetto, 3/4 17:32
4. Finale (Presto), 2/4. 21:02
I love the story about the Linz symphony. The fact that Mozart arrived in Linz with no new symphony so he composed the masterpiece in 4 days. Mozart worked well under deadlines. When his father arrived in Vienna in 1785, he walked in to find Mozart still writing and handing the sheets to the copyist - for a piano concerto performance that same night. He wrote his last 3 symphonies in 3 months of one summer. That's what geniuses do. What do mediocrities do? They argue which genius is "better".
Absolutely agree ; each genius has their own ; discussing if one is better than another , besides mediocrity , shows ignorancy about what music is . I love your comment !
@@mereyeslacalle thank you. well said yourself!
Mozart composed the entire overture for Don Giovanni the morning that it premiered, and the ink was still wet on the copies when the musicians performed it. Yet it remains an unrivalled masterpiece.
@@jubielhalasz295 I think Mozart worked well under the pressure of a deadline. His Don Giovanni overtire is one example. Another even more remarkable occasion he demonstrated getting it in “under the wire” was the evening he finished his D minor piano concerto K 466 that was required for performance that same night. The orchestra sight read it on performance night. By all accounts, a magnificent event. The emperor shouted “Bravo Mozart!”
@@SuperMusicizmylife I know. I was agreeing with you and adding to what you said. He was indeed incredibly good at working under immense pressure. His genius was so extensive that it could always perform to and exceed expectations, regardless of time pressure or any other external factor. He is without I doubt in my mind the greatest composer who ever lived.
Gotta love the way he effortlessly goes from unbridled exuberance to delicate, tender elegance in just the matter of an instant.
Mozart,s works are forever .
Forever is Mozart .
I can listen to the finale over and over and over again. I printed out the score just so I could play the Timpani parts on my keyboard with the music. I can't tell you how thrilling it is for me to hear that last flourish - 16 measures before the end. So much fun. I wish I could perform in an orchestra just to play that part. The whole movement seems to imply a break-neck race to finish the piece. Mozart wrote "When we arrived at the gates of Linz, a servant was standing there to conduct us to the Old Count Thun's, where we are still living. I really cannot tell you how they overwhelm us with kindness in this house. On Thursday, the Fourth of November, I am going to give a concert in the theater, and, as I have not a single symphony by me, I am writing away over head and ears at a new one, which must be ready by then. "
Now THIS recording right here is the bomb: th-cam.com/video/UIq_u4-uOwA/w-d-xo.html
well said! Thanks for the link as well. Mozart wrote his music for the people, not just the royals and courts, nor professional musicians. His music reaches everyone at the soul level, it is the true universal language. I enjoy the perspective of a musician like yourself. I am a bit of one myself and see Mozart's genius written on the page that produces such majestic sounds to all ears, trained and untrained alike.
The Thun family had known the Mozarts since 1762, very friendly with Leopold. Young Count Thun's wife was a good keyboard player and very well placed in high society - she did much to help Wolfgang when he eventually moved to Vienna;
He wrote this in 4 days, the symphony conveys the tone of stress, anxiety, and the psychological rush to meet a deadline fairly well.
On my way home it was on the radio and I got in the car just after the first movement started. Good timing! What an incredible masterpiece.
아름다운 연주곡 잘 들었습니다~감사합니다~🎵🎻📯🌿🍀☘🌹🌹☘🍀🌿❤❤
I like 4. mov. with oriental sounds!
One of my favorite Mozart's opera is "Abduction from Serail".
Thanks for posting. Much appreciate detailed description.
Sólo un genio pudo escribir esta maravilla tan sólo en cuatro días!! Mozart eres único , admirable , fantástico, inmortal !!
I have never heard this particular symphony before. Unbeknownst to me until now, it is astonishingly beautiful!
Une des plus belles symphonie de Mozart
Masterpiece!!! Mozart is the Best composer ever!!! My favorite !!!
This symphony is full of light. It is quite transparent. It is a necessray complement to the density of the four following ones. With its five last symphonies, Mozart used the whole palette of human feeelings.
Gérard Begni n
Amadeus was the greatest, he wrote so many masterpieces in his short life. Some works may be more impressing than others, but he never wrote pieces of bad quality. His extraordinary piece "musikalischer Spaß" shows us what "low quality" is, but it needs a genius to write something like that.
His notes are always in the right place and everyone hears when the instrumentalist makes a mistake. Therefore his music is not that easy to play.
Oh yes - the Linz symphony can be counted to his late and greatest symphonies.
Anyone who burns energy debating whether Mozart is "better" than Beethoven, or vice-versa, or feels the need to determine if either of them is "the best," is missing the point of... well... basically everything.
Mozart is "the best" at being Mozart. Beethoven is "the best" at being Beethoven.
The End
JeanChalant Wrong. The only thing greater than Mozart is God.
Johny Ringo Did
did you read the post
Johny Ringo Karajan?
JeanChalant I liked Beethoven more, but having learned he was verbally vulgar I excluded him from my favorites altogether.
ivan boskovic Mozart had a potty mouth too......
DEFINITELY one of his most under-rated symphonies!!
ABSOLUTELY. It's just adorable, it's very sweet and very well "formed" if you know what i mean. Definitely one of the best Mozart's works ever done
No words...maybe the one word:sublime.
or two words....KICK ASS!!!
Beautiful and ingenious, this music deserves more plaudits.
Timotius Matthew ff
I feel that Beethoven, Mozart, and Bach are all the best in their own way.
+Crafterman Haydn is not too bad either
Neither is George Gershwin and Aaron Copland (gotta support The Americans)
You forgot Joseph Hayd
And Händel! 😡
Ok! But the best are Beethoven, Mozart, Haydn and Bach. Around the world and throughout history there is no better composers. The Germans once wrote great music ...
And Händel! 😡
18th Century rock and roll. My all time favorite symphony,
My journey in Linz didn't taste the same as i knew Mozart was part of it. Simply honored to walk on the steps of such a music gifted man
This song's melodies from the 1st and 4th movements give me ecstacy AF 💞
Mozart was a genius. this smphony is good to listen it when you are anxious, truly.
I am somehow growing bored to see the same useless comparisons between whichever composers… Why don’t people understand? Mozart was a Classical composer. Beethoven is widely regarded as the first Romantic composer. Beethoven greatly appreciated and was inspired by Mozart, but he gradually developed his own different style. Likewise, Mozart had Bach as a model. This simply doesn’t make any of them “better” than the other.
I totally agree with your assessment.
Thank you. We human creatures were lucky to get Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms, and a bunch of other inspired creators. Celebrate the famous masters and discover the obscure musicians. YooToob comments on symphonic videos are usually theeee worst, most annoying nonsense ever. Lots of fluffing one's own pillows if you get my drift. Just be happy this amazingness exists. I'll take the delightfulness of early Christian Cannabich symphonies to most things.
Moreover, Mozart worked under totally different conditions than Beethoven. This symphony was completed in four days! Mozart made >600 works in a 35 year life, Beethoven ~150 works in a 57 year life. Imagine what Mozart could have achieved under less economic stress and what would have come out if these two geniuses had been composing in parallel, inspiring eachother.
Totally in agreement with your assessment Nelson.. AMEN....!!!!
***** I suggest you read what I wrote about Mozarts working conditions and economic stress.
Our little beginners' string orchestra is playing the first movement of this masterpiece in a concert tonight! Wish us luck! Think of me toiling away on the cello during the fast bits!!! Total eye to hand connection - no brain involved! It's way too fast!
It's a beautiful symphony.
I've often found that Mozart had a way of expressing exhilerating and soulful themes with a hint of wistful melancholy that can bring one to tears from the melodious counterpoint's interraction. Whereas, Beethoven causes me to grind my teeth at times from the hints of frustration and sense of desperation one gets from the direction he often took.
wow - he wrote this in 4 days. Its like that bit in Amadeus, its almost like he took dictation and the music was already in his head just waiting to get out on ink and paper. Amazing
Musica meravigliosa!!!
Me trae mis días de juventud con la fuerza de un cañonazo, con la contundencia de una estampida.
I can't understand all the hate for Mozart. There is no reason to compare beethoven to mozart. They were both amazing composers, both were geniuses, both made emotional, powerful music (albeit different), and both are legends. Mozart was more fun, Beethoven was more artistic, it doesn't make one better than the other. Personally, i do prefer Beethoven, but Mozart was, and always will be a musical genius and a legend.
Composed in 4 days..genius!
Thank you jumpydave, you really jumped forth with an answer. Thank you for living up to your name.
Nunca pense que Mozart hiciera esta sinfonía en tan solo ¡4 días!
Asombrosamente genial 😁
I am very fond of all the concertos
and symphonies of W.A. Mozart.
Furthermore I love this one very
much, as my girl friend lives in
Steyr, around Linz City. Ha ha.
Purest music, no one asks what is it about.
I love the counterpoint between the oboe and the bassoon in the trio of the minuetto. The bassoon could be much evidenced in that rendition.
My favorite ever since I first heard it when I was 18 .
Heard it recently for the first time while stuck in traffic near Huntley Rd. Enjoyed it a hell of a lot.
What a tease! I was following along but the video only showed the first two pages of the score. It would be really cool if the entire score was shared so we could follow along :-)
My favorite since I first heard it when I was 18 !
Despite the deadline, you never get the sense that it's rushed.
Mozart began to be "more serious" after his father died in 1787.It woke him up a little. Practically everything he wrote after that event is considered a masterpiece. I think we get a lot of haters out there because they realize the truth: That without Mozart, Beethoven wouldnt been the composer he was. Its about time people pay more respect to Mozart, Haydn, and Bach in regards to Beethoven. Without those composers I mentioned, the genius of Beethoven never wouldve come out.
My first experience of this masterpiece was listening to it on a set of 78 rpm records in an ancient radiogram (c. 1960). Despite the awful interruptions and the scratchy sound, it was unforgettable.
I honestly don't see how one could feel anything short of reverential awe for either of them.
Una de mis obras preferidas. Bella interpretación
They will always be linked together..Beethoven adored Mozart and a lot of his work is based on Mozarts genius. Beethoven lovers refuse to admit, but I guarantee Beethoven would yell at anyone who bashed his idol. :)
i now know from where did the Magic Flute overture came from!
As much as love you, Amadeus, this will be the first and last time I listen to this work.............. Nothing special that catches my ear!
2:57 = marriage of Figaro ( around 43:00-46:00)
2:10 - This is pleasing.
25:24-25:28 this is nearly the same as the initial allegro theme in the first movement of Schubert's great Quintet in C
What a beautiful village !
Przy tej muzyce nie tylko nogi ale i serce wiruje ,samopoczucie na dwa pa.
It's more fuller and substantial work than the Haffner symphony which preceded it.
1:57 no one is going to mention the reference to Handel’s Hallelujah
I noticed it sounded extremely similar too. I wonder if it was intentional.
@@Hamish_Wright well Mozart did admire Handel dearly
unsurpassed.. dauntless ochestration makes this music masterpiece!
One of my top fav classical pieces along with symphony 31 (Paris), 39, 41 (Jupiter), and Divertimento.
Grande sinfonia, credo che da qui in avanti Mozart inizi a toccare le piu' alte vette sinfoniche
E' Vero quello che dici Mozart,🇦🇹e' diventato ancora più Geniale,⭐Complimenti per i gusti Ciao,🖐️🖐️🎻🎵🇦🇹🥇🔔🎩🏆🇦🇹🎵
Let's just enjoy this Otherwordly music and leave the debate to politicians, mates.
Q
Listening with my kiddo at his request... He read it was premiered on his birthday.
Only a colossal genius could have thought up this symphony, particularly 25:21,.
O HOMEM É ETERNO QUANDO SEU TRABALHO PERMANECE. POR ISSO MOZART É ETERNO.💖💖💖👏👏👏🎼🎼🎼🇦🇹🇦🇹🇦🇹
I love mozart
I like what you're saying here, but I have to disagree with "Beethoven was more artistic." I believe they were both extraordinarily artistic. Each in their own right. Truly masters. To say one was more artistic than the other has no merit, in my humble opinion. That's like saying Picasso or Pollack was more artistic than Rembrandt or Da Vinci. They are all masters in the realm of human expression via art. Brilliant!
Hermosa melodías !
Wow mucho tiempo de no escucharla, que obra se arte!!
Fantastic.
this is a fucking masterpiece. it's just so wonderful...
Show more personal culture man!
Do not use bad words when you write about this beautiful symphony
It is very interesting . I'll have to think about it :)
No need to knock swear words. They are used out of emotion. That's their reason, definitively speaking.
Every language has hundreds of thousands of words - there are many words that express emotions and are not vulgar. Civilized man should not use such words at all - unless it is wild - then it can use.
Finally someone who knows what they are talking about! Don't worry Chris, I feel you.. Only the smart music lovers know the truth. Beethoven would be the first to tell you that your comments are accurate.
I do not think that between Beethoven and Mozart, one can be chosen as "better". In my opinion, each of their styles is COMPLETELY different from the other. Also, this opinion that Mozart's music is "too perfect" and "not emotional" is utterly untrue. Mozart's music is very expressive. Take a better listen to his music, dig a little deeper into his catalogue of compositions! Emotion doesn't always have to be blatantly obvious, like in Beethoven's music. Mozart was the master of superb subtlety!
well said! I agree 100%
Mozart had not brought any sheet music with him, and the count had a splendid orchestra. Mozart was so impressed with the orchestra, that he wrote a symphony. This one. In four days. And the best thing about the count's full orchestra? It didn't have any flutes. Mozart hated them. It did however have Barytons, which were not all that unusual in orchestras of the time.
world-class nerdiness, bruv
^^^ world-class jealousy, bruv
Mozart hated flutes, did he? ;)
Seanyboy Gaming u
in 4 mesi Mozart,🇦🇹ha Composto questo Grande Capolavoro immenso, Era Unico,Mozart,🇦🇹🎹🎼
Sí, era único, tanto, que la compuso en 4 días, no en 4 meses! 👋
Me Boring performsnce. Mozart is exploding energy not just playing the right notes and dynamics in a classical style. Mozart is life. Each note has to be spontaneous and unexpected instead of a dead perfection..
Since music is subjective, some may prefer Mozart more and some may prefer Beethovan more. If Mozart can be likened to Jasmine, Beethovan can be likened to Rose. Each one has his own unique style of composing that is appealing to some people and therefore one group loves Mozart more and another group loves Beethovan more. We should be happy to think that nature has gifted us two magnificent all time great composers. The End.
+Sahaya Raju Hear, hear! People ALWAYS forget that music is a personal, subjective taste. *Sigh*
I love Mozart *and* Beethoven, equally.....but for different reasons ;-).
Most people like both, including myself.
Beethoven was greatly influenced by Mozart, especially in his earlier works.
The greatest is Bach.Listen to the whole range of Bachs music and you will see that his genius is not comparable.
But second is mozart.
True that. I almost wouldn't hesitate to say Bach was the best composer of all.
calmed my anxiety and my depression
the dogmatic and narrowminded posts here sadly reflect their authors abyssal distance to the serene and light feathered beauty of mozart's music. peace to all of us
Even if they didn't remain faithful to classical era at all music evolves slowly, it never takes sudden changes.
Mi pareja tiene ansiedad no se que tan cierto es que esta sinfonía le hace bien a las personas con ansiedad pero aquí estoy dándole play si que él sepa para que >
He llegado aquí por lo mismo. También me recomendaron el Concierto de Aranjuez del maestro Rodrigo. Suerte y saludos.
Questa e' di Mozart,🇦🇹e' una bestemmia chi dice che non e'.🇦🇹♥️
Ich dachte nicht dass diese so schön war
Haaggus, please don't dismiss Eine Kleine Nachtmusic so cavalierly. It's a true masterpiece.
Por favor ! No más anuncios !
ESTA SIFONIA ACTÚA EN EL SUBCONSCIENTE Y CONTROLA TU ANSIEDAD
Interesting opinion. Mozart said,"I have studied every kind of music there is." It was his answer to persons who held him to be a gifted genius. There was plenty of work on his part.
La meravigliosa musica di Mozart mi trasporta in un altro mondo!!!🎼🎶🎵🎹🌈❣️🙏
Very nice.
wow.. well said
Well as a Mozart lover I have to agree that I don't think this is Mozart at his very best. Symphonies 38-41 are generally considered the finest, although I love the piano concertos the most when it comes to the large scale instrumental works - concertos 23 and 24 are two fabulous works that you may enjoy better. Happy listening.
Like si vinieron para curar la ansiedad con este tema
4 days to compose the "Linz" would have taken Brahms and Beethoven at least a year!
5:52 so witty.
Während ich diese Symphonie bei einem Schachspiel gegen meinen Computer hörte (sizilianische Eröffnung) gelang mir doch tatsächlich ein Sieg ... Musik kann soviel bewirken...
Jean Chalant is on the right way. Comparing composers: Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, ect...has no sens. It's totally subjective, personal, and how that music touches your deep feelings. And nobody can know how another person feels...
"Who " is the best is an unending debate. Let's just respect the opinion of each other and listen to the music...
Many years ago, listening to the radio a debate between critics on different interpretations and records of the Concerto de Aranguez by Joaquin Rodrigo, one of the critics said: "this piece of music worth nothing!". However, it's presently one of most popular guitar concerto!
Yes. Sublime.
Thanks for Mozart.
...como siempre:...buenísimo!...el Adagio una joyita!!
4.25 Haendel, was it you?