This piece really feels like a story being told. And when half asleep like I am now, it painted a lovely dream.
@임승원-x2p2 жыл бұрын
I learned a lot thanks to your channel thank you
@112BALAGE1124 жыл бұрын
I hope you'll visualise k. 546 soon. It's one of my favourites from Mozart
@johnmusiol60876 ай бұрын
Brainy Baby Left Brain
@ansenlam5604 жыл бұрын
❤️
@SinusPrimus4 жыл бұрын
That comes directly after Barock Music! It’s like a invasion of aliens on earth. How could such a change be possible? What was the motor behind? Greetz from Switzerland Second 🇨🇭
@smalin4 жыл бұрын
Compositional practice did not go from Bach to Mozart in one step. If you listen to all the music of Bach’s sons, you will understand the intermediate territory better.
@SinusPrimus4 жыл бұрын
@@smalin Thank you for your answer. I know the music of Bach's sons and I hear the "bridge" between the two music epochs, but Mozart's music has a totally different music language. And it seems to me like Mozart and Bach have literally nothing in common. Only in later music from Mozart you can hear some pieces that remind me sometimes at fugues and counterpoint from Bach. I mean Bach died in 1750 and only a few years later Mozart made music as if there had never been baroque music at all. It's totally fascinating how quick and how perfect this change did happen. I'm asking myself what made such a revolution possible. I mean there must have been a deep need for changing music style. But from where? Who or what was responsible for that? Compared to nature history it's like the difference between dinosaurs and mammals. Greetz from Switzerland
@112BALAGE1124 жыл бұрын
It's called the galant or rococo era in art history.
@smalin4 жыл бұрын
You seem to be not accounting for the fact that things were happening in parallel. It's true that Bach died in 1750 and Mozart was writing very different music just a few years later, but by the time Bach died, his style had long since gone out of fashion. A more useful comparison of dates might be something like 1711 (when Vivaldi composed L'estro armonico), and 1782 (when Haydn wrote his genre-defining opus 20 quartets). From that, you might say that the transition from Baroque to Classical took three generations.
@SinusPrimus4 жыл бұрын
@@smalin Thanks for your answer. 🙂Okay, that's interesting and now I can comprehend it a bit better. 👍 Does anybody know if there's a film documentation about it?