|
Audio Asylum Thread Printer Get a view of an entire thread on one page |
For Sale Ads |
67.161.182.178
In Reply to: RE: Nice Move posted by Newey on October 28, 2015 at 21:45:20
King Marke discovers Tristan having sex with his wife in Act 2. Wagner defers the Tonic right at the "point of no return." The cadence is completed, finally, at the very end of the opera, after Tristan is dead.
It's a famous moment with which any freshman music student would be familiar, and very relevant to our discussion.
Follow Ups:
I Stand Corrected
You're right. Very good analogy there. Excellent.
I just completely missed it.
However, you'd have made incalculably more impact if you had chosen a less sophomoric, hormonal-15-year-old-snot-nose type head mast. Try something normal; a witty but non-screaming head mast is much better. Shows active brain function and intelligence, rather than drug use and atrophy.
See how easy that is, Jiminy? When you're wrong, just admit that you're wrong. Learn from your mistake. Learning is better than unhinging your jaw and running your mouth. Someday, even you may come to understand that.
N. Thelman, SSI
...rolls her eyes and screams, "oh brother," it's not because she just read one of your narcissistic posts!*
Anyway, your heros, which I happen to like too:
Read the actual text behind Sibelius' Kullervo, or Mendelssohn's Mid-Summer Night's Dream. Eyebrow-raising stuff about Summer that Shakespeare wrote.
Mahler's 8th Symphony, a fusion of the Sacred and Secular--big no no.
I think you get the idea about Wagner, LOL.
Then, of course, Stravinsky's Rite--a ritual murder of a teenaged virgin. No immorality there.
Firebird? Busoni's Faust? Berlioz Fantastique? The occult. OOOOooooh.
Ravel's Daphnis, soft-core porn.
Which Newey are you today? It's hard to tell from one post to the next.
*(Is that lively discussion, or a below the belt retort? I don't know.)
The content of your post was excellent. It was the subject line head mast that was juvenile and unnesessary.
I don't feel like typing more about it.
N. Thelman, SSI
beyond cut and paste. It's because you've spent a lifetime putting symbol before sound; obsessing with symbol over sound.
For example: How can you even begin to discuss or appreciate the Tristan chord without being familiar with the music? Without even knowing the story?
g
N. Thelman, SSI
Post a Followup:
FAQ |
Post a Message! |
Forgot Password? |
|
||||||||||||||
|
This post is made possible by the generous support of people like you and our sponsors: