The Musical Magazine, Band 3Otis, Broaders and Company, 1842 |
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Ergebnisse 1-5 von 67
Seite 15
... attention , not only of the audience , but also in the greater warmth and interest with which the perform- ers took the music up . There was less of that deadness which we have so often observed , yet the choruses want much pruning ...
... attention , not only of the audience , but also in the greater warmth and interest with which the perform- ers took the music up . There was less of that deadness which we have so often observed , yet the choruses want much pruning ...
Seite 18
... attention of artists , and the public , by some compositions for the piano , full of difficulties , which he alone could execute , and produced a strong sensation by his won- derful skill in the concerts , where he was heard during the ...
... attention of artists , and the public , by some compositions for the piano , full of difficulties , which he alone could execute , and produced a strong sensation by his won- derful skill in the concerts , where he was heard during the ...
Seite 19
... attention within its walls , as something which sooner or later must hold its place in every liberal system of education , and that place not an accidental or a stolen one , but one formally recognised . We that love music feel that it ...
... attention within its walls , as something which sooner or later must hold its place in every liberal system of education , and that place not an accidental or a stolen one , but one formally recognised . We that love music feel that it ...
Seite 20
... attention to this subject , to hold up the beautiful ideal , at least , and try to realize it , as the Pierian Sodality ? If all , whom this little society has interested from time to time , * could be interested now , at once , what ...
... attention to this subject , to hold up the beautiful ideal , at least , and try to realize it , as the Pierian Sodality ? If all , whom this little society has interested from time to time , * could be interested now , at once , what ...
Seite 27
... attention . The tears rose to my eyes . To my excited imagination we seemed to be listening to the dirge of Bellini ; and , as the last lengthened note died on the lips of the vocalist thus , thought I , he expired . Little did I then ...
... attention . The tears rose to my eyes . To my excited imagination we seemed to be listening to the dirge of Bellini ; and , as the last lengthened note died on the lips of the vocalist thus , thought I , he expired . Little did I then ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Academy of Music alto voice appears artist audience bass beautiful Beethoven Boston Academy called character chiroplast choirs choral chords chorus church music Clementi composer compositions concert Convention course cultivation effect excited execution exercise expression Fasch fault feeling Fidelio fugue genius GEORGE JAMES WEBB German give hand Handel and Haydn harmony Haydn Society hear heard heart hope idea improvement instru instruction interest labor lady lectures Liszt Logier Lowell Mason manner master means melody ment Messiah mind Mozart MUSICAL MAGAZINE musicians nature never notes object opera Oratorio orchestra overture passages perfect performance piano pianoforte pieces playing psalmody pupils remarks sacred singers singing solo song soprano soul spirit stringed instruments style success symphony talent taste teacher tenor theatre thing thought tion tone true tune violin violoncello vocal voice Weber whole words
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 246 - Jacob selah lift up your heads O ye gates and be ye lifted up ye everlasting doors and the King of glory shall come in...
Seite 187 - All this fires my soul, and, provided I am not disturbed, my subject enlarges itself, becomes methodized and defined, and the whole, though it be long, stands almost complete and finished in my mind, so that I can survey it, like a fine picture or a beautiful statue, at a glance. Nor do I hear in my imagination the parts successively, but I hear them, as it were, all at once. What a delight this is I cannot tell!
Seite 242 - He gave his back to the smiters : and his cheeks to them that plucked off the hair. He hid not his face : from shame and spitting.
Seite 278 - I also heard the men themselves, that they sang with a loud voice, saying, " Blessing, honour, and glory, and power be to Him that sitteth upon the throne, and to the Lamb, for ever and ever.
Seite 46 - I inquired into the truth ; and, while a man was playing on the trump marine, made my observations on a cat, a dog, a horse, an ass, a hind, cows, small birds, and a cock and hens, who were in a yard, under a window on which I was leaning. I did not perceive that the cat was the least affected, and I even judged, by her air, that she would have given all the instruments in the world for a mouse, sleeping in the sun all the time ; the horse...
Seite 187 - You say, you should like to know my way of composing, and what method I follow in writing works of some extent. I can really say no more on this subject than the following ; for I myself know no more about it, and cannot account for it. When I am, as it were, completely myself, entirely alone, and of good cheer — say, travelling in a carriage, or walking...
Seite 187 - Mozart's, and different from that of other people. For I really do not study or aim at any originality ; I should in fact not be able to describe in what mine consists, though I think it quite natural that persons who have really an individual appearance of their own, are also differently organised from others, both externally and internally. At least I know that I have not constituted myself, either one way or the other.
Seite 31 - Farinelli sang one of his best airs, which so overcame Philip that he desired he might be brought into his presence, when he promised to grant him any reasonable request he might make. The performer, in the most respectful manner, then begged of the King to allow himself to be shaved and attended by his domestics, to which Philip consented. Farinelli continued to sing to him daily until a perfect cure was effected. — The story of Tartini is rather curious : in a moment of musical enthusiasm he...
Seite 159 - Could a greater curse fall upon this country than that the sons of the intelligent, and enlightened, and virtuous men who achieved our independence and secured our freedom, should become less intelligent, less enlightened, and less virtuous than their sires? That these valleys and plains, instead of teeming with a race burning with the love of freedom, and ever ready and able to vindicate their rights, should be filled by a people supine and ignorant, the fitting tools of demagogues and tyrants?...
Seite 186 - Good God ! how sad all this makes me, and then again how angry and savage, and it is in such a state of mind that I do things which ought not to be done. You see, my dear good friend, so it is, and not as stupid or vile wretches (Lumpen) may have told you. Let this, however, go a cassa del diavolo.