Can you think of Beethoven as both rough hewn and epicene?, Bernstein asked.
change the comma to a question mark
Her name was Elisabeth Vietz.
Beethoven and Haydn both worked under the Patronage System. However, both often worked for third parties selling compositions, doing lessons, or performing. ......... Beethoven and Haydn both worked under the patronage system, however, Beethoven did not work exclusively under this system. Haydn stayed with his patron until the Spanish duke died! Beethoven was paid from several avenues and had freedom to write or not write when he chose. The difference was, if Haydn was asked to write by his patron he had to whether he felt like it or not, Beethoven was what we would refer to as a free agent. So the answer is Hayden worked exclusively under the patronage system for the large majority of his life.
This is a very good question to ask. Someone at one point or another has asked what the difference is between these two composers. Well I think I can help you out with this. For one, Mozart is very radical and out there. He would have been the Trent Reznor of his time, whereas Beethoven would have been the Justin Timberlake of his time. Mozart is very spontaneous and outspoken. _____ Beethoven's music was considered to be radical and he was accused of endangering the morals of young women by arousing their passions with his music. Beethoven also had the advantage of the recently invented pianoforte. The movies "Amadeus" and "Immortal Beloved" might give an insight into both of these classical heavyweights.
The top most favored Beethoven song would be Fur Elise. I have discovered documents that were written by him that says he asked people that worked with him, and even the audience. People would tell him there favorite one and calculate it down on a piece of paper and play the top three songs in a concert that played many songs, hoping people didn't notice. I very much hope that my research helped you out. Have a nice day.
Justin Bieber has asked out Rihanna, Beyonce and Selena Gomez.
Can you think of Beethoven as both rough hewn and epicene?, Bernstein asked.
"The Unanswered Question" is the title of a series of lectures Leonard Bernstein gave when he held the Charles Eliot Norton professorship of poetry at Harvard University in 1973. Bernstein took his title from a work by the American composer Charles Ives, who, Bernstein noted, probably meant the phrase in a metaphysical sense. Bernstein asked it in a musical sense: "Whither music?" The first lecture lays out his somewhat abstruse and (as he acknowledges) unverifiable notion of a universal "musical phonology," an innate musical grammar or language in the human species. Bernstein had been reading Noam Chomsky and the cutting-edge linguistic theorists of the day, and was clearly eager to apply some of their concepts to music. It is a fascinating performance, fizzing with ideas and possessed of a truly inspirational passion--even if, in the end, Bernstein fails to convince us of his argument. Well worth reading, or, better yet, watching, as the lectures were videotaped.
Her name was Elisabeth Vietz.
Loss of hearing source from- the same guy who asked the question, got the answer off wikipedia, yay!
Beethoven and Haydn both worked under the Patronage System. However, both often worked for third parties selling compositions, doing lessons, or performing. ......... Beethoven and Haydn both worked under the patronage system, however, Beethoven did not work exclusively under this system. Haydn stayed with his patron until the Spanish duke died! Beethoven was paid from several avenues and had freedom to write or not write when he chose. The difference was, if Haydn was asked to write by his patron he had to whether he felt like it or not, Beethoven was what we would refer to as a free agent. So the answer is Hayden worked exclusively under the patronage system for the large majority of his life.
This is a very good question to ask. Someone at one point or another has asked what the difference is between these two composers. Well I think I can help you out with this. For one, Mozart is very radical and out there. He would have been the Trent Reznor of his time, whereas Beethoven would have been the Justin Timberlake of his time. Mozart is very spontaneous and outspoken. _____ Beethoven's music was considered to be radical and he was accused of endangering the morals of young women by arousing their passions with his music. Beethoven also had the advantage of the recently invented pianoforte. The movies "Amadeus" and "Immortal Beloved" might give an insight into both of these classical heavyweights.
This may not be the answer as it was not played in the opening score. In "The Longest Day", the troops on the ships saw the paratrooper planes fly over and one was flashing the Morse Code for "V" or dot-dot-dot-dash. One GI asked what that meant, the the other said "Victory, you know bah-bah-bah-BAAA" and hummed out Beethoven's 5th Symphony theme.
FAQ means Frequently Asked Questions, or possibly "Frequently Asked Question", if there is only one.frequently asked questionsfrequently asked questionsFrequently asked questionsFrequently Asked Questions.Frequently Asked QuestionsFrequently Asked Questionsfrequently asked questionsFrequently Asked Question(s)Usually all the questions listed in the FAQ are all of the "frequently asked questions". These are questions that have been asked many times by many different people.Frequently Asked Questions.Frequently asked questions.Frequently Asked Questions.
you hereby are asked
The passive forms of "ask" are "is asked," "was asked," "has been asked," and "will be asked."
Okay, I asked her. I caved when she asked forgiveness.
I was asked if I could chair the committee.I'm glad I wasn't asked to do it.We had asked for a table by the window.They weren't asked to attend.You were asked to pick up your room.