Beethoven.
Beethoven wrote his second symphony in 1801-1802. It is surprisingly light-hearted in tone, considering Beethoven wrote it right at the time he realized he was becoming progressively more deaf.
He was completely death when he wrote the piece the 9th symphony. that will make you kind of crazy at the time specially if you are a composer.
"Dmitri Shostakovich" was a Russian composer during the Soviet era.
Beethoven's last symphony, the 9th, was also known as The Chorale. It was the first time any composer had scored a symphony for voice as well as instruments.
Music is produced by vibrations, and deaf people can still feel different vibrations. The story is told that Beethoven cut off the legs of the piano so he could hear the vibrations of the piano. This is perhaps not necessarily true, as many pianos of the time were made with removable legs so they could be carried into the various courts of the kings and emperors for performances. Regardless, by laying the piano flat on the ground, Beethoven could distinguish the vibrations and harmonies. Bear in mind that most of us can hear music in our heads - sometimes it can be a problem! An experienced musician does it all the time and it's not difficult for a professional composer to imagine the music and write it down. It isn't strictly necessary for a composer to use an instrument while composing, even though many like to do so. For a composer as brilliant as Beethoven, with symphonies as complex as those he composed, hearing the music in his head would have been no difficulty whatsoever.
Beethoven wrote his second symphony in 1801-1802. It is surprisingly light-hearted in tone, considering Beethoven wrote it right at the time he realized he was becoming progressively more deaf.
He was completely death when he wrote the piece the 9th symphony. that will make you kind of crazy at the time specially if you are a composer.
"Dmitri Shostakovich" was a Russian composer during the Soviet era.
Beethoven's last symphony, the 9th, was also known as The Chorale. It was the first time any composer had scored a symphony for voice as well as instruments.
Music is produced by vibrations, and deaf people can still feel different vibrations. The story is told that Beethoven cut off the legs of the piano so he could hear the vibrations of the piano. This is perhaps not necessarily true, as many pianos of the time were made with removable legs so they could be carried into the various courts of the kings and emperors for performances. Regardless, by laying the piano flat on the ground, Beethoven could distinguish the vibrations and harmonies. Bear in mind that most of us can hear music in our heads - sometimes it can be a problem! An experienced musician does it all the time and it's not difficult for a professional composer to imagine the music and write it down. It isn't strictly necessary for a composer to use an instrument while composing, even though many like to do so. For a composer as brilliant as Beethoven, with symphonies as complex as those he composed, hearing the music in his head would have been no difficulty whatsoever.
beethoven im not sure but he was deaf and did live in that time period
No, he's best known as a composer. He was already quite successful by the time he began to go deaf.
Haydn's lifespan is 1732-1809. He is an Austrian composer in classical period. He was a prominent composer in developing the symphony and string quartet genres.
Beethoven included vocal soloists and chorus in the final movement of his Ninth Symphony, which was the first time a composer had incorporated voices in a symphony. This groundbreaking addition elevated the symphony to a new level of emotional and spiritual depth, and solidified its place as a revolutionary work in the history of Western classical music.
Gioacchino Rossini.
The unusual characteristic of Mozart's 36th symphony is that the slow movement had a siciliano character which he only used one other time, in the Paris symphony. However, he continued to use this in his later works, such as symphony No. 40
He wrote Symphony in C, Symphony in E-flat major, Symphony in Three Movements, and a work called Symphonies of Wind Instruments which is not in fact a symphony; of that work he said he used the title Symphonies in its original meaning of "sounding together." He also wrote Symphony of Psalms, which uses a full chorus singing the text of some of the Biblical psalms of David, in three movements.