Saturday, April 4, 2020
Beethovens Ninth Symphony Essays - Classical Music, Music
  Beethoven's Ninth Symphony        It has been called the greatest audio entity one   could ever listen to; a song which can pierce the soul of   even the most dedicated music-hater: Beethoven's Ninth  Symphony. Not only has it been designated thus; also, as   one of the few truly divinely inspired works, one which most   men can only marvel at, as they wallow in their appropriate   humility. These creations, however, are definitely not the   only aspects of entities beyond the scopes of men; there are   far more examples, which are seen every day, but often   overlooked.   I was walking outside, with this song echoing in the   recesses of my mind, on a dismal, overcast day in the   Autumnal quarter, a day when where the streets blended with   the atmosphere, when one could hardly look up without   feeling the singe of the wind against one's face. To me,   these days have always conjured up images of some diezt,   looming storm, some silent tempest which, if not otherwise   distracted will soon wreak mayhem and disaster on my   environs.  This day had an intense air about it, as do others   of its ilk. This is most likely the fault of the storm   under which it is shadowed, as though it and its inhabitants   are uneasy and harrowed about the imminent predator waiting  overhead to pounce.   As the sky overhead swam with deeper and deeper   shades of gray and hopeless black, the song in my mind was   reaching some vocal crescendo in the fourth movement, a   better foreteller of the gale I could not imagine. While   the winds bullied and tormented the defenseless   neighborhood, I started for my house.  Unexpectedly, as the crescendo was losing speed, a   quiet, pacific violin entered the musical fray in my brain,   and the entire mood of the symphony mellowed, the winds   themselves pacified, seemingly under Ludwig's fickle  dominion. Thinking the storm had passed, I continued   blissfully onward to the meadows which were my destination.  Again I was assaulted, this time by a different part   of the symphony; not too long after the first chorale. This   was the startling and almost fearful, but still uplifting,   part in which the female and male vocals collided like two   huge tidal waves with the power to splinter a fleet of ships   with the German Alle Menschen repeated several times. Upon   this onslaught of euphony, I turned from whatever I might   have been thinking before, and looked at some violently   twisting and rising leaves and other debris, and gazed at   the playful heavens, again ominous.  Annoyed with Beethoven and the cruel elements, I   stood there, unmoving; indecisive, not knowing whether to   turn around or pursue my present course, I felt the excited   chorale still striking some unknown and inexplicable fear   within me, as though some divine creature were about to   strike me down in some vehemence which lies well beyond the   realms of verbal description. So, as the chorus continued   repeating its faithful mantra, the winds again rose up   stronger than before, as twigs began to snap and fall about   me; I was still, yet deeply moved.  Perplexed at the whimsy antics of nature, I was   about to retreat to my home, when, in the remarkable   symphony, a single male vocal broke through the complicated   entanglement of godly voices, and I, despite the protests of   my superego, decided to continue on with some alien, renewed   vigor against the gusty weather, as though I were the bearer   of news about the winner of a war or some other momentous   aftermath. At this, as though impressed with my display  of singular determination, the wind made itself placid,   laying down before me.  Violins were heard, along with the driving, male   voice. Suddenly, completely without warning and all at once,   what seemed like throngs of angelic, female voices sang as   though sent on an appeal to God on the eve of apocalypse.   They continued, soon joined by male voices, and other   instruments, in the most spiritual and epiphytic   reverberation I've ever had the pleasure of witnessing, and,   seemingly, all in my favor, against cruel and remorseless   nature, pleading to let me pass. I, however, felt like only   a petty byezder in this competition between the symphony   and the elements, completely unable to comprehend, let alone   justify either side's wish, only able    
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