Originally posted by Sorrano:
Try orchestrating Beethoven's sonatas. I think you will find it a bit difficult as they are not that conducive to the orchestral medium.
Try orchestrating Beethoven's sonatas. I think you will find it a bit difficult as they are not that conducive to the orchestral medium.
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'Man know thyself'

), so I must apologize if immediateness is understood as lacking of structure but I don’t share that meaning. Don’t know your opinion about Paganini, but he caused a deep impression to Chopin, and he is one of those considered flamboyant and virtuoso and Paganini was the first composer I had all his works (ok, he wasn’t that prolific, not a great achievement). Behind (or besides) his speed-of-light passages are emotive largos, brilliant operistic orchestrations, amazing “twists and turns”… Just one thing about Liszt: Chopin said to his friend Stephen Heller that he’d like to steal Liszt’s way of playing his own preludes because he transported him beyond his own conceptions. Once again I can’t see the negative point of virtuosism.
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