Showing posts with label Beethoven. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beethoven. Show all posts

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Still Entranced

Supper Mind Music Library

I'm still entranced by this music and probably will be for some time to come now as Ed has gotten me this digital 20 album library plus bonuses for Christmas.

It is going to take awhile to get them all downloaded so instead of going after them in the order the links are listed I'm going after the ones I'm most anxious to start listening to first.  One of those is the Blissful Meditation: Piano Moods as one track is Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata which has a lot of nostalgia value for me going way back to toddler hood at least.  My Dad used to play it on the piano a lot when I was little so it became part of the soundtrack of my early childhood into my mid teens.



I wanted to embed the the video containing their BWE enhanced Moonlight Sonata track from the Super Mind Music YouTube channel but they had embedding disabled so I found this wonderful recording which is beautiful but does not contain the Brainwave Entrainment tones used by Mind Power MP3.com.



Beethoven - Moonlight Sonata with Full Orchestra

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Sunday, November 24, 2013

Sunday Serenity #364


Beethoven: Symphony No. 9 --  Handel: Organ Concerto
University of California Television (UCTV)
note: begins with Handel Concerto.  Beethoven's 9 starts at approx 14 min
This is an ongoing series from my Bucket List of things I desperately want to do before I loose the rest of my vision.


My Bucket List
#6 Attend a Performance of Beethoven's Symphony #9 by a top notch Orchestra

MAX Philharmonic Orchestra
Beethoven 9th 2012
Of course I'd want to sit with a good view of the percussion section.  The pic to the left is a still from the vid linked in the caption.  The drummer is a woman!  I would have posted that vid if the audio quality had not been so poor.

If I was actually presenting these from a list already prepared and in the order of most important, this one would probably take first place.

I discovered Beethoven's Symphony #9 in the early 90s while listening to the local classical radio station in Longview.  For the first half dozen times I heard it I missed the identification.  By the time I learned it was Beethoven's #9 I was already deeply in love with it.  Only way to put it that translates how I felt about it.

Learning next that it's final movement was known as Ode to Joy made it that much sweeter.  I took it on as my mantra, my totem, my mood medicine, my theme song, my impetus, my name (identity, identification; the very notes not the words or title), my manifestation (that which embodied my essence and now represents, announces my presence).

I managed to get a passable recording off the radio but soon bought a CD.  One of the first CDs we bought as the new technology became more affordable than cassettes.  The first of at least four that I wore out.  Several more got damaged.  I listened to it over and over and over.  In the beginning half a dozen times a day or more.  I put it on repeat as I did chores, wrote, daydreamed, exercised, meditated. Within a month or two I was able to play a several minute section in my head with the boombox off.  

I couldn't choose which sections.  A random memory of a note would trigger it and for a few seconds or a few minutes my mind was replaying it.  It would last only as long as I could stay both focused and relaxed.  The moment my thoughts strayed or I tried to direct it there would be an implacable silence.  But for the duration it was almost hard to tell the difference between that mental exercise and the real recording.  It crossed my mind that this is probably something like what it sounded like for the deaf Beethoven as he composed it.  

That was an especially rough time in my life.  I was in the throws of another lifequake of even greater proportions than this year's.  Just the high notes per se:  
  • My mood disorder had not yet been identified so was still untreated and currently in a very low slump. 
  • Ed was unemployed. 
  • I'd recently excommunicated myself from the fundamentalist church I was raised in (in which my identity was firmly rooted and my extended family on both sides were involved)
  • Our behaviorally challenging 17 year old nephew was living with us while attending his last two years of school
  • I was still reeling from the confirmation in 1990 that I had inherited the RP and was already legally blind 
  • I was plagued by an abscessed tooth 
  • I'd defaulted on my student loan which limited my options
  • The recent birth of several nieces and nephews had awakened my yearning for a baby of my own
  • A baby, one of a set of twins, we were caring for several days a week, succumbed to SIDS (not while in our care thank goodness)  
I credit Beethoven's 9th for seeing me through all of that.  It is not overstating to say that it was co-creating or reprogramming me over the 7 years between 1993 and 1999.  The list of things it did for me seems endless:
  • It modified my mood
  • It embedded in my consciousness the essential shape of a story and was thus behind the several short stories I finished over those years and the mapping out of several novels. 
  • It moved me both emotionally and physically--literally motivated me to get myself in motion both as in exercise and chores and in mapping out my future, setting goals and taking action. 
  • It revitalized hope.  
  • It taught me what 'joy' feels like so I could recognize it when it manifested.  
  • It imbued me with the sense that the ups and downs of life were a given and that neither the dark times nor the bright times last so one must learn to ride those times like a wave attributing permanence to neither.  This shift in consciousness enabled me to ride through several more low times in my mood cycle without succumbing to despair or suicidal ideation.
I've not listened to it much over the last several years and I think that was a grave error.  My two discs bought in the late 90s have scratches on them and I hadn't bothered replacing them since my discman had stopped working and my netbook's audio jack had significant issues for several years making the listening experience unpleasant.  I have been using YouTube to go listen every once in awhile when it crosses my mind.  But now that I have the Blaze smartphone I'm going to look for a good recording of the complete symphony to put on it and also on my Aspire.

But the epitome of a listening experience I long for is to sit through a performance where the music surrounds me, envelopes me, and becomes a representation of That in which I live and breathe and have my being.

My Bucket List

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Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Ode To Joy

Yesterday Ed downloaded Beethoven's 9th Symphony for me. It took him two days to find a version that was whole and of good quality. This has been one of my favorite pieces of music since I discovered it in 1993. I latched onto the 4rth movement as a lifeline through many of the ups and downs of my mood disorders. I have often wondered if there was something about this symphony that actually rewires the brain and makes it less receptive to the emotions of fear and despair or maybe just more competent to process them in a life affirming way because it really did feel like the hundreds of hours I listened to this symphony throughout the nineties caused a significant shift in my psyche.

The first time I consciously remember hearing The Ode to Joy, I was listening to classical radio while doing housework. It stopped me in my tracks and before it was over I was in tears and for the first time in my life I knew what was meant by tears of joy. I did not even know it was called Ode to Joy yet. I had to listen to the station obsessively for over a week before I caught the name of the Symphony and it was several weeks later before I bought a CD and learned what the 4rth movement was named.

Ode to Joy, both the title and the music, has been tightly woven into my sense of myself since then. My discovery of it was near the beginning of the traumatic break with the fundamentalist sect of my childhood and thus the beginning of what I did not yet know was my personal spiritual quest. It seems somehow apropos that my spiritual quest seemed to take on the theme of seeking joy. The pun or double entendre was not lost on me then. I had long thought it was ironic, even grossly unfair, that having been given the name, Joy, I spent a good part of every year since age four battling the demons of profound sadness and despair.

I have not listened to Beethoven's 9th very often since we moved in with Ed's parents in 2001. I did bring my two CDs of it with me but both had developed scratches right in the middle of the 4rth movement. Then the headphones to my discman got shorted out. I had gotten Ed a nice boom box that first Christmas here and after that I did listen to it occasionally but it was so frustrating to not be able to crank it like I always had before. The walls of trailer homes are thin. Even cranked it would have had to compete with the very loud soundtracks of the movies my father-in-law watched. Listening to my music cranked was one of the benefits of staying home alone on Saturdays during dirt track season when Ed and his folks were gone from six to ten hours.

Somehow in the last couple of years both of the CDs had gotten misplaced in the chaos of this room. I found them during the June makeover of the room and started listening to them in July during the Sven challenge after I suddenly remembered that music had been an integral part of my writing routines all through the nineties after I had discovered its power to set a mood-to-order for a scene or even an entire story or a character. By associating a piece of music to a particular piece of writing it not only helps set the needed mood but it helps in the transitioning back into the work on it after a break. It also helps immensely in retrieval of memories of your thoughts and intentions for the story which I guess is why it helps with the transitioning--a kind of conjuring by association. Sometimes I can write on the scenes while the music is playing but more often listening to the music is part of the intense daydreaming of the story during the prep stages--the initial prep stage when a story idea is newborn and the daily prep stages for writing scenes.

Beethoven's 9th symphony, movement 4 had become so integral to my life, I very nearly named my blog Ode to Joy.

It had been several months again since I listened to it and years since I've been able to hear the 4rth movement without skips and stutters. I listened to the entire symphony shortly after I woke up this morning. All 74 minutes of it. I listened with my total attention. In the last ten minutes I was once again surprised by tears of joy. I wanted to listen to the 4rth movement again but the file Ed downloaded is all one track. So this evening I went looking for a good YouTube version of Ode To Joy. The best one was split into two parts which I've embedded below. There is also a good presentation of the entire symphony in two parts: Part 1 and Part 2



Ode To Joy from Beethoven's Symphony #9 4rht movement. Part one is above and part two is below.


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Sunday, November 11, 2007

Sunday Serenity #31

I had no idea such things as techno remixes of classical music existed. I found them while exploring YouTube for Igor Stravinsky's Rite of Spring and Vivaldi's Four Seasons in relation to my NaNo novel, Spring Fever.

I like.



I'm not sure how serenity inducing this remix of Beethoven's Ode To Joy is, but since I began Sunday Serenity for the purpose of injecting more of both peace and joy into my weeks I say this counts. I love Beethoven's 9th Symphony and it's last movement is my personal anthem. I dig this version.

There is more where this came from. Explore.

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Sunday, May 06, 2007

Sunday Serenity #4

This Moonlight Sonata has always been able to mellow me. Even when listening to my Dad fumble his way through it like a third year piano student who had practiced only half a dozen times per year over the next three decades. Even with the fumbling, you could tell how much he loved it. Maybe that's why I do too.

May is the month of my Dad's birthday so he was on my mind and when I stumbled onto this while searching for a Sunday Serenity offering, I didn't need to look any further.

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