Music, such music, is a sufficient gift. Why ask for happiness, why hope not to grieve? It is enough, it is blessed enough to live from day to day and to hear such music -- not too much, or the soul could not sustain it -- from time to time.
Vikram Seth,
An Equal Music



Music Page

By the time Ludwig van Beethoven wrote his Ninth Symphony, he was completely deaf. Legend has it that he used to lie down on the floor by the piano, to check out the vibrations caused by the music he was writing. Legend also has it that the composer couldn't even hear the thunderous applause when he conducted its first public performance in Vienna -- one of the musicians had to turn him around to make him 'see' the standing ovation.
Enough talk -- now listen to Beethoven's Symphony No. 9 in D minor.
Gustav Mahler wrote the last movement of his Fifth Symphony, and sent off the manuscript to the woman who would later become his wife. Alongwith the composition was his letter in which he proposed to her. As you could have guessed, she accepted.
Here's the composition that won her heart: Mahler's Symphony No. 5 in C sharp minor.
A young man once wrote to Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart asking for tips on how to compose symphonies. The maestro replied that symphonies are complex works, and adviced him to start smaller. The young man replied, "But then, you were writing symphonies when you were just eight!" Mozart replied, "But I didn't ask anyone how."
I would've loved to put the Twenty-Fifth Symphony here, but I don't have the full symphony with me. (Do tell me if you know someplace to find the CD or music files!) So for now, here is Mozart's Symphony No. 38 in D major.

I have loads and loads of classical music on my machine, but no time to HTMLise it all. So use the Network Neighbourhood to browse to aardvark. Or else go here.
I particularly recommend the Mozart section.

One of the questions John Lennon and Paul McCartney constantly had to field was, "How do you write such good songs?" John once replied, "Tell the truth and make it rhyme." And McCartney had this to say: "We're here to try and explode the talent myth. If we can do it anybody can." The Beatles have turned out some of the best-written songs ever in the English language, and John Lennon and Paul McCartney wrote most of those together. Here's one of my favourites: Yellow Submarine. For more songs by the Fab Four, use the Network Neighbourhood to browse to aardvark, or go here.

How about some ghazals, now? Here's one my favourites, written by Javed Akhtar and sung by Jagjit Singh:
Kabhi yoon bhi to ho... You can find more ghazals at aardvark, or here.



This page was last edited Wednesday, March 15, 2000 16:39 Indian Standard Time.

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