Diferencias entre países en un mismo periodo / Differences between countries in the same period

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Hola queridos y apreciados amigos, espero estén cómo siempre muy pero muy bien el día de hoy

Hoy quiero aprovechar que justo hace unas publicaciones anteriores les traje un poco de la música del compositor Tchaikovsky, quién ya sabemos que nació el Rusia y que formó parte del romanticismo,

Ahora, quiero hacer enfoque a pequeñas diferencia que van a haber en el mismo romanticismo pero en diferentes países, en éste caso el romanticismo Ruso y el Alemán. Es por ello que hoy les traeré un poco del concierto número 1 de Max Bruch y su segundo movimiento, el movimiento lento,

Una característica notoria entre ambas piezas es que podemos decir que el romanticismo Ruso es mucho más incisivo, mucho más directo. Ésto se podría decir que es por la misma personalidad de los rusos, pero en realidad era una característica del romanticismo de ese entonces,

Ahora, el romanticismo de Bruch es mucho más sereno, quizás más calmo, pero con mucha intención entre clímax y clímax. La intensidad la usa cómo si fuese un camino, que conlleva a otro algo, y así sucesivamente.

En Tchaikovsky escuchábamos que si bien el fragmento era corto, el dramatismo empezaba desde la primera nota, dándonos a entender que lo realmente intenso comenzaba en el mismo silencio, antes de comenzar el mismo sonido,

Por otra parte Bruch no va a usar tanto dramatismo en la primera nota ni mucho menos algo tan drástico, pero si va a saber conectar y hacernos sentir que algo va a ir pasando, mientras van pasando los compases.

En pocas palabras Tchaikovsky en una muestra nos puede dar todo lo intenso del mundo, mientras que Bruch lo va a hacer pero preparándonos muestras más grandes,

Espero lo disfruten y puedan entender un poco de todo este mundo tan denso cómo lo es la música, ¡Abrazos!

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Hello dear and appreciated friends, I hope you are as always very, very well today

Today I want to take advantage of the fact that just a few previous publications ago I brought you a little of the music of the composer Tchaikovsky, who we already know was born in Russia and was part of romanticism,

Now, I want to focus on the small differences that there are going to be in the same romanticism but in different countries, in this case the Russian and the German romanticism. That is why today I will bring you a bit of Max Bruch's concert number 1 and his second movement, the slow movement,

A notable characteristic between both pieces is that we can say that Russian romanticism is much more incisive, much more direct. This could be said to be due to the very personality of the Russians, but in reality it was a characteristic of the romanticism of that time,

Now, Bruch's romanticism is much more serene, perhaps calmer, but with a lot of intention between climax and climax. The intensity is used as if it were a path, which leads to something else, and so on.

In Tchaikovsky we heard that although the fragment was short, the drama began from the first note, giving us to understand that what was really intense began in the silence itself, before beginning the same sound,

On the other hand, Bruch is not going to use so much drama in the first note, much less something so drastic, but he is going to know how to connect and make us feel that something is going to happen, while the bars go by.

In short, Tchaikovsky can give us all the intensity in the world in a sample, while Bruch is going to do it but by preparing larger samples,

I hope you enjoy it and can understand a little of this whole world as dense as music, Hugs!



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