It is no secret that I love classical music – we have certainly featured a good number of music related lists in the past. So today’s list should come as no surprise. Here we look at ten of the great composers from various periods of classical music and their most monumental works. I have tried to pick the best video clips to demonstrate the selected works.
The verdict is still out concerning the finest Requiem Mass. Mozart, Verdi, and Berlioz typically land in the top three. There’s no denying, though, that Verdi’s is the most terrifying. In order to write a good Dies Irae section (for which this Mass is legendary), which translates to “Day of Anger,” namely God’s anger during Armageddon, the composer seems to need what Verdi’s wife called “a Mercurial temper.” Short-fused or long doesn’t matter, as long as it burns like Hellfire. Verdi, as is typical with Italians, could make people run out of a room when he got angry.
The whole piece is magnificent, and critics like to call it his finest opera. It is not written in one overriding key, but like an opera, changes keys many times. The Dies Irae is by far the most famous section, but his Libera Me, written originally for the death of Rossini, is also glorious, as are the Requiem and Kyrie sections. Not that the other sections are bad. But if Verdi had written only those sections named, and nothing else for his whole life, he would still be remembered as one of the most Catholic and Italian composers ever.
This may be the most titanic concerto for piano in the popular repertoire. Busoni wrote one on an even larger scale, but it is not played as often.
It is four movements long, instead of the usual three, and the first is an absolute masterpiece of craftsmanship. The main theme is worked into a passage about halfway through that sounds very similar to the Battle Hymn of the Republic. This is a freak coincidence. It ends with a particularly demanding passage of double trills, in which the fingers of both hands must oscillate in the same direction. Try doing this, and you’ll see that the natural tendency is for the hands to mirror each other. Then the trills become tremolos, all while the entire orchestra is blasting away. The pianist must be very strong to be heard over all the other instruments.
The second movement is even more bombastic, and Brahms called it “a little wisp of a scherzo.” The third is well known for a cello solo, and the last is a little more cheerful and jubilant than the first two.
It is the most difficult piano sonata by far, and one of the most difficult pieces ever written for any instrument. Liszt intended it to a magnum opus in terms of technical artistry. Many professional pianists either never perform it, or spend several years practicing it alone, after becoming professionals, before they dare attempt it in a recital.
It is one movement, more or less, and lasts about 30 minutes. There are several melodies throughout, and the first is worked through every kind of development possible. In one of the most difficult passages, scale and arpeggio runs in one hand are accompanied by traveling tremolos in the other, very quickly. By the end, there is nothing left to say.
It has been said that Bach and Chopin are the two most idiomatic piano composers in history. Performers of Chopin’s day got word around to him that his music was very difficult for them in some passages, even though they were well versed in all the major composers at that time.
Chopin responded by writing these studies for piano technique, not meant to be universal, but meant to train the performer to play Chopin’s style of work. Today, since his music has been so integral in rounding out the Romantic era of music history, his etudes are a bible for up-and-coming pianists. Once they are mastered, a pianist can play anything from the Romantic era.
It may be the single finest piece of chamber music ever written. That competition is among this, Beethoven’s late quartets, and some by Mozart and Haydn.
It is four movements, and every movement is a masterpiece, as fresh to hear the 100th time as the first. It has a cyclic structre, the final theme of the last movement being paired with the first them of the first in a double fugue. It is very popular primarily because of its driving, unbridled melodic power, from beginning to end. Even the fairly slow second movement is a funeral march, and thus holds the listener at the edge of his or her seat.
Schumann referred to it as “heavenly length.” Schubert had a bit of a problem ending a piece when he was having fun writing it. This symphony averages about 50 minutes, and encompasses every musical idea and technique for which Schubert was famous: outstanding lyrical melodies that are very well developed, a lighthearted mood, a dark, tragic mood, all in perfectly balanced orchestration.
It is the longest opera routinely performed throughout the world, at 6 hours including intermissions. Most operas are 3 to 3.5 hours. Wagner spent 26 years writing the libretti and scores to the four music dramas that comprise Der Ring des Nibelungen.
Gotterdammerung is the last of the four, and Wagner collects all the leit-motifs, of which technique he is the famous inventor, into a powerful storyline that must be reduced to its very basics in order to fit in this list.
Siegfried, the world’s greatest hero, is by now in love with Brunnhilde. Everyone in the entire world, man and god, wants the ring, and Greed is the uncontrollable element. Hagen, one of Siegfried’s companions, spears him in the back, and later attempts to take the ring from his dead hand. The hand appears to be alive, and so the ring is left on Siegfried’s body. He is burned on a pyre with the ring, and Brunnhilde rides a horse into the flames to die with him.
The very final leit-motif in the whole story is Wagner’s melody for “love.” Everything else, man and god, is destroyed. Valhalla burns in the distance. After a performance of this piece, you will wonder if there is any music left to write about anything. It has Siegfried’s famous funeral march and Brunnhilde’s immolation scene at the end.
When Beethoven set his mind to it, he actually made good on his intent to write the best example he could in a particular musical genre. Viewers may have expected his 9th Symphony, and it may be the finest symphony of all time. But in this lister’s opinion, his Solemn Mass is his finest large-scale work.
It is not as Christian as it is mystically Deist. Beethoven’s religious beliefs are still debated, but there is no doubt that he believed in God. In the margin of the first sheet of his Gloria section, he wrote, “God above all things!” Every section is a titanic testimony to what he believed in terms of God, Christianity to some extent, Heaven, etc.
The work defies linguistic description. It has garnered just about every positive adjective in a language over the years. The most accurate, perhaps, is “ethereal.” The Gloria, for its part, is unbelievably soaring, even moreso than his 9th Symphony. It ends on a 5 chord, the dominant, instead of a 1 chord, the tonic, and this serves to make it sound like something otherworldly, or as if the music never ends, and Heaven’s orchestra takes up where it leaves off.
Wagner called it “the most perfect opera there is.” Impressive coming from him. Wagner was Mozart’s greatest admirer. Don Giovanni is a very simple story of a lecherous fool who enjoys having affairs with any woman who takes his fancy. Some have claimed it to be a self-indictment of the composer, who was something of a womanizer.
At the end, Don Giovanni is interrupted during supper by the ghost of a man he killed in order to escape, after having sex with that man’s daughter. The ghost demands him to repent, and Giovanni refuses several times. Demons appear and drag him to Hell.
Then the rest of the characters appear in the last scene and perform an ensemble soliloquy making fun of him as a sinner.
This opera is the essence of balance, among orchestra, chorus, soloists, even between music and drama. The music typically overshadows the drama, but not in this one, and it’s as mesmerizing and enchanting the thousandth time as the first.
Many musicologists consider it the finest achievement in all of music. Bach never intended it to be performed, but wanted to suit his own curiosity as to whether he had mastered every aspect of music composition at his time.
As a result, this Mass has everything Baroque in it: 4, 5, and 6 part choruses, solos, fugues, general contrapuntal mastery par excellence. It is one of the few missa toti in existence, that is, the entire Latin Mass set to music. Most masses, including those by Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, etc., are abbreviated versions of the whole litany. The Mass in b minor, consequently, is one of the longest ever written, requiring about 2 hours to perform.
It even incorporates numerology, one of Bach’s hobbies, into its music. The Crucifixus chorus is based on a melody that, when transcribed to a Cartesian plane, forms a cross.
The Mass is comprised in large part of cantatas and other sacred works which Bach wrote earlier in his life, and revised for inclusion as a chorus here, a solo there. He wrote several sections expressly for the Mass, and they are among his last works, most of them in the Credo section. If you are not particularly enthusiastic about such complex music, you’ll probably find his glorious Sanctus the easiest to enjoy.



















@casualreader
personally I’d say Bartok 4
@ Cyn, 58,
Lovely to see your smiling face(s), my dear.
“just how far up is that”
I don’t know. I’ve never tried. I could say +as far as you like+, but that might be misinterpreted and shock the sensitive, especially those hordes of under 13s here!
@ dtf 61
@casualreader
“personally I’d say Bartok 4″
I’ll settle for that … It’s even got the first example of his Little Night Music (Eine Kleine Nachtmusik), which should please everybody, even the Ringtoners. Apropos has anyone put the whole of the Ring cycle as a ringtone yet? Splendid idea. I like it!
@ astraya 60,
“@Casualreader [57]: BTW, do classical music buffs burst in on other completely different LV musical topics and proclaim something by Beethoven or whoever as being a better #1, followed by a right-on post or two? I’d hope to find people who share my taste more mature than that, in public at least.
Hey, let’s try that the next time Jamie posts a rock-music list!”
Excellent wheeze. O.K. gang, let’s do it. Bartok’s 4th?
@deathgleaner [38]: agree the glorious ninth ..
Mahler’s Symphony of a Thousand would indeed be a good addition to the list.
Also Richard Strauss should find a place in the list, his symphonic poems are among the finest music ever written, especially his monumental Alpine Symphony with its furious Thunderstorm:
Anyway, it’s nice to see Flamehorse (thanks) and various others above still oozing enthusiasm and knowledge about the most varied type of compositions, including by far the most profound, I suspect the world, or at least our civilization, will ever experience.
In more pessimistic moments I tend to suspect it’s diminishing and drowning beneath a new Dark Age of homgeneous (thesaurus word!), relentless, intrusive, unvarying, mind-numbing, thudding +industrial+ music and the endless mantra of rap.
Hey guys,
Taking up where we left off at 63 above, why don’t we form a new group called +The Ringtones+ (now go tell me one already exists!)? We could start a new classi-rock-byte-beat style based on little clips from Mozzi, Beatover, Jayess, Shosta-baby, Schumi (not the F1 driver of that ilk), Joe Green, Waggers, It’sh you, Bert, et al.
Who knows, we mind even end up on LV as +Top 10 Classi-Beat Bytes Which Last 10 Seconds Or Less+.
That reminds me (by contrast) I once visited a country where they’ve played the Andante of K467 (remember the accompanying film of the same name?) as background to the TV weather forecast. That was nightly for over 25 years. Of course it was/is played at a terribly discreet low volume so as not to distract (unduly) from the vital weather announcements, faded out here and there when appropriate and cut dead at the moment the forecast ends. That is after the forecaster has informed us about the rest of the evening’s fare, including the immediately following film. Our friends always watched the other main channel, where the background was meaningless muzak.
Coming soon: a film based around the creation of Don Giovanni – http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/movies/i-don-giovanni-20100430-tydq.html
I think I agree with some of these picks, but I question the reasoning behind some as well.
Mozart’s “Requiem”, in my opinion, definitely trumps “Don Giovanni”. And, in the case of his operas, “The Marriage of Figaro” beats out “Giovanni”; I’d check out the Act II Finale of “Figaro” as an example.
As far as Beethoven goes, why not say Symphony No. 9?!?! You mention it for a second, but it’s his crowning achievement! His 9th is much more epic, dramatic, and effective than “Missa Solemnis”. And while I don’t normally say that popularity should be used as evidence for a piece’s redeeming qualities, one can simply look at the performance frequencies for both pieces and easily see the notoriety of one of the other. Plus I think “Missa Solemnis” kind of drags on…
Schubert is perhaps the most misunderstood on this list… I like how you used mainly large symphonic works, but it’s no secret that his major output was for solo voice. The “Winterreise” is an awesome example, and would’ve been my pick.
Verdi’s “Requiem” is crazy intense, and very dramatic, but perhaps not as tastefully constructed as Brahms’ or Mozart’s.
I don’t mean to pick apart your list (I’m sure I seem like a total douche… sorry), but thanks for posting!
@Bucketheadrocks [36]:
U know what im getting tired of your crap!
Bach sux!
Buckethead sux!
ha! jk!
I Love classical music!
Bach,Beethoven, And Wangner are the best.
ummm i was driving in the car and a song came up. It has been in my head since and is my favorite song. Its called Danse Macabre by Camille Saint-Saëns. im not sure if its very popular or not but i highly recommend it to anyone with an for classical.
@ ComposerNate, 69,
Interesting points. I think, though, it all boils down to what you mean by +monumental+, or how you define it, as I noted above. For example it’s hardly possible, or certainly extremely difficult, to compare monumental across genres. Bach’s solo cello suites are monumental cello works, but not exactly +monumental+ by comparison with the B minor or St Mathew.
That criterion applies even more to Beethoven. He wrote monumental examples of most genres that seriously occupied him. Op. 131 is monumental among his and any string quartets. The 9th is monumental among his symphonies, but not as monumental as the most powerful of Bruckner’s and Mahler’s. The Emperor stands monumental among the greatest piano concertos in the repertoire. Above all, I would cite the astonishing 32 Diabelli variations though. The range of moods alone is mind-blowing. The work may not be as monumental +physically+ as the works with more forces just mentioned, but it’s the greatest set of vars ever written, alongside Bach’s Goldbergs. In fact the Goldbergs are just as wonderful, but more intimate than monumental. Not so Beethoven’s masterpiece. He was handed a jaunty little tune and asked by Diabelli (who wrote it) to contribute one variation on it to join a compendium by other composers of the day. The theme’s triteness so enraged him he almost screwed it up and binned it. Instead he wrote what IMO and that of many others, is the greatest and most powerful set of variations composed by anybody for any instrument, group of instruments, of full-blown orchestra. And we’re talking competition with the likes of Brahms, Reger, Schmidt, Dvorak, Rachmininov, Old Uncle Tom Cobley and all. Now that’s what I call monumental!
In case anyone is reading and interested, and doesn’t know, I forgot to indicate the Diabelli’s are for solo piano.
@EVCunningham [48]:
*****ing idiot
@Casualreader [72]:
I agree. The Diabelli Variations have got to be my favorite piano work, and I’m glad somebody else out there recognizes its genius.
@ Ralphie, 73,
“@ EVCunningham [48]:
*****ing idiot”
I should guess more as much in need of pity as contempt, and probably a brain-graft too. Sorry that last remark wrongly implies a brain was there in the first place. I ought to have typed +a brain insert+.
“@ dtf 74 @Casualreader [72]:
I agree. The Diabelli Variations have got to be my favorite piano work, and I’m glad somebody else out there recognizes its genius.”
I own more versions of those and also the Goldbergs than any other works, and I’m a chamber music addict at heart!
But I’m particularly sold on variations and the winning textures of harmoniemusik and its allies as well (Mozart, Krommer, Haydn, Reicha, etc.). The Diabellis just keep on rewarding and yielding (I try not to ‘overplay’ them lest familiarity should breed over-familiarity!) I once attended a series of music lectures by guy who was a well-known authority on Russian music and used to broadcast. He explained the essence of good variation techique. Basing them on a very clear, simple little undeveloped tune offers most possibilities, as Beethoven discovered. Other particular favourites are Dvorak’s Symphonic Vars., Brahms’s on a theme of Handel, and Reger’s on a Mozart theme (could anyone surpass Maxie baby at that culminating fugue?)
Great list, I might have included:
Handel's Messiah or Royal Fireworks
Haydn's Creation
Mozart's Requiem
Thanks for the great list…the only thing I think clearly missing, because I think it is THE greatest classical work of all time, is the Brahms Requiem.
Name
Name
Name
internet tv online
Name
Brahms Violin Concerto, op.61 with Jascha Heifetz (violinist) and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra with the conductor Fritz Reiner.
No.3, Beethoven’s “Missa Solemnis”, I would undoubtedly have picked his 9th Symphony. Leonard Bernstein quoted the 9th as “The greatest work in the realm of Art, regardless of the Art Form. No.9, in my opinion is a tough one for Brahms and the 2nd Piano Concerto is definitely incredible, however, I would have gone with his Violin Concerto, Op.61. If you should listen to it, try to listen to it with the great Violinist Jascha Heifitz performing it. Overall, I do believe this to be a very good list.
Just the mention of Schubert’s Great make me grin
. I’m an atheist, but listening to Schubert is like a religious experience.
I love it, Bob, because when I first psetod this entry I had mistakenly pasted the same video in twice! (Corrected later, of course.) So this was sort of appropriate!
And yes, it COULD make for a good week or more of entries I think I did that with another work last year at some point!