Einstein

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Avatar of pdela
HueyWilliams wrote:

Wow, his hair looks like a spiral galaxy!

So pdela, is that how your hair looks too?

No, I use Hairspray

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Optimissed wrote:

The people this geezer chose for their supposed brilliance were just merely clever. Like Mozart who wrote thousands of songs, each one almost identical to the next, the Muzakmeister of his era, or Einstein who beat his wife and stole Maxwell's equations.

stupid, much?

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stupidity is a formula...

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Optimissed wrote:

Mozart who wrote thousands of songs, each one almost identical to the next

Oh really? I doubt that the Köchel catalogue includes more than 1,000 items, let alone thousands of them. Most of Mozart's pieces aren't songs (since there's no singing involved in them) and are greatly varied.

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you simply reverse the two holes in the human body - exit point becomes the entry point and the entry point becomes exit point - that is the formula...ass for mouth and mouth for ass

Avatar of Optimissed

 Laughing Mixing up stupidity and disagreement is the essence of stupidity, surely??

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yes, you are mistaking stupidity for disagreeing

talking out of your ass is not disagreeing.

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"Mozart wrote songs...identical"

"Einstein beat his wife and stole"...

a lot of stupid coming out of that ass for mouth

Avatar of Optimissed

Since much of what Mozart wrote can be sung, it can be considered as songs or tunes, whether or not they were expressly written for voice accompaniment, which many, of course, were. A lot of his tunes are simplistic or childlike although some of them are more ambitious but he repeats the same motifs both within his tunes and between them. In general Mozart is boring, unlike some other Baroque composers. He composed what would now be considered "light music", the pop music of his era, written to appeal to those without a sophisticated appreciation of music as opposed, say, to pop's equivalent in jazz-rock. It's typical of some chess players to get all pedantic over detail and entirely miss the intention. Never mind, when you worship achievment, it's easy to get it mixed up with brilliance.

Avatar of red-lady
Optimissed wrote:

Since much of what Mozart wrote can be sung, it can be considered as songs or tunes, whether or not they were expressly written for voice accompaniment, which many, of course, were. A lot of his tunes are simplistic or childlike although some of them are more ambitious but he repeats the same motifs both within his tunes and between them. In general Mozart is boring, unlike some other Baroque composers. He composed what would now be considered "light music", the pop music of his era, written to appeal to those without a sophisticated appreciation of music as opposed, say, to pop's equivalent in jazz-rock. It's typical of some chess players to get all pedantic over detail and entirely miss the intention. Never mind, when you worship achievment, it's easy to get it mixed up with brilliance.

I think I just fell of my chair. Let me check. Yes :)

Tunes? Songs? Mozart did not write songs, nor did he write tunes. He was one of the most brilliant composers ever. The childish 'tunes' you talk about may sound childish because he wrote them when he was 5. That's my guess.

Good luck with the singing though. You should start with his requiem! Wink

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A child would, indeed, consider him brilliant.

Avatar of 5iegbert_7arrasch
Optimissed wrote:

Since much of what Mozart wrote can be sung, it can be considered as songs or tunes, whether or not they were expressly written for voice accompaniment, which many, of course, were. A lot of his tunes are simplistic or childlike although some of them are more ambitious but he repeats the same motifs both within his tunes and between them. In general Mozart is boring, unlike some other Baroque composers. He composed what would now be considered "light music", the pop music of his era, written to appeal to those without a sophisticated appreciation of music as opposed, say, to pop's equivalent in jazz-rock. It's typical of some chess players to get all pedantic over detail and entirely miss the intention. Never mind, when you worship achievment, it's easy to get it mixed up with brilliance.

I understand what you're saying. I find Mozart to be boring too. That sounds a little harsh I know. I know he was a gifted composer. It's just that it doesn't appeal to me.

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Take That.

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aon focail, dha focail, truir focail eile

and I not know no focail at all.

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HueyWilliams wrote:

Wow, so apparently red-lady has just devised a new acronym:  focl. 

I should have writen off with two fs. Please correct that for me.

Avatar of Optimissed

I also find Beethoven to be boring, except one or two of his tunes, such as the Pastoral symphony or the fast movement of the Moonlight Sonata; the movement that is rarely played. Undecided In general ... well, I can take a look and report back what is in the classical section of my vinyl collection.

Avatar of 5iegbert_7arrasch
Optimissed wrote:

I also find Beethoven to be boring, except one or two of his tunes, such as the Pastoral symphony or the fast movement of the Moonlight Sonata; the movement that is rarely played. In general ... well, I can take a look and report back what is in the classical section of my vinyl collection.

I'm beginning to feel you and I share a taste in Music. The Pastorale Beethoven's 6th. I listened that to death when I was a child. Got me playing music.

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Fair play to Mozart though! He really stood his ground before lyrics were invented.

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Optimissed wrote:

I also find Beethoven to be boring, except one or two of his tunes, such as the Pastoral symphony or the fast movement of the Moonlight Sonata; the movement that is rarely played. In general ... well, I can take a look and report back what is in the classical section of my vinyl collection.

Makes me very curious to hear your music.

Whenever someone plays a sonata in concert, he/she normally plays all movements... That goes for the Moonlight tune as well. Even a recording has all 3 movements... Strange world, I know.