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Showing posts with the label reflections

Maurice Ravel -The Swiss Watchmaker

Portrait of Maurice Ravel Maurice Ravel was born on 7 March 1875 in the small fishing village of Ciboure, in the Basque region near the Franco-Spanish border. This cultural crossroads—half French, half Spanish—would quietly shape his artistic imagination for the rest of his life. His father, Pierre-Joseph Ravel, was a French engineer of Swiss descent: a man of precision, mechanics, and invention. His mother, Marie Delouart, was Basque, warm and expressive, deeply rooted in Spanish culture and song. Their meeting—during her work on the Spanish railways—brought together two contrasting worlds: discipline and lyricism, structure and instinct. In many ways, Maurice Ravel would spend his life reconciling these same opposites in music. The parents of Maurice Ravel, Pierre-Joseph Ravel and Marie Delouart. Only a few months after his birth, the family moved to Paris. Ravel’s childhood was happy and intellectually nurturing. His parents encouraged both their sons—Maurice and his younger broth...

Johannes Brahms - Forbidden love

Johannes Brahms and Clara Schumann, bound by an intense emotional and artistic relationship that remained largely unspoken throughout their lives. In the summer of 1853, the twenty-year-old Johannes Brahms found himself at a turning point. A quarrel with his closest companion, the Hungarian violinist Eduard Reményi, had ended his hopes of advancement through Franz Liszt , whose music Brahms had failed—perhaps unwillingly—to flatter. Disillusioned, yet determined, he turned instead to another trusted ally: the violinist Joseph Joachim. It was Joachim who urged Brahms to travel to Düsseldorf and introduce himself to Robert Schumann and his wife, Clara. On September 30, 1853, trembling with anticipation, Brahms played for Clara Schumann for the first time—a moment that would shape the rest of his life. Robert Schumann, already struggling with declining mental health, recognized in Brahms the brilliance of the young pianist he himself could no longer be. He praised him publicly and enth...