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A Connection With The Divine? / Mozart’s Requiem
Although I believe 100% in my own, personal, nonexistent god, what Mozart does here is transcendent proof (IMHO) that a human being can be motivated to the highest levels of creation by a faith/joy/fear/awe in divinity. To me it is our aspiration for the Divine that brings us close to that quality within each being that is godlike,
Not everyone (in fact, no one) can be Mozart, but any of us can feel what he felt simply by listening.
As a composer, of sorts, I can relate also to the experience of creation M must have felt when he drew this monumental work from the depths of his soul and genius. “God” created and artists, scientists, engineers, software devs create. It is a powerful feeling. I cannot help but feel it is this deep human experience that led our ancient ancestors to imagine the source of universal creativity and name it “God”.
This performance by Karajan, et. al., and the ghostly video that accompanies it (indeed most of the performers are ghosts fifty years later) is my favorite Mozart Requiem. Watching the singers’ jaws working and stuttering from the poor video I can only imagine a philharmonic of skeletons reminding us of our mortality.
Comments
+1000
Karajan has always been my favorite of the great Nazi Zen Buddhist conductors.
@Wrlds2ndBstGeoshredr he was a Nazi?
More of a Fauré’s Requiem person myself.
Pie Jesu and In Paradisum in particular.
Let’s not forget Verdi’s.