|
Post by thefleetsin on May 2, 2017 16:32:18 GMT
amadeus left not a moment too soon
i think how embarrassed i would be attempting to show off america to history's great composers.
coming up with all manner of excuses for the human rights abuses we conveniently gloss over as we play red rover red rover that's not baby blood flooding over our clover.
so i think amadeus left not a moment too soon. and i wouldn't even let ludwig anywhere near the room where they draw the death circles.
sjw 05/02/17 inspired at this very moment in time by the baby chimes heralding the crimes.
from the 'baby series' of poems
|
|
|
Post by general313 on May 2, 2017 18:38:13 GMT
amadeus left not a moment too soon i think how embarrassed i would be attempting to show off america to history's great composers. coming up with all manner of excuses for the human rights abuses we conveniently gloss over as we play red rover red rover that's not baby blood flooding over our clover. so i think amadeus left not a moment too soon. and i wouldn't even let ludwig anywhere near the room where they draw the death circles. sjw 05/02/17 inspired at this very moment in time by the baby chimes heralding the crimes. from the 'baby series' of poems Ludwig famously reacted to a perceived tyrant of his own day when he scratched out the dedication of his Eroica symphony, upon hearing that Napoleon had declared himself emperor. He probably would not have been shocked at the state of things today.
|
|
|
Post by progressiveelement on May 3, 2017 2:26:11 GMT
Rock me Amadeus!
|
|
|
Post by FilmFlaneur on May 3, 2017 9:16:34 GMT
I agree with Robbins Landon: that Mozart's death was "the greatest tragedy in the history of music". Followed by the too early demises of Schubert, Purcell, Arriaga, Webern, Pergolesi and Linley, respectively.
|
|