Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - Tell me about your favorite piano music?

Tell me about your favorite piano music?

I like listening to Beethoven's moonlight song best.

I listened to the moonlight music quietly, as if facing the sea. On this silent night, the moon rises slowly from the sea. The moon scattered its silver light on the sparkling sea. The moon broke through Wei Yun's block and rose to the sky.

The moon shines brightly on the waves, and the waves jump on the beach layer by layer and wash the beach. At this time, the waves are rough, and the waves beat the sea and the beach, splashing thousands of lotus flowers and countless waves on the sea. "Jump" on the sea layer by layer. There was a sudden wave on the sea, and the waves kept beating against the rocks on the shore, making a crisp sound, like the sea singing a cheerful song.

Water is long, love is long; This music is full of charm. I closed my eyes and listened quietly. Moonlight falls from the sky like water, sometimes like smoke, sometimes like a rainstorm, and sometimes like a bead curtain. Gradually, it rained like a rainstorm, and then it was as heavy as an aftershock, but it soon recovered.

Water children suddenly stir up water mist, just like a misty fairyland. Suddenly, the sound is very heavy, and it seems to be growling. It is not so gentle, and it arouses a thousand layers of water in my heart, but it seems that there is a pleasant sound of water knocking on stones. Slowly, slowly, it quieted down again, very small, very small.

The moonlight song is over, which is unforgettable for a long time.

Extended data:

Creation background

Beethoven wrote this work in 180 1 year. At that time, his deafness became more and more serious, and the pain of lovelorn had not been calmed down. He wrote this piano sonata with pain. Few famous songs can be as famous as this sonata, because there is a common name "Moonlight".

There are different opinions about the origin of the name "Moonlight", but the most common one is that the first movement of this piece was described by the German poet Ludwig Rael Stubb (1799- 1860) as "like a boat swaying on a lake illuminated by moonlight in Lucerne, Switzerland".

Beethoven himself called this work "Quasi-Fantasia".