And including Emperor Joseph II!
from Derek Beales: Joseph II, Volume 2: Against the World, 1780 - 1790:
Joseph's alleged comment to Mozart about the Entführung, "Too many notes", has been taken as evidence of his ignorance. But he probably said something like, "Too beautiful for our ears, and monstrous many notes." It is always necessary to bear in mind, when appraising the emperor's remarks, his peculiar brand of humor or sarcasm. He was usually getting at someone. And he did not use the royal "we". The ears in question were those of the Viennese audience, whom he was mocking for their limited appreciation of Mozart's elaborate music.
(though not gonna lie, I think it is a LOT of notes)
from Derek Beales: Joseph II, Volume 2: Against the World, 1780 - 1790:
Joseph's alleged comment to Mozart about the Entführung, "Too many notes", has been taken as evidence of his ignorance. But he probably said something like, "Too beautiful for our ears, and monstrous many notes." It is always necessary to bear in mind, when appraising the emperor's remarks, his peculiar brand of humor or sarcasm. He was usually getting at someone. And he did not use the royal "we". The ears in question were those of the Viennese audience, whom he was mocking for their limited appreciation of Mozart's elaborate music.
(though not gonna lie, I think it is a LOT of notes)
Re: Love and arranged marriages
Date: 2022-02-15 06:47 am (UTC)Ha, yes, Razumovsky is the guy who narrates all the "now we will time-jump seven years" bits. He's actually possibly my favorite character in Ekaterina, although he seems a lot more politically savvy in the show than Massie thought he was. And then there's the TV subplot where Elizaveta secretly marries him (yes, sure, secret marriage seems dramatically plausible) and then she says she's decided he's going to be emperor when she's dead and is writing this in her will.
Me: What?
Razumovsky: What??
I've just got to Elizaveta dying, but Peter is yet to be confirmed, and Razumovsky is all, "Will? What will? No will to see here!"
Re: Love and arranged marriages
Date: 2022-02-16 01:33 am (UTC)Re the discussion of marrying non-nobles, I should add that Elizaveta had the example of her father, Peter the Great, marrying a Lithuanian peasant (mother of Elizaveta and Peter III's mother), who then became Tsarina after Peter died. Will or no will, Razumovsky could have at least made a bid for power. But one thing the show gets right is that he didn't want to play the game of thrones, in which you win or you die.
ETA: forgot to mention her name. That's Catherine I, 1725-1727.
Re: Love and arranged marriages
Date: 2022-02-17 07:47 am (UTC)