Étiquette: Mozart
Mendelssohn, the romantic who painted with the orchestra

Mendelssohn, the romantic who painted with the orchestra

ARTICLE LONG FORMAT, Jean-David Ponci | «Ah, you love Mendelssohn». At a social gathering, this is probably the composer whose praises you shouldn't sing too loudly. His music is too accessible to attract the interest of your interlocutor. The snob tends to forget that ease is a quality compatible with grandeur and beauty. Mendelssohn was considered the finest composer of his time, at least in England. Here's a little overview to help us get rid of our prejudices and discover what's original and profound about him.
Frédéric Chopin, weapons among roses

Frédéric Chopin, weapons among roses

Chopin, exquisitely sensitive, a suffering, fragile, depressive musician... That's how we like to think of him. And yet, Robert Schumann described his music as «cannons buried under flowers». Chopin was in fact a political pianist, a symbol of free Poland. He was also a man of many connections, which is why he was friends with so many famous artists. He wasn't a stage animal like Liszt, but he knew how to be charming and funny. The expression "weapons among roses" also applies to his music: the pleasant, classical, almost rosewater melody is often accompanied by a daring harmony, unique to him, that makes his compositions brilliant.
Matthieu Mégevand: «For some artists, creation is an explosion».»

Matthieu Mégevand: «For some artists, creation is an explosion».»

LONG FORM INTERVIEW, Ivan Garcia | Historian of religions, journalist and director of the Labor et Fides publishing house, Matthieu Mégevand is a busy man in his thirties. He is currently completing a novel trilogy, published by Editions Flammarion, on the theme of creation/destruction. The first part, «La bonne vie», published in 2018, is dedicated to the poet Roger Gilbert-Lecomte and his «experimental metaphysics». This first book won him the eleventh edition (2019 - 2020) of the Le Roman des Romands literary prize, awarded by school and gymnasium classes. The second part of his trilogy, published in 2019, focuses on the painter Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, and takes the reader back to Belle Epoque Paris to follow in the footsteps of this misunderstood deformed genius. As for the third part, now in the final stages of writing, it will be published in the coming years and will take as its protagonist that virtuoso of musical beauty, Mozart. To discuss this ambitious trilogy and his career as a writer, we meet Matthieu in Geneva at the «café librairie-livresse», a stone's throw from Plainpalais.