Hello, All!
This is my inaugural post, and it seemed like as good a thread as I could begin with.
I certainly have some pieces in mind for the scariest moment title, but I've been wondering about physical reactions stemming from "scary" music, as opposed to just exhilarating. I’ve noticed that when a piece has a scary point, or greatly heroic, or emotionally transcendent, it all comes to that same wonderful sensation of pure emotional overload (that spine tingling thing). So, here are a few pieces that cause me to react physically, emotionally, and completely.
Beethoven’s 9th symphony. I realize that this may be a bit clichéd, but Beethoven was after all Beethoven, and this piece was the culmination of a body of work more emotionally intense than probably any composer before or since. Listen to the Szell recording, or the Furtwangler, start to finish, and see if you don’t get chills by the end. (I do realize that this is not a “moment,” but found the piece to be a necessary point of departure.)
Richard Strauss’s Tod und Verklarung (Death and Transfiguration) and Metamorphoses. Both of these pieces are rather death obsessed, and are harmonically structured for the willies nearly from the beginning. Strauss’s ability to pace a twenty-odd minute single movement work has a listener on the edge of their seat from the beginning. Tod und Verklarung, especially, just overwhelms me at the point following death, where the solo trumpet plays [sol, do, re, mi, MI, RE]. What a moment. The only problem with the Strauss is that it sakes an exceptional orchestra, as well as a creative conductor to pull it off, not to mention a trumpet player with quite the cahones.
I have one more piece in mind that trumps the others mentioned, though, and I was quite happy to see that it was the first piece mentioned on the thread. Prokofiev’s Second Piano Concerto, and as rightly specified, the return of the orchestra in the first movement, just leaves me breathless. This is a piece I have been working on for two years now, and have performed several times. My personal experience is that it takes all that I have and more to even continue playing when the orchestra returns; I have already been more or less drained from the cadenza, and proven that the piano is capable of being a juggernaut of an instrument, but then the timpani followed by the tuba comes in and all but crushes me. Thank god I only have to survive nine measures of that before the final collapse of the movement. However, starting the second movement immediately after…ouch. I want a nap. I would like to bring everyone’s attention to the circumstances surrounding the composition of that work, that it was to be composed for pianist Max Schmidthof, a close friend of Prokofiev’s that committed suicide. For more details (performance/liner notes written by the performer), and the supreme performance of this work, listen to Alexander Toradze with Gergiev and the Kirov Orchestra.
So there is my input, and thank you all for welcoming me on board.
Best,
Bill