Episode #492 from 1:36:02
Beethoven
Gary Oldman ... Gary Oldman. Just a really... it's a masterful celebration of Beethoven in an interesting kind of way through the perspective of a love letter that he's written. But then I realized like... and this is early, this is many, many... this is a couple decades ago now, that, you know, he went deaf before he even started writing the Ninth Symphony, which is why they consider it to be one of the greatest compositions of all time, the greatest symphonies of all time. He went deaf, couldn't hear anything before he even started writing it. And so there's that famous story of him in that world premiere of having to be turned around because he can't hear people applauding, so he has to be turned around to see that people are actually clapping. I mean, there's just this whole tragic element.
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Why this moment matters
Gary Oldman ... Gary Oldman. Just a really... it's a masterful celebration of Beethoven in an interesting kind of way through the perspective of a love letter that he's written. But then I realized like... and this is early, this is many, many... this is a couple decades ago now, that, you know, he went deaf before he even started writing the Ninth Symphony, which is why they consider it to be one of the greatest compositions of all time, the greatest symphonies of all time. He went deaf, couldn't hear anything before he even started writing it. And so there's that famous story of him in that world premiere of having to be turned around because he can't hear people applauding, so he has to be turned around to see that people are actually clapping. I mean, there's just this whole tragic element.
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