Gr 7 Up—When considering Beethoven's 9th Symphony you'll be tempted to go for the free app, but don't do it; it's the best kind of worst tease. Instead, purchase the full version, but you'll need to decide: iPhone or iPad app? Don't skimp. The phone app has all the music of the iPad app, but lacks the commentaries of the experts. Your last consideration will be the listening options; the app states, "BEST WITH HEADPHONES." Trust me, it is.The production's home page streams the "
Ode to Joy," and although you sense you will be humming it all night, don't resist. Once you begin to explore the symphony, you won't be able to stop. There are four performances each with a different conductor: Ferenc Fricsay, Herbert von Karajan, Leonard Bernstein, and Sir John Eliot Gardiner. Each concert piece can be listened to while reading either the full synchronized score or a replica of Beethoven's handwritten score (amazing), or watching an electric pin-light version that lights up the corresponding parts of the orchestral seating chart as various instruments come in and out. Bernstein's performance also includes a video of the maestro conducting the symphony with the Wiener Philharmoniker in 1979.During all the pieces, a phrase-by-phrase analysis by David Owen Norris explains the music in an endearing, informal manner. For example, midway through the first movement he writes, "Those opening sparks of rhythm have caught fire, and in their light we can see we're back at the beginning…." Norris also contributed the historical analysis that offers background on Beethoven's life, including his descent into deafness and the genesis of the Ninth Symphony.Finally (and really, this shouldn't come last), there are the "Insights" by some of the world's finest musicians and scholars. Don't skip this section. Start with Suzy Klein, who makes the Ninth Symphony accessible and drops in some humor along the way. Conductor Gustavo Dudamel helps explain Beethoven's status as a universal symbol of music, and pianist Alice Sara Ott shares why the "Ode to Joy" is the basis of hope, optimism, and human rights, and discusses why music is a unique language that can unite people with idealism. Without hesitation, an app for all collections.—
Pamela Schembri, Newburgh Enlarged City Schools, NY
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