Jonathan O'Neill’s Reviews > Lexicon of Musical Invective: Critical Assaults on Composers Since Beethoven's Time > Status Update

Jonathan O'Neill
is on page 73 of 336
I played over the music of that scoundrel Brahms. What a giftless bastard! It annoys me that this self-inflated mediocrity is hailed as a genius. Why, in comparison with him, Raff is a giant, not to speak of Rubinstein, who is after all a live and important human being, while Brahms is chaotic and absolutely empty dried-up stuff.
Tchaikovsky's Diary, 1886
😲 Pyotr, you slimy devil!! 😁
— Aug 14, 2025 04:55AM
Tchaikovsky's Diary, 1886
😲 Pyotr, you slimy devil!! 😁
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Jonathan’s Previous Updates

Jonathan O'Neill
is on page 57 of 336
Berlioz, musically speaking, is a lunatic; a classical composer only in Paris, the great city of quacks. His music is simply and undisguisedly nonsense. He is a kind of Orchestral Liszt, than which I could name nothing more intensely disagreeable.
Shots fired! A few innocents caught in the cross-fire too! :D
— Aug 05, 2025 05:13AM
Shots fired! A few innocents caught in the cross-fire too! :D

Jonathan O'Neill
is on page 27 of 336
"... Bestial cries are heard: neighing horses, the squeal of a brass pig, crying jackasses, amorous quacks of a monstrous toad... Listening to this screaming music (a jazz band concert) for a minute or two, one conjures up an orchestra of madmen, sexual maniacs, led by a man-stallion beating time with an enormous phallos"
- Maxim Gorky
— Aug 03, 2025 05:45AM
- Maxim Gorky

Jonathan O'Neill
is starting
I wasn't intending to read this right away and I'll probably still just dip my toes for a bit while I finish some other books but this from the sample excerpts was just too good to ignore:
"The Finale of [of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony] is to me for the most part dull and ugly.... Oh, the pages of stupid and hopelessly vulgar music! The unspeakable cheapness of the chief tune, 'Freude, Freude'!"
:D :D
— Jul 26, 2025 02:29AM
"The Finale of [of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony] is to me for the most part dull and ugly.... Oh, the pages of stupid and hopelessly vulgar music! The unspeakable cheapness of the chief tune, 'Freude, Freude'!"
:D :D
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Elentarri
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Aug 14, 2025 05:08AM

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I wouldn't say Brahms was an elitist, Jonathan. but he was a perfectionist. As I recall, he spent 20 years working on his first symphony. He also destroyed most of his early work and sketches because he didn't want posterity to know how hard he worked to get things just right. I'll admit Brahms is one of my favorite composers, but I'll also admit he's an acquired taste. As for "thematic genius", listen to the great passacaglia, the final movement of his fourth symphony. It speaks for itself. 😊

Brahms is, admittedly, not a composer that I'm deeply familiar with. I've listened, and loved, quite a few of his pieces but not obsessively. The critics don't hold back on the 4th in this collection (which of course is a fair indication that it's a phenomenal piece). It will certainly be on repeat for me this week, particularly this passacaglia, thank you! :)

Jonathan, permit me to make a suggestion. There's a great performance of Brahms' String Quintet No. 2 in G Major, Op. 111 with the Camerata Pacifica available on YouTube. This quintet is an example of late Brahms at his best, and if you have time, it's worth a listen. Brahms chamber music, the violin sonatas, and his late piano pieces offer significant insight into this composer.




I played bassoon, Jonathan. Many years ago, in high school, college, and for a few years afterward I played in bands, orchestras and chamber music groups. Some of my friends became professionals, but I was never better than a competent amateur. I sold my instrument back in the late '70s and haven't played since. But of course, I still listen. 😉