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It all kind of started with Mozart, so that would be a logical place to start. However, I prefer Beethoven and his piano sonatas.
Reader "max" says he has a young friend who "wants to try classical music, but does not know where to start." Which single composer would you recommend to introduce someone to classical music? And why?
Though Haydn, Boccherini, Glass, or Part come to mind, Beethoven seems like a good choice. You could lure a person in with recognizable pieces like familiar movements from the 9thth symphonies, go to the 6th Symphony or other individual movements that are lyrical and pretty, then into dazzlers like the middle-period quartets, the Triple Concerto, or the 7th symphony, then the profound depths of the late quartets, and finally revisit the whole 5th and 9th symphonies to see how the surface familiarity hides further depths. It's always seemed like the main theme of the 5th could be effectively preceded by a Led Zeppelin piece like "When the Levee Breaks."
Gosh darn, same answer as last week! Beethoven and his 9th<?SUP> Symphony. Timeless, good tune & melody, the power of a full orchestra and even some massed choral singing. If this turns you off —so be it, you are hopeless (smiling)! From Wikipedia: Beethoven composed in various genres, including symphonies, concerti, piano sonatas, other sonatas (including for violin), string quartets and other chamber music, masses, an opera, and lieder. If you can't find something from that list go find some Bach, Mozart, Hayden or Vivaldi. If your young friend likes video game music get him Carl Orff's Carmina Burana. My 12-year-old son highly approves of this selection!
i do believe that the highest and also the most difficult level any composer is able to achieve is to make their music easy-listening and also widely beloved and accepted by people. in most situations, the music which sounds so simple and joyful does not mean it was easy to be composed! music is used to entertain people, no matter it can make people jump and dance, cry, feel sad, or whatever. Classical music does not have a big market share as pop or R&B, so choosing the right composer to start with is crucial as it can greatly determine whether the person who has the first touch of classical music will love the music for a long long time or would never bother to listen it anymore. Mozart is without doubt the very first choice to start with.
Beethoven. The "odd-numbered" symphonies (3, 5, 7, 9), the Violin Concerto, the last two Piano Concerti (4, 5). Just about the most universal classical composer there is. Mozart would be a close second, but the sheer mass of compositions can be overwhelming unless you're guided to specific works, and often, specific recordings. Bach, even more so. You just about can't go wrong with one of the Beethoven works mentioned above, regardless of performer.
Mozart: Symphony No. 41 (Jupiter) Mozart: Rondo in D, K. 382. Handel: Israel in Egypt, "He Gave Them Hailstones" (Chanticleer: Sing We Christmas)> Brahms: Concerto in D major (Op. 77), 3rd Movement Praetorious: 6 Dances from Terpsichore.
PHASE 1: Mozart, Vivaldi, Chopin, Tchaikovsky, mid-Beethoven, Stravinsky (yep!), Verdi, Puccini, Dvorák, Adams, Debussy, Bruch, Gershwin PHASE 2: Haydn, Brahms, Rachmaninoff, J.S.Bach, Liszt, Prokofiev, Bartok, Scarlatti, Wagner, Copland, Berg, Grieg, Bruckner, early-Beethoven, Ravel, Sibelius PHASE 3: J.S.Bach (again), late-Beethoven, Shostakovitch, Feldman, Schoenberg, Webern, Ives, Mahler, R.Strauss, Scriabin, Schubert
For younger people, I would start with John Adams. Naxos has a CD that includes performances of "Shaker Loops" and "Short Ride in a Fast Machine". These are modern compositions with a more contemporary sound that would be very accessible to a younger person. It would also show that classical music isn't just something from the past but a creative, vibrant field of music here and now.