Re: The Chickens Have Come Home to Roost
Date: April 16, 2021 11:49AM
Nigger slave Wrote:
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> the real General Mahdi Wrote:
> --------------------------------------------------
> -----
> > Lester Maddoxxx Wrote:
> >
> --------------------------------------------------
>
> > -----
> > > Who hates niggers the most?
> > >
> > > Democrats in a non election year.
> > >
> > > Schumer gunna go bye bye to AOC....
> > >
> > > Fredo Sr. in NYC by a slant.....
> > >
> > > Trump 2022
> >
> >
> > if you wasn't throwing that N word around, eye
> > would cheer you on....
> >
> > you hurting Trump's chances by speaking like
> > that...
>
> Can a nigger write a Symphony?
Beethoven was a black Moor
and Haydn was too
eye would recommend reading books by JA Rogers who always provides extensive references
"Rogers presents some intriguing evidence (anecdotal though it is) of people who knew the composer or his biographers describing his complexion and facial traits:
"Rounded nose, black-brownish complexion." From Fischer's Beethoven The Man, Vol. 1, p. 1, 1929
"His beard--he had not shaved for several days--made the lower part of his already brown face still darker."--Carl Czerny from Beethoven: Impressions of his contemporaries, arranged by Oscar Sonneck, p. 26, 1926
From this same book, Beethoven is described as "dark" (Grillparzer, p. 154), "brown" (Bettina von Arnim, p.77), "brownish" (Rellstab, p. 180).
Gelinek describes him as "Short, ugly, dark" from Nohl's Beethoven Depicted By His Contemporaries, p. 37, 1880)
Fanny Giannatasio del Rio, who was in love with Beethoven, wrote in the biography, An Unrequited Love: An Episode in the Life of Beethoven, p.60, 1876: "Beethoven could not possibly be called a handsome man. His somewhat flat broad nose and wide mouth, his small piercing eyes and swarthy complexion, pockmarked into the bargain, gave him a strong resemblance to a mulatto."
According to Rogers, Beethoven's teacher, Haydn could also have been black and relates an incident of Beethoven biographer Thayer who heard from Andre de Hevesy who heard it from Carpani that when Prince Esterhazy first heard a new symphony he asked the name of the composer who was brought before him. "What!" exclaimed Esterhazy upon seeing Haydn for the first time, "the music is by this blackamoor? Well, my fine blackamoor, henceforward thou art in my service!" Carpani also stated that Haydn was after that frequently referred to as "the Moor." Rogers, though, does bring up the possibility that Haydn may actually have had a Turkish ancestry although he presents nothing concrete to back up the assertion.
Thayer brings up the incident in order to point that Beethoven "had even more of the Moor in his features than his master [Haydn]."