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The Music History, Kinda

Author: The Music History, Kinda

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The messy, dramatic, and sometimes fake side of music history 🎧

Check out our website for more stories | https://the-music-history.com/

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6 Episodes
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Ever wondered what your favorite composer had in their glass? From refined pours to notorious binges, we’re serving the 21+ side of music history. Drinks mentioned in the episode:Franz Schubert: Schilcher (Austria – rosé wine)Gioachino Rossini: Madeira (Portugal – fortified wine)Richard Wagner: Saint-Péray (France – sparkling white wine)Giuseppe Verdi: Lambrusco (Italy – sparkling red wine)Igor Stravinsky: Ballantine’s 30-Year-Old Scotch (Scotland – blended Scotch whisky) Follow us on Instagram | @themusichistorykinda More stories | https://the-music-history.com/ Powered by Firstory Hosting
Brahms took nearly 20 years to finish his First Symphony—and the result? Mixed reviews, shady nicknames, and a melody that suspiciously echoes Beethoven’s Ode to Joy. In this episode, we dig into the myths, the legacy pressure, and why Brahms wasn’t copying the past—he was fighting it. Get ready for petty quotes, musical ghosts, and the ultimate “not your Beethoven” moment. Follow us on Instagram | @themusichistorykinda More stories | https://the-music-history.com/ Powered by Firstory Hosting
Before concert halls, there were salons—intimate, invite-only spaces where music met power, and being seen mattered as much as being heard. In this episode, we explore how composers like Chopin and Liszt navigated these elite rooms, plus what The Danish Girl and Inventing Anna reveal about the salon’s modern glow-up. Follow us on Instagram | @themusichistorykinda More stories | https://the-music-history.com/ Powered by Firstory Hosting
Before “recital” meant quiet concerts and polite applause, Franz Liszt turned it into a solo flex party. Hair tosses, memory stunts, and total chaos—this is how the piano recital was born. More stories | https://the-music-history.com/ Follow us| instagram @themusichistorykinda Powered by Firstory Hosting
Why were 19th-century composers so obsessed with proving they were Beethoven’s heir? In this episode, we dive into the legacy he left behind — and the dramatic, sometimes ridiculous things composers did to claim it. Schumann followed the rules, Liszt told a maybe-made-up childhood story, and Wagner? He wrote Beethoven fanfiction. Genius composers? Definitely. But maybe even better at branding. Follow us on Instagram | @themusichistorykinda Find out more stories | https://the-music-history.com/ Powered by Firstory Hosting
Beethoven wasn’t always the hero of Romantic music. In fact, he was once slammed for being “chaotic” and “unplayable”—until a dramatic critic named E.T.A. Hoffmann rewrote his legacy with a single review. In this episode, we dig into how one fanboy with a pen turned Beethoven from misunderstood to mythic. Follow Us on Instagram | The Music History, Kinda More Stories on Our Website | https://the-music-history.com Powered by Firstory Hosting
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