Immortal Beloved: Musical Love Letters From the Great Composers

By |2025-02-14T11:23:52-06:00February 13th, 2023|Categories: Audio/Video, Gustav Mahler, Hector Berlioz, Love, Ludwig van Beethoven, Music, Richard Wagner, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart|

Love has inspired countless composers, some of whom have written pieces dedicated to, or directly inspired by, their own beloveds. Here are ten of the best musical love letters ever composed. 1.  Wagner: Siegfried Idyll Though his reputation rests on his big, long, and loud mythological operas, Richard Wagner was also capable of composing on a [...]

Berlioz’s Long-Lost “Solemn Mass” for the Holy Innocents

By |2025-12-28T18:36:04-06:00December 27th, 2022|Categories: Hector Berlioz, Hector Berlioz Sesquicentennial Series, Music, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays|

The premier of 22-year-old Hector Berlioz's "Messe Solennelle" in 1825 was one of the most remarkable musical debuts ever by a composer, and the score's rediscovery 167 years later in a church attic is one of the most astounding events in musicological history. The fact that we today have this setting of the Mass by [...]

Learning to Love Berlioz

By |2024-01-05T13:58:00-06:00December 10th, 2022|Categories: Audio/Video, Hector Berlioz, Music, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays|

Hector Berlioz relished the spectacular sounds that could be achieved with massive orchestral forces, but he was much more than a musical showman. His gift for melody, his mastery of orchestration, his genius for musical drama, his bold originality, and the uniqueness of his style place him in the front ranks of the great composers. [...]

How an Obscure Woman’s Letters Transformed a President

By |2022-11-02T09:16:50-05:00September 19th, 2022|Categories: History, Presidency, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays|

“They say you won’t succeed because ‘making a man President cannot change him.’ But making a man President can change him! Great emergencies awaken generous traits which have lain dormant half a life. If there is a spark of true nobility in you, now is the occasion to let it shine.” On September 22, 1881, [...]

Our First Ex-President

By |2022-09-14T18:05:20-05:00September 14th, 2022|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, George Washington, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays|

George Washington knew that he was setting a precedent by voluntarily relinquishing power after serving two terms as president, and he understood that his actions after leaving office would have a great effect on the future of the American people. The United States of America faced a new political situation in 1797, upon the completion [...]

Waking Mozart: The Mystery of the Requiem

By |2021-12-04T17:02:27-06:00December 4th, 2021|Categories: Art, Audio/Video, Music, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart|

Who completed Mozart's unfinished Requiem? The masterpiece that we know today was the work of many hands. But who wrote which parts? And how much did Mozart actually write? "The last movement of his lips was an endeavor to indicate where the kettledrums should be used in his Requiem. I think I still hear the [...]

Cowardice in the Face of Evil: Viggo Mortensen in “Good”

By |2021-08-07T15:35:59-05:00August 7th, 2021|Categories: Culture, Film, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays|

“I never thought it would come to this,” the despondent college professor-turned-Nazi-cooperator cries near the end of the film “Good.” See this movie, which warns of the dangers of the failure to speak up against encroaching evil, but be forewarned that you may see someone you know—or yourself—in the main character. Everyone knows a John [...]

Indiana Jones: American Epic Hero

By |2026-06-06T16:58:08-05:00June 12th, 2021|Categories: Audio/Video, Featured, Film, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays|

There is only one fictional character who embodies the American spirit in its essence and its entirety, and who is real enough that it seems he should have existed: Indiana Jones, the swashbuckling American archaeologist. A people, a civilization defines itself largely through the heroes that it adopts and celebrates. These heroes may be entirely [...]

Baseball Goes For Woke

By |2021-04-27T20:52:19-05:00April 6th, 2021|Categories: Baseball, Civil Society, Stephen M. Klugewicz|

In a sadly predictable development, Major League Baseball continues to go the way of the Woke, demonstrating a contempt for its audience and the players' and owners' narcissistic need for self-validation through virtue-signaling. This past weekend I tried listening to an Orioles game for the first time since swearing off baseball last year because of [...]

Music for All Time: Reflections on Beethoven’s Legacy to Us

By |2025-08-01T21:41:07-05:00December 15th, 2020|Categories: Beethoven 250, Ludwig van Beethoven, Mark Malvasi, Michael De Sapio, Music, Paul Krause, Stephen M. Klugewicz|Tags: , |

"This wasn't written for you!" Beethoven once stormed at string players who complained that one of his quartets was impossible to play. "It was meant for a later age!" And so all Beethoven's works are. They are, indeed, music for all time. Please enjoy this symposium on Ludwig van Beethoven, with contributions from our distinguished [...]

Magnanimity: The Balm for Our Brutalized Public Discourse

By |2020-05-15T15:28:23-05:00May 15th, 2020|Categories: Civil Society, Love, Stephen M. Klugewicz|

Every man is his own pope and philosopher-king on the Internet, where our semi-formed and semi-informed opinions are cast as absolutes. Convinced of our perfect knowledge and infallible righteousness, we denounce and demean in harsh, uncharitable terms the arguments of others, and even their very persons. “Minds are conquered not by arms, but by love [...]

Brief Thoughts on Last Night’s Democratic Debate

By |2021-01-23T13:52:06-06:00February 26th, 2020|Categories: Politics, Stephen M. Klugewicz|

—Mike Bloomberg is not funny. —The only thing Joe Biden seems to remember from his "Catholic school upbringing" is that he should be polite and keep to the time prescribed during debates. —Bernie Sanders can make Pete Buttigieg sound like Ronald Reagan when it comes to Cold War issues. —For a party that should be [...]

The Confessions of Bruce Springsteen: “Western Stars,” the Film

By |2021-09-22T16:05:35-05:00October 31st, 2019|Categories: Bruce Springsteen, Film, Music, Stephen M. Klugewicz|

Bruce Springsteen's unrivaled stage presence comes across remarkably well in the film "Western Stars," as he performs his recent album in its entirety. But it is the brief, meditative, and confessional vignettes he uses to introduce each song that reveal just how much the entire album serves as his own version of St. Augustine's "Confessions." [...]

5 Ways You Can Help Preserve the Good, True, & Beautiful

By |2020-10-19T15:20:11-05:00October 2nd, 2019|Categories: Stephen M. Klugewicz, Support The Imaginative Conservative, The Imaginative Conservative|

Do you find yourself turning to The Imaginative Conservative as a welcome oasis of the Good, True, and Beautiful in a world that seems increasingly fallen, false, and frightful? If so, we would be appreciative if you would support us in one or more of these five ways. […]

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