- Joined
- Apr 13, 2021
He's dog shit but yes he's classical.Iannis Xenakis
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He's dog shit but yes he's classical.Iannis Xenakis
Based, he really is an almost endless well to drink from isn't he? On Hurwitz's recomendation I was listening to his Bouquet of Flowers... thing and Its amazing how all of his works sound different but they all sound like Martinu, simply incredible.OK ready for more Martinu? Last weekend I picked up the 3-CD set of Martinu's piano music by Emil Leichner.
Also apparently this opinion is enough to catch a 3-day ban from the jannies on /mu/He's dog shit but yes he's classical.
That he's bad or that he's classical? If the latter, then good -- I don't like this contemporary/new music at all.Also apparently this opinion is enough to catch a 3-day ban from the jannies on /mu/
I literally posted "Not /classical/, try >>>/trash/ instead" and got a 3 day ban.That he's bad or that he's classical? If the latter, then good -- I don't like this contemporary/new music at all.
Don't worry about posting something that's been posted before just share the stuff you like and find interesting.Since this thread is from 2013 (!) somebody else must've have already posted socialist brvtalist music but I felt like it anyway.
Can't decide if I like the heavier or the faster version more.
This is great, I need to listen to more symphonic musicSince this thread is from 2013 (!) somebody else must've have already posted socialist brvtalist music but I felt like it anyway.
Alexander Mosolov has unfortunately been consigned to the "one-hit wonder" bin, together with Carl Orff (Carmina Burana) and Mascagni (Intermezzo from Cavalleria Rusticana). All these composers have a very considerable body of work that nobody but specialists take notice. Olympia used to have an anthology of Mosolov's music which is of course out of print.Since this thread is from 2013 (!) somebody else must've have already posted socialist brvtalist music but I felt like it anyway.
Can't decide if I like the heavier or the faster version more.
was looking to take a small break from Martinu and put on her second symphony and have been really enjoying it.Ruth Gipps, one of Vaughan Williams' students, was pretty based. This is what she had to say about homos taking over music.
I'm not crazy about Mahler so I can but regurgitate the standard recommendations: either Bernstein cycles (on Sony and DG -- the DG is more complete and can be had for cheap. With Sony you either have to content for the mid-priced big box or the el-cheapo box with no sleeve notes) are renowned for their on-the-sleeve emotion. Riccardo Chailly benefits from the plush sound of the Concertgebouw and the state-of-the art recording tech. I have meant to pick up the Chailly cycle piecemeal because I was interested in the fillers, but now that I've collected most I think the fillers don't really matter after all (Mahler's orchestral arrangement of the Bach, for example, is of academic interest only, and that's being polite). Get the Chailly box set cheaply if you have the chance, and then supplement it with Chailly's recording of Mahler's vocal works (not with the Concertebouw) and you're good to go.Anyone got any Mahler recording recomendations I like chamber music but a couple of symphony cycles would be interesting to listen to, I have some gone 10 years of listening to classical music and never consciously hearing Mahler.
Toward the Unknown Region was VW’s first major choral piece (he calls it a ‘Song’ for chorus and orchestra) and despite its intermittent Wagnerian echoes (Wagner was an influence that he did want to get over, and it took him quite a time to do so) its obvious inspirational qualities—not to mention its technical savoir faire in terms of the handling of massed voices—made it a success from the first. Stanford (who conducted the first London performance in 1907) and Elgar are important models, but most of all the Parry of Blest Pair of Sirens—Parry who urged VW to write choral music ‘as befits an Englishman and democrat’. The spirit of adventure is always keen in Vaughan Williams; but after the great outburst at ‘Nor any bounds bounding us’ the words seem buoyed up on, bowled on by, wave after wave of musical excitement and elation. The great choreographer Agnes de Mille, describing an altogether different medium, nonetheless invoked an emotion which distils the spirit of Toward the Unknown Region to perfection: ‘To take the air. To challenge space. To move into space with patterns of shining splendour. To be at once stronger and freer than at any other time in life. To lift up the heart …’
That's quite a big undertaking, and I think anyone interested in the nitty-gritty would have gotten some introductory books. I think we'd better just answer questions when it comes up.So I have a dangerous idea of writing up an intro to classical music appreciation as forum post and then asking Josh to shout out the thread so the people who are curious and want to get into it have a nice starting place to ease themselves into the music, but I need help like music suggestions to illustrate what the hell a fugue is, whats sonata form etc. Also apparently alot of newcomers get weirded out by the fact that there's dozens of recordings for any piece plus how to read a title and any number of ancillcary things that ought to be covered. Anybody interested?