|
|
eXXailon
from purgatory on 2003-05-08 06:22 [#00689192]
Points: 6745 Status: Lurker
|
|
Grieg: Morning Song and Piano Concerto in A Minor
Satie: Trois Gymnopedies (esp. no. 1)
Henry Mancini: Love story (this isn't really classical because it is of this century, but still good)
Yours?
|
|
Key_Secret
from Sverige (Sweden) on 2003-05-08 06:22 [#00689194]
Points: 9325 Status: Regular | Followup to eXXailon: #00689192
|
|
too many to list, but I'll think of a few...
|
|
tibbar
from harrisburg, pa (United States) on 2003-05-08 06:26 [#00689198]
Points: 10513 Status: Lurker
|
|
the operatic piece from hannibal...
the funeral march by um... erm... whoever
|
|
wilcoooo
from Sydney (Belgium) on 2003-05-08 06:30 [#00689206]
Points: 794 Status: Regular | Followup to tibbar: #00689198
|
|
it's by chopin - marche funebre lento
|
|
tibbar
from harrisburg, pa (United States) on 2003-05-08 06:31 [#00689207]
Points: 10513 Status: Lurker
|
|
yeah! darnit im tired!!!!
who did the hannibal thingy? i forget that too... anyway, its friggin awesome! y'all should dl it or somethin'
|
|
alnuit
on 2003-05-08 06:33 [#00689212]
Points: 1113 Status: Lurker
|
|
Bach, The Goldberg Variations, Brandenburg Concertos (esp. 3rd)
Beethoven, Moonlight Sonata IIIrd movement, 9th symphony IVth movement
Tomaso Albioni, Adagio in G
Samuel Barber, Op 11 for Strings
Pachabel, Cannon in D
Vivaldi, The Four Seasons
Debussy, Prelude a l'apres-midi d'un faune and La Mer
Ravel, Bolero and For a String Quartet in F
Steve Reich, Piano Phase, Violin Phase, Electric Counterpoint
Terry Riley, In C
|
|
eXXailon
from purgatory on 2003-05-08 06:36 [#00689219]
Points: 6745 Status: Lurker | Followup to wilcoooo: #00689206
|
|
hmmmm.....a blow-up doll that's into classical music....gotta get me one of those...
|
|
Bob Mcbob
on 2003-05-08 06:40 [#00689225]
Points: 9939 Status: Regular
|
|
In Dunchi Jubilio
i dont know who its by, or even the spelling, but twas played a lot during Christmas '98...one of my all time fav songs...
|
|
Key_Secret
from Sverige (Sweden) on 2003-05-08 06:41 [#00689227]
Points: 9325 Status: Regular
|
|
ok here's a small list of my fav's... if you haven't heard all tracks on this list, I suggest you get a hold of them. They're great! =)
* Antonin Dvorak - Sym. No.9 From the New World * Antonio Vivaldi - The Four Seasons, Op.8-1 Winter (actually all of these Four Seasons are good)
* Anton Grigor'yevich Rubinstein - Melody in F, Op.3-1 * Claude Achille Debussy - La Fille Aux Cheveux De Lin * Edvard Hagerup Grieg - 'Aase's Death', from Suite Peer Gynt
* Edvard Hagerup Grieg - 'Morning', from Suite Peer Gynt * Edvard Hagerup Grieg - Solveig's Song * Georg Friedrich Handel - Sarabande * Giacomo Puccini - Madame Butterfly * Joaquin Rodrigo - Concierto De Aranjuez * Johann Pachelbel - Canon * Jules Emile Frederic Massenet - Meditation from 'Thais' * Ludwig van Beethoven - Sonata for Piano ' Moonlight' * Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky - Pathetique, Op.74 * Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky - Symphony No.5, Op.64 * Ralph Vaughan Williams - Green Sleeves * Samuel Baber - Adagio for Strings, Op.11
Two of my most favourite, I guess, are in bold text... Classical music is good... good! =)
|
|
Bob Mcbob
on 2003-05-08 07:10 [#00689270]
Points: 9939 Status: Regular | Followup to Bob Mcbob: #00689225
|
|
..if anyone knows more about it, give me a tinkle...
|
|
alnuit
on 2003-05-08 07:25 [#00689312]
Points: 1113 Status: Lurker
|
|
do you mean "Il Dulci Jubilo"
|
|
Bob Mcbob
on 2003-05-08 07:26 [#00689314]
Points: 9939 Status: Regular
|
|
probably
|
|
giginger
from Milky Beans (United Kingdom) on 2003-05-08 07:26 [#00689315]
Points: 26326 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag
|
|
At the moment it's:
Lowell Liebermann - Gargoyles. Sone of the best Piano Music I've heard in a long time.
I'm still loving Rachmaninov - Concerto No. 3 though.
|
|
tolstoyed
from the ocean on 2003-05-08 07:26 [#00689317]
Points: 50073 Status: Moderator
|
|
beethoven piano sonatas
|
|
alnuit
on 2003-05-08 07:28 [#00689322]
Points: 1113 Status: Lurker | Followup to Bob Mcbob: #00689314
|
|
then go here --> linky
|
|
Morton
from out (Netherlands, The) on 2003-05-08 07:29 [#00689327]
Points: 10000 Status: Addict
|
|
all Satie stuff many Debussy stuff Bach - Air (for G string) Grieg - Peer gynt suite and some more
|
|
Bob Mcbob
on 2003-05-08 07:31 [#00689337]
Points: 9939 Status: Regular | Followup to alnuit: #00689322
|
|
ta
|
|
Morton
from out (Netherlands, The) on 2003-05-08 07:32 [#00689340]
Points: 10000 Status: Addict | Followup to Morton: #00689327
|
|
rachmaninovs works for piano are quite imposing too
|
|
marlowe
from Antarctica on 2003-05-08 07:34 [#00689346]
Points: 24590 Status: Lurker
|
|
shostakovich - symphonies 8 and 14 beethoven - symphonies 5, 7, and 9 beethoven - piano sonatas (most of them) grieg - peer gynt, lyric pieces, piano concerto in A minor wagner - The Ring cycle Bartok - music for strings, percussion, and celeste Ligeti - Lux Aeterna Penderecki - the pieces from The Shining soundtrack Bach - just about everything Satie - trois gnossiennes Stockhausen - mantra Reich - drumming Chopin - nocturnes, etudes, preludes, waltz in B-minor, waltz in C-sharp minor
oh fuck it, this list could go on for fucking ever
|
|
bader_princess
from Svalbard And Jan Mayen Islands on 2003-05-08 08:31 [#00689472]
Points: 42 Status: Lurker
|
|
I love *Prokofiev Piano SonataNo.8 *Prokofiev's Romeo and Juliet as well as most of the ones mentioned below. (especially Pachebel's Cannon and Satie's Gymnopede no. 1)
|
|
nacmat
on 2003-05-08 08:32 [#00689477]
Points: 31271 Status: Lurker | Followup to marlowe: #00689346
|
|
Bartok - music for strings, percussion, and celeste
I just went to the auditorio in madrid to see that a month ago!!
and it was really good indeed
|
|
marlowe
from Antarctica on 2003-05-08 08:34 [#00689480]
Points: 24590 Status: Lurker | Followup to nacmat: #00689477
|
|
you lucky fucker! <:) Add Prokofiev's ROMEO AND JULIET to my list too.
|
|
Co-existence
from Bergen (Norway) on 2003-05-08 08:35 [#00689482]
Points: 3388 Status: Regular
|
|
OLIVIER MESSIAEN
|
|
nacmat
on 2003-05-08 08:37 [#00689484]
Points: 31271 Status: Lurker | Followup to marlowe: #00689480
|
|
Add Prokofiev's ROMEO AND JULIET to my list too.
LOL
I went to see this too, two years ago or so, it was danced by a ballet (spanish national ballet)
|
|
bader_princess
from Svalbard And Jan Mayen Islands on 2003-05-08 08:40 [#00689491]
Points: 42 Status: Lurker
|
|
anyone ever heard tippett's 'child of our time'?? more choral than orchestral, but one of the best modern scores i think!
Bartok's great, but i'm having 'issues' with all the hommages around.
|
|
marlowe
from Antarctica on 2003-05-08 08:40 [#00689492]
Points: 24590 Status: Lurker | Followup to nacmat: #00689484
|
|
fuck, i wish my place had such a good reportoire!
|
|
nacmat
on 2003-05-08 08:41 [#00689499]
Points: 31271 Status: Lurker
|
|
I have also seen (in the real theatre of madrid):
Aida (verdi) tanhausser (wagner) Elektra (Strauss) boheme (puccini)
and lots of concerts and sinphonies at the auditorio (mozart, bach, bethoven, dvorak, tchaikovski......)
btw peer gint by grieg is one of my favs too
we have some similar tastes I think in this classical thing
|
|
nacmat
on 2003-05-08 08:42 [#00689504]
Points: 31271 Status: Lurker | Followup to marlowe: #00689492
|
|
thats the bad thing of living in antartica I guess
|
|
Inverted Whale
from United States Minor Outlying Islands on 2003-05-08 09:12 [#00689583]
Points: 3301 Status: Lurker
|
|
There's way too many to list, but I think my favorite at this very moment is Philip Glass - Violin Concerto.
|
|
Jedi Chris
on 2003-05-08 09:16 [#00689594]
Points: 11496 Status: Lurker | Followup to eXXailon: #00689192
|
|
Trois Gymnopedies
:)
|
|
giginger
from Milky Beans (United Kingdom) on 2003-05-08 09:17 [#00689599]
Points: 26326 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag
|
|
Portaits of an Exhibition is brilliant as well. I can't remember who it's by though :(
|
|
marlowe
from Antarctica on 2003-05-08 09:22 [#00689610]
Points: 24590 Status: Lurker | Followup to giginger: #00689599
|
|
Mussorgsky
|
|
giginger
from Milky Beans (United Kingdom) on 2003-05-08 09:23 [#00689614]
Points: 26326 Status: Lurker | Followup to marlowe: #00689610 | Show recordbag
|
|
Thank you Marlowe. :D
|
|
tHALidomide
from Austin (United States) on 2003-05-08 09:40 [#00689649]
Points: 67 Status: Addict
|
|
Rachmaninoff's 3rd Concerto
Brian Eno's takeoff on Pachelbel's Canon in D-"Fullness of Wind"
All Satie stuff
|
|
dariusgriffin
from cool on 2003-05-08 09:43 [#00689654]
Points: 12428 Status: Regular
|
|
Igor Stravinsky - Le Sacre du Printemps (The Rite of Spring).
|
|
plaidzebra
from so long, xlt on 2003-05-08 12:33 [#00689919]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker
|
|
steve reich - music for large ensemble; eight lines; tehillim; electric counterpoint; music for mallet instruments, voices and organ; six marimbas; music for 18 musicians, drumming
wendy carlos didn't compose anything on the switched on bach, switched on brandenburgs, etc albums, but the recordings and performances are well worth hearing.
philip glass - string quartet no. 5
js bach - too much to list, but some favorite sections: solo violin partita #3, gavotte en rondeau; concerto for 3 violins in DM, allegro;
ok, this could go on too long. i have to give up and just give some recommendations of things that you may not have heard:
some baroque harpsichord pieces that are really great: couperin - les baricades misterieuses
handel- the harmonious blacksmith (ok everyone's heard this)
js bach - duetto III in GM (bwv 804)
has anyone here heard any renaissance choral music? the stuff that evolved from the gregorian chant? (note that i'm not talking about the gregorian chant itself). if you haven't heard it, and are interested in classical music, check out:
dum transisset sabbatum by john taverner
spem in alium by thomas tallis
magnificat anima mea dominum by manuel cardoso
miserere by gregorio allegri (this was sampled on the first orb album)
salve regina by orlando di lasso
the choirs are small and intimate (maybe 5 singers) and the music is simple but incredibly powerful and emotional, for what it's worth highly recommended. this is where the western formal music tradition gathered its momentum and blossomed, don't miss it!
|
|
pantalaimon
from Winterfell (United Kingdom) on 2003-05-08 16:54 [#00690247]
Points: 7090 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag
|
|
Sanvean: I Am Your Shadow - Lisa Gerrard
|
|
pachi
from yo momma (United States) on 2003-05-08 16:55 [#00690250]
Points: 8984 Status: Lurker
|
|
i like Gustav Holst & that one theme from 2001: A Space Odyssee(sp?)
|
|
pantalaimon
from Winterfell (United Kingdom) on 2003-05-08 16:55 [#00690251]
Points: 7090 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag
|
|
and The Blue Danube - Herbert Von Karajan
|
|
pantalaimon
from Winterfell (United Kingdom) on 2003-05-08 16:57 [#00690253]
Points: 7090 Status: Lurker | Followup to pachi: #00690250 | Show recordbag
|
|
i love the 2001 soundtrack, it was my first real introduction to classical music.
|
|
marlowe
from Antarctica on 2003-05-09 05:22 [#00690880]
Points: 24590 Status: Lurker | Followup to pantalaimon: #00690253
|
|
it's good - I prefer The Shining soundtrack - I have both shared on soulseek if anyone wants them
|
|
neetta
from Finland on 2003-05-09 05:26 [#00690890]
Points: 5924 Status: Regular
|
|
ravel - bolero has been my favourite always
also, philip glasses 'metamorphosis'
|
|
marlowe
from Antarctica on 2003-05-09 05:27 [#00690894]
Points: 24590 Status: Lurker | Followup to neetta: #00690890
|
|
that's a good one, neett -- have you heard the Zappa version ?
|
|
neetta
from Finland on 2003-05-09 05:29 [#00690899]
Points: 5924 Status: Regular | Followup to marlowe: #00690894
|
|
dunno? of bolero? never knew there was one..
when i was still living at my parents cellar, i always listened to bolero when i came home from doping/clubbing/whatever and freaked out my friends by dancing on the couch to it..
|
|
Laserbeak
from Netherlands, The on 2003-05-09 06:38 [#00690989]
Points: 2670 Status: Lurker
|
|
since there's too much to list only one work per composer:
Beethoven: symphony 9 Mozart: Requiem Bach: Brandenburg Concerto 5 Dvorak: Celloconcerto Sibelius: Symphony 3 Strauss: Metamorphosen Wagner: Overture zu Tannhauser Saint Saens: Dance Macabre Stravinsky: Petrushka Tsjaikovski: Romeo & Juliette overture Debussy: Claire de lune Ravel: Un Barque sur L'ocean Rachmaninov: Opus 23 - Maestoso Vivaldi: 4 seasons: Summer Händel: the Arrival of the queen of Sheba Schubert: Stringquartet "Der tot und das Madchen"(hope spelling is correct)
Palestrina: Stabat Mater
......and I still have a lot to listen/discover by these composers and other composers(lots of Haydn, Brahms, Liszt and Scarlatti in particular)
|
|
marlowe
from Antarctica on 2003-05-09 06:41 [#00690994]
Points: 24590 Status: Lurker
|
|
one of THE most beautiful pieces ever written is Allegre's Miserere -- get this as soon as you can
|
|
pantalaimon
from Winterfell (United Kingdom) on 2003-07-06 02:26 [#00768203]
Points: 7090 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag
|
|
I'm just starting to get into classical music, some of my faves at the mo are:
Mozart - Requiem
Tchaikovsky - Swan Lake
Does anyone know of any classical works that are dark and scary? The sort of music that might be used in a horror movie to create tension.
|
|
Sanguine
from San Francisco (United States) on 2003-07-06 05:54 [#00768227]
Points: 859 Status: Lurker
|
|
Rachmaninoff - Concerto #3 for piano Rachmaninoff - Concerto #2 for piano Rachmaninoff - Symphonic works (my FAVORITE symphony piece) Beethoven - Emperor Concerto Beethoven - Symphony #7 movement 2 Beethoven - Symphony #9 Dvorak - New World Symphony Debussey - Claire D'Lune Ravel - Pavane For a Dead Princess Mozart - The Marrige of Figaro Mendlesson - Violin Concerto Chopin - Piano concertos 1 + 2
Bartok, Briton, Schumann, Shostakovich, Bach, Gershwin, Copland...
Seriously, I could go on for hours
|
|
Laserbeak
from Netherlands, The on 2003-07-06 05:57 [#00768228]
Points: 2670 Status: Lurker | Followup to pantalaimon: #00768203
|
|
"Does anyone know of any classical works that are dark and scary?"
Berlioz: Requiem --> Tuba Mirum (sounds as if the earth is being torn open)
Shostakovich: symphony 8 This one has a very famous movement which sounds like a huge battle and where everyone is being slaughtered (enjoy! :) )
Bach: Toccata & Fugue in D minor This very famous creepy piece probably wasn't written by Bach.
|
|
andreas
from an der Saar (Germany) on 2003-07-06 05:59 [#00768230]
Points: 343 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag
|
|
contemporary composer: aarvo pärt.
|
|
Messageboard index
|