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favorite "classical" music
 

offline sneakattack on 2006-11-09 17:10 [#01999712]
Points: 6049 Status: Lurker



I'm enjoying ravel's la valse right now. assholes. I've
made this topic before.


 

offline sneakattack on 2006-11-09 17:10 [#01999713]
Points: 6049 Status: Lurker



solo piano version, that is. assholes.


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2006-11-09 17:10 [#01999714]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



the very same ravels bolero, actually


 

offline sneakattack on 2006-11-09 17:12 [#01999716]
Points: 6049 Status: Lurker | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01999714



fuck, you've got to be kidding me. that's the worst tripe
ever created. useless and repetitive. I guess it's
interesting if one has no familiarity with symphonic sounds,
otherwise it's just a paperweight.


 

offline w M w from London (United Kingdom) on 2006-11-09 17:13 [#01999717]
Points: 21451 Status: Lurker



allegro non tropo has excellent animation to bolero, have to
fastforward to it since the rest of that is terrible.

me = chopin


 

offline JivverDicker from my house on 2006-11-09 17:16 [#01999718]
Points: 12102 Status: Regular | Followup to sneakattack: #01999716



It's hardly useless, his most popular piece. He made it for
his mum as she loved all things Spanish.


 

offline sneakattack on 2006-11-09 17:16 [#01999719]
Points: 6049 Status: Lurker | Followup to w M w: #01999717



WHICH CHOPIN
BE MORE SPECIFIC


 

offline sneakattack on 2006-11-09 17:18 [#01999720]
Points: 6049 Status: Lurker | Followup to JivverDicker: #01999718



he fucking hated it too. not to say his tastes were the
best.

The best ravel is Le Tombeau de Couperin, though it's hard
to get a good recording, since it's hard and pianists like
to show off, to the great detriment of the music.


 

offline JivverDicker from my house on 2006-11-09 17:18 [#01999721]
Points: 12102 Status: Regular



My favourite Ravel is Pavane pour une infante defunte.
AMAZING.


 

offline marlowe from Antarctica on 2006-11-09 17:19 [#01999722]
Points: 24588 Status: Lurker



I'm very fond of the Allegro movement of Beethoven's 7th
symphony.


 

offline sneakattack on 2006-11-09 17:19 [#01999723]
Points: 6049 Status: Lurker | Followup to JivverDicker: #01999721



That is very nice too. do you know Le Tombeau de Couperin?

in general I favor debussy, though I am not as familiar with
his music..


 

offline sneakattack on 2006-11-09 17:20 [#01999724]
Points: 6049 Status: Lurker | Followup to marlowe: #01999722



that's a nice one. do you like the sixth?


 

offline swears from junk sleep on 2006-11-09 17:22 [#01999725]
Points: 6474 Status: Lurker



Isn't classical music only music made in a particular era?
Otherwise it's romantic, or comtempory orchestral or
whatever.


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2006-11-09 17:24 [#01999726]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to sneakattack: #01999716 | Show recordbag



haha, I think the repetition is part of the point with that
one


 

offline sneakattack on 2006-11-09 17:24 [#01999727]
Points: 6049 Status: Lurker | Followup to swears: #01999725



note the quotes.


 

offline sneakattack on 2006-11-09 17:24 [#01999728]
Points: 6049 Status: Lurker | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01999726



it definitely is, and I fucking hate it.


 

offline w M w from London (United Kingdom) on 2006-11-09 17:25 [#01999729]
Points: 21451 Status: Lurker



i have this won chopin cd... must bee limited edition two
won copy cuz i cannot gbackspacefind it ne warez on INTERNET
net NET. I DONT FEEL LIKE FINDING THE capslock track titles
wright now. i just did hello world in 523 lines of code.


 

offline sneakattack on 2006-11-09 17:25 [#01999731]
Points: 6049 Status: Lurker | Followup to w M w: #01999729



in what language? BRAINFUCK?!

check out HASKELL. it is the BEST LANGUAGE.


 

offline JivverDicker from my house on 2006-11-09 17:28 [#01999732]
Points: 12102 Status: Regular | Followup to sneakattack: #01999723



Yeah, that's great! Debussy is amazing too, they both have
the same romantic push without being twee crap.


 

offline sneakattack on 2006-11-09 17:29 [#01999733]
Points: 6049 Status: Lurker | Followup to JivverDicker: #01999732



what about scriabin? sometimes he's somewhat
impressionistic, sometimes wannabe-chopin, frequently too
bombastic. I like the 3rd sonata.

prokofiev is very brilliant.

ravel's pavane is too sad for me btw.


 

offline JivverDicker from my house on 2006-11-09 17:32 [#01999735]
Points: 12102 Status: Regular | Followup to sneakattack: #01999733



I don't really know scriabin? I'll have a look tomorrow.
Prokoviev is majestic! Pavane is earnest sorrow, I didn't
like it the first time I heard it for the same sad reason
but it really is beautiful.


 

offline Ophecks from Nova Scotia (Canada) on 2006-11-09 17:37 [#01999737]
Points: 19190 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag



I really love latter day former Soviets. Valentin
Silvestrov, Alfred Schnittke, Peteris Vasks and Arvo Part.
Silvestrov is my favorite composer ever, I love the really
dark shit.

Old school, Bartok and even really old school, Bach... hit
and miss but some of his organ works are among the best
music I've ever heard. But when I worked for HP tech support
they played a lot of popular Bach stuff when I put people on
hold, like the Brandenburg orchestral stuff and it drove me
nuts after a period and made me hate it against my will.


 

offline sneakattack on 2006-11-09 17:42 [#01999741]
Points: 6049 Status: Lurker | Followup to JivverDicker: #01999735



His etudes and sonatas are famous, but as I said earlier,
since they are difficult, pianists generally try to show off
in them too much.

a particularly good recording of the 3rd sonata is emil
gilels, live, maybe from the 70s or 80s.


 

offline sneakattack on 2006-11-09 17:43 [#01999743]
Points: 6049 Status: Lurker | Followup to Ophecks: #01999737



Never heard of silvestrov! I'll take a look. you make me
think of super metroid, which is nice.

bartok is nice, though I don't listen to it often. his "out
of doors" set of piano pieces is my favorite.

bach's "art of fugue" is excellent when played on organ.


 

offline JivverDicker from my house on 2006-11-09 17:49 [#01999746]
Points: 12102 Status: Regular



Emil Gilels is one of my favourite pianists, he used to
never check the Piano before a performance and 'battle' it
when he played. Most Pianists are so Egoistic and spoilt
they have the piano tuned by 3 different tuners and allsorts
of daft demands millimeter precision of bench
width/placement.


 

offline sneakattack on 2006-11-09 17:51 [#01999748]
Points: 6049 Status: Lurker | Followup to JivverDicker: #01999746



ha ha that's pretty sweet. Richter complained about the
times when he had many pianos to choose from, and that it
made him play shittily, since he kept blaming things on the
choice..

I didn't listen to him for years but a friend came back from
china with lots of DVDs of random soviet performances.
really excellent.

his chopin 3rd sonata recording is really excellent.


 

offline sneakattack on 2006-11-09 17:53 [#01999752]
Points: 6049 Status: Lurker | Followup to JivverDicker: #01999746



there are some excellent videos of the old great pianists on
youtube, by the way (maybe you've checked). their search
capability is terrible though, I've put in a pianist's name
and not gotten matches I know are in the database, which
have the correctly spelled name..


 

offline JivverDicker from my house on 2006-11-09 17:53 [#01999753]
Points: 12102 Status: Regular | Followup to sneakattack: #01999748



I'll have a look for that. Cheers.


 

offline Ophecks from Nova Scotia (Canada) on 2006-11-09 17:54 [#01999754]
Points: 19190 Status: Moderator | Followup to sneakattack: #01999743 | Show recordbag



Please do. Requiem for Larissa is my favorite piece ever, but
then, I like it super dark. I think Arvo Part said
Silvestrov is his favorite composer. So if you're one of the
people that appreciate Part's schtick, you might like him.

Bach + organ is just sex. I think Ich Ruf Zu Dir Herr Jesu
Christ is my favorite piece of music EVER, slightly ahead of
Martha My Dear by The Beatles. It's just incredible.


 

offline Ophecks from Nova Scotia (Canada) on 2006-11-09 17:56 [#01999755]
Points: 19190 Status: Moderator | Followup to Ophecks: #01999754 | Show recordbag



I loaded up the Helmut Walcha complete Bach organ works on
my Xbox 360 to listen to when I play Oblivion. Made the game
seem a lot better than it really is.


 

offline sneakattack on 2006-11-09 17:59 [#01999757]
Points: 6049 Status: Lurker | Followup to Ophecks: #01999754



I'm not crazy about paert, but I like some of it. for
instance "spiegel im spiegel" is way too deep into that sort
of aesthetic for me to "get it".


 

offline sneakattack on 2006-11-09 18:00 [#01999759]
Points: 6049 Status: Lurker | Followup to JivverDicker: #01999753



here is a rather intimidating snapshot of gilels
playing some prokofiev.


 

offline Ophecks from Nova Scotia (Canada) on 2006-11-09 18:03 [#01999760]
Points: 19190 Status: Moderator | Followup to sneakattack: #01999757 | Show recordbag



I thought everybody loved Spiegel im Spiegel! Evne non-Part
fans. That thing is too pretty. It's stuff like Silouans
Song or Tabula Rasa that usually turn people off Part when I
recommend him to them...


 

offline sneakattack on 2006-11-09 18:11 [#01999768]
Points: 6049 Status: Lurker | Followup to Ophecks: #01999760



it's too expansive and melancholy for me.. I need tight
coiled angst!!


 

offline mylittlesister from ...wherever (United Kingdom) on 2006-11-09 18:50 [#01999780]
Points: 8472 Status: Regular



i'm currently working my way though benjamin britten's opera
of the shakespeare play 'a midsummer night's dream'. quite
hard listening at points, but features some amazing
orchestration - particularly 'the wood' sections.

ravel's bolero is amazing, with it's approach to changing
and blending (or fusion) of timbres.

i've just got my hands on stravinsky's 'Orpheus' as well, to
which i've been recommended.


 

offline Mr Brazil from Oh Joan, I love you so... on 2006-11-09 22:27 [#01999891]
Points: 1970 Status: Lurker



The Goldbergs are always on my ipod. Glenn's 1955
interpetation and Angela Hewitt's version are outstanding.
The English Suites are superb and always a constant in my
listening repertoire.

As far as Bach is concerned: He is, in my opinion, the best
composer that ever was, not just in the Baroque period and
genre, but in all of music. His competence in the discipline
of music is masterful and if he lived in the present, I
think he could "dumb down" his abilities to produce popular
tunes today(although, creating material of mass appeal does
take talent).

A good musician from just about any time period will
probably be a good one today, and this applies readily to
Bach. The thing about muscianship is that it hardly exists
anymore, at least in the popular music arena.

Now, someone's appeal I don't understand is Satie. About all
his music is just horrible. It's almost unlistenable. He
gets by on one corny tune!


 

offline sheffieldbleep from Sheffield (United Kingdom) on 2006-11-10 00:52 [#01999912]
Points: 2466 Status: Lurker



Johann Strauss - Die Fledermaus
Chopin - Minute Waltz
Beethoven - Piano Sonata No. 14


 

offline unabomber from Palma de Mallorca (Spain) on 2006-11-10 01:04 [#01999913]
Points: 3756 Status: Regular



Tchaikovsky - Concert for Piano and Orchestra number 1
(first movement)


 

offline Morton from out (Netherlands, The) on 2006-11-10 01:50 [#01999918]
Points: 10000 Status: Addict



Beethoven's SEVENTH & SECOND


 

offline dog_belch from Netherlands, The on 2006-11-10 10:50 [#02000155]
Points: 15098 Status: Addict | Show recordbag



I feel like your collective upper middle class fathers just
farted in unison packed in a closed drawing room.


 

offline sneakattack on 2006-11-22 23:18 [#02006474]
Points: 6049 Status: Lurker



more russian shit--nikolai medtner sonata in g minor, op22


 

offline Wolfslice from Bay Area, CA (United States) on 2006-11-23 00:48 [#02006495]
Points: 4909 Status: Regular



I like a lot of Beethoven (though it's not technically
classical... Romantic peroid? or something),

and I really like Johann Pachelbel's Canon (probably not
official classical either-I dont even know if thats the real
title, thats just the mp3 I have)


 

offline DiaZoHeXagoN from The city of angels (United States) on 2006-11-23 00:57 [#02006496]
Points: 2659 Status: Lurker



indeed bachs fugues are incredible, I know its over played
and cliche but tocata and fugue in D minor are awesome. I
really like bachs Air as well.
I believe its lizst Hungarian rhapsody which is also a
favorite.
the winter pieces by vivaldi are nice too.


 

offline DiaZoHeXagoN from The city of angels (United States) on 2006-11-23 01:00 [#02006497]
Points: 2659 Status: Lurker | Followup to Wolfslice: #02006495



yeah even if its becoming an overused wedding song it is
quite a beautiful piece Pachelbels canon in d minor.
Canon-
A musical form where the melody or tune is imitated by
individual parts at regular intervals. The individual parts
may enter at different measures and pitches. The tune may
also be played at different speeds, backwards, or inverted.


 

offline furoi from Udine (Eriko Sato's undies) (Italy) on 2006-11-23 03:31 [#02006531]
Points: 1706 Status: Lurker



japanese contemporary classical such as sakamoto and
hisaishi

and lot of minimal such as Steve Reich, Lygeti etc etc

and also some of the famous pieces from the past centuries



 

offline redrum from the allman brothers band (Ireland) on 2006-11-23 03:56 [#02006548]
Points: 12878 Status: Addict



rachmaninov piano concerti
some mozart piano concerti
peter warlock's capriol suite (amazing)
haydn string quartets
bach goldberg variations (on piano, can't suffer the
harpsichord for that length of time i'm afraid)
satie is nice once in a while
rodrigo's guitar concerto
granados, albeniz works (especially enjoyable on guitar)


 

offline DiaZoHeXagoN from The city of angels (United States) on 2006-11-23 05:20 [#02006608]
Points: 2659 Status: Lurker | Followup to redrum: #02006548



rodrigo's guitar concerto
granados, albeniz works (especially enjoyable on guitar)

agreed incredible guitar songs. Julian Bream plays them
well!


 

offline redrum from the allman brothers band (Ireland) on 2006-11-23 05:55 [#02006633]
Points: 12878 Status: Addict | Followup to DiaZoHeXagoN: #02006608



my thoughts exactly :)

dedacatoria and la maja de goya are just fucking sublime..
they loose so much of their power when played on piano, i
couldn't believe it.

he's a very expressive guitarist, a fucking treasure.


 

offline mappatazee from ¨y¨z¨| (Burkina Faso) on 2006-11-23 21:36 [#02006963]
Points: 14294 Status: Lurker



debussy


 

offline Mr Brazil from Oh Joan, I love you so... on 2006-11-23 22:25 [#02006972]
Points: 1970 Status: Lurker | Followup to redrum: #02006548



Your dislike of the harpsichord is the same sentiment I have
toward the guitar. It's horrid to have to sit through a
listen of all that fret noise. And it always seems so
labored to play a guitar piece for a muscian, especially
transcriptions of genuine art music.


 


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