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rockinbass17 04-28-2006 03:49 PM

I'm not dismissing the whole era. What I'm saying is that a lot of the symphonic music from the romantic period doesn't appeal to me, I just don't like the style that was used by many composers. I'm not putting every composer from that time in this category, for example I enjoy Schubert and Tchiakovsky, but most romantic composers I've listened to, the music just doesn't click with me.

Mazeppa 04-28-2006 04:02 PM

[QUOTE=rockinbass17]I'm not dismissing the whole era. What I'm saying is that a lot of the symphonic music from the romantic period doesn't appeal to me, I just don't like the style that was used by many composers. I'm not putting every composer from that time in this category, for example I enjoy Schubert and Tchiakovsky, but most romantic composers I've listened to, the music just doesn't click with me.[/QUOTE]
Well saying you don't enjoy it is ok, but saying it sucks doesn't really go.

Ugoff 04-28-2006 08:45 PM

I'm kind of a classical noob but I've really started likeing classical music. I'm a fan of Gustav Holst and his whole movement on the Planets. I've also downloaded some music from other classical artists.

rockinbass17 04-28-2006 09:07 PM

[QUOTE=metal guitar]Well saying you don't enjoy it is ok, but saying it sucks doesn't really go.[/QUOTE]

I really just said that Franck sucks. Symphony in D really irritates me. But I never said that one who likes that type of music has a bad opinion or anything. In fact, I could see why someone would like it. I just happen to loathe it. Sorry for the confusion.

Werny 04-30-2006 05:13 AM

Nick Parnell came to my town the other day, do any other aussies know of him? He's a percussionist and played Chopin and Bach pieces on the vibraphone, excellent stuff.

There's a baroque concert in a few days but my Nan won't take me over to Albury to see it, she thinks it's too heavy. Damn!

So yeah, I'm not even a "noob", I don't own any classical. Can anyone reccomend some classic organ or harpsichord pieces?

Mazeppa 04-30-2006 05:32 AM

Bach is great for organ and harpsichord.

what 04-30-2006 11:25 AM

You can check out Messiaen for Organ... Haendel too...

Nepenthe 04-30-2006 12:43 PM

[QUOTE=metal guitar]Bach is great for organ and harpsichord.[/QUOTE]

Toccata And Fugue On Organ is one of my favorite Bach pieces.

Mazeppa 04-30-2006 01:05 PM

[QUOTE=IAmTheBlackWizard]Toccata And Fugue On Organ is one of my favorite Bach pieces.[/QUOTE]
Great piece. Last night I heard the 'Dorian' Toccata & Fugue performed which was brilliant, along with some works by more obscure composers whom I hadn't heard of before.

Grant 04-30-2006 02:35 PM

I just listened to Stravinsky's [I]Firebird[/I], it blows me away each time I hear it. What does everybody here think of ol' Igor?

Samuel 04-30-2006 04:45 PM

Love Stravinski, and Firebrird is one of my favourites. I really like the later Symphonies, and some of his sacred works, as well as the big three ballets.


What do you guys think of Henryk Gorecki? I'm listening to his 3rd symphony right now, and I quite like it.

what 05-01-2006 12:35 PM

Stravinsky is one of my favourite composers. For some reason, the composers which I like most, coincidentally (or not) are all Russian - Stravinsky, Shostakovich and Prokofiev.

I like all of Stravinsky's ballets, from his Russian period - 'Rite of Spring', to his neo-classical 'Apollon Musagete' to the abstract 'Agon'.

I love his late period where he started getting interested in the 12-tone system - his first work the septet is great. Plus his Symphonies, string quartets bah, there's some much good music from him!

Det_Nosnip 05-01-2006 03:32 PM

[QUOTE=metal guitar]Been listening to plenty of Liszt lately myself.[/QUOTE]

*glances at his own avatar*

Woohoo!!!

DonMancini 05-01-2006 06:44 PM

Anyone hear the 1812 overture version made for V for Vendetta? Hollllllllly shiiiiiiiiiiittt

Way better than other versions I heard (although it's shorter)

Mazeppa 05-02-2006 10:38 AM

[QUOTE=Det_Nosnip]*glances at his own avatar*

Woohoo!!![/QUOTE]
Haha, good man.

jazzlife 05-28-2006 12:41 PM

Messiaen
 
I see that Messiaen was mentioned a few times already! I just listened to some of the "catalogue d'oiseaux". I think Messiaen is one of the best in interpreting and using natural sounds in his music. Although he hasn't 'brought' music anywhere (and that being the cause for ppl to dislike him), i like his music. Especially his 'weird' arrangments; eg. 3 flutes, 5 trumpets, 2 violings, 1 piano, 1 organist, etc.

ariathe9th 05-29-2006 07:21 AM

[QUOTE=Werny]Nick Parnell came to my town the other day, do any other aussies know of him? He's a percussionist and played Chopin and Bach pieces on the vibraphone, excellent stuff.

There's a baroque concert in a few days but my Nan won't take me over to Albury to see it, she thinks it's too heavy. Damn!

So yeah, I'm not even a "noob", I don't own any classical. Can anyone reccomend some classic organ or harpsichord pieces?[/QUOTE]

ah yes hes recently finished studying at my school

amazing musician great guy

Alt F4 05-30-2006 03:49 AM

Does anyone like Modest Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition? Well, I am not a classical music expert but I like symphonies and chorus parts of operas. I’ve also tried to find some of Mussorgsky’s themes transcribed to tablatures but it seems it can’t be seen on the web. Any guitar player who likes Pictures at an Exhibition?

ariathe9th 05-30-2006 07:04 AM

yeuh i play guitar yeuh i like it

fingers mccoy 05-31-2006 12:48 PM

Hey man Aria i'm learning a Leo Brouwer Sonata written for Julian Bream, i'm assuming you know it, i'd like to know what you think of it and be able to send you recordings for criticism, do you have msn or an email address?

Do you play it at all? What label is releasing your cd?

ariathe9th 06-01-2006 12:39 AM

lol my cd will not be on a label

i dont play the sonata
but im very familiar with it and would love to hear ur recordings
ive got some good recordings of it one that my good friend alex tsiboulski released which i thinks the best

ive got msn its [email]benb3233@hotmail.com[/email] im pretty sure

yeuh looking forward to hearing u

its sucha beautiful piece probably brouwers best IMO
i have played thru the 2nd movement once but not realy seriously maybe one day ill play it properly

JustWondering 06-02-2006 01:59 PM

Hi, I was wondering how you classical musicians learn new songs. How many songs do you learn at once? Or how many could I possibly learn at once? I know that in writing music I never really get farther than 2 or 3 songs before, getting to far into one song makes me forget what ive learned about another. But really I am usually concentrating on one song and that makes me lose interest in another and i usually forget about it. Basically i want to learn the most amount of songs at a time, without slowing my progress. Because my reading skills suck pretty bad and it takes me a while to learn a song, its very tedious to learn just one song at a time. By the way the way i usually learn a song is to commit it to memory because my reading sucks, so there might be some extra limitations for me.

Mazeppa 06-02-2006 02:05 PM

You understand a question like that is difficult to answer, because it's almost completely dependant on your ability. Still, I only started piano a few months back so I tend to commit music to memory so that I can focus on playing it. I learn several pieces at a time, remembering different pieces isn't a problem for me and have help from my teacher. Again, it comes down to you really, I wouldn't say there's a hard rule you can follow.

what 06-05-2006 06:57 AM

[QUOTE=jazzlife]I see that Messiaen was mentioned a few times already! I just listened to some of the "catalogue d'oiseaux". I think Messiaen is one of the best in interpreting and using natural sounds in his music. Although he hasn't 'brought' music anywhere (and that being the cause for ppl to dislike him), i like his music. Especially his 'weird' arrangments; eg. 3 flutes, 5 trumpets, 2 violings, 1 piano, 1 organist, etc.[/QUOTE]

What you mean he hasn't brought it anywhere? I hope you don't think he just imitated bird song for no reason? 'People' dislike Messiean for the same reason they don't like other contemporary composers - its "boring", "unmelodic" and "dissonant".

Phunphone 06-05-2006 08:20 AM

[QUOTE=what]What you mean he hasn't brought it anywhere? I hope you don't think he just imitated bird song for no reason? 'People' dislike Messiean for the same reason they don't like other contemporary composers - its "boring", "unmelodic" and "dissonant".[/QUOTE]

Messiaen was definitely innovative and radical.

His discovery of modes of limited transcription is inventive enough. Moreover, he was the teacher of Iannis Xenakis, Pierre Boulez, Karlheinz Stockhausen and the likes. His influence on contemporary classical music is massive.

Jaffa Cake 06-30-2006 06:51 PM

I've started to really get into classical music, actually. I'm really liking Handel at the moment. Can someone reccomened me some of his greatest works, other than; Water Music, Zadok the Priest, Sarabande and the Hallelujah Chorus?

Also, what are some of Beethovens greatest works - other than his piano concerti and his 5th and 9th symphonies. Thanks.

Nepenthe 07-01-2006 06:55 AM

Well, other than the obvious Fur Elise, the Moonlight Sonata and Grosse Fugue are two of my favorite Beethoven works.

Mazeppa 07-01-2006 12:35 PM

Third Symphony. It's right up there with the Fifth and the Ninth. Nice to see that the Grosse Fugue was recommended too, that's a monumental string quartet.

rockinbass17 07-01-2006 03:32 PM

For Beethoven, I really enjoy his and 6th "Pastorale" Symphony and the 7th. I'd actually put the 6th up there as one of my favorite classical pieces.

Nepenthe 07-02-2006 04:21 PM

Grosse Fugue is extraordinary. One of my favorite pieces of music ever I'd venture to say.

CaptainWaits 07-02-2006 05:15 PM

I went to a book store tday, and in their music section they were loaded with Classical, and I found quite a bit of Bela Bartok, who I've been searching for every once in a while. So with that being said, what's a good album to pick up of his??

Ad Absurdum 07-04-2006 06:41 AM

[quote=Jaffa Cake]I've started to really get into classical music, actually. I'm really liking Handel at the moment. Can someone reccomened me some of his greatest works, other than; Water Music, Zadok the Priest, Sarabande and the Hallelujah Chorus?[/quote]Basically the whole of [I]Messiah[/I] is pure genious, you should check out the whole thing rather than just the Hallelujah chorus from it. Also his organ concerti are good, such as 'The Cukoo And The Nightingale', and also the concerti grossi from op.6 are good. I haven't heard much of his stuff, and he wrote an awful lot. I won't give any recommendations on Beethoven, because you've already got plenty and everyone else probably knows more about him than me anyway.

NP: Dvorak - [I]Symphony No. 4[/I] (the third movement in this is orgasmic)

Gunnie 07-22-2006 06:17 AM

I'm new here, and you all are probably way out of my league with the music expertise, but I thought this might be a good place to turn you on to something different. Let me know if you like it. It's original pieces written by an artist named Rene Gruss. I originally heard a few of the titles on yahoo music and fell in love with it. I ordered the cd immediately and have been trying to make him famous ever since. He labels his genre as urban classical. Give him a listen, and tell me what you think:

[url]http://www.renegruss.com/[/url]

Nepenthe 07-23-2006 10:55 AM

[QUOTE=Gunnie]I'm new here, and you all are probably way out of my league with the music expertise, but I thought this might be a good place to turn you on to something different. Let me know if you like it. It's original pieces written by an artist named Rene Gruss. I originally heard a few of the titles on yahoo music and fell in love with it. I ordered the cd immediately and have been trying to make him famous ever since. He labels his genre as urban classical. Give him a listen, and tell me what you think:

[url]http://www.renegruss.com/[/url][/QUOTE]

Classic Cool Music :lol:

It did sound very good though, something I can definately see looking into further.

Chrizzle fo' Shizzle 07-25-2006 02:29 PM

I've been listening to a lot of the stuff Sam Spence did for NFL films

Very epic

NymphetamineX 07-30-2006 08:47 PM

Hey, I've recently been getting into classical and have found I really like the piano stuff. I haven't been able to listen to much yet, but I love Beethoven's Fur Elise and Moonlight Sonata, and a couple nocturnes by Chopin, mostly just mellow piano peices. Can anyone direct me to anything else along those lines? I hardly know any termanology or composers yet, but I'm open to pretty much anything.

XAsTheRootsUndoX 08-02-2006 02:14 AM

i'm noticing a lack of love for Brahms here
i mean, his symphonies (especially the 1st), his cello concerti, all of it is gold

masada 08-02-2006 02:21 AM

Could anyone recommend a composer that is similar to Igor Stravinsky in really any way?

Mazeppa 08-02-2006 08:10 AM

[QUOTE=NymphetamineX]Hey, I've recently been getting into classical and have found I really like the piano stuff. I haven't been able to listen to much yet, but I love Beethoven's Fur Elise and Moonlight Sonata, and a couple nocturnes by Chopin, mostly just mellow piano peices. Can anyone direct me to anything else along those lines? I hardly know any termanology or composers yet, but I'm open to pretty much anything.[/QUOTE]
Try more Beethoven sonatas, perhaps Nos. 8, 23 and 26...they should fit the bill.
[QUOTE=XAsTheRootsUndoX]i'm noticing a lack of love for Brahms here[/QUOTE]
I really like his Variations of a Theme by Paganini, and his Rhapsodien Op.79. His 'Organ Symphony' is pretty cool too.

DavidB92 08-28-2006 02:36 PM

[QUOTE=Alt F4]Does anyone like Modest Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition? Well, I am not a classical music expert but I like symphonies and chorus parts of operas. I’ve also tried to find some of Mussorgsky’s themes transcribed to tablatures but it seems it can’t be seen on the web. Any guitar player who likes Pictures at an Exhibition?[/QUOTE]

Yeah, good bit of music.


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