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PianoDan 04-03-2005 06:44 AM

[QUOTE=agcolonialman]Would anyone hav the sheet music or score?[/QUOTE]
the only thing I can suggest trying would be going to [url]http://www.sheetmusicarchive.net[/url]. If that doesn't work, then ask at your local music store, and if they don't have it ask if they can order it in. That's what you do when you want sheet music.

PianoDan 04-15-2005 09:22 AM

*bump*

So I've been really into chamber music lately. The other day I listened to Haydn's "Emperor" quartet and it's absolutely gorgeous. I've also listened to Schubert's "Trout" and "Death and the Maiden" piano quintets, two more absolute beauties.

There's so much really nice chamber music written - Schubert tended to be really good at it. Mozart was obviously a genius at it. I think I posted about this previously but I recently saw a Chamber Orchestra from Germany perform. They performed one of Mozart's "Salzburg" Symphonies (his first I believe), plus a couple of oboe concertos (one by J. S. Bach), and one of the classics and one of my favourites, Palchalbel's Canon in D.

PianoDan 06-01-2005 09:48 PM

I'm bumping this thread because it's got a lot more interesting stuff in it than the thread "classical" thread made today.

For anyone who's getting into classical music, I highly recommend [URL=http://www.classicalarchives.com/]The Classical Music Archives[/URL]. It has live recordings from all major composers and most other composers of classical, baroque, romantic, and impressionist music, as well as some 20th Century music. It also has hundreds more midi recordings, which aren't good to listen to, but give you the idea of how a piece sounds.

It's a great site and well worth bookmarking. You can only play five pieces a day unless you register, but even that's a fair listen each day.

Reaganista 06-01-2005 10:07 PM

Vesti la Guibba is one of my favorite songs ever.

Glitterati 06-01-2005 10:22 PM

Stravinsky's [I]The Rite Of Spring [/I] is one of my favorites.

what 06-02-2005 04:53 AM

that thing is just crazy... and phenomenal, his Firebird suite is also great

PianoDan 06-03-2005 01:36 AM

[QUOTE=Canadian_Guy]Stravinsky's [I]The Rite Of Spring [/I] is one of my favorites.[/QUOTE]
Stravinsky is one composer I've heard mentioned lots but not heard much of. He's now on my high priority list of artists to listen to.

[QUOTE=The Tway]Vesti la Guibba is one of my favorite songs ever.[/QUOTE]
Who wrote Vesti la Guibba?

Grant 06-04-2005 12:49 PM

Upload some Stravinsky.

Ad Absurdum 06-04-2005 01:03 PM

[QUOTE=Passion,Grace and Fire]Upload some Stravinsky.[/QUOTE]

The Rite of Spring
[url]http://s38.yousendit.com/d.aspx?id=1IRNRFSRK27HP2OXNAOF9CBA5C[/url]

Samuel 06-04-2005 04:48 PM

What's up? I never realized we had this going, very cool.

Anyway, I enjoy the "Classical" stuff that I listen too a lot, but I am certainly not very well versed in the different eras. Some favourites of mine include Stravinsky, Schoenberg, Liszt, Handel, and Vivaldi.

I was wondering if anyone could point me in the direction of some stuff that I should check out, or even better, some sort of list of "must have" peices/recordings? I'm going into a Bachelors of Music program for Jazz Guitar next Fall, and I would like to be able to keep up with my peers in the non-Jazz performance areas, or at least be able to wing it. And, of course, I love the stuff.

rockinbass17 06-08-2005 06:07 PM

Has anyone here ever heard Domenico Dragonetti? I recently performed one of his pieces- Concerto in A Major- for my double bass NYSSMA solo. He writes some insane bass parts.
Anyway, does anyone know anything else from him? He's hard to find.

rockinbass17 06-23-2005 09:03 PM

*Bump* Okay, this is a good thread to have around, I want to save it from being forgotton. Come on, show classical some love!

I'm listening to Beethoven's 6th "Pastoral" Sympohony right now. I personally think it's his best, better than even the 5th and the 9th, any opinions?

Neon Dub 06-24-2005 08:14 AM

Steve Reich anyone?

Mazeppa 06-30-2005 04:05 PM

So, at the moment on Radio 3's website Beethoven's symphonies No 6, 7, 8 and 9 are available for free download.

[URL=http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/beethoven/downloads.shtml]Link[/URL]

Just if anyone's interested.

Grant 08-18-2005 07:17 AM

bump.

Delay Pedal Boy 08-21-2005 12:52 AM

[QUOTE=Neon Dub]Steve Reich anyone?[/QUOTE]
Another fan of contemporary classical! :thumb: Pachebel's been called the first one hit wonder. Can someone upload some LaMonte Young in a week from now, as I will be away soon? Thanks.

camelfarmer 08-21-2005 04:47 AM

I like classical alot.

Ive got this collection with like 30 cd's. Need to start listening to it again. I normally dload my music, classical isnt easy to dload.

camelfarmer 08-21-2005 04:48 AM

I like classical alot.

Ive got this collection with like 30 cd's. Need to start listening to it again. I normally dload my music, classical isnt easy to dload.

Mazeppa 08-21-2005 12:57 PM

I've downloaded quite a bit of classical music but I like to buy the cds, which isn't a problem because classical cds are often pretty cheap.

rockinbass17 08-21-2005 09:21 PM

My father has TONS of classical CD's lying around. I'm constantly finding new stuff to listen to. It's great. I just found a CD with alot of Chopin's Polonaises on it and it's really good stuff.

OnePartHarmony 08-21-2005 10:35 PM

Canadian Brass is the way to go.

Mazeppa 08-22-2005 04:20 AM

My dad doesn't like classical at all really, but my mum does. Too bad she doesn't have a big collection of classical :-/

PianoDan 08-22-2005 07:22 PM

[QUOTE=rockinbass17]My father has TONS of classical CD's lying around. I'm constantly finding new stuff to listen to. It's great. I just found a CD with alot of Chopin's Polonaises on it and it's really good stuff.[/QUOTE]
Chopin's Polonnaises are marvellous. I sadly only have two or three of them on CD! Anything by Chopin is pure gold.

I haven't counted them but I've got well over 100 classical CDs.

rockinbass17 08-22-2005 08:41 PM

I'm listening to Polonaise in A right now.
I'm big on piano music. Chopin, Rachmaninov, Lizst (Scherzo is amazing), even Scott Joplin. I want to hear some other piano composers, though.

Det_Nosnip 08-22-2005 10:38 PM

[QUOTE=PianoDan]The Brandenburg Concertos.[/QUOTE]

Cool, awesome! Thanks for responding to that one, I'll check 'em out.

OnePartHarmony 08-22-2005 11:32 PM

[QUOTE=rockinbass17]I'm listening to Polonaise in A right now.
I'm big on piano music. Chopin, Rachmaninov, Lizst (Scherzo is amazing), even Scott Joplin. I want to hear some other piano composers, though.[/QUOTE]

Aye. I've been listening to Moonlight Sonata and all that jazz for days now. I listen to Rhapsody in Blue just for the piano fills sometimes.

PianoDan 08-23-2005 01:06 AM

[QUOTE=rockinbass17]I'm listening to Polonaise in A right now.
I'm big on piano music. Chopin, Rachmaninov, Lizst (Scherzo is amazing), even Scott Joplin. I want to hear some other piano composers, though.[/QUOTE]
Can't leave out Mozart and Beethoven, particularly Beethoven. His 32 Sonatas are all amazing. I'm currently listening to the Waldstein - my favourite of the 32, particularly the 3rd movement.....

But don't forget Debussy, if you're into more modern/impressionist piano stuff as well.

[quote=rockinbass17]I'm listening to Beethoven's 6th "Pastoral" Sympohony right now. I personally think it's his best, better than even the 5th and the 9th, any opinions?[/QUOTE]
Yep - I agree completely. Well not quite, the 7th has got to be very close. I can't decide between the 6th and the 7th. The second movement (Allegretto, the slow one) of the 7th is my favourite movement of any symphony.

For me, 6 = 7 > 5 > 9 > 3 > 8 > 4 > 1 = 2

Amit 08-23-2005 04:03 AM

Hm.

I'm looking for more pieces by Rimsky Korsakov. I have absolutely loved Scheherezade since I was a child, but I really can't find anything else by him. Any recommendations?

That_Dude 08-23-2005 05:06 AM

The Clockwork Soundtrack is impresive. The person who did that was Wendy (formally Walter) Carlos.

Mazeppa 08-23-2005 05:08 AM

[QUOTE=Eggo]Hm.

I'm looking for more pieces by Rimsky Korsakov. I have absolutely loved Scheherezade since I was a child, but I really can't find anything else by him. Any recommendations?[/QUOTE]
Here you go, an upload. It's a very short bit of music, but it's great.

[URL= http://rapidshare.de/files/4280467/The_Flight_of_the_Bumble_Bee.mp3.html]Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov: Flight of the Bumble Bee[/URL]

Delicate Genius 08-23-2005 05:09 AM

I tend to be a fan of composers from the romantic period and later.

Chopin is probably my favorite composer; almost all of his acknowledged works I like. Liszt I also really like, although he can get dull at times (while some of them are good, I'd hate to sit through a full rotation of his Hungarian Rhapsodies). I like Alkan's etudes quite a bit, too. Rachmaninov is probably my favorite after Chopin (possibly after Liszt, but I doubt it). I like a lot of his solo piano works and the third piano concerto (not the last movement, though; cool theme and stuff, but it's boring, in my opinion).

Prokofiev is really cool, although I admittedly really only know his piano sonatas and Toccata Op. 11 (the latter of which is a monster). Stravinsky is cool from what I've heard. Shostakovich is probably my favorite non-romantic composer; he's very contrapuntal with a romantic kind of framework; I like that. Also, Rzewski is pretty cool as far as contemporary composers go ("Winnsboro Cotton Mill Blues").

Stuff outside of this time frame I like are Bach, Scarlatti, and Beethoven. I don't find Bach very fun to listen to, though; but his work is genius and I really enjoy playing it. Scarlatti is fun to listen to, as is Beethoven (I hate playing Beethoven, though). I was never a big Mozart fan, although I can see the value of his music. He's fun to play, though, but I don't get a whole lot out of his music even when I'm playing it.

EDIT: And guys, if you can't find good classical CDs or something, just go to the **** library. I used to go there every week and just pick out three CDs, then rip them when I get home. I got several CDs worth of MP3s out of it.

Mazeppa 08-23-2005 05:19 AM

Classical CDs are pretty easy to find in my experience.

Grant 08-23-2005 07:08 AM

For ages now, my favourite composer has been Igor Stravinsky. There's something about The Firebird that's just...evil. Still, the man was a genius and probably the best composer of the 20th century.

Mazeppa 08-23-2005 07:13 AM

I haven't listened to much music by Igor Stravinsky, I'll have to check out The Firebird sometime as I've heard so much about it.

Amit 08-23-2005 08:29 AM

[QUOTE=metal guitar]Here you go, an upload. It's a very short bit of music, but it's great.

[URL= http://rapidshare.de/files/4280467/The_Flight_of_the_Bumble_Bee.mp3.html]Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov: Flight of the Bumble Bee[/URL][/QUOTE]

:lol:

Everyone's heard that. I'm looking for actual [B]music[/B].

I'm asking for something like Scheherezade...Beautiful, enchanting, romantic, epic, subtle, <insert adjective>.

charolastra 08-23-2005 09:05 AM

arg. im super digging Mozart's O Fortuna.........

:p

rockinbass17 08-23-2005 09:41 AM

I just got the new music from my orchestra- the Overture to Marriage of Figaro and Shubert's 8th (Unfinished). I'm not a big fan of opera, but the overture is a very good peice of work. Pretty hard bass parts. And the Unfinished Symphony is quite good as well.

PianoDan 08-23-2005 10:41 PM

[QUOTE=Delicate Genius]Chopin is probably my favorite composer; almost all of his acknowledged works I like. Liszt I also really like, although he can get dull at times (while some of them are good, I'd hate to sit through a full rotation of his Hungarian Rhapsodies). I like Alkan's etudes quite a bit, too. Rachmaninov is probably my favorite after Chopin (possibly after Liszt, but I doubt it). I like a lot of his solo piano works and the third piano concerto (not the last movement, though; cool theme and stuff, but it's boring, in my opinion).

Prokofiev is really cool, although I admittedly really only know his piano sonatas and Toccata Op. 11 (the latter of which is a monster). Stravinsky is cool from what I've heard. Shostakovich is probably my favorite non-romantic composer; he's very contrapuntal with a romantic kind of framework; I like that. Also, Rzewski is pretty cool as far as contemporary composers go ("Winnsboro Cotton Mill Blues").[/QUOTE]
Not hugely into Liszt myself, excepting a few notable works. Anything, [i]anything[/i] by Chopin is geninus; Rachmaninov is good as well but I prefer Chopin.

What I've heard of Prokofiev sounds okay, though a tad modern for my liking; but I've been extending into more modern stuff lately. Stravinsky and Shostakovich are, unfortunately, not two composers I know a lot about.

[QUOTE=Delicate Genius]Stuff outside of this time frame I like are Bach, Scarlatti, and Beethoven. I don't find Bach very fun to listen to, though; but his work is genius and I really enjoy playing it. Scarlatti is fun to listen to, as is Beethoven (I hate playing Beethoven, though). I was never a big Mozart fan, although I can see the value of his music. He's fun to play, though, but I don't get a whole lot out of his music even when I'm playing it.[/QUOTE]
I used to be very much like that. Anything pre-Beethoven wasn't my thing, so much. But Mozart is now one of my favourites - his music is so relaxing, so good to unwind to - both for studying with, and for playing. I have been highly stressed recently but sitting down to a Mozart Sonata is like nothing else for relieving some tension. Bach has also grown on me recently; his music is more than just pure genius. The Brandenburg Concertos are beautiful. Handel has some great stuff. Vivaldi's seasons are brilliant. I'm in a Baroque phase at the moment. It was never my favourite but there's a beauty there so different to the Romantics that you'll discover if you listen to it enough.

My favourite classical work at the moment is Albinoni's Adagio in G minor - the most beautiful piece.... it's just amazing.

Delicate Genius 08-24-2005 04:54 AM

[QUOTE=PianoDan]Not hugely into Liszt myself, excepting a few notable works. Anything, [i]anything[/i] by Chopin is geninus; Rachmaninov is good as well but I prefer Chopin.
[/quote]

Yeah, Liszt is largely fluff. Like, I love "Mazeppa" and everything, but there's this one chromatic run that's completely unnecessary. Liszt tended to make his work difficult whether he could do it with tact or not. This results in many pieces with beautiful virtuosic textures, but it also frequently results in obvious fluff. Still, though, excellent composer.

I agree about Chopin. Unlike Liszt, he was no fluff (but also unlike Liszt, he didn't seem as capable of creating impressive long works). Every note in his etudes counts completely.

[quote]
What I've heard of Prokofiev sounds okay, though a tad modern for my liking; but I've been extending into more modern stuff lately. Stravinsky and Shostakovich are, unfortunately, not two composers I know a lot about.
[/quote]

If you haven't already, check out the Toccata by Prokofiev that I mentioned. That site [url]www.classiccat.com[/url] or whatever it's called has a free recording of Martha Argerich performing it (agreed to be the best performance of it by everyone I've talked to). It's more straight-up chromatic than a lot of his other stuff, which might make it appeal to your romantic side. Even then though, it's still a little 'modern,' I hated it at first, but after about three listens it stayed my favorite piece for months.

[quote]
I used to be very much like that. Anything pre-Beethoven wasn't my thing, so much. But Mozart is now one of my favourites - his music is so relaxing, so good to unwind to - both for studying with, and for playing. I have been highly stressed recently but sitting down to a Mozart Sonata is like nothing else for relieving some tension. Bach has also grown on me recently; his music is more than just pure genius. The Brandenburg Concertos are beautiful. Handel has some great stuff. Vivaldi's seasons are brilliant. I'm in a Baroque phase at the moment. It was never my favourite but there's a beauty there so different to the Romantics that you'll discover if you listen to it enough.
[/QUOTE]

My problem is that it just sounds so samey. That's the thing, though; Bach wasn't particularly innovative harmonically, he just took structure to a completely new level. So you kinda expect his stuff to sound samey harmonically, but have this really genius structures (which they do). This is why I have a hard time listening to him, because I'm not to the point of just hearing these big structures yet, all I hear are the samey harmonies. Playing the pieces, though, forces me to see the structure, so that's where I get most of my appreciation. I mainly just need to listen more, though, and develop an ear that can detect purely structure.

Mozart sounds extremely samey to me, too, except I appreciate his sense of structure less, as I enjoy linear compositions more than (non-linear?) more chordal compositions. It's not until Beethoven that everything stops sounding the same to me.

rockinbass17 08-24-2005 08:41 PM

Is that the Toccata ELP covered? Just curious.


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