That scares the bejaysus out of me Atticus. Looking at that manuscript I mean.
ah rubbish, this time next year, your hands'll be streaming up and down that keyboard ... watch em go ... well done!
Guest Guest
Subject: Re: Favourite Classical Music Fri May 23, 2008 2:53 am
cookiemonster wrote:
As I said in the other thread, I adore Rachmaninoff
A little-known masterpiece by Rachmaninoff is his Vespers -- Russian Orthodox church music. I've heard several versions of it, with different titles and different parts, but all wonderful.
Similarly, I've heard several variations on Night On Bare Mountain by Mussorgsky. Also great is his Pictures At An Exhibition.
There's something about those Russians when they're inspired... Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker is just perfect.
Carmina Burana was mentioned. Orff's other works are little-known but one delightful piece from his Schulwerk, written for children, featured in the brilliant film Badlands. There's a snatch of it here: http://ie.youtube.com/watch?v=D1voYKjSkLw
If memory serves me correct, the same Orff piece was used some years ago in a TV ad for the Sunday Independent. Yes, the Sindo (clenches fist).
About Mozart, yes, many of his works are light ("pop") but most of his later works have serious depth, not to mention genius. There are so many of them that he must have been composing a masterpiece nearly every day of his adult life.
Bach would have run him close in productivity. My own favourite: the first movement of the 6th Brandenburg Concerto.
Guest Guest
Subject: Re: Favourite Classical Music Fri May 23, 2008 12:45 pm
Does opera count? I'm rather fond of Verdi, especially La Forza del Destino. Reminds me of 'Jean de Florrete' and Stella Artois ads.
Guest Guest
Subject: Re: Favourite Classical Music Sun Jun 15, 2008 7:51 pm
Anyone who wants a different angle on well-known classical music should buy the soundtrack to A Clockwork Orange. Wendy Carlos goes all synthesised. The result is familiar and yet strange at the same time.
Guest Guest
Subject: Re: Favourite Classical Music Thu Dec 11, 2008 3:50 am
Just back from annual dose of Messiah, in one of the most beautiful Irish baroque church interiors. Last year it was a scratchy little Baroque group playing 18th century instruments and great trumpet blasts. This year the Irish Baroque Orchestra, lush and more Victorian sound. On both occasions, it was 3 hours well spent.
Guest Guest
Subject: Re: Favourite Classical Music Thu Dec 11, 2008 4:18 am
cactus flower wrote:
Just back from annual dose of Messiah, in one of the most beautiful Irish baroque church interiors. Last year it was a scratchy little Baroque group playing 18th century instruments and great trumpet blasts. This year the Irish Baroque Orchestra, lush and more Victorian sound. On both occasions, it was 3 hours well spent.
Oh wow. I so wish I had been there.
I recently lost by iPod and have to buy another. I am having such withdrawal symtoms. The lack of music is killing me. But then I have a very broad taste in music. Depending on my mood I could be listening to Chopin or Guns and Roses, a fugue or Judy Garland, Purcell or Paul Simon. I am counting the hours until I get paid and can buy a new iPod (in the full knowledge that the moment I buy it the missing old one will turn up! )
Guest Guest
Subject: Re: Favourite Classical Music Thu Dec 11, 2008 4:26 am
Music can be so much about location and occassion.
soubresauts
Can't fault that selection. Carmina Burana is good nigh out and Mozart's Requiem really is a must if there is a performance at hand.
Last edited by Squire on Thu Dec 11, 2008 11:11 pm; edited 1 time in total
Guest Guest
Subject: Re: Favourite Classical Music Thu Dec 11, 2008 4:57 am
Squire wrote:
Music can be so much about location and occassion.
soubresauts
Can't fault that selection. Carmina Burana is good nigh out and Mozart's Requiem really is a must if there is a performance at hand.
I played a tape of the Lacrymosa from the Requiem at my father's funeral. It is one of my favourite pieces of music. I still remember the reaction of the people there, few of whom ever heard it before. For weeks after I had people asking 'what was that piece of music? It is incredible.'
What I find amazing about Mozart is that so much of his music never dates. You find many pieces by other composers and you know the period from the music. But there are pieces by Mozart that I find could have been composed in any age.
Guest Guest
Subject: Re: Favourite Classical Music Thu Dec 11, 2008 2:00 pm
I know a few of the Mozart Masses D-Minor, the Spatzen, but my favorite liturgical piece would be Faure's Pie Jesu
Images of Count John McCormack and the Garda Band in the Herbert Park of a Sunday afternoon.
Guest Guest
Subject: Re: Favourite Classical Music Thu Dec 11, 2008 2:11 pm
Used to sing that very arrangement of Pie Jesu at school.
Rutter also did a fantastic arrangement.
Guest Guest
Subject: Re: Favourite Classical Music Thu Dec 11, 2008 2:37 pm
tis nice. I do be pointing microphones at that kind of thing once in a while.
Guest Guest
Subject: Re: Favourite Classical Music Thu Dec 11, 2008 11:13 pm
Papal Knight wrote:
I played a tape of the Lacrymosa from the Requiem at my father's funeral. It is one of my favourite pieces of music. I still remember the reaction of the people there, few of whom ever heard it before. For weeks after I had people asking 'what was that piece of music? It is incredible.'
It is excellent. I seem to have screwed up on the links above so here it is again.
And I know it's been nominated already, but for visuals alone let alone the sound, if this verison of Jesse Norman singing Dido's Lament doesnt blow you away, then I don't know what's wrong with ye ;-)
Guest Guest
Subject: Re: Favourite Classical Music Fri Dec 12, 2008 12:33 am
I love Janet Baker singing the same song.
Guest Guest
Subject: Re: Favourite Classical Music Sun Dec 14, 2008 1:09 pm