Carl Andreas Goepfert (1768-1818) - Sonate für Fagott und Gitarre, Op. 13: I. Allegro spirituoso ·
Ferrara Duo :
Annina Holland-Moritz, bassoon & Stefan Conradi, guitar
A wonderful piece. Everything this channel posts is Gold!

Product Placement

ellievsbear
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
taylor price

pixel skylines

JBB: An Artblog!
NASA

Love Begins

oozey mess
Xuebing Du
cherry valley forever
todays bird
we're not kids anymore.

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

No title available
Stranger Things

⁂

shark vs the universe
🪼
$LAYYYTER

seen from Italy

seen from Italy

seen from United States

seen from Italy
seen from India
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Singapore
seen from United States

seen from Italy

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Indonesia
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Albania
seen from United States
@rafiknyclassical
Carl Andreas Goepfert (1768-1818) - Sonate für Fagott und Gitarre, Op. 13: I. Allegro spirituoso ·
Ferrara Duo :
Annina Holland-Moritz, bassoon & Stefan Conradi, guitar
A wonderful piece. Everything this channel posts is Gold!
Alessandro Besozzi (1702-1793) - Trio No. 6 for oboe, violin and basso continuo: I. Adagio ·
Luca Vignali, oboe; Pavel Vernikov, violin;Paolo Carlini, bassoon
The Magic of the Pentatonic Scale: How Music’s Big Picture Unlocks Cool Tricks
What Is the Pentatonic Scale Anyway? Imagine a musical toolbox with only five tools – but those tools can build almost anything! The pentatonic scale is a group of five notes that sound great together because they don’t clash much. It’s like picking colors that always match. Learn how to apply pentatonic scales on the guitar:…
A virtuosic performance!
Queen of Spades sound track from the unreleased 1934 film.
Paul Stefan, Rudolf Kastner, Arnold Schönberg, Otto Klemperer, Hermann Scherchen, Anton Webern and Erwin Stein after the premiere of Schoenberg’s Serenade, Op. 24 in 1924.
A little 20th century musical history.
Still quite timely.
Einojuhani Rautavaara. Epic.
Agustín Barrios Mangoré (1885-1944) - Serenata morisca ·
Celil Refik Kaya, guitar
My cousin. (Just kidding!).
Ingeborg Bronsart von Schellendorf (1840–1913) : 'Lorelei' performed by Natasha Page and Ella O'Neill.
Una bella voce!
Carlo Zuccari (1704-1792) - Flute Sonata in G Major: I. Allegro (2) ·
Mario Carbotta, flute · Roberto Cognazzo, harpsichord
The Christmas Oratorio.
Prokofiev - Sonata no. 6 in A Major
I first heard this sonata in high school and honestly it was THE angsty bangy piano piece that my rebellious self could relate to. Of course, that was me focusing on the more garish parts and the unstable tonality. I haven’t listened to that sonata in forever, and it recently came up in my “recommended videos” on YouTube. I listened through again, following the score, amazed how much I remembered it. Like, with every passing bar, I could only recall what happens right after, and this strange recollection of memory, in patches, made it feel surreal. I know more about music now and about Prokofiev’s overall style, and I was captivated by all of the small details coming through that I hadn’t known before. The sonatas nos. 6, 7, and 8 were written between 1940-44, and so are known as the “War Sonatas”. No.7 is the most popular, but I’ve always had a soft spot for no. 6. Because of current political trends, the threat from the Nazis, the fear under Stalin, loss of his close friend to the regime [Vsevolod Meyerhold was an opera director and was arrested by secret police and shot. A month later, Meyerhold’s wife was found murdered under “mysterious circumstances”], and being basically forced to write an obnoxious and saccharine cantata for Stalin’s 60th birthday, Prokofiev had to channel his true anger and pain in these sonatas. The sixth opens with an unstable main theme, that rides forward like a grotesque and cold machine. The second melody has a thinner texture and is almost dreamlike, before the machinery of the opening takes over in a grotesque march. The second movement is kind of like a march, built of staccato chords throughout. The third is like a very slow waltz, lushly written and elongated, full of longing. The final is a rushed speed through hell, as dark as you’d expect a Soviet toccata to be.
Movements:
1. Allegro moderato
2. Allegretto
3. Tempo di valzer lentissimo
4. Vivace
Sergei
Microtonal chord names I just made up:
Intervals:
Supermajor: major interval raised 50 cents
Subminor: minor interval lowered 50 cents
Neutral: major interval lowered 50 cents/minor interval raised 50 cents
Superaugmented: augmented interval raised 50 cents
Subaugmented: augmented interval lowered 50 cents
Superdiminished: diminished interval raised 50 cents
Subdiminished: diminished interval lowered 50 cents
Triads:
Major triad: root + major third + perfect fifth
Supermajor triad: root + supermajor third + perfect fifth
Minor triad: root + minor third + perfect fifth
Subminor triad: root + subminor third + perfect fifth
Neutral triad: root + neutral third + perfect fifth
Augmented triad: root + major third + augmented fifth
Superaugmented triad: root + major third + superaugmented fifth
Supermajor triad (#5): root + supermajor third + augmented fifth
Hyperaugmented triad: root + supermajor third + superaugmented fifth
Half-augmented triad: root + major third + subaugmented fifth
Half-superaugmented triad: root + supermajor third + subaugmented fifth
Diminished triad: root + minor third + diminished fifth
Subdiminished triad: root + minor third + subdiminished fifth
Subminor triad (b5): root + subminor third + diminished fifth
Hypodiminished triad: root + subminor third + subdiminished fifth
Half-diminished triad: root + minor third + superdiminished fifth
Half-subdiminished triad: root + subminor third + superdiminished fifth
Escalated triad: root + neutral third + augmented fifth
Superescalated triad: root + neutral third + superaugmented fifth
Half-escalated triad: root + neutral third + subaugmented fifth
Abated triad: root + neutral third + diminished fifth
Subabated triad: root + neutral third + subdiminished fifth
Half-abated triad: root + neutral third + superdiminished fifth
This is funny!
Sunday listening.