āComposers and their Pecadilloesā, Whoās Afraid of Classical Music? By Michael Walsh
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@sarahtheflutist
āComposers and their Pecadilloesā, Whoās Afraid of Classical Music? By Michael Walsh
I discovered a Baroque composer today whom I had never heard of before: Johan Helmich Roman, nicknamed "the Swedish Handel". His Flute Concerto in G Major is just gorgeous. I'm now more convinced than ever that however long I live, I'll never exhaust the richness of Baroque music.
I don't know how I didn't know this but apparently Erik Satie never had anyone in his apartment for 27 years, like nobody at all, and when he died it was entered, 2 grand pianos were found on top of one another the top one for storage, and like a huge collection of over 100 umbrellas. I find this stuff weird when it's shown to other people, like "Hey look I stacked a piano on a piano!", but the fact that he never told a soul of this makes it so funny. He truly believed the double piano tower (or tower pianissimo if you will) was a good interior design choice. What a great man.
Beethoven being younger than mozart is kinda whack to me, it seems like it should be the opposite. Its because Mozart is famous for being a child prodigy and Beethoven is famous for being depicted as an angry mad genius. Like bruh wdym those things weren't happening at the same time and beethoven is younger lmao šš
CƩcile Chaminade
SƩrƩnade aux Ʃtoiles, Op. 142
Performed by Juliette Hurel with Hélène Couvert
Just listened to this recording again. Gorgeous
James Galway plays Songs for Annie
With the National Philharmonic Orchestra and Charles Gerhardt, Harp Ensemble and Marisa Robles, and Kevin Conneff
Side One
Le Basque
Bachianas Brasileiras Number 5 - Aria
Liebesfreud
Berceuse
Allegro
Annieās Song
Side Two
Tambourin
La Plus Que Lente
Brian Boruās March
Belfast Hornpipe
Spanish Love Song
Carmen Fantasy
Karl Münchinger / Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra
Mozart: Eine Kleine Nachtmusik, KV 525
Mozart: Divertimento in D Major, KV 136
Boccherini: Menuett for String Quintet in E Major, Op. 13, 5
Haydn: Serenade for String Quartet in F Major, Op. 3, 5
Schumann: Bilder aus Osten, Op. 66, 1
Pergolesi: Concerto armonico No. 3 in A Major
Bach: Air Suite No. 3 in D Major, BWV 1068
W. A. Mozart
Symphony No 41 in C Major, K. 551
āJupiterā
Weiner Philharmonic, Karl Bohm
Allegro vivace
Andante cantabile
Menuetto
Molto allegro
Rubinstein Chopin Waltzes
Artur Rubinstein recorded these waltzes once before, exactly ten years ago. He has been performing them in concerts for more than fifty years. Aside from the use of the latest recording techniques, what could be ānewā to make this album so important?
How does Rubinstein maintain his constantly fresh outlook which makes familiar music sound as if it had been written only the day before?
āThis question I must answer by relating a lesson I once learned from Picasso. You know Picasso and I are good friends and we used to see each other a great deal. I used to visit him while he was painting at his atlier in Paris⦠Well, for some months I saw Picasso stand in front of his easel and paint a bottle of sherry, a table, a guitar that was lying around, and some banal ironwork on the balcony. I saw about fifty canvases of those same objects. I became a little impatient and also a little bored. I wanted to see a new Picasso! So, one day I said, āLook here, Pablo, what is the matter with you? Arenāt you getting tired of painting day after day always the same things?ā Well, I saw a furious glance at me. He became really angry. āWhat rot are you talking to me? What stupid things are you telling me? Every minute Iām a different man, every hour there is a new light, every day I see that bottle with a completely different personality. It is another bottle, another table, another life in another world and everything is different!ā After a moment to catch my breath, I told him: āPablo, you are absolutely right. I catch myself thinking the next morning in a completely different way about something I was proclaiming as true the day before.ā And it is still so⦠A new recording opens up a new world to me because the music speaks to me in a different language.ā*
*From āAn Afternoon with Artur Rubinsteinā originally published in High Fidelity, July 1963
Beethoven Symphony No 6 āPastoraleā
Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra/Eugen Jochum
Allegro ma non troppo
Andante molto mosso
Allegro
Allegro
Allegretto
The Blue Danube: A Johann Strauss Festival
The Philadelphia Orchestra
Conducted by Eugene Ormandy
Voices of Spring
The Emperor Waltz
Vienna Blood
The Blue Danube Waltz
Tales from the Vienna Woods
Don Gillis
Symphony No. 5 1/2
āA Symphony of Funā
I. Perpetual Emotion
II. Spiritual?
III. Scherzophrenia
IV. Conclusion!
The Symphony No. 5½, A Symphony for Fun, is an orchestral symphony written in 1946 by the American composer Don Gillis.
Gillis, a prolific composer, had already written five symphonies when he embarked on this work's composition. He stated that he originally set out to write his sixth symphony, but found that the music emerged so light-hearted in character that rather than give the symphony a conventional number he elected to publish it as no. 5½.
The work is in four movements, the titles being punning references to the usual forms found in corresponding movements of "serious" symphonies.
Perpetual emotion
Spiritual?
Scherzophrenia
Conclusion!
The symphony was first performed in May 1947 by the Boston Pops Orchestra conducted by Arthur Fiedler. Four months later, in September, the work received its first radio broadcast performance with Arturo Toscanini conducting the NBC Symphony Orchestra.
Freddie Sateriale and his Orchestra
Musical Tribute Series: Glenn Miller
Rainbow Rhapsody
Londonderry
Kalamazoo
Story of a Starry Night
Anvil Chorus
When Johnny Comes Marching Home
Polonaise
Romance
I Dream of Jeannie
Volga Boatman
Georg Philipp Telemann
Wassermusik Overture in C Major
Suite No 6 in D minor
Concerto No 3 in A Major
Trio Sonata in E-flat Major
Konzertgruppe der Schola Contorum Basiliensis
Van Cliburn - My Favorite Chopin
Polonaise No 6 in A-Flat, Op. 53
Nocturne No 17 in B, Op. 62, No. 1
Fantasie in F Minor, Op. 49
Etude No 23 in A Minor, Op. 25, No. 11
Etude No 3 in E, Op. 10, No. 3
Ballade No 3 in A flat, Op. 47
Waltz No 7 in C Sharp Minor, Op. 63, No. 2
Scherzo No. 3 in C Sharp Minor, Op. 39
George Gershwin
An American in Paris
Promenade
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra
Leonard Slatkin, Conductor
Jeffrey Siegel, Pianist