things I find hilarious:
Ouf: There will not be an execution this year.
Everyone, disappointed: Ah!
Ouf: But there will be two next year!
Everyone, with joy: Ah!
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Latvia
seen from Türkiye
seen from Hong Kong SAR China

seen from Philippines
seen from Yemen

seen from Netherlands

seen from Germany
seen from Netherlands

seen from Lithuania
seen from Netherlands

seen from United States

seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
things I find hilarious:
Ouf: There will not be an execution this year.
Everyone, disappointed: Ah!
Ouf: But there will be two next year!
Everyone, with joy: Ah!
ARTIST SHOUT-OUT Wednesday, May 5, 2021 "Laura Cinco de Mayo Costume" by Chabrier
SOCIAL MEDIA
DeviantArt Gallery
DeviantArt Post
BlogSpot
Shop
**Don't forget to give Chabrier a follow!**
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
See the piece on DeviantArt here. See the original post on Instagram! For more details on the Artist Shout-Outs, and to view previous ones, click here!
Watch the shout-outs live on Twitch! If you miss it, you can view it on YouTube or Instagram!
Chabrier - España (1883)
While we often consider Debussy to be the beginning of Modernism in music, I was surprised to read the Mahler considered this orchestral rhapsody to be the true beginning. Similarly, the likes of Debussy, Ravel, Satie, and Poulenc point to Chabrier as being an invaluable source of inspiration. Listening to the music, it’s easy to hear why. Chabrier did not have formal music training, and so his writing often comes off as “unidiomatic”, slight variations from the expected norm, and so freedom to work with odd phrasings, orchestrations, development, and harmonies; various aspects of music that were being challenged in the upcoming era. España was meant to reflect the excitement that Chabrier felt while taking a vacation in Spain, and this short dance is full of fun and “magic”. Spanish flavored melodies play through fun orchestral combinations, sometimes murky textures, but overall is irresistible. The evocations of guitars, castanets, la jota, marches, bustling streets, the sun, oranges...these are images that come to mind when I listen to this work. Strange to see “oranges” make the list, but it’s part of the extra-musical associations that some works give me.
‘Ô Petite Étoile’ from Chabrier’s ‘L’étoile’
Marches Des Cipayes
Composer : Emmanuel Chabrier Year/Date of Composition : 1863
Alexandre Tharaud, Pianist
okay but I NEED Joyce to sing “Ô petite étoile” SO FREAKING BADLY
the tune in L’Étoile every single time a character sings the lines “Donnez-vous la...Donnez-vous la... Donnez-vous la peine de vous asseoir...” and so on is the most delicious little thing in the entire world
(the first instance of this tune in the opera, for example, is in this track at 0:38)
seriously this is just irresistible