Harmonic colouring animation of the final two movements of Beethoven’s String Quartet in A Minor, Op. 132 - following on from this video of the slow movement or ‘Heilige Dankesang’ which I posted about previously.
Best watched in fullscreen!
seen from China
seen from Russia
seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Singapore
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from Australia
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from France

seen from United States
seen from Thailand

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from South Korea

seen from United States
Harmonic colouring animation of the final two movements of Beethoven’s String Quartet in A Minor, Op. 132 - following on from this video of the slow movement or ‘Heilige Dankesang’ which I posted about previously.
Best watched in fullscreen!
Bach, Canone alla decima, Art of Fugue
Harangue the (Classical) DJ
I enjoy The Guardian's Harangue The DJ interviews, where various maestros of mixing 'empty the contents of their psychic record bags', even though I can't hear their selections(!)
So I imagined emptying the dusty contents of mine, mostly classical tracks I last heard for real in the 20th Century.
The track I’ll be opening my next DJ set with
Gabriel Prokofiev - Concerto for Turntables and Orchestra: I never had a chance to experience this innovative pairing, but Gabriel’s granddad already has good form in dance music.
The track I always play to rescue a dancefloor
John Adams’ 80s classic The Chairman Dances has a deceptively understated start, but its body-popping repetitions and suave tango will sweep everyone back onto the floor.
The track that currently gets the most rewinds
My most frequent ear-worms are the sabre-clashes, smooches and heavy breathing from Tchaikovsky’s Romeo & Juliet Fantasy Overture.
The track I wish I’d signed to my label (if I had one)
Messiaen's gaudy, iridescent, feelgood Turangalîla Symphony: the end of Joie du Sang des Étoiles gives me so much gooseflesh, I start to honk and fly in V formation.
The track I’d play to show off my eclectic tastes
This section from Ligeti’s Musica Ricercata is as catchy as it is obscure.
The track I think has been unfairly slept on this year
Tchaikovsky’s Sleeping Beauty - asleep for 100 years...
The track that should have been a crossover hit
David Bedford’s Sun Paints Rainbows on the Vast Waves - scored for windband and wine bottles. Its glorious blazes and swells of sound swept me away on the first live hearing.
The track that got me out of bed this morning
As chance would have it, today’s Deaf Dream Track is Beethoven’s own ‘apotheosis of the dance’.
The track I wish I’d never played
Never got the hang of Harrison Birtwistle’s compositions - more like a quarryful of grinding rocks.
The ideal festival track
Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring: demented, chilled out, mosh-pit brawls, sensual, frenzied and ecstatic.
The track I’d play at my auntie’s wedding
Another ‘80s classic (albeit 1880s) Johann Strauss’ Roses from South: schmaltz and sentiment for the late evening’s nuptial nostalgia.
The best track by my favourite new artist
I haven’t heard any new artist for 16 years, so I was going to omit this response. Then I recalled Stephen Malinowski, whose animated graphical scores reveal anew their music’s structure, tempi and counterpoint.
Here’s his vision of the same Rite of Spring ‘festival’ track:
The track I’d play at sunset in Ibiza
Richard Strauss’ Im Abendrot - literally 'evening-red’, deep and tranquil. Although, not so much Ibizan chillout as the chilling awareness of our mortality.
The track I’d play at my funeral
Sibelius’ Symphony No. 6: the first 3 minutes should send the congregation out feeling more serene.
hey check this out
deeply unsettling experience but simultaneously mesmerizing.. and there's moments with a genuine pulse and rhythm, too. i had to do a project in high school where we pulled a pop song and an emotion out of a hat, then had to produce a version of that song with that emotion. my emotion was 'anxiety' and listening to this made my want to go revisit that project because i have so many ideas. wow
Where my attention goes when I listen to this fugue
All you musicians... you are something different.