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-- Favoirte classical music piece... (https://www.jusunlee.com/forums/showthread.php?threadid=15585)
Favoirte classical music piece...
I feel like I"m the only one who listens to classical music a lot... here are my 3 favorites....
1) Mozart's Requiem
2) Rachmoninov (ff) 's concerto 3
3) Moonlight Sonata by Beethoven
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Ironically, we live to die... life is inevitable, so we are either living, or we are dead, but where are we when we are dead? Maybe we aren't ever "dead".Life is a memory. Time is always moving, so there is no now, thus all life is, is just a memory.
By.....me...Although I'm sure some one thought of that before me...
And I don't generally like Mozart, not like anyone cares...
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Ironically, we live to die... life is inevitable, so we are either living, or we are dead, but where are we when we are dead? Maybe we aren't ever "dead".Life is a memory. Time is always moving, so there is no now, thus all life is, is just a memory.
By.....me...Although I'm sure some one thought of that before me...
pacabell's cannon
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practice makes perfect.
www.xanga.com/hnefrdo
quote:
Originally posted by hnefrdo
pachelbel's canon
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no sig yet..
quote:
pacabell's cannon
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ni pour ni contre; ça m'est égal
"The weight of this sad time we must obey,/ Speak what we feel, not what we ought to say./ The oldest hath borne most; we that are young/ Shall never see so much, nor live so long."
King Lear (V.3.300-304)
quote:
Originally posted by Crazydeb8ter
Grieg's Concerto in A Minor.
quote:
Originally posted by hnefrdo
pacabell's cannon
pachelbel, for anyone who cares about spelling. I think that piece is nice to listen to, but i kind of characterize it as the pop of classical music. Simple, and fun. Still though, it is a nice piece. Not one of my favorites though.
But, my favorite is Felix Mendelssohn's Violin Concert no. 1. Amazing, everyone should listen to it once. That is what i think went wrong with classical music, they started to go for a full orchestra and strayed from the godly instrumental family of strings.
Not really wrong, but i love strings. After the romantic era, everything got uglier and diverse for the sake of being diverse (e.g. John Crumb's sounds of the ancient...schoenberg, berg, webern, ehh. I can appreciate it, but that does not make it excellent music).
My favorite programmatic piece is Stravinski's the Rite of Spring. Maybe it is because i had to study it for a year and write too many essays on it, but still it is quite remarkable.
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Long messages do not equal aggravation of any sort,
rather they reflect nothing more than a response of insight
that should always be read in a matter-of-fact tone.
"Those womyn that seek equality with men, lack determination."
"I beseech you, in the bowels of Christ, think it possible you may be wrong."
-Cromwell
Was the Mendelssohn concerto 1 the one in E minor? Because I played that this year for the competition... still waiting for results, but I probably didn't win... I was the youngest one...
__________________
Ironically, we live to die... life is inevitable, so we are either living, or we are dead, but where are we when we are dead? Maybe we aren't ever "dead".Life is a memory. Time is always moving, so there is no now, thus all life is, is just a memory.
By.....me...Although I'm sure some one thought of that before me...
No, Mendelssohn composed many concertos for violin and the one in e minor is not the same as hsi violin concerto no. 1. i do not believe so anyway, i was just looking online to double check and they have different opus numbers.
__________________
Long messages do not equal aggravation of any sort,
rather they reflect nothing more than a response of insight
that should always be read in a matter-of-fact tone.
"Those womyn that seek equality with men, lack determination."
"I beseech you, in the bowels of Christ, think it possible you may be wrong."
-Cromwell
E minor was Opus 64
__________________
Ironically, we live to die... life is inevitable, so we are either living, or we are dead, but where are we when we are dead? Maybe we aren't ever "dead".Life is a memory. Time is always moving, so there is no now, thus all life is, is just a memory.
By.....me...Although I'm sure some one thought of that before me...
- you damn Classical-heads! ;;know too much..
- mine are:
Barber's Adagio for Strings (including William Orbit's remake)
Ravel's Pavane pour une Infante Défunte (incl. William Orbit's remake)
Albinoni's Adagio for Organ and Strings in G Minor
Vangelis' Light and Shadow
Gouryella meets Orchestre Cyber France de Paris - Tenshi (Version Classique)
System F meets Orchestre Cyber France de Paris - Out of the Blue (Version Classique)
John Ewbank's composition for Marco Borsato's Voor altijd (or Gouryella's Ligaya)
- and.. oh yeah! i too enjoy Pachelbel's Canon in D
- my friend and i even wrote a song/beat inspired by it..
- it's called Sweet Lullaby, listen to it here
- recently remade it for the new year =) enjoy!
one can never know too much about classical music
my pick: Tomaso Antonio Vitali - Chaconne
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