Author Topic: Classical Music  (Read 1722 times)

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Offline Fineus

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I've recently re-discovered a love for classical music, curiously while watching Master and Commander. Reasons aside I'd like to hear what you good people feel is good classical music.

 

Offline Primus

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Moonlight Sonata is great. But other than that and few other, I'm not into classical music.
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Offline Andreas

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Heh, I love classical music myself. :nod:

And I like Mozart myself, though I do like the other composers (Bach, Beethoven) as well.
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Offline Ghostavo

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Classical period music or just classical music?

If it's the first, then J. Haydn and W.A. Mozart are my favorites (Symphony No. 45 totally rocks).

If it's the second, nothing can beat Vivaldi's The Four Seasons' Spring and Beethoven's Symphony No. 9.
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Offline Night Hammer

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i like what they play from the loudspeakers in Apocalypse Now when they come in in the helicopters, I think its Flight of the Valkyries
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Offline Deepblue

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Orchestral music is not the same as classical. If it's good orchestral music you want it can be found in many soundtracks, Pirates fo the Caribbean, Gladiator (particualary good), and the OH2S (:D). If it's true classical you want, I like Mozart and Dance Macabre is cool.

 

Offline Ford Prefect

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Ah, "Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis", I take it? Vaughan Williams is always good but that is magnificent.

Let's see, I'll go chronologically:

Baroque-era music is beautiful because of the way it invokes sort of feeling of calm mathematical precision. My favorites from this period would probably be J.S. Bach, Vivaldi, Handel, and Corelli, (who often sounds a lot like Vivaldi.) Everything Bach wrote was divine, but I particuarly like his flute sonatas and his choral works. Then there's Handel's Messiah, and all of Vivaldi's concerti and sonatas.

From the Classical peiod, I listen to a lot of Mozart, C.P.E Bach, and Devienne. It's not really my favorite musical era overall, but just about anything by Mozart is divine. His operas are beautiful even for some people who don't particularly like opera.

I can't think of many romantic composers I habitually listen to, so I'll move on to the really good stuff: the 19th and 20th centuries. Here, in my opinion, is where much of the most beautiful music ever written is found, (much of it by French composers.) Debussy is probably my favorite composer of all time. Many of his works are tone poems, taking a specific image, often relating to classical mythology, and describing it with an ethereal, dream-like sound. He wrote "Nuages", which is a nocturne describing clouds moving through the night sky, and it is possibly the most beautiful piece of music ever composed. It has one moment that feels to me to be the perfect musical description of complete wonder. But really anything by Debussy is beautiful. For Ravel, some of the best are "Bolero", "La Valse", and "Lever du jour", which is one of the happiest works in the musical world. Khachaturian has some great ballet suites--"Gayane's Adagio" was used in 2001: A Space Odyssey-- and Ibert wrote one particularly insane flute concerto. I'm also a fan of Orff's "Carmina Burana" and of various things by Ralph Vaughan Williams.

Gah, there's too much to talk about.
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Offline Rictor

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that song from The Triplets of Bellville (the ship in the storm). Damn, that song is amazing, though I haven't the slightest clue who its by.

 

Offline Nuclear1

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My entire WinAmp playlist is nothing but classical. I've got a lot of American composers (Sousa, Barber, and Herbert being my favorites).

I don't much listen to classical-era music. It's the modern stuff like Barber's Adagio and Stars and Stripes that work for me.
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Offline karajorma

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Quote
Originally posted by Ghostavo
If it's the second, nothing can beat Vivaldi's The Four Seasons' Spring  


Personally I prefer Winter :D

Mozart of course must be mentioned. Eine Kleine Nachtmusik (allegro) is probably my favourite but there's some great stuff in The Marriage of Figaro (and Rossini's version for that matter).

(The site I got that midi from BTW is excellent as since it's got midi files you can be listening to the song in seconds (which makes it great for identifying songs mentioned here that you don't recognise by name.

You can find it here
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Try these artists (spelling might be a little off for foreign names)

Elgar
Handel
Bach
Korsikov
Mendellson

 

Offline 01010

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Quote
Originally posted by Night Hammer
i like what they play from the loudspeakers in Apocalypse Now when they come in in the helicopters, I think its Flight of the Valkyries


Ride Of The Valkyries By Wagner

Blue Danube is one of my favourties.
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Anything by Chopin.

Any of the ballets by Tchaikovsky (especially Swan Lake).

By J. Strauss, "Roses from the South" op. 388
(Heck, just go for the entire Strauss family.  Loads of listening pleasure there.)

Mussorgsky, "Pictures at an Exhibition".  (The original piano version, not the fubared orchestrations.)

(Can you tell I love the Romantic period?)

 

Offline Ford Prefect

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Oh, I forgot Erik Satie, coincidentally a friend of Debussy.
"Mais est-ce qu'il ne vient jamais à l'idée de ces gens-là que je peux être 'artificiel' par nature?"  --Maurice Ravel

 

Offline redmenace

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I love movie toons personally. Fro example the intro to first contact.
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Offline Mongoose

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I like dramatic orchestral music (a la Lord of the Rings soundtrack/In the Hall of the Mountain King/Ride of the Valkyries), but I'm not really a fan of the "bubbly" sort of classical music.  There are a few pieces I always hear in movie trailers that I really enjoy, but I usually have absolutely no clue what they are.  There was one in the original trailer for the animated horse movie Spirit that I've heard many times, but I'm not sure exactly what it's from.  I believe it may be from the American Symphony (I don't even know the name of the composer :p).

  

Offline Deepblue

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Quote
Originally posted by Mongoose
I like dramatic orchestral music (a la Lord of the Rings soundtrack/In the Hall of the Mountain King/Ride of the Valkyries), but I'm not really a fan of the "bubbly" sort of classical music.  There are a few pieces I always hear in movie trailers that I really enjoy, but I usually have absolutely no clue what they are.  There was one in the original trailer for the animated horse movie Spirit that I've heard many times, but I'm not sure exactly what it's from.  I believe it may be from the American Symphony (I don't even know the name of the composer :p).


:nod: :nod: :nod: :nod: :nod:

 

Offline YodaSean

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Schoenberg made some really interesting music if you don't mind more bizarre and expiremental stuff.  Try Pierrot Lunaire.  Parts of it make me feel like my head is going to explode, but its fun to listen to.

 

Offline IceFire

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Holst, The Planets....best ever.  But its more 20th Century than strictly Classical in the Beethoven sense.
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Offline Ford Prefect

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Beethoven is hugely overrated, in my opinion. The 20th century has produced a lot of the best classical composers.
"Mais est-ce qu'il ne vient jamais à l'idée de ces gens-là que je peux être 'artificiel' par nature?"  --Maurice Ravel