ITT: Discuss your favorite classical pieces you cultured gentlemen
>>739214414
The Well Tempered Clavier.
Der Sampler 4 ist ziemlich gut
>>739214414
Rachmaninoff piano concerto number 1. No piece matches the intensity and beauty of this one.
>>739214414
Bump!
Pruit Igor and prophecies, fucking amazing my gents
>>739214414
Twiztid- a little fucked up
Danse Macabre by Saint Saens. It's an old club banger
>>739214414
"In the Hall of the mountain King" by Grieg
>>739214414
Winter from Vivaldi's four seasons.
Call me cliche, but Beethoven's 5th is a favorite too
Nocturnes
>>739214879
My dude
Beethoven's sonata in C minor Opus #13 "Pathetique". Also Mozart's Requiem cus that shit fire
Prelude a L'apres Midi D'un Faune by Debussy
Suite #1 for 2 Pianos, Rachmaninoff
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6OFHXmiZP38
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9E6b3swbnWg
Tchaikovsky's Valse Sentimentale could make a rock feel
Fur Elise because my sister's name Is eliza and I thinks it's cool
Mozart - Concerto for Piano #20 in D minor, K. 466, particularly the 2nd movement (Romanze)
Anything I can open up a pit to.
My favorite piece from the Baroque period would be bach' s minuet in g
Devil's Trill by Tartini
Ooga booga, doh!
Ooga booga, doh!
Ooga ooga
Booga booga
Doh! Doh! Doh!
–Fiddysent
Pachelbel's Canon in D is always a favorite, but Spring from Vivaldi's Four Seasons is high on the list too
Claire de Lune by Debussy
>>739215765
although, lately I find myself listening to newer pieces from duke Ellington, gershwin etc.
>>739215809
You mean his violin sonata in g minor?
On a more whimsical level, The Syncopated Clock by Leroy Anderson
>>739214414
Fur Elise, I've always been able to relax to that since I was a kid. And the Barber of Seville cause Bugs Bunny man.
Smetana - Má vlast (my country) - Die Moldau.
>>739215955
People who played wedding receptions in the eighties and nineties used to describe themselves as "prisoners of Pachelbel".
>>739214414
i like vivaldi. i have a bunch of vivaldi cello concertos that are very pleasant to listen to.
>>739214414
Either Waltz No. 2 by Shostakovich or Symphony No. 40 by Mozart
>>739215963
Yes Gershwin is part of the newer Baroque period
Verdi - Messa da Requiem... in its entirety, not just the meme bit everybody knows.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=OsOUcikyGRk
>>739215765
Actually written by Böhm :)
The Requiem in D minor Mozart or Piano Sonata No. 14 in C minor Beethoven
>>739216018
Same thing though it's more commonly known as the Devil's Trill
Bach's Johannes Passion is one of the greatest things ever invented by the mind and heart of man
1812 overture is perfection
Johannes Brahms -
String Sextet No. 1 in B-flat Major. Op. 18. 2nd Movement (the Andante con moto)
I mean, fuck, if you can make a Vulcan cry, that is some ass kicking tune
>>739216084
This or The Old Castle by Mussorgsky. Or Peace of the Wood by Grieg.
>>739216389
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XXFsv2BB24
>>739214414
Do you think you could have come up with a more fedora-tippy thread if you tried?
>>739214414
Any of the nine symphonies by the gentleman you posted.
For some contemporary classical programme music my fav Ludovico Einaudi song is probably Nightbook
>>739216468
gtfo faggot classical is amazing
>>739216468
Pfft. Like fedora fags know classical music. Try anime.
here are vivaldi cello concertos for those that want to hear them
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-kgs3RmFVH8
Fur Elise? In the hall of the mountain king? You filthy casuals:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iCEDfZgDPS8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DXy50exHjes
>>739216350
This is the work which hooked me into western art music
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ICuRyf1Z8hI
This is Horowitz playing Schumann's Kreisleriana. I had no idea that music and music making like this was even possible.
However all you kiddies must listen to the Beethoven 9th at some point. It should be an Earth shattering experience. Try a Furtwaengler recording
>>739216521
>>739216545
You guys are prolonging virginity with shit like this.
>>739216389
You must also try:
His Piano Quintet
the Piano Quartet in G Minor (especially the last movement)
The Horn Trio
The Clarinet Sonata in F Minor
(and other things, but at least eventually you should get around to the clarinet quintet. A very melancholy but gorgeous work)
Gymnopedie no.1 for sure
>>739214414
>>739216468
I've been listening to Estuans Interius from the Carmina Burana recently. O' Fortuna comes from the same piece.
>>739214414
Being a violinist, my favoritte work is tchaikovsky's violin concerto:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=FLy0b3daKco
Frankly, it's impossible to play
Does anyone ever find themselves going to a performance from their local orchestra Like myself?
>>739214414
Beethoven Violin Concerto in D major, Op.61 (Itzhak Perlman; Daniel Barenboim)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LD_CaKUqsgE
>>739216468
>>739216642
bullshit. Why shouldn't humans be civilized instead of knuckle dragging niggers?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sCgT94A7WgI
FAERIES AIRE AND DEATH WALTZ
>>739216808
im going to one in fall to see my philharmonic perform pieces by bach, mozart, chopin and tchaichovsky
Thomas Tallis' setting of the Lamentations should be heard by everyone at least once before they die:
Part 1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WqnxdnZl0yU
Part 2: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DVhkiPklKWs
Keep up with the times, man. The Entertainer is where its at.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gu77Vtja30c
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dGva1NVWRXk
>won the 2014 Pulitzer Prize for music
>>739216783
Never liked it tbh fam. Try Schumann's :)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YLod6Ra6f08
>>739216810
I like Menuhin, Szeryng and Huberman in this, the greatest of violin concertos.
The piano concerto repertoire is richer than all other instruments, listening through all of Mozart's is an enriching experience no doubt
>>739216831
Do you dress in old fashioned clothing and smoke a pipe, too, grandpa?
>>739214414
Isle of the Dead by Rachmaninov
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kYNxJbpM65k&t
>>739214611
bruh
>>739216084
from czech?
i love Dvořak
>>739214414
The lyrics are too old, and the music too new to fit the golden age of classical composers, but O Fortuna is an amazing piece
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7cb1QmTkOAI
>>739215387
A man of culture.
You know Mozart's Lacrimosa is pretty good too
>>739217131
Not at all. Do you have your ass hanging out and do you act all ghetto Laquisha. Enjoy your nigger music subhuman filth
>>739217440
So much cringe.
>>739217102
This motherfucker knows what's up. Also, this
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MenIhT7umeM
Mozart's 41th Symphony.
Favorite Symphony: Mozart's Requiem
Favorite movement: Beethoven's 7th, second movement.
Also really enjoy:
Beethoven's 5th, 7th, 9th Symphony
Mozart's 40th Symphony
Bach's Aria, Brandenburg Concerto #3, Sinfonia 2 and 3
Holst's Mars, The Bringer of war
Would recommend listening to all of them.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eq_jzx-gLBk
Saint-Saens Organ Finale from Symphony 3
Also, music to sing to a pig.
If I had words to make a day for you
I'd sing you a morning golden and new
I would make this day last for all time
Give you a night deep in moonshine
If I had words to make a day for you
I'd sing you a morning golden and new
I would make this day last for all time
Give you a night deep in moonshine
>>739214739
You most likely have, but I'll ask anyway. Have you ever heard his carnival of the animals?
If you haven't enjoyed classical music, you aren't really human
>>739217282
Nah mate, not czech. But I do love that piece.
Holst.
>>739217938
aight, nice to see people enjoy my culture!
rondo capricoso
Wake me up inside
Classical snob, reporting it.
If you're looking for a list of classical composers favored by people of proper breeding, Mozart is the supreme one, Bach is 2nd, Beethoven and Wagner fighting for 3rd place, Verdi and Schubert for 5th, then Handel, R.Strauss, Chopin, Bruckner, Schoenberg and Berg, and Dvorak, Mendelssohn, Chopin, Schumann, Tchaikovsky, Palestrina, Puccini, Bizet, Haydn, Gluck, Smetana, Grieg, Berwald, Sibelius, Albinoni, Gounoud, Wolf, Mahler.
>>739218477
dubs confirms. this motherfucker knows what he's talking about.
>>739218367
Underrated
Does /b/ have a favorite instrument family? Mine would be the woodwinds
>>739218477
>permanent virgin reporting in
>>739218477
/thread
>>739218477
Where is Debussy?
>>739218477
Damn. That's a really good list.
>>739218477
I would add Mussorgsky, Scriabin, Prokofiev, Weber, Josquin, Buxtehude, Byrd and Vivaldi, and delete Schoenber, Berg, Wolf and Mahler. Obviously I'm a bit 12 tone phobic :)
I find Mahler bad for my mental wellbeing, and Wolf a bit inconsistent and more interesting on paper than to the ear, although I do recognize Wolf's talent. Also Berg writes music admittedly that can appeal to the ear. I could only listen to early Schoenberg for pleasure
Liszt - Liebestraum
Man had absolute mastery of the piano
>>739218783
Debussy and Faure :)
>>739218477
>>739218477
There are a few missing from this list, but there are no composers on this list I think should be removed.
We could be friends irl. I like you.
>>739218614
>spotted the nigger
>>739214414
O guarani by Carlos Gomes.
>>739218477
>Beethoven and Wagner fighting for 3rd place, Verdi and Schubert for 5th
This
>>739218477
It doesn't take a snob to realize Mozart is number one. In fact if Mozart isn't number one on your list, you're objectively wrong.
>>739219511
I always wondered how much more he'd do if he didn't die so young
>>739214507
touche', end of story.
>>739219511
Are you asserting that he isn't a snob? Cause I don't see a person who isn't a classical snob producing that list.
>>739220047
I'm saying that any monkey could tell you that Mozart is the best classical composer
Modern yea, but Gustav Holst's The Planets
Also for concert band I hear this nice piece
"Apollo:Myth and Legend
>>739220221
So, you're stating the obvious. k. Cool story bro.
Gnossienne for piano No. 1.
Erik Satie.
Anybody enjoyed reading Swan's Way, Et Cetera?
>>739219121
Nope I just get laid is all.
>>739220245
If we're going with modern composers, John Williams just can't be beat.
>>739218477
>JS Bach is not in the top 5
>he is not even mentioned
You are wrong, and a faggot.
>>739220764
Never mind. I'm an idiot.
List is solid
>>739220706
True, but you have to acknowledge why his pieces are the way they are
https://youtu.be/uHoZ_yjPpi8
9th by ludwig van, ormandy, philadelphia
6 Moments musicaux, Op.16: No 4 in E minor or Fantasia on a theme
1. Verdi's Messa De Requiem (the whole thing, not just Dies Irae)
2. Richard Wagner, Tristan und Isolde (All of Act 3). Literally explodes with deep emotion and beauty.
>>739219511
Bach for me
>>739220394
blow up dolls don't count
>>739221182
You're objectively wrong.
Any music related professions here
Going to uni to study music education this year
>>739221449
Where you study is far more important than what you study. Especially music.
>>739221265
I'm objectively right. Bach is superior. Look at the catalogue of his works. He wrote 300 cantatas, and most of them are works of genius. Bach wrote the greatest choral works ever composed, the 2 passions and the Mass in B Minor, but many other great works. The greatest solo works for keyboard, organ, cello and violin. The greatest baroque concerti. Bach is a God. I love Mozart also, but his work is not as elevated, and there are less out and out masterpieces in his oeuvre.
>>739221228
Is this you?
>>739216831
You Anglo-Saxon barrel-niggers are nothing but inferior shit that dwell as roaches upon good soil.
Your "civilization" and "culture" is annoyingly putrid and completely useless.
We should have just burned you all with your shitty monasteries instead of keeping you as slaves as you are too useless and stupid to even make into a proper thrall.
>>739214414
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QAMQ3eKAMAU&t
>>739222039
Here's (You)r reply, lonely guy.
>>739214414
5th symphony
>>739215071
Based guy, winter is also my favorite season.
>>739218477
Bach>Mozart
>>739214414
Classical isn't a type/genre of music, is a period in the history of instrumental/symphonic music. Anyway, Canon in D by Pachelbel.
>>739214414
Les Cyclopes by Jean-Phillipe Rameau.
Best of the best baroque music
>>739214414
Firebird Suite
All bullshit writing aside. I think the wish whatever it may be will be the used for the next arc.
For real though can you fuck off back to Tumblr and leave the white man alone
Not the gay angel subplot you guys want.
Also ash wins the pokemon league when?
>>739214414
Verklärte Nacht by Schönberg
La Mer by Debussy
Symphony no 9 by Mahler
WTC/C major prelude by J.S. Bach
Sonata no 7 "White Mass" by Scriabin
Symphony no 3 Eroica by Beethoven
>>739222057
is this you?
>>739222734
Heard Pinnock's recording?
>implying beethoven was a classical composer
>implying bach was a classical composer
>>739218477
/thread
>>739222143
Have you taken your medication today Laqueesha
>>739222480
Oh so you are posting here because of your rich and fulfilling social life Cleetus
>>739222724
True but it might leave musicians from transitional or later periods out that might fit what people view as classical.
>>739222724
Western art music is a better descriptor
>>739222570
>Bach>Mozart
nope.
>>739214414
Hungarian dance brahms no 5
>>739214414
Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Chopin, Vivaldi random baroque I've heard
Been listening to Erik Satire lately.
I like piano concertos a bunch..
>>739223517
Satie* oops
What a hard thing to pick..
>Mahler makes me cry
>I agree with Ravel on Debussys "Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune " and i think it is the most "beautifull" piece not sad
> Shostakovich is deep and revolutionary.. much like mahler in sound and power (and is very genius)
> Stravinsky Funky and the rite of spring is the first piece i got obsessed with
> Prokofiev is cocky, i love his concertos.
> Bernstein has so much flavour. The guy knew everything there is to know about music
>>739223557
Looks like you. Or is it your girlfriend
>>739222039
Bach becomes better each time you listen to him.
I like "picture at an exhibition" from Mussorgsky and i got to say i love the ELP album inspired by it, not classical though.
>>739214414
true patricians listen to Marais or Purcell
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TpZYctXCBdY
>>739224119
His Songs and Dances of Death and Boris Godunov are also objectively great. Most people enjoy Night on a Bare Mountain also
>>739224030
True
>>739223683
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uYM54vhLYTU
What i mean about "Mahler make me cry"
This is the end of an Hour and twenty minutes of music... what a heavenly conclusion
>>739224255
Don't forget the Monsieur de St Colombe
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p9OBf8f55tU
Symphony No.9 In E Minor, Op.95, B. 178 "From The New World": 4 Allegro con fuoco
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H5hYjWfPNYE&t=55s
Piano Concerto. 4 in F Minor, Op. 82: I. Allegro patetico
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5poSw7tFLB4
Marche Slave (Slavonic March), Op. 31
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nz0b4STz1lo
The Planets, Op. 32: Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XIKdCTmcTLs
12 Etudes, Op. 10L Etude No. 4 in C-Sharp Minor
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_qWXH_Eqb0o
Dumka, Op. 59, TH 145
These are my top 6 pieces. Thoughts?
>>739214414
Sabatoge by the Beastie Boys
>>739223683
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j09sPfvPkQ8
Shostakovich
Imagine a Composer out of north Korea..
>>739224613
Nice list. So much music to choose from.
>>739214414
Frederic Chopin-Nocturne in F Minor, Op.55, No. 1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JbbYKEodp0Y
>>739224587
Also Savall, finally some living great composer.
Tchaikovsky 5th Symphony, Violin Concerto
Brahms 4th Symphony
Mozart 35-41 Symphony
Wagner - Dutchman and Lohengrin Overture
Beethoven String Quartets, Symphony 5,7,9
>>739225164
>all entry classical level composer
Get some tastes plz
>>739223683
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZtWAqc3qyk
Had to learn to count this when i danced to this.. Everyone tried to memories " 12 123 12 12345 123" I didnt have to.. just felt the funk.. Stravinsky said "i heard and i wrote what i heard"
>>739225434
>best works by the best composers
>not taste
?
>>739223683
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=srb2EyvTSGw
Bernstein made/wrote good musicals.. jesus i hate musicals. at least he knew stuff about classical music
>>739225788
I mean you could find better pieces than entry level...
Thes ain t bad, but they ain t the best either imo.
>>739223683
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QC45mdf8PRI
Prokofiev
>Very cocky composer
>>739214414
I absolutely adore Chopin's Concerto No 2. Used to play the timpani part
>>739214414
Let's say that I really like Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata.
What other Beethoven pieces might I enjoy? I heard that his 7th symphony is his best symphony, but I haven't listened to it yet.
>>739223683
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-YazhxBA7oo
This is an Impressionistic work.
Its made from a Poem
The poet disliked the idea "Music should be made" "He believed that his own music was sufficient, and that even with the best intentions in the world, it was a veritable crime as far as poetry was concerned to juxtapose poetry and music, even if it were the finest music there is."[5] However, when Debussy invited Mallarmé to attend the premiere performance, Mallarmé wrote to Debussy afterwards: "I have just come out of the concert, deeply moved. The marvel! Your illustration of the Afternoon of a Faun, which presents a dissonance with my text only by going much further, really, into nostalgia and into light, with finesse, with sensuality, with richness. I press your hand admiringly, Debussy. Yours, Mallarmé."
>go to 5:00 to hear what i think is the most beautiful passage in music..pure beauty
>>739214414
Reese's Puffs Rap
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VYpd-2buQc0
con te partiro
>>739228240
puke
>>739228240
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3wG4khKXai4
take that mafaka... even this is better
>>739228731
i wouldnt go that far
>>739223059
>nigger jokes
So the fedora wearing supreme gentleman classical music listening segment of /b/ overlaps with /pol/. Who could have seen that coming?
>>739228731
also that sorta reminds me of this masterpiece
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qzVBqBosf5w
>>739229075
gees
>>739214414
Clair de Lune - Claude Debussy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CvFH_6DNRCY
>>739217775
>the organ
No thanks.
>>739216084
sony cd had ma vlast, I have to wait until buildings on either side of my kinda small garden apt
are vacant, the bass of the storm & boommmmm babababooommmm shakes everything.,talking ten units nobody home,woodwinds in that lil country dance part & that melody are neat too.
this is still up? awesome. bump.
>>739230307
thiiiiis guy
>>739231331
Op here, didn't expect /b to have so many people with good taste
Brahms e-minor cello sonata
>>739232001
Yeah there are a lot of supreme gentlemen here my good sir. I bet you have refined taste in expensive scotch, too!
>>739226486
The 1st movement of the Monnlight is really an outlier in LvB's works. You should though try, first of the sonatas,
Pastoral, Pathetique, Appassionata, Waldstein, the D minor no.17, and the last 3
Symphonies 3,5,6,7,9
Late String Quartets and the Rasumovskys
Missa Solemnis
Concertos
Spring and Kreutzer Sonatas
Septet
Then you could move on to the Diabelli Variations, Fidelio, the Hammerklavier, An dei Ferne Geliebte, the other sonatas and various other chamber works
Chopin's Nocturne in c # minor is definitely inspired by the Moonlight, but it is a much bleaker piece
>>739214414
Chopin
>>739229030
ah so your a brown guy with a branding mark on his forehead? Figures
>>739232011
Beautiful piece indeed. Now listening to Brahms' 4th (racket)
Schumann is very great. Underrated now unaccountably. As is Faure.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FQ0hWMrLHnI
My favorite trombone pieces would be Morceau Symphonique and the Blue Bells of Scotland.
is a piece by beethoven sonata 32 op 111
Chicago morning by Hauschka
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MvRA_zuxCVw
>>739232881
I also love to play that sonata myself.
Nice, I like that as well, enjoy.
>>739214414
>>739233311
Yes, the greatest of the sonatas
>>739233632
My favourite pieces of Brahms are probably the piano quintet and the quartet in g minor. I am a pianist btw :)
I love the unaccompanied cello suites of Bach. Also some of the viola gamba pieces sound very good on the cello. St Colombe is a very interesting figure
>>739232881
Brahms 4 with Kleiber and the Vienna Phil is the best
>>739233795
haha what wit. Andydeus? American humour how hilarious
>>739233947
Carlos or Erich. I assume you mean Carlos
My fave cycle other than Beethoven is the Schumann. Jansons, Gardiner, Marriner and Furtwaengler are GOAT, but I still enjoy Sawallisch, Klemperer, Kubelik and Cantelli, despite the wide variety of tempi.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0aX9-dhii3o
>>739234015
>>739234237
Carlos. Also the best Beethoven 5
Berlioz
Harold en Italie
Marche de Pelerins Chantant la priere du soir
>>739234475
I enjoy Furtwaengler's ninth(s). I have heard Kleiber in Beethoven, yes very spirited, powerful. Erich Kleiber was also great, possibly the greatest Mozartian of his era.
I have grown out of Karajan entirely I'm afraid
>>739215572
>op 9 no 2 of Chopin
pritty gud tatse
>>739214414
People have probably already said it, but moonlight sonata is a masterpiece
Mozart's Requiem
...or Tchaik IV... all that crash cymbal yo
>>739234770
What's your favorite movement?
>>739234821
The first, of course.
>>739234602
Love Harold in Italy. Also the Te Deum. Les Troyens is a mighty work, but a big investment of time. On the whole though worth it.
Romeo and Juliet is considered by some Berliozians to be his best work, but of his trilogy of romantic suffering or whatever, I prefer Harold, that last movement has so much power. Far prefer it to the Fantastique
>>739234696
Brass in the finale of Kleiber's fifth is epic
>>739234891
There is no first movement, only 2nd and 3rd. You never listened to it! You're a big, fat phony!
As of recent, Beethoven's 5th Piano Concerto, "Emperor." Widely considered one of the if not THE best piano concertos ever made
>>739234696
Also not to be missed: Brahms B flat Piano Concerto with Reiner and Gilels. And piano quintet with Serkin and Budapest.
>>739234891
The greatest sonatas in Beethoven, in order (imho)
32
31
23 (Appassionata)
30
21 (Waldstein)
14 (Moonlight)
8 (Pathetique)
29 (hammerklavier)
26 (Les Adieux)
17 (Tempest)
28
15 (Pastoral)
but there are many other great ones and great movements.
If Schumann's Kreisleriana and Fantasy in C were fitted into that list, they'd be quite high up )just in terms of being great works, not specifically in terms of being sonatas, although the Fantasy really is a sonata)
>>739234821
I love a good bowel movement.
>>739233908
I find the those one of the most exhilarating chamber works ever written. Sheer inspiration. And as a cellist, I'll of course never stop loving and trying to improve on the suites. Sounds like we'd make a good fit for playing together. I play the piano as well, but it's my secondary.
I'm listening to the St Colombe gamba suites now for the calming effect as I have to go to sleep, thanks for mentioning it
>>739235414
>>739235147
NO, I uh, I swear I have! Really!
>>739235028
Indeed. Must relisten
>>739235147
What do you mean? In a sense there is only 2 movements in that the 2nd movement leads into the allegro with no break
>>739235339
Love Gilels. Love the first more than the 2nd. More violence :)
Also love Serkin in the Burleske of Strauss. Everyone should listen to the Burleske of Strauss
Rofl what's going on in this thread, loggers??
>>739235414
So did Beethoven. He sometimes kept his stools under his stool
>>739235545
No worries bro, enjoy some deep sleep, great to chat
>>739217102
irish?
One of the greatest concerts given
https://www.youtube.com/watch?QNDhhx42vL8&v=UL3mBkhcODw
>>739224681
Hours later and I'm still sad nobody commented on the Star Trek reference.
>>739214582
White Trash detected
>>739214414
O Fortuna
/thread
>>739236655
I love star trek (TNG/voyager) but not familiar with this (possibly newer) reference sorry
Luigi Boccherini String Quartet in E Major Op.11 No. 5
ur all a bunch of faggots. classical isnt real music u homos.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmJefsOErr0
this is real music u faggots
>>739214414
Gymnopedie No.1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-Xm7s9eGxU
Sicilienne
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U5Y0uQLgriA
Nocturnes III (Honorable mention) First minute is heavenly
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E5Y7mbfS5r8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kCoOqsxLxSo
not enough Ives in this thread tbh
>>739215642
Except the Albumblatt was originally inscribed "für Therese" and was misread. Nice piece, though.
>>739216727
In his day, Brahms was known more for his chamber music than for his symphonic work. For good reason. Also try his Intermezzi for piano.
Schoenberg orchestrated the piano quartet in g, one of the few decent things he ever did, really ripped up the Rondo alla Zingarese.
>>739238905
Not to be confused with the sonata 24 ' a Therese'
>>739216783
Berg's is better.
>>739216810
Grumiaux did it better.
>>739214414
La Campanella
>>739217466
You're talking about a section of his Requiem.
>>739218477
>Classical snob
Lists beaucoup romantics.
>>739223683
>rite of spring
>>739239968
Rite of Spring blows. Firebird Suite 100M GET
>>739220394
I used to get laid by playing broken consort music. Really puts girls in the mood for some reason.
>>739222143
>You Anglo-Saxon barrel-niggers
Benjamin Britten deserves a mention here. Les Illuminations, Missa brevis, Rejoice in the Lamb, Serenade for Tenor, Horn, and Strings.
>>739239760
God tier
>>739214414
since nobody is choosing classical pieces, I choose "Flute and orchestra" by Morton Feldman
>>739215957
so underrated
>>739225816
Hershey Kay wrote Leonard Bernstein's stuff. Atelier fashion. Still I like his/their MASS.
>>739239479
Yes, the chamber music is superior to his orchestral by a long way. Brahms wasn't really a very interesting orchestrator and I'm only really enthusiastic about the 4th symphony (the 3rd more or less). The orchestral arrangement of the quartet is surprisingly effective you are right.
My favourite of the the late sets of klavierstuecke is 116, probably an homage to Schumann's Kreisleriana (op 16). So much fire. Also the Rhapsody op. 119. Not all of the late piano pieces are called Intermezzi, many are called Capriccio and a few are called other things.I love the little Intermezzo op. 119/1 in b minor
Windpipe by Handel
or
The Swan by Camille Saint Saens
Prelude Op. 28 No. 15 from chopin
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6pp4XHxx0k
Daphnis et Chloe Suite No. 2 by Ravel.
Eat my dick faggots I'm outta here!
>>739214414
Fun trivial fact that probably most of you already know: Mozart was a weird fuck with scatophiliac humor
>>739214414
Holst- The Planets
Favorite recording: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLFCyuaVaYQb6yHDepmIolVjyLKMqThFbu
>>739226486
Look for anything performed by the pianist Claudio Arrau. No one can touch his Beethoven. You can almost hear bells ringing in his version of the fourth concerto.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2AR5roZctuk
Funy sound but brilliant playing by Richter
>>739218477
No Rachmaninoff???
>>739241111
Schnabel :)
not a fan of Arrau particularly, he seems a touch calculating
>>739241053
I was just about to post this. Thank you good sir for appreciating art.
>>739232001
It doesn't, just lots of people with Best Of albums.
>>739241242
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WhLDse5R8dQ
>>739234237
I met Marriner once. He was such a nice person that I wanted to climb onto his lap and purr.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ice3Ui9Hhss
>>739241308
Cheers!
Pierrot Lunaire
I'm an opera fan, though this piece wasn't in the classical era, I really enjoy the Doll's Aria from The Tales of Hoffmann
>>739241613
late lamented, pbuh
Underrated I think, Europeans tended to look down on the English a fair bit
>>739218477
Change Mozart for Beethoven you pleb
>>739235766
Is this another "chamber pot music" joke?
>>739240349
>classical
>Morton Feldman
Off by a couple of centuries. Soon that won't matter.
Greatest operas imho are all by Mozart, Zauberfloete, Don Giovanni and Nozze di Figaro, with Idomeneo getting an honourable mention. Fidelio, Tristan, and Boris are all great. I have to mention Carmen also, even though it is popular. It is still a good even great piece, even if a little trashy somehow. Puccini is also popular for a reason. Schumann's Genoveva is a great work, virtually unheard (as is his Paradise and the Peri, but that is something like an oratorio although it could be operatically staged I guess). Bach's passions are in effect glorious religious operas. Eugene Onegin Dvorak's Rusalka and Smetana's Bartered Bride are very enjoyable. One should try Kalomiris' The Master Builder, Szymanowski's King Roger, Poulenc's Dialogues of the Carmelites, and Meale's Mer da Glace
>>739241908
Indeed
>>739242140
What when the state enforces listening to the most braindead and commercial rap 24 hours a day
Bach's little fugue in G minor. Such an amazing complex piece. It's so much fun to get really high and listen to the complex layers in this song.
https://youtu.be/PhRa3REdozw
>>739240557
The symphonist of Brahms's day was Joachim Raff. Almost unknown today (as will be so many of our own day) and yet he deserves to be resurrected. I'd like to find a recording of his fifth symphony again.
>Not all of the late piano pieces are called Intermezzi
In fact, off-hand I'd say only three opp were so called. They are all very pensive, almost world-weary. One of the op.117 is my favorite, something one might commit suicide to were that to become necessary.
>>739240913
Another trivial fact: The engraving that OP's painting was based on was drawn after von Beethoven had consumed a cup of "forty bean" coffee.
I hate to be that guy but Waltz of the Flowers https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QxHkLdQy5f0
>>739214414
Posted 5 hours ago.
>>739214414
Symphony No. 9, Beethoven. A masterpiece.
>>739242919
Mmm I have heard a few works by Raff, including the Leonora, I wasn't terribly enthusiastic. I do admire Brahms, just not really the 1st 2 symphonies. Dvorak is meritorious, Tchaikovsky's Pathetique is powerful, and there is always Bruckner if you like that kind of thing
>>739243136
È pur, si muove. Bravo!