What are some /lit/ composers?
>>9332560
No idea what a /lit/ composer would be but my favorites are Scriabin, Prokofiev, and Cyril Scott. Scriabin's 2nd symphony paints such a narrative-like picture in my mind, with very clear progressions of mood
Ravel?
>>9332560
Bob dYLAN.
>>9332588
>no rachmaninov, no marin marais
pleb.
nah, just kidding, i like prokofiev a lot too, do you like ravel, or holst?
>>9332608
I don't like Holst, but I do like some Ravel's piano work. Ravel and Debussy's style have been utilized to death in modern cinema soundtracks though it's hard to hear them with fresh ears, no fault of the composers themselves of course
>>9332560
Nietzsche
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_xIvlUYyPc
Tim Hecker
Arca
>>9332672
You'd probably like Michael Stearns
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M8jArZMILME
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y9vU36JCbIM
probably stockhausen since everyone who listens to him is either an academic or a mega-poser
Tchaikovsky.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wss3y3e7Gqk
>>9332560
John Maus
I'd say Ariel Pink because I like his music, but he's a pseud
Mahler. He was a huge cuck, like most of /lit/.
Philip Glass
>>9332752
/lit/ favors small hellenistic cocks
>>9332734
i got a lot more respect for maus after hearing he was the only musical guest on World Peace that didnt condemn MDE when people found out they were alt-right
>>9332632
I really like heldenklage too anon, why didn't he liked brahms?
Dvorak, Sibelius, Respighi, Tchaikovsky, Debussy
>>9332730
Damn right, him and dvorak
https://youtu.be/ShmwB7n3H4A
tchaikovsky sucks, stop pretending already
>>9332974
What does he suck
>>9332981
too melodramatic
>>9332560
I like Mozart, Verdi, Lehar, Weill and Bernstein.
>>9332730
;-;
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QJa1RrxlHg
schumann initially wanted to be a writer after getting jean paul pilled, check out his collected writings, also his diary t b h
liszt wrote a biography of chopin: https://archive.org/details/lifeofchopin00lisziala
composers with own aesthetic-theoretical writings: debussy, busoni, yves, pfitzner, deryck cooke, martynov
>>9332993
I said what, brainlet.
>>9333023
sorry, he was gay so I guess he sucked peepees and then felt guilty about it
Ravel is pretty /lit/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UPdsPhSQy58
Bob Dylan, Jim Morrison, Robert Fripp.
>>9332560
Atlantic Records
Rautarvaara, Grieg, Sibelius, Adams, Ole, Bull, Part, Johnson, Cage ect
Wagner, Schoenberg, and Berg.
>>9332993
His talent in crafting melodies justifies it or makes up for it at the very least.
>>9333806
Seconding rautavaara
>>9332560
>yet another namedropping thread where musical ignorant pseuds try to impress their cool internet buddies with their super special and oh so unique taste in music
Late beethoven, by the way
>>9332560
Bach: he supposedly left encrypted messages in his compositions
>>9332560
Luciano Berio
>>9334310
>not early mid and late beethoven
>>9332993
Stop pretending that he wasn't one of the greatest melodists
>>9332560
Nick Cave
Leonard Cohen
Plebs
>>9334684
Op said
>composers
not "minstrels".
>>9333806
Adams definitely for his anti-Marxist music.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P-vK4IV4giw
>>9334310
>yet another namedropping thread where musical ignorant pseuds
>musical ignorant pseuds
>musical ignorant pseuds
>musical ignorant pseuds
Retard alert
ITT
>/lit/ try to talk about music
embarrassing as usual
>>9334990
harrumph posting is most vulgar posting
More like
>ITT: your favorite composers
But Frederic Devreese. Check him out
jobim
bacharach
Pushkin's Eugene Onegin was turned into an opera. That's pretty /lit/.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jjpUw1isGEM
nobody has mentioned Stravinsky?
>>9335355
I would have, but someone always call me a pleb for liking him.
>>9335355
i dont like his music but his lecture notes about poetics of music were interesting, some of his esoteric principles can be translated to writing.
>>9334351
schumann and elgar used cyphers too according to eric sams
>>9335355
What's some good neo-classcial stravinsky? I've only listened to his early works + his violin concerto
>>9335355
I like his ballets.
>>9335705
pulcinella, octet, jeu de cartes
IMHO
>>9335355
Rite of spring is Ulysses of music
I'm preparing 4 hands version with my friend, the one that Stravinsky and Debussy sight read for the first time, it's mindblowing and fun to decipher
>>9335835
thanks
have some handel in exchange
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DSSA_VWrLX0
Luciano Cilio
Aro Part
the wandelweiser collective
Fuck Wagner; he's a faggot; that don't know how to write anything.
He's a an actor; he seduces your ears; fuck that guy, but not physically, emotionally, or . . . that word that starts with an M.
I hates him; loathing I feel in my ass, and abyssia.
[Backstage talking to his current favorite soprano disciple]
Wagner: By chance of being more than acquainted with you, - the LEAST fairest of all Rhinemaidens, I will flip this coin;
tails, you you listen to the snake, heads, well, I don't have to compose anything for you to understand that one.
----------------------
Mass it up with dat bm.
Laudmaus Te.
Kanye West
Ravel, Debussy, Smetana, Tchaikovsky, Holst
and Beethoven of course
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mgHxmAsINDk
>>9337017
literally the only right answer
Kanye West
Julius Eastman
Steve Reich
Penderecki
Kraftwerk
Kyary Pamyu Pamyu
Ligeti
Carl Orff
Joanna Newsom
>>9332632
A little messy but it gave me the feels
How can anyone not love that man?
>>9334684
Whoever composed the strings of river man is the GOAT
Debussy, call me pleb I don't give a fuck, the snow is dancing is my jam
Since someone said Ariel Pink and Maus, I guess I will have to mention mid 00's Panda Bear to complete the indie talented hacks trilogy
>>9335355
I especially like Nightcall. It always puts me in the right mood
>>9334990
i know right, fellow /mu/tant? These plebs don't even mention grimes or kanye and just keep talking about these dead fucking white males XD
is piano the most /lit/ instrument?
>>9337518
No. Baritone and Tenor voice is.
>>9335705
rite of spring and the firebird are both dope
>>9334990
The classical general at /mu/ isn't much better than this.
>>9335371
i weighed the options of being called a pleb against getting that sweet name dropping self esteem bump
>>9335880
spot on. i was looking for stravinsky as i scrolled through the thread. when i didnt see it, i figured id get called a pleb and laughed at, but then i come back 7 hours later and my comment has more positive replies than anyone else.
/lit/ never fails to surprise me
>>9337518
It's clearly the cello, piano is a normie instrument.
Considering /lit/ is a Catholic board, Messiaen.
Just for age variety, Yiruma is a fantastic modern pianist.
What the fuck is this thread even? Name dropping and that's it? Does anybody actually discuss literature in this board ever??
Takemitsu
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nGgrEqYja9M
Buxtehude
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tVU_hF44KfM
>>9337655
I read a lot DFW, Pychon, James Joyce, and many more!
>>9337655
Hey I tried. If you want to discuss opera versions of books I will discuss them.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R3ANMTxGVIw
>>9337655
Welcome to /lit/, enjoy your stay.People only listen to classical music in order to namedrop.
>>9332952
>that fortissimo modulation to g minor in the adagio of the cello concerto
>>9334310
3rd movement of op. 132 is literally, L I T E R A L L Y the most beautiful movement of a string quartet ever.
>>9334351
He spelled his name all the time like the autist he was. In German B-flat is written as 'B' and B natural is written as 'H'. So Bb-A-C-B would become B-A-C-H
>>9337655
>>9337710
You can't not 'namedrop.' Even if you don't particularly like the big composers, it's literally impossible to talk about classical without at least acknowledging them. Every single composer on from the 19th century was influenced by Beethoven. The modern song form can be traced all the way back to Schubert.
ITT wut r some composers u like