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Who spins some classical?

What's Hot
darthed1981darthed1981 Frets: 12014
Who works a bit of classical into their listening?

I love a bit of Elgar, Rachmaninov, Beethoven, Vaughan-Williams, Wagner, Dvorak, Holst.

This isn't about elitism BTW - we are talking about beautiful melody and harmony that has stood the test of centuries.

Classic FM is a must for if you have had a bad day and want to ignore the dickheads on your way home.  The proms remain a fantastic series of concerts each year.

What say ye, my good friends?
You are the dreamer, and the dream...
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Comments

  • LuttiSLuttiS Frets: 2246
    I saw Pav before he died. One of the best shows i've been to.
    Rachmaninov is a beast with big hands. The Planets is my Jam. Beethoven's melodies are amazing.
    I also like Megadeth.

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  • beed84beed84 Frets: 2422
    edited August 2023
    .
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  • Rachmaniinov is one of my faves, I only seem to like the mid and post romantic period.. I have tried listening to classical era but not for me at all.
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  • ICBMICBM Frets: 72719
    Yes, I do. I did go through a period of buying pretty much any and all classical CDs I found in charity shops, but over time I’ve found that - like all types of music - there is some I like and some I don’t, which has nothing to do with ‘quality’, and classical is at least as varied as rock... you shouldn’t expect to like everything, despite what some of the elitism associated with it often seems to require - nor look down on the most ‘mainstream’ composers just because they’re popular, the reason they are is mostly because their music is great, as well as often some of the most accessible.

    "Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski

    "Only two things are infinite - the universe, and human stupidity. And I'm not sure about the universe." - Albert Einstein

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  • Also as a modern type offering listen to the Cloud Atlas soundtrack...

    Also Catrin Finch, she is awesome.


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  • I tend to enjoy more modern classical works, mostly those in a more avant garde realm - especially 12 tone serialism at the moment Schonberg, Berg,  and particularly Webern. Along with the "newer" guys who don't stick so strictly to serialism like later Stravinsky, Boulez, Ives, Varese, and very much Ligeti

    I can enjoy more "classical classical" in moderation but I don't find myself drawn to it as much as those above
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  • darthed1981darthed1981 Frets: 12014
    LuttiS said:
    I saw Pav before he died. One of the best shows i've been to.
    Rachmaninov is a beast with big hands. The Planets is my Jam. Beethoven's melodies are amazing.
    I also like Megadeth.

    Nice to hear from you bud! :)
    You are the dreamer, and the dream...
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  • Heard this on the radio tonight. Quite beautiful.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ntri-r3O5ig
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  • vizviz Frets: 10737
    Variety is the spice of life. Yesterday evening I watched my daughter’s funk band, then came home and listened to Ravel’s Le Tombeau de Couperin, then SLF’s BBC sessions. 
    Roland said: Scales are primarily a tool for categorising knowledge, not a rule for what can or cannot be played.
    Supportact said: [my style is] probably more an accumulation of limitations and bad habits than a 'style'.
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  • TanninTannin Frets: 5550
    Count me in for sure. My favourites include Mozart, Shostakovich, Borodin, Rimsky-Korsakov, Dvořák, Haydn, Janáček.

    I don't much care for the showy romantics like Rachmaninov and Tchaikovsky. Or Wagner for that matter. Beethoven I blow  a bit hot and cold on - magnificent at the right time but sometimes too bombastic (rather like heavy metal). Bach I admire more than I enjoy. I feel as though I ought to like Bach more than I do. Brahms, depends on the work. Ditto Mahler.
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  • KittyfriskKittyfrisk Frets: 19108
    Heard this on the radio tonight. Quite beautiful.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ntri-r3O5ig
    Were you by chance listening to "Add to Playlist" ? I bet you were... too  ;)
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m001k84y
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  • StuckfastStuckfast Frets: 2427
    Current fave:


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  • CrankyCranky Frets: 2631
    edited August 2023
    Tannin said:
    Count me in for sure. My favourites include Mozart, Shostakovich, Borodin, Rimsky-Korsakov, Dvořák, Haydn, Janáček.

    I don't much care for the showy romantics like Rachmaninov and Tchaikovsky. Or Wagner for that matter. Beethoven I blow  a bit hot and cold on - magnificent at the right time but sometimes too bombastic (rather like heavy metal). Bach I admire more than I enjoy. I feel as though I ought to like Bach more than I do. Brahms, depends on the work. Ditto Mahler.
    Yeah this is where calling everything “classical” does us no favors.

    I don’t really like romantic or baroque music — Vivaldi, Handel, Dvorak etc no thanks.  Mozart, some Bach, Beethoven, Chopin can keep me going for hours, though.  Modernist/impressionist stuff like Debussy, Satie and Ravel even better (the Belle Epoch fascinates me; I’d time travel back to it if it wasn’t for the lack of vaccines, soap, indoor plumbing, deodorant etc — and obvs my lack of time travel ability).

    Liszt and Monti are Romantic exceptions for me.  Czardas and Hungarian Rhapsody are so good.  Maybe there’s something about the Hungarian style that appeals to me, idk enough about any of it to say.

    Sadly, I rarely know who or what I’m listening to exactly because “Sonata in C Major” or “Little Fugue in F Minor” aren’t very catchy names.  I couldn’t tell you the name of any one Haydn or Chopin composition off the cuff that’s for sure.  “Air on the G String”, “Moonlight Sonata” and “Claire de Lune” are easy to remember, at least.

    edit: okay Tchaikovsky is in my wheelhouse too.  Nutcracker Suite on cello is mesmerizing — https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=CK_ldkjyFUc&pp=ygUXSGF1c2VyIG51dGNyYWNrZXIgc3VpdGU%3D

    Instruments matter to me.  I’m partial to strings and horns.  And too many instruments at once is too much for me.
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  • swillerswiller Frets: 1327
    im a sucker for villa lobos..
    william orbit should put this through his access virus :)


    Dont worry, be silly.
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  • barnstormbarnstorm Frets: 635
    The Four Seasons is the one thing I’ll go out of my way to hear new recordings of. Absolutely rips, and has stood the test of time better than any other piece of music for me. Outrageous achievement to write something that arguably still counts as pop music 300 years on.
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  • robertyroberty Frets: 10896
    Not nearly enough. I bloody love it though. I'm a sucker for a bit of Chopin. Bittersweet. Schubert is another favourite. I will watch this thread for recommendations

    Classical was the first music I started listening to, when I was very young, because I was taking music lessons and learning it. I was a weird kid
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  • GassageGassage Frets: 30973
    edited August 2023
    My Mum was a junior opera singer so I was brought up on it and love much of it, esp Bizet & Puccini.

    Play me Jussi Bjoerling and I'll go weak at the knees. The greatest voice I've ever heard- so beautifully sweet.

    His control and vibrato are quite astonishing.


    *An Official Foo-Approved guitarist since Sept 2023.

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  • KilgoreKilgore Frets: 8601
    Love a bit of classical. You can't beat Clapton with the National Philharmonic Orchestra. Some think it's high brow and elitist but that's not true at all, he still does solos.
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  • I'm a classical pianist first and foremost, so definitely enjoy listening to a lot of classical. What I would say though is if people only listen to classical to unwind and relax, that's great if it works for you, but that's only such a small section of what is out there and what I did to be my favourite classical to listen to is stuff that actually makes it hard to relax.

    My favourites to play on piano are Rachmaninoff, Chopin, Bach, Schubert, Mozart and Ravel. 

    My favourites to listen to are a bit different - there's quite a lot I find interesting to listen to which I find a bit dull or unsatisfying to play, or they are mainly for instruments that don't translate to solo piano. Vivaldi, Paganini, Mahler, Holst, Debussy. The only piano music I really listen to apart from whatever they put on classic FM in the car is Liszt or Rachmaninoff.

    Beethoven however gets a total free pass for both playing and listening - I was played his music (unknowingly) as a baby to get me to sleep and apparently it worked within minutes to get me quiet and ready to sleep. Then when I was about 15 I got a new (to me) piano which came with a massive box full of old sheet music, including his complete piano sonatas. On the first sight read of the pathetique and the moonlight, I could play them pretty much all the way through, albeit slightly slower than proper tempo on the fast movements. They were probably slightly higher than my general grade level at the time however way more advanced than the normal sight reading tests, I was quite amazed at how easy they seemed to be and that I knew my way through them. Then my parents told me about playing it to me as an infant, and it kind of clicked into place I suppose. 

    Around the same time I got into rock music (and Liszt, also a proper rocker of a composer) and I've always felt a lot of similarities between the intensity and passion and heart of the music and the performance potential.

    Shameless bit of self promo here
    Please note my communication is not very good, so please be patient with me
    soundcloud.com/thecolourbox-1
    youtube.com/@TheColourboxMusic
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  • I'm a classical pianist first and foremost...
    Impresssive...most impressive...
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