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  1. #26
    Manure Ginobili Mixability's Avatar
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    Classical Music is very soothing. I actually went to the Symphony at the Majestic on Friday, it was great, probably cause my boss(a doctor) gave me his wonderful seats. Talk about romantic, good thing I took my girl!

  2. #27
    License to Lillard tlongII's Avatar
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    Hey Manny,

    Try a listen to "Fanfare for the Common Man" by Aaron Coplan. It's a relatively recent work (1942) and you will probably recognize it. It's one of my favorite orchestral pieces though.

  3. #28
    Get Refuel! FromWayDowntown's Avatar
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    Good topic, Manny.

    One of the more underrated composers of all-time, IMO, is Gustav Mahler. You might give a listen to some of his symphonies, which are complex and full of symbolism. It's mostly darker music, in the tradition of Beethoven's later symphonies, but it's brilliant work.

  4. #29
    Money Winobili MiNuS's Avatar
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    "Pines of Rome" by Respighi (its a long piece about 15minutes-I highly recommend this.
    It takes you on a nice trip )
    OTTORINO RESPIGHI
    Born in Bologna, July 9, 1879; died in Rome, April 18, 1936


    The Pines of Rome


    Respighi's strong interest in historical subjects and in music of bygone eras led to compositions like the potpourri Rossiniana, the ballet La Boutique fantasque (also based on Rossini's music), The Birds (old harpsichord pieces), and Ancient Airs and Dances (seventeenth- and eighteenth-century lute music). This interest also brought forth the music by which he is best remembered today, a trilogy of symphonic evocations of ancient Rome: The Fountains of Rome (1917), The Pines of Rome (1924) and Feste romane (Roman Festivals, 1928), all bursting with brilliant effects, resplendent orchestration and intoxicating rhythms.

    Rome, the "Eternal City," was a "natural" for a musician of Respighi's antiquarian inclinations, a city steeped in history, studded with monuments and statues, richly endowed with great art and architecture. In The Pines of Rome, Respighi does not so much attempt to portray nature, but rather uses landscapes with pines in and and around Rome as points of departure to conjure up visions and reminiscences of the great city. "The century-old trees which so characteristically dominate the Roman landscape become witnesses to the principal events in Roman life," wrote Respighi. The first performance was given, appropriately enough, in Rome on December 14, 1924, with Bernardino Molinari conducting the Augusteo Orchestra.

    In the published score, Respighi wrote a description of the sights and sounds evoked by the four connected sections. Somewhat abridged, the text runs as follows:

    I. The Pines of the Villa Borghese - Children are at play in the pine grove of the Villa Borghese; they mimic marching soldiers and battles; they chatter like excited swallows at evening, then swarm away. Triangle, bells, celesta, piano and harp contribute to the shimmering brilliance. Suddenly the scene changes to

    II. Pines near a Catacomb - We see the shadows of the pines, which crown the entrance of a catacomb. From the depths rises a mournful chant [low horns] which floats through the air like a solemn hymn, then slowly and mysteriously dies away.

    III. The Pines of the Janiculum - A slight tremor disturbs the night air. The full moon reveals the profile of the pines on the Janiculum. A nightingale is singing. [The use of the recorded birdsong represents the first time a well-known composer employed modern recording playback techniques within a musical work.]

    IV. The Pines of the Appian Way - Misty dawn on the Appian Way [the ancient highway extending 350 miles from modern Brindisi to Rome]. A magical countryside guarded by solitary pines. The indistinct, incessant rhythm of muffled footsteps. In the poet's mind appears a vision of past glories: in the grandeur of the rising sun, an army advances inexorably on the Capitoline Hill to the accompaniment of brass fanfares.
    ------------------------------------------------------------

    Carmina Burana-Carl Orff -(if you're pissed off!) Oh and by the way this the song used in the Spurs intro montage. I think? I believe its one of the most used classical songs used with teams,since its a very fiery piece.

    Flight of the Bumble Bee-Rimskij-Korsakov (I highly recommend the Chicago or Canadian Brass version of this classic for a wake up call or if you need to be quick on your feet)
    Last edited by minusplus; 11-07-2005 at 01:08 PM.

  5. #30
    e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0 MannyIsGod's Avatar
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    Hey Manny,

    Try a listen to "Fanfare for the Common Man" by Aaron Coplan. It's a relatively recent work (1942) and you will probably recognize it. It's one of my favorite orchestral pieces though.
    I'm actually finding out that I have much more of a taste for modern compisition.

    I haven't listened to this much classical since HS when I was in band.

  6. #31
    That's what she said. LuvBones's Avatar
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    Check out Firebird Suite by Stravinsky

    awww.. reminds me of high school and Fantasia 2000.

  7. #32
    I can live with it JoeChalupa's Avatar
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  8. #33
    I can live with it JoeChalupa's Avatar
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    Yo-Yo Ma

  9. #34
    Money Winobili MiNuS's Avatar
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    Metallica Kicks ass!Thats an instant classic.

    I know Sebastian Bach would have loved it!

  10. #35
    I can live with it JoeChalupa's Avatar
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    I also enjoy Joshua Bell.


  11. #36
    Money Winobili MiNuS's Avatar
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    Manny,all this violin crap you gotta skip. Check out "The Pines of Rome" after a few beers and forget about all this Pink Floyd sh!t.

    "Pines" rocks!

    edit:
    I also played in band and we played this piece in Corpus at some festival.
    We had 11 all-staters.30 area-wide players and 8 in the All-symphony.
    I played the Tuba and was third chair in Valley Highschool my freshman year.
    Our first chair was first chair All-state,I was second chair in our band and our 3rd chair player made the all-state.I didn't practice for the compe ion over the XMAS break and my lips were out of it.
    We had 15 tuba players in my freshman year.

    I dropped out of band after my sophmore year and became a socialite,cut my hair,put some deoderant and got myself a girlfriend. Sure I was the guy that always started his sentences"Last year,in bandcamp....."
    Last edited by minusplus; 11-07-2005 at 03:03 PM.

  12. #37
    e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0 MannyIsGod's Avatar
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    Oh, and isn't it amazing how much classical music we associate with Looney Tunes?

  13. #38
    e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0 MannyIsGod's Avatar
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    I'm going to check out most of what is in this thread.

    I'm big on brass (I played baritone, trumpet and trombone in HS), strings (I'm a guitarist now), and percussion. I could probably live happily without woodwinds though.

  14. #39
    Fantasy Football Guru Guru of Nothing's Avatar
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    Oldie But Goody



    THEY'VE GOT THE CLAP
    Music Industry Salivates Fusion of Classical and Rap

    NEW YORK (SatireWire.com) — It's impossible to pinpoint the birth date or true parents of most musical movements. Who, exactly, began rock 'n roll? What single moment in time gave us jazz?

    But with the latest, and some say greatest, musical movement of them all, there is a date, a place, and an undisputed and unlikely pair of creators.

    Late on Aug. 31, 2000, renowned cellist Yo-Yo Ma finished a concert at Carnegie Hall, took a wrong turn down an alley, and bumped into Sean Combs, a.k.a. rap superstar Puff Daddy, who had just finished a concert of his own. Unaware of who Ma was, Combs noted Ma's cello case and decided to have some fun. "I told him, 'You know, gangsters use to carry their guns in a case like that. That's a big case, so you must be a big gansta,'" Combs recalled.



    Ma nervously explained that he was a cellist, pulled out his instrument, and began to play. Combs still isn't sure what came over him, but he began to sing. Thus, Clap was born.

    Half a year later, the improbable fusion of classical music and rap has swept aside pop divas to reign atop the charts. Clap dominates MTV. Clappers populate the newsstands. Even the Grammys, long considered less hip than other award shows, will have a Clap category this year.

    Where rappers sang of an often violent street-life existence, and classical music's sophisticated instrumentalism appealed to the upper classes, Clappers sing about the street lives of 18th Century aristocrats to the accompaniment of piano, strings, woodwinds and brass. And always, as in Clapper Def Ludwig's single Baroque 2 Da Bone, there is that incessant clapping:

    We eat a lotta cake, (clap)
    Sometimes it gets old, (clap)
    The servants fetch our robe de chambre,
    So we don't get cold. (clap, clap ... clapclap)

    "We don't just sing about ourselves anymore," said Queen Leitmotifah (formerly Queen Latifah), who recently released her first Clap album. "We have to read a lot of history, try to get into the heads of the masters, like Mozart, Tchaikovsky. Then we look at what life was like in, say, the palaces of St. Petersberg in 1743, and we tell it like it was."

    To the record industry, Clap does more than combine two musical movements. It brings together two historically disparate economic groups—wealthy classical music aficionados and street-level rap fans — who have contrary, but appealing, buying habits. "Young music fans have less sense than money," explained Sony executive Max Schmeel, "and old, classical music lovers have more money than sense. This puts us in a very good position."

    Schmeel estimates the annual Clap market at $40 billion, and judging by the rush to cross into Clap, that number may be revised upward. Already, Blow Da Chateau, the Clap single by Sonata by Nature, (formerly Naughty by Nature), sits atop the R & B, classical, and pop charts. Meanwhile, Ma and Combs last week signed a $100 million deal with Sony Music to produce two albums as Yo-Yo Ma Big Thang and Puff Daddy Dvorak. Combs already has a hit on his hands with the disc Aristo , a duet with noted cellist Kim Jong.

    What makes Clap's future particularly bright is that it has transcended music and become a social force at the street level. Wealthy suburbanites who once sent their children to private schools are enrolling them in inner city schools, believing the atmosphere will widen their appreciation of Clap. Once-violent street gangs, meanwhile, have taken on the personae and lifestyle exhibited by Clap and its performers. According to the FBI, the infamous Crips have at least two cells that have renamed themselves the Clefs, and the Latin Kings will soon rename themselves The Libretto Kings. These changes are more than just skin deep.

    Said 17-year-old Chicago resident Ralph "Bolero" Winston, a member of the Bach Boys gang: "We useta control everything west of Dearborn between 30th and 32nd, and life was fast, you know. But that's not the thing anymore. We want to control our tempo allegre. We seek out the pastorale, embrace divertissement. That's our refrain."

    Ironically, Chicago law enforcement has a slightly different refrain: "The truth is, we have no friggin' idea what these kids are talking about nowadays," said Chicago Gang Task Force detective Lance Boylgrim. "We had the street language and street names down, but now all they talk about is andante and arpeggio and harmonic structure. I had a kid yesterday actually call me contrapuntal. To my face."

    But Clap is forcing everybody to retool. Even classical artists who once regarded other forms of music as beneath them are rethinking. "I have never felt this strong about a music since I first heard the Verdi," said Luciano "Bad Luc" Pavarotti, who plans next year to rap tenor in the Metropolitan Opera's "Rigoghetto," the Clap version of Verdi's classic. "As some of my new friends are saying, 'I got da Clap, and I not goin' back."

    Copyright © 2000, SatireWire

  15. #40
    It is what it is. Mark in Austin's Avatar
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    Manny - There is a three-disc soundtrack to Amadeus that is amazing. I often use it at work when I need to put on the headphones and focus. I'll also listen to it at night if I'm getting tired when driving. Probably my favorite right now.

    If you like brass, the original soundtrack to Gladiator has some unbelieveably good stuff on it.

    Mussorgsky's Night on Bald Mountain is cool - you can find it on the Fantasia soundtrack, it's a version "compiled" by Rimsky-Korsakov from the different versions that Mussorgsky wrote over the course of his life. There are a ton of different versions (different music - not different performers) out there though.

    Holst's The Planets - particularly Mars - is also good.

    Some have already mentioed Aaron Copeland - I would add Appalachian Spring to the list. Some see copeland as being a "bridge" between classical composition, modern, and american folk music - I'm really in awe of what he was able to blend together without it sounding forced or contrived every time I listen to it.

    One off the wall suggestion, even though it isn't classical:

    Page and Plant's No Quarter album - fused the Zepplin songs with Moroccan-influenced compositions. I can listen to the CD over and over while I'm working or relaxing - it has come to be one of my favorites.

  16. #41
    redirkulous mavsfan1000's Avatar
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    I'm not really into classical music. It is ok once in awhile to listen to it but I would get bored with it. For relaxation Bob Marley is the best to listen to.
    What a difference 6 years makes. I love Classical Music now. And Bach is my favorite composer. This is the collection I just bought. Wow is it a good deal. 23 Cd's of Bach's best works along with other great works of other composers (Vivaldi, Handel, and many others of the Baroque Era). http://www.amazon.com/Baroque-Master...3591656&sr=1-2
    Last edited by mavsfan1000; 12-11-2011 at 03:28 AM.

  17. #42
    Independent DMX7's Avatar
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    Good topic, Manny.

    One of the more underrated composers of all-time, IMO, is Gustav Mahler. You might give a listen to some of his symphonies, which are complex and full of symbolism. It's mostly darker music, in the tradition of Beethoven's later symphonies, but it's brilliant work.
    Gustav Mahler is a God. Symphony of a Thousand (i.e., No. 8) is epic.

  18. #43
    I cannot grok its fullnes leemajors's Avatar
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    I like Satie a lot.


  19. #44
    俺はまんこが大好きなんだよ baseline bum's Avatar
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    If you're into piano, Vladimir Horowitz is mind-blowing. His performances of Rachmaninoff 2 & 3 are legendary... this album has great renditions of the two:


    Here's an indication of Horowitz's skill

    Unfortunately, the album this is from (New Recordings of Chopin) isn't available on CD as far as I know, though it's not too hard to find on vinyl on ebay. I'm sure it is one of the greatest hits compilations, but I have no clue which.

    Furtwangler has an incredible performance of Beethoven's 9th from 1951 (sound quality isn't perfect, being 60 years old).


    Too bad he's a Nazi.... here's a video of him performing for Hitler's birthday (can even see Goebbels @ the 1:26 mark, lol)



    My personal favorite version of the 9th is from 2006 by Bernard Haitink and the London Symphony Orchesta. The vocals in the fourth movement are my favorite I have ever heard.


    I love this performance of Dvorák's 9th; never heard a better one.
    Last edited by baseline bum; 12-12-2011 at 02:02 AM.

  20. #45
    Veteran hater's Avatar
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  21. #46
    Veteran
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    I bought a classical album from amazon for two bucks and its still two bucks. Album is called "66 must-have sensual classics". Only bought it cause it was 2 bucks. Check out the cover.

  22. #47
    Veteran cantthinkofanything's Avatar
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    I bought a classical album from amazon for two bucks and its still two bucks. Album is called "66 must-have sensual classics". Only bought it cause it was 2 bucks. Check out the cover.
    I'm not searching for that. Provide a ing link you lazy ass mother er.

  23. #48
    Veteran cantthinkofanything's Avatar
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    here. I did it after all you lazy .


  24. #49
    Veteran cantthinkofanything's Avatar
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    although you got a heck of a deal you cheap bas .

  25. #50
    Corpus Christi Spurs Fan Phenomanul's Avatar
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    Over the past few years I've amassed a pretty extensive collection of classical music from Albéniz to Zimmerman (about 18,000 pieces)...

    You know you have it bad when you seek out multiple versions of your favorite pieces and know the different Orchestras and the Conductors by name...

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