Fedora Euphoria EdishJust Watched a Youtube Summary of The God Delusion subEdishhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sPqsPfY2ViUThis thread is for the discussion of music in the Western (European) classical tradition, as well as classical instrument-playing.>How do I get into classical?This link has resources including audio courses, textbooks and selections of recordings to help you start to understand and appreciate classical music:https://rentry.org/classicalgenPrevious: >>129452490
This is the thread.
W.
We need a /classical/ opera.
>>129481483based atheist OP this is a rational and up-to-date general
Tchaikovskyhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DLuNIMlnDo4
Medtner
>>129482005He raped your mind.
>>129482034>HeThanks DID patient.
>Theme and Variationszzzzzzzzzzz
>>129482034Was literally thinking the same, poor gal really does come here everyday just to unload her schizophrenia as if anyone here cares.
Anyways, back to listening to the music of our people.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c3pxeSq06Hg
>>129482051have you considered Faure's?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HAdIC_9iLN0
>>129481596sorry it's my fault, I got into opera about a month ago and whenever I get excited about something I make a lot of posts about it. assuming your post is about how there's been too much opera posting lately and you're tired of seeing it
>>129482132No I meant for all the /classical/ drama.
>>129481483>>129481904>>129481954>>129481984>>129482005thank you sisters, maybe try metalthread instead?
Does anyone have a lossless rip of Colin Davis's recording of Bruckners mass in f minor?Brahms (posted this arrangement before but I really like it)https://youtu.be/LsT6O01su0U
>>129481904LMAO, that's just sad.
>>129481483I thought AI was slop?
>>129482219I'm still wondering what levels of schizophrenia was required to link this to his jewish bully.
>>129482217didn't know about that arrangement, good shout, thanks
Happy 100th birthday to György Kurtág.
>>129482235It is, thats why its fitting for Chopin.
>>129482257Happy birthday!https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x4LGf4AYCS4
>>129481483That scene is the gayest thing i have ever seen
>>129482335It's pretty cute
>>129482335That's just your average afterparty at the Chopin competition.
>>129482274>bad things are good when I do them
now playingstart of Schubert: Piano Trio No. 1, Op. 99 D898https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sDM2D1w1xQg&list=OLAK5uy_kZ2QC_JV-xLBDq1NZAw2g-XJEvKFzSpWc&index=2Schubert: Notturno in E-Flat Majorhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v2fFXraKvUc&list=OLAK5uy_kZ2QC_JV-xLBDq1NZAw2g-XJEvKFzSpWc&index=6start of Schubert: Piano Trio No. 2, Op. 100 D929https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a3h55245HS8&list=OLAK5uy_kZ2QC_JV-xLBDq1NZAw2g-XJEvKFzSpWc&index=7Schubert: Sonatensatz in B-Flat Majorhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZpRkg2pZ-c8&list=OLAK5uy_kZ2QC_JV-xLBDq1NZAw2g-XJEvKFzSpWc&index=10https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kZ2QC_JV-xLBDq1NZAw2g-XJEvKFzSpWc>Unanimously hailed by the critics ever since their release in 2000, these recordings offer a chance to follow Schubert's development in the field of the piano trio, from the youthful Sonatensatz (1812) to the immense masterpieces of his maturity. The Sunday Times wrote, "The Wanderers take us on an exhilarating emotional rollercoaster ride, with a wonderful sense of conversational repartee in the fast outer movements and rapt expressions of wonderment in Schubert's sublime, songful slow movements."
>>129482411Correct.
>Classical Music for the Villains out there Epic Music >this playlist will make you feel like a 19th century villain>a classical mix for a prince building his empire 57 minutes>A Playlist to feel like a "Villain" plotting his revenge. 1 hour, 6 minutes>playlist to feel like a 19th century villain who won the war 1 hour, 2 minutes>Best Dark Classical Music will make you feel like a 19th century villain - Mozart, Tchaikovsky... 3 hours, 6 minutes>Classical Music that Goes HARD>Classical Music for a Dramatic Villain Arc>Classical Music for When You’re Slowly Going Insane 2 hours, 4 minutes>Classical Music for When you are plotting your Revenge-#classicalmusic #violin / Violin 54 minutes>That's Why VILLAINS Listen to Classical Music 2 hours, 35 minutes>a 19th century classical mix for battle 38 minutes
>>129482476Mindbroken and mentally dominated by reddit and your own self-created algorithm.
Mahler 8 > Mahler 98th is a grand elevation of the symphony and the greatest piece of concert music ever written
>>129482476Before I learned how to properly find recordings, or even quality YouTube channels that posted some, I listened to some of those mixes, and they ain't bad for someone new to classical. I wouldn't suggest any of them for anyone into classical enough to browse here, but in the nascent stage before that, sure, why not?
>>129482476for me it's that dark academia kino
>>129482505Absolute nonsense of the highest order. There is not a single piece of music that surpasses the genius of Mahler's 9th.
Why does Mahler attract the autistic and not Bruckner?
>>129482555I like bothT: diagnosed asperger's
Wagner freaking died my dudes...
>yfw you walk into your professor's/CEO's office and they're listening to,>gershwin:(>mozart:/>beethoven:)>schoenberg:D>messiaen:O
Now we are talkinghttps://youtu.be/nHw5ala_Uh8?si=kkDNZK139K8u2I2h
>>129482633He is still making pizza.
Max Regerhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PHD8pxx5q8Y&list=OLAK5uy_nhikErwEIQcYlb7CoweecxZT7OCHmShc0&index=1>This new album by Gavle Symphony Orchestra and conductor Jaime Martin includes two perhaps finest orchestral works by Max Reger (1873-1916) written towards the end of his life, the Four Tone Poems after Bocklin and the Romantic Suite, both sensous and poetic works suggesting a loose connection with Debussy. Reger's 150th anniversary of birth was celebrated in 2023. Yet, much of Reger's music appears on concert programmes only very occasionally. During his own lifetime Reger was highly admired: Paul Hindemith described Reger as "the last giant of music," and when Schoenberg founded his Society for Private Musical Performances in 1918, Max Reger, along with Debussy and Bartok, was one of the most frequently performed composers. Admiring Reger as an important innovator, Schoenberg promoted his music because "he still remains unfamiliar" and "I consider him a genius". Reger's Four Tone Poems after Bocklin and the Romantic Suite are sufficient to prove that Schoenberg was totally right.
>>129482668Some proper Regerhaze that.
>>129482555Pretty much everyone loves both. But Bruckner isn't as diverse as Mahler, so I guess it comes off as that.
Wagner-Liszthttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ydzTndlLgVE&list=OLAK5uy_kTaA_y_NHHiyjoD7NMjKaAAN50J1UoRkI&index=4
>>129482217>Does anyone have a lossless rip of Colin Davis's recording of Bruckners mass in f minor?I just listen to it on streaming. It is a great recording.
>>129482476But what are some pieces suitable for a villain like me?
>the recording catches the conductor turning a pageKino
>>129479111>the instinctual negative reaction to dissonance, intense chromaticism, or atonalityGood thing that isn't applicable to me. I just don't think Schoenberg is very good.>I highly doubt that, considering you originally stated your reason for liking him was simply because he was shorter in length and with less notes.No reason to doubt that as I'm telling you what I actually think. Besides, I never said it was the only reason.
>>129479105I'm not German, so your uncle is safe.
>>129482123NTA, that piece is a little too Schumannesque for my taste. But the 9th variation is sublime.
>>129482939Seems about right.
>>129482939Some major names are missing, doubtful this is true
>>129483086>is sublime
>>129483120Triggered?
>>129483132This post is 100% verified not sublime.
>>12948293925 Most Played Composers... What? Where? Since when?
>>129483136U mad bro?
>>129483155I'm sublime bro.
The 3rd scherzo is sublime, can't get it out of my mindhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hqyM7Hnupdw
>>129483163Cool story bro.
anyone bothered by the word 'sublime' should NOT be posting here
>>129483175Sublime post.
>>129483141Its data from an angry feminist think tank that's upset no one plays female works, lmao.
>>129483170Subliminal post.
>>129483167>is sublime
Prefer sublemon for my coronata
>>129483185the world has been sexist towards women for a long time, so women simply have not had the same wordly inspiration/motivation to write music as men have had, and there simply AREN'T many good female composers. we can't invent them out of thin air. instead of complaining about how we program these great male composers she should have gone and written a piece of music of her own. not that it would necessarily be great, but it's worth a shot.how many noteworthy female composers even are there? Clara Shumann and Fanny Mendelssohn? and don't mention Hildegard, that's not even polyphonic music.
>>129483518Same poster https://desuarchive.org/mu/thread/129432767/#q129443157, knew ya were a woman, janny. I was only 80% sure before. but sometimes I surprise myself with how keen my eye is.
>>129483518post bobs.
Thinking about composing a musically related on topic sexist post towards our cleaning technician again.
>>129483603Only incels and/or Muslims hate women. Women inspired some of the best classical music the world has ever seen and some of the best pianists right now are women. Shut up and sit down, chudcel.
>>129483603>>129482476>>Classical Music for When You’re Slowly Going Insane 2 hours, 4 minutes
>>129483518You're right. Women and colored folks didn't get the headstart white folks did. I guess most westerners don't know or don't care that the west enslaved and pillaged the rest of the world for centuries and kept women suppressed. Now that they're given more opportunity, (dumb) white folk feel that their social status is under threat. It only bothers shitty people who are facing accountability for the first time.Who's your favorite female composer?
>>129484111White men* specifically. Not white folk
>>129484111>>129484122>Women and colored folks didn't get the headstart white folks did>White men* specifically. Not white folkOh yeah the headstart of the collapse of Rome? What was the rest of the world doing that period? Oh right, not making any sort of great music. And then who created the industrial revolution? Oh right, white folks -- sorry, white men*. And then who stopped world slavery and forced people by military to do so? Oh right, white folks -- sorry, white men*. And who gave women free reign which basically no other large society had done? Oh right, white folks -- sorry, white men*.And what have these women and non white men managed so far? So far, not much in comparison. And when it comes to music: essentially nothing of note.
>>129484326Chudcel Charlie Kirk fanboy drivel, take it back to /pol/ you frogposting zoomers.
>>129484365Not an argument.
>>129484377Correct, that was an order. Fuck off, Magapede.
>>129484473>hear me roar
Why don't classical musicians do this, they are playing all out of tunehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xCUlippF2sg
>>129484624it's not even possible to produce a pentatonic scale with consistently in tune intervals.also, please don't post links to Collier here. we have standards in this establishment.
>>129484624Just intonation? Choirs and string ensembles/orchestras do do this.
>>129483603that isn't me. what even made you think so>>129483617i'm a dude but I can show you my manboobs if you want
>>129484723>not me>I'm a dudeLol.Lmao.
>>129484723>I can show you my manboobshello, Dave.
>>129484737here, schizo
>>129484737jelly?
>>129484749Not sure why you are posting random brown people from the internet.
>>129484777Checked and correct.
>>129484777still whiter than J.S.Bach.
>>129484811To be fair there are very few who qualify as white, I thank the Saxon gods that I was born white and not swarthy like Europeans are.
damn the Sinopoli/Domingo/Studer Tannhauser is fire
>>129469727Should have included the Grosse Fugue too.
>>129482217> Does anyone have a lossless rip of Colin Davis's recording of Bruckners mass in f minor?Enjoy.https://mega.nz/file/9tMEARpa#FUvJNx8ghLBhkq2yEjnXKtVvs8b_z5yLVuEkgW1Bs5w
What if Bruckner was French and he was called Bruqueneur
So we all have in our will that before they're allowed to pull the plug on us in the hospital, they have to play Beethoven's String Quartets Nos. 12-16 for us in audiophile quality (Alban Berg or Takacs recording, either is acceptable), right?
>>129485086but that is how you say it
>>129483185>european orchestras play old european musicHow is this news?
>>129485275When are you going to wake up and realize they will never be happy until all of European art and history is destroyed and forgotten? The culture in ruin and the people replaced. A good ending for those who make these think tanks, and that is no conspiracy.
>youtubers when they watch a pianist performing a piece:|>youtubers when they watch a pianist performing a piece with closed eyes, swaying with passion:OOO
BEST Brahms Double Concerto?
>>129485970I'd say the usual recommended reference recording is Szell/Oistrakh/Rostropovichhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Et1zSwsXubEthough of course I gotta said with the K-God, with Karajan/Mutter/Meneseshttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1HXGtVVBexMCan't go wrong with either, and there are some other good ones with great performers (Walter/Fournier, Abbado/YoYoMa/Stern, Ormandy/Rose/Stern, Chung/Capucon/Capucon, Barenboim/Perlman/YoYoMa, Chailly/Repin/Mork), but these two should more than satisfy.
>>129485343/pol/ seems more your speed.
>>129481483havergal brianhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Bobtu9b2WM
Strange thought: you know how many operas have a shorter orchestral suite? Y'know, for when you want to perform some of the music in an orchestral program. I always figured it was a way for composers to have their ideas more easily accessible in non-opera form.Anyway, I was looking at contemporary operas, and I noticed one of the composers had a recording full of piano pieces, so I took a look at it, and the first three pieces were "Piano Suites from [X opera of theirs]" and my immediate reaction was, "fuckin' hack, recycling ideas off their one-hit-wonder opera" lol wtf, why did I react this way? Just because their music is contemporary and they're still alive? Silly. Carry on...
Wotan did nothing wrong
>>129487389It ain't easy being the boss, nor having the libido of a god
>Harold Schonberg, the great music critic of the old New York Times, called [Smetana's The Bartered Bride] one of the three perfect comic operas (the others being Mozart's Figaro and Wagner's Meistersinger).tru?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_DNnCOBnvZA&list=OLAK5uy_kkbyaOd-PhKtYmLIDxgW_UTqwbHhVwev8&index=1
Beethovenhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qjk2zYjwaJc
learning to play piano through synthesia. are there any good beginner pieces you guys would recommend?
I don't care much for Berlioz's Les Troyens. Explains why no one really ever recorded it.
>>129487565Bartok's Mikrokosmos
>>129485072Dont download my pc is full of cp now, posting from prison
Satie's Gymnopédie is sublimé.
>>129488409it's spelt 'salon'I kid. Yeah they're pretty good. I wouldn't say they inspire the feeling of sublimity though, as that's a unique sensation, distinct from just 'good', but to each their own
>>129488417I was just kidding and baiting obviously.
>>129488409I like his Nocturnes and Gothic Dances.
top 10 symphonies off the dome, off the chrome 2-21-26 (no order!!!)mahler 9mahler 6mahler 8beethoven 9beethoven 3tchaikovsky 6brahms 4bruckner 8bruckner 9oh shit only one slot left... uh... dvorak 9/shostakovich 7+10/mozart 40+41/rach 2, I can't decide!schumann's good but not good enoughany problems?
>>129488608whoops i forgot schubert 9 -- fits into that lower tier
>>129486119And bluesky seems like yours.
>>129488608For meBeethoven 3, 8, Schumann 3, Schubert 9, Mahler 5, 6, 9, Bruckner 7, 8, Rach 2
Listening to Feinberg again.
I might've listened to half the recordings of the 3rd scherzo in C# minor that exist on youtube in the past 24 hours, and it's still stuck in my head.
>>129489153>3rd scherzo in C# minoChopin's attempt at strength are unconvincing and undermined by his silly useless color-minded downward arpeggios.
>>129489201
>>129489260Low IQ.
>>129489153Well? Don't leave us hanging, name some of your favorites.
>>129489273At this point, I've listened to so many that I lost the track of which ones were the best. But one thing I noticed, is that people don't usually play it too badly (maybe except Arrau in this case), which is surprising, I guess everyone gets this one right. Even Pogorelich, who's as talentless as they come, wasn't unlistenable (except his staccati), but Barere is definitely up there among the best. And all the usual names from Rubinstein to even Khrikuli at the Chopin competition played it well.>>129489268But enough about you.
>>129489352>But enough about you.I'm not the person confused by basic English and posting their favorite furbaby pictures as a showcase for their lack of understanding.
>>129489362No, it's quite reasonable to be confused by embarrassing extramusical terminologies applied to music.
Why is Mahler 9 so beloved? I find it not as good as his 8th or Das Lied Von Der Erde.
>>129489374This poor gal does even know what a downward arpeggio is.
>>129489380Well, it's incredible. Relative to the 8th and Das Lied, however, I'd say it's because most people prefer an orchestral symphony over a choral symphony and lieder symphony. So long as you have the 6th, 8th, 9th, and Das Lied all in your top 4 or 5 (if you really like one of the others), then we're straight.
>>129489380>>129489380>There seem to be two kinds of music in the first movement: music that is gentle, harmonious, sublimely beautiful, and resolved; and music that is complex, dissonant, full of tension and unresolved. And the structure of the movement seems to set these two kinds of music against each other. The former kind may be said to represent hope, joy, the possibility of peace, spiritual meaning, and an acceptance of death, while the latter may be said to represent hate, anguish, suffering, doubt, confusion, and fear.>Musically speaking, the former is represented in the ardent, yearning, nostalgic harmonies of late-nineteenth-century Romantic style; the latter, in the tortured, involuted, contrapuntal, and often virtually atonal style of the early twentieth-century. In 1909, when the Ninth Symphony was composed, Mahler stood at the very dividing line between these two worlds: he was the culmination of the past and the harbinger of the future, the pinnacle of the Romantic era and the admirer and champion of the young Schoenberg, standard-bearer of the Second Viennese School. The Ninth Symphony, Mahler’s last completed work, embodies this fundamental struggle between the two ages and depicts one man’s struggle between hope and despair, meaning and chaos, joy and resignation in the face of his own death.https://www.benjaminzander.org/library/mahler-reflections-on-the-ninth-symphony/
>>129489380Because of how effective and unique it is, the themes are unique by themselves, but so is the way they are handled. There appear to be no sections, but rather a confinuous flow of the unresolved tension, that only gets resolved at the end (of the first movement) and it has the most ravishing climax I've ever heard with almost cacophonic dissonances (similar to the eroica symphony, but more complex), yet it's not entirely atonal, and has a tonic pull. Not to mention the memorable and brilliant finale and rondo burleske, Atkinson has a video about the latter. In contrast, the 8th is much less tense, and it's choral, that goes hand in hand.>>129489383That's the only musical word you could find in your poor post, not that it was mentioned in any relevant context.
>>129481483Classical is such a meme. I am playing quietly because this is a solemn part of the song AND NOW I AM PLAYING LOUD BECAUSE THIS IS THE INTENSE PART AHHHHHHHH BE IMPRESSED fuck off, corny ass genre
>>129489508>That's the only musical word you could find in your poor postGoalpost moved, epic. Why don't you just accept you're ESL (self admitted) and unable to comprehend the original post?
>>129489522Btw I was searching the archives for discussions on certain composers and came across this absolute pure 10/10 gem from you.https://desuarchive.org/mu/thread/124375848/#q124377766>excess rubato is a cope for the lack of skill.>excess rubato is a cope for the lack of skill.>excess rubato is a cope for the lack of skill.>excess rubato is a cope for the lack of skill.HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAAAAAAGod bless, we hate Cortot here confirmed.
Any metal that a lover of men would like?
>>129489531thank you schizo sister. but that is completely right. see chopin competition for fake excess rubato that chopin himself would reject (and has written so in the letters).>>129489526thank you metalimbecile
>>129489551>but that is completely right.True, Cortot is a disgrace and hated here.
>>129489540Infectious Jelqing, Alien Fucker, and Napalm Death.
What I never get about this shitty female is why she pretends to be clearing the thread for quality and yet leaves garbage like >>129489540 and >>129489515If you're going to babysit your favorite thread at least do it properly.
there's a difference between the occasional shitpost and flooding the thread with your bizarro lovers spat for days on end
>>129489648it's Tristan und Isolde: 4chan Schizo Edition
>>129489635I think they're only deleting posts from the same two individuals. Those two you linked seem to be singular funposts from other people, and if we start deleting those on 4chan, then we've become reddit.
>>129489648>>129489689Typical janitor makes her own opinion public and then deletes the obvious rebuttal, hate to see it. you always win if you have the delete button...
>>129489715I refrain from ever saying this to people, whether I'm anonymous or otherwise, because I find it immensely rude, and I hate to be churlish, but mein gott, shut. the. fuck. up.
>>129489720/classical/ posters are so effeminate that they have to apologize to you first before letting out a weakly "p-please be quiet..." insult. They probably react the same way when some guy fucks their GF in the other room. Loving Ever Laugh.
>mfw there are mods in this thread RIGHT NOW who regularly browse this general and can see our IPs, meaning they know how many posts in these threads consist of just me samefagging, pretending to be different people posting classical content, trying to keep this general alive and activeO_Ooh shi---
>>129489738>modsNah shes just a janitor, you can tell because all she gives are ban requests that put you on timeout. If a mod comes they'll give you instant bans since they don't need approval. If you cause a really big problem they'll come by.
>>129489747You never fail to ruin the humor I'm aiming at with my posts, anon.
now playingstart of Beethoven: Triple Concerto in C Major, Op. 56https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ssW2lQflKEQ&list=OLAK5uy_l4N71LcIe7wuMxrhqUO2ZaJQ8Nmwdz8OM&index=2start of Beethoven: 25 Scottish Songs, Op. 108 (selected)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u9LmNqNaDWs&list=OLAK5uy_l4N71LcIe7wuMxrhqUO2ZaJQ8Nmwdz8OM&index=4https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_l4N71LcIe7wuMxrhqUO2ZaJQ8Nmwdz8OM>Three of the world's greatest classical stars join forces to record Beethoven's Triple Concerto. All alumni of the BBC Young Musician competition, they are great friends, but this is the first time they have appeared on record together. The works are accompanied by a selection of Beethoven's rarely performed Folk Songs, along with celebrated baritone Gerald Finley.Weird I hadn't heard of this recording before, since I've listened to recordings from each of these performers in the past, as they're all contemporary rising stars in the classical world. Except the conductor, no clue who the hell that is.
>>129489756Tbqh your humor isn't very funny so I don't mind. You're too innocent to make good jokes, humor is derived from mockery, cynicism, or superiority.
>>129489775oops, strike that, Rouvali is that conductor with the recent Sibelius cycle I've posted. That's an embarrassing mistake!
>be me, active poster in /classical/>lying on my bed near my computer, listening to a 3 hour opera>halfway through think of an amusing classical-related post I can make in the general that might brighten some people's day, maybe even generate some discussion or at least "i know that feel!">get up from bed, sit down at computer, type it out>lay back down, glance over at computer every few minutes to see if any replies>finally a reply>it's the metalschizo who completely missed the humor and simply piggybacked off my post to make some bizarre insult>tfw life is suffering
>>129489798>be me, metalschizo>sitting at chair, perfect posture, listening to Beethoven's 5th fart cover>halfway through my 4chanx extension notifies me of a new post on this general that people like to spam on>scroll through 100 out of my 13,457 open tabs to find it>read half-baked attempt to pat herself on the back about "keeping the general alive" packaged with what she calls "humor" despite no one ever replying lol to any of her posts>she leaves her signature emoji to ensure I know she has huge massive knockers I want to see>piggyback off her unfunny post to sperg out over whatever stupid bullshit I want to>tfw life is joy
>>129489847p. funnylet us ode to joyhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HlneNQIWwjA
Dutton
>>129489863Tbqh I have very little appreciation for Ode to Joy, its been ruined by pop culture and advertisement companies. The Liszt transcription is more tolerable since I don't immediately think of really shitty hollywood movies, but even then I don't have much love for it. Unironically its a bit kitsch for me.
>>129489966Halfrate Spengler for youtube midwits.
>>129489974aaand you just lost the goodwill you earned with your funny post above
Any classical or modern classical (dissonant deathened black metal) that sounds like the Ghostbusters theme song?
>>129489982I thought disliking the last movement wasn't much of a contrarian take. Maybe its the inner Jew in me, but such unironic naivety is bit like a Nanaimo bar, a small bite is fine, but the whole piece makes me want to hurl from the sweetness. I mean none of his late string quartets or soantas sound like thishttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=03XCQCS_w4M
Bump
>>129490040Try New Jeans, Misfits and Infectious Jelqing
>>129490057Beetroot is hated here.
>>129490084Its a pretty mid vegetable. Definitely some higher tier options available. Super high in nitrates thoughever, so would recommend for health reasons.
>>129490057I tease. Anyone is allowed to hate or like anything, though it does seem you only really like piano music.
>>129490120I get burns from eating pineapple. I think it's all the atonal music I listen to and my mostly vegan diet that has weakened me.
>>129490133Idk, kinda seems more like you got AGP from listening to KPOP and then wasted your life shitposting on /metal/ all day. Must be real slow over there for you to be stuck here orbiting your unrequited love every day.
>>129490125>though it does seem you only really like piano music.I listen to string quartets as well, and would be fine with admitting that they are superior to piano in all manners besides chordal textures. Piano quintet is actually my favorite setup, its the best of both worlds really. Have you listened to Ornstein's yet? Its a bit strange tbqh. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vxCk4K5wPPo&list=PLExdRU27xbS0LNEzB1ves4Mz9siUwcYai
Can I wear my black metal battle vest, swastika pendant and corpsepaint to the Scriabin recital or should I stick to formal wear? I kinda want to represent the black metal community and show we are more than just a bunch of idiots who listen to noise.
I sampled some parts from the Ring cycles of Kempe, Keilberth, and Krauss, and yeah, I just can't do that historical sound quality, sorry. I don't care how much better the singing was when it sounds like it's being sung in a tin can, plus you can barely hear the orchestral backing at all. Bohm's set is as old as I'll go.
>>129490206I would recommend to go back to those older sets once you are familiar with the music and only listen to select passages.
>>129490226Hmm, fair enough. I'mma listen to either Simone Young or Levine's now then. Pretty much gonna go through all of the modern sets.
now playingstart of Elgar: Violin Concerto in B Minor, Op. 61https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5VJUoB9kJCQ&list=OLAK5uy_mR-dgNxHiDbYcwxoL-Ynn5tb3wS776D_c&index=2Elgar: Sospiri, Op. 70 (Version for Violin & Piano)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lsx1Z0gcOkU&list=OLAK5uy_mR-dgNxHiDbYcwxoL-Ynn5tb3wS776D_c&index=5Elgar: Salut d'amour, Op. 12https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w61ig6yTbV8&list=OLAK5uy_mR-dgNxHiDbYcwxoL-Ynn5tb3wS776D_c&index=6Elgar: Chanson de nuit, Op. 15 No. 1https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YSdzzKtWU_0&list=OLAK5uy_mR-dgNxHiDbYcwxoL-Ynn5tb3wS776D_c&index=6https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mR-dgNxHiDbYcwxoL-Ynn5tb3wS776D_c>GRAMMY Award-winning violinist Nicola Benedetti's new album explores music by Britain's beloved composer, Edward Elgar. The centerpiece is his Violin Concerto in B minor, Op. 61, performed by Benedetti with the London Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Vladimir Jurowski. The vast and technically demanding concerto is coupled with three short works for violin and piano: Salut d'Amour, Sospiri and Chanson de Nuit.While I believe some of the other masterpiece Violin Concertos in the standard repertoire are objectively superior, if I could only one final Violin Concerto before my death, surely I would choose Elgar's passionately gorgeous and magnificently complex piece.
>>129490459if I could only hear* one final Violin Concerto before my death -- missed a word
Is it me or is Inbal just the lamest conductor. He's not really bad, just terribly lame.
>>129490476>Elgar - Violin ConcertoOk, I will check it out and report back. For me it would me Machavariani's.
>>129488372It doesn't look that bad but all the flats and changes in accidents are tripping me up. I need something easier
>>129491182I meant the first book.
>>129491195ok I found it, thanks
>>129491140Hope you enjoy!
>>129490180I do know you should kill yourself
is Frank Zappa honorary classical? I hear he was a proponent of serialism
>>129490206compared to these three, the Knappertsbusch cycle doesn't sound as bad lol
>>129493316https://youtu.be/6p-cs1B7qcU
>>129487565I recommend getting a (good) teacher.
>>129488409Not classical
>>129489380I'm seeing it tonight I'll let you know why
>>129493491it is not only classical but has also been talked about on this very general before
>>129493531>TorontoMy condolences, hopefully Trump invades us soon before we become an Indian colony, saar.
>>129493606Yes Toronto, monSaar
>Please unblock spur.us and mcl.io to proceed.4cuck now requires a fingerprint. Goodbye, 4cuck, goodbye /classical/. This may be my last post on this website since it took me some genuine effort to post this without selling my soul to cloudflare. Have your vegan /metal/shitter replace me as your local autist, he's more fit for this garbage of a website anyway LOL. Or perhaps, see you on future altchans, tomorrow or whatever.
>>129493665How do people not feel ashamed at how bad public sculpture is now?
>>129485134>Alban Berg or Takacs recordingThat would be one sad way to go.
>>129493825why can't you just behave yourself?
>>129493825See you tomorrow, like always. You will never leave.
best Mahler 9?best Mahler 8?best Mahler 6?best Mahler 5?
>>129494017Karajan of course.
>>129494017Bernstein, naturally.
>>129494100DG or Sony?
>>129494017BarshaiSinopoliCurrentzisLeinsdorf
Best part is that he thinks there are alt chans with active music boards, lol. Maybe he was referring to /pol/ alt chans since he browses there.
>>129494082>submit your ID to call anon a faggot
>>129493825Damn, now there is no one left that's dumb enough to talk to Hector.
>>129494017karajanbertinibernstein schwarz
>>129494180Christ what a fucking loser
>>129493825Why do you steal people's words and phrases? A /metal/ poster even thought this was him lol
>>129494224Yeah some german kpop bugman with AGP sitting around making garbage posts all day sure is loser.
>>129494248Why do you type like such a loser as well?
>>129494265Whoops meant to reply to >>129494224
>>129494225What makes you think its not him? I would be impressed if troony wrote that, normally xhe doesn't put much effort into xer larps. Plus I'm not even sure what the goal would be, usually you pretend to be other people to mock them or drive drama between people that they usually get along with. Plus I can't see any other reason for him to have been posting for the past few hours on a weekend. Well, maybe hes taking another 3 day vacation, he did sit the last one out, so maybe he really can't figure out how to evade, but I don't that he never got banned all the other times his posts were deleted, which makes me think he should probably know how to evade.
>>129494292>but I don't that he never got banned*but I don't think that he never got banned*
>>129494292Nice schizo-rambling. I have seriously no idea what or who the fuck you are talking about.
>>129494268Nah I replied to the right post. You type like a loser
>>129494292who is "him"? you don't know who made that post?
>>129494363>>129494363>who is "him"You mean Norsetard avatarfagging with schumannlol.jpg?Don't get me wrong, there is a chance its a larp, but like I said, whats the point? No one is getting mad because someone is complaining about the slow deterioration of the site. >>129494362Thank you Ratthew. Where is your chin though?
>>129494406Why do you type like a loser?
>>129494406yes, people thought it was you because he copies you like a little brother copies a big brother
>>129494419>he copies you like a little brother copies a big brotherTbqh I liked him too before you idiots estrogenized him and turned him into a melodramic spambot, talking to women for too long and too often does this to men, you see it with married men as well. I actually wasn't even planning on making bad posts on this general before he had that strange emotional meltdown. I can't even tell what really made him get like that, because before I would shit on bands he liked and he would shit on bands I liked with nothing personal about it, was just for laughs really. Guys being guys. /classical/ is literally a text form of HRT. >>129494417Why do you walking around LA talking to yourself like a deranged chinless sewer rat, Ratthew?
>>129494483because he retreated here with an air of superiority, you followed him and dragged him back into the muck and he hates it
>literally talking to himselffucking sad.
>>129490206>any recordings from before the late 60s are too low qualityHow fucking spoiled are you? Are you just an autist obsessed with sonics with no regard for artistic quality? We're not talking about recordings from the 1920s here, this is recordings from the 50s and early 60s, many of them in very good quality. Kill yourself.
>How fucking spoiled are you? Are you just an autist obsessed with sonics with no regard for artistic quality? We're not talking about recordings from the 1920s here, this is recordings from the 50s and early 60s, many of them in very good quality. Kill yourself.
>>129494502Yeah I had that theory too, but I never brought it up since I try not to be too spiteful, and thats a bit much. Technically I got into classical before he did btw, I just never moved over here because it was too slow and I was too busy on muh bike. I did mention that theory in a fashion by talking about how he poses as some higher minded aristocrat here, sort of a wink wink nudge nudge to sort himself out, but hes too committed to the roleplaying to realize I was suggesting a way out from his emotional mindbreak. I don't really get why hes obsessed with it either, Beethoven literally had a shitbucket under his piano, Berlioz planned a triple murder suicide where he would sneak in to the house as a maid, Caravaggio hung out with homeless people and would run around challenging people to duels or starting fights in bars because he was a based psychotic warrior mindset. If you aren't willing to be outside the box and in the muck, then you'll never truly create waves in anything. Anyone can be a MEHler or Bruckner who just copy pasted what others did but refined it, very few can outright shock the artistic world, and those people usually aren't the tidy well-to-do types. Although Bruckner was a fucking wierdo too with the skull obsession, probably why he made better music. Whatever, guess he wanted to "change" himself into his idolized image, he used to do his silly superiority classical roleplaying on the other general and I told him to just drop metal then, which eventually he accepted and left after I wasn't posting as often due to my other hobbies.
>>129494573>mono>good quality
>>129494665Christ what a loser
>>129494882>no uNGMI lass.
>>129494896Oh its you, the background character no one even cares enough about to create a name for. Continue crying, you aren't even worth typing to.
Linus 4chan Tips
You just got tricked by a rat
>>129494682What decade do you think stereo sound became prominent in?
Mozart > literally everything shared ITT Don't @ me, I'm not going to bother reading
>>129494927>referring to yourself as a rodentJust another day in the life of USDJ.
Coolhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HdSAb48tV8M
>>129494945the decade where good audio quality was invented
>>129494573>How fucking spoiled are you?well I do live in 2026>Are you just an autist obsessed with sonics with no regard for artistic quality?That's the thing, I'm not! My only requirement is I'm able to actually hear the orchestra, which in those recordings is difficult, and the artifacts, like hiss and tinny resonances, are not distracting, which again they are. I have no issue with Bohm's, for example, or Kleiber or Leinsdorf or Sawallisch or Kempe for the other Wagner operas. The Krauss, Keilberth, and Kempe Rings (the historical KKK) just seem to cross that threshold for me. I wish they didn't! At least the Knappertsbusch one seems listenable to me.