[a / b / c / d / e / f / g / gif / h / hr / k / m / o / p / r / s / t / u / v / vg / vm / vmg / vr / vrpg / vst / w / wg] [i / ic] [r9k / s4s / vip] [cm / hm / lgbt / y] [3 / aco / adv / an / bant / biz / cgl / ck / co / diy / fa / fit / gd / hc / his / int / jp / lit / mlp / mu / n / news / out / po / pol / pw / qst / sci / soc / sp / tg / toy / trv / tv / vp / vt / wsg / wsr / x / xs] [Settings] [Search] [Mobile] [Home]
Board
Settings Mobile Home
/mu/ - Music

Name
Options
Comment
Verification
4chan Pass users can bypass this verification. [Learn More] [Login]
File
  • Please read the Rules and FAQ before posting.

08/21/20New boards added: /vrpg/, /vmg/, /vst/ and /vm/
05/04/17New trial board added: /bant/ - International/Random
10/04/16New board for 4chan Pass users: /vip/ - Very Important Posts
[Hide] [Show All]


[Advertise on 4chan]


File: Bruckner_final_years.jpg (712 KB, 1208x1772)
712 KB JPG
Bruckner edition
https://youtu.be/NeYZI_tIp9E

This 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/classicalgen

Previous: >>130308930
>>
File: 717+78SuQfL._SL1425_[1].jpg (147 KB, 1425x1425)
147 KB JPG
Richard Goode's Beethoven
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WkO6Zi66lJY&list=OLAK5uy_khz8jF98pUvoSpKfaAv8rRNmLkOf58B1U&index=86

>It's interesting that the great Beethoven sonata cycles areseldom the ones by the big-name virtuosos. Horowitz never attempted one. Neither did Rubinstein. Ashkenazy recorded them all, but with only partial success. Richter never managed all 32 works at one time, and Gilels died before completing his cycle. The most successful complete recordings--Schnabel, Kempff, Arrau, and Backhaus--are all by pianists with a solidly intellectual mindset, however powerful their technique. Goode joins this select company, turning in performances of uncompromising integrity and musical strength. Of course, his reputation as a musician's musician precedes him: here is a player sensitive to Beethoven's every nuance, presenting the composers thoughts with exemplary clarity and taste. This is the Beethoven cycle for the '90s. --David Hurwitz
>>
>In his analysis of the Études, André Boucourechliev emphasizes this point: "Chopin is contradicted at every moment. Looking back through history, one stops at Beethoven, and even more at Gesualdo, that prince of continuous discontinuity[37]...". According to him, Debussy's antecedents "are not Franck or Mussorgsky, but the anonymous composers of the Middle Ages, Monteverdi, and Gesualdo".[232]

>Harry Halbreich adopts the same perspective, seeing in Debussy "a liberator, as only Claudio Monteverdi had been before him".[233] Marguerite Long confirms this link forged by Debussy between the Baroque aesthetic and the postmodern perspectives of the 20th century, based on her personal recollections:

>Like Monteverdi, the musician employs the special alchemy invoked for the Études. It is now up to him to direct the beacons of intelligence and sensuality toward the mysteries of an art he adores.[234]

Where were you when you realize Debussy's etudes and late period was the apotheosis and summation of the Western Tradition. It started with a Frenchman, and ended with a Frenchman
>>
File: french do it.png (51 KB, 640x318)
51 KB PNG
>>130351001
true

Favorite recording of Debussy's piano music?
>>
>>130350975
Not gonna name names but a lot of the more famous Beethoven piano sonata cycles when I return to them, I feel "this is pretty good but not as good as I remember"; with Goode, I almost always feel it is better than I remember. That posted movement is divine. Equally impressive is he has an approach to Beethoven that is entirely his own. You can identify Goode's cycle within a couple notes.
>>
>>130351021
ugh, that's not even in order, I hate that post
>>
File: 51ezAzfLUNL[1].jpg (44 KB, 500x432)
44 KB JPG
It's time

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3i4doRl2D30&list=OLAK5uy_k-YwV2D3BlDh87pzaI_0KURVbjfnpf0Hk&index=1
>>
>>130351060
s-sorry, i'll do better next time. for you.
>>
>>130350905
Disgust and not a little bit of pity. And immediate reporting to the authorities.
>>
File: s.jpg (35 KB, 500x500)
35 KB JPG
Best Stabat Mater of the entire classical period, second best of the entire 18th century.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KWzU_MoL8s4
>>
Today's secret word is

...Fugue

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8_JccQK3KKU
>>
>>130351110
Nice, didn't know he had one. Sounds divine so far. Always down for a Stabat Mater.
>>
File: nothanks.jpg (61 KB, 380x380)
61 KB JPG
>>130351146
>Gould
>>
>>130351156
it's pronounced 'Gold'
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E0Ytqf2zXWc&list=OLAK5uy_meLBGOX9UBGW-6AvhpCRHgjMxuQ33L0Pc&index=26
>>
>>130350939
Listening to Haydn - The Creation. Next season BSO plays it one week and next week it's Creation by Osvaldo GOLIJOV/David Henry HWANG. Thinking if I should get tickets for Haydn only or should I try modern reimagining too? Anyone heard anything by them?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EuIs7R2BpvQ

>>130348825
He wanted acid.
>>
File: j6h54g3fwdq.gif (752 KB, 359x137)
752 KB GIF
>>
File: puke-barf.gif (1.05 MB, 220x220)
1.05 MB GIF
>>130351172
>>
>>130351173
>The focal point of this existential inquiry is Creation, a BSO-commissioned companion piece to Haydn’s exalted choral masterwork, The Creation. Written by longtime BSO collaborator and Tanglewood Music Center Fellow Osvaldo Golijov with lyricist David Henry Hwang, this momentous new work draws on jazz, Arabic, and Brazilian music as it explores Darwinian theory, randomness in the cosmos, and theories of the universe.

sounds like a big yikes

but if you're into that kinda thing, sure, go for it
>>
File: gv references.png (7 KB, 604x115)
7 KB PNG
>>130351184
credit where credit is due
>>
>>130351172
as in "fool's gold"
>>130351199
credit to whom for what
>>
>>130351207
Distler lists Gould's GV as a reference recording.
>>
>>130351211
and?
>>
>>130351199
I think that's the Organ recording

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CyrsEjA3m3g
>>
>>130351214
insert credit
>>
>>130351220
for what
>>
Bach

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IpXHoWc3lO4&list=OLAK5uy_kPHzngEU7u5thx60UqfcVe7_-fvNeppdw&index=21
>>
>>130351155
Glad you're enjoying it, anon! It's a same none of Boccherini's masses have survived, and his early oratorio Giuseppe Riconosciuto is a bit of an immature piece, heavily indebted to Bach and Handel. I would love for more vocal works from late-era Boccherini to surface
>>
>>130351267
>a same
shame*
>>
i literally cannot get into any Mahler except DLVDE which i love.
>>
>>130351606
Have you tried his other song cycles?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=15zoPkptiqc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9edKNmyiLBc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uTqxfa1yi-I

and his cantata
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PBkJ9VAnXFM
>>
Waiting for Barbirolli's Mahler to finally click. Maybe I'm just too young.
>>
>>130351656
I find they work best when you become very familiar with the works, and then relish their idiosyncrasy. That's how it was for me. But in any case, there's so many interpretations of Mahler, you shouldn't feel obligated to like any particular one. If it's not for you, no worries, there are others!
>>
best recording of Rach's Symphonic Dances?
>>
>>130351817
As with the other orchestral Rach works, there's lots of good ones. For a safe recommendation, go with Ashkenazy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UowHpVjJrt8

or Ormandy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wRib49Bc6Xc
>>
>>130351817
Kondrashin
>>
File: 61ZFyuW2wQL._SL1000_[1].jpg (79 KB, 1000x990)
79 KB JPG
>>130351817
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y57MhwKW4bA&list=OLAK5uy_mJrwPOqUDLqmQM4as4jasAta0BdjQgKNs&index=1
>>
>>130351817
whichever's shortest
>>
opening line of a review,
>There are few recordings of opera that come close to perfection, this isn't one of them but it is still great and important.

lol okay
>>
Spacecraft

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FZnbJHO9C0&list=RD4FZnbJHO9C0&start_radio=1
>>
>>130352143
lemme try
>There are few recordings of classical piano music which touch that nerve at the bottom of your spine, the area reserved for the most beautiful and sublime of all art. This isn't one of them but it's still pretty good.
>>
File: Michael Torke.jpg (30 KB, 320x320)
30 KB JPG
Opinions? I like his music way more than Adams or Glass, and his music doesn't reek of pretentious that seems to permeate many of Adams work, its very lighthearted and joyful like Chabrier, Stravinsky or Ravel before WW1.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uO1d_j4A12E&list=RDuO1d_j4A12E&start_radio=1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bq-0JasXv3c&list=RDBq-0JasXv3c&start_radio=1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UHbBl6tZSoQ&list=RDUHbBl6tZSoQ&start_radio=1
>>
Glenn Gould talks about Stravinsky, Schoenberg, and Soviet music

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rW3nyib0Z8w

I don't really know what he means the Rite of Spring not being a good jest
>>
if Rachmaninoff was so good, why didn't he compose more than two piano sonatas?
>>
Bruckner

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bk8nQs6mKX0&list=OLAK5uy_mkoMZPPPFKvBqAk3-sKeEcFQjy8UODcBM&index=1
>>
File: images (10).jpg (33 KB, 585x524)
33 KB JPG
>>130351110
for the love of God check this recording out
>>
brahms
>>
>>130353231
I thought Stabat Maters were for the love of the Virgin Mary? :p
>>
>>130354550
Sucks
>>
File: ltg_cropped.jpg (53 KB, 420x568)
53 KB JPG
>>130355148
>>
Why are Russian compositions mostly melancholic and give off that depressed feeling like getting the blues and composing on the edge of a building and jumping right after finishing with it?

Rachmaninov, Scriabin, Glazunov, Tchaikovsky (although not as much as the above ones), Mussorgsky and fucking Shostakovich. I mean...I can understand Shostakovich and the oppressive system that he worked in, even the joyous parts of his works feel painful but also have a certain beauty.
>>
>>130355753
Have you ever been in Russia?
>>
>>130355807
I'm eastern yuropoor, it's the same shit basically.
>>
>>130355833
In that case I'm confused why you have this question in the first place. You can listen to Stravinsky who doesn't give a fuck most of the time, but most Russian compositions would be either tragic, melancholic, or plain depressed.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M7BPlOirPig
>>
>>130355942
You're saying that being poor in shitty weather makes them so depressed and melancholic? Rachmaninov's 3rd piano concerto is basically >tfw no gf :( to my ears. I thought there's more than that.
>>
>>130355942
Funny you post Rimsky-Korsakov since I'd hardly describe Scheherazade that way. Had a real knack for gossamer fairy music.
>>
>>130355753
Pretty much >>130355807

No one feels inspired and heroic in Russia. That's why Tchaikovsky 6 is Pathetique and not Heroique
>>
>>130356068
Kek
>>
File: 51-P5Fh-ECL[1].jpg (50 KB, 450x393)
50 KB JPG
hiss Meistersinger morning
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YShqfrzSNQw&list=OLAK5uy_kAH_539Qc180nFHx8dlrW4MV7-2zduz5k&index=1

great review of it
https://www.wagnerdiscography.com/reviews/mei/mei43furtwangler.htm
>>
>>130355753
It's a grim place. That said I feel like there's quite a lot of happy even jaunty Russian pieces and plenty of heroic sounding pieces. I'm not really sure I agree with that-I'd grant you Shostakovich, even Shostakovich has the happiest sounding fugue in the world.
>>
>>130356150
>5 hour Meistersinger
jesus Furtwangler... I think Knappertsbusch has one just as long too.
>>
File: 81wzIkFvvhL._SL1450_[1].jpg (361 KB, 1450x1450)
361 KB JPG
now playing

Władysław Szpilman: Mazurek
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ju8dQ2GIwrc&list=OLAK5uy_kRJUwSUA851EGa-56G4SkONpC2p-Hm1CA&index=2

start of Władysław Szpilman: Suite "The Life of the Machines"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vkH7h094EG0&list=OLAK5uy_kRJUwSUA851EGa-56G4SkONpC2p-Hm1CA&index=3

start of Shostakovich: Piano Sonata No. 1, Op. 12
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PsYprmBDWjE&list=OLAK5uy_kRJUwSUA851EGa-56G4SkONpC2p-Hm1CA&index=6

start of Mieczyslaw Weinberg: Piano Sonata No. 4 in B Minor, Op. 56
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2kugLI6j5j0&list=OLAK5uy_kRJUwSUA851EGa-56G4SkONpC2p-Hm1CA&index=12

start of Prokofiev: Piano Sonata No. 8 in B-Flat Major, Op. 84
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MxXnio8jnGQ&list=OLAK5uy_kRJUwSUA851EGa-56G4SkONpC2p-Hm1CA&index=15

>Pianist Yulianna Avdeeva makes her Pentatone debut with Resilience, presenting music by Szpilman, Shostakovich, Weinberg and Prokofiev, composers who - each in their own way - maintained themselves in times of great instability. The focal point of this album is Wladyslaw Szpilman, a Polish Jew who survived World War II thanks to the power of his music, and is widely known as the title hero of Roman Polanski's award-winning film The Pianist. Incited by the unique opportunity to play on Szpilman's house piano, this recording project helped Avdeeva to cope with the challenges of our current times, and it may offer fortitude and consolation to listeners as well. A pianist of fiery temperament and virtuosity, Yulianna Avdeeva plays with power, conviction, and sensibility, having won over audiences all over the world.

A well-designed tracklist: half of it by lesser-known composers (Szpilman, Weinberg), a neglected piece by a famous composer (Shostakovich's first piano sonata [most don't even know he has two piano sonatas!]), and then closing with Prokofiev's masterpiece, his 8th Piano Sonata, one of the summits of 20th century solo piano music. All performed by a wonderful pianist. Check it out!
>>
>>130355978
Rach's 2 piano concerto is basically-sitting alone by the telephone thinking of all the friends you've known but when you dial the telephone nobodies home
>>
>>130355753
I resonate with the melancholy of Russia, much more so than any other expression by any other tradition. Rachmaninoff understands the heart, that can't be said of most composers, even the great ones lack that quality.
>>
Any double nass classical or is it too bassy?
>>
>>130356561
What?
>>
Thanks for ruining this poem Stravinsky

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hgBjc5onfPk&list=RDhgBjc5onfPk&start_radio=1
>>
>>130356561
Schubert's piano quintet (piano + string quartet) uses a double bass instead of a 2nd violin and it's one of my favorite pieces
>>
File: wdwf3ff.png (1.79 MB, 1903x1039)
1.79 MB PNG
>>130356867
The pianist of the 'trout' quintet has cloned himself and got the clone to turn the pages for him
>>
Mahler

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eocmoJlzcMI&list=OLAK5uy_n9KOb4Vpd_el74jx8De5WGwTa5chwfonU
>>
File: 20260515_123252.jpg (2.32 MB, 2397x4096)
2.32 MB JPG
What organ composer is closest to Debussy?
>>
>>130351146
Based ngl.
>>
File: Front.jpg (59 KB, 600x600)
59 KB JPG
>>130357447
Messiaen. Debussy was probably the single biggest influence on him. Literally got his 'modes of limited transposition' partially from Debussy.
>>
Quintessential Deutsche Grammophon vinyls everyone has to own?
>>
>>130358129
None.
>>
>>130356968
kek
>>
>>130358129
All of them-I can't choose
>>
Best genre: Symphony.

Worst genre: Opera.

Simple as.
>>
>>130359250
Correct when it comes to Beethoven.
>>
>>130353231
Isn't that the 1801 revision for three voices + organ though? I much prefer the original
>>
>>130352752
because he wasn't
>>
>>130353231
>>130359282
Ope, nevermind, it appears to be the original version. I'll give it a spin!
>>
>>130359266
>Correct when it comes to the genres.
FTFY.
>>
File: f.jpg (308 KB, 1406x1406)
308 KB JPG
>>130357789
better performer/recording
>>
>>130351656
They're all kind of shit, his only succesful Mahler recording is the 5th and the song cycles with Janet Baker (which are still subpar in their conducting). His style wasn't good for Mahler at all, rather lumbering and not in a way that lets you focus on things such as orchestral timbre or a unique sense of rhythm or interesting balances, since he was not a great orchestral trainer and tended to get bad results from the orchestra. Just listen to his 9th which has the Berlin Phil at the helm and it's very sloppily played. Mahler can survive sloppy playing if the interpretation is interesting, but his isn't.
>>
best Mahler Symphony to start with?
>>
>>130359460
1 through 9
>>
>>130359460
The third (Haitink conducting).
>>
>>130359460
4 is the most approachable. Try Fischer's recording.
>>
>>130359460
Mahler newbie listening order by accessability (roughly, my take)
5 > 2 > 1 > 4 > 6 > 3 > 8 > 9 > 7

Ranking of symphonies
9 > 6 > 5 > 3 > 4 > 7 > 8 > 2 > 1
>>
>>130359460
Abbado 5
>>
>>130355753
it was made by people who could not get laid for people who could not get laid
>>
File: 71RAT6Mo7-L.jpg (203 KB, 1200x1197)
203 KB JPG
The definitive Art of Fugue, interpretation-wise (because I still prefer orchestral sonority).
If you have to pick one to take on an island with you, this is the only one you must pick, not anything else.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EwfQIfB3r8s&list=OLAK5uy_nxAcOZXHrTktsli-zpO-MfnkNGgYSJm88&index=1
>>
>>130359601
>conjectural en--
dropped
>>
>>130359601
you sound arrogant so I won't check it out
>>
>>130359612
You can literally skip that track, not that a halfwit dilettante would know.
>>130359617
Good.
>>
>>130359629
You can literally kill yourself today, what with being a pointless, lowbrow pseud who has shit taste and shittier opinions
>>
>>130359642
Don't talk so badly about yourself, anon
>>
>>130359650
Nonsensical reply
>>
>>130359666
Okay Satan.
>>
>>130359669
Schizophrenic reply
>>
>>130359460
Just listen to them chronologically
>>
xDD
>>
>>130359744
>red meat
kys.
/classical/ is strictly striving towards veganism and never glorifies meat consumption.
>>
>>130359829
you're the greatest faggot to ever shit out a retarded opinion in this general's history and I sincerely hope you die a painful, embarrassing death today
>>
File: 81Hp1FtyM6L._SL1500_[1].jpg (232 KB, 1500x1283)
232 KB JPG
in the mood for more hiss Wagner
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5MN0awueGbQ&list=OLAK5uy_lc4tBmw9CRUUx2fuNC42s8TLThpnilrrE&index=1
>>
>>130359829
shut the fuck up I add onto the other Anon's opinion with hoping that you get raped
>>
So why do old live recordings sound the way they do, with the inferior sound quality? Not enough mics? The mics and recording equipment are too low quality? What's the hiss from? etc
>>
>>130360197
are the concepts of time and technology completely alien to you
>lmao why are daguerrotypes so blurry and why's there no color lol
>>
>>130359840
>>130360122
Meat-consuming slaves are running their mouths again in my general?
>>
>>130360222
kill yourself
>>
>>130360219
lol

I meant that it continued past the time when studio recordings began to sound really good. So the equipment was there. I'm gonna go with they just didn't wire the live concert with enough mics and wires and equipment, that most of what we're hearing from many older live recordings is just from a single mic from overhead or whatever to catch a broad sound, so that's why things sound the way they do. So it's a budget thing, ultimately.
>>
File: IMG_5604.jpg (207 KB, 828x332)
207 KB JPG
Thoughts on picrel book?
>>
>>130360245
>lol I actually already had an answer to my question
why bother us with it then
>>
>>130360249
utter trash; you'll love it
>>
>>130360245
number of mics has nothing to do with sound quality, Mercury's recordings were famous for their minimal use of miking and their recordings still sound better than most today
>>
>>130360300
Then? Poor placement of the mics?
>>
>>130360362
voodoo magic
>>
>>130360374
:O

the hiss demon
>>
>>130360222
if it is not a link to your livestreamed suicide, then don't reply to anyone
>>
>>130360237
>>130360533
Meat consumer is mad.
>>
>>130360542
kill yourself
>>
>>130353231
>>130359406
It's taking me so long to find a working download, it better blow my fucking mind
>>
The entire domain of classical music has ceased to exist for me. There is only Wagner's Ring, over and over again. I am either in heaven or hell, and I am not sure which.

https://files.catbox.moe/6ph2sy.m4a
>>
>>130360808
ok good luck with your upcoming psychiatric reevaluation anon
>>
>>130360808
that is the fate you chose by not following rule 1.
>>
>>130360619
just fucking stream it off youtube man
>>
File: no.jpg (29 KB, 580x396)
29 KB JPG
>>130361385
>just settle for an inferior experience
>>
>>130360362
not really, sometimes the equipment just wasn't good or they didn't have good tape

amount of hiss is normally from the medium it was recorded on, which could vary in quality
>>
>>130360808
Maybe it's because I'm tonedeaf but the singing in that sounds plenty good to me. Perhaps not as good as the old greats but still enjoyable. Some things change with time. That's simply how modern opera singing sounds now. Same with how many Americans used to speak with some sort of Atlantic accent back in the day that eventually got phased out.
>>
>>130360197
>>130360245
>>130360362
It's all a CIA psyop to annoy and irk you, specifically, unto madness



[Advertise on 4chan]

Delete Post: [File Only] Style:
[Disable Mobile View / Use Desktop Site]

[Enable Mobile View / Use Mobile Site]

All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective parties. Images uploaded are the responsibility of the Poster. Comments are owned by the Poster.