It's the reason why I have several versions of Webern, Beethoven and Bach.
Owen Roberts
So can someone explain to me why beethoven's late string quartet are supposed to be so great? I've listened to various recordings of all of them and they just seem alright to me. Is this just a meme, they don't even sound particularly better than his early quartets
Didn't get an answer from the previous thread, could anyone ID this piece playing (click the link to go to the time stamp, the embedded player doesn't work properly) youtu.be/LLRLSJDUoDE?t=370
Thanks.
Bentley Morris
"Schnee" (2008) by Hans Abrahamsen.
I think, I haven't really listened to new music in years.
Caleb Hernandez
It's the le inevitable emancipation of the dissonance meme in full force, only believed by tasteless marxists that do not understand balance and transcendental aesthetics.
Grayson Murphy
Sounds a lot like Quantz desu
Parker Young
Normal i guess. I listen to three or four of the same piece and most of the time I choose the karajan one.
Caleb Miller
...
Oliver Mitchell
Because there's good versions and bad versions, as simple as that
It's like hearing a song from your favorite singer and then hearing a shitty cover, you're know which one you want to hear
Landon Richardson
>also conducts no-nonsense modern mahler why im glad i was already a fan
Hunter Sanders
Thank God that obnoxious Rameau poster seems to have moved on.
these threads got to be complete shit with that tool spamming Rameau this ,Rameau that ...
I mean, I love most of his stuff. Just wondering about a claim someone made.
Christopher Ross
Yes it's a meme. He makes better music than half the shit that gets posted here.
Gabriel Turner
>all men grow into bruckner Bruckner is a pre-Mahler phase (if at all - most people just try to listen to his symphonies and decide he's average at best). Mahler puts Bruckner to shame.
Camden Nguyen
is there a link for the the rebel camus
Ryder Bailey
is there a mega link or torrent for khachaturian?
Asher Bailey
youtube.com/watch?v=TsyOuyNh6oQ More of a symbolic amen, but damn do she bang. Would highly recommend giving the whole thing a listen if you haven't before. At least listen to the last 2 minutes
Kevin Rodriguez
>Mahler
William Thompson
extremely
I always end up typing a piece name into a search engine, then blacking out for hours only to find "Karajan" the only product of the fugue state.
You forget John Corigliano >implying that Tchakovsky was gay and not simply autistic
Andrew Bailey
>Georg Friedrich Haas is a famous Austrian composer & the child of Nazi parents. His wife Mollena is a famous American kink educator & descendant of African slaves. Together they live in a public, kinky relationship they have both craved for 40 years: She is his slave & muse, he is her master – a combination that pushes people's buttons & touches on subjects like race, sexuality, politics & power dynamics. This film documents their lives between perversion, art, love & radical self-determination. ready for kino?
Jose Moore
FPTSIU
Isaac Scott
there's literally no reason to include schönbergs textbooks in the folders unless one is interested in his personality.
Ethan Lee
Why?
Ian Peterson
he's not an original thinker and there are more modern textbooks. all you get is a snapshot of flawed standard fin de siecle curriculum colored by schönberg personality.
Samuel Wilson
How is it flawed?
Jonathan Lopez
What's the greatest American work for solo piano?
Sebastian Ward
Where do I get this guy's music?
Blake Morgan
culmination of 19th century misconceptions about forms, harmony, all domains of composition. hugo riemann and andre gedalge are other such specimen.
Angel Wilson
Wouldn't that just mean he looks at those concepts differently? What's the RIGHT way of looking at those concepts then?
Nathaniel Phillips
Youtube, check this post. If you mean to buy, he publishes his work in Chandos website
Christopher Martinez
Doctor Atomic
Christopher Rodriguez
Rameau is good but he overexaggerated his greatness and acted like Rameau invented music.
Levi Morgan
Aaron Copland, Leonard Bernstein, the list goes on...
Hunter Gomez
All you said was jews, what a coincidence...
Levi Bailey
lets just say a lot of good modern textbooks were written after 1970s
Lucas Ross
His fundamentals of Musical Composition is excellent. I'm not sure if it's in the OP folders though.
Schoenberg's personality doesn't really come through in his textbooks. There are purely textbooks for students to learn from.
Ethan Anderson
i wish the weeb baroque fag would also fuck off for good
i'd rather have a million bogposters in each thread than that autistic anime garbage
his taste in music is also awful
Blake Watson
>spend hours searching the "best" recording >only download 24-bit FLACs
How fitting that it was composed by Fredrick II himself.
Daniel Jenkins
>the audience interests me only in as far as it improves the acoustics of the concert hall
what did schönberg mean by this?
Ethan Jones
He appreciates coughs and sneezes during performances like all conisseurs do.
Jacob Gonzalez
Concert halls have very bright acoustics without being full of people. Generally they sound better with people padding them out.
Like most great composers, Schoenberg (you should use his correct name, not his original German name that he disowned) wrote the music he wanted to write and didn't really care what the audience thought.
Hunter Gomez
I love the guy. He made music distinctive music you could actually listen to when everybody else was making pretentious shit.
>music in an empty hall sounds even worse than in a hall filled by empty people
James Watson
>Arnold Schoenberg, conductor Otto Klemperer, conductor Hermann Scherchen, composer Anton Webern and writer/musician Erwin Stein
when will they learn?
Jackson Gonzalez
>Schoenberg (you should use his correct name, not his original German name that he disowned)
John Ortiz
What is Mahler doing there
Jace Perez
Neither Scherchen nor Webern were Jewish btw. also, Webern was supportive of the Third Reich
Alexander Stewart
hownew
Colton Garcia
chillin
Brayden Cook
depends what you're looking for in your sound quality. If you want a really bright unnatural sound - no people is fine. If you want a mellower sound without unnatural echoes all over the place, having padding (ie. people) is preferable.
If you don't know much about acoustics, now is the time to either do some research or stay out of the conversation and keep your greentext and reaction images to yourself.
Carson Harris
why did he say "empty people" and not just people though? is contempt for goyim also part of acoustics?
Thomas Edwards
You probably still have no ear and musical memory, his late quartets sounds nothing like the early ones? Can't you seriously hear how complex the counterpoint is, how refined and labyrintic the form has become, and the mastery Beethoven achieved over ornamentation? Lots of things are happening in every bar, and studying his scores will show you that these compositions are almost logical, inevitable, if you know what he is doing.
Easton Howard
Eh, he just praised Hitler in some letters (while also writing letters to Berg in which he says that Hitler is evil blablabla). Also his music was banned by Nazi plebs in 1938: at the end of the war Webern just kinda liked Hitler's character, but apart from that he was swindling between an apolitical position and an antiNazi one.
Pfitzner: that was a nazi!
Apparently Berlioz had the luck to be able to hear music at command. He mentions many times in his biography trance states in which he is able to hear fully orchestrated music in his head and jot that down immediatly. Beethoven, Schibert and Mozart could do it, Schumann was envious cause of it for his entire life, for he had to compose at the piano. Also Berlioz was a truly dedicated (almost manic) student. Notice that he was already composing mature, fully orchestrated works 2 years after having started studying. In 6 years he had already mastered music enough to write the Symphonie Fantastique, and 4 years in he was already a finalist (even as a student he was among the best composers in France).
Basically: be a genius; naturally be able to hear music in your head; study 16 hours everyday; be bipolar, so that when you're manic you can study 18 hours.
Sebastian Green
"Shadowtime" by Ferneyhough
Lincoln Myers
mem
John King
Do you guys know any good recordings of Gesualdo's music?