Your favorite classical tunes...

Gawan

Gawan

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One of my favorite classical tunes is from Tchaikovsky "Winter Dreams" or "Winter Daydreams":

SlipNet

SlipNet

Jedi Council Member
When I was a young fella in my twenties I dated a classically trained musician for 6 years, and she taught me plenty about the aesthetics of classical music. I saw a completely different side to her during these moments, and I cherish what we shared briefly even today, I learned a lot from her. She loved this piece, so I'll share it here.

luc

luc

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FOTCM Member
One of the great piano classics by Mozart:


I'm currently practicing the first movement, and although I don't have as much time/energy as I might want for this, it greatly soothes me, especially given all that is going on. It's kind of a "the way is the goal" thing, mastering something in tiny steps, being fully concentrated on pulling that music I hear in my mind out of my unwilling flesh...

The way Barenboim plays it actually comes close to how I "hear" it, compared to all other versions I know of, but still not quite. It's annoying if you know exactly how you want it to sound, but can't pull it off that way quite yet:-DAnyway, for me it was a great decision to get back into classical piano a bit after a 25+ years hiatus. Love it.
Pashalis

Pashalis

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I'm not all too much into classical music but there are two compositions that I really like. The first one is "Méditation" from Jules Massenet interpreted by David Garrett:


And the second one is Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata:

Christine

Christine

Dagobah Resident
@Agron

The film tells the story of three generations, united by their love of music and dance, from the inter-war period to the 1980s, in four countries: France, Germany, Russia and the United States. The four stories come together in the final scene, a concert in Paris.

Agron

Agron

Jedi Council Member
@Agron

The film tells the story of three generations, united by their love of music and dance, from the inter-war period to the 1980s, in four countries: France, Germany, Russia and the United States. The four stories come together in the final scene, a concert in Paris.

Quite cool! Thanks;-D

埃菲尔铁塔下拍摄的吗?我永远不会忘记我的visits to Paris. Last time I was there I actually went on an Eiffel tour and spent some time enjoying its grandeour and the sight of Paris from the top. When my wife and me came back down and had a snack in the park that is close to Eiffel tower we were awarded by being in a flock of Crows which did an amazing whirling "dance". My wife was scared of them while I was amased:lol:
Kari Baba

Kari Baba

Jedi
FOTCM Member
Besides all the wonderful pieces of music that I want to have here in this thread, I have two more that I love:
1. Lacrimosa from Zbigniew Preisner`s Requiem for a Friend.



2. Concerto grosso op.6 No. 8 by Arcangelo Corelli

Javi

Javi

Jedi
I would like to share here this old version of a Magnificat by Claudio Monteverdi. It is a version from 1975, surely a very precocious and today "outdated" interpretation within the universe of the interpretation of "ancient music" rediscovered in more recent decades. However, I share it because it has a very special value for me. The first time I heard it many years ago when I was very young (I still knew little about early music) , I was deeply impressed. It was like rediscovering a treasure lost under the mountain of a later music that was more and more "superficial" and/or elitist (without detracting from great later classical works of more elaborate harmonies). I felt such depth in this music that in fact it was the one that had the greatest emotional impact on me, even crying uncontrollably.
In order not to make it too long I put here only the last two movements of the work. The tenors' duo "Gloria Patri" offers a version whose color and emotionality I have not found in any subsequent version (despite being these more sophisticated in instrumentation and historical adaptation). And the end of "Sicut Erat" is for me simply amazing for a work from 400 years ago.

Gloria Patri
Sicut erat
Juba

Juba

The Living Force
FOTCM Member
I love Anna Netrebko & Elīna Garanča – Offenbach's Barcarolle.


和科水泽仙女的解释。


And Mozart's Lacrimosa.


Love Rachmaninoff's Bogoroditse Dyevo Raduisya.


And perhaps tho most Adagio from Aram Khachaturian - Spartacus.


It is so hard to name them all, this is just a couple of classical tunes I like to listen.
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