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Favourite composer?

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Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,139 ✭✭✭Sauron


    Has to be Beethoven for me..

    the 7th symphony, especially the second movement,

    Piano sonata no 14.. one of my all time favourites...

    I'm a big fan of most of his piano sonatas really... some amazing works..


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 273 ✭✭axtradub12


    Rachmaninov.

    Piano Concertos 1 & 4 :)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,487 ✭✭✭banquo


    Nah, mozart all the way tbh. I'd loveto get into bach but I've no idea where to start. Would a "best of Bach" compilation cd be the best introduction, does anyone think?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,936 ✭✭✭fade2black


    "Now that's what I call Bach"....

    There are loads of best ofs out there for composers but I recommend you get one of those big classical box sets and try all of them....Bach would be up near the top for me as well though.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 299 ✭✭Alqua


    Hmm, it wouldn't let me edit my post...
    Well, I realised had I left out two of my favourite composers! :rolleyes: So here's my updated list:
    Allegri
    Beethoven
    Mozart
    Handel
    Palestrina
    Bach
    Chopin
    Rutter


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 273 ✭✭axtradub12


    My favourites, Rachmaninov,Tchaikovsky,Dvorak,Grieg,Bruckner,Berlioz,Sibelius,Brahms,Wagner, Borodin in that order.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 29 NiallKelly


    piano:

    1. Chopin - His Nocturnes, since a lot of them aren't too difficult to play.
    2. Lizt - La Campanella!
    3. Rachmaninov

    others:

    Tchaikovsky
    Grieg
    Beethoven
    Bach


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8 G-RÓID


    Rachmanonov by far with his third piano concerto althogh im quite partial to a bit of chopin! :D


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 52 ✭✭cjs19


    There is absolutely no question as to who the greatest composer of all time was, is, and ever will be. The sheer volume, innovation and highly finished feel to each work is astounding alone. If you dont know who I'm talking about by now then for gods sake child, purchase The Magic Flute, sit back and kick yourself at how mediocre a talent everything since has been. I saw earlier someone said his music is repetitive but one has to understand the social circumstances Mozart was composing under. Anything that sounded a little out there was viewed with dismay. Given that, he took convention and spat it out. This boy composed perfect intricate harmonies at the keyboard on the spot, this man was able to take an altogether simple melody and tease it until it became more than just music. Phrases held with such restraint that one almost feels he/she is being allowed for one moment a glimpse into the soul. I say this with humility and claim no offence on ones preference, but any man that says otherwise must have a hearing problem. Please feel free to correct me or challenge me as I love all classical music (almost). Just realise first that this was the music that took Bach's brilliant but rigid attempts at emancipation and made it look childlike. No longer was music a little verse to amuse, it was now a library to understand.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 656 ✭✭✭supersheep


    Beethoven first. Fur Elise is what got me to start playing the piano again. Then Mozart, as Rondo alla Turca is my favourite piece (a tricky little devil though)... But I love most classical music. Best genre there is.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,345 ✭✭✭Velvet Vocals


    cjs19 wrote:
    Correct me if I'm wrong,

    No correction necessary!! Well said!!! :)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,225 ✭✭✭JackKelly


    being a piano-er it has to be Chopin Rach and Liszt.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,487 ✭✭✭banquo


    RACH! woot!

    Someone recommended Debussy's Clair de Lune to me a few days ago, been meaning to take a look at it.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 656 ✭✭✭supersheep


    It's a really nice piece... A little out of my range, at the minute at least...


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 11 haemogoblin


    i have to say that ravel would be my favourite composer. all of his stuff is great, especially his piano works like gaspard de la nuit, sonantine and le tombeau de couperin. debussey i like too, i guess i like strange harmony!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4 warpath


    Well, many of you will disagree, but my favourite peices are all Mozart. Schubert's Piano Sonata in B flat, 3rd movement D.960 and his Moment Musical No.3 in F minor "Air russe" D.780 are close behind along with Haydn's String Quartet No.5 in D major Op.64 "The Lark": (1-4) - but Mozart's fearful symmetries are just too amazing to have any other peices come into the same catagory. (No offence intended) I say that particular statement because most people don't realize just how much Mozart hid his genuis. Beethoven's peice are very pleasing to the ear, but are nothing in comparison to having a beautiful symmetry take you completely by surprise and fill your eyes with tears from not only "happy" tears, but sad ones also. It is sad because how can one man create so many masterpieces so unlike any other composer. (I've counted rughly about 50 genuine symmerical MASTERPIECES) I can list about 40 of Mozart's top slow and fast compositions but i will only go to 5 each.

    Favourite Slow
    i) Piano Concerto No.24 in C minor: Larghetto (K.491)
    ii) Piano Sonata No.11 in A major: Andante Grazioso (K.331)
    iii) Piano Concerto No.26 in D major: Larghetto (K.537) (got em mixed up)
    iv) March from his opera Idomeneo
    v) Serenade No.10 in B major "Gran Partita": Adagio (K.361) <
    (ingenuities aren't very hidden so most will like this one the best, the reason I don't is because it is exactly that. I had to put it never-the-less because once in awile there is nothing like "Gran Partita" to examplifly Mozartean grace and perfection)


    Favourite Fast
    i) Piano Sonata No.11 in A major: Rondo: alla turca (K.331)
    ii) Piano Concerto No.22 in E flat major: Allegro (K.482) <---I listened to it so much in the past I totally forgot about it. Im kinda bored of it now, but it is incredible never-the-less.
    iii) Piano Quintet in E flat major: Rondo: Allegretto (K.452)
    iv) Overture to Marriage of Figaro: (K.492)
    v) Violin Concerto No.2 in D major: Rondo: Andante grazioso-Allegro ma non troppo (K.218) <
    just try and find ONE note that isn't absolute PERFECT
    vi) Violin Concerto No.5 in A major: Rondo: tempo Di Minuetto (K.219)



    There are about 40+ other compositions that are relatively weaker in attack, but still far surpasses the next leadind composer. (Haydn)


    To give you an idea of just how many masterpieces the man created... Listen to his Oboe Concerto in C major: Rondo: Allegretto (K.314) This particular peice probably isn't even in the standard Mozart concert repetoire but it is a very nice MASTERPIECE. (40-51 seconds in there is a very nice bass line) Even his Basson Concerto written when he was about 18 is in my mind ffffffffffffffffffffffffffffaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaarrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr superior to anything any other composer has create at that particular age.


    P.S. Beethoven's "Hammerklavier" is very complex (individual fugues written for each change in key and form) but as many a composer has said in the past; "Music, no matter what the situation, no matter what the theme, must never cease to be music." In other words, music must be symmetrical unless it is bubblegum music. Symmetrical sounds are beauty, not coarse violent ones heard in Chopin, Beethoven, Ravel, etc... The reason most composers resort to coarse junctions or passages or orchestral statements is because the ability to create thirds, fourths, and fifths (notes that are the same but diff octave) as a statement or theme itself demands a symmetrical outlook or concept in relation to music. Haydn and Schubert did this very well and that is why they are in MY mind 2nd and 3rd place. (D.960 to prove it)

    "Before God and as an honest man I tell you that your son is the greatest composer known to me either in person or by name. He has taste, and what is more, the most profound knowledge of composition." -Joseph Haydn to the simpleton Leopold Mozart

    P.S.S. One last example. (sry) Listen to Piano Concerto No.19 in F major:Allegro (K.459) It doesn't seem like an incredible masterpeice at 1st, but just keep listening to it so you are able to understand the main theme, then try to listen to the relatively hidden woodwind and ochestral string conversations in the backround while the piano plays the main theme and initiates the developement.

    P.S.S. I didn't mean to undermine any other composer and I also didn't intend to cause offence to anyone. It is just.....

    "Many people make a mistake who think that my art has come easily to me. Nobody has devoted so much time and thought to composition as I. There is not a famous master whose music I have not studied over an over." -trazoM suedamA gnagfloW

    P.S.S.S. I don't personally like vocal compositions as they tend to make me shiver and my ears hurt. (No offence intended) ie. whenever I fall asleep and forget to create a playlist on a CD that has singing, I am ALWAYS violently awaken by the vocals even if it is an aria. (I never am awaken by his instrmental works)


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