What are you listening to now?
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wrote on 14 Aug 2020, 21:10 last edited by
@George-K said in What are you listening to now?:
I play that in the background in each of my team meetings. No shit.
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@George-K said in What are you listening to now?:
I play that in the background in each of my team meetings. No shit.
wrote on 14 Aug 2020, 21:19 last edited by@Aqua-Letifer said in What are you listening to now?:
I play that in the background in each of my team meetings. No shit.
Next time, try this:
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wrote on 15 Aug 2020, 01:28 last edited by
For other Democratic Socialist music, the Ponchobo Electonic Ensemble can be listened to.
Link to video -
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wrote on 27 Sept 2020, 13:49 last edited by
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wrote on 27 Sept 2020, 15:41 last edited by
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wrote on 7 Oct 2020, 13:32 last edited by
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wrote on 7 Oct 2020, 13:59 last edited by
@George-K interesting!
I found this excerpt on YT:
Link to videoIt's interesting to compare it with the Liszt transcription:
Link to videoI think I prefer the Liszt variant slightly. Overall, I must say, though, that, at least in the finale of the 9th, they fail to convince me relative to the orchestral version.
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@George-K interesting!
I found this excerpt on YT:
Link to videoIt's interesting to compare it with the Liszt transcription:
Link to videoI think I prefer the Liszt variant slightly. Overall, I must say, though, that, at least in the finale of the 9th, they fail to convince me relative to the orchestral version.
wrote on 7 Oct 2020, 14:38 last edited by@Klaus I've listened to that recording countless times. However, I never followed the score.
Gives me a new appreciation for all thing things that are going on.
And how freakishly difficult it must be to play. All. Those. Octaves.
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wrote on 7 Oct 2020, 14:47 last edited by George K 10 Jul 2020, 14:50
Speaking of transcriptions...
As I mentioned, I'm reading "2312," and in it there's a description of a concert in which one of the pieces performed was a four-hand version of the Beethoven Grosse Fuge. They even mentioned the opus number: 134.
I had no idea this thing existed, but, there you have it. Beethoven himself transcribed it for four hands:
Link to videoOh, and speaking of speaking of transcriptions, my first encounter with Peter Serkin was a recording I purchased in 1972 (?) of him playing Beethoven's Op. 61(a) - the piano version of the violin concerto.
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wrote on 7 Oct 2020, 15:14 last edited by
Since we're doing piano, I recently rediscovered this album on Amazon music - it accompanies my dog walks. I just love this guy's playing.
Link to video -
Since we're doing piano, I recently rediscovered this album on Amazon music - it accompanies my dog walks. I just love this guy's playing.
Link to videowrote on 7 Oct 2020, 15:22 last edited by@Doctor-Phibes said in What are you listening to now?:
I recently rediscovered this album on Amazon music
Thanks for that. I just added it to my library. He's got quite the discography!
This is a bit more than half...
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wrote on 7 Oct 2020, 15:41 last edited by Doctor Phibes 10 Jul 2020, 15:42
Early Bud Powell is amazing. As he got older, it was less good - he suffered a lot from mental illness, back when the treatment was rather unsophisticated. A very sad life - he died in 1966 at the age of 41 from a combination of TB and alcoholism.
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wrote on 4 Dec 2020, 14:16 last edited by
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wrote on 24 Dec 2020, 12:37 last edited by
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wrote on 19 Jan 2021, 16:40 last edited by
Dave Mason alone together
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alone_Together_(Dave_Mason_album)
Really fine subtly good rock and roll
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wrote on 19 Jan 2021, 17:39 last edited by
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wrote on 5 Mar 2021, 01:43 last edited by
Wow.
Link to videoIf you didn't know it was Joni Mitchell, you'd never guess.
I always preferred her version to the saccharine Judy Collins version. I also prefer this recording to Collins'.
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wrote on 5 Mar 2021, 02:50 last edited by
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wrote on 5 Mar 2021, 22:33 last edited byLink to video
A wonderful recording of, probably my favorite of Sibelius' symphonies.
The second movement is just wonderful. Go to about 4:30 and listen to how well he brings out the pizzicato of the strings as counterpoint to the main melody.
I've said this is the perfect "Winter Symphony," even more than the Tchaikovsky 4th.
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wrote on 18 Apr 2021, 12:22 last edited by