Originally posted by Decrepit Poster
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
What are you listening to now?
Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
X
-
I am listening to Mary Stuart (Maria Stuarda) by Donizetti from Opera in English with Dame Janet Baker. Very wonderful opera.
Also am fully recovered from the pneumonia that had afflicted me for three weeks and took me out of work for two weeks."Life is too short to spend it wandering in the barren Sahara of musical trash."
--Sergei Vasilyevich Rachmaninoff
Comment
-
String Quartet No. 7 in F major
String Quartet No. 7 in F major-Razumovsky.
From Wikipedia:
On the last leaf of the sketches for the Adagio, Beethoven wrote, "A weeping willow or acacia tree on my brother's grave" (Einen Trauerwiden oder Akazien-Baum aufs Grab meines Bruders). Both of his brothers were alive when this work was written so these words are interpreted as having a masonic significance, for the acacia is widely considered the symbolic plant of Freemasonry.
That's kind of interesting- anyone know any more about that?Ludwig van Beethoven
Den Sie wenn Sie wollten
Doch nicht vergessen sollten
Comment
-
Yesterday at YouTube I again watched/heard Pollini playing the closing movement of Les Adieux, which has become my preferred interpretation.
Also yesterday I got bee in my bonnet to hear Karl Goldmark's 'Rustic Wedding' Symphony, at one time something of a concert staple but nowadays not often performed. The performance I settled for is a bit more subdued than I find ideal, but well played and enjoyable. (I attempted to listen to a more rambunctious performance, but its instrument balances were often wonky.) Here's the first portion of the movement one.
This evening I returned to an old favorite and watched/heard the period group Tafelmusik play the final movement of Beethoven's seventh symphony. I find it quite exhilarating. I watched and/or heard a number of alternatives, but by and large found them tame by comparison.Last edited by Decrepit Poster; 05-06-2015, 10:58 AM.
Comment
-
Listening to Goldmark's "Rustic Wedding" day before yesterday reminded me of another piece first encountered during my early days beginning to explore symphonic literature, Dvorak's orchestral tone poem "The Golden Spinning Wheel", which I am watching at YouTube as I type. Don't think I've heard it in a great many years.Last edited by Decrepit Poster; 05-07-2015, 12:20 AM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Decrepit Poster View Post
This evening I returned to an old favorite and watched/heard the period group Tafelmusik play the final movement of Beethoven's seventh symphony. I find it quite exhilarating. I watched and/or heard a number of alternatives, but by and large found them tame by comparison.
Comment
Comment