Recap:
51 edgard varèse - Ionisation52 Benjamin Britten - Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings53 Philip Glass - Music in Similar Motion54 Bela Bartok - Mikrokosmos55 John Zorn - Cobra56 Bela Bartok - Concerto for Orchestra57 Karlheinz Stockhausen - Kreuzspiel58 Edgard Varese - Density 21.559 Louis Andriessen - De Staat60 Maurice Ravel - Rapsodie espagnole61 Yamashiro Shoji (with Geinoh Yamashirogumi) - Akira (Original Soundtrack)62 Bela Bartok - String Quartet no. 463 Maurice Ravel - String Quartet in F64 Benjamin Britten - War Requiem65 Steve Reich - Music for Mallet Instruments, Voices and Organ66 Pierre Boulez - le marteau sans maître67 Brian Eno - Discreet Music68 John Luther Adams - Become Ocean69 Jerry Goldsmith - Alien, film score70 Gustav Mahler - Das Lied von der Erde71 Igor Stravinsky - Les Noces72 Claude Debussy - String Quartet in G Minor73 Gustav Mahler - Symphony no. 974 Gavin Bryars - The Sinking of the Titanic75 Antonin Dvořák - Symphony no. 9 ('New World')76 Iannis Xenakis - Pithoprakta76 Steve Reich - Sextet78 Charles Ives - The Unanswered Question79 Jean Sibelius - Symphony No. 480 Gustav Mahler - Symphony no. 581 Philip Glass - Akhnaten82 George Gershwin - An American In Paris83 Antonin Dvořák - Rusalka84 Steve Reich - Piano Phase85 Giacomo Puccini - Manon Lescaut86 Claude Debussy - Etudes87 Scott Joplin - The Entertainer88 luciano berio - Sequenza III (for female voice)89 Igor Stravinsky - Symphonies of Wind Instruments90 Ennio Morricone - For A Few Dollars More, film score90 Les Baxter - Quiet Village92 Glenn Branca - Symphony no. 13 ('Hallucination City')93 Maurice Duruflé - Requiem94 Arvo Pärt - Magnificat95 Gustav Mahler - Symphony no. 396 John Cage - First Construction in Metal97 Meredith Monk - Dolmen Music98 Iannis Xenakis - Metastasis99 Benjamin Britten - The Turn of the Screw, opera after Henry James100 Gérard Grisey - Les espaces acoustiques
― Spiritual Hat Minimalism (Sund4r), Friday, 30 September 2016 03:54 (nine years ago)
We're at the halfway mark!
Varèse is the king of the 20th century for me i think, a channel thru which almost everything good and important flows; but i feel like he's under-served in terms of great recordings. anybody got any suggestions?
― i bill everything i duck (Noodle Vague), Friday, 30 September 2016 06:00 (nine years ago)
The 2CD set on decca conducted by Chailly was considered the new benchmark when it came out. I don't have many others besides that, just Boulez. Can't remember how the two Naxos discs were reviewed.
Certainly the more specialized pieces have been recorded a lot on mixed recital discs. There are a lot of density 21.5s and ionisations out there.
― I wish you could see my home. It's... it's so... exciting (Jon not Jon), Friday, 30 September 2016 11:09 (nine years ago)
Also Robert Craft recorded most of the Varese oeuvre on Columbia in the early 70s and while I haven't listened to it it has a cool ass cover.
― I wish you could see my home. It's... it's so... exciting (Jon not Jon), Friday, 30 September 2016 11:13 (nine years ago)
think I've got the Chailly, not sure about it tbh
― Still D.U.C.K. (Noodle Vague), Friday, 30 September 2016 11:23 (nine years ago)
Our #50 might be top 5 if you asked the right composition faculties.
― Spiritual Hat Minimalism (Sund4r), Friday, 30 September 2016 12:49 (nine years ago)
50 Arnold Schoenberg - Pierrot Lunaire Points: 471 Votes: 3 #1s: 0http://timerime.com/upload/resized/41207/485045/resized_image2_5c8665dc9357c37ffbba275ebf9265a1.jpg
― Spiritual Hat Minimalism (Sund4r), Friday, 30 September 2016 12:51 (nine years ago)
#8 for me. Interesting that it only made three people's ballots.
Should be top 10 but that's true of a lot of things that have already placed!
― I wish you could see my home. It's... it's so... exciting (Jon not Jon), Friday, 30 September 2016 12:57 (nine years ago)
Definitely the most glaring 'TOO LOW' for me. Even #8 on my ballot was probably too low, listening to Lucy Shelton's recording now. A piece I keep getting more out of. Every aspect of it is so delicious and masterful, simultaneously comic and eerie/deranged. How many innovations go back to this one piece?: the uniquely expressive and dramatic sprechtstimme vocal part, the chamber instrumentation so lovely and effective that "Pierrot ensemble" became a standard type of modern chamber ensemble, obviously the atonal language, but also Schoenberg's fine sensitivity to timbre and dynamics here.
― Spiritual Hat Minimalism (Sund4r), Friday, 30 September 2016 13:13 (nine years ago)
A friend of mine celebrated her 30th birthday by renting out a bar and performing Pierrot Lunaire in it.
― ¶ (DJP), Friday, 30 September 2016 13:52 (nine years ago)
Woah.
― Spiritual Hat Minimalism (Sund4r), Friday, 30 September 2016 13:53 (nine years ago)
I know someone who commissioned every composer she could find (a lot because she's a hotshot pianist) to write a short piano piece for her to play on her 30th.
― Spiritual Hat Minimalism (Sund4r), Friday, 30 September 2016 13:54 (nine years ago)
49 Gavin Bryars - Jesus' Blood Never Failed Me Yet Points: 473 Votes: 3 #1s: 0
http://www.paraethos.com/images/aqualung2.jpg
― Spiritual Hat Minimalism (Sund4r), Friday, 30 September 2016 13:55 (nine years ago)
This is where I admit that, as much as I like the idea behind this, and as much as I like Sinking of the Titanic, and as much as I like Frederik's story, this piece has always driven me a bit bonkers, at least the original 25m recording, which is the only one I ever listened to.
― Spiritual Hat Minimalism (Sund4r), Friday, 30 September 2016 13:57 (nine years ago)
I love this piece so much. Guaranteed to unclog even the most stubborn tear ducts, at least for me.
― aaaaaaaauuuuuuuuu (melting robot) (WilliamC), Friday, 30 September 2016 14:01 (nine years ago)
Whoa, I honestly didn't think this would show up over Sinking. I'm not sure Gavin Bryars has two recordings in the top 100 classical works of the 20th century, but I love this piece. And yeah, it should be heard in a big church late at night, pretty drunk and with a pretty person by your side.
― Frederik B, Friday, 30 September 2016 14:09 (nine years ago)
Also, can't wait to dive into all these works I've never checked out. I mean, I know Schoenberg - we're doing Friede auf Erden this october, and wow! - but never know where to start. Pierrot Lunaire it is.
― Frederik B, Friday, 30 September 2016 14:16 (nine years ago)
Oh man, if you've never heard it before, Pierrot is OPO material.
― Spiritual Hat Minimalism (Sund4r), Friday, 30 September 2016 14:24 (nine years ago)
I can see how Jesus' Blood... could seem mawkish and/or irritating but it's one of the pieces of music I remember hearing as a kid, and for some reason the strongest memory it provokes is my granddad dying and so... I ended up not voting for it because I couldn't bear to listen to it again.
― ultros ultros-ghali, Friday, 30 September 2016 14:24 (nine years ago)
Sorry to be a downer
I think I find "Jesus' Blood" a little too sentimental but there are times when sentimental is fine. Pierrot shd've been higher but I didn't vote so there it is
― Still D.U.C.K. (Noodle Vague), Friday, 30 September 2016 14:27 (nine years ago)
Voted for this. Love the original version, don't care for the Tom Waits version at all, although I guess Waits gave it some traction which is at least partly responsible for it placing above Sinking (which I think is a superior piece)
― heaven parker (anagram), Friday, 30 September 2016 14:29 (nine years ago)
― ¶ (DJP), Friday, September 30, 2016 9:52 AM (forty-three minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
That's so cool. Anybody we can hear on record/online?
― I wish you could see my home. It's... it's so... exciting (Jon not Jon), Friday, 30 September 2016 14:37 (nine years ago)
Sentimentality is fine, even good. I just don't feel like Jesus' Blood goes anywhere. With Reich, all the rhythmic phasing effects give you something to listen for in the repetitions; with early Glass, you've got the additive rhythms. With Sinking of the Titanic, you have the gradual timbral shifts and atmospheric sounds. The gradual introduction of straightforward string and brass harmonizations of a one-line loop over 25 minutes just doesn't seem very interesting to me. I think I might like it as a five-minute piece.
― Spiritual Hat Minimalism (Sund4r), Friday, 30 September 2016 14:38 (nine years ago)
I totally believe that it could work in this situation:
it should be heard in a big church late at night, pretty drunk and with a pretty person by your side.
― Spiritual Hat Minimalism (Sund4r), Friday, 30 September 2016 14:39 (nine years ago)
sund4r I usually listen to the Lucy Shelton recording of Pierrot too, and that's what I've put on the playlist.
(note to listeners: Shelton's recording is a 2fer. She performs the cycle first in German and then in English. The poems are so wonderful that it's well worth also listening to the english one... but not first!)
― I wish you could see my home. It's... it's so... exciting (Jon not Jon), Friday, 30 September 2016 14:41 (nine years ago)
At 48, one that I didn't know before the discussion thread. It's pretty interesting, though:
48 Alfred Schnittke - Concerto for Choir Points: 475 Votes: 4 #1s: 0
https://i.ytimg.com/vi/M7x2aeKlE_8/maxresdefault.jpg
― Spiritual Hat Minimalism (Sund4r), Friday, 30 September 2016 14:51 (nine years ago)
ok how weird is it that i just clicked on the kate bush thread and this schnittke piece is mentioned there by Michael Jones in the first post I see (he felt one of the kate live interludes reminded him of this pc)
― I wish you could see my home. It's... it's so... exciting (Jon not Jon), Friday, 30 September 2016 14:59 (nine years ago)
Yay! Did this this spring, so much fun to sing.
― Frederik B, Friday, 30 September 2016 15:02 (nine years ago)
She didn't record her performance but she does have a website: http://www.thealobo.com/multimedia
― ¶ (DJP), Friday, 30 September 2016 15:03 (nine years ago)
i see she's singing the Durufle Requiem in Sarasota in January!
― I wish you could see my home. It's... it's so... exciting (Jon not Jon), Friday, 30 September 2016 15:09 (nine years ago)
Varese is one of the few legitimate modern classical composers I find really accessible. Maybe that means that he is "lite" too? I think I prefer the older recordings of his works that were my first exposure to his music.
― _Rudipherous_, Friday, 30 September 2016 15:19 (nine years ago)
I've never thought of Varèse as lite fwiw.
― Spiritual Hat Minimalism (Sund4r), Friday, 30 September 2016 15:27 (nine years ago)
47 Ennio Morricone - The Good, the Bad and the Ugly Points: 477 Votes: 4 #1s: 0
http://cps-static.rovicorp.com/3/JPG_500/MI0002/774/MI0002774960.jpg?partner=allrovi.com
― Spiritual Hat Minimalism (Sund4r), Friday, 30 September 2016 15:36 (nine years ago)
Dude's second appearance in a countdown of all notated music since 1890, which is p interesting, I have to say.
― Spiritual Hat Minimalism (Sund4r), Friday, 30 September 2016 15:49 (nine years ago)
He is one of most inventive and original composers known to me tbh
There are so many sides to the work he's done in film... Everything from neo-bel-canto to krautrock.
I wish I had nominated his score to The Thing. I don't remember why I pruned it from my noms list.
― I wish you could see my home. It's... it's so... exciting (Jon not Jon), Friday, 30 September 2016 16:21 (nine years ago)
I prefer Nino Rota, but I am not that familiar with either of them.
― _Rudipherous_, Friday, 30 September 2016 16:42 (nine years ago)
i wonder if varèse isn't so much 'lite' as he is fairly easily translatable into and readable through the aesthetics of electronic music etc
― lazy rascals, spending their substance, and more, in riotous living (Merdeyeux), Friday, 30 September 2016 16:45 (nine years ago)
morricone POX off top of head
the thingfor a few dollars morecopkilleroceanoil pratoexorcist ii the hereticmy name is nobodyonce upon a time in the westdays of heavengrand slam
― I wish you could see my home. It's... it's so... exciting (Jon not Jon), Friday, 30 September 2016 16:46 (nine years ago)
I'm not really saying Varese is lite, but if I like him, it leaves me wondering.
Enjoying Mikrokosmos. If I were ever to study piano, I'd be happy to practice material like this, I think. (Not that drowning-in-the-molten-confection-of-melancholy romantic piano music though.)
― _Rudipherous_, Friday, 30 September 2016 17:01 (nine years ago)
i like giu la testa and vergogna schifosi. also his soundtrack to "danger diabolik" which really should get a proper issue one of these days.
― a confederacy of lampreys (rushomancy), Friday, 30 September 2016 17:02 (nine years ago)
It was terribly unjust to stop at listing 10 morricones. Giu la testa rules. I don't know the second one you said but I'll check it out!
― I wish you could see my home. It's... it's so... exciting (Jon not Jon), Friday, 30 September 2016 17:04 (nine years ago)
My favourite version of the classic notation software, before they made it more like Finale:
46 Jean Sibelius - Symphony no. 6 Points: 480 Votes: 3 #1s: 0
https://www.google.com/url?sa=i&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=images&cd=&ved=0ahUKEwi5sMHX2LfPAhWCMj4KHYMDBI4QjBwIBA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.suomenrahapaja.fi%2Fproductresources%2Fsource%2Fpic1%2F17984.png&psig=AFQjCNFBEJlY43hleFk2BrFpoQXu7AXvOg&ust=1475345568802157
― Spiritual Hat Minimalism (Sund4r), Friday, 30 September 2016 18:13 (nine years ago)
http://www.suomenrahapaja.fi/productresources/source/pic1/17984.png
― Spiritual Hat Minimalism (Sund4r), Friday, 30 September 2016 18:14 (nine years ago)
http://d29ci68ykuu27r.cloudfront.net/product/Look-Inside/covers/19221755.jpg
Fought the temptation to post a picture of a 1930s Goethe medal
― Spiritual Hat Minimalism (Sund4r), Friday, 30 September 2016 18:15 (nine years ago)
When Robert Creeley made a pun on Bartok/bar-talk, did that have any significance related to the composer or was it just Creeley being goofy?
― _Rudipherous_, Friday, 30 September 2016 18:27 (nine years ago)
This has been bothering me for decades.
― _Rudipherous_, Friday, 30 September 2016 18:28 (nine years ago)