Fürever Elise. ♥
This, I love moonlight Sonata and Franz Liszt's Lovedream.GladiOol wrote:
Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata and 7th symphony are truly awesome /o/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_OYYBJbI59g this one is pretty epic as well.
UnderminE wrote:
I wasn't planning to post youtube videos on this sub-forum, but I had to post this one because no words could describe this epicness:
I love the Black Key Etude... I think it was also Chopin.kanye west wrote:
I am a HUGE Chopin fan. Everything in this YouTube channel is...simply amazing.
Yeah I love Bolero very much =w=bigdan27 wrote:
Is there any fan of Maurice Ravel's Bolero? cuz I'm one
Well I assume that 'classical' means 'the music with serious meanings', and that's my definition of classical music. Actually there are lots of composers in 20th century and 21st century:some of them use radical techniques such as the absence of tonality(a.k.a. atonic music) while others put jazz/rock elements into their own music(a perfect and famous example is some of Ravel's works).Mogsworth wrote:
I'm only going to assume that you mean 'classical' as in 'most instrumental non-jazz/electronic/rock music, usually made pre-second-half-of-the-20th-century' and not the classical era. Especially since most of these lists span multiple composers over hundreds of years and technique varieties.
Hell yes, I was waiting for someone to post this.Moriya Suwako wrote:
John Cage's 4'33
Guess what!? I'm currently practicing Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C# Minor!mathexpert9981 wrote:
An absolutely stunningly beautiful piece, unfortunately it's by a lesser-known composer so not many know about it.
A piece that truly explores every inch of the piano to its full potential.
Written by Beethoven, Transcribed by Lizst, performed by Gould. Holy crap.
rachmaninoff da manmathexpert9981 wrote:
A piece that truly explores every inch of the piano to its full potential.
Really cool, currently I'm working on the Pathetique sonata (among others, but that's my main piece) but I hope to play it in the future too~ :3Moriya Suwako wrote:
Guess what!? I'm currently practicing Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C# Minor!
I've not yet played any of lizst's pieces, but I do enjoy listening to his 1st Mephisto Waltz; imo one of the best pieces in the romantic erawinber1 wrote:
I also like Franz Liszt a lot, but it's probably because I find playing his pieces fun, but fooking tiring sometimes.
Pathetique sonata is surely great, I particularly love the second movement. Btw the first movement is tough, good luck!mathexpert9981 wrote:
Really cool, currently I'm working on the Pathetique sonata (among others, but that's my main piece) but I hope to play it in the future too~ :3Moriya Suwako wrote:
Guess what!? I'm currently practicing Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C# Minor!
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that was the exact piece i was thinking of LOLmathexpert9981 wrote:
I've not yet played any of lizst's pieces, but I do enjoy listening to his 1st Mephisto Waltz; imo one of the best pieces in the romantic era
Replying to a month-old response after you responded to something I made 6 months before your response.Moriya Suwako wrote:
Well I assume that 'classical' means 'the music with serious meanings', and that's my definition of classical music. Actually there are lots of composers in 20th century and 21st century:some of them use radical techniques such as the absence of tonality(a.k.a. atonic music) while others put jazz/rock elements into their own music(a perfect and famous example is some of Ravel's works).Mogsworth wrote:
I'm only going to assume that you mean 'classical' as in 'most instrumental non-jazz/electronic/rock music, usually made pre-second-half-of-the-20th-century' and not the classical era. Especially since most of these lists span multiple composers over hundreds of years and technique varieties.
It's not necessary to be instrumental, in my opinion. Like Schoenberg and Webern, who wrote lots of vocal music.
...Jacqli wrote:
Pachebel (Canon)