Yeah, Tchaikovsky was one of my favorites for a long time, but I kind of fell into the Baroque period and just never got out, I guess.Fiz_The_Toaster said:snip
I loved that game, the aesthetics were AWESOME!!!JemothSkarii said:"I like Chopin myself"
"I don't play Chopin"
"If I die, would you play Chopin in rememberance of me?"
...In all honesty though, I love Chopin...if only I wasn't stuck in Eternal Sonata
I'm an orchdork...frizzlebyte said:Yeah, Tchaikovsky was one of my favorites for a long time, but I kind of fell into the Baroque period and just never got out, I guess.Fiz_The_Toaster said:snip
If not for Smetana, Zelenka would probably still be unknown to modern audiences. At least by and large.
Unless I miss my guess, unless you're hardcore into classical (orchestral) music, Zelenka's still unknown to you. He might be more well-known than I am aware, though.
Have you listened to his Choral Fantasy? It's unjustly less popular then it should be.JehuBot said:Well , usually I don't listen to Classic music.
but when I do , Ludwig Von Beethoven , Mothah fuckaz ! >
sure , he's mainstream , but how many deaf composers made it big out there in his time ?
he just simply said "Fuck you , deafness ! Imma make music !" and did what he love.
Art music (what most folks use the term "classical music" to describe) has been using electronic instruments since the 1920s, and Busoni and the Futurists were talking about it as far back as 1907.SenseOfTumour said:I'd also dare to suggest that perhaps some instrumental electronica could be the evolution of classical music, not the formulaic club music but some of the more deep and involving works.
For instance, this, by Orbital, putting aside that all the instruments are being electronically played by only 2 people and not a full orchestra, could it not be said to fulfil many of the attributes of classical?
Writes some of the most uninspired, dreary, cliched music it has ever been my misfortune to listen to. His fame is a crime when there are so many other great contemporary composers out there. And he studied under Berio; such a waste.billygoverton said:Ludivico Einaudi
Yeah, I'd not heard of that, but wasn't trying to suggest Orbital were doing something new, in my own way I was hopefully trying to say that classical was alive and well, and evolving into new stylestrooper6 said:.SenseOfTumour said:as it's just above this one![]()
Wut. That is a ridiculous statement.SenseOfTumour said:when if you look at the state of classical music today, it's almost entirely cover versions of other people's music, exactly what they deride pop for![]()