If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra / Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra
Joel Eric Suben
Lovely,probably not masterpieces,so I didn't post this on the American classics thread,because they aren't classics.
Reminiscent of too many composers to list.
Very interesting Bryn, many thanks for posting - completely new to me (although her name rings a bell from somewhere).
I found a few things on Apple Music, but not the album you reference.
Currently listening to "The Art Of The Virtual Rhythmicon" has some Gosfield on it (All sideways Glance From An Electric Eye) - definitely my cup of tea
Very interesting Bryn, many thanks for posting - completely new to me (although her name rings a bell from somewhere).
I found a few things on Apple Music, but not the album you reference.
Currently listening to "The Art Of The Virtual Rhythmicon" has some Gosfield on it (All sideways Glance From An Electric Eye) - definitely my cup of tea
Completely new to me . I'm usually a bit suspicious of music that i like as much as this on first listen.
excellent recommendation, Bryn and Beefy.
quite a bit of her music on youtube to dip into.
I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra / Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra
Joel Eric Suben
Lovely,probably not masterpieces,so I didn't post this on the American classics thread,because they aren't classics.
Reminiscent of too many composers to list.
Now sampling some Scarmolin pieces, such as the Nocturne (clarinet) and Dances from The Caliph. The trouble with this stuff is that the composer obviously had more talent than (probably) most of us. I would find it very hard to write any music as good as that, yet really it does not scale any great heights - no Moazrt, Haydn, Beethoven, Brahms, Stravinsky, Bartok, Copland, Bernstein etc.
The best is the enemy of the good!
Background music? Maybe the symphonies were better than the pieces I've been able to hear.
Very interesting Bryn, many thanks for posting - completely new to me (although her name rings a bell from somewhere).
I found a few things on Apple Music, but not the album you reference.
Currently listening to "The Art Of The Virtual Rhythmicon" has some Gosfield on it (All sideways Glance From An Electric Eye) - definitely my cup of tea
Nick Didkovsky (who made the instrument on this album)
has done some really interesting things
I heard a performance of this one a few years ago at a festival in Budapest
Zero Waste is a duo for pianist Kathleen Supove and computer, which challenges the live performer to both create and sight-read a new piece on the spot. The...
Completely new to me . I'm usually a bit suspicious of music that i like as much as this on first listen.
excellent recommendation, Bryn and Beefy.
quite a bit of her music on youtube to dip into.
Totally new to me too. I only discovered her work as a result of searching out recordings in which the FLUX Quartet were involved. I ordered a couple of CDs of her music on trust, (trust in the musical taste of the members of the FLUX Quartet, that is). I was half expecting something similar to the work of the Bow Gamelan Ensemble. That was not to be the case.
Now sampling some Scarmolin pieces, such as the Nocturne (clarinet) and Dances from The Caliph. The trouble with this stuff is that the composer obviously had more talent than (probably) most of us. I would find it very hard to write any music as good as that, yet really it does not scale any great heights - no Moazrt, Haydn, Beethoven, Brahms, Stravinsky, Bartok, Copland, Bernstein etc.
The best is the enemy of the good!
Background music? Maybe the symphonies were better than the pieces I've been able to hear.
Comment