This has probably been asked before but I can't find it. It's that dreaded question at the end of Desert Island Discs … Come on, let's have it! Which one? Which one is absolute TOPS?
I tend to think that the answer to that question for most people will change over time. Ask them that question a year, perhaps even a month, later and their answer will be different, but I have realised that with me the answer to that question has not changed for decades. So that's what I am asking. Do you have a piece that has stood the test of time, a special piece, one you keep coming back to no matter how many times you hear it, it does things to you no other piece does ….. ooooo eur, steady on now Rich! It puts a tingle on your tingle
:)
Doesn't have to be classical, and if you cannot pin it down to just one then so be it, but what I am not keen on is lists. I'm also interested in the reason. I realise that for some the reason may be difficult to relate, explaining why you like a piece of music, why it gives that extra tingle, could be like trying to explain why you like a piece of cake, but it would be nice if you could try.
Here's my piece and my attempt at explaining why:-
Neptune (from The Planets Suite) - Gustav Holst
I consider this the most remarkable piece of music ever written and it has the most profound effect on me. It gets deep down into my soul. Holst has a special way of using the celesta, harp, and female chorus.
Some of you will know the problem I have with the volume orchestral music is played. Most of the versions on YouTube are way too quiet so I've chosen Tomita's version for you to listen to while, or IF, you read any further:-
(I vote we have more Tomita on Radio 3. I know his version of a Debussy piece was played recently, but that was a very rare outing as far as I know)
I am not religeous in the conventional sense but this piece I believe takes me to that special place that in religious people is filled by their beliefs. It's as if hidden within the notes of this wonderfull piece lie the answers to the mysteries of the universe. I am floating in outer space … at first it is cold ….. the mysteries out there are wonderous and they surround me … (Holst is the master of the celesta) but then comes the women's wordless chorus, and I don't know what it is about a female wordless chorus but it has the amazing ability to take the listener into the land of unanswered questions, the land of myths and legends, and in this case the whole universe, but they also bring WARMTH. There is warmth somewhere out there in the depths of space. The wordless chorus coming in at the end is like a cosy warm blanket of humanity that wraps around you. Holst was not the first to use the female wordless chorus to create such an effect. Who was the first? Does anyone know? Debussy? Ravel? It is such a piece that it leaves me with a feeling that NOTHING can follow Neptune … NOTHING!
Colin Matthew's Pluto is a great piece in itself, and it is a reasonable attempt at following Neptune, except that it is not done in Holst's style which I find very puzzling, but to follow Neptune is really an impossible task.
I have two complaints about Neptune though …. firstly it's not long enough, secondly the ending is never performed correctly. This was the first piece to have a fade out ending and I have never heard that fade out done properly, never on recordings or live performances. The point about the ending is that it is supposed to fade out until you cannot distinguish the point at which the music ends and the silence begins. The door to the back stage is supposed to be gradually closed and the choir (presumably in stocking feet) are supposed to walk away still singing until they cannot be heard. You are not supposed to hear the choir stop singing, but yet I always do. I have had to create my own version in Audacity.
If there are any other Neptune fans out there, this is an intersting one:-
Absolutely fascinating that, but notice how soon they stop singing. What was the point in closing the doors if they're going to stop singing as soon as they're closed? Keep singing damn you!
Rich
I tend to think that the answer to that question for most people will change over time. Ask them that question a year, perhaps even a month, later and their answer will be different, but I have realised that with me the answer to that question has not changed for decades. So that's what I am asking. Do you have a piece that has stood the test of time, a special piece, one you keep coming back to no matter how many times you hear it, it does things to you no other piece does ….. ooooo eur, steady on now Rich! It puts a tingle on your tingle
:)
Doesn't have to be classical, and if you cannot pin it down to just one then so be it, but what I am not keen on is lists. I'm also interested in the reason. I realise that for some the reason may be difficult to relate, explaining why you like a piece of music, why it gives that extra tingle, could be like trying to explain why you like a piece of cake, but it would be nice if you could try.
Here's my piece and my attempt at explaining why:-
Neptune (from The Planets Suite) - Gustav Holst
I consider this the most remarkable piece of music ever written and it has the most profound effect on me. It gets deep down into my soul. Holst has a special way of using the celesta, harp, and female chorus.
Some of you will know the problem I have with the volume orchestral music is played. Most of the versions on YouTube are way too quiet so I've chosen Tomita's version for you to listen to while, or IF, you read any further:-
(I vote we have more Tomita on Radio 3. I know his version of a Debussy piece was played recently, but that was a very rare outing as far as I know)
I am not religeous in the conventional sense but this piece I believe takes me to that special place that in religious people is filled by their beliefs. It's as if hidden within the notes of this wonderfull piece lie the answers to the mysteries of the universe. I am floating in outer space … at first it is cold ….. the mysteries out there are wonderous and they surround me … (Holst is the master of the celesta) but then comes the women's wordless chorus, and I don't know what it is about a female wordless chorus but it has the amazing ability to take the listener into the land of unanswered questions, the land of myths and legends, and in this case the whole universe, but they also bring WARMTH. There is warmth somewhere out there in the depths of space. The wordless chorus coming in at the end is like a cosy warm blanket of humanity that wraps around you. Holst was not the first to use the female wordless chorus to create such an effect. Who was the first? Does anyone know? Debussy? Ravel? It is such a piece that it leaves me with a feeling that NOTHING can follow Neptune … NOTHING!
Colin Matthew's Pluto is a great piece in itself, and it is a reasonable attempt at following Neptune, except that it is not done in Holst's style which I find very puzzling, but to follow Neptune is really an impossible task.
I have two complaints about Neptune though …. firstly it's not long enough, secondly the ending is never performed correctly. This was the first piece to have a fade out ending and I have never heard that fade out done properly, never on recordings or live performances. The point about the ending is that it is supposed to fade out until you cannot distinguish the point at which the music ends and the silence begins. The door to the back stage is supposed to be gradually closed and the choir (presumably in stocking feet) are supposed to walk away still singing until they cannot be heard. You are not supposed to hear the choir stop singing, but yet I always do. I have had to create my own version in Audacity.
If there are any other Neptune fans out there, this is an intersting one:-
Absolutely fascinating that, but notice how soon they stop singing. What was the point in closing the doors if they're going to stop singing as soon as they're closed? Keep singing damn you!
Rich
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