Originally posted by Bella Kemp
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Five Pieces you would be happy to never hear again
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[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Maybe it's my lack of musical education but I don't get this key thing. I can understand that it may be necessary to accommodate the range of certain instruments but why should Bb major or F major be better or worse than any other. For example when I sing a song I will pitch it to suit my voice and indeed Vaughan Williams in his Songs of Travel did two versions - a baritone version which I think was the original and a tenor version one third above. Both sound 'right' to me. I have also transposed Jaques Brel's 'If you go away' a third up from the original to avoid loss of power in the lower notes.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI don't think so. The wirelesses I remember, like the one we had in our village school, had all sorts of valves, funny noises - and wires coming out of it.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI didn't read pasto's comment as reflecting his opinion of the key itself, Bella Of all the Beethoven Symphonies, it is the least interesting in its use of Tonality - or, perhaps better, it is interesting from its comparatively limited use of Tonality. Possibly why he returned to the key after only four years for his next-but-one Symphony - the only time he "re-used" a Tonality in any of the Nine. (Of course, this wouldn't've been true if he'd lived to complete the Tenth Symphony in Eb Major; but then, all sorts of things we take for granted now wouldn't be the case if he'd finished the Tenth!)
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostMaybe it's my lack of musical education but I don't get this key thing. I can understand that it may be necessary to accommodate the range of certain instruments but why should Bb major or F major be better or worse than any other.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostKnocks out Beethoven symphony 4, and Mozart's Gran Partita then!
Also Haydn Symphony 102. Schubert D960 sonata and Schumann Symphony 1, Brahms 2nd Piano concert and a string sextet.
Any others?
Oh, and Chausson's Symphony, too...
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI'm only going to put a toe in the water of the ocean that is how composers' ideas of "B minor" (for example) were different from instruments today tuned to A = 440 (for example).
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostNor I, cloughie, nor I. As I don't have "perfect pitch", it's the relationships within a work that gets me going. And I'm only going to put a toe in the water of the ocean that is how composers' ideas of "B minor" (for example) were different from instruments today tuned to A = 440 (for example).
(or even most European instruments that are now tuned to A=442 )
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostNor I, cloughie, nor I. As I don't have "perfect pitch", it's the relationships within a work that gets me going. And I'm only going to put a toe in the water of the ocean that is how composers' ideas of "B minor" (for example) were different from instruments today tuned to A = 440 (for example).
Is it not the case, though, that certain keys fit more happily with some instruments than others - flat keys for winds, sharp keys for strings, perhaps - and so in composers' minds certain keys could have instrumental associations...
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Apropos keys - however modern tuning may differ from the original, one thing is true; certain keys are harsher or kinder on players because of their instrumental technique. And even more significantly, some keys allow for more open strings, which actually affects the sound. D major and G major were perhaps the favourite 18th century orchestral keys simply because the majority of open strings sounded in the home key. Likewise, A-flat and D-flat - though rarely used then - produced a different sound quality, since almost no open strings came into play.
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostI was browsing in my local Oxfam the other day and came across a copy of Bernstein's Mass. This must surely be the most embarrassingly awful piece of 20th Century music! Certainly it will be the top of my list for sheer cringe making vulgarity! ( Hides behind sofa )[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI don't think so. The wirelesses I remember, like the one we had in our village school, had all sorts of valves, funny noises - and wires coming out of it.
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostI was browsing in my local Oxfam the other day and came across a copy of Bernstein's Mass. This must surely be the most embarrassingly awful piece of 20th Century music! Certainly it will be the top of my list for sheer cringe making vulgarity! ( Hides behind sofa )
The Chichester Psalms are even worse, in my opionion! Still, at least Bernstein managed to compose one great work!!!
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