Alphabet associations - I
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amateur51
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Oh! I'm such a fool! Schoenberg's Opus 26 (the first large-scale work to use the Method of Composing with Twelve Notes Related Only to Each Other throughout) is his Wind Quintet. A medium untouched for about 100 years before this work.
Benda one of the others?
EDIT: Cross post with cloughie who got the other two composers.
(Don't think Strauss wrote a Ww5tet?)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostOh! I'm such a fool! Schoenberg's Opus 26 (the first large-scale work to use the Method of Composing with Twelve Notes Related Only to Each Other throughout) is his Wind Quintet. A medium untouched for about 100 years before this work.
EDIT: Cross post with cloughie who got the other two composers.
Summary:
The Wind Quintet as a "standard" ensemble was effectively established by Franz Danzi (1763–1826), who composed 9 Wind Quintets, and Anton Reicha (1770 – 1836), who composed 24. There appear to have been very few others composed until the twentieth century.
Cloughie got the "W" and the first two links, so I think he has the privilege of the next letter (by established convention a choice of X, Y, Z or A).
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Originally posted by Caliban View PostNice one Cloughs!
Still very keen to hear Richard Schonberg's Wind Quintet though! Got a link, mate?
aside - just watching TV Breakfast - Russell Watson described as the top selling 'Classical' artist! Not a bad voice Ive heard much worse but 'Classical'?
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