Trois morceaux en forme de poire must have been conceived well before the term pear-shaped assumed it current connotation (at least in certain English speaking countries), but it did once provide an incentive to me to title a piano study based on combining Chopin's three études in A minor Étude en forme de Chopin.
Nice piece - shame about the title...
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I've tried to avoid quoting Percy Grainger (just too easy!) but I can't resist Arrival Platform Humlet, from In A Nutshell. I was introduced to this at university in 1972, rather late in the evening. It took several days to realise that it means 'a little something you hum while waiting for a train'.
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3rd Viennese School
Never bought or intentionally heard this cause of the title (I have heard it by accident though)
Ravel Mother Goose.
It sounds so, well, you know.
3VS
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostJosef Strauss' delightful waltz, Dynamiden was originally titled Geheime Anziehungskrafte.
By the way, Richard Strauss lifted the beginning of the first waltz for use in Rosenkavalier - quite intentionally.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostSurely one of the most unweildy of titles for a composition has to be that of Diana Burrell, for her 1992 string orchestral piece, "Das Meer, das so gross unt weit ist, da wimmelt's ohne Zahl, grosse und kleine Tiere".
There probably are longer titles.......
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostSure there are - but then, just as the work bearing the one that you quote almost always gets abbreviated to Das Meer, so does Sorabji's Sequentia Cyclica super Dies Iræ ex Missa pro Defunctis in Clavicembali usum get abbrevated to Sequentia Cyclica and his Fantasiettina sul nome illustre dell'egregio poeta Christopher Grieve ossia Hugh M'Diarmid to Fantasiettina, for obvious reasons of practicality.
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Panjandrum
One work which definitely fits the criterion is that drawn from Rossini's "Peches de ma vieillesse": roughly translated as follows: "Radishes, Anchovies, Pickles and Butter Themes and Variations". A tasty morsel but a mouthful to say.
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostI rather thought that this thread mentioned works which were very accessible, but unfortunately titled --- does the Sorabji fit the description
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Norfolk Born
By "accessible", I guess I meant written so as to attract the musically untrained, but slightly adventurous, among us - tuneful without being trivial. I suspect that Ferretfancy may have also understood the word in that sense.
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Panjandrum
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