Religious or not, what pieces of music do you consider to be your idea of musical paradise? I am prompted to ask the question, having just discovered the wonderfully atmospheric Hyperion CD of Polyphony singing Bruckner choral music in Ely Cathedral. If there is a heaven, I hope it is like this!
Your heavenly sounds.
Collapse
X
-
Lateralthinking1
-
"Heavenly" means the best earth has to offer for atheists like me. Slightly off-topic (already, I know!) - when I heard Rebecca Saunders' Stasis last November, it occured to me that the ending of the piece is rather as I hope dying will be: surrounded by strange, beautiful new sounds that captivate my conciousness until oblivion gently takes over.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by vinteuil View PostTomás Luis de Victoria will do for me. And for starters - have you tried the wonderful 10 CD set recently out on archiv with Ensemble Plus Ultra / Michael Noone?
So many others.
Cardoso by Herreweghe http://store.harmoniamundi.com/missa...agnificat.html
Tallis 'Puer Natus Est' by Stile Antico http://www.stileantico.co.uk/PuerNatusEst.php
Fauré Requiem by Accentus/Equilbey http://en.naive.fr/#/work/faure-requiem
Duruflé Requiem by King's Choir / Ledger http://www.amazon.co.uk/Fauré-Requie.../dp/B001I4NT8M
And in real life, sitting in the substalls in King's College Chapel, preferably of a winter's evening by candle-light, with the choir singing the Howells 'Gloucester' or 'St Pauls' Magnificat - that'll do it for me..."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
Comment
-
-
Kevin Volans, White Man Sleeps, 4th dance.
Szymanowski, Stabat Mater.
J.S.Bach, Cantatas 21 & 147; Matthew Passion no.75, bass aria "Mache Dich, mein Herze, rein".
Beethoven Missa Solemnis - the Sanctus/Benedictus, Agnus Dei and Dona Nobis.
Roussel, 3rd movement, "Soir d'ete" from Symphony No.1, "Poeme de la Foret".
Bruckner Symphony No.4, 2nd Movement andante.
Bartok Piano Cto. No.3, 2nd movement, andante religioso.
Tchaikovsky Symphony No.3, 3rd movement, andante elegiaco.
Nielsen Symphony No.3, 2nd movement, andante pastorale.
Ives, Orchestral Set No.1, 3rd movement, "The Housatonic at Stockbridge".
Ives, Orchestral Set No.2, 3rd movement "From Hanover Square North, at the end of a tragic day, the voices of the people again
arose."
In a way it's what you always seek... as R.S.Thomas put it,
"that green
island, ringed with the rain's
bow, that we had found and would spend
the rest of our lives looking for."
(R.S.Thomas, "That Place")Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 12-02-12, 00:45.
Comment
-
-
Beef Oven
-
scottycelt
When I seek 'heavenly sounds' I instinctively reach for a Bruckner symphony.
Too many special moments to list here, but my extra-special ones are the closing bars of the first movement of No 7, the slow movement of No 2, and that incomparable conclusion to the Fifth (more ecstatically 'heaven-storming' than 'heavenly', possibly).
Strangely enough, I don't encounter many such moments in the composer's formal religious works, and the Te Deum I find somewhat aggressive and almost militaristic-sounding.
Very strange ...
Comment
-
amateur51
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post"Heavenly" means the best earth has to offer for atheists like me. Slightly off-topic (already, I know!) - when I heard Rebecca Saunders' Stasis last November, it occured to me that the ending of the piece is rather as I hope dying will be: surrounded by strange, beautiful new sounds that captivate my conciousness until oblivion gently takes over.
Don't know the piece tho'
Comment
-
amateur51
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostKevin Volans, White Man Sleeps, 4th dance.
Szymanowski, Stabat Mater.
J.S.Bach, Cantatas 21 & 147; Matthew Passion no.75, bass aria "Mache Dich, mein Herze, rein".
Beethoven Missa Solemnis - the Sanctus/Benedictus, Agnus Dei and Dona Nobis.
Roussel, 3rd movement, "Soir d'ete" from Symphony No.1, "Poeme de la Foret".
Bruckner Symphony No.4, 2nd Movement andante.
Bartok Piano Cto. No.3, 2nd movement, andante religioso.
Tchaikovsky Symphony No.3, 3rd movement, andante elegiaco.
Nielsen Symphony No.3, 2nd movement, andante pastorale.
Ives, Orchestral Set No.1, 3rd movement, "The Housatonic at Stockbridge".
Ives, Orchestral Set No.2, 3rd movement "From Hanover Square North, at the end of a tragic day, the voices of the people again
arose."
In a way it's what you always seek... as R.S.Thomas put it,
"that green
island, ringed with the rain's
bow, that we had found and would spend
the rest of our lives looking for."
(R.S.Thomas, "That Place")
Comment
-
Don Petter
-
Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by MickyD View PostReligious or not, what pieces of music do you consider to be your idea of musical paradise? I am prompted to ask the question, having just discovered the wonderfully atmospheric Hyperion CD of Polyphony singing Bruckner choral music in Ely Cathedral. If there is a heaven, I hope it is like this!
Comment
Comment