Originally posted by Beef Oven
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One Hit Wonders
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Northender
Purcell: Dido's Lament
Wagner: Ride Of The Valkyries/Siegfried Idyll
Britten: Sea Pictures/Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra
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3rd Viennese School
Rachmaninov Piano conceto no.2. Sometimes for variance they'll play no.2 as well
Debussy La Mer
Vaughan Williams The Lark Ascending. He also wrote other stuff, like The Lark Ascending
Stravinsky The Rite of Spring. The only thing he DID write!
(except for countless other works after it in a 53 year composition period)
Chopin only EVER wrote Nocturnes.
3VS
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3rd Viennese School
But usually its horrible screechy or boring singing, either Wagner or music from the Renainsance. And Handel. again!
Even after they've played some really good stuff!
"What a superb performance of Mahler symphony no.6 ! Well, weve now got 3 hours before nightwaves, so what better way to fill the time than play you some really boring horrible songs by Schuman!"
3VS
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Paul Dukas 'L'Apprenti Sorcier'. Perhaps because Disney grabbed it for 'Fantasia', it has become so much his signature tune that no-one is any longer aware that he did write some other stuff. Just looking on the shelves, there is 'La Peri', 'Symphony in C', 'Prelude to Ariane et Barbe Bleu' (which means, according to the sleeve note, that the whole opera exists waiting for a recording), 'Ouverture Polyeucte'. But you cant claim he's much known these days, when can you last remember hearing some Dukas?
I see that a disc of Duparc songs has got miss-shelved among the Dukas, but that is entirely another story (and someone else must tell it, French [and German] art song isnt really my thing).
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Hovering my cursor over the title of this New Post I read "Radio 3 and The Other Place have a knack of reducing some composers' output to a single piece of music. So if it's Mendelssohn you nearly always get...".
My instant attempt to complete the sentence led me first to Fingal's Cave (original version played a few days ago) , then the Octet (ditto the M-orchestrated version of the scherzo) and then to the violin concerto. Other posters have added other popular M works, and have significantly lengthened the list of frequently played works by RVW and many others. I could have mentioned "I was glad" as the Parry routine selection.
So if exceptions do indeed prove (= test) a rule, I think this one snapped under minimal applied load very rapidly!
OK, Widor remains a one-hit wonder but that's really on merit, not via the vagaries of R3 selectors.I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostI beg to disagree with you but only marginally. Many composers have up to three pieces.
RVW - Tallis, Lark and Greensleeeves.
Mendelssohn - MND, Hebrides and Sym 4 (Movt 1)
Grieg - Holberg, Peer Gynt (Morning) and Wedding Day at T....
Prokofiev - Sym 1, bits of Lieu Kije and Peter and the Wolf
Ravel - Bolero, La Valse, Alborada
but then the one work Aubade does apply to:
Bernstein Candide Ov
Copland Fanfare
Walton Crown Imperial (Portsmouth Point Ov occasionally)
Not sure which "law" we have now but if I look at the analysis of Breakfast playlists for July last year the scores on Cloughie's doors are
RVW 5 items played 1 from Cloughie's list
Mendelssohn 12-1
Grieg 5-0
Prokofiev 6-0
Ravel 7-1
Bernstein 3-0
Copland 2-1
Walton 2-0
Not sure what it proves - Breakfast's Law?
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