5 Pieces

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  • decantor
    Full Member
    • Dec 2010
    • 521

    #61
    Originally posted by ardcarp View Post
    decantor, Having mentioned your age at the first two spine-tinglers, you omitted that information for the rest! Come on....fess up.
    ardcarp, your interest is flattering, but the information you seek is not precisely verifiable: at a guess, (in order) early teens, mid teens, mid thirties. Now, at what age did your spine first tingle to a classical piece? And what was it?

    Comment

    • doversoul1
      Ex Member
      • Dec 2010
      • 7132

      #62
      (in my childhood)
      Mendelssohn Violin Concerto in E minor
      (in my youth)
      Vivaldi Four Seasons performed by I Musici
      Elizabethan Lute songs performed by Julian Bream
      (much (much) later)
      Bach St Matthew Passion
      (as recent as last Friday)
      Les Troyens: thanks to the link posted by mercia on the Royal Opera: Les Troyens thread
      This was definitely more a ‘being blown away’ than a spine tingling experience.

      Comment

      • salymap
        Late member
        • Nov 2010
        • 5969

        #63
        Originally posted by David-G View Post
        I don't see why not! I am curious what your next set of choices will be. I am sure that it is quite possible to be "blown away" by something other than a big orchestral work.
        Yes, I know, it's just sooo difficult. All I can drum up atm.

        Schubert - Piano Sonata in Bb.D960
        Mozart - Quintet for keyboard and winds K452
        Strauss - Four Last Songs
        Janacek - Mladi
        Mahler - Kindertotenlieder

        Comment

        • Serial_Apologist
          Full Member
          • Dec 2010
          • 37995

          #64
          Originally posted by decantor View Post
          ardcarp, your interest is flattering, but the information you seek is not precisely verifiable: at a guess, (in order) early teens, mid teens, mid thirties. Now, at what age did your spine first tingle to a classical piece? And what was it?
          If it's not too rude to interrupt my answer to that one would unquestionably be the Schumann Piano Concerto, at the age of 6. Once my father overcame his considerable misgivings and let me play his first-ever LP on his precious, home-made radiogram, I just played and played it. It was the first of many works I came to know from start to finish, now stored in my memory.

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          • ferneyhoughgeliebte
            Gone fishin'
            • Sep 2011
            • 30163

            #65
            Originally posted by salymap View Post
            Schubert - Piano Sonata in Bb.D960
            Strauss - Four Last Songs
            Oh, yes! Those, too!
            [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

            Comment

            • Petrushka
              Full Member
              • Nov 2010
              • 12389

              #66
              Originally posted by decantor View Post
              Now, at what age did your spine first tingle to a classical piece? And what was it?
              If I may answer this one for myself: I was thirteen days short of my 16th birthday, May 23 1970, and it was Wagner's Prelude to Act 3 of Lohengrin a chance hearing on Radio 2 of all places. Never forget it!
              "The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink

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              • Roslynmuse
                Full Member
                • Jun 2011
                • 1270

                #67
                Chopin - Etudes Opp 10 and 25
                Wagner - Parsifal
                Ravel - L'enfant et les sortileges
                Louis Andriessen - De Staat
                Jeffrey Lewis - Memoria

                and many more x5...

                Comment

                • Ebubu

                  #68
                  There now seems to be 2 questions in this thread

                  "5 Pieces that blew you away the first time you heard them. "

                  Well trying to filter through my memory :
                  Schmitt's Psalm 47 (recording) (I was 16)
                  Mahler 8th (live ! Wow, what a blow !)
                  Messiaen Turangalila
                  Wagner's Ring (Chereau prod on TV. I was scotched ! must have been 16 or 17)
                  Les Troyens (selection with Crespin, Pretre conducting).

                  "Now, at what age did your spine first tingle to a classical piece? And what was it? "
                  I started the piano at age 7, motivated by the son of my parents' friends, who, just a few years older than me was playing, the little prodigy Liszt's "Ronde des Lutins".... (I never achieved that level, but it's probably the first piano piece that "tingled my spine" very vividly.)
                  Then I discovered Tchaikovsky (Nutcracker and Swan Lake), and from then on many things, as I would listen to every classical vinyl that I could lay may hands on. I very distinctly remember the Chopin discovery, and sometime later, Offenbach, the Verdi choruses, Maria Callas.... (quite eclectic !)

                  "And the opening bars of both Bach Passions do it every time...... "
                  Yep, same here....

                  Comment

                  • Pabmusic
                    Full Member
                    • May 2011
                    • 5537

                    #69
                    Originally posted by Pabmusic View Post
                    Holst: Suite in E-flat
                    Butterworth: Banks of Green Willow
                    Suk: Fantastic Scherzo
                    Sibelius: En Saga
                    Finzi: Dies Natalis

                    These are pieces that awoke my sensibilities with a real jolt when I first heard them (1960s I think).
                    Here's five symphonic works that I've discovered in later years, that evoked the 'eureka' moment at the time and that still give pleasure:

                    Suk: Asrael
                    Kalinnikov: Symphony 2 (or else No. 1 - I can't make up my mind)
                    Elgar: Symphony 1
                    RVW: Symphony 5
                    Bartok: Concerto for Orchestra

                    Comment

                    • salymap
                      Late member
                      • Nov 2010
                      • 5969

                      #70
                      If I may have a go at the age question - I loved a lot of music from the age of eight,Tchaik ballet music and popular pieces but the real thrill was walking into the empty RAH one coldmorning when the 10 oclock rehearsal had just started. A friend, studying at Trinity, had been advised to attend rehearsals and asked me to go with her. We were seventeen years old and school friends.

                      As we walked into the hall Berlioz' overture Roman Carnival filled the echoing spaces and I was well and truly hooked for life. Live music is best and I miss it still

                      Comment

                      • IRF

                        #71
                        Bach - 'Prelude' from violin sonata number 3 (all the Partitas and Sonatas, really, but that was the first bit I heard and it 'blew me away' all by itself).
                        Cage - Variations VII
                        Messiaen - Quartet for the End of Time
                        Sarasate - Zigeunerweisen
                        Deep Purple - Child in Time

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                        • Beef Oven!
                          Ex-member
                          • Sep 2013
                          • 18147

                          #72
                          Holst - The Planets
                          RVW - The Lark Ascending
                          Ravel - Bolero
                          Wagner - Tristan Und Isolde
                          RVW - Symphony #5

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                          • Bryn
                            Banned
                            • Mar 2007
                            • 24688

                            #73
                            Stravinsky: Symphony in Three Movements

                            Varèse: Déserts

                            Messiaen: Et exspecto resurrectionem mortuorum

                            Stockhausen: Carré

                            Cardew: The Great Digest, (as it was then called) Paragraph 2.

                            .

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                            • edashtav
                              Full Member
                              • Jul 2012
                              • 3676

                              #74
                              Honegger Symphony no 5 Di Tre Re
                              Bach Mass in B minor
                              Sorabji Piano Sonata no 3
                              Messaien Chronochromie
                              Brian Symphony no. 6 “Tragica”

                              Comment

                              • Serial_Apologist
                                Full Member
                                • Dec 2010
                                • 37995

                                #75
                                Stravinsky - Symphony in 3 Movements (thanks for the reminder, Bryn!)
                                Koechlin - Symphony No 2
                                Bartok - Musaic for Strings, Harp, Celesta & Percussion
                                Bridge - Enter Spring
                                Schoenberg - Erwartung

                                Ooer - I could name so many others!

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