Classical Music Lovers
If I recall correctly there are portions of the piece that were entirely written by mozart. If anything, sussmeyer just did some corrections on part transpositions. Most of what was not completed by Mozart at the very least had elaborate sketches. Some of it only needing completion of the orchestration.
yeah, a theme is not much more than a refined doodle. The mastery is in the development and then subsequent orchestration. This is why I think Danny Elfman is a hack film composer. He does not do much development and last I heard has never done any of his own film orchestration.
yeah, a theme is not much more than a refined doodle. The mastery is in the development and then subsequent orchestration. This is why I think Danny Elfman is a hack film composer. He does not do much development and last I heard has never done any of his own film orchestration.
call me baby
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Rian Jackson
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To be more precise, his student Süßmayer (pronounced "soos-my-er") declared that he was wholly responsible for the "Sanctus", "Benedictus", and "Agnus Dei", but no one has been able to verify his statement. However, we do know that Süßmayer made use of Mozart's own music in the "Lux aeterna" and "Cum sanctis tuis" and that he orchestrated everything from the "Dies irae" to the "Hostias".
- tonytohono
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Sorry BullD - I couldn't be happier if someone roasted those fucks on a spit.bullD wrote:
Make everybody happy, even the folks under 40 (in reference to your referencing their IQ's), and get , " Metallica - S & M with the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra," conducted by composer Michael Kamen and of course, Metallica.
I agree, they have been roasted for some time now. My point was not meant to plug Metallica...tonytohono wrote:Sorry BullD - I couldn't be happier if someone roasted those fucks on a spit.bullD wrote:
Make everybody happy, even the folks under 40 (in reference to your referencing their IQ's), and get , " Metallica - S & M with the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra," conducted by composer Michael Kamen and of course, Metallica.
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Rian Jackson
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I found it really fascinating. My professor related what was going on in the world geopolitically to what was happening in music and other arts. The interconnections were jaw droppingly fascinating. The fact that an architectural feature in a cathedral sparked the counterpoint revolution blows my mind.
I also found it hilarious when my fussy professor would beat down the musical theatre bimbos when they would refer to 'Amadeus' to inform their opinions on music history.
I also found it hilarious when my fussy professor would beat down the musical theatre bimbos when they would refer to 'Amadeus' to inform their opinions on music history.
call me baby
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Rian Jackson
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- tonytohono
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- theCryptofishist
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Actually, Stuart, last night I was thinking about some of those sorts of things re art and our discussion yesterday on same. Not that I have much coherent to say about it now. . .stuart wrote:I found it really fascinating. My professor related what was going on in the world geopolitically to what was happening in music and other arts. The interconnections were jaw droppingly fascinating. The fact that an architectural feature in a cathedral sparked the counterpoint revolution blows my mind.
The Lady with a Lamprey
"The powerful are exploiting people, art and ideas, and this leads to us plebes debating how to best ration ice.
Man, no wonder they always win....." Lonesomebri
"The powerful are exploiting people, art and ideas, and this leads to us plebes debating how to best ration ice.
Man, no wonder they always win....." Lonesomebri
- samtzu
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Interconnectedness is everything... it blows my mind sometimes... I did a study of the 14th Century and how it defined the world we live in today, along with the paralells... amazing. Closer to our time frame, the stuff that Keysey did in the Bay Area in the Sixties has changed a lot of how we look at everything. Not that it all can be systematically traced back to him, but like a spreading fractal, it influences a lot of what we listen to, read, wear, live in, and work for today.Rian Jackson wrote:holy shit, i never knew any of that kind of stuff.
maybe i'll have to crack the books mouldering on my bookshelf.
actually, did you use any textx that drew such parallels? if so, do you remember the names?
The revolutionary does not grow up because he cannot grow, while the creative individual cannot grow up because he keeps growing ~~ Eric Hoffer
- theCryptofishist
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I do remember picking up on the gregorian chants being a product of the aucoustical property of cathedrals--and I don't have Stuart's erudiction on the subject. Possibly tv (ya know, pbs--not real tv) and then hanging out with m.r. who may have likened it to how jazz in the 50s was a function of the physics of the instruments. So, I think the general idea is out there as a meme that even fish can pick up.Rian Jackson wrote:holy shit, i never knew any of that kind of stuff.
maybe i'll have to crack the books mouldering on my bookshelf.
actually, did you use any textx that drew such parallels? if so, do you remember the names?
The Lady with a Lamprey
"The powerful are exploiting people, art and ideas, and this leads to us plebes debating how to best ration ice.
Man, no wonder they always win....." Lonesomebri
"The powerful are exploiting people, art and ideas, and this leads to us plebes debating how to best ration ice.
Man, no wonder they always win....." Lonesomebri
re:texts
my intructor was Professor Walter Reinhold
he developed this program called 'Culture'
here is a link...
http://www.culturalresources.com/CRI.html#search
my intructor was Professor Walter Reinhold
he developed this program called 'Culture'
here is a link...
http://www.culturalresources.com/CRI.html#search
call me baby
- theCryptofishist
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All I know is that when Sinatra died and they played all his songs, I realized a) how many of them I knew from elsewhere and b) how much bettter I liked the other (non-Sinatra) arrangements.stuart wrote:is Elfman a genius or is his arranger/orchestrator? If all one knows of Elfman as a film composer is what one hears on a sountrack album then one can't really say
(Note--I know that Sinatra didn't do his own arrangements or all his own arrangements, but his interpratations are often the famous ones.)
The Lady with a Lamprey
"The powerful are exploiting people, art and ideas, and this leads to us plebes debating how to best ration ice.
Man, no wonder they always win....." Lonesomebri
"The powerful are exploiting people, art and ideas, and this leads to us plebes debating how to best ration ice.
Man, no wonder they always win....." Lonesomebri
- theCryptofishist
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I don't have much regard for the man or his work, but it's my understanding that he worked with the arrangers. Certainly, he had enough pull to choose what kind of style he wanted to sing in and who he wanted to work with.
The Lady with a Lamprey
"The powerful are exploiting people, art and ideas, and this leads to us plebes debating how to best ration ice.
Man, no wonder they always win....." Lonesomebri
"The powerful are exploiting people, art and ideas, and this leads to us plebes debating how to best ration ice.
Man, no wonder they always win....." Lonesomebri
- Ranger Genius
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I don't know where you get the info that Elfman doesn't do his own orchestration, because it's wrong.
The real film composer hack is John Williams. Blatant plagiarist...but of course most classical music is public domain, so it's not actually. It's an 'homage' when he cribs a few pages straight out of 'Also Sprach Zarathustra" for Close Encounters...or from Holst for Star Wars.
The real film composer hack is John Williams. Blatant plagiarist...but of course most classical music is public domain, so it's not actually. It's an 'homage' when he cribs a few pages straight out of 'Also Sprach Zarathustra" for Close Encounters...or from Holst for Star Wars.
“We cross our bridges when we come to them and burn them behind us, with nothing to show for our progress except a memory of the smell of smoke, and a presumption that once our eyes watered.”
- Ranger Genius
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wrong thread for this discussion I suppose but yes, listening to the oldies can still have an effect, just like listening to oldies from all different genre, which is probably what you are saying. However, anything after the 80's from these guys, imo, sucks ass.Rian Jackson wrote:but sometimes i really enjoy metallica....
original point: no, snobby, not all people that listen to their music have IQ's below 40...
- Ranger Genius
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I wasn't implying that. I just meant these specific people. The album I'm referring to was actually the one in which a symphony debases itself by being relegated to a few accent notes and ornamental trills. Just appauling. Aside:not all people that listen to their music have IQ's below 40...
One of the guys I worked with there only knew one adjective/adverb: fuck. I never heard him complete a sentence without using it. Fragments, monosyllabic responses, and grunts, yes. But never a complete sentence without the word fuck. Really quite amazing.
“We cross our bridges when we come to them and burn them behind us, with nothing to show for our progress except a memory of the smell of smoke, and a presumption that once our eyes watered.”
- diane o'thirst
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Hey, Quasi, maybe I should join your camp...'cause I'm doing classical sets, too 
Some inspirations:
- A dramatic presentation of "Carnavale des Animaux" with recitations of the Ogden Nash verses that accompany it...
- Mythodea, of course,
- An Orientale set, with all the various Turkish-inspired pieces,
- Saint-Saëns' Organ Concerto, for its bigness, richness and humour,
- A Dies Irae set,
- For when we get threatened with a storm, a Storms-themed set, for example "La Tempesta di Mare," the Summer and Winter storm allegros from the Four Seasons, Royal Hunt and Storm, the Storm sequence from Beethoven's Pastoral Symphony, also "Calm At Sea" and "Prosperous Voyage," either Beethoven or Mendelssohn,
- Bach would be exceedingly thematic since some psychologists claim that listening to Baroque, and especially Bach, optimizes your brain and raises your IQ; maybe some nice easy-going Bach first thing in the morning to gently wake the camp,
Some inspirations:
- A dramatic presentation of "Carnavale des Animaux" with recitations of the Ogden Nash verses that accompany it...
- Mythodea, of course,
- An Orientale set, with all the various Turkish-inspired pieces,
- Saint-Saëns' Organ Concerto, for its bigness, richness and humour,
- A Dies Irae set,
- For when we get threatened with a storm, a Storms-themed set, for example "La Tempesta di Mare," the Summer and Winter storm allegros from the Four Seasons, Royal Hunt and Storm, the Storm sequence from Beethoven's Pastoral Symphony, also "Calm At Sea" and "Prosperous Voyage," either Beethoven or Mendelssohn,
- Bach would be exceedingly thematic since some psychologists claim that listening to Baroque, and especially Bach, optimizes your brain and raises your IQ; maybe some nice easy-going Bach first thing in the morning to gently wake the camp,
[url=http://tinyurl.com/245sagf][img]http://tinyurl.com/2bbr28j/.gif[/img][/url][url=http://tinyurl.com/23753ws][img]http://tinyurl.com/2auqebj/.gif[/img][/url][url=http://tinyurl.com/m4y82q][img]http://tinyurl.com/l56rdn/.gif[/img][/url]
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Rian Jackson
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all the greats were involved in 'sampling'. it was common practice - and accepted - for hundreds of years.Ranger Genius wrote:I don't know where you get the info that Elfman doesn't do his own orchestration, because it's wrong.
The real film composer hack is John Williams. Blatant plagiarist...but of course most classical music is public domain, so it's not actually. It's an 'homage' when he cribs a few pages straight out of 'Also Sprach Zarathustra" for Close Encounters...or from Holst for Star Wars.
IIRC (if i recall correctly, the new theme of this thread)
- QuasiPseudo
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Diane - awesome suggestions from you & all! Perhaps some duelling classical DJ action would be in order...
Been toying with mixing some classics into a beat pattern for danceability & fire spinning; not sure how well this will work, I havent heard it done before; but there are a lot of classics that follow a pretty consistent beat...
Been toying with mixing some classics into a beat pattern for danceability & fire spinning; not sure how well this will work, I havent heard it done before; but there are a lot of classics that follow a pretty consistent beat...
- Ranger Genius
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I'm not talking a few lines, a fleeting reference to a theme..I mean obviously copying the melody, probably assuming (with good reason) that a person who buys the soundtrack to a Lucas or Spielberg film doesn't know shit about classical music, and won't notice that major themes from the star wars suite are blatant copies of Holst's The Planets. Especially some of the Empire themes which come from Mars, the Bringer of War.
“We cross our bridges when we come to them and burn them behind us, with nothing to show for our progress except a memory of the smell of smoke, and a presumption that once our eyes watered.”
- Ranger Genius
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Quasi: for a consistent, fairly fast tempo, look to the Baroques..Mozart, Vivaldi, et al. I actually like to spin to the aforementioned Mars movement. Very envigorating little ditty.
“We cross our bridges when we come to them and burn them behind us, with nothing to show for our progress except a memory of the smell of smoke, and a presumption that once our eyes watered.”
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Rian Jackson
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i follow ya.
IIRC, it was done with a very different intention 'back in the day'. i think the listener was meant to recognise the original pieces.
kind of like an inside joke, only significantly more high brow.
That's pretty sad that they'd be doing that in things like Star Wars. And although i know very little about the history of copywriting, Holst, like Britten, is a very modern composer.
Sometimes i wonder how much of other people's work makes it into my own by way of the subconscious. It's something i worry about obsessively when I'm writing, wondering if I've inadvertently plagiarized.
IIRC, it was done with a very different intention 'back in the day'. i think the listener was meant to recognise the original pieces.
kind of like an inside joke, only significantly more high brow.
That's pretty sad that they'd be doing that in things like Star Wars. And although i know very little about the history of copywriting, Holst, like Britten, is a very modern composer.
Sometimes i wonder how much of other people's work makes it into my own by way of the subconscious. It's something i worry about obsessively when I'm writing, wondering if I've inadvertently plagiarized.
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GuinivereElise
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we used to have discussions about this very thing in my music theory classes, back when I was a mooshic major...Rian Jackson wrote:i follow ya.
IIRC, it was done with a very different intention 'back in the day'. i think the listener was meant to recognise the original pieces.
kind of like an inside joke, only significantly more high brow.
That's pretty sad that they'd be doing that in things like Star Wars. And although i know very little about the history of copywriting, Holst, like Britten, is a very modern composer.
Sometimes i wonder how much of other people's work makes it into my own by way of the subconscious. It's something i worry about obsessively when I'm writing, wondering if I've inadvertently plagiarized.
IIRC, we discussed using the same chord progressions, and about whether this was plagarizing or not... can't remember what we came up with...
it was a long time ago..