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Author: DFP_friend

Classical music

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Post time 6-4-2006 09:57 PM | Show all posts
Today , April 6th, is composer-conductor Andre Previn'is 77th birthday.  :pompom::pompom:



Masa dia muda sikit :



[ Last edited by  hamizao at 7-4-2006 04:41 PM ]

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Post time 7-4-2006 02:58 PM | Show all posts
ada tak yang suka pada Seiji Ozawa?

OZAWA, SEIJI [Ozawa, Seiji] , 1935-, Japanese conductor, b. Manchuria. A graduate of the Toho School of Music, Ozawa won competitions in Europe and the United States and was hired (1961) by the New York Philharmonic as an assistant conductor. He was director of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra (1965-70) and the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra (1970-73) before he served as music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra for almost thirty years, from 1973 to 2002. In 2002, he left Boston to become director of the Vienna State Opera. Ozawa was the first Japanese conductor to gain recognition in the West. Interested in performing unfamiliar works, he is noted for the breadth of his repertoire and the clarity, sensitivity, and precision of his technique.

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Post time 7-4-2006 03:01 PM | Show all posts
suka gaya dia, tergelak everytime i see him conducting on the stage, and his funny hairstyle

        

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Post time 14-4-2006 04:27 PM | Show all posts
suka jugak and my all time favorite is habanera french version.

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Post time 14-4-2006 05:20 PM | Show all posts

Reply #27 anginutara's post

is it by Bizet?
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Post time 20-4-2008 12:30 AM | Show all posts

Reply #28 liesl's post

Edited by seribulan at 27-2-2019 01:07 PM



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Post time 26-4-2008 04:38 AM | Show all posts
aku suka piazzola - oblivion, cello drp julian lloyd webber, 1st time dengar kat classic fm aku terus beli cd, bila dah beli cd tu rupanya byk lagi yg bess

yoyoma pun ok, aku beli cd dia semata2 nak dgr piazzola's libertango

aku ada beberapa cd classical music, works from tchaikovsky, hendel, elgar, sibelius
cd lagu setakat ni andrea bocelli, tapi aku suka jugak caruso drp pavarotti

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Post time 16-5-2008 10:35 AM | Show all posts
tak perasan ada post pasal classical music.
i mmg suke la sgt2 lagu2 mcm ni. everytime balik mesia sure pegi MPO nyer. sorang ke berdua ke, tak kira.
tapi sgt syok...
i have all vanessa mae album. tgh kumpul tchaikovsky gak. i also liked plays/theater, mcm Phantom of the Opera. last year tgk kat Melbourne! best....
i like new age music. il divo, patrizio buanne...yg choral songs sume. i never thought that i would like them tapi mmg best!

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Post time 6-4-2009 08:52 PM | Show all posts
  hehehe.. salam pada peminat classical.. thread ni cam lama dah.. tapi malas nak bukak baru.. so, sambung je ler... kur minat gak lagu classic nie pasal irama dia tenang jer... contoh cam lagu canon in D by Pachelbel, pastu mozart... layan yg mana sedap je ler...  tapi ari tu cari lagu classic satu nie.. tak tau sapa main...lastly ari tu ade kuar utk background music iklan desperate housewive..kat AXN ke 8tv.. cari jugak lagu tu.. tapi x dapat lagi.. so, sesapa yg tau .. mintak tolong... tenkiu...

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Post time 14-2-2019 06:19 PM | Show all posts
Muzik klasik ni aku dngar ikut mood. Bukan avid listener, hanya sekadar sorng manusia nak menghayati karya manusia zaman dulu. Mostly yang aku dgar mainstream pieces yang kebanyakannya ramai orang tahu.

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Post time 27-2-2019 02:08 PM | Show all posts
@ipes2 your kind of music...
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Post time 28-2-2019 07:56 AM | Show all posts
seribulan replied at 27-2-2019 02:08 PM
@ipes2 your kind of music...

ya, masa kecik takde toys
utk elakkan sy dari nangis masa dia masak, mak bawak turun radio kat lantai dan bukak channel combo tentera ke, orkes rtm ke etc.. depa mainkan classical musics la kebanyankannya. now bila dah ada duit sendiri, sy pegi la ke several orchestra halls kat prague, berlin, several in rome, several in dublin dan several in london utk dengar. eh kat mesia pon sy pi 2 tempat; kat petronas tower tu ok gak. alhamdulillah Allah beri sy minat pada benda2 lembut dan tidak kasar

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Post time 28-2-2019 07:59 AM | Show all posts
ipes2 replied at 28-2-2019 06:56 AM
ya, masa kecik takde toys
utk elakkan sy dari nangis masa dia masak, mak bawak turun radio kat la ...

Namakan muzik-muzik tu bila lapang ye
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Post time 28-2-2019 11:17 AM | Show all posts
Edited by seribulan at 28-2-2019 10:26 AM

Classical

Welcome to the finest collection of classical music online, featuring history’s most important works as brought to life by today’s finest performers.

https://www.accuradio.com/classical/






The 15 most famous tunes in classical music

26 September 2018, 11:23 | Updated: 28 November 2018, 16:52

Classical Music

https://www.classicfm.com/discov ... ssical-music-tunes/

Clockwise from top left: Turandot (Puccini), Pavarotti, Mozart, Torvill and Dean dance to Ravel's Boléro, Rossini. Picture: Getty Images

By Sofia Rizzi

Here are some of the world's most famous classical music melodies and everything you need to know about them.

There's nothing more annoying than humming a tune but not knowing what it's called or where it's from. Fear not – here are some of the most famous tunes from the history of music, complete with all the background information you need.

And if you want to hear more famous classical tunes, why not order a copy of our new album, The Classics You Know?

1.    Mozart – Eine kleine Nachtmusik

    The official name of this piece is the Serenade No. 13 for strings in G major, and it was composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in 1787. Mozart himself gave the piece its nickname, when he jotted this name down in the log book he kept detailing all the music he wrote.

    The music has been used in Charlie's Angels – Full Throttle, Alien, Ace Ventura and There's Something About Mary, as well as in countless TV programmes and adverts. It also featured prominently in the film Amadeus about the composer himself.


2. Beethoven – Für Elise

    This piece was never published during Beethoven’s lifetime and it wasn't even discovered until forty years after his death.

    As a result, no one’s quite sure who the Elise of the title was… and some musicologists even think the title might have been copied incorrectly and it was originally called ‘Für Therese’.

    But whoever the lucky recipient of this piece was, we can all agree that it’s one of the most charming pieces for piano ever written.

    Due to the music’s simple yet catchy melody, there have been countless reinterpretations of the piece including a cubist rendition and a jazzy cover.

3.  Puccini – 'O mio babbino caro' from Gianni Schicchi


    There might be uncontacted tribes in the Amazon who haven't heard this piece, but there can't be many other people in the world who wouldn't recognise this famous aria by Puccini.

    It comes from his opera Gianni Schicchi, a one-act opera all about the lengths one family will go to to make sure they inherit money from an elderly relative. An unlikely source for a melody that has become famous as one of the most romantic ever writtten…

    ‘O mio babbino caro’ is performed by young Lauretta, who is pleading with her father to allow her to marry Rinuccio, the man she loves. And it’s fame has far outstripped that of the opera.

    It features on the soundtracks for Downton Abbey, Captain Correlli’s Mandolin, A Room with a View, and the list goes on.

4. J.S. Bach – Toccata and Fugue in D minor

    This piece by Bach might not have the catchiest title, but we guarantee you'll know the famous opening.

    It has become associated with scary moments in horror films, perhaps because it famously made an appearance in the opening credits of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931).

5. Beethoven – Symphony No.5 in C minor

    This symphony by Beethoven opens with perhaps the four most famous chords of all time – the famous “da da da duuum”. Some critics have suggested that this opening represents the sound of Fate knocking at the door.

    Who knows if that's what Beethoven had in mind – but what's beyond a shadow of a doubt is that this piece has come so famous it's even featured in pop songs.

6.Vivaldi – The Four Seasons

    The Four Seasons is actually a group of four violin concertos by Antonio Vivaldi. Each gives a musical expression to a season of the year – listen out for the chattering teeth in Winter, the dramatic storm in summer, and the arrival of the hunt in autumn.

    All four of the concertos have become world famous. In fact, you may well have even heard this piece being used as a ringtone!

7. Bizet – ‘Carmen’

    Bizet's opera Carmen from 1875 is jam-packed with catchy tunes – from the 'Toreador's Song' to the 'Habanera' and the aria 'L'amour est un oiseau rebelle' to the Overture itself.

    Bizet's music has appeared most recently in the Pixar film Up. Sesame Street also did a pretty epic cover, not to forget Tom and Jerry's homage.

    What many might not know is that Carmen was a pretty groundbreaking opera in the 19th century. Bizet was seen as quite the rebel for having set his music to such a risqué plot. But the opera has gone on to become one of the most successful ever written.

8. Johann Strauss II – The Blue Danube

    The Blue Danube is the commonly used name for Johann Strauss II's waltz By the Beautiful Blue Danube. The Viennese connections with this song has made it almost an unofficial national anthem for Austria. However, film lovers might recognise it from Stanley Kubrick’s epic film 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), where it's used in the stunning opening sequence.

9.  Ravel – Boléro

    This tune was made famous when it was used by Torvill and Dean for their gold-medal-winning 1984 Olympic performance.

    Ravel’s music was actually originally composed as a ballet for the Russian dance Ida Rubinstein, so its rise to 20th-century fame through Torvill and Dean’s ice skating routine isn’t far from what the composer intended!

10.    Delibes – ‘Flower Duet’ from Lakmé

    The ‘Flower Duet’ is from Léo Delibes’ opera Lakmé and the composer is a bit of a one-hit wonder. But that one hit has become a super hit – this duet is now one of the most famous ever written. It is traditionally sung by a soprano and mezzo-soprano but its rise to fame has resulted in many different interpretations of the song.

    This is by far the most famous section of the opera, and the duet might be best known as the soundtrack to a very memorable British Airways advert.

11. Grieg – ‘In the Hall of the Mountain King’ from Peer Gynt Suite

    Grieg’s Peer Gynt Suite was originally written as incidental music for a production of Ibsen's play Peer Gynt. But he later turned his music into two suites, which have become some of his best known work.

    This movement is particularly famous because of its incredibly catchy main theme. Modern pop and rock bands including Electric Light Orchestra, The Who and Savatage have used the melody in their music, and it has also been used for many years by the British theme park Alton Towers as a sort of theme tune, appearing in their adverts and on their YouTube videos.

12. Mozart – Overture from The Marriage of Figaro

    The melodies in this opera overture have been used time and time again in films, TV shows, adverts and even pop music. In the 1971 film Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory you’ll hear Willy Wonka opening the doors to his chocolate factory by playing the music from this overture on a miniature piano.

    The Marriage of Figaro tells the story of Figaro and Susanna, who work for the Count and Countess Almaviva, and whose plans to get married hit one or two obstacles along the way… It is one of the most frequently performed operas of all time.

13. Puccini – 'Nessun Dorma' from Turandot

    Puccini's opera aria Nessun Dorma was brought to a global audience when it was used as the anthem for the 1990 World Cup in Italy, in a recording by the legendary tenor Luciano Pavarotti.

    It actually comes from Puccini's final opera Turandot, which was left unfinished when he died. It tells the story of the brutal princess Turandot and her murderous reign.

    Today, the piece has become a classic in the world of TV talent shows. Paul Potts, who won the first series of Britain's Got Talent, made this his calling-card aria

14. Prokofiev – 'Dance of the Knights' from Romeo and Juliet

    You may well recognise this if you're a fan of The Apprentice… The television series chose this section from Prokofiev's Romeo and Juliet as its theme music.

    The ballet tells the tragic story of Shakespeare's star-crossed lovers and the war waged between the rival families, the Montagues and the Capulets. So it's no surprise that this centrepiece of the ballet is one of the most dramatic pieces of music ever written. Nor that the producers of The Apprentice wanted some of that drama for their theme music.

15. Rossini – Overture from 'William Tell'

    The finale of this overture is instantly recognisable for its galloping rhythm and trumpet solos. It reached an international audience when it was used as the theme music for The Lone Ranger films and television and radio shows.

    But the music has since become almost a cliché as the soundtrack for car chases and zany antics. And it's also featured in countless ads

    Rossini's opera doesn't actually have any other well-known melodies. And this section of the overture, called The March of the Swiss Soldiers, doesn't even make another appearance in the five-hour long opera.

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Post time 5-3-2019 03:05 AM | Show all posts
seribulan replied at 28-2-2019 07:59 AM
Namakan muzik-muzik tu bila lapang ye

alah yg basic2 je
canon
fur elise
valkyrie
some mozarts
some bachs
some marching musics
simple2 je
tapi ia membentuk minat sy sbb sy dgr masa kecik

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Post time 6-3-2019 12:29 PM | Show all posts
ipes2 replied at 5-3-2019 02:05 AM
alah yg basic2 je
canon
fur elise


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Post time 8-3-2020 01:21 AM | Show all posts
I also like calssical music! Thanks!
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