Music Banter

Music Banter (https://www.musicbanter.com/)
-   Classical (https://www.musicbanter.com/classical/)
-   -   Works that got you into classical? (https://www.musicbanter.com/classical/62236-works-got-you-into-classical.html)

ando here 02-22-2021 06:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nuclear Banana (Post 2163473)
Hi this is my first post. I was 15 yrs old & was listening to the local University radio station. They played Beethovens Symphony#3 played by The Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra. Before that moment I had been an 80's metalhead kid. I realized instantly that Beethoven was the most amazing thing I had ever heard. I played It LOUD through my headphones. Then I heard Bach's Brandenburg Concerto #2 on the same radio station. I had always been told that classical music was boring and stodgy and only for really really old people for some reason. I realized I had been lied to. The tone of the orchestra, the complex musical structures that don't rely at all on drumsets or guitars , but was incredibly powerful in its own way. The way that classical music has musical architecture and beauty that you don't get even close to being able to express in metal or rock music. I was so enamored with it I decided that I was going to teach myself how to compose orchestral music. And fast forward 30 years, I'm still teaching myself.

:) Nice. Thanks.

MasterRaro 02-22-2022 02:39 PM

For me it was listening to Horowitz, mainly Horowitz playing Chopin. The 1st Ballade.... that piece and his sublime recording of it was the point of no return for me.

Melon 06-06-2022 05:32 AM

Wagner's Parsifal and Handel's Water Music and Music for the Royal Fireworks.

music_collector 06-06-2022 07:16 AM

Movie scores got me into classical music. That makes up the bulk of the classical I listen to these days. The first score I heard was likely Star Wars. I'll bet John Williams got a LOT of people interested in classical music.

I never thought I'd like French horn, until I heard it in First Blood. The theme fits the movie like a glove.

Ayn Marx 06-12-2022 05:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nuclear Banana (Post 2163473)
Hi this is my first post. I was 15 yrs old & was listening to the local University radio station. They played Beethovens Symphony#3 played by The Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra. Before that moment I had been an 80's metalhead kid. I realized instantly that Beethoven was the most amazing thing I had ever heard. I played It LOUD through my headphones. Then I heard Bach's Brandenburg Concerto #2 on the same radio station. I had always been told that classical music was boring and stodgy and only for really really old people for some reason. I realized I had been lied to. The tone of the orchestra, the complex musical structures that don't rely at all on drumsets or guitars , but was incredibly powerful in its own way. The way that classical music has musical architecture and beauty that you don't get even close to being able to express in metal or rock music. I was so enamored with it I decided that I was going to teach myself how to compose orchestral music. And fast forward 30 years, I'm still teaching myself.

Apart from movie scores I heard nothing but classical music until my early teens.
When the Blues finally knocked me sideways I came to the conclusion my parents had lied to me. Took many more decades to get into some metal. When I finally realised a lot of metal was screaming about the insane world our species has created I got it. But hey, lets face it, some classical music is dull as dishwater written primarily to be ‘polite & inoffensive’.

Vetiver 07-09-2022 08:30 AM

A recording by Alexander Scriabin, which I luckily recorded onto VHS, while watching an art documentary on TV. I then transferred the sound onto cassette, but didn't know what the hell it was or who composed it (the documentary didn't credit the music at the end).

For over 25 years, I had the recording on cassette and wasn't any nearer to solving the mystery. Then, a few years ago, I heard the same piece on a classical radio show. After taking down all the details, I went to a P2P site and downloaded every version of that piece. 50 versions, to be exact.

Using purely memory and an ear for detail, I managed to whittle the results down to 5 or 6 (also discarding the recordings made after the year I watched the documentary greatly helped). I then compared the remaining versions to the cassette recording (that had since been converted to MiniDisc). Within moments, I knew which version it was and confirmed this by closely comparing every nuance of the two recordings.

Piano Sonata No. 2 In G Sharp Minor, Opus 19 'Sonata Fantasy' - Andante. I'm a big fan of dreamy, peaceful piano music from the likes of Debussy and Satie, so I'm glad I finally solved the mystery.

Strangely enough, after first hearing the piece on the radio, the same radio station started playing it a few more times. I had been listening to Radio 3 for years and, up until that point, had never heard it being played ever. Go figure...

SoloYH 09-22-2022 12:56 AM

Waltz 64/2 Chopin
Liebestraum 3 Liszt
La Campanella Liszt
Moment Musicaux 4 Rachmaninoff

Akixia 03-08-2023 07:33 AM

Beethoven's symphony no.5

kirrwed 04-01-2023 11:30 PM

CD collection of classicals

Danzaburou 04-02-2023 02:55 AM

Beethoven's Der Sturm

to this day I think it's the best piano sonata out there, especially the third movement <3


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 03:50 PM.


© 2003-2024 Advameg, Inc.