Tchaikovsky and the Composing Circles
or Influential People: Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky By now, we’ve gone through enough of the history of the previous pieces and composers that we kind of already have an understanding of the climate in which the rest of the composers … Continue reading Tchaikovsky and the Composing Circles
Concert Review: NSO- A Fantastic Symphony
So… the Vienna Philharmonic is a tough act to follow. But I do love our local ensemble, and even though our maestro 呂紹嘉 wasn’t with us, I was still looking forward to the concert. I also have a confession: I … Continue reading Concert Review: NSO- A Fantastic Symphony
Concert Review: Vienna Philharmonic in Taipei- Part 2
The actual music portion. Part one yesterday I suppose was more like a long preface or lead-in to the two concerts that will go down in my books as the most anticipated things I’ve ever attended. But yesterday, all we talked … Continue reading Concert Review: Vienna Philharmonic in Taipei- Part 2
Rimsky-Korsakov Symphony no. 1 in Em, op. 1
performed by the Gothenburg Symphony Ochestra under Neeme Järvi or as below by the Moscow Radio Symphony Orchestra under Boris Khaikin mvt. 2 mvt. 3 mvt. 4 Opus one! If you read Tuesday’s Wikipedia-heavy article about Rimsky-Korsakov, you’ll hopefully remember … Continue reading Rimsky-Korsakov Symphony no. 1 in Em, op. 1
Concert Review: Vienna Philharmonic in Taipei- Part 1
So much to say, and yet so little that needs saying. It’s the Vienna Philharmonic. We have been extremely fortunate lately here in Taipei to have some really wonderful ensembles lined up. As you may have read, I saw the … Continue reading Concert Review: Vienna Philharmonic in Taipei- Part 1
Influential People: Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
Ilya Repin’s work is amazing; he also painted RK. From Wikipedia So this is perhaps the first name of the bunch that people might recognize. The only thing of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov which we have discussed so far is his piano … Continue reading Influential People: Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
Concert Review: NSO- An Evening of Piano Concertos
I look here and there for good ‘beginner’ concerts, evenings with programs that would be really good for someone whose never set foot in a concert hall before. In thinking about that, I wrote yesterday’s post about what for me … Continue reading Concert Review: NSO- An Evening of Piano Concertos
Concerts for Newcomers
This article is in preparation for a concert I’ll be attending tomorrow and some things I got to thinking about while preparing to think about writing the article about said concert that’ll be posted in the next few days. Anyway, … Continue reading Concerts for Newcomers
Mily Balakirev: Symphony no. 1 in C major,
performed (again) by the Russian State Symphony Orchestra under Igor Golovschin I have to say with this symphony that, while I don’t care much for the man who wrote it (after preparing this week’s article on him), of the first … Continue reading Mily Balakirev: Symphony no. 1 in C major,
Influential People: Mily Balakirev
The younger, less round Balakirev In talking about Russian music, even people who don’t listen to classical music might be able to name Rachmaninoff, Tchaikovsky, even Prokofiev or Shostakovich, and we will surely get to them all. But this week, … Continue reading Influential People: Mily Balakirev
Concert Review: NSO: A ‘Great’ Symphony
I’m going to be saying this a lot this season, but this is a concert I’ve been looking forward to for months. The last concert I attended at our National Concert Hall was on May 28, over four months ago. … Continue reading Concert Review: NSO: A ‘Great’ Symphony
Welcome to the new Fugue for Thought!
I’m excited to be doing this! This past week marked two years that I’ve been writing this thing, and I’d been tossing around the idea of moving to WordPress and trying to become one of those serious blogger/writer people for … Continue reading Welcome to the new Fugue for Thought!
Anton Rubinstein: Symphony No. 2, ‘Ocean’
The Russian Symphony Part 1
So I started writing about the piece we will talk about today, and then I realized I’d listened to and wrote about the wrong symphony.
The second symphony from this Russian composer doesn’t feel terribly Russian or Symphonic. Perhaps in a world before Debussy’s La Mer, this piece would feel less like a large-scale tone poem, something it seemed to lean toward as the composer worked on the piece later.
Despite Liszt’s lack of willingness to give aid to the young, poor Rubinstein, the symphony bears a dedication to Liszt. Its first performance was on March 6, 1852, and the American Symphony program notes state:
… it won the favor of audiences with its magnificent trumpet calls, swirling melodies, and solid structure. The ocean, according to Rubinstein, is depicted in the contrasts between the agitated and peaceful passages, the deep lyricism of the second movement, and the heroic chorale at the end of the fourth movement, when man’s spirit gains domination over the power of the ocean.
Continue reading “Anton Rubinstein: Symphony No. 2, ‘Ocean’”
Influential People: Anton Rubinstein
I started including this information in tomorrow’s music post, but it got a little long, so I decided I’d make it a separate thing ahead of the discussion of the first work in our Russian symphony series.
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| Rubinstein on the podium as portrayed by Ilya Repin. |
Concert Review: Ensemble Intercontemporain
I’m telling you, we’re getting great stuff programmed here in Taipei. My knowledge of this concert goes back some time, to this day, actually, the day of a friend’s graduation recital (well, composition). Turns out the lady sitting behind me … Continue reading Concert Review: Ensemble Intercontemporain
The Russian Symphony: A Series
The Russian Coat of Arms from around the time of the earliest of the symphonies we’ll be talking about We’ve been doing lots of German stuff this year. Lots. If you think of music like you think of language families … Continue reading The Russian Symphony: A Series
The Sacredness of the Concert Hall
I have read two recent articles about trends (or just culture) in the concert hall and what’s acceptable, what’s considered “polite,” or expected or appropriate, for either newcomers or the long-time patrons, and I have thoughts. As a regular concertgoer … Continue reading The Sacredness of the Concert Hall
Liszt: Piano Sonata in B minor, S. 178
performed by Martha Argerich The article from a few days ago about Liszt was to try to give a few of the highlights that I personally enjoyed about Liszt’s life. This virtuoso performer and composer is likely more known through … Continue reading Liszt: Piano Sonata in B minor, S. 178
Concert Review: Dance with Sabine Meyer (TSO)
And they begin. This was the first concert of the Taipei Symphony season I’ve been able to attend, and really the first concert of the season, but it wasn’t supposed to be. The TSO’s season opener back at the end … Continue reading Concert Review: Dance with Sabine Meyer (TSO)
Influential People: Franz Liszt
Franz Liszt: where does one begin? Handsome chap, too Most people know him as the frighteningly virtuosic virtuoso pianist born in 1811, the year after Chopin and Schumann, he himself being one of the most influential performers/composers of the 19th … Continue reading Influential People: Franz Liszt
Charles-Valentin Alkan: Souvenirs: Trois Morceaux dans le genre pathétique, op. 15
…unlike Wagner, Alkan did not seek to refashion the world through opera; nor, like Berlioz, to dazzle the crowds by putting orchestral music at the service of literary expression; nor even, as with Chopin or Liszt, to extend the field … Continue reading Charles-Valentin Alkan: Souvenirs: Trois Morceaux dans le genre pathétique, op. 15
