What's your favorite piece of classical music?

ManBearPig

Diamond Member
Sep 5, 2000
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Could be piano, violin, etc...any of that old shit. Nothing new. Curious to see what you guys come up with. I'll have to think of some later, but I like Vivaldi a lot. I like all the usual dudes too...Bach, Beethoven, etc.

I know I probably didn't word the title right, but I'm using 'classical' for lack of a better term.
 

Joseph F

Diamond Member
Jul 12, 2010
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I can't make up my mind between Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, (see sig) and Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake.
 

Crono

Lifer
Aug 8, 2001
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Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker suite, Waltz of the Flowers if I have to choose a specific piece.

Sent from my mwp6985 using Board Express
 

dr150

Diamond Member
Sep 18, 2003
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Wrong forum. Too many noobs on this subject.

Head on over to some old-timer symphony forum for some good insights.
 

brainhulk

Diamond Member
Sep 14, 2007
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that song from shawshank redemption they plaid over the loudspeakers "Le nozze di Figaro (The Marriage of Figaro)"

oh well i guess it's not really classical music. hehe
 

chubbyfatazn

Golden Member
Oct 14, 2006
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I'm very partial to these as I've played them all:

Chopin Etude 10 No. 4
Beethoven - Sonata #23, 1st and 3rd Movements
Beethoven - Sonata #21, 1st and 3rd Movements

If I had to pick one, it'd be the Appassionata 3rd movement. The coda is absolutely brilliant, it's also incredibly fun to play.
 
May 11, 2008
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There is so much what i like.

But this : Moonlight sonata from Beethoven captures me every time. Written in 1801.
When listening to it with an open mind, you can really feel all emotional expressions put into it. It is as someone speaks to you without using words.
Telling you a story. At least that is how it seems to me.

I do not know if this is really the story behind it.
But it could fit very well with the music.
One evening Ludwing van Beethoven and a friend were taking a walk. As they were passing through a narrow, dark street, they heard music coming from a little house.

“Hush” Beethoven said. “it is from one of my most beautiful pieces.”

Suddenly a voice said, “I cannot play anymore- it is so beauty! How I wish I could hear that piece played by someone who could do justice to it.”

Without a word, Beethoven and his friend entered the houde. It was the home of a poor shoemaker. At the piano sat a young girl.

“Pardon me,” said the great composer. “I am musician. I heard you say you wished to hear someone play the piece you have just been playing. Will you permit to play it for you?

“Thank you very much,” answered the girl, “but our piano is very old. And we have no music sheets.”

“No music sheets! How did you play, then? Asked Beethoven.

The young girl turned her face toward the great master.

Looking at her more closely, he saw that he was blind.

“I play from memory,” she said.

“where did you hear the piece that you were playning just now?

“I used to hear a lady practicing near our old home. During the summer evenings, her windows were open, and I walked to and fro outside to listen to her, “ she answered.

Beethoven seated himself at the piano. The blind girl and her brother listened with raptured to the master’s playing. At last the shoemaker came neqr and asked, “Who are you?

Beethoven made no answer. The shoemaker repeated his questions, and master smiled. He began to play the piece which the girl hads trying to play.

The listeners held their breath. When the playing stopped, they cried, “You are the master himself! You are Beethoven!”

He rose to go, but they held him back.

“Play for us once more- only once more,” they pleaded.

He seated himself again at the piano. The brilliant moonlight was shinning into the bare little room.

“I will compose a sonata to the moonlight,” he said.

He looked thoughtfully for something at the bright skies lit up by the moon and the twinkling stars. Then his fingers moved ocer the keys of the old, worn piano. In low, sad, sweet strains, he played his new piece. Finally, pushing back his chair, and turning towards the door he said, “Farewell to you.”

He paused and looked tenderly at the face blind girl.

“Yes, I will come again an give you some lessons. Farewell! I will soon come again!”

Beethoven said to his friend, “let us hurry that I may write out that sonata while I can yet remenber it!”

That was how Ludwing van Beethoven’s famous “Moonlight sonata” was composed.

Beethoven - Moonlight sonata
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Tr0otuiQuU
 
Last edited:
May 11, 2008
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Since i was curious, i looked a little further.
Another explanation about moonlight sonata :

The Moonlight Sonata was composed in the summer of 1801 in Hungary, on an estate belonging to the Brunswick family. The composition was published in 1802 and was dedicated to Beethoven’s pupil and passion, 17 years old Countess Giulietta Gucciardi.
The Sonata is one of the most popular piano sonatas from Beethoven’s creation. It is also named “The Moonlight Sonata” by poet Ludwig Rellstab who, in 1832, had this inspiration on a moon lit night on the banks of the Lucerna River. Some biographers make the connection between the unshared love the composer held for Giulietta Guicciardi and the sonorities of the first part. Even more so, this sonata was dedicated to Giulietta, the musical theme of the first part being borrowed from a German ballad as Wyzewa observed.
According to Fischer, this image has no connection with Beethoven’s intentions. He rather attributes this atmosphere to the feeling that overwhelmed the composer when he took watch at the side of a friend who prematurely left the world of the living. In one of Beethoven’s manuscripts there are several notes from Mozart’s Don Juan, notes that follow the killing of the Commander by Don Juan, and lower, this passage is rendered in C sharp minor in absolute resemblance to the first part of the sonata in C sharp minor. Analyzing and comparing, one could realize that it cannot be the case of a romantic moon lit night, but rather of a solemn funeral hymn.
 

Mr. Pedantic

Diamond Member
Feb 14, 2010
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Bach's Passacaglia & Fugue in C minor is very good. And the BWV 565 Toccata & Fugue in D minor, especially the fugue.

And the preludes and fugues in the Well-tempered Clavier, book 1.