Posted on 07/06/2008 12:35:45 PM PDT by HoosierHawk
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Classical Music presented on the first Sunday of every month.
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Keyword: firstsundaymusic
And a personal fav:
Thanks to mylife for the classical music suggestions.
Thanks for the ping!
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Thanks,
sitetest
MUSIC *** |
Nice graphic! I’m glad you enjoy.
;o)
One of my favorites Hawk!
Watermusic rocks.
I am watching PBS doing the 4th celebration in DC It is sooooo @#$kin lame. Huey Lewis and whats this?... L00ks like George Clooney singing woody Guthrie?
Thanks for some real music.
Happy Independence day~!
I won’t deny that Boulez had a genuine gift for music from the Baroque period. But you won’t understand music from that period unless you hear it on period instruments with genuine Baroque performance practice. Travor Pinnock and the English Concert have recordings far superior to Boulez for those Handel pieces.
[Somehow I thought that, in view of the time of the year, you might have selected the 1812 overture.]
Just lovely HH & much appreciated!
Diggin’ the “Dropped A Bomb On Me”!:)
I just looked at the initial selection of yours and I have to admit that I was out last night watching the Indianapolis Orchestra put on the 1812 Overture complete with 4 cannon from a National Guard detachment from Evansville [I think they were 155s] and the most spectacular firework display that I have ever seen. I'm still somewhat in awe of the whole thing.
Thanks, I’m glad you are enjoying the music.
Dance.... life is just a party...
;)
I'd point you to a previous thread, but I've lost all my music. I have to upload all of it again and that will take some time.
In anticipation of Napoleon's advance into Moscow, Russian troops had taken food, provisions, and a large segment of the population and then fled Moscow to St. Petersburg.
There remains some disagreement on whether the retreating Russian troops had also set fires to further destroy any remaining food or supplies. The fires eventually burned Moscow to the ground leaving Napoleon's already starving Grande Armée in even more desperate straits.
The other theory says that Napoleon's Grande Armée upon finding no surrendering Russian troops, and no expected victor's provisions from what Napoleon viewed at the time as a defeated Russian army; and in an attempt to stay warm, may have started wood-burning fires themselves which then unfortunately spread and burned Moscow to the ground.
Russian Tsar Alexander I signed a manifesto in December 1812 stating that he intended to build a Cathedral thanking God for saving Russia from Napoleon's Grande Armée and as a memorial to the sacrifices of the Russian people.
The Tsar commissioned the building of the beautiful and incredibly ornate Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in Moscow but it would undergo a change in the building site; some architectural plan changes, implemented by one or two new Tsars before the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour would host the debut of Tschaikovsky's 1812 Overture in 1882.
As the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour was finally nearing completion, a friend of Tschaikovsky's had suggested that he compose something which would commemorate the 1812 Russian victory over Napoleon's Grande Armée; commemorate and be performed in celebration of the completion of the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour; commemorate the 25th anniversary of the coronation of Tsar Alexander II in 1881 [Note: After many failed assassination attempts, Tsar Alexander II was assassinated March 13, 1881] as well as coinciding with the beginning of the 1882 Moscow Arts and Industry Exhibition.
Tchaikovsky began the project on October 12, 1880 and completed the 1812 Overture six weeks later.
That’s funny. I didn’t realize how much of the PDQ Bach videos are out there.
Great post! Thanks!
All wonderful music, thank you. I also heartily recommend Handel’s Coronation Anthems (especially enjoy Zadok the Priest)
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