Posted on 06/12/2015 6:00:06 PM PDT by AZamericonnie
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Ruddigore is not performed as often as the other G & S operas. It’s a little harder to stage because of special effects, but it is a lot of fun!
“God Bless America” reminds me of that one...or rather, that one reminds me of “God Bless America”.
Chopin came first! :-)
Yes...I have a rehearsal today, a service tomorrow, and “Leavin’ on a Jet Plane” Monday.
The very definition of my soul, I wanted to be this guy, I dressed like this guy.
The world is a lesser place without this guy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1RVZ15JeBSM
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They didn’t call him “The March King” because he was fairly good.
One tends to think of Beethovens approach to C minor being one of struggle, and this is no exception. It opens in 4/4 with an "allegro con brio, one of his favorite fast markings. The manly struggle of C minor yields to E-flat for the second subject. For the first time, Lou doesnt have repeat marks for the exposition, and he slides right into development, which goes through no fewer than nine keys before the recap! The second subject in recapitulation appears in C Major as expected, but a long coda brings it all back to C minor with a small excursion into D-flat.
Up until now, Lou has written slow movements with heartfelt beauty, but he hasnt reached the stage where a Beethoven slow movement is a conversation with God. Now, for the first time, he conducts one of those conversations with the Divine. This movement is in A-flat, marked adagio cantabile, but with a 2/2 signature to keep it from dragging. Your screen may get blurry as this movement progresses. The central panel turns to A-flat minor (7 flats)! Near the end he alternates between pizzicato (plucked strings, not a small pizza) and arco (bowed strings, not a brand of gasoline).
In third position is a scherzo, only the second time a Beethoven violin sonata is in a four movement format. This is a simple allegro in 3/4 and C Major. The violin part sounds at times like a buzzing bee. In the second part of the middle section, Lou steals a Russian folk melody for the first, but not the last, time.
The finale is an allegro in 2/2 that returns to C minor. This is a rondo, so well be coming back to the first theme a lot. Yes, thats a fugato as one episode! He wraps it up with a bravura presto coda.
This video features Anne-Sophie Mutter and Lambert Orkis.
Next week its another violin sonata and some variations for piano, violin and cello.
I LOVE Cm! A l;ot of my piano music (but not guitar music) is in Cm. I love the way the keys are lined up in Cm, which seem to faciltate a seamless transition to Eb, Ab, Bb, or even Fm.
(I know this is possible in every key, but there is something about Cm that makes composition in that key very easy and fun for me.)
Beethoven practically slapped a copyright on C minor.
Thank goodness that is not an option!
You can’t copyright a chord progression or a title either.
However, it is the height of HUBRIS to title a song something like “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” or “Someone to Watch over me” when sublime songs with those titles already exist! LOL!
This shows Freds gift for writing songs without words. You can almost imagine an aria in French to this melody. It even ends with a kind of recitative before the resolution.
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