The smiles are priceless!
You can tell everyone in the orchestra is having a blast playing such a cheerful non-serious piece. Bravo!
The smiles are priceless!
Andre Rieu was having lots of fun playing that song on his violin, and he was engaging everyone else.The smiles are priceless!
You can tell everyone in the orchestra is having a blast playing such a cheerful non-serious piece. Bravo!
Mine, too! She played Suzuki violin from the age of 3 for 9 years total. The failure, she was never taught to read music.Many moons ago my daughter would have been one of the little cherubs playing violin.
Mine, too! She played Suzuki violin from the age of 3 for 9 years total. The failure, she was never taught to read music.
I am not all that familiar with his music.I like Liszt.
I'm awful at that too. I can at times say, "This sounds like So-n-so." But I very seldom remember the names of the pieces. For me it's characters. Tchaikovsky is passionate. Beethoven elegant. Paganini romantic. Bach easy-going. Etc. As far as the names of the pieces, if they were "The Cow on the Hill" or "Children Laughing" or something like that, I might be able to remember. As they are . . . . f'get abou' it.I am not all that familiar with his music.
For a long time I listened to Christian music on my CD player in my car. Then a CD got stuck in there. Since then, almost a year now, I have been listening to Colorado Public Radio Classical Music. It is great! They play lots of different composers and also do some talking about them, teaching. I've heard lots of classical music over the years and never knew who the composer was or the name of the music. I am hearing and learning, but if I don't write it down, I lose it again. It is best for me to hang onto anything by listening to it on repeat here and there for a while.
There is so much of it that has been used in films, commercials, cartoons, and other places. It is familiar to the ear, but not so easy to always identify the name of the piece or the composer.I'm pretty good at remembering the composer, but I couldn't tell you the name of the piece, unless it is a "greatest hit" like Beethoven's Fifth or Eine Kleine Nachtmusik. I really do like most classical music. I can be very soothing.
Our classical station played this piece of music and talked about the composer today. I recognized this piece immediately, but had never heard of the composer or knew the name of the piece. Anyone who has watched a few movies will recognize it.
Trois Gymnopédies: Première Gymnopédie · Daniel Varsano · Erik Satie
I have known this piece since 1968. Those of us that were hippies back in the 60's will remember the rock group Blood Sweat and Tears. IMHO they were really the first rock group that included horns and other instruments before Chicago did it, but I digress.
BST included this piece on their second album which won a Grammy for album of the year. Here is a link. I think many will remember these songs.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood,_Sweat_&_Tears_(Blood,_Sweat_&_Tears_album)
It's Halloween, right? This is the penultimate Halloween piece.
And now for something completely different....
You don't need dozens of expensive instruments, just some wine glasses :
(relax, it's only 2-1/2 minutes)
After the concert, we had some conversations about many aspects of being a musician in a symphony. Daughter wondered how much a musician who plays in one makes? It is all over the map, but the lower end is around $46,000. A concert master can make $500,00 a year.Being a violinist that was instructed by a concert master in a symphony I do like many of the works of Camille Saint Saens. His violin solos are out of this world. I'll never have the skill to play any of his works but I sure enjoy listening to them.
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