![]() ![]() The podcasts make me want to go listen again, and listen more broadly and deeply - perhaps the best testament to their value. The combination of lightly analytical talk-throughs, background personal and historical context, and a working professional conductor's perspective on the field is engaging, informative, and energizing. ![]() I love his attention to "golden moments" - a few magical bars of transition that one might easily overlook in less focused listening. 9, Part 1 und 162 Episoden von Sticky Notes: The Classical Music Podcast an Anmeldung oder Installation nicht notwendig. Click on three dotes to delete or change the color of a particular note. Höre dir kostenlos Beethoven Symphony No. ![]() Double-click on the existing note to edit it. Select the Notes option given in the menu on the left side. He gives you the confidence to tackle what might otherwise be very intimidating major works, starting from an experiential listener's point of view-very much my own philosophy in listening to songs as well. Sign in to the Sticky Notes app with your Microsoft account. He's that perfect combination of enthusiastic friend who is also a deeply knowledgeable nerd. 6, Part 1 by Sticky Notes: The Classical Music Podcast instantly on your tablet, phone or browser - no downloads needed. It has notorious performance problems such as the order of the middle. This music has the power to transform us, to move us, to anger us, to frighten us, to fill us with joy- and all those things simultaneously, within one piece. He repeatedly reminds us that 'Classical Music is NOT supposed to be relaxing'. Joshua's podcast has provided an ideal starting point. Sticky Notes: The Classical Music Podcast 163 Episodes 39 minutes How Musical Revolutions Were Created, Part 1 - w/Jan Swafford Jan Swafford was such a fantastic guest last time that I thought we had to have him back on. Mahler's 6th Symphony is one of his most complex and ambitious pieces, though it retains a firmly classical structure throughout. I have been listening to Joshua Weilerstein's Sticky Notes podcast. But I'm just kicking off a semester sabbatical to work on my own compositions, and decided I wanted to start off with a lot of listening and learning. As Dvorak said, he would try to make this symphony ”different from the other symphonies, with individual thoughts worked out in a new way.” So today on the show we’re going to talk about how this symphony is different from other symphonies, and also how Dvorak constructs his chains of melodies that add up to the joyful whole of this piece, though tinged with the melancholy that is almost always present with Dvorak.I teach songwriting at the college level, so I am well informed about music generally, but am still an enthusiastic beginner when it comes to the classical repertoire. It is a piece full of invention and of the scintillating energy of trying out new ideas. Today, I’m going to take a piece that is, on its surface, quite simple, and I’m going to show you how this symphony is not quite as simple as it seems. Very often on this show I try to take pieces that are quite complicated and break them down for you to show you how to follow their twists and turns despite their complexities. Sticky Notes: The Classical Music Podcast is a English-speaking podcast specialized in the field of classical music and opera and selected by soclassiq. It is, on its surface, an uncomplicated piece, bursting at the seams with melody after melody after melody, almost mirroring one of Brahms’ greatest one-liners, where he referred to his summer country home as a place where melodies were so heavily present thatt one had to be careful to avoid tripping on them! The overriding characteristic of this 8th symphony is joy, from its childlike key of G Major, to its raucous use of folk music, and even its smiling through tears slow movement. Sticky Notes is a classical music podcast for everyone, whether you are just getting interested in classical music for the first time, or if youve been. Dvorak’s gift for writing the most gorgeous of melodies is on full display in his 8th symphony, a piece that has been charming listeners ever since its very first performances. These are all words that I found while researching Dvorak’s 8th symphony. ![]()
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