Showing posts with label classic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label classic. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 17, 2021
WALTER CARLOS - THE WELL-TEMPERED SYNTHESIZER
Here's an album from Walter Carlos, pieces from Monteverdi, Scarlatti, Handel and J. S. Bach played with a synthesizer.....
GET IT HERE
enjoy!
WALTER CARLOS - SWITCHED ON BACH
Here's Walter Carlos' 1968 album Switched On Bach, pieces from Bach played with a synthesizer.... Funny thing, this was in the album, an article about the composer and it turns out that Walter Carlos is actually Wendy Carlos :) Stanley Kubrick liked her music so much he asked her to do the score for Clockwork Orange....
GET IT HERE
Enjoy!
Monday, May 4, 2020
ALBERT W. KETELBEY - IN A PERSIAN MARKET
Albert William Ketèlbey (/kəˈtɛlbi/; born Ketelbey; 9 August 1875 – 26 November 1959) was an English composer, conductor and pianist, best known for his short pieces of light orchestral music. He was born in Birmingham and moved to London in 1889 to study at Trinity College of Music. After a brilliant studentship he did not pursue the classical career predicted for him, becoming musical director of the Vaudeville Theatre before gaining fame as a composer of light music and as a conductor of his own works.
For many years Ketèlbey worked for a series of music publishers, including Chappell & Co and the Columbia Graphophone Company, making arrangements for smaller orchestras, a period in which he learned to write fluent and popular music. He also found great success writing music for silent films until the advent of talking films in the late 1920s.
The composer's early works in conventional classical style were well received, but it was for his light orchestral pieces that he became best known. One of his earliest works in the genre, In a Monastery Garden (1915), sold over a million copies and brought him to widespread notice; his later musical depictions of exotic scenes caught the public imagination and established his fortune. Such works as In a Persian Market (1920), In a Chinese Temple Garden (1923), and In the Mystic Land of Egypt (1931) became best-sellers in print and on records; by the late 1920s he was Britain's first millionaire composer. His celebrations of British scenes were equally popular: examples include Cockney Suite (1924) with its scenes of London life, and his ceremonial music for royal events. His works were frequently recorded during his heyday, and a substantial part of his output has been put on CD in more recent years.
Ketèlbey's popularity began to wane during the Second World War and his originality also declined; many of his post-war works were re-workings of older pieces and he increasingly found his music ignored by the BBC. In 1949 he moved to the Isle of Wight, where he spent his retirement, and he died at home in obscurity. His work has been reappraised since his death; in a 2003 poll by the BBC radio programme Your Hundred Best Tunes, Bells Across the Meadows was voted the 36th most popular tune of all time and the last night of the 2009 Proms season marked the fiftieth anniversary of Ketèlbey's death—the first time his music had been included in the festival's finale.
I guess you could call this a kind of pre-exotica music, I'm loving it....
GET IT HERE
Enjoy!
Tuesday, March 3, 2020
HECTOR ZAZOU - MADE TO MEASURE VOL. 5
Hector Zazou (July 11, 1948 – September 8, 2008)was a prolific French composer and record producer who worked with, produced, and collaborated with an international array of recording artists. I saw him live in Amsterdam with Zazou Bikaye back in '84 just after they released their incredible album Noir Et Blanc....
GET IT HERE
Enjoy!
Wednesday, November 7, 2012
JOSEPH SCHMIDT - IK HOU VAN HOLLAND / HET VISSERSMEISJE
Joseph Schmidt (March 4, 1904 – November 16, 1942) was a Bukovinian Jewish tenor and actor. He was born in Davideny (Ukrainian: Davydivka) village of Storozhynets district in the Bukovina province of Austria-Hungary, later Romania and now part of Ukraine.
He died in a German concentration camp. Here he's singing two songs in Dutch language....
http://www.mediafire.com/?p8c19x16iayu0wx
enjoy!
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