- Joined
- Sep 19, 2012
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- 45
I enjoy everyone mentioned. My favorite is Bach. Piano played by Glen Gould, flute by Rampal or Galway. I also like Telemann.
This piece, by Tomaso Albinoni, is one of my all-time favorites.
Usually known as Adagio in G Minor (Adagio in Sol minore)
Is Bohemian Rhapsody baroque pop?
Senior Lecturer in English at UCL and Queen fan Matthew Beaumont says: "The architecture of Bohemian Rhapsody - and it is an architecture - is self-consciously, ostentatiously baroque.Jun 15, 2011
The French and English tend to get ignored because of the dominance of Italy during the period and the overwhelming Genius of Bach.Like several others, I enjoy everyone that's been mentioned. I also have a great liking for some who've been - to my mind, conspicuously - overlooked, particularly Jean Philippe Rameau and Henry Purcell.
I vote for Turlough O'Carolan, Ireland's unofficial national composer. The blind Irish harpist travelled the country composing and performing during the Baroque period.
"Born in 1670 on a farm in Nobber, County Meath, at a time when Ireland was still suffering the reverberations of Oliver Cromwell’s “To Hell or Connaught” land confiscations, the family moved, first to Carrig-on-Shannon in County Leitrim, and then, in 1684, to Ballyfarnon, a village in what is now Northern Roscommon. His father, Hugh, found employment on the estate of the McDermott Roes, a leading Irish family of the old Gaelic order who, despite being Catholic, had managed to retain substantial landholding...At 18, O’Carolan was stricken with smallpox and nearly died. He survived, but the disease left him permanently blind."Turlough O’Carolan: The Irish Vivaldi | #site_title
In 1691, a poor, blind, twenty-one year old son of a blacksmith and his guide set out on a journey from a backwater estate, Alderford, near the town of Balyfarnon, County Roscommon, hoping to make a living as an itinerant harper. He seemed an unlikely figure to leave a lasting stamp on Ireland’s...www.irishamerica.com
O'Carolan's Concerto
J. S. Bach was a great fan of Buxtehude, and walked 250 miles as a young man of 20 to meet him and hear him play.This is a brilliant recording.
I visited his grave in Keadue Co. Roscommon a couple of decades ago. There’s a nice little park there; not much else.O’Carolan’s name in Irish is Toirdhealbhach Ó Cearbhalláin. Here’s an excellent article on his life and works from the National Library of Ireland: Turlough O'Carolan.
(P.S.: I’ll be in Dublin on vacation in two weeks. I’ll have to look up O’Carolan.)
I already mentioned that in an earlier post, although my memory is that it was more like 100 miles. The distance doesn’t matter; the fact that he stayed long enough to be profoundly influenced is much more important. Buxtehude’s extant sacred works have all been recorded and released in a massive 10 volume set that is a must for true fans of the middle Baroque. One can hear easily what influenced Bach.J. S. Bach was a great fan of Buxtehude, and walked 250 miles as a young man of 20 to meet him and hear him play.
If you like Locatelli, try Biber on for size. His Mystery Sonatas are all scordatura and incredibly interesting.I visited his grave in Keadue Co. Roscommon a couple of decades ago. There’s a nice little park there; not much else.
Another baroque composer I like is Pietro Locatelli. I don’t know much about him, but I have some discs of hit concerti grossi. William Boyce might be more rococo than baroque, but I really like some of his stuff, too. I think most of Boyce’s known music is choral; I don’t think much of Locatelli’s music survives at all.
As with others, I think JS Bach is in a class all his own