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- From: gmw1@namaste.cc.columbia.edu (Gabe M Wiener)
- Newsgroups: rec.music.classical,rec.music.info,news.answers,rec.answers
- Subject: FAQ: rec.music.classical
- Followup-To: rec.music.classical
- Date: 27 Mar 1994 19:20:15 GMT
- Organization: Columbia University
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- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu rec.music.classical:46107 rec.music.info:2978 news.answers:16899 rec.answers:4634
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- Archive-name: music/classical-faq
- Version: 1.9.2
-
- Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) file for rec.music.classical
- Version 1.9.2
-
- Edited and collected by Gabe Wiener (gmw1@columbia.edu)
-
- Many thanks to all the readers of rec.music.classical who have helped
- in the compilation and upkeep of this list. Comments, corrections,
- and queries regarding this file should be sent to the above address.
-
- Last modified: Jaunary 7, 1994
-
- [Ed. note: This revision, 1.9.2, brings the FAQ current with all the
- myriad suggestions that have been sent heretofore. Please note that
- often there were competing suggestions for a given recommendation,
- etc. In certain situations I have used both, in others I have picked
- one. If you made a suggestion that you don't see and it still really
- bothers you, feel free to resubmit it, and of course, keep new comments
- coming. But this version should hold us for a while. -Gabe]
-
- ---
-
- Table of contents:
-
- Q1. What are the major periods of "classical" music?
- Q2. I'm new to classical music and don't have any classical recordings.
- What should I listen to so that I can learn more?
- Q3. I heard this melody on the radio. How do I figure out what it is?
- Q4. When I went to the record store to buy a CD of [insert piece],
- I found dozens of versions. How do I know which one to buy?
- Q5. Why are there so many recordings of the same piece?
- Q6. How do I find out if [insert-piece] has ever been recorded?
- Q7. What is that music from [insert TV-show/Movie] called?
- Q8. What are the essential reference books to classical music?
- Q9. What distinguishes classical music from popular music?
- Q10. What is the difference between an opera and a musical?
- Q11. What is the history behind Orff's Carmina Burana?
- Q12. What are the words to the first movement of Carmina Burana?
- Q13. How do you pronounce all those conductors' and composers' names?
- Q14. How are composers' works usually indexed? Why so many ways?
- Q15. What's the point of having a conductor?
- Q16. Will a "DDD" recording always sound better than "ADD" or "AAD"? What
- do those codes mean anyway?
- Q17. What is "authentic performance practice?"
-
- ----------
- Q1. What are the major periods of "classical" music?
-
- What the public generally calls "classical" music is actually many
- different styles of music that come from many historical periods. The
- usual classifications are: Medieval music, Renaissance, Baroque,
- Classical, Romantic, and Modern. The precise dates of the beginning
- and end of each period is a source of major academic debate, and many
- argue (and perhaps correctly) that there is no precise date but rather
- a long overlap. It is also quite accurate to say that styles changed
- in different places at different rates, so one date isn't necessarily
- valid for every region of Europe.
-
- With that disclaimer, here are *approximate* dates that distinguish
- each period. Some of them overlap, as you can see, since certain
- composers adopted the new styles before others.
-
- Early: 1100-1300
- Medieval: 1300-1430
- Renaissance: 1430-1600
- Baroque: 1600-1750
- Classical: 1750-1827
- Romantic: 1810-1900
- Modern: 1890+
-
- This breakdown attempts to categorize fundamental shifts in the
- attitudes and styles of characteristic composers. Chances are that if
- you like the music of a composer of one period, you will like music by
- other composers of the same period, though we *do* encourage you to
- experiment and to sample music of all periods.
-
- Q2. I'm new to classical music and want to learn about it. What should I
- listen to?
-
- Probably the first thing you should listen to is your local classical
- radio station. Because there are so many different types of music
- that are usually lumped in as "classical," there is no easy answer to
- this question. By listening to a varied program at first, you can
- begin to identify the types of music and the eras which are most
- interesting to you. You will then be better armed to purchase
- recordings.
-
- Another useful tool is your local public library or university music
- library. If you are wary to plunk down your greenbacks for a composer
- whom you've never heard, go and check out a CD or throw on a headset in
- the library's listening center and check out a sample. Many people
- try to preview entire discs by listening to them first on loan.
-
- Still, the regulars on rec.music.classical have compiled the following
- lists to help you get started. We do make some assumptions, however,
- namely that you have some idea of what _periods_ of music interest you
- (once again, check out a classical radio station for a few days if
- you're not sure). If you are eager to get started, we have also
- provided a general survey of music that covers all the major periods.
-
- Table of contents for the lists:
-
- L1 A list for rank beginners who want a general survey.
- L2 A list of representative medieval/renaissance music
- L3 A list of representative Baroque instrumental works
- L4 A list of representative Baroque choral works
- L5 A list of representative Classical instrumental works
- L6 A list of representative Romantic instrumental works
- L7 A list of representative Lieder
- L8 A list of representative Classical and Romantic
- choral works
- L9 A list of operas spanning the history of the genre
- L10 A list of music written between 1900 and 1918
- L11 A list of music written between 1920 and 1945
- L12 A list of music written since 1945
- L13 A list of piano concerti
- L14 A list of violin concerti
- L15 A list of symphonies
- L16 A list of piano/harpsichord music
- L17 A list of chamber music
- L18 A list of modern chamber music
- L19 A list of viola and cello concerti
- L20 A list of violin and piano music
-
- L1 A list of recommended works for those who have no experience
- with "classical" music. This list gives representative examples
- of all the major periods, or so we believe.
- 1. Hildegard: Symphoniae
- 1. Machaut: Messe de Nostre Dame
- 2. Dufay: Chansons
- 3. Josquin: Benedicta es
- 4. Palestrina: Missa Papae Marcelli
- 5. Bach: Brandenburg Concerto #5
- 6. Bach: Cantata #140, "Wachet auf!"
- 7. Handel: Messiah
- 8. Mozart: Symphony #40, K. 550
- 9. Mozart: Selections from "The Marriage of Figaro"
- 10. Haydn: Op. 76 String Quartets
- 11. Beethoven: Symphonies #5, #6
- 12. Berlioz: Symphonie Fantastique
- 13. Chopin: The "Horowitz Plays Chopin" disc, or
- Rubinstein: "Highlights from the Chopin Collection"
- 14. Mendelssohn: Violin Concerto
- 15. Wagner: "Ring" cycle selections
- 16. Brahms: Symphony #3
- 17. Mahler Symphony #1
- 18. Tchaikovsky: Nutcracker Suite
- 19. Schoenberg: Pierrot Lunaire
- 20. Stravinsky: The Rite of Spring
- 21. Prokofiev: Piano Concerto #3
- 22. Bartok: Concerto for Orchestra
- 23. Berg: Violin Concerto
- 24. Reich: Desert Music
-
- L2 A list of representative medieval/renaissance works
- 1. A recording of Gregorian chant/organum
- 2. Hildegard: Columba Aspexit
- 3. Machaut: Messe de Nostre Dame
- 4. Dufay: Missa Se la Face ay Pale
- 5. Ockeghem: Chansons
- 6. Josquin: Benedicta es
- 7: Italian madrigals by Rore, Gesualdo, Monteverdi, etc.
- 8. Palestrina: Missa Papae Marcelli
- 9. English madrigals by Morley, Weelkes, Gibbons, etc.
- 10. Byrd: The Great Service
- 11. Dowland: Lute songs
- 12. Gabrieli: Canzonas
- 13. Tallis: Lamentations of Jeremiah
-
- L3 A list of representative Baroque instrumental works
- 1. Corelli: Violin Sonatas
- 2. Couperin: Pieces de Clavecin (harpsichord)
- 3. Bach: The six Brandenburg Concerti
- 4. Bach: Keyboard partitas
- 5. Bach: Sonata in E major for Violin
- 6. Bach: Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor
- 7. Handel: Water Music, Music for the Royal Fireworks
- 8. Handel: Organ Concerto #13 ("Cuckoo & Nightingale")
- 9. Handel: Trio Sonatas
- 10. Boyce: The Eight Symphonies
- 11. Vivaldi: The Four Seasons
- 12. Telemann: Trio Sonatas
- 13. Scarlatti: Harpsichord Sonatas
- 14. Pachelbel: Canon in D
- 15. LeClair: Trio Sonatas
-
- L4 A list of representative Baroque choral works
- 1. Monteverdi: 1610 Vespers (Vespro Della Beata Vergine)
- 2. Carissimi Jepthe
- 3. Handel: Messiah
- 4. Handel: Saul
- 5. Purcell: Ode for St. Cecilia's Day
- 6. Bach: Magnificat
- 7. Bach: Cantata 140, "Wachet auf!"
- 8. Schutz: Musikalische Exequien
- 9. Vivaldi: Gloria
- 10. Charpentier: Te Deum
-
- L5 A list of representative Classical instrumental works
- 1. Mozart: Symphony #40, K.550
- 2. Mozart: Eine kleine Nachtmusik, K.525
- 3. Mozart: Piano Concerti #20 (K.466), #21 (K.467)
- 4. Mozart: Clarinet Quintet, K.581
- 5. Haydn: String Quartet, Op. 76 #3
- 6. Haydn: London Symphonies ("Surprise" and "Clock")
- 7. Beethoven: Symphonies #5, #6, #9 (also choral)
- 8. Beethoven: String Quartet, Op. 59 #1
- 9. Beethoven: Piano sonatas, Op. 13
-
- L6 A list of representative Romantic instrumental works
- 1. Schubert: Impromptus Op. 90
- 2. Brahms: Symphonies #3, #4
- 3. Brahms: Hungarian Dances
- 4. Rossini: Overtures
- 5. Mendelssohn: Overture to A Midsummer Night's Dream
- 6. Mendelssohn: Violin Concerto
- 7. Berlioz: Symphonie Fantastique
- 8. Chopin: Preludes Op. 28
- 9. Liszt: Les Preludes
- 10. Rimsky-Korsakov:
- Scheherazade
- 11. Dvorak: Symphony #8, Slavonic Dances
- 12: Saint-Saens:Symphony #3 ("Organ")
- 13. Smetana: The Moldau
- 14. Strauss: Don Juan
- 15. Bruckner: 4th Symphony
- 16. Tchaikovsky: 6th Symphony
- 17. Moussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibition
- 18. Barber: Adagio for strings
-
- L7 A list of representative Romantic vocal works (Lieder)
- 1. Schubert: Erlkonig
- 2. Schubert: Die Schone Muellerin
- 3. Mahler: Kindertotenlieder
- 4. Schumann Dichterliebe
- 5. Wolf: Spanisches Liederbuch
- 6. Brahms: Liebeslieder Walzer
- 7. Berlioz: Les Nuits d'Ete
- 8. Faure: Melodies
- 9. Vaughan Williams: Songs of Travel
- 10. Ravel: Chansons Madecasses
- 11. Strauss: Four Last Songs
- 12. Canteloube: Songs of the Auvergne
-
- L8 A list of representative Classical and Romantic choral works
- 1. Mozart: Requiem, K.626
- 2. Mozart: Mass in C Minor, K.427
- 3. Haydn: The Creation
- 4. Haydn: Lord Nelson Mass
- 5. Beethoven: Missa Solemnis
- 6. Beethoven: Choral Fantasy, Sym. #9
- 7. Mendelssohn: Elijah
- 8. Brahms: Liebeslieder Waltzer
- 9. Brahms: Ein Deutsches Requiem
- 10. Verdi: Requiem
- 11. Berlioz: Te Deum
- 12. Dvorak: Stabat Mater
- 13. Faure: Requiem
- 14. Bruckner: Te Deum
-
- L9 A listing of operas spanning the history of the genre:
- 1. Monteverdi: Orfeo
- 2. Charpentier: Les Arts Florissants
- 3. Lully: Atys
- 4. Handel: Giulio Cesare
- 5. Purcell: Dido and Aeneas
- 6. Mozart: Don Giovanni, K.527
- 7. Mozart: The Magic Flute, K.620
- 8. Beethoven: Fidelio
- 9. Verdi: La Traviata
- 10. Puccini: La Boheme
- 11. Rossini: The Barber of Seville
- 12. Wagner: Die Walkuere
- 13. Bizet: Carmen
- 14. Sullivan: The Pirates of Penzance
- 15. Gershwin: Porgy and Bess
- 16. Weill: Threepenny Opera
- 17. Strauss: Salome
- 18. Berg: Wozzeck
- 19. Britten: Billy Budd
- 20. Glass: Akhnaten
-
- L10 A list of music written between 1900 and 1918:
- 1. Debussy: La Mer
- 2. Strauss: Salome, Rosenkavalier
- 3. Mahler: Symphony #9
- 4. Schoenberg: Pierrot Lunaire, 5 Pieces for Orch.
- 5. Sibelius: Symphony #2
- 6. Stravinsky: The Rite of Spring, Petrushka
- 7. Webern: 6 Pieces, Op. 10
- 8. Berg: Altenberg Songs
- 9. Holst: The Planets
- 10. Ives 3rd symphony, Concord Sonata
- 11. Reger: Clarinet Quintet
- 12. Scriabin: Piano Sonatas
- 13. Rachmaninov: 2nd Symphony
- 14. Bartok: Bagatelles
- 15. Prokofiev: Classical Symphony, Scythian Suite
- 16. Satie: Parade
- 17. Vaughan-Williams: Lark Ascending
-
- L11 A list of music written between 1920 and 1945:
- 1. Berg: Violin Concerto
- 2. Gershwin: Rhapsody in Blue
- 3. Webern: Symphony
- 4. Copland: Appalachian Spring, Rodeo
- 5. Bartok: Music for Strings
- 6. Shostakovich: Symphonies #1, #5
- 7. Prokofiev: Alex. Nevsky
- 8. Vaughan-Williams: Fantasia on a theme by Thomas Tallis
- 9. Orff: Carmina Burana
- 10. Durufle: Requiem
- 11. Ellington: Black and Tan Fantasy
- 12. Milhaud: Le creation du monde
- 13. Honnegger: Pacific 231
- 14. Messiaen: Quartet for the End of Time
- 15. Harris: Symphony #3
- 16. Hanson: Symphony #2
- 17. Janacek: Katya Kabanova
- 18. Schoenberg: Moses und Aron
- 19. Sibelius: Symphony #7
-
- L12 A list of music written since 1945:
- 1. Boulez: Pli selon pli
- 2. Babbitt: A Solo Requiem, 2nd Quartet
- 3. Carter: A Mirror on Which to Dwell
- 4. Bernstein: Chichester Psalms
- 5. Poulenc: Gloria
- 6. Britten: War Requiem
- 7. Riley: In C
- 8. Reich: Desert Music
- 9. Glass: Glassworks
- 10. Rochberg: 3rd Quartet
- 11. Crumb: Black Angels
- 12. Stravinsky: Requiem Canticles, Rake's Progress
- 13. Schoenberg: A Survivor from Warsaw
-
- L13 A list of piano concerti
- 1. Bach: Brandenburg #5 (Harpsichord)
- 2. Mozart: Piano Concerti #20, #21, #23 (K.466, 467, 488)
- 3. Beethoven: Concerti #4, #5
- 4. Chopin: Concerti #1, #2
- 5. Grieg: Piano Concerto
- 6. Schumann: Piano Concerto
- 7. Liszt: Concerto #1
- 8. Tchaikovsky: Concerto #1
- 9. Brahms: Concerti #1, #2
- 10. Rachmaninov: Concerti #2, #3
- 11. Bartok: Concerto #2
- 12. Prokofiev: Concerto #3
- 13. Mendelssohn: Concerto #1
-
- L14 A list of violin concerti
- 1. Vivaldi: The Four Seasons
- 2. Bach: Concerti #1, #2; for 2 violins
- 3. Mozart: Concerti #3-5 (K.216, 218, 219)
- 4. Beethoven: Violin Concerto
- 5. Mendelssohn: Violin Concerto
- 6. Tchaikovsky: Violin Concerto
- 7. Brahms: Violin Concerto
- 8. Bruch: Concerto #1
- 9. Bartok: Concerto #2
- 10. Prokofiev: Concerto #1
- 11. Stravinsky: Violin Concerto
- 12. Shostakovich: Violin Concerto
- 13. Sibelius: Violin Concerto
- 14. Elgar: Violin Concerto
-
- L15 A list of symphonies
- 1. Mozart: Symphony #38, #40, #41 (K.504, 550, 551)
- 2. Beethoven: Symphonies #3, #5, #6, #9 ("Choral")
- 3. Haydn: Symphonies #94, #101, #104
- 4. Schubert: Symphonies #8 "Unfinished" & #9 "The Great"
- 5. Schumann: Symphonies #1, #3
- 6. Berlioz: Symphonie Fantastique
- 7. Saint-Saens: Symphony #3 ("Organ")
- 8. Bruckner: Symphonies #4, #9
- 9: Tchaikovsky: Symphonies #4-6
- 10.Brahms: Symphonies #3, #4
- 11.Franck: Symphony in d
- 12.Borodin: Symphony #2
- 13.Dvorak: Symphony #7, #8, #9 "New World"
- 14.Mahler: Symphonies #5, #9
- 15.Sibelius: Symphony #2
- 16.Rachmaninov: Symphony #2
- 17.Nielsen: Symphony #4
- 18.Prokofiev: Symphony #5
- 19.Elgar: Symphony #1
- 20.Copland: Symphony #3
-
- L16 A list of representative piano/harpsichord music:
- 1. Frescobaldi: Toccatas
- 2. Bach: Goldberg Variations
- 3. Scarlatti: Harpsichord Sonatas
- 4. Mozart: Sonatas #8, #11, #13, #15 (K.310,331,333,545)
- Sonata in D, K.576, Rondo K.511, Adagio K.540
- 5. Haydn: Sonata #52
- 6. Chopin: Ballades, Nocturnes, Etudes, etc.
- 7. Mendelssohn: Songs without Words
- 8. Schubert: Impromptus Op. 90,
- Sonatas for Piano D. 959, 960
- F minor fantasy for piano 4-hands
- 9. Beethoven: Piano sonatas #14, 23
- 10. Schumann: Carnaval, Op.9; Fantasy in C, Op. 17
- 11. Liszt: Sonata in b minor
- 12. Ravel: Miroirs, Gaspard de la nuit
- 13. Debussy: Preludes
- 14. Liszt: Transcendental Etudes
- 15. Rachmaninov: Etudes, Preludes (inc. Op. 3 #2)
-
- L17 A list of chamber music:
- 1. Purcell: Trio Sonatas
- 2. Telemann: Trio Sonatas
- 3. Mozart Divertimento, K.563
- 4. Mozart: String Quartets K.387,421,428,458,464,465,590
- 5. Mozart: Clarinet Quintet, K.581
- 6. Mozart String Quintets (K.515, 516, 593, 614)
- 7. Haydn: String Quartet, Op. 76 #3
- 8. Beethoven: String Quartets #8, #14
- 9. Beethoven: Piano Quintet
- 10. Schubert: String Quartet #14 "Death & the Maiden"
- 11. Schubert: Piano Quintet "Trout"
- 12. Mendelssohn: String Octet
- 13. Schumann: Piano Quintet
- 14. Dvorak: String Quartets #10, #14
- 15. Dvorak: Piano Trio #4
- 16. Borodin: String Quartet #2
- 17. Brahms: Piano Trio #1
-
- L18 A list of modern chamber music:
- 1. Bartok: 6 quartets
- 2. Schoenberg: 4 quartets, Op.. 7,10 (w/soprano),30, 37
- 3. Berg: Lyric Suite
- 4. Webern: Quartet for Sax, Clarinet, Cello, and Piano.
- 5. Debussy: Quartet, sonata for flute, viola, harp.
- 6. Ravel: Quartet, duo for violin and cello
- 7. Shostakovich: Quartets, No. 8, 13-15.
- 8. Janacek: Mladi, Intimate Letters Quartet
- 9. Stravinsky: Octet
- 10. Babbitt: 2nd quartet
- 11. Carter: 3rd quartet
- 12. Quartets by Scelsi and Schnittke.
-
- L19 A list of viola and cello concerti
- 1. Telemann: Viola Concerto
- 2. Haydn: Cello concerto in D op.101
- 3. Boccherini: Cello concerto in B flat
- 4. Schumann: Cello concerto
- 3. Dvorak: Cello concerto op.104
- 5. Tchaikovsky: Variations on a rococo theme
- 6. Saint Saens: Cello Concerto #1
- 7. Lalo: Cello Concerto
- 8. Walton: Viola Concerto, Cello Concerto
- 9. Bartok: Viola Concerto
- 10. Elgar: Cello Concerto op.85
- 11. Hindemith: Viola Concerto
- 12. Barber: Cello Concerto
- 13. Shostakovitch: Cello Concerto #1
- 14. Khachaturian: Cello Concerto
- 15. Moeran: Cello Concerto
- 16. Delius: Cello Concerto
- 17. Bloch: Schelomo
- 18. Penderecki: Cello Concerto #2
-
- L20 A list of violin and piano music
- 1. Mozart: Sonata K.454
- 2. Beethoven: Sonata #5 op.24 "Spring"
- 3. Schumann: Sonatas op.105 & 121
- 3. Brahms: Sonata #3
- 4. Franck: Sonata in A
- 5. Faure: Sonata #1
- 6. Lekeu: Sonata in G
- 7. Strauss: Sonata in E flat
- 8. Respighi: Sonata in B minor
- 9. Saint-Saens: Sonata op.75
- 10. Lalo: Sonata
- 11. Grieg: Sonata #3
- 12. Pierne: Sonata
- 13. Debussy: Sonata
- 14. Elgar: Sonata
- 15. Janacek: Sonata
- 16. Walton: Sonata
- 17. Bartok: Sonata #2
-
- -----
-
- Q3. I heard this melody on the radio. How do I figure out what it is?
-
- First option: Call the radio station and ask. They're usually quite
- helpful about this sort of thing.
-
- Second option: Most mainstream-market classical stations publish a
- monthly program guide. If you are a regular listener, you might
- consider subscribing for just this reason.
-
- Beyond that, we are presuming you know a little something about musical
- notation or at the very least, musical note names. Your local music
- library will have a number of dictionaries of musical themes that will
- help you identify the theme. See below in the reference books
- section.
-
- If after researching you still cannot find the theme, then post to the
- net with the theme represented as note-names.
-
-
- Q4. I heard this great piece on the radio, but when I went to the
- record store to buy a copy, I found dozens of versions. Which is the
- right one to get?
-
- This question is one that often confronts even the most seasoned
- record collectors. The decision of which version of a piece to buy on
- record is entirely a matter of taste. Experienced listeners often
- know the style of each conductor and can judge on that basis. If you
- are unfamiliar with a piece or with the versions available to you, you
- might want to start off by looking in the Penguin Guide (see
- "Reference Books" below). Though not always 100% on the mark, this
- guide will describe the differences between multiple recordings of a
- given work, and may enable you to choose the recording that is right
- for you. There are also magazines such as Fanfare, Gramophone, Stereo
- Review, Audio, and some of the high-end audio journals that review new
- recordings on a regular basis.
-
-
- Q5. Why are there so many recordings of the same piece?
-
- The question of interpretation is addressed in Q15. Briefly though,
- All conductors and performers have their own interpretation of a given
- piece of music, and thus no two recordings are truly the same, just as
- no two painters' portraits of the same individual could ever be the
- same. Some interpretations are subtly different from others, while
- other interpretations raise serious performance issues. For instance,
- Bach on piano, harpsichord, or clavichord? Beethoven with a large
- orchestra, a chamber orchestra, or a period-instrument orchestra?
- _Pictures at an Exhibition_ for piano, orchestrated by Ravel or
- somebody else, or on solo guitar? (no kidding).
-
- The other reason there are so many recordings of certain works is that
- the record companies can sell them. A famous violinist's recording of
- The Four Seasons will in almost all cases sell better than that
- violinist's recording of an unknown work, even if the unknown work is
- musically strong. People buy what they know, and record companies
- want the assurance that they will see profit from a pressing.
-
- The unfortunate result is that a lot of good music *never* gets
- recorded while a lot of hackneyed music gets re-recorded every year.
- I counted 52 versions of The Four Seasons once in a record store.
-
-
- Q6. How do I find out if [insert piece] has ever been recorded?
-
- *EVER* been recorded is tough. To check if there is a current release
- of your piece of choice, look in Opus, a publication put out by
- Schwann that lists all works currently available. Most record stores
- will either sell you a copy, or have a desk copy that you can use. If
- you're looking for an old vinyl recording, you'll have to check with a
- rare record dealer. Many maintain very extensive back issues of the
- Schwann catalog and can help you locate that rare gem.
-
- Current discs in print can be found in Phonolog, a large looseleaf book
- available at all record dealers. Akin to "Books in Print."
-
-
- Q7. What is that music in [insert TV show/movie here] ?
-
- We have a little joke in the newsgroup that no matter what movie or TV
- show, it's probably either Pachelbel's Canon or Carmina Burana.
- Anyway, here is a list of some movies and TV shows and the music they
- contain.
-
- 2001, A Space Odyssey Also sprach Zarathustra R. Strauss
- 2001, A Space Odyssey Blue Danube Waltz J. Strauss
- 2001, A Space Odyssey Lux Eterna Ligeti
- Acura commercial Romeo & Juliet Prokofeiv
- All That Jazz Spring from The Four Seasons Vivaldi
- Apocalypse Now Die Walkure Wagner
- Babette's Feast Don Giovanni Mozart
- Breaking Away Barber of Seville Rossini
- Breaking Away Italian Symphony Mendelssohn
- Children of a Lesser God Concerto for 2 violins Bach
- A Clockwork Orange Symphony #9 Beethoven
- A Clockwork Orange William Tell Overture Rossini
- A Clockwork Orange Barber of Seville overture Rossini
- A Clockwork Orange La Gazza Ladra overture Rossini
- Dark Eyes Barber of Seville Rossini
- Death in Venice Symphony #5 Mahler
- Die Hard Symphony #9 Beethoven
- Diva La Wally Catalani
- Elvira Madigan Piano Cto. #21 Mozart
- Empire of The Sun Suo Gan (Welsh folksong...circumflex on the a)
- Excalibur Carmina Burana Carl Orff
- Fatal Attraction Madama Butterfly Puccini
- Foul Play The Mikado Sullivan
- Forbidden Games Romance Yepes
- A Fish Called Wanda Barber of Seville Rossini
- Gallipoli Les Pecheurs de Perles Bizet
- Glory Original music James Horner
- Grey Fox Martha Flotow
- Heaven Help Us Hallelujah Chorus (Messiah) Handel
- Hannah and Her Sisters Manon Lescaut Puccini
- Horse's Mouth Lt. Kije Suite Prokofiev
- Huntley/Brinkley Report Symphony #9 Beethoven
- Hopscotch Barber of Seville Rossini
- Hopscotch Eine kleine Nachtmusik Mozart
- Jean de Florette Forza del Destino Verdi
- Kramer vs. Kramer Concerto for 2 Mandolins Vivaldi
- Lone Ranger theme William Tell Overture finale Rossini
- Love and Death Lt. Kije Suite Prokofiev
- Masterpiece Theater theme Symphonie de Fanfare Mouret
- Moderns Marriage of Figaro Mozart
- Moonstruck La Boheme Puccini
- My Brilliant Career "Of Foreign Land and Peoples"
- from Kinderszenen Schumann
- Olympic Music ('84) Olympic Fanfare John Williams
- Olympic Music (Every year) Bugler's Dream Leo Arnaud
- Ordinary people/GE lightbulb Canon in D Pachelbel
- Platoon Adagio for Strings Barber
- Pretty Woman La Traviata Verdi
- Prizzi's Honor L'Elisir d'Amore Donizetti
- Prizzi's Honor Barber of Seville Rossini
- Raging Bull Cavalleria Rusticana Mascagni
- Room with a View Gianni Schicchi Puccini
- Room with a View La Rondine Puccini
- Sammy and Rosie Der Erlkonig Schubert
- The Shining Music for Strings Bartok
- Slam Dance Samson et Delilah Saint-Saens
- Someone To Watch Over Me Lakme Delibes
- Someone To Watch Over Me Gloria Vivaldi
- Somewhere in Time Rhapsody on a theme by Paganini Rachmaninoff
- Sophie's Choice Kinderszenen Schumann
- The Four Seasons The Four Seasons Vivaldi
- Trading Places The Marriage of Figaro Mozart
- Traffik String Quartet #8 Shostakovich
- Untouchables Pagliacci Leoncavallo
- Wall Street Rigoletto Verdi
- Witches of Eastwick Turandot Puccini
- Year of Living Dangerously Four Last Songs Strauss, R.
-
- Many of opera cuts can be found on one of the following recordings by Angel:
- Opera Goes to the Movies
- Son of Opera Goes to the Movies
-
-
- Q8. What are the best reference works on music in general?
-
- The supreme musical references is probably the New Grove Dictionary of
- Music and Musicians. This is a multi-volume set, about as large as
- your average encyclopedia, so you'll probably have to trek to your
- local library to find a copy.
-
- Two more obtainable books are a) the New Harvard Dictionary of Music
- (and the paperback version, the Concise Harvard Dictionary of Music),
- and b) The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Both of these are
- invaluable for all musicians and music enthusiasts.
-
- David Mason Greene: Greene's Biographical Encyclopedia of Composers
- (David Mason Greene) is a good choice for interested amateurs and
- general listeners (those needing less than Grove's, in other words),
- Greene is a great source because it's compact and includes a huge
- number of composers (2400). His information could be refined in a
- number of places, but there are few other source that fill the same
- need.
-
- There are composer biographies, almost all of them excellent,
- published by Norton/Grove. These are the dictionary articles, with
- worklist, bibliography, and index, and slightly updated. Some volumes
- cover several composers, e.g., Bach Family, Northern European Baroque
- Masters.
-
- Grove also has multi-volume special dictionaries for opera, American
- music, and musical instruments.
-
- When picking recorded performances with which you are unfamiliar, you
- might wish to consult the Penguin Guide. This book provides a good
- starting point, and while it doesn't get everything right, it does
- have some excellent reviews, and can do a lot to help you identify the
- differences between the myriad versions of any particular piece. Be
- warned, though. The Penguin folks have been known to have what some
- consider an unfair bias against some early-instrument recordings. So
- read some of the reviews with a grain of salt. There are also the
- "Opus" catalogs put out by Schwann, the musical version of "Books in
- Print." Many people also swear by magazines like Fanfare, Grammophone,
- etc. for reviews.
-
- If you don't have time to read all those magazines, you might want to
- check out Stevenson's Guide to classical recordings. This publication
- synthesizes the reviews of about 30 different magazines. Thus you
- aren't getting only one opinion, but an overview of what all the
- various critics thought about a given disc. The Guide also contains a
- CD Guide Honor Roll, which lists the performances that have received a
- three-plus (+++) rating from at least four critics, with no negative
- reviews given from any other critic. In other words, if you buy based
- on this honor roll list, you're pretty much assured of getting a
- decent recording. This very useful publication is available at some
- record stores, or else you can order it from Stevenson Classical Disk
- Guide, P.O. Box 53286, Indianapolis, IN 46253. Subscription price is
- $31 per year, four editions per year.
-
- When trying to identify that theme you have running around in your
- head, consult Barlow & Morgenstern's dictionaries. "A Dictionary of
- Musical Themes" and "A Dictionary of Opera and Song Themes" are
- essential references.
-
- A good all-around historical reference book is "A History of Western
- Music" by Donald Jay Grout and Claude V. Palisca. More than one grad
- student has curled up by the fireplace with this tome in preparation
- for qualifiers.
-
- The Music Research Division of the New York Public Library has a
- telephone reference service. The number is +1 212 870 1650.
-
-
- Q9. What distinguishes classical music from popular music?
-
- Scholars go round and round on this one. Some say that classical
- music has more structure and "form" than popular music, but everyone
- knows that there is plenty of form in popular music. Others say that
- "classical music is an art, and popular music is entertainment."
- While that may in part be true, to make that assertion is perhaps to
- scoff at some of the artistry that exists in the popular venues.
-
- Today, classical music has an elite patronage, whereas popular music
- has more universal appeal. Also, classical music is generally
- considered to have a more unified and rigorous body of theory. Of
- course, these concepts did not exist at the time that most of the
- "classical" music was written.
-
- "Classical" music is repertoire music; when two artists play a piece,
- the results will be similar, the differences subtle. Compare
- different jazz versions or different pop versions of a song. One is
- likely to find much more difference there.
-
-
- Q10. What is the difference between an opera and a musical?
-
- Generally, a musical has dialogue with interspersed songs. Opera is
- generally sung through, the dialogue portions being replaced with
- recitatives (music which is intoned in a way that resembles speech).
- There are notable exceptions to this rule, e.g. Carmen (Bizet) and The
- Magic Flute (Mozart), both of which have spoken dialogue. The German
- name for operas with spoken dialogue is singspiel (pronounced
- ZING-shpeel). German productions pre-Wagner were almost always
- singspiel
-
- Many musicals, such as Les Miserables, Chess, Joseph, etc. are sung
- through, and are, in the classical world, often referred to as
- "popular operas" or "rock operas" to signify that they do bear some
- resemblance to "classical" opera.
-
- Another important difference is that in musicals, the principal
- singers also dance. In opera that never happens.
-
-
- Q11. What is the history behind Orff's Carmina Burana?
-
- "Carmina Burana" was originally a cycle of medieval songs. The text is
- rather risque poetry written by medieval students. Carl Orff adapted
- some of them into the best known arrangement, not surprisingly called
- "Carmina Burana," in the 1930s. Of the songs he adapted, some are in
- Latin and some are in Middle High German (much as Chaucer's "Canterbury
- Tales" is in Middle English). The best known of the songs he used is
- "Fortuna Imperatrix Mundi" (a.k.a. "O Fortuna"), which was heavily used
- in the film EXCALIBUR.
-
- Carmina Burana is a wonderful introduction to classical music for the
- Bruce Springsteen generation. When novice listeners are told s that
- it's all about sex, drinking, gambling, and more sex, it breaks down a
- few of their preconceived notions about the classics.
-
- The full texts to Carmina Burana, both original languages and English
- translation can be found in the internet music archives, accessible by
- Gopher or FTP (ftp.uwp.edu). We include the first movement here owing
- to the frequency with which the request is made.
-
-
- Q12. What are the words to the first movement? (the one in all the movies)
-
- Fortuna Imperatrix Mundi Fortune, Empress of the World
- 1. O Fortuna 1. O Fortune
- Coro Chorus
-
- O fortuna, O fortune,
- velut Luna like the moon
- statu variabilis, you are changeable,
- semper crescis, ever waxing
- aut decrescis and waning;
- vita detestabilis hateful life
- nunc obdurat first oppresses
- et tunc curat and then soothes
- ludo mentis aciem; as fancy takes it;
- egestatem, poverty
- potestatem and power
- dissolvit ut glaciem. it melts them like ice.
-
- Sors immanis Fate - monstrous
- et inanis. and empty.
- rota tu volubilis. you whirling wheel,
- status malus you are malevolent,
- vana salus well-being is in vain
- semper dissolubilis, and always fades to nothing.
- obumbrata shadowed
- et velata and veiled
- mihi quoque niteris; you plague me too;
- nunc per ludum now through the game
- dorsum nudum I bring my bare back
- fero tui sceleris. to your villainy.
-
- Sors salutis Fate is against me
- et virtutis in health
- mihi nunc contraria and virtue,
- est affectus driven on
- et defectus and weighted down,
- semper in angaria. always enslaved.
- Hac in hora So at this hour
- sine mora without delay
- cordum pulsum tangite; pluck the vibrating strings;
- quod per sortem since Fate
- sternit fortem, strikes down the strong man,
- mecum omnes plangite ! everyone weep with me !
-
-
- Q13. How do you pronounce all those conductors', composers', and
- performers' names?
-
- We don't have schwas and umlauts in ASCII, so I'll do my best. A *k
- indicates that the guttural k sound (as in chutzpah or Bach) should be
- used. #k indicates a palatal "ch" sound as in "reich." *n is the
- french "n" as in "bon." *r is the French r. "zh" as in "vision"
- Note that I assume a generic American accent here. Some of these
- pronunciations may not work with other accents.
-
- Claudio Abbado ah-BAH-do
- Earnest Ansermet ahn-sair-MAY
- Arleen Auger Au-ZHAY
- Daniel Barenboim BARE-'n-boim
- Berlioz Bair-lee-OHZ
- Leonard Bernstein BURN-stine
- Bizet BI-zay
- Pierre Boulez BU-lez
- Dietrich Buxtehude DEE-t*ri#k BOOKS-te-hoo-de
- Chailly CHI-yee
- Chopin Sho-PA(*)N
- Couperin COU-peh*r-a*n
- Debussy De-bu-SEE
- Antal Dorati Ahn-TAHL DOH-rah-tee
- Charles Dutoit Du-TWAH
- Dukas DU-kahss
- Dvorak D'VOR-zhack
- Faure FAU-*ray
- Cesar Franck Say-ZAHR Frahnk
- Wilhelm Furtwangler VIL-helm FOORT-veng-ler
- Bernard Haitink BURN-ard HIGH-tink
- Haydn HIDE-in
- Herbert von Karajan HAIR-bairt Fawn KAHR-ay-ahn.
- Kodaly KO-dai
- Raymond Leppard LEP-pard
- James Levine Luh-VINE
- Liszt List
- Charles Mackerras Muh-KAHR-ass
- Neville Marriner NEH-vul MARR-in-er
- Kurt Masur Mah-ZOOR
- Zubin Mehta ZOO-bin MAY-tuh
- Monteverdi Mon-te-VARE-dee (not Mon-te-VUR-dee)
- Mozart MOH-tsart
- Johann Pachelbel YO-hahn Pa-*KEL-bel
- Poulenc POO-lenk (that's how he pronounced it)
- Ravel Ruh-VEL
- Reiner RHINE-er
- Saint-Saens Sa*n-SOH*N
- Schubert SHOO-bairt
- Shostakovitch shash-teh-KOH-vich
- Smetana SMET-nuh
- Georg Solti jorj SHOL-tee
- George Szell jorj sell
- Tchaikovsky Chiy-KAHF-skee
- Verdi VARE-dee (not VUR-dee)
- Richard Wagner *RI#K-art VAHG-ner
- Bruno Walter VAHL-ter
- Webern VAY-bairn
- Weelkes Weelks
- Wilbye WILL-bee
-
- (Please do not send mail "correcting" the French pronunciations. I
- know there are many schools of thought on them. I finally settled it
- for the FAQ by asking a native Frenchman. Unless you can offer a very
- compelling argument the other way, it's staying. Sue me. Sorry, but
- I'm sick to death of my mailbox flooding every month with thirty
- opinions on how to pronounce Debussy. Thank you for your cooperation.)
-
-
- Q14. How are composers' works usually indexed? Why so many ways?
- I just heard this radio guy announce "Foobar's string quartet in
- E flat minor, opus 173 number 3, the `Boiled Egg,' FWV 145."
- Why did he identify it four times over?
-
- Newcomers to the classical repertoire are often disturbed to discover
- that a work may have a "catalog number" and an "opus number" and a
- name (e.g. The Jupiter Symphony, the Clock, the Cuckoo and the
- Nightingale, Wachet auf, etc). Many early composers did not catalog
- their works at all, and thus it was left to scholars in the nineteenth
- ant twentieth centuries to compile thematic catalogs. Bach, for
- instance, is catalogged with BWV numbers (Bach Werke Verzeichnis,
- "Bach work catalog"), etc. Handel, however, published some of his
- work in collections called opera (that's the Latin plural for "Opus"
- and is entirely different from the word meaning sung musical drama).
- Thus a work of Handel might be referred to as Opus 3 No. 3, but might
- still have an HWV number. To make matters worse, some works have
- their own names. Thus, sticking with Handel as an example, Organ
- Concerto #13 is also known as "The Cuckoo and the Nightingale," and as
- HWV 295.
-
- Here is a list of the major thematic catalogs...
-
- B - Catalog of the works of Dvorak by Burghauser
- BeRI - Catalog of the works of Roman by Bengtsson
- BuxWV - "Buxtehude-Werke-Verzeichnis" Catalog of the works of
- Buxtehude by Karstadt
- BWV - "Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis" Catalog of the works of J.S. Bach
- by Schmieder (sometimes designated by "S.")
- D - Catalog of the works of Schubert by Deutsch
- D - Catalog of the violin concertos of Tartini by Dounias
- E - Catalog of the symphonies of L. Mozart by Eisen
- F - Catalog of the works of Vivaldi by Fanna
- F - Catalog of the works of W.F. Bach by Falck
- G - Catalog of the works of Boccherini by Gerard
- G - Catalog of the works of Torelli by Giegling
- G - Catalog of the violin concertos of Viotti by Giazotto
- H - Catalog of the unpublished works of Beethoven by Hess
- H - Catalog of the works of Charpentier by Hitchcock
- Hob - Catalog of the works of F.J. Haydn by Hoboken
- HW - Catalog of the works of J.C.F. Bach by H. Wohlforth
- HWV - "Handel-Werke-Verzeichnis" Catalog of the works of Handel by Baselt
- J - Catalog of the works C.M. von Weber by Jahns
- K - Catalog of the works of W.A. Mozart by Koechel (same as KV below)
- K - Catalog of the works of Rosetti
- K - Catalog of the works of D. Scarlatti by Kirkpatrick
- KV - "Koechel-Verzeichnis" Catalog of the works of W.A. Mozart by Koechel
- L - Catalog of the works of D. Scarlatti by Longo
- L - Catalog of the works of Debussy by Lesure
- LWV - "Lully-Werke-Verzeichnis" Catalog of the works of Lully by Schneider
- M - Catalog of the works of Vivaldi by Malipiero
- MS - Catalog of the works of Molter
- Op - Opus number, generally a chronological publication number that may
- have been assigned by either the publisher or composer
- P - Catalog of the works of J.M. Haydn by Perger
- P - Catalog of the works of Vivaldi by Pincherle
- R - Catalog of the works of Vivaldi by Malipiero as published by Ricordi
- R - Catalog of the works of Gottleib Muffat by Riedl
- RO - Catalog of the works of Gottschalk
- RV - Catalog of the works of Vivaldi by Ryom
- S - Catalog of the works of Liszt by Searle
- SR - Catalog of the works of Soler by Padre Samuel Rubio
- SWV - "Schutz-Werke-Verzeichnis" Catalog of the works of Schutz by
- Bittinger
- TWV - "Telemann-Werke-Verzeichnis" Catalog of the works of Telemann
- by Kassel
- VB - "Valentini Bakfark Opera Omnia" Catalog of the works of Balint
- Bakfark
- WoO - "Werk ohne Opuszahl" or "Work without opus number", typically
- unpublished works or works that were not assigned an opus number
- by the composer
- Wq - Catalog of the works of C.P.E. Bach by Wotquenne
- WWV - "Wagner-Werke-Verzeichnis" Catalog of the works of Wagner by
- Deatheridge, Geck & Voss
- Z - Catalog of the works of Purcell by Zimmerman
-
-
- Q15. What's the point of having a conductor? Can't professional
- musicians keep time by themselves?
-
- Yes, professional musicians can keep time by themselves, but a
- conductor does significantly more than just beat time. A good
- conductor will add interpretation and shape to a piece of music by
- controlling the dynamics of the music and by indicating entrances
- and cutoffs with great precision. There are some orchestras that
- play without a conductor (the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra springs to
- mind), but even in that case, there is usually one instrumentalist
- who functions as the "leader" and who the other musicians look to
- for cues. Many pieces change tempo in mid-stride, and a single
- person making the choice of exactly when and how can make the
- transition occur with great precision.
-
- In a large symphony orchestra there is also the additional problem
- that very often the acoustics of the hall are such that the musicians
- on, for instance, the extreme right of the orchestra simply cannot
- hear what the musicians on the extreme left are doing, and thus it is
- necessary to have a common reference, namely, the conductor. While it
- is true that each musician can keep time, the accumulated error would
- eventually cause the rhythm to become murky.
-
- The conductor has yet another purpose, and that is to set the "tone"
- of a piece. Whether the conductor uses sudden, forceful movements or
- smooth and delicate strokes will in many ways affect the way the
- musicians interpret the music and subsequently, the overall color of
- the work.
-
- Listen for yourself to the effects of the conductor. Pick any work
- that you know well and listen to a particular recording many times...
- until you really feel you *know* it. Then buy or borrow recordings of
- the same piece under other conductors. How is it different? Is the
- conductor interpreting the music differently? Is he adding color to
- certain areas and letting other areas speak for themselves? With
- practice it becomes relatively easy to differentiate conductors'
- styles.
-
-
- Q16. Will a "DDD" recording always sound better than "ADD" or "AAD"? What
- do those codes mean anyway?
-
- In the early days of the CD, the Society of Professional Audio
- Recording Services (SPARS) [pronounced "sparz" not "sparse"] developed
- a three-letter coding system to distinguish between the types of
- recording equipment used at different junctures of the making of a CD.
- The D indicates digital equipment, and the A indicates analog
- equipment.
-
- The first letter indicates the type of equipment used in the initial
- recording. The second letter indicates the type of equipment used for
- mixing and editing. The third letter is superfluous. It indicates
- the type of equipment used for mastering, which in the case of a CD
- can only be digital.
-
- Many people use the SPARS code as a barometer of the sound quality of
- a CD, and this is a wrong thing to do. The SPARS code doesn't, nor
- was it ever meant to reflect the actual quality of the CD. Between
- digital and analog recorders, neither intrinsically sounds better than
- the other. A recording made on a good Studer A820 fitted out with
- Dolby SR will generally sound better than a recording made on a cheap
- Sony TCD-D3 DATman, though the DATman will sound better than many
- cheap analog systems.
-
- In the end, both analog and digital systems have the ability to sound
- great or to sound awful. It all depends on the type of equipment and
- the skill of the engineer operating it. Many modern DDD recordings
- are so carelessly made that they don't sound nearly as good as
- recordings made 20 years ago. Then again, a good DDD can sound
- *excellent*, as can a good analog recording. You get the idea.
-
- Of course, neither method of recording says anything about miking.
- Even if the engineer uses the best digital equipment, if the mikes are
- not placed properly, the recording won't sound very good, and a good
- mic technique recorded to a walkman will in all likelihood be more
- aesthetically pleasing.
-
-
- Q17. What is "authentic performance practice"?
-
- Any musical work can be interpreted in a variety of different ways.
- Authentic performance practice stresses scholarship and an
- understanding of the performance characteristics actually intended by
- the composer. Therefore, a performance of the Chicago Symphony
- playing a Bach orchestral suite, for instance, would probably fail to
- impress the authentic performance aficionados, because Bach never
- intended for such a large ensemble.
-
- Authentic performance practice can extend to instrument construction,
- string material, tuning and temperament, seating arrangements, trills
- and figures, numbers of performers on a given part, tempo, doublings,
- and of course, overall playing technique. Compare an authentic
- performance and a modern performance of the same work. One is likely
- to notice substantial differences between them. The choice as to which
- one prefers is left as an exercise for the reader.
-
-
- --
- Gabe Wiener -- gmw1@columbia.edu -- N2GPZ -- PGP on request
- Sound engineering, recording, and digital mastering for classical music
- "I am terrified at the thought that so much hideous and bad music
- will be put on records forever." --Sir Arthur Sullivan
-