/classical/

Sibelius Quartet Edition

m.youtube.com/watch?v=TyyszRlULEQ

>General Folder #1. Renaissance up to 20th century/modern classical. Also contains a folder of live recordings/recitals by some outstanding performers.
mega.co.nz/#F!mMYGhBgY!Ee_a6DJvLJRGej-9GBqi0A
>General Folder #2. Mostly 20th century/modern with other assorted bits and pieces
mega.co.nz/#F!Y8pXlJ7L!RzSeyGemu6QdvYzlfKs67w
>General Folder #3. Renaissance up to early/mid-20th century. Also contains a folder of Scarlatti sonate and another live recording/recital folder.
mega.co.nz/#F!kMpkFSzL!diCUavpSn9B-pr-MfKnKdA
>General Folder #4. Renaissance up to late 19th century
mega.co.nz/#F!ekBFiCLD!spgz8Ij5G0SRH2JjXpnjLg
>General Folder #5. Very eclectic mix
mega.co.nz/#F!O8pj1ZiL!mAfQOneAAMlDlrgkqvzfEg
>General Folder #6. Yellow Piss stuff. Also there's some other stuff in here.
mega.nz/#F!DlRSjQaS!SzxR-CUyK4AYPknI1LYgdg
>Renaissance Folder #1. Mass settings
mega.co.nz/#F!ygImCRjS!1C9L77tCcZGQRF6UVXa-dA
>Renaissance Folder #2. Motets and madrigals (plus Leiden choirbooks)
mega.co.nz/#F!il5yBShJ!WPT0v8GwCAFdOaTYOLDA1g
>Debussy Folder.
mega.co.nz/#F!DdJWUBBK!BeGdGaiAqdLy9SBZjCHjCw
>Opera Folder. Contains recorded video productions of about 10 well-known operas, with a bias towards late Romantic
mega.co.nz/#F!4EVlnJrB!PRjPFC0vB2UT1vrBHAlHlw
>Book Folder #1. Random assortment of books on music theory and composition, music history etc.
mega.nz/#F!HsAVXT5C!AoFKwCXr4PJnrNg5KzDJjw
>Book Folder #2. Comprehensive list of the most important harpsichord and piano pieces through history
mega.nz/#F!1xJgVSLA!i2eLakjehx5DY8qYUzS0Zg
>Book Folder #3. Harmony, Composition, Counterpoint and Orchestration
mega.nz/#F!2k9VgKob!5N3Kwf0RIQeayYcA4XvRyg

Previous

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Other urls found in this thread:

youtube.com/watch?v=ZwVW1ttVhuQ
youtube.com/watch?v=bbGyZE5r2f0
youtube.com/watch?v=V4iuNRO5a1Y
m.youtube.com/watch?v=swWKGbaoQLo
youtube.com/watch?v=tI0TXLnVK4U
youtu.be/tz_UYy8hl8k
youtube.com/watch?v=0FPP9-MvjXE
youtube.com/watch?v=2Udxv1u2JrE
youtube.com/watch?v=pze4NxCOjg0
youtube.com/watch?v=aiYJ7-TpyYE
youtube.com/watch?v=VLfaB4JGwGI
youtube.com/watch?v=rYJMWRBq_hw
youtube.com/watch?v=vN_qqRrABT4&list=PL_1KRMi6SAPlNq3tyecHTnfRggvCfPiAL&index=7
youtube.com/watch?v=L6nLtGcYozU
twitter.com/NSFWRedditGif

Scriabin or Rachmaninoff?

Bach, Holy Week edition:

youtube.com/watch?v=ZwVW1ttVhuQ

Rachmaninoff no question.

Niccolò Antonio Zingarelli
youtube.com/watch?v=bbGyZE5r2f0

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Faure Cello Sonata in D minor. the first movement in particular is cool

youtube.com/watch?v=V4iuNRO5a1Y

Walton

m.youtube.com/watch?v=swWKGbaoQLo

the version for string orchestra he made is good too

youtube.com/watch?v=tI0TXLnVK4U

classical more like gaysexsical lmao

What is the best notation program and what are some tricks for being more effective in these programs?

This is the chosen thread.

Sibelius and Finale are both industry standards, try them both and see which one you like better (though honestly most people will just stick with the one they tried first).

Learn all of the keyboard shortcuts you can.

Mendelssohn is the second best romantic and is the master of emotion and musical drama

How do I cope with the fact that all the greatest composers started playing their instruments when they were below the age of 10 and I started at the age of 19?

you cope by working harder

Try to be the exception

Best French operas/arias?

ravel
youtu.be/tz_UYy8hl8k

>sonata 14? you mean op 27 no 2

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>Sibelius and Finale are both industry standards
But are they good though? For the compatability and cooperation, isn't it possible to export your score to musicxml format which both sibelius and finale can read? Are there some important features of a sibelius or finale file that a musicxml file cannot capture?
>Learn all of the keyboard shortcuts you can.
Got it!

>When he was seven, Ravel started piano lessons
>Mendelssohn began taking piano lessons from his mother when he was six, and at seven was tutored by Marie Bigot in Paris
>Rachmaninoff began piano and music lessons organised by his mother at age four

Its literally impossible to escape the hell that is being raised by incompetent people that dont give you a thorough education

They are both excellent and industry standard for good reason. I use Sibelius, I found it more intuitive but you can use either and no one will care.

I've never had an issue with compatibility between programs using musicxml. If you're uncertain about something specific you can probably just google it. But for 99% of what each program is capable of it will work perfectly.

I can't stress enough how much time you'll save once you know how to notate almost entirely from the keyboard. Every time you reach for the mouse look up what keyboard shortcut you could have used instead.

Gounod
youtube.com/watch?v=0FPP9-MvjXE

Violin concerti:
Schumann > Mendelssohn > Beethoven > Brahms
prove me wrong (protip: you can't)

I mean, with that attitude of course it is.

You've clearly already made up your mind that you'd rather be a sad sack of shit who never amounts to anything than try and realize your actual potential.

Or maybe that's what's stopping you? The realization that you don't actually have any potential, and that by trying and failing, you'll only confirm your worst fears?

Despite what you're trying to convince yourself of, you are your own person. Your parents aren't responsible for you anymore. Education isn't given, it's taken. In ten years from now are you still going to be whining and blaming your parents? Or are you going to spend the next decade trying to become the person you want to be? You'll probably be alive anyway, so you might as well be ten years older and wiser than ten years older and still a little bitch.

Good luck user, but we all know you're not going to make it.

Mozart 3 > all

This is possibly the worst recording of the st matthew passion wtf are u doing m8

youtube.com/watch?v=2Udxv1u2JrE
this

I have been watching some reviews on youtube, and honestly, Sibelius seems better.
>I've never had an issue with compatibility between programs using musicxml. If you're uncertain about something specific you can probably just google it. But for 99% of what each program is capable of it will work perfectly.
Okay, sounds great!
>I can't stress enough how much time you'll save once you know how to notate almost entirely from the keyboard. Every time you reach for the mouse look up what keyboard shortcut you could have used instead.
I can totally imagine this, having gotten to this level of proficiency in other types of software that is unrelated to music. I am very pleased to hear that these programs are designed such that this is possible. The one I am using right now, Musescore (free), doesn't seem to be that good in this regard. At least not out of the box.

Musescore is pretty good considering it's free. I tried it around 2011 and it was absolutely garbage. It has improved a lot since, and it seems like it should only get better since they've brought tantacrul onboard.

>start learning my first instrument before 10
>be somewhat good at music, all my solfege and piano teachers over the years think I have perfect pitch even though it's just a consistent relative pitch
>quit music around 14
>become interested in composition later, in my mid twenties
>realize I fucked up my life irreversibly

At least you aren't me, user.

I'm similar, learnt piano since I was young and am generally musically talented but I was an arrogant idiot of a kid and refused to learn notation or proper pieces, only cared about fucking around and I got away with it because I was a good hack, basically. I did years of exams and playing in school bands by memorising pieces instead of learning how to read the fucking music. I can play any old rock or folk piece of shit on a piano, guitar or a drum kit but all I'd like to do now is play a bit of Bach or something and I'm screwed. I could have been in an orchestra or studied music but I was a moron. It's probably the only thing I seriously regret.

I was too childish to practise as a kid, which is sad because I used to write little melodies on the piano when I was made to sit down, i didnt take music again till me teens and then started composing. I really wish my parents had just guaranteed me perfect pitch when I was a kid. My siblings did play properly and were good but music then became a labour to them and they gave it up when older.

youtube.com/watch?v=pze4NxCOjg0

ahah the nugget gets me every time
it’s still good though

Bach

youtube.com/watch?v=aiYJ7-TpyYE

What would you like to listen to as you leave this world?

Last night I watched a movie where a man with Alzheimer's put on Chopin's Nocturnes as he had one last glass of bourbon then blew his brains off. It was generic as shit but got me thinking about this.

>What would you like to listen to as you leave this world

Sion hort die wachter singen from BWV 140.

youtube.com/watch?v=VLfaB4JGwGI

youtube.com/watch?v=rYJMWRBq_hw

embarrassing

based

>they've brought tantacrul onboard
Nice

The hand in the coat is a freemason sign right? Why were so many composers doing that sign? If it means they were freemasons why were so many of them freemasons? Sibelius, Brahms, Mozart...

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No, it's not a masonic gesture.

what is it then?

>The hand-in-waistcoat (also referred to as hand-inside-vest, hand-in-jacket, hand-held-in, or hidden hand) is a gesture commonly found in portraiture during the 18th and 19th centuries. The pose appeared by the 1750s to indicate leadership in a calm and firm manner. The pose is most often associated with Napoleon I of France due to its use in several portraits made by his artist, Jacques-Louis David, amongst them the 1812 painting Napoleon in His Study.[1] The pose, thought of as being stately, was copied by other portrait painters across Europe and America. Most paintings and photographs show the right hand inserted into the waistcoat/jacket but some sitters appear with the left hand inserted. The pose was also often seen in mid-nineteenth century photography.

Uhh is this or the other thread the proper one?

Why are we split

yeah like that's not bullshit at all

shit

look at the time of the threads. the other one is the proper one

probably a reference to "the hidden hand" behind events, i.e. the masons or jews or whatever

yeah let's go with your schizophrenic conspiracy theory

I think I read somewhere that Mozart was a mason or illuminati or whatever.
There is a website called gnosticteachings.org, haven't been on it for a long time. They talk about how the teachings there are what brought forward the great creativity in music or something like that.
I think it was in Manly P Hall's book the Secret Teachings of All Ages it talked about all great philosophers being part of secret societies or some shit like that.
The first few degrees of Freemasonry they study the Trivium. The Trivium is followed by the Quadrivium and music is one of the subjects of the Quadrivium.

Mozart was a mason, that's well-documented. So was his father Leopold. And J. Haydn. But that doesn't mean that every person depicted with his hand in his coat is a mason.

the other thread is tainted. this is the real thread.

Writing out on manuscript=soul
Notation program=soulless

Bruch > all

Bruch < all

What is it about Beethoven that attracts genre tourists so much?
Every time I see a pseudo intellectual essay on this forsaken board it's always Beethoven. But no one else, not even Mozart or Fagtosky or other entry level composers.

Mozart invited Haydn to the lodge meeting once but it's not recorded whether Haydn continued at all

youtube.com/watch?v=vN_qqRrABT4&list=PL_1KRMi6SAPlNq3tyecHTnfRggvCfPiAL&index=7
Classical music BTFO
>inb4 muh crescendos (common in classical music)
>inb4 muh two chords
It just sounds better

You're forgetting Bach
>DAE Gödel Escher Bach? le strange loops xD I fucking love science!!!

Lilypond, all GUI scorewriters are slow, inefficient and bloated.

dunno man this shit slaps more
youtube.com/watch?v=L6nLtGcYozU

Because Beethoven was the first liberated genius composer.

umm sweaty that's haydn

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