I got the chance to sing in Carnagie Hall when I was 16... I love Opera, musicals, anytype of classical music.. There is something so powerful about not just hearing, but feeling the music! Originally Posted by Red_Headed_JulieThat is incredibly cool. I saw Rigoletto with the NYC Opera, but I have never been to the Met or inside Carnegie Hall. Going to the Metropolitan Opera and seeing someone in Carnegie Hall are on my bucket list. As is a bbbj from mariel hemingwayesque inappropriately younger women during a horse drawn carriage ride in Central Park.
I'm classically trained, and my daughter intends on minoring in Opera performance. So yes... we love opera around these parts!!! Originally Posted by GracePrestonClassically trained in what?
Classical yes, especially when it's paired with a good movie. Like "Ride of the Valkeries" in the movie Apocalypse Now. Originally Posted by ProlongusThat is one my favorite scenes from any movie ever. 99% of the symbolism is lost unless you know the role of the Valkyries in Nordic myth. I was showing that scene on youtube to a friend in the last month and literally choked up. Pretty silly the things that can choke me up.
If you love Bach, you'll love this album. I pop it in twice a week at least. The harp and violin work on here are amazing.This is impressive. MSOG with a composer that fathered 20 kids!!
https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/ba...as/id491236938 Originally Posted by str8.2.bbbj
Classical yes, especially when it's paired with a good movie. Like "Ride of the Valkeries" in the movie Apocalypse Now. Originally Posted by Prolongus"Valkyries" was also excellent as performed by Elmer Fudd and transmuted into "Kill the Wabbit!" Cartoons are a great fount of classical music because the studios didn't want to pay ASCAP or BMI clearance fees so they used fee free music.
"Valkyries" was also excellent as performed by Elmer Fudd and transmuted into "Kill the Wabbit!" Cartoons are a great fount of classical music because the studios didn't want to pay ASCAP or BMI clearance fees so they used fee free music.I took an Opera Appreciation course at a local university years ago. The instructor was a local music critic. He showed this cartoon during the first class. When it was over he said "that will be it for Wagner" Like I said he was a critic.
c.a. Originally Posted by Chainsaw Anthropologist
Classical yes, especially when it's paired with a good movie. Like "Ride of the Valkeries" in the movie Apocalypse Now. Originally Posted by ProlongusAnother great example of this is Samuel Barber's Adagio for Strings in Platoon.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ECQeLQURNuw
There are moments of transition in all of our lives. I know the exact moment I knew I couldn't live without classical music. I got on a midnight train between Paris and Munich in the fall of 1980. I met a French girl. That in itself can change your life, but a few days latter she took me to hear Bach's Saint Mathew's Passion. It was performed in a tiny church in in a quiet neighborhood in Munich. The number of people in the chorus was just about the same as the number of people in the audience. Bach sung acapella, windows open, candle light, French girl. My god whats a boy to do? Things haven't been the same since. Originally Posted by boomvangGot to watch those French girls on trains. Met mine on a train from Vienna to Nice. She was going to Salzberg. Never intended to go to there, but made a detour. An excellent decision. Hung out with her for two months, thank God not all in Salzberg. Still in contact about once a month.
Got to watch those French girls on trains. Met mine on a train from Vienna to Nice. She was going to Salzberg. Never intended to go to there, but made a detour. An excellent decision. Hung out with her for two months, thank God not all in Salzberg. Still in contact about once a month. Originally Posted by TexTushHogWhat was wrong with Salzberg? Mozartaphobia? Mozart StraBe, Mozartplatz, Mozathaus, Mozartburger, Mozart Brathähnchen. I have never been a huge Mozart fan. I always struggled for an adjective to describe the way I feel about his music. Then I read a biography of Beethoven. Beethoven is my composer. A man's composer. Beethoven was influenced by Mozart of course, but he described his music as effeminate. That hit the nail on the head.
As a young teen in the school band our band director always said a true musician could appreciate any type of music. Back then I really liked jazz and the normal stuff played on the radio. It wasn't until college that I started really listening to and appreciating classical music. Now I listen to almost all music and have my car radio set on various stations......NEVER got used to heavy metal and punk though. Originally Posted by gladius82I know what you mean. Metal and Punk are acquired taste; I'm not talking CBGB Punk. Honest to god punk. Its like a lot of things its best consumed live. Dallas had a bar "The Hot Club" on Maple Ave. This was before Deep Ellum became a scene and these were real punks. I saw The Lords of The New Church in there one night. It was awe inspiring. The Sex Pistols played at the Bronco Bowl I knew about and let it slip by, I wish I could say I had been there.
Back when I worked in an office on Woodall Rodgers—and was single—I would often stop by the Meyerson Symphony Hall and stand in line (which was never for very long) for returned tickets. I always seemed to get killer orchestra seats. That was so great, when I had time to do that kind of thing.Its a good thing this is an anonymous board. I'm about to commit Fort Worth blasphemy. The Morton Meyerson is a single use symphony hall. You can't stage an opera, ballet nothing. Just hear a symphony or something that doesn't require people moving around on stage. But it is world class and something Dallas should be extreemly proud of. I.M. Pei the architect that designed the Mortitorium has several buildings in Dallas. Regardless of how you feel about the Pyramid he is also the architect that was invited to design the addition to the Louvre. That's an art museum in Paris France.
One of the highlights of my music-going life was hearing Pinchas Zukerman play violin while he conducted the orchestra WITH the great Itzhak Perlman also playing violin. Wow.
About a year ago I took my 8 year-old daughter to hear pianist Khatia Buniatishvili in the Opera House. If you want to see a beautiful woman, look her up. Originally Posted by NorthDallas30