marco85

DeRank : 0,00
DeAge™ : 7390 days • Here since 18 march 2006
Oasis (What's The Story) Morning Glory?
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-quoted by the legendary Paul McCartney: ā€œone of the greatest songs in the history of musicā€ - but in my opinion, he must have smoked all the grass from Buckingham Palace...
Wojciech Kilar Bram Stoker's Dracula O.S.T.
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Great choice! The soundtrack captures the film's atmosphere of perversion beautifully...
AA.VV. Music from the Motion Picture, Pulp Fiction
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Great review and great album...but the rating is very high! I've heard soundtracks that are much better than this...
Leone Di Lernia Re Leone Di Lernia
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AH AH!
King Crimson Larks' Tongues In Aspic
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"The album opens with 'Larks' Tongues in Aspic pt. I,' the most beautiful piece in the Crimson history, in my opinion the most beautiful in the history of music." Oh, philosophical buffoon, what are you trying to teach us now, the history of music? Clown.
Antonio Vivaldi Le Quattro Stagioni
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That is to say, when it comes to violin concerts, this must stand out for its unique sound possibilities, for the beauty of its tone, etc...
Antonio Vivaldi Le Quattro Stagioni
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nothing bothers me at all! we simply didn’t understand each other regarding the issue! okay, modern composers might find the four seasons boring and outdated: you named a few, and that was great, but I wanted to emphasize that, aside from what moderns might say, Vivaldi’s music is BEAUTIFUL (and I cited Bach to support this thesis)! however, I also wanted you to explain why you consider the Vivaldian violin concertos full of virtuosity for its own sake... I mean, after all, they are violin concertos only... it’s obvious that this (beautiful) instrument should stand out, and in my opinion, dear Antonio proved to be absolutely brilliant in this...
Antonio Vivaldi Le Quattro Stagioni
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No, sorry dear, but I told you "Bach was inspired by Vivaldi," knowing that with Bach's death the baroque period came to an end, I wanted to emphasize that a great composer still gave him the right credit; you replied "but Bach is not very modern" and off you went with the history lesson... Then the idea that the virtuosity of Vivaldi and that of early baroque (here comes your second little lesson for the definition) is almost always self-serving is extremely debatable... if you want, we can discuss it, but only if you drop your music history textbook...
Antonio Vivaldi Le Quattro Stagioni
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Bach is not ultra-modern...so is he mediocre?! Does he not deserve to be taken into consideration?! Bah...Virtuosity is always beautiful when it is not an end in itself...as for technique, it is essential: after all, each single note has its own technical value.
Antonio Vivaldi Le Quattro Stagioni
Voto:
"Many modern and contemporary composers do not hide their dislike for the superficial music of the Italian" But who are you talking about?! Bach was inspired by Vivaldi. I won't add anything else. "Sorry, if music doesn't have to depend on virtuosity, how do you view people who self-proclaim as non-musicians like Brian Eno, who are in fact among the most important musicians in rock history? And what about genres like new wave or punk?" Huh? What confusion... I don't understand the question. I would also like to emphasize that technique and virtuosity are two different things. There is a nice difference.