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GreatClassicalMusic

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Welcome to The Great Classical Music myspace page!


This site aims to educate and inform people of classical music, or for people who are already fans, give them a chance to listen to some great music and perhaps read more about its origins, famous composers, and quotations. Suggestions are always appreciated, and I will be updating whenever I can. Thanks for stopping by!
25 Greatest Classical Music Works
1. Symphony No. 9 "Choral" – Ludwig Van Beethoven
2. Mass In B Minor – Johann Sebastian Bach
3. Symphony No. 6 "Pathetique" – Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky
4. Symphony No. 41 "Jupiter" – Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
5. Rite Of Spring – Igor Stravinsky
6. Symphony No. 9 – Gustav Mahler
7. The Ring of the Nibelungs – Richard Wagner
8. Symphony No. 3 "Eroica" – Ludwig Van Beethoven
9. Pictures At An Exhibition – Modest Mussorgsky (orch. by Maurice Ravel)
10. Symphony No. 5 – Ludwig Van Beethoven
11. Symphony No. 9 "From The New World" – Antonin Dvorak
12. Piano Concerto No. 5 "Emperor" – Ludwig Van Beethoven
13. Also Sprach Zarathustra – Richard Strauss
14. Violin Concerto – Ludwig Van Beethoven
15. St Matthew's Passion – Johann Sebastian Bach
16. Piano Concerto No. 2 – Sergei Rachmaninoff
17. Symphony No. 4 – Johannes Brahms
18. Piano Concerto – Robert Schumann
19. Symphonie Fantastique – Hector Berlioz
20. Piano Sonata No. 2 – Frederic Chopin
21. Symphony No. 9 – Anton Bruckner
22. Piano Concerto No. 1 – Peter Ilitch Tchaikovsky
23. Requiem – Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
24. The Planets – Gustav Holst
25. Symphony No. 8 "Unfinished" – Franz Schubert
Top 10 Composers 1. Ludwig Van Beethoven
2. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
3. Johann Sebastian Bach
4. Richard Wagner
5. Sergei Rachmaninoff
6. Johannes Brahms
7. Franz Schubert
8. Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky
9. George Frideric Handel
10. Frédéric Chopin

Madame Butterfly - Giacomo Puccini - 1904


Act One
A wedding is to be celebrated between Pinkerton, a Lieutenant in the US navy, and Cio Cio San, a 15 year old geisha known as Butterfly.
Pinkerton is shown around the house he has rented for his new Japanese bride by the marriage-broker Goro. He has leased it for 999 years, but notes that both deals (the house and and the marriage) can be broken at any time. The American consul, Sharpless, arrives to act as Pinkerton's witness at the wedding. Pinkerton makes it clear he does not take the marriage seriously. Sharpless warns Pinkerton to be careful: it would be wrong to break an utterly trusting heart.
Unknown to her family, Butterfly has visited the Christian Mission, renouncing her own religion - an irreversible decision.
The wedding ceremony takes place but Butterfly's uncle, the Bonze, has learnt of her visit to the Christian Mission. He denounces her, telling Butterfly that she will never be welcomed by the community again. Pinkerton is enraged and orders all the guests to leave. Pinkerton comforts his weeping bride in a tender love duet.
Act Two
Three years have past, and Pinkerton has long gone. Butterfly is convinced he will one day return (The famous Un bel di vedremo ). Sharpless arrives with a letter in which Pinkerton announces his marriage to an American wife, asking Sharpless to tell Butterfly. Before he can do, Goro appears with Prince Yamadori, a man of great wealth, who would like to marry Butterfly. Butterfly shrugs him off, point out that her marriage to Pinkerton is governed by US law, and she is not free to marry. Yamadori leaves and Sharpless tries again to read Pinkerton's letter. Butterfly will not let him tell her the truth, and keeps twisting his words to make them sound like a love letter.
Butterfly shows Sharpless her son with blonde curly hair, who is Pinkerton's child. She sings tenderly of her love and Sharpless departs, deeply moved. A cannon is heard announcing the arrival of Pinkerton's ship. While waiting for him to arrive, Butterfly and her maid Suzuki excitedly decorate the house with flowers to welcome Pinkerton home.Act Three
A new day dawns and there is still no sign of Pinkerton. Suzuki persuades the exhausted Butterfly to go and rest with her child.
Pinkerton arrives with his new wife, intending to persuade Cio Cio San to hand over their son to him. Suzuki tells him of Butterfly's great love and suffering, and, filled with remorse, Pinkerton hurries away. Butterfly returns to greet her husband but instead finds his new wife. She realises why the couple have come. Kate asks for her forgiveness, whereupon Butterfly tells her there should be no woman on Earth happier than she and not to be saddened over her own plight. She says she will hand over her son if Pinkerton comes to get him personally.
Left alone with her thoughts, Butterfly considers her father's ceremonial sword and prepares for suicide. She bids farewell to her son and strikes the mortal blow. A moment later, Pinkerton arrives, calling her name.

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 2/3/2007
Band Website: classicfm.com
Band Members: To Myspace: This myspace has been used for my and other peoples enjoyment, I am not making anything out of this site.

Classical Music Quotes

"When I am alone with my notes, my heart pounds and the tears stream from my eyes" - Guiseppe Verdi

"I shall seize Fate by the throat; it shall certainly not bend and crush me completely" - Beethoven

"There's nothing remarkable about it. All one has to do is hit the right keys at the right time and the instrument plays itself" - Bach

"I write music with an exclamation point! - Richard Wagner

"To play without passion is inexcusable!" - Beethoven

"Some people come into our lives, leave footprints on our hearts, and we are never the same." - Franz Schubert

"Neither a lofty degree of intelligence nor imagination nor both together go to the making of genius. Love, love, love, that is the soul of genius." - Mozart

"The Symphony must be like the world. It must embrace everything" - Gustav Mahler

"I can't listen to too much Wagner. I start getting the urge to conquer Poland" - Woody Allen

"My favourite opera is La Boheme because it is the shortest I know" - King George V

"My idea is that there is music in the air, music all around us; the world is full of it, and you simply take as much as you require." - Elgar

"Wagner has lovely moments but awful quarters of an hour" - Gioacchino Rossini

"After playing Chopin, I feel as if I had been weeping over sins that I had never committed, and mourning over tragedies that were not my own" - Oscar Wilde

"When I open my eyes I must sigh, for what I see is contrary to my religion, and I must despise the world which does not know that music is a higher revelation than all wisdom and philosophy." - Beethoven

"I sing from the heart... I sing the words of a song and really feel them, from the top of my head to the tip of my toes... I sing as though my life depends on it, and if I ever stop doing that then I'll stop living" - Mario Lanza

"I put all my soul into Bohème, and I love it boundlessly. I love its creatures more than I can say." - Giacomo Puccini

"'The trees are singing my music...Or have I sung theirs?" Edward Elgar

"Am I afraid of high notes? Of course I am afraid? What sane man is not?” - Luciano Pavarotti

"So far as genius can exist in a man who is merely virtuous, Haydn had it. He went as far as the limits that morality sets to the intellect" - Friedrich Nietzsche (Philosopher)

"It is unnecessary for music to make people think...it would be enough it it made them listen! - Claude Debussy

"I should be glad if something occurred to me as a main idea that occurs to Dvorak only by the way" - Johannes Brahms

"Verdi...has bursts of marvellous passion. His passion is brutal, it is true, but it is better to be impassioned in this way than not at all" - Georges Bizet

"My mind and fingers have worked like two damned ones. Unless I go mad, you will find an artist in me "- Franz Liszt, aged 21

"Keep your eye on him; one day he will make the World talk of him" - Mozart on Beethoven

"We cannot despair about mankind knowing that Mozart was a man" - Albert Einstein

"Handel understands effect better than any of us; when he chooses, he strikes like a thunderbolt" - Mozart on Handel

"The effect of all good music is to affect the soul" - Claudio Monteverdi, the first to popularise Opera

"As a musician I tell you that if you were to suppress adultery, fanaticism, crime, evil, the supernatural, there would no longer be the means for writing one note" - Georges Bizet

"One can't judge Wagner's opera Lohengrin after a first hearing, and I certainly don't intend to hear it a second time" - Rossini

"In opera, there is always too much singing." - Claude Debussy

"If a composer could say what he had to say in words he would not bother trying to say it in music" - Gustav Mahler

"There are two golden rules for an orchestra: start together and finish together. The public doesn't give a damn what goes on in between"
"The sound of a harpsichord is like two skeletons copulating on a hot tin roof" - Thomas Beecham

"To Strauss the composer I take my hat off to Strauss the man I wear it back on" - Arturo Toscanini on Richard Strauss's Nazi past

"I believe richness is like love in the theatres and novels. No matter how often one encounters it in all shapes and sizes it never misses its target if effectively yielded." - Giacomo Meyerbeer

Sounds Like: Medievil (467-1400)

Renaissance (1400-1600)
-Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
-Nicolas Gombert

Baroque (1600-1760)
-Henry Purcell
-Antonio Vivaldi
-Claudio Monteverdi
-Johann Sebastian Bach

Classical (1730-1820)
-Joseph Haydn
-Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
-Ludwig Van Beethoven
-Franz Schubert

Romantic (1815-1910)
-Carl Maria Von Weber
-Frederic Chopin
-Robert Schumann
-Guiseppe Verdi

20th century (1900-2000)

-Leonard Bernstein
-Giacomo Puccini
-Sergei Rachmaninoff
-George Gershwin

Contemporary classical music (1975-Present)
-Philip Glass
-Karlheinz Stockhausen
-Lukas Foss

Record Label: unsigned
Type of Label: None

My Blog

They sing of love, betrayal, and death far from home. No wonder tenors die young

I don't think it matters if you confuse the singer with the song. Their ruined lives are in the script Published: 08 September 2007 [Howard Jacobson] "It feels so strange here sometimes," th...
Posted by GreatClassicalMusic on Sat, 08 Sep 2007 08:47:00 PST

Milan 2007 [La Scala trip]

I have just returned from a visit to Milan where I saw a family friend perform in Candide at La Scala. It was a great performance, La Scala was amazing! We went back stage and it was great to imagine ...
Posted by GreatClassicalMusic on Sun, 08 Jul 2007 07:56:00 PST

It takes more than a good voice to be an opera singer

Philip Hensher 19/6/07 On Sunday night, ITV, of all people, found time to broadcast a performance of the G major tenor aria from the last act of Turandot. If that sounds frankly unlikely, put it like...
Posted by GreatClassicalMusic on Tue, 19 Jun 2007 11:16:00 PST

Go on, tell it like it is...

The Royal Opera is reviving Verdi's Stiffelio next week. The opera had its UK premiere at Covent Garden in the early 1990s. It was quite something to have a UK premiere of a Verdi Opera in our lifetim...
Posted by GreatClassicalMusic on Sun, 15 Apr 2007 03:43:00 PST

The day the music died?

Yes, big Companies may have looked at the figures and concluded that it isn't worth investing in classical music. Classical music has always had a fairly small fan base, and the vast commercial succes...
Posted by GreatClassicalMusic on Fri, 06 Apr 2007 01:48:00 PST

FRANZ SHUBERT (30/3/07)

Borrowed from The Independent newspaper on 30.3.07 [30 March 1824] Franz Schubert writes to his friend Leopold Kupelwiser in Rome. He had been suffering from the symptoms of syphilis for two years. "I...
Posted by GreatClassicalMusic on Sun, 01 Apr 2007 05:54:00 PST