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Length: 2:51
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Not that I don't also enjoy the musical genius...
Another piece I know because of Looney Tunes.
Same here!! Thanx RP!
I really think this Brahms dude is going somewhere. So promising.
LOL! Too funny!
+99999999999999999999999999 for Brahms.
The bearded serious looking dead composer shown on the CD cover hides the fact that Brahms learned his trade as a young man by playing (improvising) on the piano in brothels.
In brahthels?
Another one stolen by soviet's 'culture' and used as own music.
Only if you're stuck in a historical rut...
Allan Sherman anyone?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jIwvsj40sBY&list=PL8AD324E20B6A7CBD&index=8
He didn't ruin this song for me, but it's hard to listen to it without my brain calling up some of those dumb lyrics.
Another piece I know because of Looney Tunes.
Wow 2 days in a row!
Another one stolen by soviet's 'culture' and used as own music.
You say stolen. I say wonderful.
Hard to dance to!
Depends the dance! Them 19th century Hungarians were pretty wacky.
Although he looks pretty sketchy here.
Like he's on his way to a Terry Gilliam/Monty Python sketch?
I really think this Brahms dude is going somewhere. So promising.
Although he looks pretty sketchy here.
I hear The Munsters theme in here
Yeah, Brahms totally lifted it - mostly because of his infatuation with Yvonne DeCarlo/Lily.
Yet again, we have a rough transition from Unshaken by D'Angelo (which is great) into a Hungarian Dance. What about a big band piece with strings then the Hungarian Dance? Abrupt genre switches without great transitions make for rough listening experiences.
Whenever I think this, I assume Bill & Rebecca are trying to teach me something and I listen more closely for a connection... sometimes it's not obvious, but there's always one there!
How come everything good in classical is a No. 5
Apart from the four Rachmaninov piano concerti (he never wrote a fifth!), though I concede that Shostakovitch's 5th symphony is very great indeed.
bugs and elmer chasing each other through the forest tip-toe-ing around a tree can’t you just see it?
i fear my knowledge of much of the old "classics" began with Bugs and Merry Meodies...and didn't progress far enough after...but understand "classical" has become a generic term that doesn't always apply...
bugs and elmer chasing each other through the forest tip-toe-ing around a tree can’t you just see it?
a former co-worker's kids call Classical "Bugs Bunny Music"
quit your whining
"Brahms & Liszt"
Anyone know the meaning?
Tip: It's Cockney rhyming slang!
So there you have one food from each land.
Each one delicious, each one simply grand.
Mix them all up, in one big mish mash.
And what have you got? Hungarian goulash!
Man, my thoughts exactly.
You're probably thinking of Flight from the Cluster Bee. Totally different.
Fondly recalls that late 60's early 70's TV commercial where the grandfatherly pitchman mentions Polovetsian Dance Number 4 by Borodin. 5 musta been really good.
Not everything, but Perez Prado's "Mambo #5" is probably his best.
the comment below was meant to agree with the Looney Tunes comment
I see Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd running around in the woods
skooba wrote:
kcar wrote:
Yes! Exactly! There's definitely a Loony Tunes feel to this piece.
Years ago while dating a woman in Germany we visited one of her friends raising three young, young girls. They treated us to some wonderful "ballet" set to this music. A bit goofy but very sweet and lovely.
1) "(no lyrics available)" I think someone needs to get on that!
2) The "release date"....of 1869. That literally made me LOL,
skooba wrote:
kcar wrote:
Yes! Exactly! There's definitely a Loony Tunes feel to this piece.
Can you think of anything other than Beethoven's 5th?
Beside that, Beethoven's 9th symphony (choral), is voted greatest piece of music almost every year in a row on Classical Radio Boston WCRB
I can take German, Russian, maybe. But never, never Hungarian in the afternoon.
This is an outrage!
Funny, today (june 28, 2016) we had the same sequence: Stones followed by Brahms. Same playlist?
You're being too hard on yourself; if you were a kid in the 1970s, you're not that old.
kcar wrote:
Yes! Exactly! There's definitely a Loony Tunes feel to this piece.
YES!!!!!
Slap!
I gave it an 8. It's not that good to give it a 10.
A lot of truth in this comment.
I remember my music school.
I heard this done by Allan Sherman years and years before I heard the original. He "ruined" a number of classical pieces. I don't resent him quite as much as I despise United Airlines for co-opting Rhapsody in Blue, though.
Yes! Exactly! There's definitely a Loony Tunes feel to this piece.
The bearded serious looking dead composer shown on the CD cover hides the fact that Brahms learned his trade as a young man by playing (improvising) on the piano in brothels.
Brill stuff, though. Well done RP :)
Edit: Noo
sorry!
Edit: Noo
Dig that facial hair Jo!