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#resphigi
patrickdebana · 3 years
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Rain before it falls (upcoming tour in September in Italy 🇮🇹...so happy to be back on stage with my beautiful Svetlana Zakharova and Denis Savin @svetlana_zakharova_official @savindisa ) Thank you Roberto Giovanardi and MuzArts for making this happen @rob.giova52 @muzarts #svetlanazakharova #denissavin #muzarts #yuribaranov #tour #upcoming #september #italy #onstageagin #rainbeforeitfalls #resphigi #carlospinoquintana @pinoquintanacarlos #bach #light #jamesangot #libretto @jeanfrancoisvazelle #costumes @stephie.baeuerle @stb.costumedesign #love #trio #story #storytelling #dance #dancers #choreography @patrickdebana_dance #anouncement #silence #emotions #emotionsmatter #humans #humanity (at Большой театр России / Bolshoi Theatre of Russia) https://www.instagram.com/p/CQ2qJ88o6Vv/?utm_medium=tumblr
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classical-crap · 7 years
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yessssss I am hyped. afraid, but hyped
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classical music recs
divided into vague categories in no particular order
feeling some kind of way sonata for flute & piano - poulenc two nocturnes - scriabin apres un reve - faure (arr. for cello and piano) vltava (die moldau) - smetana cello concerto in e minor - elgar the lark - glinka (arr. balakirev) chaconne - ‘vitali’ (violin & piano, violin & organ, arr. charlier, arr. respighi) das lied von der erde - mahler the poem of ecstasy - scriabin violin concerto in d minor - sibelius zigeunerweisen - sarasate exstase - ysaÿe violin concerto in d minor - khachaturian symphony of psalms - stravinsky
so you like the piano romance sans parole - faure (no. 1, no. 2, no. 3) six pieces for piano - resphigi danzas argentina - ginastera (no. 1, no. 2, no. 3) nocturnes in c-sharp minor - abelardo nocturne in e-flat major - glinka odeon - nazareth années de pèlerinage - liszt concerto for solo piano - alkan romeo & juliet fantasy overture - tchaikovsky (arr. gryaznov) piano concerto no. 1 - tchaikovsky mélancolie - poulenc enigma variations, c.a.e. - elgar (transcribed for piano)
when you want anxiety in music form threnedy for the victims of hiroshima - penderecki tabula rasa - pärt chant de linos - jolivet allegro de sonata - h & j wieniawski der erlkönig  - ernst
lush das wunder der heliane - korngold pictures at an exhibition - mussorgsky (orch. ravel) a somerset rhapsody - holst cello concerto in b minor - dvorak piano concerto no. 3 - prokofiev enigma variations, nimrod & * * * - elgar symphony nr. 4 in e-flat minor - brucker
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smallbutcapable · 5 years
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Hello! I understand you like trees. Or at least have a knack for dendrology. First, have you read a book called “The Overstory” by Richard Powers? And second, have you heard of a classical piece called “The Pines of Rome” by Resphigi? I thought I’d ask because of it involves with your interests 😄 I didn’t mean to impose. I hope you’re doing ok!
Hi, Anon! Thanks for the ask! I’m a botanist by trade who’s working to gain her certification in arboriculture so I love anything trees!🌲 🌳 I haven’t heard of either of those books but I’m definitely going to look them up. I love reading! Thank you so much for telling me about them! You’re no bother at all, I hope you’re staying safe! 🤗
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i know its been a bit but, DOES ANYONE KNOW WHAT THE FUCK WAS UP WITH THE FLYING RESPHIGI WHALES GOING TO WHALE HEAVEN
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peachesandlesbians · 6 years
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Cookie dough, Rocky road, butter pecan
cookie dough: do you play any instruments?
I do! I play clarinet, bass clarinet, and piano. I also used to play violin. 
rocky road: favorite songs at the moment?
Right now, it’s Strawberries & Cigarettes by Troye Sivan, Pines of Rome by Resphigi, Cherry Bomb by NCT 127, Broken Hearts Club by gnash, BTS’ new japanese album, and He’ll Never Love You (HNLY) by Hayley Kiyoko!
butter pecan: favorite songs for life?
ANYTHING by Hayley Kiyoko, 1812 Overture (it’s technically a piece, but whatever), Spring Day by BTS, the whole Hamilton soundtrack, the whole Dear Evan Hanson soundtrack, and many, many more. 
Thanks for the ask!
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scottbcrowley2 · 5 years
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Jan Pellant closes first season with Coeur d’Alene Symphony with ‘Sounds of Magic’ - Thu, 02 May 2019 PST
“Sounds of Magic” features performances of Paul Dukas’s Sorcerer’s Apprentice, Alexander Glazunov’s Saxophone Concerto and Ottorino Resphigi’s Pines of Rome. Jan Pellant closes first season with Coeur d’Alene Symphony with ‘Sounds of Magic’ - Thu, 02 May 2019 PST
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handsingsweapon · 7 years
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i swear vitya will get to yuuri in chapter 4. i swear it. music links below!
Now We Are Free, Lisa Gerrard (Gladiator Soundtrack): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o2ZiIPEorP0
The Appachian Way, movement 4 of the Pines of Rome, Resphigi: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQwGTe_MueM
Wandering Star, Portishead: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gEQNAZGoZrw
One Day More, Les Miserables: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rvE7aM66-BM
Les Sans Papiers, Notre Dame de Paris: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U5vNha50j9w
3rd Movement, 2nd Concerto, Rachmaninoff: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IbG2Uf2GdxY
El Tango de Roxanne, Moulin Rouge (Christophe!): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=egYUpyU-GxU
Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This), Eurythmics (also Christophe!): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qeMFqkcPYcg
SexyBack, Justin Timberlake (yeah. Christophe, again): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3gOHvDP_vCs
9 Crimes, Damien Rice (ed. note: for the Olympics it would’ve had to be an instrumental cover, I believe): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gFPBmhfljRA & here’s the original: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cgqOSCgc8xc
Great Gate of Kiev, Modest Mussorgsky: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b8gs4TozJbQ
Hallelujah, Jeff Buckley: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y8AWFf7EAc4
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528flute · 8 years
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My favorite piece of music right now is The fountains of Rome. The music is so uplifting and inspiringly. It has so many orchestral colors. I love the combinations that Resphigi uses, like piccolo and english horn together. I love how the brass continually climb upward and upward at the end of the piece.
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classical-crap · 6 years
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hey, i've been playing classical music for years and i love it but i have an issue. i rarely listen to music outside of the music that i'm currently playing, so i feel totally lost when other musicians talk about songs and stuff. plus i feel like i just need to appreciate music more! any recommendations? (btw i play cello and piano and prefer romantic era music)
I’m just going to list six pieces that may or may not be unrelated to cello and the romantic era and if you find one you like, go down a youtube rabbit hole until you find a piece that’s similar. it’s a pretty effective way of finding new pieces. 
1. dvorak symphony seven
2. resphigi pines of rome
3. mahler piano quartet in a minor
4. debussy string quartet in g minor
5. ravel introduction and allegro
6. and the bach cello suites (maybe not the g major because I guarantee you’ve heard it. maybe try this one?)
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elretratodeisabela · 12 years
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Victoria de los Angeles sings 'Stornellatrice' (Resphigi) Gerald Moore, piano London 09.V.1949
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classical-crap · 7 years
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I need your help I guess. I have to pick my classes for the next two years at school and I can choose between 0,2 or 4 music lessons per week. I'll definitely take 2 but I'm not sure if I should take 4 because me teacher said you should now classical music and I quite enjoy classical music but I don't know where to start to get it to know better(I don't listen to it regularly at the moment but wouldn't mind doing it if I needed to). Do you have any advice how to get started with classical music?
first off, I think four lessons a week is probably a bit much, unless you’re a beginner and your teacher intends on drilling you ceaselessly with lots of scale and technical studies and you’re serious about learning your instrument.
the best way to get started is to play and to listen. I’m gonna list a pretty diverse set of composers and I want you to go and make a point of listening to at least a short piece by all of them, and maybe see if you can learn a piece by one of them eventually. you’ll probably hear some familiar stuff. and then after that, go explore on your own. listen to a piece you’ve never heard of. see what’s out there. (and if you really like it, pick up a music history book with short biographies on some of the composers)
-mozart
-bach
-tchaikovsky
-chopin
-debussy
-shostakovich
-takashi yoshimatsu
-lili boulanger
-mahler
-albeniz
-delius
-hildegard von bingen
-resphigi
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classical-crap · 7 years
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i'm a composer and have a question about violins. i know that when writing for beginning violinists (like 4th graders) you shouldn't write higher than first position. what's the highest position a reasonably gifted high schooler could play on the violin? like an honors/gifted youth orchestra level player?
everything you need to know about how high can the violins go-middle school orchestra: don't go above an e three ledger lines above the staff-good high school orchestra: don't go above a b 5 ledger lines above the staff and only for lyrical passages (no high sixteenth notes)-good youth symphony orchestra: an e three ledger lines above the staff but with an 8va symbol. I wouldn't have many sixteenth notes above a b. I would recommend looking at the 1st violin part for la forza del destino by verdi. my youth symphony was able to perform it and it's a decently written violin part.-for all orchestra writing I wouldn't go above what I recommended for the youth symphony level. you could get away with an f but at a certain point you're just going to cause the listener and the performer pain. take resphigi, for example. his music is difficult and playable, but sometimes a bit much.-for violin solo: the absolute highest is an A 4 ledger lines and a space above the staff with an 8va symbol. it is the highest note I have ever seen written for the instrument and talented players will complain but they can play it.
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