Astronuc
Jan11-05, 07:30 PM
Most people may know to go to All Music Guide (www.allmusic.com) if one is looking for a particular picece of music, group, album, or is just interested in the history.
In the US, one can purchase music on-line at Barnes and Noble, Amazon and others.
Another good place for music from Europ, which is not available in the US is -
Groove Unlimited (http://www.groove.nl/)
Groove is a great place to find out what's happening in the European music scene.
Astronuc
Feb6-05, 04:48 PM
Some interesting sources for music:
Peter Schickele of PDQ Bach has a good program looking at different music:
http://www.schickele.com/cgi-bin/playlist.pl?command=list
And for those who like Jazz:
http://www.jazzafterhours.org/ look on left for Playlists.
Astronuc
Feb6-05, 04:50 PM
Symphony No. 6 in D Major, Op. 60. by Antonin Dvorák (1841-1904)
Four movements - the third and fourth movements are outstanding, especially the third which has some rather interesting progressions. The fourth movement has some complicated parts for young musicians, but they played superbly.
For lyrics of many international pieces - check out:
http://www.recmusic.org/lieder/
The Lied and Art Song Texts Page is an archive of texts to Lieder and other Classical Art Songs (Kunstlieder, Mélodies, Canzoni, Romansy, Canciones, Liederen, Canções, Sånger, Laulua, etc.) as well as many choral works and other types of classical vocal pieces. It includes thousands of translations to English, French, German, Spanish and other languages.
This site houses an extensive, growing archive of texts to 16,019 Lieder and other classical art songs (Kunstlieder, Mélodies, Romansy, etc.) and other classical vocal pieces such as choral works, madrigals and part-songs, in over 15 languages, with 2,632 volunteer translations to English, French, Spanish, German, and other languages. It was created in May, 1995 by Emily Ezust, and is offered as a non-commercial and non-profit public service.
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