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The Epic Picks
For those who don't regularly listen to the music I post — now is the best time to start, and for those who do — here's a list of some of the most grandiose accomplishments of Western music for you to revisit and reenjoy. And yeah, I may love Liszt a little too much
Beethoven: Symphony No. 9 "Choral" - a symphony that defined centuries to come and whose last movement has been used as a hymn for the unity of mankind by the most distinct political and social movements, serving as an ultimately time and ideology-defying work of art (but yeah, of course we all know that any great art is right-wing in its very essence)
- 2nd movement
- 4th movement "Ode to Joy" (second audio) + Liszt's piano arrangement
Wagner: Lohengrin: Prelude - slow and heavenly pure introduction and the most uplifting and epic goosebumps-giving climax you'll ever hear
Liszt: Faust Symphony
- 1. Faust - a triumphant and heroic movement with a climax that's worth everything
- 2. Gretchen / a piano arrangement - peaceful depiction of plain earthy beauty, innocence and lovely passion
- 3. Mephistopheles + a final chorus - all the genius of Liszt's thematic transformation (which is performed on the Faust themes) + an epic chorus
Liszt: Piano Sonata in B minor - a tremendous single-movement piano sonata, considered to be one of the greatest works for piano ever written and the ultimate example of music as a philosophical medium. Despite being a single 30min movement, it includes a complete development and transformation for all of its themes, wild dances, a tragic prologue, a peaceful lyrical meditation and a fugue.
There isn't a concrete program for it but some of theories suggest that it should be interpreted as a portrait of the Faust legend or the myth of the Fall. Here's an amazing video essay on it
Tchaikovsky: Symphony No.6 "Pathétique" - a tragic, passionate and emotionally raw symphony considered to be the best of Tchaikovsky and one of the best of all time
- 1st movement
- 3rd movement
- 4th movement
Beethoven: Symphony No. 7
- 2nd movement - one of the best symphonic slow movements ever
- 3rd movement - you will see why Wagner called this symphony "the Apotheosis of Dance"
- Chopin: Polonaise "Heroic"
- Liszt: Prometheus
- Liszt: Dante Symphony: I. Inferno
- Liszt/Wagner: Elsa's Traum
- Wagner: Tristan und Isolde
- Beethoven: Symphony No. 3 "Eroica", I. Allegro con brio
- Beethoven: Symphony No. 6 "Pastoral", V. Alegretto
- Bach: Violin Partita No. 2: V. Ciaccona
yet to post Gretchen and Dante Symphony's Purgatorio when appropriate
helpful links: what the fuck is a symphony
For those who don't regularly listen to the music I post — now is the best time to start, and for those who do — here's a list of some of the most grandiose accomplishments of Western music for you to revisit and reenjoy. And yeah, I may love Liszt a little too much
Beethoven: Symphony No. 9 "Choral" - a symphony that defined centuries to come and whose last movement has been used as a hymn for the unity of mankind by the most distinct political and social movements, serving as an ultimately time and ideology-defying work of art (but yeah, of course we all know that any great art is right-wing in its very essence)
- 2nd movement
- 4th movement "Ode to Joy" (second audio) + Liszt's piano arrangement
Wagner: Lohengrin: Prelude - slow and heavenly pure introduction and the most uplifting and epic goosebumps-giving climax you'll ever hear
Liszt: Faust Symphony
- 1. Faust - a triumphant and heroic movement with a climax that's worth everything
- 2. Gretchen / a piano arrangement - peaceful depiction of plain earthy beauty, innocence and lovely passion
- 3. Mephistopheles + a final chorus - all the genius of Liszt's thematic transformation (which is performed on the Faust themes) + an epic chorus
Liszt: Piano Sonata in B minor - a tremendous single-movement piano sonata, considered to be one of the greatest works for piano ever written and the ultimate example of music as a philosophical medium. Despite being a single 30min movement, it includes a complete development and transformation for all of its themes, wild dances, a tragic prologue, a peaceful lyrical meditation and a fugue.
There isn't a concrete program for it but some of theories suggest that it should be interpreted as a portrait of the Faust legend or the myth of the Fall. Here's an amazing video essay on it
Tchaikovsky: Symphony No.6 "Pathétique" - a tragic, passionate and emotionally raw symphony considered to be the best of Tchaikovsky and one of the best of all time
- 1st movement
- 3rd movement
- 4th movement
Beethoven: Symphony No. 7
- 2nd movement - one of the best symphonic slow movements ever
- 3rd movement - you will see why Wagner called this symphony "the Apotheosis of Dance"
- Chopin: Polonaise "Heroic"
- Liszt: Prometheus
- Liszt: Dante Symphony: I. Inferno
- Liszt/Wagner: Elsa's Traum
- Wagner: Tristan und Isolde
- Beethoven: Symphony No. 3 "Eroica", I. Allegro con brio
- Beethoven: Symphony No. 6 "Pastoral", V. Alegretto
- Bach: Violin Partita No. 2: V. Ciaccona
yet to post Gretchen and Dante Symphony's Purgatorio when appropriate
helpful links: what the fuck is a symphony
03.05.202510:33
You guys are amazing
01.05.202514:52
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