2017-11-21 notes: strictly progressive (last evening at the Light Lounge)

This playlist is the last time we have a classical music evening at the Light Lounge near Leicester Square tube.

I am very grateful to Gary and his team for the opportunity and their support.

While I will now be looking for a new home for this project, this last playlist was able to divest itself of any populist considerations, so it is a bit, dare I say, “hardcore”…

If Knussen, Schönberg, Salonen, and Schnittke are a bit too much for you, come a bit later, at around 8.30pm to enjoy the less intense modernity in the form of Bernstein and Stravinsky.

On the other hand, the Light Lounge has a happy hour from 5pm-7pm, so this might be the perfect opportunity to sweeten this 20th/21st Century attack on your musical sensibilities with a Pisco Pear Sour, or a White Lady.

Link to the playlist

2017-11-14 notes: happy and powerful

This certainly is one of the most upbeat playlist I have done.

Many thanks to Paîvi and Michael Smith who contributed a significant number of the titles here.

It is a very colourful collection of energetic happiness with such diverse composers as Beethoven, Handel, Strauss, Walton, Sibelius, Mozart, Bach, and many others.

Enjoy.

2017-10-31 playlist: Halloween

https://itunes.apple.com/gb/playlist/halloween/idpl.u-6mo44aeTB8PjNv

 

 composer  title
Liszt Mephisto Waltz
Strauss Neujahrskonzert et al.
Ravel La Valse
Mussorgsky A night on the bare mountain
Mahler symphony no. 6
Ravel Bolero
Berlioz symphonie fantastique
Stravinsky Sacre
Mozart requiem
Wagner valkyries
Verdi requiem

Instrument collection at Ronnie Scott’s on Saturday, 28th October 2017, 10am-4pm

Music Fund is my favourite charity: They collect instruments, repair them (if necessary) and bring them to conflict zones.

Give Music A Chance.

Please support them with a donation (easiest way is to come to my Classical Light Lounge evening where we have tip jars.)

However, tomorrow, from 10am-4pm at Ronnie Scott’s, you can support them directly by handing over a beloved (or not) instrument that you do not use anymore. Music Fund will check its condition and find it a new home. That could be a very keen youngster (or grandpa or anything in between) anywhere in the world.

My favourite story is how founder Lukas Pairon went to the Congo and taught a former gang leader how to repair guitars. One of the most touching moments for me was when I watched a documentary about Music Fund’s work in Gaza where a mother said “We live a life, you know. It makes me sad that all the world only knows us for the bombing and the violence. We eat, we go to school, we play music.” (quoted from memory)

Or a young girl in the same documentary who explains in only a few words how music is important to her even more because of all the violence she has experienced and the number of loved ones she has lost.

Music is important. To all of us. Let us try to give Music a chance. Everywhere.

Please come to Ronnie Scott’s tomorrow, or donate financially either at the Classical Light Lounge or via http://www.musicfund-uk.org

2017-10-31 notes: Halloween

For Halloween, I decided to alternate dark themes with the almost unbearable cheerfulness of Johann Strauss, so almost every piece gets juxtaposed with a loud and light waltz.

That is real life for you: No light without shadow…

The sequence of the Strauss pieces is mainly based on the original Neujahrskonzert in Vienna of 1939. Once that is done, later pieces follow.

Interspersed, however, you will find much more sombre pieces by Liszt, Ravel, Mussorgsky, Mahler, Berlioz, Stravinsky, Mozart, Wagner, and Verdi.

2017-10-24 notes: violin, not too sugary

Oh, this playlist seemed so well planned originally.

Then, at quarter past five, I see an email from Pete, the manager of the Light Lounge, asking whether I have sent today’s playlist yet.

Well, I had not, so this one was partly well planned, partly improvised, and also is much shorter than the usual 6.5 hours.

Also, it starts with the finale of Nutcracker, which is a slap in the face for the evening’s theme – classical music hardly gets any more sugary 🙂 But at that time, I was in the bar already, and my friend Anna Harris requested Nutcracker, so who am I to ignore her.

However, the list swiftly follows with “proper” hardcore violin music with ASM first rendering Vivaldi’s four seasons in a recording that got a lot of flak at the time due to its rather big, almost romantically sized orchestra, but then Karajan did whatever he felt like at that stage.

A much younger Anne-Sophie Mutter follows with Karajan’s majesgtically slow interpretation of Beethoven’s violin concerto.

Then, Hilary Hahn does some Bach, and I have to admit that I commited the ultimate classical music sin and sacrificed the quiet movements. The bar gets too loud to hear anything subtle between about 7pm and 8.30pm.

Tchaikovsky’s violin concerto brings more contemporary passion and tempo into the evening with a wonderful and light-hearted recording by Gidon Kremer.

Julia Fischer then does all the very same work that I played with Hilary Hahn, because why not, it is nice to see how very different the same pieces can sound even here in the bar.

And because I am weird, obsessed and consistently inconsistent, I finish with Verdi’s Dies Irae, and Wagner’s ride of the Valkyries.

2017-10-24 playlist: violin, not too sugary

https://itunes.apple.com/gb/playlist/violin-not-too-sugary/idpl.u-BNA66YXu1ezP9d

 

 composer  title
Tchaikovsky Finale of Nutcracker, Berlin Philharmonic, Simon Rattle
Vivaldi Four Seasons, Anne-Sophie Mutter, Karajan
Beethoven violin concerto, Anne-Sophie Mutter, Karajan
JS Bach Violin concerto no.1, Hilary Hahn
JS Bach Violin concerto no.2, Hilary Hahn
 JS Bach concerto for 2 violins BWV 1043, Hilary Hahn
Tchaikovsky violin concerto, Gidon Kremer
JS Bach Violin concerto no.1, Julia Fischer
JS Bach Violin concerto no.2, Julia Fischer
 JS Bach concerto for 2 violins BWV 1043, Julia Fischer
Vivalid violin concertoes, Gidon Kremer
Verdi Requiem: Dies Irae
Wagner Ride of the Valkyries

2017-10-10 playlist: piano, symphonies, and choral drama

https://itunes.apple.com/gb/playlist/piano-symphonies-and-choral-drama/idpl.u-RRbVVD1T3mN18l

 

 composer  title  duration
JS Bach Prelude no. 1, well-tempered clavier, Gulda  2m 08s
JS Bach Fugue no.1, well-tempered clavier, Gulda  3m 08s
Beethoven Piano sonata no. 14, Adagio sostenuto, Pollini  6m 21s
JS Bach Prelude no. 1, well-tempered clavier, cembalo  2m 18s
JS Bach Fugue no.1, well-tempered clavier, cembalo  2m 06s
JS Bach  Brandenburg concerto no. 4, 1st movement  6m 36s
 JS Bach  Brandenburg concerto no. 4, 2nd movement  2m 29s
 JS Bach  Brandenburg concerto no. 4, 3rd movement  4m 26s
Salonen  Lachen verlernt  10m 40s
JS Bach Prelude no. 1, well-tempered clavier, Hewitt  2m 09s
JS Bach Fugue no.1, well-tempered clavier, Hewitt  1m 56s
Beethoven  Piano sonata no. 29, 1st movement, Brendan  11m 43s
Beethoven Piano sonata no. 29, 2nd movement, Brendel  2m 39s
Beethoven Piano sonata no. 29, 3rd movement, Brendel  19m 36s
Beethoven Piano sonata no. 29, 4th movement, Brendel  12m 13s
Schumann Piano concerto A minor, 1st, Gremaud  15m 02s
Schumann Piano concerto A minor, 2nd, Gremaud  5m 41s
Schumann Piano concerto A minor, 3rd, Gremaud  10m 28s
Beethoven 5th symphony, 1st, Karajan (1963)  7m 20s
Beethoven 5th symphony, 2nd, Karajan (1963)  10m 04s
Beethoven 5th symphony, 3rd, Karajan (1963)  9m 05s
Chopin  Piano concerto no.2, 1st, Pogorelich  13m 51s
Chopin Piano concerto no.2, 2nd, Pogorelich  10m 09s
Chopin Piano concerto no.2, 3rd, Pogorelich  7m 28s
Berlioz  Symphonie fantastique, 1st, Muti  15m 19s
Berlioz  Symphonie fantastique, 2nd, Muti  6m 46s
Berlioz  Symphonie fantastique, 3rd, Muti  16m 07s
Berlioz  Symphonie fantastique, 4th, Muti  6m 40s
Berlioz  Symphonie fantastique, 5th, Muti  9m 56s
Mozart Symphony no.41, “Jupiter”, 1st, Böhm  7m 38s
Mozart Symphony no.41, “Jupiter”, 2nd, Böhm  7m 40s
Mozart Symphony no.41, “Jupiter”, 3rd, Böhm  5m 24s
Mozart Symphony no.41, “Jupiter”, 4th, Böhm  6m 25s
Bruckner  Symphony no. 4, “Romantic”, 1st, Rattle  19m 36s
Bruckner  Symphony no. 4, “Romantic”, 2nd, Rattle  16m 38s
Bruckner  Symphony no. 4, “Romantic”, 3rd, Rattle  11m 17s
Bruckner  Symphony no. 4, “Romantic”, 4th, Rattle  23m 48s
Händel  Messiah, Hallelujah, Gardiner  3m 48s
Haydn Creation, “Mit Staunen”, Levine  2m 12s
Haydn Creation, “Stimmt an die Saiten”, Levine  2m 17s
Händel Messiah, Hallelujah, Davis  3m 43s
Verdi  Aida, Gloria All’Egitto, Maazel  3m 41s
Mozart  Requiem, Kyrie, Abbado  2m 25s
Mozart  Requiem, Dies irae, Abbado  1m 59s
Mozart  Requiem, Domine, Abbado  3m 36s
Orff  Carmina Burana, Fortuna, Harding  2m 36s
Wagner Ride of the Valkyries, Karajan  6m 09s
Penderecki  Metamorphosen, 1, Mutter  14m 22s
Wagner Ride of the Valkyries, Solti  3m 05s
Verdi  Requiem, Dies irae, Bernstein  2m 11s
Verdi  Requiem, Libera me, Bernstein  13m 40s