If Music Be The Food Of Love, Play On: The Music Thread: What Are You Listening To?

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Tonight, I shall refer you to a quite lovely and heartbreakingly beautiful piece by Ronald Binge that goes by the name of The Watermill.

As a child, I saw a TV production of The Wind In The Willows, for which this was the theme music of the soundtrack, and I never forgot - nor could ever forget - that haunting, bittersweet, tune.

But, for a very long time, I didn't know what it was called, nor who composed it.
 

lizkat

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Tonight, I shall refer you to a quite lovely and heartbreakingly beautiful piece by Ronald Binge that goes by the name of The Watermill.

As a child, I saw a TV production of The Wind In The Willows, for which this was the theme music of the soundtrack, and I never forgot - nor could ever forget - that haunting, bittersweet, tune.

But, for a very long time, I didn't know what it was called, nor who composed it.

This offering has not only that music --such a wonderful piece for the oboe-- but also a collection of beautiful English landscape paintings, many of which do feature watermills. Performance by the Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Ernest Tomlinson.

 

lizkat

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Golden Brown - The Stranglers.


That one was brought to my attention one night at a party for its restless time signatures, after i had offered up Prokofiev's 7th Sonata on that topic and someone else said wrong genre looking for something a little more now... LOL when I looked it up more recently on YouTube I ran into a comment that I found hilarious: "so British it colonised my computer."
 

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That one was brought to my attention one night at a party for its restless time signatures, after i had offered up Prokofiev's 7th Sonata on that topic and someone else said wrong genre looking for something a little more now... LOL when I looked it up more recently on YouTube I ran into a comment that I found hilarious: "so British it colonised my computer."

It is a brilliant - and haunting track.

To my mind (or ear), a timeless classic.

And I have always loved (well, I have long loved Baroque music, howsoever unfashionable it may have been in my university days - dudes/guys, especially, were always stupefied by the fact that I not only loved - but knew - this music, it is hard to condescend to someone who knows and loves classical music) the harpsichord.

That sound; I adore it. (Better than piano - which I also like - to my jaundiced ear).

There have been days when I would have (almost willingly) sold my soul to have mastery of this instrument. But then, I also think this about the theorbo.

Sigh: Yes. I know what I want to come back to in my next life (assuming such a thing exists).

What is there not to like - with a stunning harpsichord (howsoever incongruous) in a (flawless) modern musical setting?

And, an aside: Any guy (dude) who could play piano competently or decently, or with some respect for music and instrument (okay, I prefer harpsichord, but let's not be too demanding or high maintenance) met with my wholehearted approval; let's just say that sitting (nursing a glass of wine - beer doesn't quite cut it in these circumstances or settings) while listening to a chap/dude/guy who could play Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata (and yes, Baroque is even better) is something that - while I am not quite weak at the knees - does Put Me In A Very Good Mood.
 
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This offering has not only that music --such a wonderful piece for the oboe-- but also a collection of beautiful English landscape paintings, many of which do feature watermills. Performance by the Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Ernest Tomlinson.


Gorgeous.
 

lizkat

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Schumann's Fantasiestücke, Op 12, performed by British pianist Benjamin Frith. On a NAXOS album of piano works by Schumann and Brahms, other pianists on this album are Jeño Jandó and Idil Biret.


Schumann, Brahms - piano works - Jandó, Frith, Biret.png
 

lizkat

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Tracks from Burgers, the 1972 album by Hot Tuna, the ever-evolving group (more or less held together in various iterations by Jorma Kaukonen and Jack Casady "and friends") loosely configured as a blues-rock band that had originated as a sideline for some members of Jefferson Airplane.

album art - Burgers (1972) -  Hot Tuna .jpg
 

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More Pink Martini - what an absolutely wonderful group.

I have had the privilege and pleasure of seeing them play live (twice) - once on my birthday, the (excellent) ticket a birthday present from my brother.

Anyway, I have been listening to the albums Je Dis Oui! and Hey Eugene! (by Pink Martini).
 
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