Classical Music Blogs or Personal Webpages

Started by Que, December 13, 2008, 02:23:25 AM

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Philoctetes

#20
Sweet, opera reviews:

http://npw-opera-concerts.blogspot.com/

Sorry, Philo, but our viewpoint on gratuitous vulgarity has remained constant in your absence. Welcome back, BTW. 8)  GB

Que

Sorry for posting a blog in French again...I guess Francophones just adore Baroque Music!



Q

Antoine Marchand

http://www.robert-hill-live.blogspot.com/

A blog for anyone interested in period instruments and historically informed performances of Classical and Baroque music.

:)

sonusantiqva

Hello:

Les presento un foro para compartir música (de manera altruista, siempre) y debatir sobre ella; especialmente de música antigua (antiqva), hasta Monteverdi (más o menos).

I present a forum for sharing music (so unselfish, always) discuss it; especially early music (Antiqva) to Monteverdi (more or less).

https://sonusantiqva.org

jlaurson

this blog looks like some sort of scam uh... not very genuine and written to attract links, not a devoted readership... and if there's any ranking involved, I obviously disagree with it... but perhaps of interest all the same:

50 Best Blogs for Exploring Classical Music
http://www.mastersdegree.net/blog/2010/50-best-blogs-for-exploring-classical-music/


tyrangrillo

For those interested in classical recordings on ECM Records' New Series imprint, feel free to check out my ECM blog, which contains a growing number of reviews and short essays. I am currently in the process of reviewing every classical release on the label and welcome your comments and/or suggestions:

http://ecmreviews.com/

As of this posting, my most recent review is of Giya Kancheli's Magnum Ignotum, featuring the great Rostropovich.

Thank you,
Tyran

Lethevich

Thanks for the link - the quality of review sure beats my usual source - Amazon ;D
Peanut butter, flour and sugar do not make cookies. They make FIRE.


Octo_Russ

What do you think of my Blog?, my Blog is now one year old, and i wondered what people think of it on this forum, i'm quite biased for it, but would like to get an idea from anyone seeing it for the first time, my Blog is a personal journal of my listening activities, and yet it's nice to have an audience too, my Blog is roughly 75-80% Classical.

So take a look, http://octoruss.blogspot.com/ tell me what you think, im very much interested in, Questions / Improvements / Criticisms / Advice / Suggestions / Praise even, feel free to comment, i won't get upset if you don't like it, i just want to get a feel for what others think.


I'm a Musical Octopus, I Love to get a Tentacle in every Genre of Music. http://octoruss.blogspot.com/

John Copeland

Quote from: Octo_Russ on January 01, 2011, 02:28:31 PM
What do you think of my Blog?, my Blog is now one year old, and i wondered what people think of it on this forum, i'm quite biased for it, but would like to get an idea from anyone seeing it for the first time, my Blog is a personal journal of my listening activities, and yet it's nice to have an audience too, my Blog is roughly 75-80% Classical.

So take a look, http://octoruss.blogspot.com/ tell me what you think, im very much interested in, Questions / Improvements / Criticisms / Advice / Suggestions / Praise even, feel free to comment, i won't get upset if you don't like it, i just want to get a feel for what others think.



Well my tentacly challenged friend, I like the style and layout of your blog, and your side notes give it gravitas.  Your present seems well informed.
Weakness:  Spread over too many genres, but its always good to read intelligent, well informed reviews.

tyrangrillo

Quote from: Octo_Russ on January 01, 2011, 02:28:31 PM
What do you think of my Blog?, my Blog is now one year old, and i wondered what people think of it on this forum, i'm quite biased for it, but would like to get an idea from anyone seeing it for the first time, my Blog is a personal journal of my listening activities, and yet it's nice to have an audience too, my Blog is roughly 75-80% Classical.

So take a look, http://octoruss.blogspot.com/ tell me what you think, im very much interested in, Questions / Improvements / Criticisms / Advice / Suggestions / Praise even, feel free to comment, i won't get upset if you don't like it, i just want to get a feel for what others think.

Your blog is positively lovely! Kudos on the Elgar recommendation, by the way. My only suggestion would be to change the white-text-against-solid-black layout, if possible, as it gets tiring on the eyes rather quickly. Otherwise, blog away! Now that winter break is ending and a new semester awaits, I'm afraid I won't be able to match your listening rate of 3 to 5 discs a day until summer rolls around.

Rinaldo

A recently started blog by a very inspiring Czech scientist & bona fide music connoisseur: Smell of Sound. "Read what I'm listening to," writes the author, "365 recordings for 2011." Audio is provided as well. I don't understand where does he find the time to thoroughly listen to all those recordings AND blog about them as well, but he used to work at CERN, so there might be quantum tunneling black magic involved.


ongakublue

#33
 8) here is my blog by me - avid listener, composer, music teacher - is quite new and has posts on classical music amoung other things

http://jamiebonline.blogspot.com/

as said it is new so not many posts yet but there will be more including classical music reviews

thanks to those who visit
Jamie Byrne

My Blog: http://jamiebonline.blogspot.com/

ClassicalWeekly

I'm make my contribution, too.

My site is www.classicalweekly.com.  It started out of my realization that as I explore more and more music, I discover fantastic works that I've never heard of before; and then I say "I can't believe I didn't know about that work before".  So now each week I post an excerpt from a work that I think is interesting for some reason (with my non-professional musician comment), as well as a YouTube video of an example of the work.   I found that people new to classical music find it much more accessible to hear a single movement first as opposed to listening to the entire work and then waiting for the proverbial "good part"

I also have on this site an eBook that I wrote, "A Digital Workflow for Classical Music and Opera CDs: Creating High-Quality Archives of your Classical CDs for iTunes, the iPod and other Management Software and Players."  You can get an excerpt at www.classicalweekly.com/eBook

Please check it out and let me know what you think (or if there's a work of classical music that you think that people MUST hear).

Thanks!
www.classicalweekly.com - Weekly Classical Music Suggestions

Get our iTunes and Classical Music eBook!

Harry Powell

http://estanochebarralibre.blogspot.com/

My blog about the music and performers I like best.

http://tuttopavarotti.blogspot.com/

My blog about Pavarotti's career.

For those of you who can read Spanish.
I'm not an native English speaker, so please feel free to let me know if I'm not expressing myself clearly.

fahl5

Hi,
I am doing some experiments producing classical music digitally. I invite you to listen some examples on my musicsite (http://klassik.s-fahl.de). It is all CCC, since it is just my joy to do things like that. You will find mostly Pianomusic, but also pianochambermusic, a few string quartetts, orchestral compositions and even some Works with orchestra and choir. I also do like to make rarely heard and recorded composers audible this way. You might find on my page compositions never recorded bevor, but naturally I also trained my knowledge in "digital interpretation" in trying to make recordings of traditional repertoire like Bach, Haydn, Liszt etc. Working together with a frined, who produces samplelibraries of historical instruments I also enjoy to produce recordings of music that historially fits to the sampled instrument. You will find a whole section on my site just for historical keyboards. My just finished Project was to produce Recordings of tha 120 canons and fugues of A.A.Klengel, which is absolutly incredible good music. So if you are interested, just listen. best
fahl5
klassik-resampled: over 1400 mp3 with 77 hours often rare music

Archaic Torso of Apollo

I ran across this yesterday, while doing some Beethoven research:

http://lvbandmore.blogspot.com/

This appears to be a one-man labor of love, and it's probably the most interesting and wide-ranging LvB site I've yet seen.
formerly VELIMIR (before that, Spitvalve)

"Who knows not strict counterpoint, lives and dies an ignoramus" - CPE Bach

haydnguy

Quote from: ~ Que ~ on December 13, 2008, 02:23:25 AM
Please post links to intersting Classical Music blogs and personal webpages! :)

My first contribution - mainly of interest for those who read French... :-\

A very highly sophisticated blog, covering all aspects of art, but music in particular - with main focus on Early Music & Baroque. It includes reviews of recordings and samples.

JardinBaroque

Q

Que, very interested in seeing this one. I think the Google translater might work good enough. Unfortunately it's coming up with a blank page. I'm using IE9.

haydnguy

Quote from: Teresa on June 12, 2010, 04:43:12 PM
Here is my blog about my favorite recording company, Telarc.  They record mostly Classical and Jazz.
The Telarc High Resolution Fan Club

Joined your blog Teresa. :)