What concerts are you looking forward to . . . in the hereafter?

Started by secondwind, September 25, 2009, 09:43:49 AM

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secondwind

Let's face it, if you believe in the afterlife at all, you've gotta believe there will be music!  Concerts I'm looking forward to:

Symphony No. 8 (premiere) . . . . . Sibelius

Clarinet Concerto No. 2 . . . . . . . . Mozart
                       soloist:  A. Stadler

Variations on a Theme of Mendelssohn . . . J.S. Bach

What concerts are you looking forward to?

hornteacher

Mozart's completed Requiem.

Beethoven's 10th.

Schubert's "Finished" Symphony

Bernstein conducting again.

Brian


Brian

Quote from: Brian on September 25, 2009, 10:03:00 PM
Berlioz conducting Mahler's First.
And all the major orchestral works of Ravel, with Michelangeli on hand to play the piano concertos.

secondwind

Alicia de Larrocha  playing Granados

(because I never had a chance to hear her perform live in this life :'()

Brian

Ancerl with the Glagolitic Mass and Sinfonietta. Then the next night Talich takes over for Dvorak's Seventh and the first two-thirds of Ma Vlast.

Daidalos

Being a heathen, I'll probably be burning in hell, in which case I can look forward to experiencing Wagner's epic cycle of 17 four-hour long operas, depicting the heroic tale of his own life, the story he always wanted told.
A legible handwriting is sign of a lack of inspiration.

ChamberNut

Brahm's Clarinet Concerto

Wagner's 'Star Wars' cycle  ;D

Mahler's completed 10th

Beethoven - String Quintet in D minor (with 2 cellos)

Keemun

Bruckner: Symphony No. 9 with 4th movement (in case there was going to be a 4th movement)

Bruckner: Symphony No. 10

Mahler: Symphony No. 10 (complete)

Mahler: Violin Concerto

Sibelius: Symphony No. 8

Tchaikovsky: Violin Concerto No. 2

Bach: Cello Suites Nos. 7-12
Music is the mediator between the spiritual and the sensual life. - Ludwig van Beethoven

Lethevich

Mahler - Concerto for orchestra
Berg - Chamber opera on Kafka's "Metamorphosis"
Bruckner - Organ concerto
Sibelius - Piano concerto
Sibelius - A four movement tone poem suite in his late style
Rott - Symphony No.9
Peanut butter, flour and sugar do not make cookies. They make FIRE.

Opus106

Regards,
Navneeth

Lethevich

Moar!

Brahms:
Cello concerto
Clarinet trio No.2
Clarinet quintet No.2
Piano sonata No.4
Clarinet sonata No.3
A septet, octet and nonet
A further concert overture or tone poem
Peanut butter, flour and sugar do not make cookies. They make FIRE.

Opus106

Quote from: Lethe on September 28, 2009, 11:05:07 AM
Moar!

Brahms:
Cello concerto
Clarinet trio No.2
Clarinet quintet No.2
Piano sonata No.4
Clarinet sonata No.3
A septet, octet and nonet
A further concert overture or tone poem

How about an opera?
Regards,
Navneeth


Brian

Quote from: various people
Sibelius - Piano concerto
Brahms - opera
Call me crazy, but I'm not sure I'd want to hear these. For instance, a series of violin, cello or flute concertos (or English horn) would befit Sibelius' orchestral style much better than a piano concerto, methinks.

I think a Mahler Trombone Concerto would be pretty cool.

Lethevich

Quote from: Brian on September 28, 2009, 12:05:07 PM
Call me crazy, but I'm not sure I'd want to hear these. For instance, a series of violin, cello or flute concertos (or English horn) would befit Sibelius' orchestral style much better than a piano concerto, methinks.

My interest in specifically a piano concerto from Sibelius was spurred by the first movement of Peterson-Berger's 3rd symphony, which has a kind of sibelian landscape, evoking the twinkle of cold spring, or distant bells. I found it magical, but feel that Sibelius could've done a lot more in terms of sophistication and depth (providing it was in his late style rather than VC-era). Admittedly it would be a gamble, as he has no piano piece which demonstrates a full affinity with the instrument...

I'm also not sure how Brahms would work in anything other than abstract drama, but it would be fun to find out 0:)
Peanut butter, flour and sugar do not make cookies. They make FIRE.

Brian

Quote from: Lethe on September 28, 2009, 02:22:22 PM
My interest in specifically a piano concerto from Sibelius was spurred by the first movement of Peterson-Berger's 3rd symphony, which has a kind of sibelian landscape, evoking the twinkle of cold spring, or distant bells. I found it magical, but feel that Sibelius could've done a lot more in terms of sophistication and depth (providing it was in his late style rather than VC-era). Admittedly it would be a gamble, as he has no piano piece which demonstrates a full affinity with the instrument...

Hmmm, something interesting to listen to now!  8)

greg

Mahler trombone concerto?  ;D

A Mahler piano concerto would be awesome... and of course, the millions of symphonies he'd write after that.

secondwind

Quote from: Lethe on September 28, 2009, 11:05:07 AM
Moar!

Brahms:
Cello concerto
Clarinet trio No.2
Clarinet quintet No.2
Piano sonata No.4
Clarinet sonata No.3
A septet, octet and nonet
A further concert overture or tone poem
Yes, I want a ticket to this one!  Actually, this would be an entire concert series. . .

Joe Barron

Charles Ives, the Universe Symphony. I figure he's had the time and the energy to complete it by now. We won't have to put up with those wretched "realizations" anymore, and he'll be able to place the musicians antiphonally across the entire cosmos.

Of course, it will be strictly SRO in hell ...