Your top 16 and two-thirds sonatas for bassoon and cello

Started by O Delvig, June 20, 2007, 05:43:12 PM

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O Delvig

Here's mine:

Mozart K292
Mozart K292
Mozart K292
Mozart K292
Mozart K292
Mozart K292
Mozart K292
Mozart K292
Mozart K292
Mozart K292
Mozart K292
Mozart K292
Mozart K292
Mozart K292
Mozart K292
Mozart K292
Mozart K292 (first two movements)

Bonehelm

Holy crap, what's with all these "Your top..." threads?

Heather Harrison

Somewhere in the wide world of classical music, there must be one of these besides the one by Mozart, but I sure can't think of one at the moment.

Heather

springrite

Quote from: Bonehelm on June 20, 2007, 05:54:00 PM
Holy crap, what's with all these "Your top..." threads?

Someone started a silly one just to make a point about the silliness of these threads. Now these point-making threads have manifested into beaded spaghetti.

O Delvig

now that I've actually gone looking, I find Hindemith, Bizet, as well as some Japanese composers have written some works.

http://www.cavalli-records.de/index.htm?/html_en/ccd/ccd257.htm

;D ;D ;D ;D ;D

I may have to revise my list.

springrite

Quote from: spaghetti on June 20, 2007, 06:11:18 PM
now that I've actually gone looking, I find Hindemith, Bizet, as well as some Japanese composers have written some works.

http://www.cavalli-records.de/index.htm?/html_en/ccd/ccd257.htm

;D ;D ;D ;D ;D

I may have to revise my list.

You mean you will put works you have never listened to, found on the Internet, on your list of top this and that list?

How wonderful.

O Delvig

Quote from: springrite on June 20, 2007, 06:16:16 PM
You mean you will put works you have never listened to, found on the Internet, on your list of top this and that list?

How wonderful.

And where, may I ask, is your list?

(Remember, the last one is only two-thirds of a work. That may help you narrow down your list, if you don't like one movement of a work.)

I'd like to ask people not to post 17, or 18, or 37. And please don't put at the bottom, "Of course, that's not counting composer X's opus Y, and composer Z's Pasta Sonata, etc."

Bonehelm

Quote from: springrite on June 20, 2007, 06:16:16 PM
You mean you will put works you have never listened to, found on the Internet, on your list of top this and that list?

How wonderful.

Not to mention he put European composers together with a Jap composer.

oyasumi


Bonehelm

Quote from: oyasumi on June 20, 2007, 09:04:15 PM
Um...

Hmm? Just saying Japanese music is kinda out of the ordinary European classical music we listen to, that's all.

Symphonien

Quote from: Bonehelm on June 20, 2007, 10:40:51 PM
Hmm? Just saying Japanese music is kinda out of the ordinary European classical music we listen to, that's all.

Er... how so? There are many Japanese composers that write "classical" music. By this logic, you're also saying that all composers from non-European countries cannot be considered classical like all of Asia, America, Australia, etc. Do you mean to suggest that Ives, Barber, Copland, Villa-Lobos, Ginastera, Takemitsu, Sculthorpe etc are not classical music?

greg

there's so many works by Ubloobideega in this genre that I don't even know where to start  :-\