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Well, blow this! (at the start, anyway)

Posted: 04 Aug 2018, 14:05
by Airspeed
Sit down, get comfortable......
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8KsXPq3nedY

Re: Well, blow this! (at the start, anyway)

Posted: 04 Aug 2018, 15:31
by Nigel H-J
Excellent Mike, I really enjoyed listening to that.

Regards
Nigel.

Re: Well, blow this! (at the start, anyway)

Posted: 04 Aug 2018, 16:09
by FlyTexas
Very nice. :) The conductor looks a bit like film director Quentin Tarantino. :lol:

Brian

Re: Well, blow this! (at the start, anyway)

Posted: 04 Aug 2018, 21:53
by simondix
FlyTexas wrote:
04 Aug 2018, 16:09
Very nice. :) The conductor looks a bit like film director Quentin Tarantino. :lol:

Brian
I thought more like Max Boyce

Re: Well, blow this! (at the start, anyway)

Posted: 04 Aug 2018, 23:07
by nigelb
Thanks for posting that Mike. Only one change of keys in the entire piece but very haunting with Ravel's masterful use of orchestration.

Nigel²

Re: Well, blow this! (at the start, anyway)

Posted: 05 Aug 2018, 09:30
by Filonian
What a wonderful start to Sunday. Many thanks Mike. In cases like this, I enjoyed it more because they looked as if they were enjoying it. I think I would have enjoyed playing under such an animated conductor.


Graham Image

Re: Well, blow this! (at the start, anyway)

Posted: 07 Aug 2018, 04:10
by Airspeed
Glad you enjoyed it, Gentlemen!
I am no music expert; "..a change of key...." :dunno: I was intrigued as to how the snare drummer managed to put those earrings on without missing a beat. :stupid:
Anyway, I've often wondered why the melody suddenly becomes so raucous at the end, so I looked it up.
Anybody interested: https://www.classicfm.com/composers/rav ... ls-bolero/
Another of life's mysteries solved. :)

Re: Well, blow this! (at the start, anyway)

Posted: 07 Aug 2018, 04:18
by airboatr
I thought of this when I first read the thread topic
https://youtu.be/EGwXj4vOalo
:RN:

Re: Well, blow this! (at the start, anyway)

Posted: 07 Aug 2018, 10:04
by Airspeed
They sound very civilised! :agree:

*-) "Excuse me my good man, but we've come to blast your ship out of the water; is that OK? :dunno:
Come on, men, back up the rigging, last one to make a hornpipe is a girls blouse!"

Re: Well, blow this! (at the start, anyway)

Posted: 08 Aug 2018, 01:51
by nigelb
Airspeed wrote:
07 Aug 2018, 04:10
Glad you enjoyed it, Gentlemen!
I am no music expert; "..a change of key...." :dunno: I was intrigued as to how the snare drummer managed to put those earrings on without missing a beat. :stupid:
Anyway, I've often wondered why the melody suddenly becomes so raucous at the end, so I looked it up.
Anybody interested: https://www.classicfm.com/composers/rav ... ls-bolero/
Another of life's mysteries solved. :)
Yes Mike, one change of Key from C Major to E Major at the end! Unusual for classical music because composers usually modulated to several keys in their compositions contributing to the variety of the piece. Ravel achieved variety by the use of instrumental and harmonic variety. Mozart was famous for traveling around most of the circle of fifths. The first movement of his 40th symphony is evidence of that. "Circle of fifths?" No, nothing to do with bottles of whiskey volume (Colonial measurement) so you will have to google that to learn all about it. Music, mathematics and physics are all related and this is evidenced by the circle of fifths. Probably more than you ever wanted or needed to know. ;)

Nigel²