You are currently browsing the category archive for the ‘Music’ category.
Category Archive
The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude – L’Arpeggiata – Athanasius Kircher
February 9, 2018 in Music | Tags: L'Arpeggiata - Athanasius Kircher (1602-1680) - Tarantella Napoletana, The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude, Tono Hypodorico | by The Arbourist | Comments closed
Share this:
The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude – Giovanni Valentini – Sonata à 5.
January 26, 2018 in Music | Tags: Baroque, Music, The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude | by The Arbourist | Comments closed
I’ll see if I can feature more of G.Valentini’s work. I like it. :)
Giovanni Valentini (ca. 1582 – 29/30 April 1649) was an Italian Baroque composer, poet and keyboard virtuoso. Overshadowed by his contemporaries, Claudio Monteverdi and Heinrich Schütz, Valentini is practically forgotten today, although he occupied one of the most prestigious musical posts of his time. He is best remembered for his innovative usage of asymmetric meters and the fact that he was Johann Kaspar Kerll’s first teacher. The family name comes from deep roots in the native country of Greece. Well known for their classical music but also known for the family that branched off to the neighbouring country of Italy.
Share this:
The DWR Friday Choral Interlude – Franz Schubert – Messe G-dur I: Kyrie
January 19, 2018 in Music | Tags: Franz Schubert - Messe G-dur I: Kyrie, The DWR Friday Choral Interlude | by The Arbourist | 1 comment
Guess who is singing this mass. :) Just the Kyrie for today, the soporano soloist is quite good. Enjoy. :)
Share this:
The DWR Sunday Religious Disservice – Ken Ham
January 7, 2018 in Music | Tags: Religion, The DWR Sunday Relgious Disservice | by The Arbourist | 4 comments
Ah, 2018 opens with a intelligently compelling argument brought to you by none other than the nigh-famous Ken Ham. (Folks, I think may have fused my cortex writing the words intelligently and compelling in the same sentence as Ken Ham).

Share this:
The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude – Haydn’s Nelson Mass
January 5, 2018 in Music | Tags: Haydn, Kyrie, Missa in Angustiis, The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude | by The Arbourist | Comments closed
I’ve found a much better version of one of my favorite masses. The soprano soloist is amazing in this version.
Haydn’s chief biographer, H. C. Robbins Landon, has written that this mass “is arguably Haydn’s greatest single composition”.[1] Written in 1798, it is one of the six late masses by Haydn for the Esterhazy family composed after taking a short hiatus, during which elaborate church music was inhibited by the Josephinian reforms of the 1780s. The late sacred works of Haydn are regarded as masterworks, influenced by the experience of his London symphonies. They highlight the soloists and chorus while allowing the orchestra to play a prominent role.[2]
Owing to the political and financial instability of this period in European history, Haydn’s patron Nikolaus II dismissed the Feldharmonie, or wind band octet, shortly before Haydn wrote the Missa in Angustiis for the Princess’s name day.[2] Haydn, therefore, was left with a “dark” orchestra composed of strings, trumpets, timpani, and organ.[3] Later editors and arrangers added what they perceived to be missing woodwind parts, but the original scoring has again become the accepted choice for modern performances.
Though Haydn’s reputation was at its peak in 1798, when he wrote this mass, his world was in turmoil. Napoleon had won four major battles with Austria in less than a year. The previous year, in early 1797, his armies had crossed the Alps and threatened Vienna itself. In May 1798, Napoleon invaded Egypt to destroy Britain’s trade routes to the East.
The summer of 1798 was therefore a terrifying time for Austria, and when Haydn finished this mass, his own title, in the catalogue of his works, was Missa in Angustiis (Mass for troubled times). What Haydn did not know when he wrote the mass, but what he and his audience heard (perhaps on September 15, the day of the very first performance), was that on 1 August, Napoleon had been dealt a stunning defeat in the Battle of the Nile by British forces led by Admiral Horatio Nelson. Because of this coincidence, the mass gradually acquired the nickname Lord Nelson Mass. The title became indelible when, in 1800, Lord Nelson himself visited the Palais Esterházy, accompanied by his British mistress, Lady Hamilton, and may have heard the mass performed.[4]
Haydn’s original title may also have come from illness and exhaustion at this time, which followed his supervision of the first performances of The Creation, completed a few months earlier. More simply, it may have sprung from the challenge of composing without the desired instrumentation.[5] The solo parts for two of the vocal quartet are virtuosic: the bass line was perhaps written for the accomplished Christian Specht, and the soprano line, even more demanding, could have been written for Barbara Pilhofer or Therese Gassmann. The piece was premiered 23 September 1798 at the Stadtpfarr church, a last minute venue change from the Bergkirche in Eisenstadt.
Share this:
The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude – .S. Bach WO – BWV 248 Teil1 “Jauchzet frohlocket “
December 22, 2017 in Music | Tags: 248, Bach, Bach - Fugue in G minor BWV 578, The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude | by The Arbourist | Comments closed
It’s a repeat, but I like this performance better and really, no such thing as too much Bach. :)
Share this:
The Imperial March – A Musical Analysis
December 21, 2017 in Music | Tags: John Williams, Music Theory, The Imperial March | by The Arbourist | 2 comments
I understand about a third of what he’s talking about. Music theory is complicated. :/ A great video though. :)


Your opinions…