| Pachelbel's canon in D Major - Very nice version |
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****I am terribly sorry, but I do not have
the mp3 anymore... I accidently deleted it
while backing-up my computer. sorry****
This is one of the greatest hits in the
classical world which was composed in the
1680's by Johann Pachelbel. Performed by the
Slovak Chamber Orchestra
Highly recommended, enjoy!
You can find the mp3 here:
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=S86BU8JS
I've uploaded the file again to RapidShare:
http://rapidshare.com/files/100141177/09_Cano
n_in_D_major.rar.html
Sheets:
http://www.sheetmusicfox.com/Pachelbel/pacorg
18.pdf
I uploaded this video about 1 year ago, on
Febuary 2007.
If you loved this one, you should visit my
user page regularly, 'cause I will start
uploading classical pieces regularly to
youtube, would be about 1-2 videos a month or
so.
My first one is Saint Saens' Danse Macabre:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=WdLoTPUNtD0
Enjoy :) Tags : Pachelbel pachelbel Canon canon d-major gigue classical good version viola cello contrabass bass Orchestra Slovak great |
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Affichage : 3052364
Durée : 356 s |
| Jacques Loussier plays Bach, gavotte D major |
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Jacques Loussier Trio plays Bach
Piano: Jacques Loussier
Bass: Vincent Charbonnier
Percussion: André Arpino
Recorder live in Munich, 1989.
I'm composer. I cordially invite you to
listen to my music & give your opinion:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o8NjRFUZwMA
http://es.youtube.com/watch?v=gOkwrbCijrw
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PbkkaihgB3w
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QQx3ZEerQ1Q
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xNjpo63NGwo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iNgh4EpWM1M
http://es.youtube.com/watch?v=wdw78-6T0MA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wYKGjFyZbiY
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FnZOQbVZb-s
http://es.youtube.com/watch?v=HZmGEfsXijc Tags : jacques loussier bach trio piano jazz gavotte gavota baroque gulda kapustin gershwin jarret labeque bolling |
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Affichage : 54102
Durée : 424 s |
| Jacques Loussier: Bach fugue No. 5 D major WTC |
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Jacques Loussier trio plays Bach: Well
Tempered Clavier, Fugue No. 5
Piano: Jacques Loussier
Bass: Vincent Charbonnier
Percussion: André Arpino
Recorder live in Munich, 1989.
I'm composer. I cordially invite you to
listen to my music & give your opinion:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o8NjRFUZwMA
http://es.youtube.com/watch?v=gOkwrbCijrw
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PbkkaihgB3w
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QQx3ZEerQ1Q
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xNjpo63NGwo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iNgh4EpWM1M
http://es.youtube.com/watch?v=wdw78-6T0MA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wYKGjFyZbiY
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FnZOQbVZb-s
http://es.youtube.com/watch?v=HZmGEfsXijc
(más) Tags : jacques loussier bach fugue No. 5 well tempered clavier piano trio jazz jarret gulda gershwin labeque bolling kapunstin |
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Affichage : 41975
Durée : 267 s |
| Electric Guitar Canon Rock in D Major |
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PLEASE READ DESCRIPTION, I'M NOT THE ONE
PLAYING. SO DON'T ASK QUESTIONS LIKE: DO YOU
HAVE THE TABS?
IF you want the mp3 file, search in Ares or
Limewire (i'm not sure if you can in iTunes)
for: Canon Rock, or Canon Rock in D Major by
jerry c
It's a South Korean 23 year old person that
plays Canon Rock in D Major in electric
guitar. (NOT ME) In the video has the drums,
violins etc.. as background music, but the
guy is playing the guitar.
This is what wikipedia says about him:
Jeong-Hyun Lim
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jeong-Hyun Lim,(Ko:ìž„ì •í˜„) also known by
the online alias funtwo, is a 23-year-old
South Korean guitarist known for his cover of
JerryC's Canon Rock. Lim has been playing the
electric guitar for 6 years (self-taught,
though he attended formal guitar lessons for
only one month in 2000).
Lim attended Auckland University in New
Zealand before moving to Seoul, but plans to
return to New Zealand in March to continue
his degree in Technology. He says: "I think
the quiet and peaceful circumstances of
Auckland really helped my musical
motivation." He says that whilst living in
Remuera, Auckland he was a musical catalyst.
Jeong-Hyun Lim played and recorded his cover
of Canon Rock during 2005. On October 23,
2005 he first posted his Canon Rock Video on
a Korean Online Community called Mule.
Funtwo's cover of Canon Rock had garnered 15
million views, over thirty-eight thousand
comments and favorited over one hundred and
nine thousand times, as of Feb 20, 2007. It
is the fifth most viewed, most discussed, and
second most favorited video on YouTube. It
has been mentioned on CNN, 20/20, The New
York Times, and National Public Radio in
addition to MBC news, KBS news, and other
Korean news stations.
Many viewers have speculated and thought the
video as fake since the music is not in
proper sync with the video. Lim later stated
to The New York Times that this had to do
with the fact that "[...] he says he recorded
the audio and video independently and then
matched them inexactly."[2]
Due to the initial secrecy surrounding the
guitar player in his video, several other
people have claimed to be Funtwo. One of
these was Alfonso Candra, a 12 year old
classical pianist who performed 'Canon Rock'
for a small crowd at the Indonesian Embassy
in Washington, DC in August of 2006. Tags : electric guitar Canon rock Dmajor major JerryC funtwo Johann Pachelbel |
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Affichage : 301545
Durée : 320 s |
| Boccherini: Quintetto in D Major "Fandango" |
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Stereo:
http://br.youtube.com/watch?v=FhzR_MYcjiU&fmt
=18
Luigi Rodolfo Boccherini (1743 - 1805).
Quintetto in D Major "Fandango".
Andreas Staier (Harpsichord).
Arrangement: Andreas Staier and Christine
Schornsheim.
Boccherini was born in Lucca, Italy, in a
musical family. At a young age his father, a
cellist and double bass player, sent Luigi to
study in Rome. In 1757 he went to Vienna with
his son where the two of them were employed
by the court as musicians in the Burgtheater.
In 1761 Boccherini went to Madrid, where he
was employed by Don Luis, the younger brother
of King Charles III. There he flourished
under royal patronage, until one day when the
King expressed his disapproval at a passage
in a new trio, and ordered Boccherini to
change it. The composer, no doubt irritated
with this intrusion into his art, doubled the
passage instead, leading to his immediate
dismissal. Then he accompanied Don Luis to
Arenas de San Pedro a little town at the
Gredos mountains, there and in the closest
town of Candeleda Boccherini wrote many of
his most brilliant works.
Among his late patrons was the French consul
Lucien Bonaparte, as well as King Friedrich
Wilhelm II of Prussia, himself an amateur
cellist, flutist, and avid supporter of the
arts. Boccherini fell on hard times following
the deaths of his Spanish patron, two wives,
and two daughters, and he died almost in
poverty in 1805, being survived by two sons.
His blood line continues to this day in
Spain.
Much of his chamber music follows models
established by Joseph Haydn; however,
Boccherini is often credited with improving
Haydn's model of the string quartet by
bringing the cello to prominence, whereas
Haydn had always relegated it to an
accompaniment role. Rather, some sources for
Boccherini's style are in the works of a
famous Italian cellist, Giovanni Battista
Cirri, who was born before Boccherini and
before Haydn and the Spanish popular music.
A virtuoso cellist of the first caliber
(possibly the most accomplished cellist in
history), Boccherini often played violin
repertoire on the cello, at pitch, a skill he
developed by substituting for ailing
violinists while touring. This supreme
command of the instrument brought him much
praise from his contemporaries (notably
Baillot, Rode, and Romberg), and is evident
in the cello parts of his compositions
(particularly in the quintets for two cellos,
treated often as cello concertos with string
quartet accompaniment).
He wrote a large amount of chamber music,
including over one hundred string quintets
for two violins, viola and two cellos (a type
which he pioneered, in contrast with the then
common scoring for two violins, two violas
and one cello), a dozen guitar quintets, not
all of which have survived, nearly a hundred
string quartets, and a number of string trios
and sonatas (including at least 19 for the
cello). His orchestral music includes around
30 symphonies and 12 virtuoso cello
concertos.
Boccherini's works have been catalogued by
the French musicologist Yves Gérard (born
1932) in the Gérard catalog, published in
London (1969), hence the "G" numbers for his
output.
With a ministerial decree dated 27 April
2006, the Opera Omnia of the composer Luigi
Boccherini was promoted to the status of
Italian National Edition. The director of the
new critical edition is professor Christian
Speck (Koblenz-Landau), and the advisory
committee includes Theophil Antonicek
(Vienna), Sergio Durante (Padua), Ludwig
Finscher (Heidelberg), Yves Gérard (Paris),
Roberto Illiano (Cremona-Lucca), Fulvia
Morabito (Cremona-Lucca), Rudolf Rasch
(Utrecht), Massimiliano Sala (Cremona-Lucca),
and Andrea Schiavina (Bologna).
Boccherini's style is characterized by the
typical Rococo charm, lightness, and
optimism, and exhibits much melodic and
rhythmic invention, coupled with frequent
influences from the guitar tradition of his
adopted country, Spain. Neglected after his
death - the dismissive sobriquet "Haydn's
wife" dates from the nineteenth century - his
works have been gaining more recognition
lately, in print, record, and concert hall.
His famous "Musica notturna delle strade di
Madrid" (String Quintet in C Major, Op. 30
No. 6), has recently been popularised through
the Peter Weir film Master and Commander: The
Far Side of the World.
His distinctive compositions for string
quintet (two violins, one viola, two cellos),
long neglected after his death, have been
brought back to life by the Boccherini
Quintet in the second half of the XX century,
when two of its founding members discovered a
complete collection of the first edition of
the 141 string quintets in Paris and began
playing and recording them around the world. Tags : Boccherini Fandango Andreas Staier |
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Affichage : 8534
Durée : 658 s |
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