Great insightful journey through the 20nd century 😀Added schoenberg and Anton Webern to my playlist. Did not listen to them before (don't know much about classical).
It was lovely to see another of your great vidoes appearing on my feed. As you said, composers don't slot neatly into categories, some expressionistic pieces sound impressionistic - ua-cam.com/video/Fh7t30u1IhA/v-deo.html - some serial pieces sound neoclassical like the central sections in Agon - ua-cam.com/video/tpygslSyQTY/v-deo.html - and yes, you should definitely do a video on Feldman, I've heard all manner of attempts at classifying him, from 'Webern extended into serentiy' to experimental to minimalist. Where would you place Feldman's old mate Birtwistle?
Nice overview, but when it comes to microtonality I think you should have mentioned composers like Harry Partch and Ben Johnston who related the use of microtonality to the overtone series.
Thank you! 🙏
That's quote a mouthful of words.
Great insightful journey through the 20nd century 😀Added schoenberg and Anton Webern to my playlist. Did not listen to them before (don't know much about classical).
Thank you very much for your videos.
🌹🌹🌹
It was lovely to see another of your great vidoes appearing on my feed. As you said, composers don't slot neatly into categories, some expressionistic pieces sound impressionistic - ua-cam.com/video/Fh7t30u1IhA/v-deo.html - some serial pieces sound neoclassical like the central sections in Agon - ua-cam.com/video/tpygslSyQTY/v-deo.html - and yes, you should definitely do a video on Feldman, I've heard all manner of attempts at classifying him, from 'Webern extended into serentiy' to experimental to minimalist. Where would you place Feldman's old mate Birtwistle?
Nice overview, but when it comes to microtonality I think you should have mentioned composers like Harry Partch and Ben Johnston who related the use of microtonality to the overtone series.
Good point: I didn’t mention Spectralism!