@@MrRemi1802He actually said "from all centuries" (!). I was dreading Baroque / Renaissance -- but didn't hear any! All very much my kind of thing (and pretty well the very opening of movements): so I got lucky (13/15).
@@oritdrimer4354 Nah, much like Chopin he was at home in small formats with his focus on miniatures. Sonatas and Piano Concertos were never fitting of those while also being too restrictive of what he wanted to do.
Y'all know that "the Tristan chord" is lifted straight out of Berlioz "Romeo and Juliet," right? It's handled differently, of course, but the chord itself? Berlioz.
Yeah - I grew up steeped in classical music and was an orchestral violinist in my youth - only got about 5. Too much opera, never enjoyed opera much. Classical music is about more than Opera. Not one piece from the baroque, and only Stravinsky really in 20th C. A bunch of overly dramatic romantics - nice if you like that sort of thing - I don't particularly. Let's have a bit of Sibelius, or a bit of Bach. Britten, or Walton. What about the entire choral repertoire other than Opera! A single piano concerto, what about violin concertos? Cello Concertos? Quartets! Give me Shostakovich 8th string quartet!
More or less the same (i.e. I had some lucky guesses) - I was kicking myself about the Tchaikovsky ones - must get back to listening to that composer's symphonies !
It's Schubert's Winterreise, without 'Die'. Schubert left out 'Die' to avoid having the exact same title of Wilhelm Müller's poem cycle, which is Die Winterreise
Years ago I had the confidence-building experience of turning on the radio just in time to hear the last chord of Sibelius' "Valse Triste," and correctly identified the piece. I had previously never heard the work, but had recently completed my study of the score. The final chord is quite unique in its construction and balance! Perhaps you can prepare a test of opening and closing chords of various works to challenge us to identify them just from the orchestral construct?
13/15!!! I did *not* expect to make it that far. Actually, the only two I missed were realted to the Symphonie Fantastique... I guess I need to brush up on my Berlioz 🧐
Never heard “Hansel und Gretel”. I’d better change that. Also didn’t know the Bruckner 7th but guessed right. Happy with 12/15 and maybe some bonus for the Tristan chord!
15/15, but still a good challenge. I'm pianist and sometimes opera accompanist. Also worked in a music library. It's a good thing I played Hansel and Gretel or I might have missed that. You have a new subscriber.
9/15! I need to study up on opera and Dvorak symphonies haha. Haven't listened to them since 2021. Also, I appreciate how high quality your production is for a small channel! Good luck in your future pursuits
Proud of my 11/15! Sorry to say I am a bit lacking in my knowledge of Italian opera and solo piano works. I also got tripped up trying to remember which Tchaik symphony I was hearing.
10/15 but I definitely needed the four answers to choose. It made me realize I have now clue of Mahler, Bruckner and Operas whatsoever. I should educate myself.
Thank you for pointing out how amazing Dvorak's 9th is!!! No joke I have a CD in my car that plays his 8th and 9th Symphonies on repeat! Truly masterpieces!
Here's a list of pieces I would recommend. Ravel Daphnis et Chloe second suite Mahler symphony 3 6 7 an d9 Beethoven 5 6 9 Berlioz symphony fantastique The nutcracker Tchaikovsky Brukner symphony 4 7 8 Tchakovsky 4 5 6 Brahms symphony all 4 Schumann symphony 3 Schubert symphony unfinished and number 8 in " the große" in c major Opera La boheme Hansel and gretel (this one is a great beginner opera, probably the easiest to get into, and probably the greatest one ever written, it's amazing, truly, can highly recommend it) Salome Strauss Mozart Magic flute Wagner Tristan and Lohengrin Ouvertures
15/15. Mostly familiar pieces, but could not have done more than 10 without the choises... In most cases it was easy to rule out three. This challenge shows that 40 years of casual listening will make you familiar with the standard repertoire without actually knowing too much about the pieces or the composers...
12/15. I'm not an opera fan and so I missed Hansel & Gretel. I should have gotten Bruckner's 7th. I adore Bruckner's 4th, 8th and 9th and now I'll listen to his 7th. Classical music has enriched my life in so many ways. Also, it's so nice to see you have company.
12/15. I missed out on Humperdinck, Pucchini and Strauss/Salome - I'm not much of an opera type (at least not when it stretches beyond Mozart operas). You made me curious about Humperdinck though. Btw, I personally would not characterize Schubert as 'soft and gentle', more melancholic and almost painfully beautiful. Different temperament from Beethoven, but in terms of quality the same level. Very nice selection of pieces.
Interestingly, the use of bitonality at the opening of part two of "Le Sacre du Printemps" also turns up in "Turandot", notably during the openings to Acts I and III. I wonder if Puccini was influenced by Stravinsky?
11/15. I teach middle & high school orchestra and have played in many local and professional symphonies. Primary instrument is viola, but I also play bass and piano. Great trivia.
14/15 caught me in number 15 with Salomé, although I have to say I guessed the last ones because I knew very well the other options 😅 Thank you! Very straightforward and approachable content :)
7/15. I'm not a professional musician, but I come form a musical family (my brother, mother and aunt are classical pianists), so classical music is part of our family life.
I got maybe like 2 without guessing lol I love classical music but I struggle to move on from a piece and find something new to listen. This video will probably be useful for that
Got all except the last, though I guessed correctly Richard Strauss. Composers can be famous yet some of their best hardly anyone notices, for instance Bach's aria "Liebster Jesu mein Verlangen" probably my all time favorite melody.
14/15 - but several of the symphonies were lucky guesses. I would have done a lot worse if the test were fill in the blank. Usually I can guess a composer and/or school even if I don’t know the exact work. I suppose it’s the product of a mis-spent youth, sulking at home by the stereo rather than out thrashing to Dead Kennedys like the other ‘80s teens. I also took ballet as a kid and played in the school band.
13/15, only two mistakes! I do get the bonus points for the Tristan chord though, haha. I'm not a big opera fan so I sadly choked on Hansel & Gretel, which I actually knew, which I guess made up for getting lucky on Turandot (which I didn't). My other lapse came from Bruckner, a composer I've never really studied or even carefully listened to. Thanks for the quiz!
my retired brother who has played in many symphonies and plays his Oboe , and now also English Horn in a symphony in Boise , Idaho could most likely guess every one of your questions correctly ! I only got 3 right 😅 oh and he LOVES Mahler ❤❤❤❤❤
I share your sentiment. He says, "There's not one movement you'd like to skip [in the Dvorak 9] like in pretty much every other symphony." Seriously? This guy is way too critical.
12/15, plus the bonus. I will admit I had to take educated guesses on a few; I could have predicted which those would be, and which I would probably miss. I don't really agree with your take on the _Tristan_ chord. The analysis I've heard which I think works better is a French sixth with an appoggiatura. (You're right about the passage ending on a V.)
Thanks for this video! A lot of fun. 11/15. I always thought I was pretty well educated in classical music, but now I know where the holes in my knowledge are.
I think I got about 9. This is a pretty wide range of music. Many of these pieces I've only heard once or twice, so I can forgive myself for not instantly recognising them...
I got them all immediately without needing the multiple choice. I missed the Schubert song because I'm not an expert at his leider although Schubert is one of my favorite composers.
15/15, and I'm not a musician, but I have to admit Turandot was a guess, and if there were other Bruckner symphonies to choose from I might have missed that one as well.
10/15. It’s amazing how many symphonies written by the greats I haven’t actually taken the time to listen to; I missed Beethoven 5, Tchaikovsky 6, and Bruckner 7 all wrong. Fun fact: Bruckner often proposed to teenage girls while he was very much older because he wanted his wife to be a virgin just like him 🫠
8/15 😎, didnt know any, just guessed from either italian or german writing on the music, and then guessed from names and the feeling of the music. i only listened to a lot of classical when i was a baby and dont remember it, i love rock
Oh dear! I knew only 3 out of the 15 before the options came up. I had a couple of lucky guesses after they did, but I'm not going to count those. I'm off now to listen to Dvorak's 9th symphony - the whole of it, not just the well-known bit that goes daaaah da daaaaaah, daaaah da daaaah, daaaah da daah daah daaaaaah....
15/15, but I had to guess _La Mer_ so need to brush up on my Debussy! Good quiz. I wish pub quizzes were more like this than "which hip hop artist broke a shoelace in 2011..."!😅
RITE OF SPRING MENTIONED!!!! I think I got like maybe a 6/15 but as soon as I heard the first tritone chord of Mystic Circles I nearly jumped out of my seat in excitement lmao
12/15 But quite easy for a French Horn player ! (and I even had Rachmaninov Piano concerto ... but I thought only Rachmaninov could write that kind on stuff). As a french person I would say that your french accent is kinda weird but 10/10 for the effort, that still the best I've heard for a non french speaker ! :) (and better than 95% english accent for french native, including myself)
I got 9. Kinda 9 1/2 bc I recognized one of them but didn’t guess it in time. Tuba players tend to forget about the first 3 movements of Symphonie fantastique
Leave a comment🙌🏻
another one of these? please? I need to redeem myself
I remembered a friend has made a quiz to guess the piece by only one note, and they all started in C. 😂
Too easy using a piano reduction. Use a full score excerpt instead.
As a pianist I would love to watch the exact same video but about famous piano pieces😊
Absolutely. The title is wrong, these are mainly symphonic pieces, and not only from the classical era.
I'm with you. I don't listen to symphonic pieces much so when i watched this video my brain was utterly shocked.
@@MrRemi1802He actually said "from all centuries" (!). I was dreading Baroque / Renaissance -- but didn't hear any! All very much my kind of thing (and pretty well the very opening of movements): so I got lucky (13/15).
From pianists everywhere, I thank you. Lol!
@@MrRemi1802where does it say "Classical Era"?
15/15 - but then I am [or rather was] an orchestral violinist.
😂
15/15 - but then I am a (classical) music critic
8/15 - but I only listen to mostly piano music cause I play piano.
Same, currently a Violist lols
15/15 - but then i was an orchestral cellist
Seeing "Scriabin piano concerto no. 3" truly makes me wish that scriabin should've lived longer.
Sad lip infection :(
He would've never written another piano concerto though
@@alphakrab5022 but he should have
@@oritdrimer4354I mean Prometheus has a pretty big reliance on the piano part :)
Ofc I understand it's a symphony
@@oritdrimer4354 Nah, much like Chopin he was at home in small formats with his focus on miniatures. Sonatas and Piano Concertos were never fitting of those while also being too restrictive of what he wanted to do.
#5, “this definitely sounds like something Tchaikovsky would write.”
“Is it Tchaikovsky 6?”
“Hahaha yes definitely.”
“Or Tchaikovsky 5?”
“ *FUCK* “
😂
Yeah that was definitely a “you sonofabitch” moment
0/15 😂 but I’m only now, at 40 getting exposed to classical music. I’m slowly starting to appreciate it 😊
7/15 not particularly easy for a pianist… 😅 Now I know I should go and listen to more orchestral pieces and operas
Yes please😂
I once spoke to Bang Bang, he didn't know any of Brahms' symphonies. True story. Pianists are the tenors of the instrument players.
Same for me. I think I would do much better with just piano. I got 7 but one was a 80% guess...but the other 8 I had zero idea
Only if you like these. It's nothing wrong with loving piano music.
Came back 4 months later with a score of 10/15
6/15
11/15 with the bonus points from the Tristan chord
Also your pronounciation of the French stuff is crazy good
Y'all know that "the Tristan chord" is lifted straight out of Berlioz "Romeo and Juliet," right? It's handled differently, of course, but the chord itself? Berlioz.
Not to mention his pronunciation of German. 😊
@@asym52 interesting
@@dodiad well he IS German
@@gmfrunzik Uh, that was the joke. Maybe you missed the smiley-face emoji.
Berlioz "Except for the 3rd movement..."?? Thats a fantastic movement!
"La scéne au champ" is great and so different. The disappearance of the oboe at the end..
Would not be the same without it.
In my opinion it’s too long winded and bland
@@deVriesOP125I think it’s helpful to think of it in relation to the story-the lonely man in the countryside dreaming of his lover.
1/15 lol. thought i would know at least three ... the sad thing is, I am 100% sure STILL know more about classical than about 99% of the people
I'm 100% sure you're right.
Yeah - I grew up steeped in classical music and was an orchestral violinist in my youth - only got about 5. Too much opera, never enjoyed opera much. Classical music is about more than Opera. Not one piece from the baroque, and only Stravinsky really in 20th C. A bunch of overly dramatic romantics - nice if you like that sort of thing - I don't particularly. Let's have a bit of Sibelius, or a bit of Bach. Britten, or Walton. What about the entire choral repertoire other than Opera! A single piano concerto, what about violin concertos? Cello Concertos? Quartets! Give me Shostakovich 8th string quartet!
The same goes to me! 5/15
Too much stuff that I don't listen, too little stuff that I do listen...
13/15, but I wouldn't have done it without the multiple choice options, and even then I had a couple of lucky guesses.
More or less the same (i.e. I had some lucky guesses) - I was kicking myself about the Tchaikovsky ones - must get back to listening to that composer's symphonies !
Same for me with 12/15.
11/15, more than expected. Great video Carl!
Same here - but 2 were lucky guesses
13/15. The selection from Turandot sounded like Uranus, The Magician, from Holsts, The Planets.
I thought the same lol
I noticed that too.
Same score and same impression here 😅
Yes!
My thoughts too.
We need part 2!
10/15, did much better than I thought I would.
15/15. All those years building up, and listening to, a record collection were apparently not wasted 🙂
It's Schubert's Winterreise, without 'Die'. Schubert left out 'Die' to avoid having the exact same title of Wilhelm Müller's poem cycle, which is Die Winterreise
9/15 that is way more than I expected as a person with no actual formal Western Classical Music education.
10/15. Not to bad for a person who doesn't play an instrument.
14 of 15 points ... yeah! Thank you for this music-quiz!
Years ago I had the confidence-building experience of turning on the radio just in time to hear the last chord of Sibelius' "Valse Triste," and correctly identified the piece. I had previously never heard the work, but had recently completed my study of the score. The final chord is quite unique in its construction and balance! Perhaps you can prepare a test of opening and closing chords of various works to challenge us to identify them just from the orchestral construct?
13/15!!!
I did *not* expect to make it that far. Actually, the only two I missed were realted to the Symphonie Fantastique... I guess I need to brush up on my Berlioz 🧐
Got 8. I'm not trained in Classical music but it has been a part of my life since the beginning of my college days till now in my mid thirties.
That's not bad at all
Same score here. But I'm almost 50 and been listening to classical like... forever.
63 here. Bwwn itto it from college too. got 9...one guess.
Me too, 8/15 without lucky guesses. Great quiz!
Love this video, it really encourages me to listen to more classical symphony
Never heard “Hansel und Gretel”. I’d better change that. Also didn’t know the Bruckner 7th but guessed right. Happy with 12/15 and maybe some bonus for the Tristan chord!
Hansel and Gretel was the only one I hadn't heard, so calling it one of the greatest operas of all time is probably a bit of a stretch.
@@late8641haha you not knowing a piece does not mean its not great buddy😀
15/15, but still a good challenge. I'm pianist and sometimes opera accompanist. Also worked in a music library. It's a good thing I played Hansel and Gretel or I might have missed that. You have a new subscriber.
9/15! I need to study up on opera and Dvorak symphonies haha. Haven't listened to them since 2021. Also, I appreciate how high quality your production is for a small channel! Good luck in your future pursuits
You got Dvorak 9 right?
Right?
music from all centuries he says... sticks from 1788-1922 cutting out 300 years of classical music ;)
😂 Sorry
7/15. I haven’t listened to many operas but this has given me some good ones to start with.
Proud of my 11/15! Sorry to say I am a bit lacking in my knowledge of Italian opera and solo piano works. I also got tripped up trying to remember which Tchaik symphony I was hearing.
Me too (on the lack of opera knowledge).
10/15 but I definitely needed the four answers to choose. It made me realize I have now clue of Mahler, Bruckner and Operas whatsoever. I should educate myself.
Thank you for pointing out how amazing Dvorak's 9th is!!! No joke I have a CD in my car that plays his 8th and 9th Symphonies on repeat! Truly masterpieces!
is it the Kubelik recording?
Try the 5th, 6th and 7th as well!
Your classical pieces challenge me. I had a lot of fun.
Thanks💪🏻
11/15 with 4 lucky picks where I never heard of the piece, but sounded like a particular composer.
11/15, 16/15 with Tristan chord. I suck at guessing the operas!
3 or max 4 i think i am new any sugestion or do you think i should listen more new(for me ofc) stuff?
Here's a list of pieces I would recommend.
Ravel Daphnis et Chloe second suite
Mahler symphony 3 6 7 an d9
Beethoven 5 6 9
Berlioz symphony fantastique
The nutcracker Tchaikovsky
Brukner symphony 4 7 8
Tchakovsky 4 5 6
Brahms symphony all 4
Schumann symphony 3
Schubert symphony unfinished and number 8 in " the große" in c major
Opera
La boheme
Hansel and gretel (this one is a great beginner opera, probably the easiest to get into, and probably the greatest one ever written, it's amazing, truly, can highly recommend it)
Salome Strauss
Mozart Magic flute
Wagner Tristan and Lohengrin Ouvertures
15/15. Mostly familiar pieces, but could not have done more than 10 without the choises... In most cases it was easy to rule out three. This challenge shows that 40 years of casual listening will make you familiar with the standard repertoire without actually knowing too much about the pieces or the composers...
I recognized 6 pieces, and guessed 5 more pieces with the help of response options 😎
Cool video
could you do a baroque music edition?
Excellent idea! More, please
Got 12/15. Much much better than I thought. I am not a musician, just one who loves classical music
12/15. I'm not an opera fan and so I missed Hansel & Gretel. I should have gotten Bruckner's 7th. I adore Bruckner's 4th, 8th and 9th and now I'll listen to his 7th. Classical music has enriched my life in so many ways. Also, it's so nice to see you have company.
12/15. The 20th century stuff was easy as that’s what I primarily listen to.
13/15 with 3 out of 5 guesses correct. Some of these are really on the edge of the repertoire.
11/15 with 3 guesses. Thanks for reminding me I must return to listening to orchestral music.
You're welcome😂
12/15.
I missed out on Humperdinck, Pucchini and Strauss/Salome - I'm not much of an opera type (at least not when it stretches beyond Mozart operas). You made me curious about Humperdinck though.
Btw, I personally would not characterize Schubert as 'soft and gentle', more melancholic and almost painfully beautiful. Different temperament from Beethoven, but in terms of quality the same level.
Very nice selection of pieces.
Interestingly, the use of bitonality at the opening of part two of "Le Sacre du Printemps" also turns up in "Turandot", notably during the openings to Acts I and III. I wonder if Puccini was influenced by Stravinsky?
11/15! Basically, anything opera-related is my blind spot, so I genuinely did not know of the four that I didn't get.
11/15. I teach middle & high school orchestra and have played in many local and professional symphonies. Primary instrument is viola, but I also play bass and piano. Great trivia.
14/15 caught me in number 15 with Salomé, although I have to say I guessed the last ones because I knew very well the other options 😅
Thank you! Very straightforward and approachable content :)
I got 8 out of 15, can't wait for the next one!!
Thanks💪🏻and congratulations
7/15. I'm not a professional musician, but I come form a musical family (my brother, mother and aunt are classical pianists), so classical music is part of our family life.
I got maybe like 2 without guessing lol
I love classical music but I struggle to move on from a piece and find something new to listen. This video will probably be useful for that
Got all except the last, though I guessed correctly Richard Strauss. Composers can be famous yet some of their best hardly anyone notices, for instance Bach's aria "Liebster Jesu mein Verlangen" probably my all time favorite melody.
I have 10 not as great as I hoped, but I was so happy when I heard bruckner 7, the only real real real trancedabtal piece on this list!!
14/15 - but several of the symphonies were lucky guesses. I would have done a lot worse if the test were fill in the blank.
Usually I can guess a composer and/or school even if I don’t know the exact work. I suppose it’s the product of a mis-spent youth, sulking at home by the stereo rather than out thrashing to Dead Kennedys like the other ‘80s teens. I also took ballet as a kid and played in the school band.
All 15. Carl, that was a lot of fun.
Classical name that tune !
13/15, only two mistakes! I do get the bonus points for the Tristan chord though, haha.
I'm not a big opera fan so I sadly choked on Hansel & Gretel, which I actually knew, which I guess made up for getting lucky on Turandot (which I didn't). My other lapse came from Bruckner, a composer I've never really studied or even carefully listened to.
Thanks for the quiz!
my retired brother who has played in many symphonies and plays his Oboe , and now also English Horn in a symphony in Boise , Idaho could most likely guess every one of your questions correctly ! I only got 3 right 😅 oh and he LOVES Mahler ❤❤❤❤❤
Salome! What a masterpiece. Strauss had outdone himself with that one
10 right. The last ones were the toughest, of course.
1:38 Lol of the symphonies I've listened to I never wanted to skip any of the movements and I did listen to quite a few of them
I share your sentiment. He says, "There's not one movement you'd like to skip [in the Dvorak 9] like in pretty much every other symphony." Seriously? This guy is way too critical.
I got 13 out of 15----a couple of holes in my listening I'll have to fill. Thank you! That was fun!
11/15, didn't know Hansel, Turandot, Bruckner, and Salome. Thank you, that was fun.
12/15, plus the bonus. I will admit I had to take educated guesses on a few; I could have predicted which those would be, and which I would probably miss.
I don't really agree with your take on the _Tristan_ chord. The analysis I've heard which I think works better is a French sixth with an appoggiatura. (You're right about the passage ending on a V.)
14/15. Only missed the Hansel und Gretel, but I've only heard it once many years back. Made some educated guesses on a couple of others.
14/15 Thought I might get all of them, but the last one stumped me. Double bassist.
5 that I recognized, but 6 if you count a wild guess. So right on the border. Haha
Thanks for this video! A lot of fun. 11/15. I always thought I was pretty well educated in classical music, but now I know where the holes in my knowledge are.
12/15 with the bonus points from the Tristan chord.
15/15. Only needed the multiple choice for 3.
15 except I thought it was Rach 3 when it's Rach 2 as an initial impression haha
6/15, after playing trumpet for most of my childhood. I'll take it
I think I got about 9. This is a pretty wide range of music. Many of these pieces I've only heard once or twice, so I can forgive myself for not instantly recognising them...
10/15. I missed Brahms 4, the Berlioz, Schubert's die Winterreise, Turandot, Bruckner 7, and Salome.
10/15 - I need to brush up on Bruckner - any advice on where to start?
Simply the symfonies
Got 14 of 15 (missed “Winterreise”). I am a PRO musician, after all!:)💪👍😉
13/15, only Hansel and Gretel and the Puccini that caught me out!
I got them all immediately without needing the multiple choice. I missed the Schubert song because I'm not an expert at his leider although Schubert is one of my favorite composers.
15/15, and I'm not a musician, but I have to admit Turandot was a guess, and if there were other Bruckner symphonies to choose from I might have missed that one as well.
10/15 right plus 5 bonus points for the Tristan chord. 15 points
10/15. It’s amazing how many symphonies written by the greats I haven’t actually taken the time to listen to; I missed Beethoven 5, Tchaikovsky 6, and Bruckner 7 all wrong. Fun fact: Bruckner often proposed to teenage girls while he was very much older because he wanted his wife to be a virgin just like him 🫠
8/15 😎, didnt know any, just guessed from either italian or german writing on the music, and then guessed from names and the feeling of the music. i only listened to a lot of classical when i was a baby and dont remember it, i love rock
Oh dear! I knew only 3 out of the 15 before the options came up. I had a couple of lucky guesses after they did, but I'm not going to count those.
I'm off now to listen to Dvorak's 9th symphony - the whole of it, not just the well-known bit that goes daaaah da daaaaaah, daaaah da daaaah, daaaah da daah daah daaaaaah....
Do one with more early baroque renaissance and even medieval music great video either way
I don’t know the solo piano repertoire and Italian operas well enough. Those are the ones I missed.
14/15!!! The only one I got wrong is the last one because I don't really know Richard Strauss operas.
9/15, but mostly the easier early ones!
9/15 Identified 3 by knowing them and the other 6 by guessing the composer style.
Maybe as a pianist I should listen to more orchestra
15/15, but I had to guess _La Mer_ so need to brush up on my Debussy!
Good quiz. I wish pub quizzes were more like this than "which hip hop artist broke a shoelace in 2011..."!😅
Thank you🙌🏻
11/15 with two lucky guesses!
12/15...
So many lucky guesses, but I think it's okay :)
RITE OF SPRING MENTIONED!!!! I think I got like maybe a 6/15 but as soon as I heard the first tritone chord of Mystic Circles I nearly jumped out of my seat in excitement lmao
12/15 But quite easy for a French Horn player ! (and I even had Rachmaninov Piano concerto ... but I thought only Rachmaninov could write that kind on stuff).
As a french person I would say that your french accent is kinda weird but 10/10 for the effort, that still the best I've heard for a non french speaker ! :) (and better than 95% english accent for french native, including myself)
I got 13 and in the other two it was a toss up between pieces by the same composer who I’d guessed before you gave the options 😅
8/15 - I somehow recognized one of these from the WAY THE SCORE WAS ENGRAVED
…I only know piano repertoire :(
where are bach, händel, haydn and scarlatti....
Got 5 right: Mozart 40, Brahms 4, Wagner Tristan and Isolde, Schubert Wintereisse, and Rachmaninov 2
I got 9. Kinda 9 1/2 bc I recognized one of them but didn’t guess it in time. Tuba players tend to forget about the first 3 movements of Symphonie fantastique
I only knew it was Tristan and Isolde because of that chord thanks for the points 😂 9 or 14 with the Tristan chord
3/15 i actually knew and not just guessed. (Mozart 40, rite of spring and la mer).