Baroque » Discussions

Some names.

 
    • Jojobi said...
    • User
    • 26 Dec 2005, 03:11

    Some names.

    Giovanni Gabrieli, Claudio Monteverdi, Ignazio Albertini, Henrico Albicastro, Tomaso Albinoni, Alessandro Scarlatti, Girolamo Frescobaldi and Jacopo Peri

    • Kortox said...
    • User
    • 12 Feb 2006, 02:12
    pachelbel

    Open the pod bay door HAL
    • Rionda said...
    • User
    • 12 Feb 2006, 14:12
    XVIII century Italians are absolutely great, I agree.

    No .signature file found.
  • not a big fan of the P. (pachelbel)

    His claim to fame is of course his Canon, and I have made it a mission in my life to make sure that brides stop playing that at their weddings. His organ music is supposed to be OK, but otherwise, most serious musicologists don't give him too much regard.

    But I suppose I'm a snob about some things.

    • towolf said...
    • User
    • 12 Mar 2006, 03:16
    Domenico Scarlatti, son of Alessandro.

    yes you're an ignorant snob.

    • deMaal said...
    • User
    • 19 Apr 2006, 11:54
    Arcangelo Corelli.

    Georg Friedrich Händel is a saint
    William Shakespeare is a saint
    Jim Henson is a saint
    Toon Tellegen is a saint
    Dame Edna Everage is a saint too!
  • Baroque and roll

    My favorites:
    -J.S. Bach
    -G.F. Haendel
    -Antonio Vivaldi
    -Arcangelo Corelli
    -Tomasso Albinoni
    -C.W. Glück
    -Henry Purcell
    -Leonardo Leo
    -Domenico Scarlatti
    -Pietro Locatelli
    -G.P. Telemann

  • Giovanni Battista Pergolesi!

    • sinisha said...
    • User
    • 10 Sep 2007, 13:10
    Telemann, Vivaldi, Bach....magnificent three of baroque!:))

    • [Deleted user] said...
    • User
    • 4 Oct 2007, 16:01

    Edited by a deleted user on 20 Jan 2008, 19:11
    • [Deleted user] said...
    • User
    • 20 Jan 2008, 19:08
    At the moment...

    Josef Myslivecek, Claudio Monteverdi and Antonio Vivaldi (I heard a wonderful recording of the oratorio Juditha triumphans with Magdalena Kozena and the album Vivaldi Operas that got me hocked on Vivaldi)

    • [Deleted user] said...
    • User
    • 3 Apr 2008, 17:21
    My favorites are Telemann and Francois Couperin.

    • rm508 said...
    • User
    • 14 Aug 2008, 14:19
    The Monteverdi vespers are totally joyous. I've also been put on to the madrigals and responsories of Carlo Gesualdo: fragmented, dissonant, chromatic, really interesting.

    evaeke, you posted ages ago, but tell me more about Myslivecek? I'm intrigued.

  • Jean-Baptiste Lully, Nicola Porpora, Henry Purcell, Joseph Bodin de Boismortier,
    Johan Helmich Roman, Michel Corette.

  • Buxtehude

    • kantalo said...
    • User
    • 1 Jun 2010, 20:18
    Marin Marais, Pergolesi, Couperin, Rameau, Delalande, Marc-Antoine Charpentier, Forqueray, Barbara Strozzi, Pachelbel, Zelenka...

    kantalo
  • There is only one god- Bach, and Mendelssohn is his prophet.

    Everyone thinks of changing the world, but no one thinks of changing himself.
    -Leo Tolstoy
    • Satnos said...
    • User
    • 9 Aug 2010, 04:05
    JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH!!!!


    "O essencial da arte é exprimir; o que se exprime não interessa." Fernando Pessoa
  • Reinhard Keiser! :)

  • Francois Couperin

  • Canon is an amazing piece of work! i think pachelbel is too underrated as a composer. this is just a reponse to @ freyjawaru. Canon is amazing and no one has ever done a piece like it,

  • Antonio Vivaldi-Storm

    Dozorca Mikro Parku
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