10:26
Jean Francaix Flute Concerto- Hye Sung Choe, flute
Jean Francaix Flute Concerto- Hye Sung Choe, flute
this is the end of 3rd movement to the very end of the concerto by Jean Francaix, performed by Hye Sung Choe, flute with David Effron conducting Eastman School Symphony Orchestra at the Eastman Theater on April 9, 2010. the other file was too long, and don't know how to edit video files yet. I will re-upload the full version with normalized sound when the comprehensive exam is over in June. ;) and, I just realized that the sync b/w sound & video got messed up after i uploaded it. any solution?
7:19
A. Piazzolla: Concerto for bandoneon (Aconcagua) 1st mov't
A. Piazzolla: Concerto for bandoneon (Aconcagua) 1st mov't
Astor Piazzolla's Concerto for bandoneon (1st mov't) performed by Ivano Battiston and the Krasnoyarsk Chamber Orchestra (artistic director: Michael Beniumov) conducted by David Bellugi. You can see a much higher quality version of this video by going to www.davidbellugi.com and clicking on "Video Files"
5:40
Mozart Files - Piano Progressions
Mozart Files - Piano Progressions
Mozart: Minuet to Sonata to Fantasy to Concerto. Clips from my Mozart Files: November 2003 - July 2006.
4:32
Haydn - Trumpet Concerto - Best-of Classical Music
Haydn - Trumpet Concerto - Best-of Classical Music
Theaudio is under "Public Domain" The public domain is an intellectual property designation for the range of content that is not owned or controlled by anyone. These materials are public property, and available for anyone to use freely (the "right to copy") for any purpose. ...50 years from creation year or 70 years after his death en.wikipedia.org
2:51
Bach - Piano Concerto in F Minor Largo!!s - Best of Classical Music
Bach - Piano Concerto in F Minor Largo!!s - Best of Classical Music
Theaudio is under "Public Domain" The public domain is an intellectual property designation for the range of content that is not owned or controlled by anyone. These materials are public property, and available for anyone to use freely (the "right to copy") for any purpose. ...50 years from creation year or 70 years after his death en.wikipedia.org
6:44
Mozart - Piano concerto No 21, Elvira Madigan - Best-of Classical Music
Mozart - Piano concerto No 21, Elvira Madigan - Best-of Classical Music
The audio is under "Public Domain" The public domain is an intellectual property designation for the range of content that is not owned or controlled by anyone. These materials are public property, and available for anyone to use freely (the "right to copy") for any purpose. ...50 years from creation year or 70 years after his death en.wikipedia.org
8:29
Mendelssohn Violin Concerto E Minor Mvmt 1 part-1 Accompaniment
Mendelssohn Violin Concerto E Minor Mvmt 1 part-1 Accompaniment
*READ THIS*** Ok you will realize that this is only the first few pages of the piece... I did not recieve the part AFTER the cadenza but i will be getting it soon from the person that i am BUYING it from.. please note that i BOUGHT this for $100+... i believe it was created through Finale, a music program, and was difficult to make.. This file belongs to ME.. any violations will result in the deletion of this video and i will no longer post any videos that could be potentially helpful to others. PS this is only 1 out of 6 of my files... the other 5 are.. -Piano & Violin (before cadenza) -Violin w/ Piano (only when violin is not playing) (before cadenza) -Piano only (after cadenza) -Piano & Violin (after cadenza) -Violin w/ Piano (only when violin is not playing) (after cadenza) i personally.. would like to post these but it will depend on how well people respond to this videoo.. practice hard! and good luck =)
5:33
Bach, Brandenburg Concerto #3, First Movement, Allegro
Bach, Brandenburg Concerto #3, First Movement, Allegro
FAQ The first movement of Bach's third Brandenburg Concerto, BWV 1048,accompanied by a scrolling, bar-graph score. This concerto is unusual in that each of the three violins, three violas, and three violoncellos have solo parts. Q: Where can I see the score for this piece? A: The score that the bar-graph score is based on is here: www.musanim.com The first page of Bach's original manuscript is here: www.musanim.com Q: Who is playing this piece? A: The Advent Chamber Orchestra. I got this recording from the Wikimedia Commons: tinyurl.com This recording is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 2.0 License: creativecommons.org Q: What do the colors means? A: When the instruments in each section play in unison, there is a single fat (tall) note for all three; when they have solos, the notes are thinner (about half as high). The violins are shades of red, the violas are shades of green, and the violoncellos are shades of blue. The contrabass is sort of a brownish-gray, and is always wide, since it doesn't have solos. When two instruments play the same note, the colors blend (eg red + green = yellow). Q: Is there a way I could make bar-graph scores like this myself? A: The Music Animation Machine MIDI file player will generate a display like this (though not with the different note heights); you can get the (Windows) software here: www.musanim.com There are lots of places on the web where you can get MIDI files; I usually go to the Classical Archives site <b>...</b>
4:11
Tchaikovsky - Piano Concerto No 1, B Flat Minor, Op 23 open - Best-of Classical Music
Tchaikovsky - Piano Concerto No 1, B Flat Minor, Op 23 open - Best-of Classical Music
Theaudio is under "Public Domain" The public domain is an intellectual property designation for the range of content that is not owned or controlled by anyone. These materials are public property, and available for anyone to use freely (the "right to copy") for any purpose. ...50 years from creation year or 70 years after his death en.wikipedia.org
5:51
Bach, Brandenburg Concerto #6, Third Movement, Allegro
Bach, Brandenburg Concerto #6, Third Movement, Allegro
FAQ The last movement of Bach's sixth (and last) Brandenburg Concerto, BWV 1051,accompanied by a scrolling, bar-graph score. This concerto is unusual in that the highest-pitched instruments in the ensemble are two solo violas. Q: Where can I see the score for this piece? A: The score that the bar-graph score is based on is here: www.musanim.com Q: Who is playing this piece? A: The violists are Elias Goldstein & Elizabeth Choi, and the solo violoncellist is Anna Steinhoff; they are playing with the Advent Chamber Orchestra. I got this recording from the Wikimedia Commons: tinyurl.com This recording is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 2.0 License: creativecommons.org Q: Is there a way I could make the bar-graph scores myself? A: The Music Animation Machine MIDI file player will generate this display; you can get the (Windows) software here: www.musanim.com There are lots of places on the web where you can get MIDI files; I usually go to the Classical Archives site first: www.classicalarchives.com Q: Could you please do a MAM video of ______? A: First, check my "to do" list: www.musanim.com ... If the piece isn't listed, read the "Could you please do a MAM video of ______?" item on my main FAQ: www.musanim.com ... and if you think I'd consider doing it, email me (stephen at musanim dot com). Q: Can I get a DVD with pieces like this? A: Yes: www.musanim.com .
8:08
Mozart, Piano Concerto No. 21, Andante ("Elvira Madigan")
Mozart, Piano Concerto No. 21, Andante ("Elvira Madigan")
FAQ Q: Can I get free sheet music for this piece? A: Yes, you can download the piano solo here: www.musanim.com and the full score and parts here: tinyurl.com Q: Why do you keep uploading this piece? A: The first two versions both had things wrong with them that I either noticed after I'd uploaded them or decided were worse than I'd realized. Hopefully "three's the charm." Q: What do the colors mean? A: The reddish colors are the string instruments, the fuzzy greenish colors are the wind instruments, and thin blue/violet is the piano. Q: Why isn't everything perfectly in sync like in your other videos? A: There were actually three separate performances: the performance you're hearing, the performance you're seeing (my hands), and the performance the bar-graph score is based on. I got these as close as I could, but there were always places that were a little off, so I finally said "good enough" and stopped trying to make it better. Q: It seems like the two scores don't match exactly; is that a mistake? A: You're right, they don't match exactly. The bar-graph score at the top has all the notes of all the instruments, but the conventional score at the bottom is a "reduction" with the eleven staves of the full score compressed into four staves. To make this score readable, I left out some parts that I considered less important when a lot of instruments are playing. Q: How did you make this video? A: You can read my Production Notes here: www.musanim.com Q: What does "Elvira <b>...</b>
5:15
Bach, Brandenburg Concerto #4, 3rd mvt., presto (bar-graph score)
Bach, Brandenburg Concerto #4, 3rd mvt., presto (bar-graph score)
The third movement of JS Bach's fourth Brandenburg Concerto played on plucked strings, marimba and vibraphone, accompanied by a scrolling bar-graph score. FAQ Q: Where can I get the sheet music for this piece? A: One of the scores I prepared for making this video is here: www.musanim.com Q: Who is playing this piece? A: Nobody; it's the playback from the music notation program Sibelius. Q: Isthere a way I could make the bar-graph scores myself? A: The Music Animation Machine MIDI file player will generate this display; you can get the (Windows) software here: www.musanim.com There are lots of places on the web where you can get MIDI files; I usually go to the Classical Archives site first: www.classicalarchives.com Q: Could you please do a MAM video of ______? A: Please read this: www.musanim.com .
5:50
Bach, Brandenburg Concerto #6, first movement (animation ver. 4)
Bach, Brandenburg Concerto #6, first movement (animation ver. 4)
The first movement of Bach's sixth (and last) Brandenburg Concerto, BWV 1051, accompanied by an animated score. This concerto is unusual in that the highest-pitched instruments in the ensemble are two solo violas.FAQ Q: Where can I get free sheet music for this piece? A: Here: tinyurl.com Q: Who is playing this piece? A: The violists are Elias Goldstein & Elizabeth Choi, and the solo violoncellist is Anna Steinhoff; they are playing with the Advent Chamber Orchestra. I got this recording from the Wikimedia Commons: tinyurl.com This recording is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 2.0 License: creativecommons.org Q: There sure is a lot of audience noise in this ... coughing, baby crying ... A: Yes, there is. That might have been part of why this recording was put in the Wikimedia Commons. Q: I don't like this version of the animation as much as others I've seen ... A: I've posted several versions of this, including ... ... balls without stretching (version 1) ... www.youtube.com ... balls with stretching (version 2) ... www.youtube.com ... bars (version 3) ... www.youtube.com ... balls with stretching (version 4) ... www.youtube.com ... balls with stretching (version 4 with white background) ... www.youtube.com Q: It sure is hard to watch this. A: Yes, but it may help to know this: at the beginning (and the other places that are like the beginning), the two violas (the highest instruments) are playing the same thing, offset in time by one eighth-note <b>...</b>
9:31
Part I Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 3 in Synthesia
Part I Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 3 in Synthesia
Pretty colors. o.0 A nice piano hero sort of game running the Rachmaninoff 3 in strict tempo. Although the original beats this anyday. All you need is the midi file to play it. Just a nice demonstration of the first movement. I only thought that looked the coolest. Ossia cadenza by the way.
8:01
Mozart: Clarinet Concerto: II. Adagio (Audio Only)
Mozart: Clarinet Concerto: II. Adagio (Audio Only)
David Shifrin, Bassett Clarinet in A Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra Conducted by Gerard Schwarz Score available here: tinyurl.com
34:25
Mozart - Piano Concerto No. 22 in E flat, K. 482 [complete]
Mozart - Piano Concerto No. 22 in E flat, K. 482 [complete]
The Piano Concerto No. 22 in E flat major, K. 482, is a concertante work for piano, or pianoforte, and orchestra by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Mozart composed the concerto in December of 1785. This is the first piano concerto of Mozart's to include clarinets in its scoring. It has the following three movements: 1. Allegro 2. Andante 3. Allegro Roger Kamien and Naphtali Wagner have analysed in detail Mozart's use of bridge themes in the exposition of the concerto's first movement. Simon Keefe has analysed the character of the dialogue between the soloist and the orchestra in the concerto's first movement. The slow second movement in C minor recalls similar slow C minor movements in other Mozart E-flat major concertos such as K.271 and K.364. Mozart's father, in a famous letter to Maria ("Nannerl"), expressed surprise that a call was made for the slow movement ("a rather unusual occurrence!") to be repeated. In the rondo finale, the main theme resembles that of Mozart's third horn concerto (K.447). Adena Portowitz has noted similar features between the finale of the K.271 and K.482 concerti. In another similarity to K.271, the finale is interrupted by a lengthy and slow minuet episode before returning to the main theme for a lively finish (also recalling Count Almaviva's adagio pleadings for forgiveness leading to a buffa conclusion in Le Nozze di Figaro- a work that Mozart was working on at this time).The treatment is different here (variations in the ninth, an episode only <b>...</b>
7:22
A. Piazzolla: Concerto for bandoneon (Aconcagua) 2nd mov't
A. Piazzolla: Concerto for bandoneon (Aconcagua) 2nd mov't
Astor Piazzolla's Concerto for bandoneon (2nd mov't) performed by Ivano Battiston and the Krasnoyarsk Chamber Orchestra (artistic director: Michael Beniumov) conducted by David Bellugi. You can see a much higher quality version of this video by going to www.davidbellugi.com and clicking on "Video Files"
24:53
Mozart - Violin Concerto No. 3 in G, K. 216 [complete]
Mozart - Violin Concerto No. 3 in G, K. 216 [complete]
The Violin Concerto No. 3 in G major, K. 216, was composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in Salzburg in 1775. Mozart was only 19 at the time. The piece is in three movements: 1. Allegro 2. Adagio and 3. Rondeau, Allegro. The Allegro is in sonata form, opening with a brilliant G major theme, played by the orchestra. The main theme is a bright and happy discussion between the solo violin and the accompanist, followed by a modulation to the dominant D major, then its parallel key D minor. It experiments in other keys but does not settle and eventually heads back to the tonic, G major, in the recapitulation with the help of the cadenza. The second movement is also in ternary form form, and in the dominant key of D major. The orchestra begins by playing the well known and beautiful main theme, which the violin imitates one octave higher. The winds then play a dance-like motif in A major, which the violin concludes by its own. After a conclusion in A, the violin plays the main theme again, remaining in the same key. When it should have sounded A natural, it sounds A sharp, and the melody switches to B minor, in a fairly tragic passage. It soon modulates back to A major, and to the home key of D major through the main theme. After the cadenza, and in a quite unusual thing for Mozart to do, the violin plays the main theme again, thus concluding the movement in D. The third movement is a Rondeau Allegro, and opens with an orchestra theme which gave the concerto its nickname <b>...</b>
5:33
Bach - Brandenburg Concertos No.3 - i: Allegro Moderato
Bach - Brandenburg Concertos No.3 - i: Allegro Moderato
Bwv1048, Freiburg Baroque Orchestra - Buy this DVD from : amzn.to
6:53
Johann Sebastian Bach - Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 (Allegro-Adagio)
Johann Sebastian Bach - Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 (Allegro-Adagio)
Johann Sebastian Bach Brandenburg Concerto No 3 in G Major, BWV 1048, Allegro Adagio. Johann Sebastian Bach was taught by his father to play the violin and the harpsichord. He was also initiated into the art of organ playing by his famous uncle, Johann Christoph Bach. Most of Johann Bach's younger life was spent playing church and town organs. It wasn't until his later life that his genius of composing surfaced. Unfortunately, at the height of his creativity his eyesight started to fail him. Sadly, he lived in the darkness because of his light sensitive eyes until his final years. Sorry for bad transitions! I didn't know how to make a proper transition in my first videos.
23:54
Mozart - Violin Concerto No. 4 in D, K. 218 [complete]
Mozart - Violin Concerto No. 4 in D, K. 218 [complete]
Violin Concerto No. 4 in D major K. 218 was composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in 1775 in Salzburg. The autograph of the score is preserved in Biblioteka Jagiellońska, Kraków. The concerto has the usual fast-slow-fast structure and lasts around 23 minutes. The movements are: 1. Allegro 2. Andante cantabile and 3. Rondeau (Andante grazioso - Allegro ma non troppo). ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- FREE .mp3 and .wav files of all Mozart's music at: www.mozart-archiv.de FREE sheet music scores of any Mozart piece at: dme.mozarteum.at ALSO check out these cool sites: musopen.org and imslp.org ------------------------------------------------------------------------- NOTE: I do not know who the performers of this are, nor the place and date of recording!!! Any suggestions are welcome. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ENJOY!!!! :D








