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Category Archives: Music
Polytonality in Rachmaninoff
In previous posts I have argued that Rachmaninoff, the self-proclaimed musical conservative, was not only influenced by his more forward-looking contemporaries, but actually incorporated some of their modern harmonic devices in his music. Polytonality is the use of two different … Continue reading
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Harmonic Dissonance in Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto #2
My previous blog entry on Rachmaninoff’s concertos may have raised some skepticism amongst those who consider the composer to be, whatever his other merits, a conservative in his musical language. Rachmaninoff himself helped foster this notion with quotes like “I … Continue reading
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Blogging Project: Analyzing Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concertos
My blog is littered with uncompleted, overly-ambitious projects. Here is yet another one. Since I became musically conscious sometime during my childhood, I have been fond of Sergei Rachmaninoff’s music, in particular his piano concertos. I remember tape recording these … Continue reading
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Rachmaninoff “Piano Concerto No. 5″
I was certainly surprised to find on YouTube links to videos of a fifth piano concerto by Sergei Rachmaninoff. I quickly discovered (after listening for a few seconds) that this was an arrangement of Rachmaninoff’s Second Symphony for piano and … Continue reading
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Joseph Marx – Eine Herbstsymphonie
I was fortunate enough to attend the US premiere of Joseph Marx’s Eine Herbstsymphonie (“Autumn Symphony”) in New York City on December 7, 2008, performed by the American Symphony Orchestra. The work is regarded as Marx’s masterpiece, but aside from … Continue reading