2009年11月10日星期二

Conclusion

Will.We complete this semester,I am so happy to study this semester. In fact there is not have so many homework to do. Some we did on the class, some we have enough time to do. The teacher is great. He is a very kind man, very friendly, he doesn't makes us stressful. after this semester, my english is more development. when I read the English article or watch English movie I understand more and more.
I think this blog is a good way to contact my English teacher. If I have something do not understand. please give me a hand. Thank you !

< Battle Royal > music park

This is a Japanese film. I write some music part for it.

#01. Requiem (Giuseppe Verdi) - Prologue
「レクイエム」(ヴェルディ)—プロローグ
It is very rare in movie case where the song “Requiem” is used bluntly as the background music in the prologue of a movie. Battle Royale scores with this exception. The original “Requiem” is written by Giuseppe Verdi is to commemorate the death of Gioachino Rossini and Alessandro Manzoni and lasted for 72 minutes. The part that was used in the film is the shortened version edited by music composer of Battle Royal film, Masamichi Amano. It is common in to hear such music in those funeral or horror scene. However, there wasn’t such scene in Battle Royale. Instead, the opening of the song which is so intense and mind blowing were used during the opening of the movie, to create the horrifying and stressful atmosphere which last through the whole movie. This song is also the only soundtrack in the movie that has vocal in it. Well, I used to have this song as my wake up morning call which I think is pretty effective but leave me haunted for the rest of the day. What do you think?
#07. Radetsky-Marsch Op. 228 (Johan Strauss)
「ラデツキー行进曲
During the first broadcast of the death name lists, it was started with Johann Strauss most famous work, Radetzky March which was dedicated to the Austrian Marshal Joseph Radetzky von Radetz after the victory of Venice revolt. However, due to the controverial status of Joseph Radetzky, Johan Strauss refused to mention or play the song for the rest of his live. Yet, despite its military nature, the tone of the song is rather festive than martial, and its upbeat atmosphere and catchy tunes has secured its popularity in the ballroom, carnival and even the battlefield. Thus, it is passed down through generations and lasted until this century. It is almost always played as the last piece of music at the Neujahrskonzert, the Vienna New Year Concert. The way where Kitano or the Battle Royale Act itself suppress the students through killing and forced them to participate in the game somehow reminiscence with the victory of Venice revolt which this song is dedicated to.
#09. An Der Schoen, Blue Danube Waltz Op. 134 (John Strauss Jr)
「美しく青きドナウ
Compare with the first broadcast, the second broadcast started with An Der Schoen, where Blue Danube is the common English title for the song. It is composed by John Strauss Junior which is the son of John Strauss mentioned above. The reason of using this song in the film is quite simple, by the time of second broadcast, almost half of the students are dead in the bloodshed game. However, a scene of dark humour occured when Kitano reminded his students to put down their weapon and stop their fight to have their lunch properly. It somehow suit fittingly into the melody of the music itself and manage to carry out the contrasted atmosphere
#19. Aria from Orchestral Suite No.3 in D (Johann Sebastian Bach)
「G线上のアリア(バッハ)
This song, played during the later part of the fight between Kiriyama and Mitsuko. The serene music initially contrast strongly but blended nicely with the killing scene. During Mitsuko’s final moment, The tranquillity of the music, followed by the fading of her life, create a very peaceful atmosphere, which signified the liberation of her soul from the cruel life cycle. Her last words, “ I just don’t want to be the loser anymore…” carried the sadness and sorrow of her which resonance with the music. At least, in her last moment, the atmosphere created allowed the audience to sympathize her.

2009年10月14日星期三

Review after a concert

A good concert will give people a good feeling. A good concert not only makes people physical and mental pleasure, but also can cultivate sentiment. Today I will talk about one concert my watched . The performer is Yuri Bashmet . He is one of the famous performer in the world . He played a romantic period piece. The piece is writing for viola and orchestra. Composer is Weber .It was an exciting performance. People never forget it . The reason why this is an exciting performance is Bashmet not only have the perfect technique, but also he use his music conquer the audience. If a performer only to has the technique no music or only has music no technique are not successful. A good musician will put the technique and music together . I think Bashmet did this . I still clearly remeber At the beginning of this piece. He used a fullness sound that captures my heart .I like his sound . His sound has a charm , makes people easy to enter his music . He treat the music very cleverly . For example . He treat some easy notes very carefully . If change to the other one .I think he can not take care about very note . I think Bashmet treats very note seriously . So his music is perfect . Music can makes people comfortable . A good concert will wash your soul . At the end of this review I want to say is listen more and more music can makes life beautifully

2009年9月28日星期一

Introduction

my name is Li Gen. I'm from China.I study in singapore now.and I'm the second year student. I'm a young musician.A viola player.I love lots of classical music.If you like classical music too.please send the message for me. If you have some question about music. I'm very happy to answer it if I know.
Ha Welcome to my blog.I hope we can become to friends

Qi Zhang one person's symphony orchestra

I know her just now .I also find some material about her. Qi Zhang has been playing since the age of nine. Performing in various venus in Shanghai, nationwide and overseas, including an electronic organ concert at Shanghai Concert Hall. She won first Prize in the International Electronic Organ Competition in Spain in 2004.
I'm a string player.I do not know so much about organ. I think her technic is perfect.But she just only one person.If she play a orchestra music .She could not think everything, she can not play every part .
I saw someone said she dynamic is not very good and sounds little peaceful or something like that.I just want to say that is electronic organ.It can not do many color change.And it is very difficult to play a symphony by herself.I think she is wonderful organ player.She did a good job.I will support her also!

2009年9月25日星期五

How music makes you feel

Different peried music has different feeling.A good piece not only has a beautiful melody but also has the performer emotion .Different people playing the same piece the feeling is not the same .So the feeling of the audience will be different .However, music has not changed.On the one hand we can feel the performers emotion, the other hand we can feel the sense of the composer.
I would like to cite an example to explained my idea.There are two videos from YOUTUBE.They are all good.
Link:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HUF9neEN81I
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQiyagTGpdU&feature=related
But they are very different.The first one was Performed buy Jascha Heifetz and William Primrose . They played the elegant style .The second one was performed buy Zimmermann Brunello.They played more free .I like the first one more because this version music processing very clear and everything put together ,makes me more energy.The second one also not bad.But maybe too much freedem would damage the music.It is just my thought.Whatever which one you like .The most important thing is music will makes you life colorful.

2009年8月17日星期一

My favorite composer :Beethoven

Beethoven


born Bonn, baptized 17 December 1770; died Vienna, 26 March 1827
He studied first with his father, Johann, a singer and instrumentalist in the service of the Elector of Cologne at Bonn, but mainly with C.G. Neefe, court organist. At 11 ½ he was able to deputize for Neefe; at 12 he had some music published. In 1787 he went to Vienna, but quickly returned on hearing that his mother was dying. Five years later he went back to Vienna, where he settled. He pursued his studies, first with Haydn, but there was some clash of temperaments and Beethoven studied too with Schenk, Albrechtsberger and Salieri. Until 1794 he was supported by the Elector at Bonn but he found patrons among the music-loving Viennese aristocracy and soon enjoyed success as a piano virtuoso, playing at private houses or palaces rather than in public. His public debut was in 1795; about the same time his first important publications appeared, three piano trios op.l and three piano sonatas op.2. As a pianist, it was reported, he had fire, brilliance and fantasy as well as depth of feeling. It is naturally in the piano sonatas, writing for his own instrument, that he is at his most original in this period; the Pathetique belongs to 1799, the Moonlight ('Sonata quasi una fantasia') to 1801, and these represent only the most obvious innovations in style and emotional content. These years also saw the composition of his first three piano concertos, his first two symphonies and a set of six string quartets op.l8.
1802, however, was a year of crisis for Beethoven, with his realization that the impaired hearing he had noticed for some time was incurable and sure to worsen. That autumn, at a village outside Vienna, Heiligenstadt, he wrote a will-like document, addressed to his two brothers, describing his bitter unhappiness over his affliction in terms suggesting that he thought death was near. But he came through with his determination strengthened and entered a new creative phase, generally called his 'middle period'. It is characterized by a heroic tone, evident in the Eroica Symphony (no.3, originally to have been dedicated not to a noble patron but to Napoleon), in Symphony no.5, where the sombre mood of the c Minor first movement ('Fate knocking on the door') ultimately yields to a triumphant C Major finale with piccolo, trombones and percussion added to the orchestra, and in his opera Fidelio. Here the heroic theme is made explicit by the story, in which (in the post-French Revolution 'rescue opera' tradition) a wife saves her imprisoned husband from murder at the hands of his oppressive political enemy. The three string quartets of this period, op.59, are similarly heroic in scale: the first, lasting some 45 minutes, is conceived with great breadth, and it too embodies a sense of triumph as the intense f Minor Adagio gives way to a jubilant finale in the major embodying (at the request of the dedicatee, Count Razumovsky) a Russian folk melody.
Fidelio, unsuccessful at its premiere, was twice revised by Beethoven and his librettists and successful in its final version of 1814. Here there is more emphasis on the moral force of the story. It deals not only with freedom and justice, and heroism, but also with married love, and in the character of the heroine Leonore, Beethoven's lofty, idealized image of womanhood is to be seen. He did not find it in real life he fell in love several times, usually with aristocratic pupils (some of them married), and each time was either rejected or saw that the woman did not match his ideals. In 1812, however, he wrote a passionate love-letter to an 'Eternally Beloved' (probably Antonie Brentano, a Viennese married to a Frankfurt businessman), but probably the letter was never sent.
With his powerful and expansive middle-period works, which include the Pastoral Symphony (no.6, conjuring up his feelings about the countryside, which he loved), Symphony no.7 and Symphony no. 8, Piano Concertos nos.4 (a lyrical work) and 5 (the noble and brilliant Emperor) and the Violin Concerto, as well as more chamber works and piano sonatas (such as the Waldstein and the Appassionata) Beethoven was firmly established as the greatest composer of his time. His piano-playing career had finished in 1808 (a charity appearance in 1814 was a disaster because of his deafness). That year he had considered leaving Vienna for a secure post in Germany, but three Viennese noblemen had banded together to provide him with a steady income and he remained there, although the plan foundered in the ensuing Napoleonic wars in which his patrons suffered and the value of Austrian money declined.
The years after 1812 were relatively unproductive. He seems to have been seriously depressed, by his deafness and the resulting isolation, by the failure of his marital hopes and (from 1815) by anxieties over the custodianship of the son of his late brother, which involved him in legal actions. But he came out of these trials to write his profoundest music, which surely reflects something of what he had been through. There are seven piano sonatas in this, his 'late period', including the turbulent Hammerklavier op.106, with its dynamic writing and its harsh, rebarbative fugue, and op.110, which also has fugues and much eccentric writing at the instrument's extremes of compass; there is a great Mass and a Choral Symphony, no.9 in d Minor, where the extended variation-finale is a setting for soloists and chorus of Schiller's Ode to Joy; and there is a group of string quartets, music on a new plane of spiritual depth, with their exalted ideas, abrupt contrasts and emotional intensity. The traditional four-movement scheme and conventional forms are discarded in favour of designs of six or seven movements, some fugal, some akin to variations (these forms especially attracted him in his late years), some song-like, some martial, one even like a chorale prelude. For Beethoven, the act of composition had always been a struggle, as the tortuous scrawls of his sketchbooks show; in these late works the sense of agonizing effort is a part of the music.
Musical taste in Vienna had changed during the first decades of the 19th century; the public were chiefly interested in light Italian opera (especially Rossini) and easygoing chamber music and songs, to suit the prevalent bourgeois taste. Yet the Viennese were conscious of Beethoven's greatness: they applauded the Choral Symphony even though, understandably, they found it difficuit, and though baffled by the late quartets they sensed their extraordinary visionary qualities. His reputation went far beyond Vienna: the late Mass was first heard in St. Petersburg, and the initial commission that produced the Choral Symphony had come from the Philharmonic Society of London. When, early in 1827, he died, 10,000 are said to have attended the funeral. He had become a public figure, as no composer had done before. Unlike composers of the preceding generation, he had never been a purveyor of music to the nobility he had lived into the age - indeed helped create it - of the artist as hero and the property of mankind at large.