In the English language, "autumn" predates "fall" by less than 300 years, and "fall" is merely an abbreviation of the poetic phrase "the fall of leaves" established by British poets prior to the 1600s. That's right, "fall" comes from _British_ English. Insisting on "autumn" out of some obsession with specious pedantry is as silly as insisting on "harvest" - the term which predates both.
Inspirata muzica lui Glazunov 😊
Delightful, charming, underrated.
Ventos fortes, tempestade, natureza e romance. Obra impressionante!
6:14 "inspired" Rachmaninoff's symphonic dances written 40 years later (descending arpeggio motive and staccato sixteenth-note chromatisms)
Wonderful! How about Les Ruses d'amour next?
🙂
4:43
26:28
It's Autumn, not "Fall" lol
In the English language, "autumn" predates "fall" by less than 300 years, and "fall" is merely an abbreviation of the poetic phrase "the fall of leaves" established by British poets prior to the 1600s. That's right, "fall" comes from _British_ English.
Insisting on "autumn" out of some obsession with specious pedantry is as silly as insisting on "harvest" - the term which predates both.
@@theMMAdhatterIt's not pedantry, it's just a better translation of what Glazunov meant when he wrote "L'Automne" in the score.