Samuel Coleridge-Taylor - Nonet, Op. 2 (1894)

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  • Опубликовано: 6 окт 2024

Комментарии • 6

  • @contrebasseclassique
    @contrebasseclassique  2 года назад +1

    I. Allegro energico (0:15)
    II. Andante con moto (6:37)
    III. Scherzo: Allegro (12:37)
    IV. Allegro vivace (17:57)

  • @theMMAdhatter
    @theMMAdhatter 2 месяца назад +1

    Man, I really love SCT. Thank you so much for sharing this lovely work!
    I was curious and procrastinating on some other work, so I looked into the wonky credits - especially since it seemed so ironic not to be able to credit the bassist on a channel designed to feature bass music! Information I can find through the New York Public Library says Craig Brown was the double bassist for _Coleridge-Taylor: Chamber music_ released by Centaur in 2004. On Presto, the same album lists both Fadial and Orenstein as having played the clarinet quintet, and Fadial the African Dances. Perhaps one or the other accidentally got listed for the Nonet, as well.
    [There's also another RUclips score video of the Nonet put out by the channel "University of Rochester 3D Audio," which appears to be associated with Harley himself, as it links to his UoR faculty page featuring numerous other videos from the same account. In that video description, not only does it list Brown as the bassist, but Fadial as the violinist. And if that account is truly Harley, I'd probably trust him to remember who he played with!]

    • @contrebasseclassique
      @contrebasseclassique  2 месяца назад +1

      Thanks for your comment theMMAdhatter. I will add that name in the description box.

  • @kristinejohanek
    @kristinejohanek Год назад +2

    This wasn't what I was looking for, but I'm glad I stopped for a listen. Such a hopeful piece.

    • @contrebasseclassique
      @contrebasseclassique  Год назад

      Hi Kristine. Thanks for your comment. Did you know this composer before? Or did you discover him with this video?

    • @kristinejohanek
      @kristinejohanek Год назад

      @@contrebasseclassique , I knew of him and have listened to a couple of his pieces before. I am a new symphony conductor looking for a piece to feature some of my excellent wind players before my oboist retires this winter, and this piece came up on my feed. I think I may do the first movement - or maybe the whole piece. I had been searching for a wind quintet, but this would be something different and special.