One characteristic of Bridge's music that I admire (and one which, granted applies to the music of many others) is his continued reliance on and development of Tonality (by the time of this work, a very old system, but one which still represented inexhaustible possibilities to the composer). Love the late-Romantic, Impressionist, pastoral harmonic language, as well as the various "moods" here, some more energetic than others.
@vpdemantova2 ай бұрын
Greetings!! Can you recommend me some more advanced and modern composers? Or old composers also? That uses tonality like Bridge, and develops the musical language in an harmonious way, mystical and ethereal? Pleassse? It’s so difficult to find new composers I like like him
@hectorbarrionuevo6034Ай бұрын
@@vpdemantova Greetings ! This is a somewhat unwieldy list of favorite composers --born 1870s onwards (so, contemporaneous with Bridge and later, in no particular order): A. Scriabin; RVW; Rachmaninov; Jean Roger-Ducasse; Holst; J. Marx; Respighi; Atterberg; Korngold; Bernstein; A. Roussel; Ravel; R. Gliere; F. Bridge; Bax; E. Coates; Howells; Moeran; G. Jacob; Harris; Finzi; Walton; Alwyn; E. Tubin; Messiaen; R. Sierra; Diamond; Braga-Santos; D. Gillis; R. Ward; Samuel Jones; E. Whitacre; F. Schreker; H. Hanson; W. Stenhammar; Myaskovsky; V. Novak; B. Bartok; A. Casella; B. Martinu; E. Schulhoff; E. Goossens; F. Poulenc; Prokofiev; Shostakovich; L.E. Larsson; I. Gurney; K. Fuchs; Stravinsky; S. v Hausegger; G. Lloyd; Schmitt; Schmidt; Orff; Karlowicz; Steinberg; Reger; Z. Stojowski; H. Pfitzner; Copland; L. Glass; László Lajtha; Rued Langgaard; Chavez; Villa-Lobos; Ginastera; Dutilleux; G. Enescu; Honegger; Barber; Britten; Gubaidulina; Christopher Wilson; C. Effinger ...Many, many more, before 1870s, such as Puccini and Debussy ...
@intervalkid4 жыл бұрын
Wonderful blend of styles and influences. Excellent piece. One of the more tasteful composers of the era.
@MrRbjunior839 жыл бұрын
Fantastic English symphony music! I am so happy to discovered!
@PHMPublishing6 жыл бұрын
This was one of the FB works that I exhumed from the archives for this recording by BBC NOW. It's a lovely recording, but with hindsight, it probably needs to go along a bit quicker in places. It's Bridge's first big orchestral piece. He was 25. Check out his complete works in my book Frank Bridge - The Complete Works (PHM Publishing)
@intervalkid4 жыл бұрын
Thanks.
@daltonmarcellus87023 жыл бұрын
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@calebalfred70613 жыл бұрын
@Dalton Marcellus Yup, have been using Kaldrostream for since december myself :D
@jerrymaxim35733 жыл бұрын
@Dalton Marcellus Yup, have been watching on KaldroStream for years myself :)
@tgcnow2 жыл бұрын
I was thinking, this is going a bit slow, just before I read your comment.
@Chowringhee5 жыл бұрын
Brilliantly adventurous, moody, intriguing. Just what an original tone poem should be.
@bowerdw5 жыл бұрын
A composer is new to me. Keep em comin.
@waggishsagacity7947 Жыл бұрын
Doug Bower: If you're trying to fall in love with Frank Bridge, may I suggest his "Valse Intermezzo", enclosed. Just a delightful and intriguing piece, but a great introduction to this composer. kzbin.info/www/bejne/fX64aY2cqallfNU
@richardmedot4 жыл бұрын
Toujours tres beau
@neilpattison1307 жыл бұрын
A very puzzling composer, capable of very beautiful effects and compelling themes, but also of long passages of featureless, generalised sonority, and no one piece of his seems to me to sustain anything like the development of musical ideas that one might expect on the basis of his emotional insight and discipline.
@DavidA-ps1qr2 жыл бұрын
That's a very interesting comment. It would be interesting to know how Bridge edited his own work. His overall style is difficult to pin down. Perhaps that's why he's not as popular as he could be.
@pianoredux75162 жыл бұрын
I beg to differ. Perhaps earlier, but his more mature works belie your characterization in my view/hearing.
@slothostpUL2 жыл бұрын
Rather like Bruckner.
@galas0629 жыл бұрын
thank you!
@joeyjennings95486 жыл бұрын
well.. for a midnight song at least he puts you to bed at the end 😴
@luzobsidiana Жыл бұрын
I'm looking for something like Lacrimosa or Scherezade, if someone knows please let me know some recommendations
@harryandruschak28437 жыл бұрын
"Like" on 18 August 2017
@Leomerya122 жыл бұрын
18:17 Dukas and Tchaikovsky's baby.
@andrewpetersen5272Ай бұрын
Image credit?
@PreciousBinti8 жыл бұрын
I was looking for a set piece song and came across Frank Bridges, is he the composer of the song 'Sister awake close not your eyes'?
2:53 - I wonder.... where did the Pixar Incredibles theme come from?...
@ataxias75 жыл бұрын
I believe it's a very short-term correlation and most likely a co-incidence, also given how long this symphonic poem is. Meaning, if you take short segments out of it, you can find such similarities with a lot of other pieces.
@steveegallo33845 жыл бұрын
@@ataxias7 -- True....Often they're resonating only some chimeric notion of an echoed motif associated rather with selective reminiscence than with deep reflexion or imagination…..
@amandalee35177 жыл бұрын
who would you say he is the most similar to .. of the big boys (Beethoven, etc.) ?
@AustinArto7 жыл бұрын
My vote on similarity would be to Mahler. This is my idea, not learned opinion.
@terrygrimley96507 жыл бұрын
This is very early Bridge, written around 1903 when he was in his early 20s. This recording, made in the 1990s, might have been only its second performance. His style changed abruptly around the First World War. Stylistic reference points in his romantic early music include Brahms, Tchaikovsky, Faure, Rachmaninov. His later, more modernist, music adds Ravel, Stravinsky and the second Viennese school (he actually introduced his pupil, Benjamin Britten, to Schoenberg!).
@peterbuckley2653 жыл бұрын
NO, BUT BEETHOVEN IS FAR OVER PLAHYED BY ORCHESTRAS H VING AN EASY TIME PLAYING REPEATEDLY THE SAME 5 PER CENT OF MUSIC FROM 1850 TO 1950 , BEING OUT OF ORDER BY REPEATEDLY, 3NEGLECTING THEE OTHER EQUALLY EXCELLENT AND SOMETIMES FAR BETTER 95 PER CENT .