Sunday, April 29, 2018

10 gargantuan and epic pieces of classical music ...


... that will make you feel tiny in comparison


By Classic FM, London
epic classical music
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Big pieces, big orchestras, big sounds, big everything. These are the most epic pieces of classical music ever written.
So we were looking for pieces more epic than this:
And we think we've found some. Here we go...

Sibelius – Symphony No. 5

Go straight to the finale and bask in the epic majesty of Finland’s finest ever approximation of the call of a swan - obviously using the French horn.


Verdi – Aida

Verdi’s Aida is the grandest of grand operas, calling for gargantuan sets, huge orchestra forces and a chorus big enough to scale a pyramid.


Beethoven – Symphony No. 9

No biggie, just a symphony that attempts to incorporate ALL THAT IS GOOD AND RIGHT IN MANKIND’S STRUGGLE AGAINST DARKNESS.


Stravinsky – The Rite Of Spring

It reportedly caused a riot on its premiere, and it totally sounds like one too.


Saint-Saëns – Symphony No. 3

For sheer noise and impression, Saint-Saëns so-called ‘Organ’ symphony does the business like no other.

 

John Williams – Superman

Because nothing says ‘epic’ like a fictional superhero with his pants on outside his tights and a heroic theme played on French horn. Simple, effective, huge.


Haydn – The Creation

A piece in which the early classical legend attempts to recreate the dawn of mankind with only an orchestra and a chorus at his disposal. And he succeeds.


Brian – Symphony No. 1 (‘Gothic’)

Got a spare few hours? And a penchant for full orchestra, chorus and brass band sharing the stage? You’ll be in need of Havergal Brian’s gargantuan ‘Gothic’ symphony.


Rachmaninov – Piano Concerto No. 3

It’s a popular work, but that doesn’t diminish the sheer scale of Rachmaninov’s vision for this work.


Tallis – Spem in Alium

There’s a bit late on in this choral masterpiece when 40 voices miraculously join together in breathtaking unison after swirling around each other – it’s the very definition of epic.
Spem in alium at RNCM
40 cellos playing Thomas Tallis' Renaissance masterpiece
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