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Thursday, November 12, 2020

The top 10 one-hit wonders in classical music

 

Classical music's one-hit wonders
Classical music's one-hit wonders. Picture: Getty

By Maddy Shaw Roberts, ClassicFM London

From Pachelbel and his Canon, to Orff and his Carmina, here are the most iconic “one-hit wonders” of the classical music world.

Some of classical music’s greatest contributors – think of the biggies, BachMozart and Beethoven – wrote countless pages of music, that we still play and enjoy today.

But some composers haven’t quite enjoyed the same full-blown, century-crossing success. Here are, without further ado, the most famous and beloved one-hit wonder composers in classical music, and their most famous piece.


  1. Pachelbel – Canon

    Johann Pachelbel is the original one-hit wonder guy. While he wrote lots of music in the 17th century, only his Canon in D remains popular today – especially at weddings.

    The canon is grounded by a basso continuo line, played by one poor cellist who repeats eight notes throughout the entire piece with no variation. Musically speaking, it’s not super interesting for musicians. But it remains a fundamental work from the Baroque era and has even inspired pop songs in 2020.

    'Pachelbel's Nightmare': sequel to Pachelbel's Canon in D
    YouTuber musicalbasics made a sequel to one of the most famous pieces of all time.
  2. Mascagni – Intermezzo (Cavalleria Rusticana)

    The Italian composer Pietro Mascagni was most noted for his operas – but it’s his first masterpiece Cavalleria Rusticana, written in 1890, that overshadows all his later works. Its best-known tune is the orchestral ‘Intermezzo’an indulgent, sumptuous melody that speaks of a summer under the sun in Sicily.

  3. Carl Orff – O Fortuna (Carmina Burana)

    Carl Orff hit the jackpot when he came across the Carmina Burana, a collection of 13th-century songs and poems, and decided to set them all to music. Of them, the 20th-century German’s setting of ‘O Fortuna’ has gone above and beyond surviving the test of time, its stately intro lending itself to countless film and TV themes – most famously, The X Factor.

    Read more: What are the lyrics to ‘O Fortuna’ from Carmina Burana? >

    O, Fortuna (Cello Craziness)
    Credit: YouTube / James McGonigle
  4. Lehár – The Merry Widow

    A joyous fanfare opening, the ‘Vilja Song’ and the titular ‘Waltz’ – The Merry Widow is packed with great melodies. And its composer, Austro-Hungarian Franz Lehár, is recognised as one of the most significant writers of operetta. But history, as it does, has only really remembered him for one of them.

  5. Smetana – ‘Vltava’ (The Moldau), Má Vlast

    ‘Vltava’ from Czech composer Bedrich Smetana’s symphonic poem Má Vlast is an evocative musical painting of the rolling river that passes through Prague. Also known as ‘The Moldau’, the movement is one passage in a monumental achievement by the composer. But its central, sweeping melody has taken the cake as by far the best-known tune in Smetana’s musical stock.

  6. Giordani – Andrea Chénier

    Andrea Chénier is a cracker of an opera, but very much all Italian composer Umberto Giordani is known for. The pinnacle aria ‘La mamma morta’, sung exquisitely by Maria Callas, features in a key scene in the movie Philadelphia where Tom Hanks’ character delivers an affecting monologue about how Callas’ soprano notes get him all teary.

  7. Pergolesi – Stabat Mater

    Near the end of his tragically short life, Pergolesi composed his celebrated ‘Stabat Mater’, a sacred piece opening with two voices which occasionally overlap in pitch, creating a temporary and haunting dissonance. While famous in the 18th century as a comic-opera composer, Pergolesi is now known for little else than this eye-wateringly beautiful setting.

  8. Charpentier – Te Deum

    If this French Baroque composer were to see how his stately, polyphonic motet is being used today, he might find his jaw somewhere around the region of the floor.

    ‘Te Deum’, Marc-Antoine Charpentier’s brassy, warlike rondo, was supposedly premiered in celebration of a French battle victory in 1692. But today, it is most recognisably the main theme for Eurovisionthe world’s international song contestant. And it really works

  9. Dukas – Sorcerer’s Apprentice

    Paul Dukas is pretty much only known these days for The Sorcerer’s Apprentice – but, certainly in our books, it measures up to an entire catalogue. The enchanting work for orchestra was made famous by Disney’s Fantasia, and is the only piece of music that featured in both the 1940 and 2000 versions. In the remake, Dukas’ music plays while Mickey Mouse, as a sorcerer’s apprentice, battles a living army of broomsticks.

  10. Gruber – Silent Night

    A beloved Christmas melody, heard every year in churches, cathedrals and on doorsteps all over the world… but who has heard of any of the composer’s other work?

    So the story goes, Franz Xaver Gruber’s classic carol was first performed on Christmas Eve in 1818 – but, in the end rather poignantly, on the guitar, because the church’s organ was broken. Some things work out for the best...

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(C) 2020 ClassicFM London

Sunday, November 8, 2020

Niño Tiro - his music and his life

 


Niño Tiro (*1980)

Niño Tiro's music is anachronistic, eccentric, and outright melodic. Born in Cagayan de

Oro City, Philippines, he started piano lessons at the age of five. During his High-School

days, he then explored Rock and played electric bass in a band. Realizing his passion

for music regardless of genre, he pursued playing the piano for his Bachelor's degree in

music while playing Jazz and Rock during his spare time. He also taught piano in a

family-owned studio while pursuing his Bachelor's degree. After he graduated, he was

faculty of the Lourdes College School of Music for 13 years, where he became a

prestigious piano pedagogue and an avant-garde music teacher. He also plays Jazz,

Blues, and Rock as a professional session player in various local bands. In 2004, his

band's song was a radio hit and was #1 for eight weeks on the local airwaves. He

worked in the United States as The Life Teen Music Director in Santa Barbara Catholic

Church. He is currently pursuing a second Bachelor's degree in Music, majoring in

Composition under the tutelage of Horst-Hans Bäcker. He is presently faculty of The

Conservatory of Music, Theater, and Dance of Liceo de Cagayan University, the

Principal Double bass player of the Cagayan De Oro Symphony Orchestra, continuing his passion for 

teaching  and making music.


"Phantasie für Ludwig"; by Philippine composer Niño Tiro (*1980) is dedicated to Susanne

Kessel.

It is part of Vol. 9 of Susanne Kessel's global composition project "250 piano pieces for

Beethoven".

Susanne Kessel invited 250 composers worldwide to write new piano pieces for Beethoven's

250th anniversary in the year 2020. All pieces refer to Beethoven's music and his life.

Susanne Kessel played the world premieres of all the piano pieces in Beethoven's birth town,

Bonn. There will be more performances also in other cities and countries by the pianist herself.

All pieces are published within a high-quality sheet music edition by EDITIONS MUSICA

FERRUM / London.

The sheet music of this piece will be in Vol. 9 of the project's edition.

All information about the project - and SHOP:

www.250-piano-pieces-for-beethoven.com

"Phantasie für Ludwig"; is a Sturm und Drang piece in A minor based on the Beethoven style of

Classical Romantic composition. There are a few nods here and there from the Meister's

monumental works. The dissonance and melodic and harmonic tension in this piece conveys the

ups and downs of a composer's life and depicts the life of Ludwig succumbing to the frailty of

the human mind and body. The work ends in A, neither major and minor, symbolizing the

continuing struggles that everyone, especially Ludwig, faced in life.

Thursday, November 5, 2020

Scientists find the amazing reason your favorite music gives you ‘chills’


Why does music give you 'chills'?
Why does music give you 'chills'? Picture: Getty

By Maddy Shaw Roberts, ClassicFM London

Now we know why our favorite music sends shivers down our spine.

Scientists say they have discovered why the melodies we love give us goosebumps.

A team of French researchers found that when we listen to our favourite music, the areas of the brain which handle emotion, movement, and processing music and sound work together to create a surge in dopamine levels – our ‘feel good’ chemical.

According to the study, our brains also try to anticipate what happens next in the song. And when we guess correctly, we get a reward.

Thibault Chabin, a PhD student at the University Burgundy Franche-Comté who led the study, said: “What is most intriguing is that music seems to have no biological benefit to us. However, the implication of dopamine and of the reward system in processing of musical pleasure suggests an ancestral function for music.

“This ancestral function may lie in the period of time we spend in anticipation of the ‘chill-inducing’ part of the music. As we wait, our brains are busy predicting the future and release dopamine.

“Evolutionarily speaking, being able to predict what will happen next is essential for survival.”

Read more: Music takes 13 minutes to ‘release sadness’ and 9 to make you happy >

The team of researchers, whose study was published in the journal Frontiers in Neuroscience, carried out the experiment on 18 music-lovers with a range of musical abilities, who had all experienced chills when listening to music.

“Participants of our study were able to precisely indicate ‘chill-producing’ moments in the songs, but most musical chills occurred in many parts of the extracts and not only in the predicted moments,” says Chabin.

Side note, interestingly – or tragically, depending on your take! – only about half of people get chills when listening to music. Those who do, are considered to have an “enhanced ability to experience intense emotions”.

For Chabin’s study, the participants were hooked up to machines that record electrical activity in the brain, and they were played 90-second clips of their favourite songs.

While they were listening, the scientists watched what happened in their brains whenever the music gave them ‘chills’.

These regions work together to process music and release the ‘feel-good’ hormone, dopamine. Combined with the anticipation that triggers those pleasurable ‘reward systems’, this produces the tingly chill participants felt while listening.

“This represents a good perspective for musical emotion research,” Chabin said.

“Musical pleasure is a very interesting phenomenon that deserves to be investigated further, in order to understand why music is rewarding and unlock why music is essential in human lives.”

(C) 2020 by ClassicFM London