Thursday, October 27, 2016

How well do you know the music of Harry Potter?



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What instrument plays the opening of the Prologue in the soundtrack for the first Harry Potter film?
What instrument plays the opening of the Prologue in the soundtrack for the first Harry Potter film?
x
Chimes
Glockenspiel
Celesta
Piccolo
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What enchanted instrument puts the terrifying three-headed dog Fluffy to sleep in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone?
What enchanted instrument puts the terrifying three-headed dog Fluffy to sleep in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone?
Piano
Violin
Flute
Harp
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Who wrote the music for Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows (both parts)?
iStock
iStock
Who wrote the music for Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows (both parts)?
x
Alexandre Desplat
John Williams
Howard Shore
James Horner
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What instrument does Harry play to lull Fluffy the three-headed dog to sleep?
iStock
iStock
What instrument does Harry play to lull Fluffy the three-headed dog to sleep?
x
A violin
An oboe
A flute
Panpipes
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Who or what does this piece of music represent?
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Voldemort
The dementors
Snape
The Philosopher's Stone
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Which of these singer-songwriters wrote a song for the fictional band that appears at the Yule Ball in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire?
Which of these singer-songwriters wrote a song for the fictional band that appears at the Yule Ball in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire?
Jarvis Cocker
Nick Cave
Damon Albarn
Guy Garvey
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Which character does this piece of music represent?
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Professor McGonagall
Ron Weasley
Norbert the Norwegian Ridgeback
Dobby the House Elf (Chamber of Secrets)
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Who says this in Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone?
Who says this in Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone?
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Albus Dumbledore
Professor McGonagall
Professor Flitwick
Professor Sprout
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 Which of these magical creatures from the Harry Potter books is famous for its singing?
iStock
iStock
Which of these magical creatures from the Harry Potter books is famous for its singing?
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Fawkes
Buckbeak
Hedwig
Aragog
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Who wrote the music for Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire?
iStock
iStock
Who wrote the music for Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire?
x
John Williams
Alexandre Desplat
Howard Shore
Patrick Doyle

Friday, October 14, 2016

Definitively the Best Classical Covers of Pop Songs

By Daniel Ross, ClassicFM London


One of the great things about classical musicians is that they’re always up for a cover version. Here are the best classical covers of pop songs on the internet, from Taylor Swift to Michael Jackson.
image: http://assets5.classicfm.com/2016/41/classical-covers-of-pop-songs-1476272346-article-0.jpg
classical covers of pop songs
Taylor Swift - Blank Space (Brooklyn Duo)

The cloying eagerness to settle down balanced by the whimsy of living your youth with abandon… Argh, it just feels so real! And even without the lyrics, Brooklyn Duo get it across beautifully.

Mark Ronson - Uptown Funk (Electric Colour Orchestra)

A monster hit that requires its performers to convey as much charisma as Bruno Mars. Do these guys manage it? (YES.)

Queen - Bohemian Rhapsody (Nicholas Hersh)

One of the all-time greats in the pop rep, Bohemian Rhapsody has been reimagined in countless different and inventive ways. But here, turning it into a kind of viola concerto, it sounds like it’s never sounded before.

Adele - Skyfall (Ji Liu)

Classy, solemn, exciting - and that’s just the Adele version. When pianist Ji Liu gets hold of it, though, Skyfall becomes that little bit more heightened.
Play
Ji Liu plays Skyfall
When James Bond meets Rachmaninov
04:03
image: http://cf.c.ooyala.com/N2M29udzoV_6c7V-T_WDNNLiIJkjne2N/rQqFhpGihXXoLKSn4xMDoxOjA4MTsiGN

Nicki Minaj - Anaconda (Lara St. John)

One of the most bonkers pop songs in recent years is given a performance art twist in this invigorating chamber performance.

Michael Jackson - Smooth Criminal (2CELLOS)

The King of Pop is ripe for classical reinterpretation, and many have tried - especially with Smooth Criminal. But the boys from 2CELLOS had it nailed when they stripped the whole song back and let the intensity come to the fore.

Let It Go - Idina Menzel (The Piano Guys)

This list wouldn’t be complete without the Piano Guys, who arguably kickstarted this whole movement for classical covers of pop songs in the YouTube generation. Their delicate mash-ups (on this occasion they’ve paired the Disney classic with some Vivaldi) are as ingenious as they are infectious, and this might just be their best one.

Sunday, September 18, 2016

Thursday, September 15, 2016

A Haydn Minuet and Trio Sounds Exactly the Same Played Back- and Forwards

Did you know: This Haydn minuet and trio sounds exactly the same played backwards as it does forwards


An enterprising YouTuber has shown that the minuet and trio movements from Haydn's Symphony No.47 sound the same backwards and forwards… and it’s pretty awesome
image: http://assets9.classicfm.com/2016/37/haydn-palindrome-symphony-asset-1473773299-article-0.jpg
Haydn Palindrome symphony asset
However great a piece of music is, it usually sounds pretty pants when it’s played backwards.
But not Haydn’s Minuet and Trio from his Symphony No.47 – nicknamed ‘The Palindrome’ – because Haydn used a neat bit of musical trickery to create a piece that's perfectly symmetrical.

Here’s why it’s called ‘The Palindrome’

The second part of the Minuet is the same music as the first part – but in reverse. And the same thing happens in the Trio .
Here’s the score of the melody from the minuet to demonstrate:
image: http://assets.classicfm.com/2016/37/haydn-palindrome-symphony-1473771572.jpg
Haydn Palindrome symphony
Here's what the movement sounds like performed live:
And just in case you're in any doubt that the piece *is* actually a palindrome, one muso geek on YouTube has actually reversed the audio, just to prove the whole Minuet and Trio is really and truly the same backwards as it is forwards.
First you'll hear the whole Minuet and Trio movement played in reverse, before the real version.
Music geek of YouTube, we salute you.
Haydn is known as a bit of a musical trickster – he also wrote the ‘Surprise’ Symphony designed to wake up audience members who chose to doze through his musical creations.
He also wrote the ‘Joke’ string quartet which has a couple of “fake” endings to trick unsuspecting audience members into applauding too early. The cheeky chappy.

Wednesday, September 7, 2016

Quiz: How good is your taste in music?

Quiz: How good is your taste in music?

Answer these questions, and we'll tell you how much of a discerning consumer you are.
taste in music quiz
Good taste, bad taste, it's all part of life's rich tapestry, right? WRONG. Getting good taste in music is one of the most important developmental stages in any human being's life, and so we thought we'd make sure you were on the right track.
Just answer these simple questions, and we'll tell you if you've got great taste, good taste, OK taste or truly awful taste. Let us know how you get on in the comments below, if you feel you can admit your result.

Friday, September 2, 2016

The Oldest Melody in Existence ...

The Hurrian Hymn was discovered in the 1950s on a clay tablet inscribed with Cuneiform text. It’s the oldest surviving melody and is over 3400 years old.
image: http://assets9.classicfm.com/2016/35/oldest-song-melody-1472638078-article-1.jpg
Oldest song melody. Hurrian hymn
The hymn was discovered on a clay tablet in Ugarit, now part of modern-day Syria, and is dedicated the Hurrians’ goddess of the orchards Nikkal.
The clay tablet text, which was discovered alongside around 30 other tablet fragments, specifies 9 lyre strings and the intervals between those strings – kind of like an ancient guitar tab.
But this is the only hymn that could be reconstructed – although the name of the composer is now lost.

Here it is:

image: http://assets.classicfm.com/2016/35/musical-score-from-ugarit-clay-tablet-from-ugarit-with-the-hurrian-hymn-13th-cent-bc-1472635579.jpg
Clay tablet from Ugarit
Picture: Getty

Doesn’t look much like music does it…?

The system of music notation we use now wasn’t invented until 1000 AD. This is something altogether different.
The notation here is essentially a set of instructions for intervals and tuning based around a heptatonic diatonic scale. There’s much more detail about the precise language and instructions here .
The lyrics are very difficult to translate, but one academic has come up with this rendering of them:
‘Once I have endeared the deity, she will love me in her heart,
the offer I bring may wholly cover my sin, 
bringing sesame oil may work on my behalf in awe may I'

Here's the whole haunting melody