panic in paradise
Bluelighter
i dont know nearly as much as i should about classical, but have been listening my whole life and Shostakovitch is who has always been there, remembering back to six or eight years old... haha ...when i do listen to him its 'quartets & quintets' or solo string-instruments almost always.
i love the abstractness(is one word) of his work, the melancholy that does fall into place after a few touch-&-goes along the way - his piano solo's i do collect, and they are the more minimal-omniscient "rainy-day/cold-night" stuff
;-)
after so many years of listening regularly, and then not for a few months the same songs do have new appeal as far layers that stand out more, or various changes and resonance between instruments i had never noticed.
a quick mention about Chopin is that his 'Nocturne for Violin and Piano' - is my favorite of any Nocturnes i have heard, easily - i can listen to that on repeat all day, and have most of the day several times.. .
Chopin - Nocturne for piano and violin
-^ listen for the exhale at 2:12
;-)
i love the abstractness(is one word) of his work, the melancholy that does fall into place after a few touch-&-goes along the way - his piano solo's i do collect, and they are the more minimal-omniscient "rainy-day/cold-night" stuff
;-)
after so many years of listening regularly, and then not for a few months the same songs do have new appeal as far layers that stand out more, or various changes and resonance between instruments i had never noticed.
a quick mention about Chopin is that his 'Nocturne for Violin and Piano' - is my favorite of any Nocturnes i have heard, easily - i can listen to that on repeat all day, and have most of the day several times.. .
Chopin - Nocturne for piano and violin
-^ listen for the exhale at 2:12
;-)