Your favorite music from 1900-1909?

Discussion in 'Music Corner' started by Terrapin Station, Mar 22, 2019.

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  1. Terrapin Station

    Terrapin Station Master Guns Thread Starter

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    You don't have to post a big list all at once. Just add some favorite tunes/pieces whenever you think of them.
     
  2. Terrapin Station

    Terrapin Station Master Guns Thread Starter

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    Arnold Schoenberg - Pelleas und Melisande

     
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  3. Andrew J

    Andrew J Forum Resident

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    South East England
    Could you extend that to two years earlier (1888), so I can include Satie's Trois Gymnopedies?
     
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  4. Andrew J

    Andrew J Forum Resident

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    Mahler's #5
     
  5. Terrapin Station

    Terrapin Station Master Guns Thread Starter

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    I'll didn't do one yet, but I plan to eventually start an 1880s thread. I have an 1890s: Your favorite music from the 1890s?

    If you want to start it before I get to it (I'm trying not to do too many at once), just let me know so that I don't duplicate it.
     
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  6. David G.

    David G. Forum Resident

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    There's a series of CDs called Covent Garden on Record. The first two volumes cover the period from the invention of recording devices through 1910. These are fascinating glimpses into opera singing styles that are essentially from the 19th Century.

    [​IMG]

    The 1903 Grand Opera Series is another phenomenal collection of recordings from that decade.

    [​IMG]
     
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  7. idleracer

    idleracer Forum Resident

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    California
    :kilroy: I'd have to go for "Clair de lune" (1905). That's the date it was published. I have no idea when the first recording of it materialized.
     
  8. Andrew J

    Andrew J Forum Resident

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    Thanks...I think these threads should all be yours
     
  9. drad dog

    drad dog A Listener

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    "The Black National Anthem" - Copyright 1900 - by James Weldon Johnson and J. Rosamund Johnson.
     
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  10. drad dog

    drad dog A Listener

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    Also dating from 1900 - Flight of the Bumblebee
     
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  11. SITKOL'76

    SITKOL'76 Forum Resident

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    Isn't the earliest peace of recorded music from 1920? Crazy Blues I think is what the song is called.
     
  12. Andrew J

    Andrew J Forum Resident

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    South East England
    Funny you should say that. Apparently the first recorded singing is from 1860, for a piece called Au Clair de la Lune

    Oldest human voice recording uncovered
     
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  13. Terrapin Station

    Terrapin Station Master Guns Thread Starter

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  14. Ian Blackaby

    Ian Blackaby Active Member

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    London
    Just this ....

    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
     
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  15. SITKOL'76

    SITKOL'76 Forum Resident

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  16. zen

    zen Senior Member


     
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  17. wildroot indigo

    wildroot indigo Forum Resident

    I love early spiritual singers the Dinwiddie Colored Quartet, from Dinwiddie, Virginia... They recorded six titles in 1902 (reissued on a couple of Document CDs):

    Down On The Old Camp Ground
    Poor Mourner
    Steal Away
    My Way Is Cloudy
    Gabriel's Trumpet
    We'll Anchor Bye-And-Bye

    According to Blues and Gospel Records, there were 7" (Victor) and 10" (Monarch) masters recorded for each title. Document claims all the Monarch releases, but Poor Mourner and Steal Away are only 1:45 and 1:48 respectively.

    Such a great feeling to this, their first recording… imagine how they sounded live.

     
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  18. john hp

    john hp Forum Resident

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    'Shine On Harvest Moon'
     
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  19. Luisboa

    Luisboa Forum Resident

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    Coimbra, Portugal
    Problably Der Abschied from Mahler's Das lied von der Erde.
     
  20. john hp

    john hp Forum Resident

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    Warwickshire, UK
    'Meet Me in St. Louis, Louis'
     
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  21. Luisboa

    Luisboa Forum Resident

    Location:
    Coimbra, Portugal
    I dont know by heart this opera, only listened 2 or 3 times. Its a good one no doubt. Where in the opera is that small piece youre talking?
     
  22. JozefK

    JozefK Forum Resident

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    Dixie
  23. Rufus McDufus

    Rufus McDufus Forum Resident

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    London
    Wow, those recent Bowie remasters really are bad aren't they? o_O
     
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  24. Aftermath

    Aftermath Senior Member

    Scott Joplin - The Entertainer (1902)

     
  25. mark winstanley

    mark winstanley Certified dinosaur, who likes physical product

    I t was interesting reading through who was who in the early 1900's and Bill Murray and Arther Collins seemed to be pretty big, but in real terms Scott Joplin would be one of the few things I know from this era....

    Maple Leaf Rag Played by Scott Joplin
     
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