German composer and organist (1653–1706)
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Sarah thought she was being frugal and industrious, but now she has a stained sink and a broken olive oil dispenser. We learn why an AI tech bro wants to see your eyeballs, and Susie's mad about it. We hear cicadas play Pachelbel's Canon in D on their abdomen (or buttholes?). Sarah says an adult star got a billboard to advertise her OnlyFans, but Christians are defacing it for Jesus. We find out what causes someone to have a breakthrough in therapy. And we hear how the whale equivalent of acne allows them to navigate and migrate successfully.Listen to more podcasts like this: https://wavepodcastnetwork.comConnect with us on social media:BCP Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/braincandypodcastSusie's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/susiemeisterSarah's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/imsarahriceBCP on X: https://www.x.com/braincandypodSponsors:Visit https://shopbeam.com/BRAINCANDY and use code BRAINCANDY to get our exclusive discount of up to 35% off.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
BestPodcastintheMetaverse.com Canary Cry News Talk #838 - 05.05.2025 - Recorded Live to 1s and 0s THE DONNING OF ALCATRAZ | Kentucky Derby, Worldcoin USA, Singing Cyborgs Deconstructing World Events from a Biblical Worldview Declaring Jesus as Lord amidst the Fifth Generation War! CageRattlerCoffee.com SD/TC email Ike for discount Join the Canary Cry Roundtable This Episode was Produced By: Executive Producers Sir LX Protocol V2 Baron of the Berrean Protocol*** Amber J*** Sir Jamey Not the Lanister*** Producers of TREASURE (CanaryCry.Support) Sir Marty of the Bass, Mark B, John B, Greg & Gainer, Cage Rattler Coffee, American Hobo, Lizart25, Sir Morv Knight of the Burning Chariots, Sir Casey the Shield Knight Producers of TALENT Sir Marty K Knight of the Wrong Timeline Producers of TIME Timestampers: Jade Bouncerson, Morgan E Clippy Team: Courtney S, JOLMS, Kristen Reminders: Clankoniphius Links: JAM SHOW NOTES/TIMESTAMPS HELLO WORLD EFNO TRUMP/SPACE POPE REPTILIAN Trump orders Alcatraz prison to reopen and expanded to house the 'dregs of society' (DailyMail) Clip: Pope Trump AI Shared by White House, Catholics Outraged (NBC News) EXECS THE KENTUCKY DERBY Who won Kentucky Derby 2025 (Sporting News) Normal Announcer out with nut allergy (Yahoo) WORLDCOIN Worldcoin banned in Indonesia (CCN) Worldcoin moves into the US, Visa, other partners (Verge) NEW WORLD ORDER/EUGENICS Underprepared for new world order created by 'jaw dropping' collapse of populations (Yahoo Fin) PRODUCERS CYBORG/BIBLICAL/BEAST SYSTEM Scientists Direct Cyborg Cicadas to Play Rendition of "Pachelbel's Canon” (Futurism) Scientists Have Used Nanotechnology To “Tattoo” Tardigrades (Scitech Daily) ANTARCTICA Antarctica gains ice for first time in decades, reversing trend of mass loss, study finds (Fox) TALENT/MEET UP TIME/END Stories we didn't get to: Clip: Pope Trump AI Shared by White House, Catholics Outraged (NBC News) Catholic outrage grows over 'Pope Trump' image on official White House media (NCR Online) → Designers Do a Double Take at the Lettering on Pope Francis' Tombstone (NY Times) Skype shutting down today — these are the best alternatives (TechCrunch) White House has ‘no specific timeline' to release Epstein files despite promises (Independent) Secret CIA files claim to expose locations of three alien bases...two of them on Earth (DailyMail) NIH closes experimentation labs accused of brutally killing thousands of beagles 40+ years (fox)
Comenzamos el martes con el turista musical en Muy Muy Lejano, el mundo ficticio de la película Shrek. Allí descubrimos que la globalización también ha absorbido la ciénaga del ogro verde, el castillo de La Bella Durmiente o la cabaña de Blancanieves. Pero en el reducto de lo auténtico, escuchamos la música de Counting Crows con 'Accidentally in Love' y de Bonny Tyler con 'Holding out for a hero'. Después, el violinista Necko Vidal te da alternativas musicales para caminar hacia el altar el día de tu boda y así, evitar el manido Canon de Pachelbel. A las ocho conocemos la actualidad y una nueva palabra desde Don Benito: 'cádace'. Por último, charlamos con el cantante Santi Araujo sobre su último disco, 'Canciones para bailar', y sobre sus próximos conciertos.Escuchar audio
Adéntrese en un fascinante viaje musical y misterioso con "El Enigma Eterno del Canon de Pachelbel", un programa producido por Radio EDENEX y magistralmente presentado y dirigido por Alberto Guzmán. Más allá de ser una de las composiciones más reconocidas del Barroco, el Canon de Pachelbel encierra secretos y enigmas que han intrigado a músicos, historiadores y amantes del arte durante siglos. ¿Por qué esta obra, concebida en el siglo XVII, sigue resonando en la cultura contemporánea con un poder casi hipnótico? ¿Esconde su estructura armónica algún mensaje oculto? ¿Qué relación guarda con las creencias de su tiempo y con la espiritualidad que marcó la Europa barroca? Descubra las teorías, las curiosidades históricas y los misterios que rodean a esta pieza inmortal en un programa que entrelaza música, historia y reflexión. Desde su conexión con la matemática divina hasta su influencia en la música moderna, Alberto Guzmán le guiará por los caminos menos transitados de esta obra que trasciende lo humano para rozar lo divino. Prepárese para escuchar, aprender y, sobre todo, asombrarse. "El Enigma Eterno del Canon de Pachelbel" le espera con respuestas… y nuevas preguntas. Puedes ampliar tu experiencia, viendo el programa desde YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@edenex1 https://www.edenex.es
durée : 00:29:28 - France Musique est à vous junior du samedi 11 janvier 2025 - par : Gabrielle Oliveira-Guyon - "Peut-on ne pas aimer la musique ?" Voici la question à laquelle Nicolas Lafitte, aidé de son acolyte S.O.S.O, tentera de répondre ! Nous suivrons également les aventures d'Octave et Mélo, et écouterons le Canon de Pachelbel à la demande d'Elsa.
Music correspondent Kirsten Zemke explores how German Baroque composer Johann Pachelbel's Canon in D has been used in modern music.
Pachelbel leaves the Snomies with a special gift. A Song of Sugar and Snow is a special Advent-ture that will have a new episode releasing from December 1st until December 24th, Christmas Eve! Join us for a story of spreading spirit and ending sorrow! Christmas is coming... Cast GM - Alpha Alex (@AlphaComicGames/@QuidRoll) Halley - Anonymous Alex (@AlexandBirds) Jack Frost - Austin (@SeezyDrop) Johann Pachelbel/G.U.M.D.R.O.P - Nate (@SplintersmithNC) Cedar- Jenna (@JennaChil) You can find links to all the music and sound effects we used here!
Jack, Pachelbel, and Halley get called to a meeting by Nick and Gloria. A Song of Sugar and Snow is a special Advent-ture that will have a new episode releasing from December 1st until December 24th, Christmas Eve! Join us for a story of spreading spirit and ending sorrow! Christmas is coming... Cast GM - Alpha Alex (@AlphaComicGames/@QuidRoll) Halley - Anonymous Alex (@AlexandBirds) Jack Frost - Austin (@SeezyDrop) Johann Pachelbel - Nate (@SplintersmithNC) Cedar- Jenna (@JennaChil) You can find links to all the music and sound effects we used here!
No mês de setembro, comemoramos os aniversários de vários compositores clássicos. Para celebrar as datas, o "Clássicos CBN" traz trechos de clássicos conhecidos desses grandes mestres. Teremos obras de vários períodos, de compositores como Pachelbel, Dvorak, Holst, Shostakovich e Gershwin. Ouça a conversa completa!
Katherine Jenkins & Philharmonia Orchestra Meets Hip Hop - Pachelbel's Canon In D ( Blob66 Remix ) by alfreD oRtega roSa
Un 'Canon', en musique, consiste à superposer des tronçons de mélodies à plusieurs voix, comme dans la chanson "Frère Jacques". Le plus célèbre d'entre eux s'appelle "Le Canon de Pachelbel". Un thème de 8 notes qui va devenir un véritable succès... Et qui se cache dans de nombreux tubes ! Cet été, Florian Gazan vous propose de découvrir le meilleur de "Ça va faire des histoires". Du lundi au vendredi, RTL organise un grand concours d'histoires et d'anecdotes entre trois experts, en trois manches. Tout au long de l'émission, les auditeurs votent en direct pour leurs histoires préférées afin d'élire le meilleur expert du jour ! Retrouvez "Ça va faire des histoires" en podcast sur RTL.fr et sur toutes vos plateformes préférées.
Episode: 1189 The other Pachelbel brings music to Colonial America. Today, the first "recorded" concert in America.
Pe 26 mai, Teodora Brody, prima artistă care a dat voce Rapsodiilor compuse de George Enescu, revine la București cu un concert memorabil! "Unifying World", un eveniment muzical în care muzica clasică întâlneşte jazz-ul. Despre concertul de la Bucureşti, care dă startul unui turneu în Statele Unite, vorbim astăzi în RFI360 cu Teodora Brody. În 2023, Teodora Brody lansa albumul 'Rhapsody', înregistrat cu London Symphony Orchestra, sub bagheta lui Robert Ziegler. 'Rhapsody' aducea împreună prelucrări vocale în premieră după teme celebre din muzica clasică. Un album ce pornește de la Rapsodia nr.1 a lui George Enescu. ” Teodora Brody a profitat de șansa de a face o mișcare evolutivă în viitorul muzicii. Imaginația și curajul ei sunt admirabile”, au scris americanii de la faimoasă revistă Fanfare, iar spaniolii de la Ritmo au subliniat: ”Cu Bartók și dansurile sale românești, românca este în elementul ei, devenind un punct de întâlnire între trei forțe copleșitoare ale naturii: Bartók, jazzul și Teodora Brody.” Născută în România, în prezent stabilită în Elveția, Teodora Brody s-a pregătit inițial în jazzul clasic și a devenit cunoscută la sfârșitul anilor 1990 și începutul anilor 2000, cântând alături de legendarul pianist de jazz Johnny Răducanu. Teodora a fost pionieră în fuziunea jazzului cu Doina – creație lirică specifică poporului român – și este larg recunoscută pentru introducerea publicului internațional în lumea unică a acestui gen muzical, profund emoționant și personal. Căutând teritorii muzicale de explorat, Teodora a interpretat alături de muzicieni precum Stanley Jordan, Theodosii Spassov, Lars Danielsson, Johnny Răducanu, Les Paul, Curtis Fuller, Eric Legnini, Phillippe Duchemin, Guido Manusardi, Benny Rietveld, Daniele di Bonaventura, Ion Baciu și Al Copley. Pe scena mondială, Teodora a apărut în mod regulat la prestigioase festivaluri europene de jazz, inclusiv Montreux, Lugano și Marciac, iar peste Atlantic a cântat la Biblioteca Congresului din SUA și la Galeria de Artă Corcoran, precum și la cluburi legendare cum ar fi Iridium New York și Blues Alley din Washington D.C.Cu proiecte unice precum „Unifying Worlds”, „From Classical to Jazz” și „Classical Emotion”, Teodora a explorat repertoriul clasic cu o abordare complet nouă, creând și interpratând versiuni vocale originale ale unora dintre capodoperele create de Bach, Beethoven, Enescu, Pachelbel, Vivaldi, Bartók, Pablo Casals.Duminică 26 mai, Teodora Brody prezintă concertul "Unifying World", la București, la Sala Luceafărul.
Start up "Pachelbel's Canon" — it's time to meet your new Betches Brides co-hosts! In the first episode of this new season of Betches Brides, get to know comedian Selena Coppock and her BFF Chelsea White as they prepare for Selena's wedding ahead. Selena fills listeners in on the story behind her hit @nytvows parody account, how she helped Chelsea snag the real 'New York Times' treatment for her own wedding, and shares details of her upcoming nuptials. Plus, producer Jaz Zepatos shares the story behind her last-minute wedding venue change, and we ask the perennial question: to pun or not to pun on your wedding hashtags? Email us at brides@betches.com with your wedding questions and horror stories, or leave a voicemail at (646) 389-7804. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
My guest today is Ashley Goodall, a leadership expert who has spent his career exploring large organizations from the inside, most recently as an executive at Cisco. He is the co-author of Nine Lies About Work, which was selected as the best management book of 2019 by Strategy + Business and as one of Amazon's best business and leadership books of 2019. It is an awesome book - highly recommended. If, after listening to this conversation you want to hear more (and I think you will!), take a listen to him and his co-author, Marcus Buckingham, talking on the HBR Idea Cast about lie #5 - the idea that people need feedback - and how most managers think about giving feedback in an utterly wrong way - which is also an idea we dive into later in our conversation today. Prior to Cisco, Ashley spent fourteen years at Deloitte as a consultant and as the Chief Learning Officer for Leadership and Professional development. His book, "The Problem with Change: and the Essential Nature of Human Performance" is about what we might call lie number 10: the idea that change is good and that leaders must lead change in order to be good leaders. Wholesale belief in this lie has created what Ashley calls “Life in the Blender” - driven by what I've heard some folks refer to as “The Reorg of the Day”. I love love love the musical analogies Ashley uses to describe leadership - not as the lead guitar or first violin, but as the Ground Bass - the principal structural element of a musical piece. The Leader can help teams navigate change by playing a backbeat of stability and consistency, supporting a range of free expression and variation. Find a link to Pachelbel's Canon here and listen to the Goldberg variations here (which he mentions in the extended version of the analogy, later on in the conversation). What is that Ground Bass? For Ashley it's about helping people feel seen, connected, celebrated and clear on the story of the meaning of their contributions to the work. This perspective aligns very well with the message Bree Larson offered here some years back. Bree is a Partner at SYPartners and shared her framework around the challenges of designing organizational change - that most change can easily result in one or more of the Six Types of Loss she identified: Loss of Control Loss of Pride Loss of Narrative Loss of Time Loss of Competence Loss of Familiarity All of which Ashley suggests leaders can deflect or reduce through 9 key leadership skills that he outlines in depth in his book: Make space Forge undeniable competence Share secrets Be predictable Speak real words Honor ritual Focus most on teams Radicalize HR Pave the way Prior to releasing the book, Ashley wrote a New York Times Op-Ed piece which is a blockbuster and is an even more succinct, poignant and straight-on condemnation of modern corporate leadership - it is also highly worth reading. This book feels a bit like a Burn Book - Ashley is pointing out fundamental misconceptions at the heart of corporate life in a direct and unvarnished manner - in the hope that some leaders will listen and start doing things differently - Leading in a way that takes into account how humans really are and what we really need to thrive at work. Ashley is very clear: companies need to look beyond wellness initiatives and corporate cheerleading and shift their focus to the fundamental environment of daily work. The effects of a corporate life caught in constant change are more than clear to anyone who's been through it: uncertainty, a lack of control, a sense of unbelonging and of displacement, and a loss of meaning As Goodall says, “The ultimate job of leadership is not disruption and it is not to create change; it is to create a platform for human contribution, to create the conditions in which people can do the best work of their lives.” Also - do listen for an extended exchange around minute 40 where we talk about the power of praise and the Paul Hollywood handshake - if you're not a Great British Bake off fan, there's still time to watch a few episodes to get in the mood - or at least witness the effect of the Hollywood Handshake on Friends star David Schwimmer here. Head over to theconversationfactory.com/listen for full episode transcripts, links, show notes and more key quotes and ideas. You can also head over there and become a monthly supporter of the show for as little as $8 a month. You'll get complimentary access to exclusive workshops and resources that I only share with this circle of facilitators and leaders. Links Find a link to Pachelbel's Canon here and listen to the Goldberg variations here. Ashley wrote a New York Times Op-Ed which is a blockbuster Take a listen to Ashley and his co-author, Marcus Buckingham, talking on the HBR Idea Cast about lie #5 - the idea that people need feedback - and how most managers think about giving feedback utterly wrong. Canon in D Major by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/...) Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-... Artist: http://incompetech.com/ Witness the effect of the Hollywood Handshake on Friends star David Schwimmer here.
It's chord progression appears in countless pop songs, it's played at tons of weddings and repeats the same 8 notes over and over again… what is it? It's Pachelbel's Canon! We'll get into what makes this piece so popular, and how to spot it in the wild this week on Classical Sprouts.
主播|李叔 嘉宾|崔璀本期节目,女性成长平台Momself创始人,职场教育品牌“优势星球”创始人崔璀,时隔三年再次做客日谈,和主持人李叔聊了聊这几年对于工作和人生意义感的一些思考。天生敏感的人最不喜欢的话就是“你想多了”,但敏感却赋予了人处理细腻问题的能力;把工作拆解成“意义目标、成果目标、行动目标”之后,如果想不通行动的意义依然会陷入迷茫;在努力效能不足的时代下,又该如何面对当下的职场环境并保持信念。在崔璀的新书《每个人都有自己的职场优势》中,从优势的角度出发,探讨了和职场选择相关的诸多问题。寻找答案从来不是一劳永逸,我们都在自我探索,自我成长的路途中。崔璀老师的新书《每个人都有自己的职场优势》目前已在日谈公园官方微信公众号上的日光集市上架,欢迎感兴趣的听众前去购买~|嘉宾做客日谈的往期节目|vol.334你可能不知道自己的优势在哪里| Song List |George Winston - Variations on the Kanon by Pachelbel|关注我们|移步点击日谈公园品牌官网(链接:https://www.ritanbbpark.com),了解更多微信公众号:日谈公园微博:@日谈公园小红书:日谈公园即刻:日谈李小日B站:日谈公园| 商务合作 |欢迎发送邮件至 bbpark@ritanbbpark.com
Después de décadas de trabajo, la jubilación permite tener más tiempo para viajar, escuchar música, ir a museos, pasear por el campo, estar con amigos o hacer deporte. En este programa hemos intentado que cupiera todo eso: nos vamos de viaje para recorrer en bicicleta la tierra de Johann Sebastian Bach. A lomos de nuestra mula de metal pasaremos por Eisenach, Arnstadt, Gotha, Erfurt, Weimar y Weissenfels hasta llegar a Leipzig, y en el camino disfrutaremos de los paisajes de Turingia y nos encontraremos también con Lutero, Pachelbel o Schütz.Escuchar audio
Pachelbel and Jack let Spruce, Halley, and Clara in on what they found out. A Song of Sugar and Snow is a special Advent-ture that will have a new episode releasing from December 1st until December 24th, Christmas Eve! Join us for a whimsical winter advent-ture! Christmas is coming... Cast GM - Alpha Alex (@AlphaComicGames/@QuidRoll) Halley - Anonymous Alex (@AlexandBirds) Jack Frost - Austin (@SeezyDrop) Johann Pachelbel - Nate (@SplintersmithNC) Spruce - Jenna (@JennaChil) You can find links to all the music and sound effects we used here!
After finding out what is in the snow mounds, Pachelbel and Spruce question Hafnhaf. A Song of Sugar and Snow is a special Advent-ture that will have a new episode releasing from December 1st until December 24th, Christmas Eve! Join us for a whimsical winter advent-ture! Christmas is coming... Cast GM - Alpha Alex (@AlphaComicGames/@QuidRoll) Halley - Anonymous Alex (@AlexandBirds) Jack Frost - Austin (@SeezyDrop) Johann Pachelbel - Nate (@SplintersmithNC) Spruce - Jenna (@JennaChil) You can find links to all the music and sound effects we used here!
Halley and Jack distract a Keabler elf, while Pachelbel and Spruce meet try to gain an audience with Mrs. Clause. A Song of Sugar and Snow is a special Advent-ture that will have a new episode releasing from December 1st until December 24th, Christmas Eve! Join us for a whimsical winter advent-ture! Christmas is coming... Cast GM - Alpha Alex (@AlphaComicGames/@QuidRoll) Halley - Anonymous Alex (@AlexandBirds) Jack Frost - Austin (@SeezyDrop) Johann Pachelbel - Nate (@SplintersmithNC) Spruce - Jenna (@JennaChil) You can find links to all the music and sound effects we used here!
In Breaking Walls episode 145 it's the fall of 1963 and network radio drama is dead while American life is changing. If you're listening to this in real time, this month marks the sixtieth anniversary of John F. Kennedy's assassination. To go beyond its public horror and understand American society three generations ago, we'll focus on Jean Shepherd. —————————— Highlights: • I, Libertine • Jean Shepherd Gets His Familiar WOR Time Slot • November 1963 Begins • Veteran's Day, Malcolm X, and Lenny Bruce • President Kennedy's Last Trip to Florida • Shep's Show During JFK Last Week • John F. Kennedy's Last Day • An Unfortunate Arthur Godfrey Episode • Live News Coverage As The Unthinkable Happens To President Kennedy In Dallas • John Kennedy Has Passed, Lee Harvey Oswald Is Arrested • A Weekend of Mourning With the Boston Symphony Orchestra • President Kennedy's Funeral Coverage • Jean Shepherd Eulogizes John F Kennedy • A Subdued Christmas Eve With Shep • Looking Ahead to Rod Serling and The Zero Hour —————————— The WallBreakers: http://thewallbreakers.com Subscribe to Breaking Walls everywhere you get your podcasts. To support the show: http://patreon.com/TheWallBreakers —————————— The reading material for today's episode was: • Excelsior You Fathead! The Art and Enigma of Jean Shepherd — By Eugene Bergmann • Boom!: Talking About the Sixties — By Tom Brokaw • Four Days In November: The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy — By Vincent Bugliosi • On The Air — By John Dunning • Oswald's Tale: An American Mystery — By Norman Mailer As well as articles from: • The Bridgeport Post • The Chicago Tribune • The Cincinnati Enquirer • The Hammond Times • The Kansas City Times • The Library of Congress • The Los Angeles Times • The Miami News • The New York Daily News • The New York Times • The Orlando Sentinel And the Assassination Report of the Warren Commission —————————— On the interview front: • Andy Rooney spoke with CBS for their 50th anniversary in 1977 —————————— Selected music featured in today's episode was: • The John Coltrane Quartet in concert — November 19th, 1962 • Pachelbel's Canon In D — By Michael Silverman • All I've Got To Do — By The Beatles • The Boston Symphony in concert — November 23rd, 1963 • Some Children See Him — By George Winston —————————— A special thank you to Ted Davenport, Jerry Haendiges, and Gordon Skene. For Ted go to RadioMemories.com, for Jerry, visit OTRSite.com, and for Gordon, please go to PastDaily.com. —————————— Thank you to: Tony Adams Steven Allmon Orson Orsen Chandler Phil Erickson Jessica Hanna Perri Harper Thomas M. Joyce Ryan Kramer Earl Millard Gary Mollica Barry Nadler Christian Neuhaus Ray Shaw Filipe A Silva John Williams Jim W. —————————— WallBreakers Links: Patreon - patreon.com/thewallbreakers Social Media - @TheWallBreakers
Well, that brings our look at November 1963 through the eyes of Jean Shepherd and President Kennedy to a close. Frankly, I wasn't completely sure what this episode would become until I finished producing it. Speaking of anniversaries, we have one in December that's a bit more recent and much happier if you like radio drama. Next time on Breaking Walls, in honor of the fiftieth anniversary of The Zero Hour's debut on the Mutual Broadcasting System, we spotlight the rebirth of radio drama in 1973. It's the first of a two-part mini series on radio drama in the 1970s. The reading material used in today's episode was: • Excelsior You Fathead! The Art and Enigma of Jean Shepherd — By Eugene Bergmann • Boom!: Talking About the Sixties — By Tom Brokaw • Four Days In November: The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy — By Vincent Bugliosi • On The Air — By John Dunning • Oswald's Tale: An American Mystery — By Norman Mailer As well as articles from: • The Bridgeport Post • The Chicago Tribune • The Cincinnati Enquirer • The Hammond Times • The Kansas City Times • The Library of Congress • The Los Angeles Times • The Miami News • The New York Daily News • The New York Times • The Orlando Sentinel And the Assassination Report of the Warren Commission On the interview front: • Andy Rooney spoke with CBS for their 50th anniversary in 1977 Selected music featured in today's episode was: • The John Coltrane Quartet in concert — November 19th, 1962 • Pachelbel's Canon In D — By Michael Silverman • All I've Got To Do — By The Beatles • The Boston Symphony in concert — November 23rd, 1963 • Some Children See Him — By George Winston Breaking Walls Episode 146 will spotlight Rod Serling and The Zero Hour in honor of the 50th anniversary of its debut on Mutual Broadcasting. This episode will be available beginning December 1st, 2023 everywhere you get your podcasts, and at TheWallBreakers.com. In the meantime, give Breaking Walls a quick rating on whatever platform you listen, especially itunes. You can also join The Breaking Walls Facebook group at Facebook.com/Groups/TheWallBreakers. And support this show for as little as a buck a month at Patreon.com/TheWallBreakers. So until December 1st, my name is James Scully, this has been Breaking Walls Episode 145, and I'll catch you on the flip side. Thank you very much.
In this episode, the boyz go for baroque and bet the pot on Pachelbel's smash 1680 hit Canon in D. With the stakes high, the lads call the bluff of the artists who have incorporated Pachelbel's Canon into their music, up the ante on the idea of a collective unconscious, and are all-in on the importance of being in the right frame of mind to truly appreciate a work of art. With their cards on the table, Ty calls out Tom's pronunciation of "mauve," but Tom keeps his pokerface, knowing he has an ace-in-the-hole with his cup of Red Rose tea. Who rakes in the chips? Tune in and find out...Songs:Reverb Syndicate - Better Dancing Through TechnologyPalliard - Canon in D - Arthur Fielder - Sleigh Ride Vangelis - Chariots of FireAphrodite's Child - Rain and TearsDémis Roussos - Forever and EverTop Pops - Oh Lord, Why Lord?Parliament - Oh Lord, Why Lord?Bob Marley - No Woman No CryAlphaville - Forever YoungTwisted Sister - We're Not Gonna Take ItU2 - With Or Without YouBeatles - Let It BeMaroon 5 - MemoriesBuddy Emmons - Canon in DRaf - Self-ControlBeatles - BecauseBach - "Bouree"Beatles - BlackbirdWalter Murphy - A Fifth of BeethovenGustav Holst - MarsBlack Sabbath - Black SabbathGodspeed You! Black Emperor - StormRachel's - Water From the Same SourcePhilip Glass - The GridSufjan Stevens - JacksonvilleBarry Manilow - I Write the SongsConnect with us:Instagram
Devin welcomes Internationally-acclaimed guitar virtuoso Trace Bundy, who's music is poetry in motion, using harmonics, looping, multiple capos, and his unique banter and stage presence to deliver an unforgettable live concert experience. Seeing the fan-dubbed "Acoustic Ninja" play live confounds even the most accomplished music lovers as to how one person can do all that with just two hands and ten fingers. Bundy's unique career has brought him across the world, with concerts in 28 countries and counting - from performance halls of South Korea and Italy, to remote villages in Zimbabwe and Guatemala. He has independently sold over 150,000 albums on his record label, Honest Ninja Music. His video clips circulate virally at astonishing speed, with over 45 million YouTube views to date. Thank you for joining us on One Symphony. Thanks to Trace Bundy for sharing his music and story. You can find his music where ever you listen. And he's playing live in concert with Boulder Symphony this Friday night at Boulder Theatre. Works on the show today include music written and performed by Trace Bundy, U2, and Pachelbel from the albums Elephant King and Adapt. Thanks to Honest Ninja Music for making this episode possible. You can always find more info at OneSymphony.org including a virtual tip jar if you'd like to support the show. Thank you to Johnson & Stories, Suerte Tequila, & Chuck & Margit Porter for making this episode possible. Please feel free to rate, review, or share the show! Until next time, thank you for being part of the music! https://tracebundy.com https://www.johnsonandstories.com https://drinksuerte.com https://devinpatrickhughes.com https://bouldersymphony.org
Let's finish up our 2-part series on Baroque composer Johann Pachelbel by learning about his most famous piece -- and perhaps one of the most well-known classical pieces of all time -- Canon in D Major. In this episode, we'll talk about what as musical canon is and how this piece soared to popularity in the 1970's. Be sure to check out the listening schedule I've linked below to hear different interpretations of arrangements of this famous melody from so long ago. Links Mentioned in this Episode: Membership info for Busy Kids Do Piano Membership info for Busy Moms Do Piano Musical Samples You'll Hear in this Episode: Pachelbel - Canon - Stringspace String Quartet Row, Row, Row Your Boat (Round) Wedding String Quartet - Canon in D (Best Version) (Johann Pachelbel) Music Listening Schedule for Episode 104 Check out this episode's playlist to hear a few different interpretations of Pachelbel's famous piece. Subscribe & Review in Apple Podcasts Are you subscribed to my podcast? If you're not, head on over to do that today so you don't miss an episode. Click here to subscribe in Apple Podcasts! If you're feeling extra magnanimous, I would be really grateful if you left a review over on Apple Podcasts, too. Those reviews help other families find my podcast learn more about music. Just click here to review, select “Ratings and Reviews” and “Write a Review” and let me know what you love about Busy Kids Love Music. Thanks!
We're kicking off a new school year here in the U.S., and I thought I'd kick off the back-to-school season with a brand new composer series on famous Baroque composer Johann Pachelbel. Today we'll learn about his life, style and legacy. In two weeks, be sure to tune in again when we dig in deep about one of his most famous pieces, Canon in D Major. Links Mentioned in this Episode: Membership info for Busy Kids Do Piano Membership info for Busy Moms Do Piano Musical Samples You'll Hear in this Episode: (2) J. Pachelbel - Hexachordum Apollinis (1699) (2) Johann Pachelbel (1653-1706): Toccata in G Minor (P 468) J. PACHELBEL - Toccata in e minor (Anne-Isabelle de Parcevaux, organ) Canon in D (Pachelbel) - Violin & Piano Music Listening Schedule for Episode 103 This episode's playlist highlights some of Pachelbel's pieces from today's episode as well as a few others. Listen to it here. Subscribe & Review in Apple Podcats Are you subscribed to my podcast? If you're not, head on over to do that today so you don't miss an episode. Click here to subscribe in iTunes! If you're feeling extra magnanimous, I would be really grateful if you left a review over on iTunes, too. Those reviews help other families find my podcast learn more about music. Just click here to review, select “Ratings and Reviews” and “Write a Review” and let me know what you love about Busy Kids Love Music. Thanks!
While there are many notable quotes from Johann Sebastian Bach, one of my favorites is this one: “There's nothing remarkable about it. All one has to do is hit the right keys at the right time and the instrument plays itself.” Okay, the man was a musical genius, but obviously he also had a remarkable talent for understatement. On the other hand, that really is the major part of learning and playing a piece of music, at least it's where we start. Certainly the expression of the music is our ultimate aim, but communicating the music starts with the right notes at the right time. That's the focus of the podcast today: not so much how to find the right notes, but how to play them at the right time. We all know it's not as simple as Bach made it sound. In fact, the difficulties of finding that “right time” are evident everyday in our practice, even if we are expert players. See if any of these common rhythmic challenges sound familiar to you from your personal experience: Starting a piece before you've looked at the time signature, and getting it wrong. Uneven subdivisions of the beat, not making your sixteenth notes exactly half the length of your eighth notes, for example. Not remembering to count rests or ties. Rushing through some passages and slowing down in others. Forgetting to count and losing your place. I'm guessing you've had at least one of those challenges; I know I have. Maybe you know how to fix the problem, but maybe you're not really sure of the best way to go about it. Maybe you've tried fixing it, but you seem to have to fix it again with every new piece you learn. Perhaps rhythm or counting or working with the metronome is a constant frustration for you. If any of those things sound familiar, you're in luck, my friend, because I'm going to give you some actual steps to take to become more rhythmically secure, not just fix the problems as they arise, although these strategies will work for that too. I want to show you how to practice your rhythm skills, whether you feel pretty confident already and you just want to get to the next level, or you have trouble with plain old counting or working with the metronome. I taught these methods for nineteen years when I was teaching theory and ear training at the Curtis Institute of Music, and if they are good enough for the world-class students there, they will almost certainly help you too. And by the way, just to make this ultra-relevant for us harpists, I will be using the Pachelbel Canon as our teaching text. So get out whatever version you have of the Pachelbel - any arrangement will work for this - and follow along as we get rhythmic today. Links to things I think you might be interested in that were mentioned in the podcast episode: Registration for our fall session of Harp Mastery® Certified Coaching opens soon. Join the First to Know list now! Related resource Finding Your Groove: How to Train Your Inner Metronome blog post Harpmastery.com Get involved in the show! Send your questions and suggestions for future podcast episodes to me at podcast@harpmastery.com LINKS NOT WORKING FOR YOU? FInd all the show resources here: https://www.harpmastery.com/blog/Episode-117
Manuel Comesaña analiza el legado de la progresión armónica del Canon de Pachelbel, un hitazo en el mundo pop. ¡No te lo pierdas!
Manuel Comesaña y el Canon de Pachelbel, la carabela portuguesa con Miguel del Pino y el tiempo acelerante con Jesús Alcoba.
Recent Mizzou Masters of Music Graduate in Percussion Performance Jeremiah Ingram stops by talk about his 2022 Masters recital (02:15), his responsibilities as Graduate Teaching Assistant with Marching Mizzou's drumline, staying for a third year, the saturation of the music field, and heading to the University of Kentucky to start his doctorate in the Fall (08:00), growing up in Opelika, Alabama, being a first-generation college student, his high school percussion experiences, and being part of the Future Business Leaders of America (27:45), attending Auburn University (AL) for undergrad (43:45), his process of auditioning and preparing to come to Mizzou (01:04:15), and settles in for the Random Ass Questions, including the challenges of attending Primarily White Institutions (PWIs), great movies, the Boston Celtics, and great books and poetry (01:14:10).Finishing with a Rave on the 2023 film Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse (01:40:30).Links:Guests from Previous Podcast Episodes mentioned:Jordan NielsenStephen LandyClif WalkerMegan ArnsJosh JonesOther Links:“Rebonds B” - Iannis Xenakis“Complexus” - Paul Rennick“Spitfire” - Nathan Daughtrey“Over the Rainbow” - Robert Oetomo“As One” - Gene Koshinski“Eight on 3 and Nine on 2” - Robert MarinoRick HollandMichael McGlynnFuture Business Leaders of America“The Kick 6” - Auburn vs. Alabama 2013Mizzou vs. Auburn 2022 college footballThe @Percussion Podcast“Transformation of Pachelbel's Canon” - arr. Nanae MimuraEpic Movie trailerGlory Road trailerRadio trailer1986 Boston Celtics2008 Boston CelticsAuthor David GogginsThe Talent Code - Daniel CoyleThe Inner Game of Music - Tim Gallwey and Barry GreenJP BouvetMaya Angelou and PoetryA Return to Love - Marianne WilliamsonRaves:Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse trailer
"Depuis quand, comment et surtout pourquoi a-t-on créé ça ?" Vous ne vous êtes peut-être jamais posé la question. Qu'importe ! Lui a la réponse… David Castello-Lopes remonte, avec humour, aux origines d'un objet de notre quotidien. Aujourd'hui, les origines du canon de pachelbel.
"Depuis quand, comment et surtout pourquoi a-t-on créé ça ?" Vous ne vous êtes peut-être jamais posé la question. Qu'importe ! Lui a la réponse… David Castello-Lopes remonte, avec humour, aux origines d'un objet de notre quotidien. Aujourd'hui, les origines du canon de Pachelbel.
Vis à vis mit den Urban Strings rund um Barockgeiger Georg Kallweit: Musik von Bach, Biber und Pachelbel, aufgenommen von "Angesicht zu Angesicht", um die dialogische Struktur der Stücke auch aufnahmetechnisch abzubilden.
O que é, afinal, o famoso Canon de Pachelbel, para além de ser uma das músicas mais ouvidas e plagiadas de sempre?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Sound Chaser Progressive Rock Podcast is on the air. The show this time has a variety of musical styles spanning the years 1968 to 2022. The full variety of prog is on display. There are several pieces adapted from classical composition. You get an abundance of musical duos. We also have an In Memoriam feature for two musicians recently passed away – Ralph Humphrey and Johnny Fean. The Symphonic Zone takes you to the magisterial soundspace. All that, plus news of tours and releases on Sound Chaser. Playlist1. Jack & Owane - Swedish Coffee, from Guardian Spirits of the Quantum MultiverseIN MEMORIAM2. Frank Zappa [featuring Ralph Humphrey] - For the Young Sophisticate, from Läther3. Horslips [featuring Johnny Fean] - Homesick, from The Man Who Built AmericaEND IN MEMORIAM4. Soft Machine - All White, from Fifth5. Soft Machine - Drop, from Fifth6. John Klemmer - Waterfall, from Waterfalls7. Osamu Kitajima - Purple Hills and Crystal Streams, from Osamu8. The Urbane - Neon, from Lions and Fables [compilation]9. FM - Up to You, from City of Fear10. Yes - Don't Kill the Whale, from Live at Montreux11. Irene Papas & Vangelis Papathanassiou - Tin Oraiotita Tis Parthenias Sou, from Rapsodies12. Andy Summers & Robert Fripp - In the Cloud Forest, from I Advance Masked13. Simon & Bard - Gunther's Vortex, from MusaicTHE SYMPHONIC ZONE14. Fireballet - Night on Bald Mountain, from Night on Bald Mountain15. Morning Sky - Bach Changes, from Morning Sky16. Multi-Story - Sly Dream Catcher, from Crimson Stone17. Patrick Gleeson - Holst: Mars, the Bringer of War, from An Electronic Portrait of Holst's The Planets18. Lodger Wright - White Star, from One Lump or Two?19. Nuova Era - Dopo L'infinito, from Dopo L'infinitoLEAVING THE SYMPHONIC ZONE20. Peter Banks - Diminuendo in Bloom, from Reduction21. Peter Banks - Tone Down, from Reduction22. Peter Banks - The Age of Distortion, from Reduction23. The Nice - Don Edito El Gruva, from Ars Longa Vita Brevis24. Fleet Foxes - Textbook Love, from The Fleet Foxes (EP)25. Peter Davison - Morning Meditation, from Music on the Way26. Sky - Vivaldi: Andante, from Sky 227. Godley Creme - Random Brainwave, from Freeze Frame28. Godley Creme - I Pity Inanimate Objects, from Freeze Frame29. Pierre Moerlen's Gong - Xsta-Sea, from Full Circle Live30. George Winston - Variations on the Kanon by Pachelbel, from December31. Scott / Thompson - Lotus, from Heartspeak32. Yaatri - Pool of Reflection, from Lucid33. Yaatri - Vipassana, from Lucid34. Albaitil Ashwai - Leman Ertaqa, from Nuun35. Zopp - V, from Zopp36. jhimm - Absent (Part 2), from Absent
Thomas Sowell calls "Disparate Impact" ideology the "grand dogma" of our time.But what is disparate impact and why is it so important?On this episode we take a deep dive into disparate impact ideology and how it has changed America.Joining me to discuss this important subject is Heather Mac Donald.Heather is a fellow at the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research based in New York City. Much like Sowell , Heather does research into domestic policy and urban affairs and tries to figure out what's working and what's not working. She then writes articles and books sharing what she has learned.Her first book was published in 2000 and was called “The burden of bad ideas : how modern intellectuals misshape our society”Three years later she wrote a book called “Are Cops Racist?”This was followed with another book about policing in 2016 called “The War on Cops: How the New Attack on Law and Order Makes Everyone Less Safe.”I first discovered Heather Mac Donald in 2018 with the publication of her book “The Diversity Delusion: How Race and Gender Pandering Corrupt the University and Undermine Our Culture.” I loved that book and I remember finishing it then immediately starting it over and reading it a second time. Her latest book which just came out this month is called “When Race Trumps Merit, How the Pursuit of Equity Sacrifices Excellence, Destroys Beauty, and Threatens Lives.”USEFUL LINKS:• More podcast-related links here: AlanWolan.com• How to calculate the "Birthday Problem": Ted-Ed Video HERE• "Birthday Problem Khan Academy explanation HERE• You can purchase Heather Mac Donald's new book HERE• Photos of the CalTech Turtle Pond HERE• Jerry MacGuire "Show Me the Money" scene HERE• Heather Mac Donald Wikipedia page HERE• Classical Music featured in this episode:"Cello Suite No 1" by Bach, "Für Elise" by Beethoven, "Canon in D" by Pachelbel, "Humoresque" by Dvorak, "Caprice No. 24" by Paganini, "Symphony No. 5" by Beethoven, "Die Zauberflöte" by Mozart, "Eine Kleine Nachtmusik" by Mozart, "Theme from Schindler's List" by John Williams, "Hungarian Dance No. 5" by Brahms, "Gymnopedie No. 1" by Satie, and "Ode to Joy" by Beethoven. THERE ARE 3 WAYS TO SUPPORT THE PODCAST:1) Support the show financially by subscribing with a monthly contribution on Patreon: www.Patreon.com/SowellGeniusThe money raised through Patreon supports our efforts to popularize the books and ideas of Thomas Sowell.----------------------------------------------2) Rate and review the podcast on Apple Podcasts. This helps a lot by nudging the show to the top of Google searches. I really appreciate the many positive reviews, especially this one by Jonsby: "This is one of the few podcasts that I actually slow down so I can savor it!"----------------------------------------------3) Purchase our Thomas Sowell Post It Note pads: You can find all 100 digital images of the post it notes HERE, feel free to download them and use them however you like.To purchase pads o
It's still spring break so let's reminisce on the 100th episode of “Office Ladies”! The ladies break down “Heavy Competition”, where Michael tries to steal Dwight's customers while running Michael Scott Paper Company. To celebrate, Angela pops some champagne and Jenna demonstrates the skill needed for that super fun cheeseball opening. So as you're deciding whether “Pachelbel” is a better wedding song than “You Can Call Me Al”, enjoy this ep and thanks for being an “Office Ladies” fan! Listen to Creed Bratton's song, “Breathe Easy”:https://music.apple.com/us/album/breathe-easy-single/1590302298 Office Ladies Website - Submit a fan question: https://officeladies.com/submitaquestionFollow Us on Instagram: OfficeLadiesPodCheck out Office Ladies Merch at Podswag: https://www.podswag.com/collections/office-ladies
Ep. 47, con Mario Mora | El término de hoy ha generado todo un lío. Al hablar de canon, casi todo el mundo piensa en esa manera de componer que es popular por Pachelbel y que consiste en la realización de una misma melodía por distintas voces en diferentes momentos, solapándose entre sí. Hemos descubierto que también es un instrumento, pero de lo que más vamos a hablar es de una acepción que nada tiene que ver con todo esto. Nos lo cuenta Cristina Roldán, musicóloga, y quien va a abrir una serie de cuestiones que no nos van a dejar indiferentes a nadie.
A special in-person JJBPod gang episode, as we take a look at Episode 20 of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Stone Ocean - F.F. The Witness! We also read some weird Araki author comments, talk about adventures in puberty, 12-foot skeletons, viral internet freestyles, lollipops, trypophobia, Pachelbel, The Silence of the Lambs, and the most common Chinese surnames. Rate us nicely on Apple Podcasts | Support us on Patreon | Follow us on Twitter | Subscribe to us on YouTube | Join the fan Discord --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/jjbpod/message
Pachelbel's Canon is a musical piece that has been utilized in many popular songs. Rob Paravonian is known for his comedy viral video “Pachelbel's Rant” where he performs some of the pieces that use the music in some way. Rob Paravonian guest co-hosts this episode with Rachel Teichman, LMSW and Victor Varnado, KSN. Produced by Victor Varnado & Rachel Teichman Full Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pachelbel%27s_Canon WE APPRECIATE YOUR SUPPORT ON PATREON!https://www.patreon.com/wikilistenpodcast Find us on social media! https://www.facebook.com/WikiListen Instagram @WikiListen Twitter @Wiki_Listen Youtube Get bonus content on Patreon Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Coming to you from our email inbox, here's an episode of music requested by you the listener! These three works are iconic, but leave your preconceived notions at the door and prepare to hear them in a new way. Plus, we also do a little Q&A at the end of the show. Support Classical Breakdown: https://weta.org/donatefmSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Synopsis On today's date in 17th century Germany, a baby boy was christened who would grow up to be one of the leading composers and organists of his time. No, it wasn't Johann Sebastian Bach – although the child we're discussing here would become the teacher of the teacher of J.S. Bach and did serve as godfather to one J.S. Bach's older relations. It was Johann Pachelbel who was baptized on today's date in Nuremberg in the year 1653. A famous musician in his day, after his death in 1706, Pachelbel would be pretty much forgotten by most music lovers until late in the 20th century, when an orchestral arrangement of a little chamber piece that he had written would, as Pachelbel's “Canon,” suddenly become an unexpected hit. In 1979, the American composer George Rochberg even included a set of variations on Pachelbel's Canon as the 3rd movement of his own String Quartet No. 6. Like Bach, some of Pachelbel's children also became composers, and one of them, Karl Teodorus Pachelbel, emigrated from Germany to the British colonies of North America. As “Charles Theodore Pachelbel,” he became an important figure in the musical life of early 18th century Boston and Charleston, where he died in 1750, the same year as J.S. Bach Music Played in Today's Program George Rochberg (1918-2005) –Variations on Pachelbel's Canon, from String Quartet No. 6 (Concord Quartet) New World 80551
Ten contemporary composers, performers, producers, and DJs break new ground with Summer Tales, a genre-defying program of classical music reworks – the ideal chillout soundtrack to carefree summer days. Invited to reimagine popular classics with summer in mind, David Douglas, Goldmund, Peter Gregson, Laura Masotto, Mathilda, Model Man, Roosevelt, Someone, Sam Thompson, and Xinobi have worked their magic on music by composers from Pachelbel and Bach to Debussy and Ravel. Their inspired and contrasting responses, ranging from laidback soundscapes to more dance-floor-oriented tracks, make up the Summer Tales listening experience.Purchase the music (without talk) at:Summer Tales (classicalsavings.com)Your purchase helps to support our show! Classical Music Discoveries is sponsored by La Musica International Chamber Music Festival and Uber. @CMDHedgecock#ClassicalMusicDiscoveries #KeepClassicalMusicAlive#LaMusicaFestival #CMDGrandOperaCompanyofVenice #CMDParisPhilharmonicinOrléans#CMDGermanOperaCompanyofBerlin#CMDGrandOperaCompanyofBarcelonaSpain#ClassicalMusicLivesOn#Uber Please consider supporting our show, thank you!http://www.classicalsavings.com/donate.html staff@classicalmusicdiscoveries.comThis album is broadcasted with the permission of Crossover Media Music Promotion (Zachary Swanson and Amanda Bloom).
Continuing Oscar Movie Month, we're discussing Ordinary People! We chat about Mary Tyler Moore and how much she ruled, Pachelbel's Canon (or Cannon), and an unusual lunch date for Donald Sutherland. Today's episode brought to you in part by Nutrafol. Nutrafol helps you take control of hair growth, it is formulated with potent botanicals to help you grow hair as strong as you are. And it's physician-formulated to be one hundred percent drug-free. For free shipping and $15 off head to www.Nutrafol.com and use promo code LOVE For hair as strong as you are. This episode is brought to you in part by TeePublic. Check out www.TeePublic.com and discover your next favourite Tee. Psst... they also have nerdy hoodies, sweaters, baseball tees and long sleeves. Check out our favourite designs at www.TeePublic.HateLovePodcast.com Produced by Andrew Ivimey as part of The From Superheroes Network Visit www.FromSuperheroes.com for more podcasts, articles, YouTube series, web comics, and more.
Episode #237 of BGMania: A Video Game Music Podcast. ALERT! We have something that's never happened before on the show... Bryan is not in this episode! This week on the show, Bedroth from RPGera presents a solo sister episode to the "Licensed Songs Used Expertly in Games" show from two weeks ago and explores a much more different side of music... the Classical kind! Email the show at bgmaniapodcast@gmail.com with requests for upcoming episodes, questions, feedback, comments, concerns, whatever you want really! Special thanks to our Executive Producers: Jexak & Xancu. EPISODE PLAYLIST AND CREDITS Music #1 (The Nutcracker Ballet: Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy) from Tetris [Hirokazu "Hip" Tanaka / Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, 1989] Run! Run! Run! (William Tell Overture: Finale: March of the Swiss Soldiers) from Gokujou Parodius! Kako no Eikou wo Motomete [Kazuhiro Senoo / Gioachino Antonio Rossini, 1994] Just Dig! (Orphée aux Enfers: Galop Infernal) from Lemmings [Tomomi Hatakeyama / Jacques Offenbach, 1992] Turkish March (Piano Sonata No. 11: Alla turca) from Donkey Konga [Junko Ozawa / Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, 2003] Pachelbel's Canon (Canon in D) from Ane-San [Koji Hayama / Johann Pachelbel, 1995] Bonus Gallery (String Quintet in E major, Op. 11, No. 5: Minuetto) from Regular Show: Mordecai & Rigby in 8-Bit Land [Jake Kaufman / Ridolfo Luigi Boccherini, 2013] Frantic Factory/Action Type B (Csiko's Post) from Yoshi's Cookie [Akira Satou, Nobuya Ikuta, or Noriko Nishizaka / Hermann Necke, 1993] Palace of Gods (Toccata & Fugue in D minor) from Battle of Olympus [Kazuo Sawa / Johann Sebastian Bach, 1989] Docking Sequence (An der schönen, blauen Donau: The Blue Danube) from Elite [Aidan Bell & Julie Dunn / Johann Baptist Strauss II, 1984] Moonlight Sonata (Piano Sonata No. 14: Sonata quasi una fantasia) from Resident Evil Remake [Shusaku Uchiyama, Makoto Tomozawa, or Misao Senbongi / Ludwig van Beethoven, 2002] Germany Stage: Wolfgang Krauser's Theme (Requiem in D minor: Dies irae) from Fatal Fury 2 [Toshio Shimizu / Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, 1992] Ave Maria (Opus 52, No. 6: Ellens dritter Gesang) from Hitman: Blood Money [Jesper Kyd / Franz Peter Schubert feat. Daniel Perret of the Zurich Boys' Choir, 2006] G-Senjou no Aria #5 (Orchestral Suite no. 3 in D major: Second movement: Air on the G String) from G-senjou no Maou -The Devil on G-string- [tiko-μ / Johann Sebastian Bach, 2009] Planets Suite "Mars", "Jupiter" (The Planets: Mars, the Bringer of War and Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity) from Catherine [Shoji Meguro / Gustav Theodore Holst, 2011] SUPPORT US Patreon: https://patreon.com/rpgera CONTACT US Website: https://rpgera.com Discord: https://discord.gg/cC73Heu Twitch: https://twitch.tv/leveldowngames Twitter: https://twitter.com/OriginalLDG Instagram: https://instagram.com/bryan.ldg/ Facebook: https://facebook.com/leveldowngaming --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/bgmania/message
David and Justin talk about it all with this Demo Tape track. They also chat about Disney easter eggs, Pachelbel's Canon in D, and play a rousing game of Anything or Any Thing. Check out Anything here! Get the YouTube playlist for the episode here Follow us on Instagram at @jimmyeatpod Follow us on Twitter atRead More
Synopsis On today's date in 1706, the German composer and organist Johann Pachelbel was buried in Nuremberg, the town where he was born some 53 years earlier. In his day, Pachelbel was regarded as an innovative composer of Protestant church music and works for harpsichord and organ. Pachelbel was acquainted with the Bach family, and was, in fact, the teacher of the teacher of J.S. Bach, and served as godfather to one J.S. Bach's older relations. Johann Pachelbel would be pretty much forgotten by most music lovers until late in the 20th century, when an orchestral arrangement of a little Canon he had written would suddenly become one of the best-known classical themes of our time. In 1979, the American composer George Rochberg, even included variations on Pachelbel's famous Canon as the 3rd movement of his own String Quartet No. 6. Like Bach, some of Johann Pachelbel's children also became composers, and one of them, Karl Teodorus Pachelbel, emigrated from Germany to the British colonies of North America. As “Charles Theodore Pachelbel,” he became an important figure in the musical life of early 18th century Boston and Charleston, and died there in 1750, the same year as J.S. Bach. Music Played in Today's Program George Rochberg (b. 1918) — Variations on the Pachelbel Canon (Concord String Quartet) RCA/BMG 60712 On This Day Births 1737 - Bohemian composer Josef Mysliveczek, in Ober-Sarka; He was a friend and colleague of Mozart; 1839 - Russian composer Modest Mussorgsky (Gregorian date: Mar. 21); 1910 - American composer Samuel Barber, in West Chester, Pa.; 1930 - American composer and jazz saxophonist Ornette Coleman, in Forth Worth, Texas; Deaths 1706 - Burial date of German composer Johann Pachelbel, age c. 52, in Nuremberg; Premieres 1740 - Handel: oratorio "L'Allegro, il Penseroso, ed il Moderato," and Organ Concerto in Bb, Op. 7, no. 1, in London (Julian date: Feb. 27); 1748 - Handel: oratorio "Joshua," in London at the Covent Garden Theater; The event possibly included the premiere of Handel's "Concerto a due cori" No. 1 as well (Gregorian date March 20); 1842 - Verdi: opera "Nabucco" (Nabucodonosor), in Milan at the Teatro alla Scala; 1844 - Verdi: opera "Ernani," in Venice at the Teatro La Fenice; 1849 - Nicolai: opera "Die lustigen Weiber von Windsor" (after Shakespeare's play "The Merry Wives of Windsor"), in Berlin at the Königliches Opernhaus; 1868 - Thomas: opera "Hamlet," (after Shakespeare's play "Hamlet") at the Paris Opéra; 1877 - Tchaikovsky: symphonic-fantasy "Fancesca da Rimini," in Moscow (Julian date: Feb. 25); 1924 - Prokofiev: Piano Sonata No. 5 (first version), in Paris, by the composer; A revised version of this sonata premiered in Alma-Ata (USSR) on February 5, 1954, by Anatoli Vedernikov; 1930 - Weill: opera "Die Aufsteig und Fall der Stadt Mahagonny" (The Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny), in Leipzig at the Neues Theater; 1941 - Cowell: Symphony No. 2 ("Antropos"), in Brooklyn; 1951 - Honegger: Symphony No. 5 ("Di tre re"), by the Boston Symphony, Charles Munch conducting; 1980 - Earle Brown: "Caldar Piece," for percussionists and mobile, in Valencia, Calif.; 1982 - Berio: opera "La vera storia" (The True Story), in Milan at the Teatro alla Scala; Others 1831 - Italian violin virtuoso Nicolo Paganini makes his Parisian debut a the Opéra; Composers in the audience include Meyerbeer, Cherubini, Halvéy; and Franz Liszt (who transcribes Pagnini's showpiece "La Campanella" for piano); Also in attendance are the many famous novelists and poets, including George Sand, Victor Hugo, Alfred de Mussset and Heinrich Heine. Links and Resources On Johann Pachelbel On George Rochberg
For International Women's Day 2022, Linton Stephens mixes a classical playlist for singer and songwriter Sigrid. Sigrid's playlist: Gabriela Montero - Improvisation on Pachelbel's Canon in D major Louise Farrenc - Symphony no. 1 in C minor (4th movement) Hannah Peel - The Unfolding Barbara Strozzi - Amor dormiglione Dobrinka Tabakova - Concerto for cello and orchestra, 3rd movement 'Radiant' Klein - Hope Dealers Classical Fix is a podcast aimed at opening up the world of classical music to anyone who fancies giving it a go. Each week, Linton mixes a bespoke playlist for his guest, who then joins him to share their impressions of their new classical discoveries. Linton Stephens is a bassoonist with the Chineke! Orchestra and has also performed with the BBC Philharmonic, Halle Orchestra and Opera North, amongst many others.