Week THREE: Birthday Week!
Hello and welcome to the WEEK THREE Main Thread for this challenge!
Alright everyone - this is the thread where we'll all be posting our daily updates.
Make sure you've read the rules before replying (<- click)
Twice a week between March 27- April 1, I hope to be reading your daily updates in this very thread right here!
Here is this week's assignment!
Submit a Recording!
This Recording can be of yourself playing some of Rachmaninoff's music, it could be your favorite recording of him playing, or a different pianist playing his music!
We are gathering videos to put together into a collage for this weekend's Watch Party, and Birthday Celebration to honor this great Composer!
Watch Party:
April 1st at 11am Pacific time
https://app.tonebase.co/piano/live/player/pno-rachmaninoff-birthday-celebration
-
A favorite recording by Yo-Yo Ma of one of my favorite Rachmaninoff song’s Zdes’ Khorosho, Op 21 No 7.
All is well here...
Look, in the distance
The river glows like a fire;
The meadows are like a colourful carpet,
And there is the whiteness of clouds.
There is nobody here.
All is quiet…
Here I am alone with God.
And the flowers, and the old pine,
And you, my dream…
-
https://youtu.be/JBBw7G-_5S0 Posting my Prelude no 12 in G# minor, op 32. It's for me a melancholic piece but not without a silver lining. I imagine a wintry scene with a man walking down a path in deep thought with the sound of distant horse carriages with sleigh bells resonating through the woods. Towards the end of the piece, a carriage sweeps by him and disappears into the distance.
-
This is my recording of Elegie Op.3 no1 which I made a couple of years ago on my rather old but faithful digital piano. The keys rattled and the pedals worked intermittently so I finally traded it in for a brand new one. I suppose this could be an Elegie for all those pianos that we have owned and played but are no longer with us!! https://youtu.be/lRh5SMAMsMw
-
I think my favorite so far is the Polichinelle, op. 3 no. 4 ("A Bunny Dreams of Conquest") I posted last week, but I did find this absolutely lovely Romance and will post it for this week. It is opus 21 no. 5 and entitled "Lilacs." Listening to it, I saw a beautiful still lake with shimmering sunlight. A family of geese comes into view, swimming gracefully at first but then the little goslings begin to play: dipping down into the water, flapping their wings, chasing each other - interrupting the stillness with their springtime antics.