treehugger1995 Posted July 10, 2013 Posted July 10, 2013 I'd also add to this list John Corigliano, he's at least one of the best teachers I've seen, based on the successes of his students, and also Eric Whitacre, you have to at least give him credit for his work on choirs, and his Virtual Choir. Of course, John Adams also comes to mind, Frank Ticheli is also a genius in Wind Ensemble literature. Quote
treehugger1995 Posted July 10, 2013 Posted July 10, 2013 oh, and Higdon and Theofandis, you can never forget them! Quote
Michael Armstrong Posted July 10, 2013 Posted July 10, 2013 I'd also add to this list John Corigliano, he's at least one of the best teachers I've seen, based on the successes of his students, and also Eric Whitacre, you have to at least give him credit for his work on choirs, and his Virtual Choir. Of course, John Adams also comes to mind, Frank Ticheli is also a genius in Wind Ensemble literature. Oh hey, someone finally said it, so it is safe to say. I am going with Whitacre for best CHORAL composer alive. I know that he is a one-trick pony, but boy is he good at that trick. 1 Quote
Tokkemon Posted July 10, 2013 Posted July 10, 2013 Whicacer's trick isn't even that good. He's like Mozart. Doing the same crap over and over and over and over and over again. And once more for good measure. Quote
muhmuhmuhmusic Posted July 10, 2013 Posted July 10, 2013 Whicacer's trick isn't even that good. He's like Mozart. Doing the same crap over and over and over and over and over again. And once more for good measure. So I take it you wouldn't approve of my suggesting Steve Reich to our burgeoning list, then? After all, he does the same delicacies over and over and over again, and 100 more times for even more measures. 2 Quote
Guest Vasili P. Posted July 11, 2013 Posted July 11, 2013 Favouring matter. No answer, no resalt. Someone asked the same thing Arthur Rubinstein, if he has an answer about great painists. He said: " I went once at Musée du Louvre. I ender the area of Leonardo da Vinci. I saw the pictures and i had the feeling of perfection. Then i saw pictures of Raphael and i had same feelings. Michelangelo, Rembrandt...Caravaggio..! I return home and i had in my eyes all these Top Artists. Who was above all the other? Who was top of the tops? None! Different strong emotions, different feelings, but with the same gravity! There are many gifted pianists. No, i'm not the best! It is favouring matter." 1 Quote
siwi Posted July 16, 2013 Posted July 16, 2013 But he also didn't like the fact that Shostakovich's Leningrad Symphony was getting more attention than his own works - hence his famous parody of it in his Concerto for Orchestra. You've fallen for a common myth. The piece Bartok was actually satirising is part of Lehar's The Merry Widow, supposedly Hitler's favourite opera. Although the Shostakovich theme contains descending scales these are halfway through the melody and there are only two of them. Bartok's joke dissonance clearly follows the phrase struture of the Lehar and includes the whole melody, as well as making far more sense as a satire. Anyway, to address the subject, I'd have to vote for Thomas Ades. Proven in every genre, he is consistantly interesting, inventive and able to re-invent his music. That doesn't stop him from being an iconoclast, but it doesn't matter because the quality of the music is so high. Quote
Max Castillo Posted August 2, 2013 Posted August 2, 2013 ITT: composers I've never heard about. 1 Quote
FossMaNo1 Posted August 16, 2013 Posted August 16, 2013 Would I get punched in the mouth if I voted for John Williams? He is the reason I started studying composition. 3 Quote
shiihs Posted August 17, 2013 Posted August 17, 2013 No surprise here, Luderart: it's you. Don't be so modest, xiangyik. It was you all along! Quote
Josef Fischer Posted August 20, 2013 Posted August 20, 2013 Jeremy Soule his music is simple but I get goose pimples listening to any1 of the even though i've heard them 1000s of times like the skyrim theme dragonborn or auriel's ascension from oblivion and that is why I hink he is the greatest the best of all time is of course Mozart but I prefer Vivaldi because he his f** cking metal Quote
NRKulus Posted September 11, 2013 Posted September 11, 2013 Would I get punched in the mouth if I voted for John Williams? He is the reason I started studying composition. Short answer: no. He's had a hugely positive impact on film scoring as an art form, and (whether deliberately or not) has done more to stir the general public's interest in orchestral music (good orchestral music, in my opinion) than any living concert-hall composer would likely be able to. Personally, I never understood why hating on John Williams is such a popular pastime among B.M. Composition types... even when I was one of them! 1 Quote
Austenite Posted September 12, 2013 Posted September 12, 2013 Regarding the OP: my vote would go for (...) John Williams. Would I get punched in the mouth if I voted for John Williams? Personally, I never understood why hating on John Williams is such a popular pastime among B.M. Composition types... even when I was one of them! Bashing John Williams is almost as much of a popular pastime as bashing Haydn & Mozart among a few guys here and there. Nevertheless, I have really ceased to care about all the bashing and enjoy his music scores all the same. Haters will hate. 2 Quote
Ken320 Posted October 8, 2013 Posted October 8, 2013 Would I get punched in the mouth if I voted for John Williams? He is the reason I started studying composition. I take my hat off to Williams' and his skillful and underrated "The Accidental Tourist." Quote
Ken320 Posted October 8, 2013 Posted October 8, 2013 Does it have to be a high brow artsy fart? How about the English pop band "Everything But The Girl?" It's REALLY HARD to write a good pop song. Really really hard. You can fool so many people with stuff that goes over their head, but producing a three minute gem is bloody difficult and always more meaningful than the latest concepts in academia and whatnot. Quote
Stirling_Radliff Posted October 8, 2013 Posted October 8, 2013 Does it have to be a high brow artsy fart? How about the English pop band "Everything But The Girl?" It's REALLY HARD to write a good pop song. Really really hard. You can fool so many people with stuff that goes over their head, but producing a three minute gem is bloody difficult and always more meaningful than the latest concepts in academia and whatnot. Well, that's entirely subjective: Meaningfulness - leave that to people than music. I think it's kind of silly to ask who the 'greatest living composer' is, anyway. If not about meaning, it would be better to ask 'what living composer has had the most impact in such and such a period?'. And even then it's rather ambiguous: Different composers have had different impacts on different parts of the musical world. How is one to measure impactfulness in any meaningful sense, not to mention greatness - except maybe in retrospect. Anyway, I don't see the point. Quote
Kvothe Posted October 9, 2013 Posted October 9, 2013 Vitrousioso: Franz Listz, Fredick Chopin, Ludwig Beethoveen, J. S. Bach, Rachominov, Brahms, Modest Mussorsky, ect. Quote
Ken320 Posted November 2, 2013 Posted November 2, 2013 Vitrousioso: Franz Listz, Fredick Chopin, Ludwig Beethoveen, J. S. Bach, Rachominov, Brahms, Modest Mussorsky, ect. John Cleese: Dead dead dead dead dead dead dead! 1 1 Quote
jrcramer Posted November 4, 2013 Posted November 4, 2013 I'd like to add a Dutch guy, who recently won some awards like the Grawemeyer: Michel van der Aa. And yup that's his real name, not a pun to get on the first page of a Musical Encyclopedia :D I think he's interesting for blurring the lines between music and the way he uses other media. Quote
Austenite Posted November 4, 2013 Posted November 4, 2013 ... yup that's his real name, not a pun to get on the first page of a Musical Encyclopedia... :lol: Definitely this one made my day. BTW, glad to see you back, Jaap! Quote
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