It was the perennial Schubert who created a series of Moments Musicaux ('musical moments') for piano, some of which most budding pianists have probably enjoyed trying to play ~ especially the little one in the key of F minor (no.3).
This Quiz on musical trivia invites you to concentrate on a variety of interesting 'moments' ~ intentional and otherwise ~ within the world of music.
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Chopin referred to the piece as his Little Dog Waltz
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It has since been the tradition that if even the King stood for this remarkable piece of music, so ought everyone else to do
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This piece was by Ernest Bucalossi (1859-1933): credit where credit's due!
Answer 2 meanwhile refers to the staging of a classical drama by Aristophanes |
There may well be plenty of others, but these are certainly all genuine: Delius' On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring (of course!); the charming harpsichord rondo Le Coucou by Daquin all those years ago (and which works comfortably well on the piano or indeed on the organ, if one can get away with it!); and Strauss's 'French Polka' by the somewhat disconcerting title Im Krapfenwald'l (the name of a forest somewhere near Vienna, presumably) ... which can be enjoyed on this link: Johann Straus: Im Krapfenwald'l. Polka Francaise
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There is a repeated note (A♭/G♯) running as an eight-to-the-bar ostinato throughout the piece, like the incessant dripping of rain
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She was a flautist.
(You will no doubt appreciate the subtle link to English 'midsummer' from Q.6 previously!) |
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(... Mozart having, by then, been dead for a little over a century-and-a-half!)
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Answer 1 is correct, and there was a further development by Donald Swann in one of the Hoffnung Music Festivals in the 1950s. The allusion in Answer 2 is to Haydn's Farewell Symphony; Answer 3 refers to Tchaikovsky, and Answer 4 might be Tchaikovsky again or possibly Britten in his Simple Symphony. (Pizzicato is not, though, therefore, the exclusive preserve of mainstream composers who may happen also to be gay ... !)
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The correct 2nd line of the first verse should be:
She passed the Salley Gardens with little snow-white feet ... but the 1st verse should have started: Down by the Salley Gardens my love and I did stand, And on my leaning shoulder she laid her snow-white hand. The occasional singer has got himself, or his characters, into some interesting contortions over this! |
The perils of music-making in a paranoid age for the global village ... All the more need for the spread of soothing live Chopin and other music, one might have thought!
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