Tumgik
#Sabre Rossini
videbi · 3 years
Text
Classical Music For Working Out
Aaron Copland - Fanfare for the Common Man
Georges Bizet - Prelude to Act I from Carmen
J.S. Bach - Brandenburg Concerto no. 3, 1st mvt
Gioachino Rossini - Overture from William Tell
Johann Strauss - Auf Der Jagd
Aram Khachaturian - Sabre Dance
Maurice Ravel - Bolero
Sam Fonteyn - ‘Pop Looks Bach’
Tchaikovsky - Finale from 1812 Overture
Edvard Grieg - ‘In The Hall Of The Mountain King’ from the Peer Gynt Suite
Ludwig Van Beethoven - Egmont Overture
John Adams - Roadrunner
Hector Berlioz - March to the Scaffold Mozart - Symphony no. 25, 1st mvt
Vangelis - Chariots Of Fire
1 note · View note
Colleen: The Creed broke up. We’re toast.
Sabre: Broke up? Like- Like a band?? Like the Beatles???
19 notes · View notes
Text
Silence: You are my last living legacy.
Silence: *Hands Sabre a kazoo*
Sabre: ..??
Sabre: What do you want me to do with this???
(Edit: I POSTED THIS ON THE WRONG BLOG BUT OH WELL)
22 notes · View notes
Text
The Arcana Characters As Pieces of Classical Music:
(My sister @sevrina-devorak picked out most of these. Click the song titles for links to the pieces!)
Asra
Character Theme: The Carnival of the Animals - Aquarium by Camille Saint-Saëns
Love Theme: I Giorni by Ludovico Einaudi
Nadia:
Character Theme: Le Cygne by Camille Saint-Saëns
Love Theme: Bagatelle in A Minor, “Für Elise” by Ludwig Von Beethoven
Julian:
Character Theme: Sabre Dance by Aram Khachaturian
Love Theme: Love Theme from Romeo & Juliet by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
Muriel:
Character Theme: Gnossienne No. 1 by Erik Satie
Love Theme: Canon and Gigue in D Major by Johann Pachelbel
Portia:
Character Theme: Serenade in G Major, “Eine Kleine Nachtmusick” by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Love Theme:  Frühlingsstimmen op. 410 by Johann Strauss II
Lucio:
Character Theme: Devil’s Trill Sonata by Giuseppe Tartini
Love Theme: Can-Can from Orpheus in the Underworld by Jacques Offenbach
Bonus!:
Mazelinka: Hungarian Dance No. 5 by Johannes Brahms
Morga: Flight of the Valkyries by Richard Wagner
Valerius: String Quintet in E Major, Minuetto by Luigi Boccherini
Valdemar: Night on Bald Mountain by Modest Mussorgsky
Volta: Dance of the Sugar-Plum Fairies by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky 
Vulgora: Dance of the Knights by Sergei Prokofiev
Vlastomil: The Four Seasons - Winter by Antonio Vivaldi
Bonus Bonus!:
Faust: Chinese Dance, “Tea” by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
Chandra: Orchestral Suite No. 3 in D Major by Johann Sebastian Bach
Malak: Flight of the Bumblebee by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakow
Inanna: Cello Suite No. 1 in G Major by Johann Sebastian Bach
Pepi: Duetto Buffo Para Dos Gatos by Gioachino Rossini
Mercedes & Melchior: In the Hall of the Mountain King by Edvard Grieg
394 notes · View notes
scorpiosanssexy · 4 years
Text
The Signs as classical music  (taken from my playlist)
so i was listening to this last night and i was inspired to make this post because some of these pieces are certified bangers. You will definetely recognise a couple. 
Tumblr media
Check Sun, Moon and Rising
Aries: William Tell Overture by Gioacchino Rossini
Adventurous, Enthusiastic and Innocent 
Tumblr media
Taurus: Bolero by Maurice Ravel 
Elegant, Resourceful and Patient
Tumblr media
Gemini: Sabre Danse by Aran Khachaturian 
Witty, Mischievous and Intelligent 
Tumblr media
Cancer: Clair de Lune by Claude Debussy 
Nurturing, Empathetic and Loyal
Tumblr media
Leo: Rhapsody in Blue by George Gershwin 
Dramatic, Radiant and Warm-hearted 
Tumblr media
Virgo: Morning Mood by Edvard Grieg
Humble, Organised and Devoted 
Tumblr media
Libra: Valse de Concert by Alexander Glazunov 
Sociable, Clever and Just 
Tumblr media
Scorpio: Danse Macabre by Camille Saint-Saens
Compassionate, Deep and Mysterious 
Tumblr media
Sagittarius: Bacchanale by Camille Saint-Saens 
Curious, Honest and Optimistic 
Tumblr media
Capricorn: New World by Antonin Dvorak 
Driven, Disciplined and Traditional 
Tumblr media
Aquarius: The Sorcerer’s Apprentice by Paul Dukas 
Eccentric, Humanitarian and Assertive 
Tumblr media
Pisces: Cinderella Waltz by Sergei Prokofiev 
Dreamy, Poetic and Mystical 
Tumblr media
135 notes · View notes
sloshed-cinema · 4 years
Text
8 1/2 (1963)
Tumblr media
Fellini bookends his film in a really interesting fashion.  The entire film is a sort of meta-movie, but the opening and closing sequences move even a layer beyond.  In the first moments, our introduction to Guido is in silence.  Gradually sound seeps into the mix as the director realizes his car is on fire and he can’t get out.  Countless people in the snarl of traffic look on in bemusement as he realizes his predicament.  This is the director as the hapless performer, tortured by his audience and unable to escape their judgment.  Contrast this with the end, a release of form and pretense.  The director abandons order and joins the circle of his cast, crew, and producers dancing in the derelict set of the abandoned project.  Guido needs those in his life, and the film becomes a bacchanal.
A mix of conventional meta-comedy and surrealist imagery exists in 8 1/2.  Fellini takes ample time to mock everyone from critics (unceremoniously hanged) to producers (always eyeing the bottom line) to diva actresses (espousing high claims about their craft while looking utterly ridiculous).  But beyond the tropes of the industry, filmmaking is about personal discovery, both for Fellini and Guido.  Flashbacks take the viewer to Guido’s childhood, from late-night antics in his near-infancy to episodes with a prostitute that lead to nightmarish visions of Catholic school punishments and norms.  
8 1/2 makes fairly generous use of snippets from “mainstream” classic works—the “Flight of the Valkyries” from Wagner’s Die Walküre, the Overture from Rossini’s Il barbiere di Siviglia, “Waltz of the Flowers” from Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker, and something that I believe is a rough nod to Khachaturian’s “Sabre Dance” from Gayane.  The Tchaikovsky in particular is linked with the introduction of feminine characters to the story.  The Wagner and Rossini seem to underline the pomp and ridiculousness of the spa at which Guido is taking his “rest holiday” to plan his insane sci-fi epic.
Does Tarantino reference this movie in Pulp Fiction’s dance sequence?  Because there’s definitely some of that arm-swishing going on here.  He probably is.
THE RULES
SIP
Nuns or other people of the cloth appear onscreen.
Someone mentions a Guido film.
A classical piece begins to play.  Two if you can name it.
Psycho actress antics.
Spaghetti Western rules with dubbing.
BIG DRINK
Fantastical shit begins.
Weird phone ringing noises.
A flashback starts.
10 notes · View notes
calebwittebane · 4 years
Note
[Music note] baby deino
La gazza ladra - Gioacchino Rossini
Sabre Dance - Jelonek
1 note · View note
higgsinos · 7 years
Text
Music to main Junkrat to
Russian Dance - Tchaikovsky
In the Hall of the Mountain King - Grieg 
Ride of the Valkyries - Wagner
Can Can - Offenbach
Entry of the Gladiators - Fuick
O Fortuna - Orff
Lacrimosa - Mozart
Hungarian Dance No. 5 - Brahms
Waltz No. 2 - Shostakovich
Sabre Dance - Khachaturian
Les Toreadors - Bizet
William Tell Overture - Rossini
@megasatan   @banshees
589 notes · View notes
ccutlatelolco · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Conciertos en colaboración con la Coordinación Nacional de Música y Ópera del INBA.
Entrada libre / cupo limitado al aforo del recinto
Programa 4 de junio 
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Dueto del aria de Las bodas de Fígaro
Fernando J. Obradors
El vito
Gerónimo Giménez
La tempranica
Joaquín Rodrigo
De los álamos vengo madre
Pablo Luna
Canción española o del niño judío
Gioachino Rossini
Dueto de los gatos
María Grever
Así
Júrame
Despedida
Ricardo Córdova D.
Arrullo
Canción
Manuel M. Ponce
Insomnio
Jorge del Moral
Faisán azul
Mario Ruíz Armengol
Ternura
Karina Peña Carrera
Un dulce canto
Ignacio Fernández Esperón “Tata Nacho”
Íntima
Salvador Moreno
Cementerio en la nieve
Belisario de Jesús García
Morir por tu amor
Interpreta
María Teresa González Cruz, soprano
Karina Peña Carrera, piano
Artistas invitadas: Alejandra Collado, Verónica Marlen González Reyes
Programa del 11 de junio
Canción mexicana del siglo XIX
Ignacio Fernández Esperón “Tata Nacho” (México, 1894-1968)
La borrachita
Rosa marchita
Tengo nostalgia de tí
Que triste estoy
Íntima
Alfonso Esparza Oteo (México, 1894-1950)
Déjame llorar
Su mamá tuvo la culpa
María Grever (México, 1885 – Estados Unidos, 1951)
Te quiero, dijiste
Despedida
Ricardo Castro (México, 1864-1907)
Ave Maria
Ramón Serratos (México, 1895-1973)
La chorreada
Manuel M. Ponce (México, 1882-1948)
Cuiden su vida
Jorge del Moral (México, 1900-1941)
No niegues que me quisiste
José Sabre Marroquin (Mexico, 1909-1995)
Nocturnal
- Zarzuela
Fernando Moreno Torroba (España, 1891-1982)
De Luisa Fernanda
  “De este apacible rincón de Madrid”
Ruperto Chapí (España, 1851-1909)
De Las carceleras
  “Al pensar en el sueño de mis amores”
Fernando Moreno Torroba
De Luisa Fernanda
  “Caballero de alto plumero”
Intérpretes:
Carmen García Chavarín, soprano
Flavio Becerra, tenor
Carlos Alberto Pecero, piano
Programa del 18 de junio
Domenico Scarlatti (Italia, 1685-1757)
Sonata en fa menor K481
Ludwig van Beethoven (Alemania, 1770-1827)
Sonata Op. 31 núm. 2 La tempestad
Largo
Adagio
Allegretto
Frédéric Chopin (Polonia, 1810 – Francia, 1849)
Estudio Op. 25 núm. 7 en do sostenido menor
Estudio Op. 10 núm. 12 en do menor
Georges Pfeiffer (Francia, 1835-1908)
Inquietud Op. 82
Claude Debussy (Francia, 1862-1918)
Preludio núm. 7 Libro 1 Ce qu’a vu le vent d’Ouest
Manuel. M. Ponce (México, 1882-1948)
Malgré tout
Rapsodia mexicana núm. 2
Brenda Ariadna Herrera Sánchez, piano
Programa del 25 de junio
Edvard Grieg (Noruega, 1843-1907)
Piezas líricas
Arietta Op. 12 núm. 1
Valse Op. 12 núm. 2
Hoja de álbum Op. 12 núm. 7
Melodía popular Op. 38 núm. 2
Melodía Op. 38 núm. 3
Danza noruega Op.47 núm. 6
Nocturno Op. 54 núm. 4
Hacia la patria Op. 62 núm. 6
De la juventud Op. 65 núm. 1
Boda en Troldhaugen Op.65 núm. 6
Intermedio
Ricardo Castro (México, 1864-1907)
Berceuse Op.36
Barcarola Op. 30
Nocturno Op. 15
Nostalgia Op. 44
Vals Caressante
Vals Capricho Op. 1
Intérprete:
Claudio Herrera, piano
9 notes · View notes
Text
This is Classical
New Post has been published on http://createbacklinks.pro/this-is-classical-2/
This is Classical
DISC 1 Vivaldi – Spring from The Four Seasons Grieg – Morning from Peer Gynt Schubert – Unfinished Symphony Bach – The Lover s Concerto Dvorak – Humoreske Debussy – The Girl With The Flaxen Hair Tchaikovsky – Dance Of The Sugar Plum Fairy from The Nutcracker Mozart – Eine Kleine Nachtmusik (4th Movement) Grieg – Piano Concerto In A Minor (1st Movement) Dvorak – The New World Symphony (Excerpt) Debussy – Golliwog s Cakewalk Tchaikovsky – Miniature Overture from The Nutcracker Purcell – Trumpet Voluntary Mendelssohn – Song Of The Gondolier Bizet – Toreador s Song from Carmen 19. Bach – Toccata And Fugue In D Minor Dvorak – Slavanic Dance In C Major Grieg – Holberg Suite (Excerpt) Carillion from L Arlesienne (Suite No.1) Bach – Sheep May Safely Graze Wagner – Lohengrin (Prelude To Act III)
DISC 2 Prokofiev – Montagues And Capulets from Romeo And Juliet Rachmaninov – Prelude To C Sharp Minor Barber – Adagio For Strings Gershwin – Prelude No.2 Delius – Aquarelle Walton – Death Of Falstaff Bach – Musette In D Major (Anna Magdalena) Albinoni – Adagio In G Minor Briten – Frolicsome Finale Gershwin – Prelude No. 1 Mascagni – Intermezzo from Cavalleria Rusticana Pachelbel – Canon In D Major Falla – Ritual Fire Dance Grieg – Wedding Day At Troldhaugen Faure – Pavane Gershwin – Prelude No.3 Khachaturian – Sabre Dance Rachmaninov – Prelude In G Minor Gershwin – Rhapsody In Blue Bach – Sleeper s Wake Tchaikovsky – Waltz from Swan Lake Chopin – Prelude In E Minor Khachaturian – Waltz from Maskarade Bach – Gavotte In G Minor Tchaikovsky – 1812 Overture (Finale)
DISC 3 Beethoven – Symphony No.5 In C Minor (1st Movement) Rimsky-Korsakov – The Young Prince And Princess from Scheherazade Handel – Water Music (Air) Tchaikovsky – Serenade For Strings In C Major (Excerpt) Grieg – In The Hall Of The Mountain King from Peer Gynt Schumann The Merry Peasant from Album For The Young Brahms – Hungarian Dance No.1 In G Minor Tchaikovsky – Lullaby Beethoven – Symphony No.7 In A Major (2nd Movement ) Rimsky-Korsakov – Flight Of The Bumble Bee Tchaikovsky – Symphony No.6 In B Minor Pathetique (Scherzo) Schubert – Moment Musical In F Minor Bach – Air On A G String Chopin – Pianno Sonata No.2 In B Flat Minor (Funeral March) Mozart – Eine Klieine Nachtmusik (1st Movement) Debussy – Clair De Lune Grieg – Holberg Suite (Prelude) Shumann – Dreaming from Scenes From Childhood Beethoven – Moonlight Sonata (1st Movement) Chopin – Minute Waltz Brahms – Symphony No.3 In F Major (3rd Movement) Schumann – Prophet Bird from Forest Scenes Tchaikovsky – Romeo And Juliet Fantasy Overture (Excerpt) Mozart – Clarinet Concerto In A Major (Slow Movement) Rossini – William Tell Overture (Finale)
DISC 4 Tchaikovsky – Scene from Swan Lake Chopin – Nocturne In F Sharp Major Bach – Brandenburg Concerto No.3 In G Major (1st Movement) Beethoven – Fur Elise Bizet – Habanera from Carmen Bach – Gounod Ave Maria Tchaikovsky – Waltz Of The Flowers from The Nutcracker Smetana – Overture To The Bartered Bride Dvorak – Nocturne In B Major Grieg – Solveig s Song from Perr Gynt Massenet – Meditation from Thals Bizet – Prelude from L Arlesienne Tchaikovsky – Piano Concerto No.1 In B Flat Minor Schubert – Arabeske In C Major Mahler – Symphony No.5 In C Sharp Minor (4th Movement) Brahms – Hungarian Dance No.5 In G Minor Rachmaninov – Vocalise Tchaikovsky – Dance Of The Swans from Swan Lake Chopin – Waltz In E Minor Bach – Badinerle from Orchestral Suite No.2 In B Minor Brahms – Hungarian Dance No.18 In D Major Beethoven – Piano Son
0 notes
Sabre: God give me patience.
Flub: Don’t you mean give me strength?
Sabre: If he gave me strength you’d be dead.
28 notes · View notes
Sure, You may be verified on Twitter, but are you verified in the eyes of God?
Sabre @ pretty much every villain
18 notes · View notes
I don’t care if you’re seven, I’m not letting you win this Easter Egg hunt. Welcome to the real world, kid
Sabre, Probably
26 notes · View notes
Flub: People who sleep without socks on make me worry.
Colleen: People who sleep WITH socks on are not to be trusted.
Sabre: People who sleep are weird.
Spency: I was sock once.
Rinnly: ....What does that even mean?
16 notes · View notes
I’m tired of people telling me to “go to the hospital” and that I’ve “lost a lot of blood”. It’s my stab wound, not yours. Stay out of it.
Sabre, probably
22 notes · View notes
Sabre: What if the person who named Walkie Talkies named everything.
Sabre: Like socks are feetie heaties.
Colleen: Forks are stabbie grabbies.
Flub: Nightmares are Dreamie Screamies.
Spency: Stamps are Lickie Stickies.
Lucas: Ah yes, the new generation of Assassins who will carry on the legacy of the brotherhood.
19 notes · View notes