A Blast From The Past

Continuing the theme from yesterday, today’s choice is again music steeped in the liturgy of the Russian Orthodox Church – however, it is very different to the Rachmaninoff that I previously shared as it attempts to depict “the transition from the solemnity and mystery of the evening of Passion Saturday to the unbridled pagan-religious celebrations of Easter Sunday morning”.

One of the first album covers that I shared in my recent ‘challenge’ was the Readers Digest boxed set “Music of the World’s Great Composers” and in the comments I mentioned that this set was – almost exclusively – my introduction to classical music. The various tracks became the basis of my “musical knowledge” and thus I perhaps had a few pieces of music that were sort of fundamental to my library that others may have been less familiar with.

Rimsky-Korsakov’s Russian Easter Festival Overture was a favourite of mine and I was able to find it on youTube to share here. It is, perhaps, not the best recording quality – but it is most certainly the one that feels most familiar (there are a large number of recordings available and I was having one that “felt” like it was right in tempo and sound).

Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov : Russian Easter Festival Overture
Folk Music Romantic Salvation Army Vocal Opera Horns Religious Welcome Symphony Film Theatre Early Music Winter Fun Comedy Popular Jazz Running Orchestral Baroque Musical Theatre Wind Band Classical Instrumental Faith Concerto Brass Traditional Friends Ballet Choral Electronic Concerts Percussion

Feeding my Ignorance