June 7, 1959
Randy Weston, 1961 (Herb Snitzer)
Randy Weston’s quartet joins Mal Waldron’s at the Five Spot. It was a Sunday, which meant the music started at 5:30.
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@sonateharder
June 7, 1959
Randy Weston, 1961 (Herb Snitzer)
Randy Weston’s quartet joins Mal Waldron’s at the Five Spot. It was a Sunday, which meant the music started at 5:30.

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Duke Ellington Today Show 1964
L-R: Duke Ellington, Ernie Shepard, Johnny Hodges, Sam Woodyard and Harry Carney
photo by Blueyetaxa
E-mu Emulator
Yall dont understand
Andy Warhol, early drawing

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“Life is like music for its own sake. We are living in an eternal now, and when we listen to music we are not listening to the past, we are not listening to the future, we are listening to an expanded present.”
— Alan Watts
Next on my what I've been listening to is On an overgrown Path by Janáček, 'the Madonna of Frydek' is absolutely wonderful and 'Good Night' is really lovely too,
But as always what I've really been listening to is Debussy and Grieg Lyric pieces, because they make me happy.
Krystian Zimerman having a bit of fun in Mozart Sonata no. 10 in C Major, K 330
Mozart would’ve liked that.
I don't know how I didn't know this but apparently Erik Satie never had anyone in his apartment for 27 years, like nobody at all, and when he died it was entered, 2 grand pianos were found on top of one another the top one for storage, and like a huge collection of over 100 umbrellas. I find this stuff weird when it's shown to other people, like "Hey look I stacked a piano on a piano!", but the fact that he never told a soul of this makes it so funny. He truly believed the double piano tower (or tower pianissimo if you will) was a good interior design choice. What a great man.
My favourite thing ever is listening to a performance of a piano piece and as we get to the climax hearing the performer breathing really heavily, either they're stressed or a little too into the music. ..I get it though.

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My current list of pieces I'm learning is La fille aux cheveux de lin January (Tchaik) La cathédrale engloutie Oiseaux tristes My mum has complained to me that they're all too "intense" ):< even the quieter ones like la fille have quite strong bits, does anyone have any suggestions for like more consistently relaxed (but still musically interesting) pieces? I was thinking an arabesque from Debussy, I aspire to perform it one day as well as @leonardbirdstein did (GENUINELY IT WAS AMAZING) but idk! Any suggestions from the world?
maybe one of the Schubert Impromptus would work
Erik Satie’s Apartment by Gary Westford
@florenloren
Christine McVie
Y'know how Debussy used to title his pieces at the end, leaving just a roman numeral at the beginning? Could this be considered the original vagueposting? Here's a pentatonic scale and oo look uh- was that an 11th chord? If you guys knew what this song was about you'd go crazy..
Dutch pianist, harpsichordist, and composer Guus Janssen (born May 13, 1951)

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Play me a tango
Johann Nepomuk Hoechle (Austrian, 1790-1835), Beethoven's Room at the Time of his Death [Beethoven's study in the Schwarzspanierhaus, his final residence, painted three days after the composer's death], 1827, ink and wash.