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The Official Game Thread

Discussion in 'General' started by PJF, Apr 5, 2007.

  1. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    Coccobill is stuck! So, he thinks he'll wait for the rien ne va plus. :wink:
     
  2. techneut

    techneut Active Member Piano Society Artist Trusted Member

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    Looks like this round is more difficult than I had thought :D
    Seeing as everybody is stuck, perhaps I should drop a hint.
    The 7 composers still to be identified (remember they're all different), are, in no particular order:

    - The greatest Czech composer
    - The greatest Brazilian composer
    - The two greatest Russian composers
    - The greatest French composer
    - Plus two other illustrious and fairly well-known Frenchmen

    Piece of cake now, right ?

    :lol:
     
  3. juufa72

    juufa72 New Member Piano Society Artist

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    My guesses (In no particular order)

    - The greatest Czech composer

    Smetana

    - The greatest Brazilian composer

    Moupou (spelling?)

    - The two greatest Russian composers

    Rachmaninov and Tchaikovsky

    - The greatest French composer

    Satie :wink:

    - Plus two other illustrious and fairly well-known Frenchmen

    Ravel and Debussy



    But I should receive no credit because I have not guessed the piece name[/b]
     
  4. pianolady

    pianolady Monica Hart, Administrator Staff Member Piano Society Artist Trusted Member

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    Thanks for the tip. The greatest Brazillian composer is Villa-Lobos (as I recently learned) #16 is Villa Lobos is Shoo Shoo Little Bird from Cirandas.
     
  5. juufa72

    juufa72 New Member Piano Society Artist

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    The greatest Czech composer could also be Dvorak. :roll: but I think Smetana is better. :wink:
     
  6. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    One of whom is Gabriel Fauré, since track nr.2 is his first prelude from opus 103. :)
     
  7. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    Track 10 is Fragments by Rachmaninoff.

    I wonder who is the other "greatest"... As I see it, there are almost 4-5 "greatest" Russian composers. :)
     
  8. techneut

    techneut Active Member Piano Society Artist Trusted Member

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    Indeed not. Actually all of the composers are wrong except the two Russians. Mompou was Catalan, not Brazilian !

    Right, one more point for pianolady and two more for coccobill. We can already that coccobill wins this round ! Shall I divulge the remaining 4 tracks or do you people want to puzzle further ?
     
  9. juufa72

    juufa72 New Member Piano Society Artist

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    ...please the suspense is killing me :lol:
     
  10. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    OK, I too give in!
     
  11. techneut

    techneut Active Member Piano Society Artist Trusted Member

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    Alrighty then...

    5: Tchaikovsky: Funeral March, No.4 from 6 Pieces on one Theme Op.21
    11: Saint-Saens: Bagatelle Op.3 No.1
    14: Dvorak: Mazurka Op.56 No.4
    17: Debussy: Berceuse Heroique

    I am not surprised nobody recognized the Debussy piece, though I'd expected someone to guess the composer.

    Well that was fun, thanks for playing. Coccobill gets the stage now ! I'm sure he'll come up with an intrigueing selection.
     
  12. Chaotica

    Chaotica New Member Piano Society Artist

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    Shorter, but better-known clips would be great! More people could guess then.
     
  13. pianolady

    pianolady Monica Hart, Administrator Staff Member Piano Society Artist Trusted Member

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    Boy, those were hard. Ok, maybe not for cocobill, which worries me because he can probably make the next round equally hard. (hope not)
     
  14. techneut

    techneut Active Member Piano Society Artist Trusted Member

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    I thought about something like that. Was afraid it would be too easy.....
    Indeed, the better known, the shorther the clips could be. And vice versa - I thought schmontz's clips were way too short to even form an idea of who the composer was.
     
  15. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    :roll: mois? :roll:

    I don't know exactly what kind of quiz I'll make. Please, leave me a couple of days to think of it and get something ready. As an anticipation, I prefer brain teaser to trivia games, for that matter.
     
  16. juufa72

    juufa72 New Member Piano Society Artist

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    I think that you should mix it up!

    -A few shorter and more, well-known clips.
    -Four or five 30-40sec clips of easily researchable pieces.
    -Maybe two or three "hard" clips of about 1 minute in length...but worth double the points 8)


    Because if you guys continously select "hard' clips then it will not be much of a game, more like a redunant oligopoly.
     
  17. pianolady

    pianolady Monica Hart, Administrator Staff Member Piano Society Artist Trusted Member

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    Brain teasers should be fun, (unless you tease my brain too much, which isn't hard to do (I can say that, not you guys :lol: ). Maybe picture type clues too, or something like a scavenger hunt on the internet that's related to classical music. But it's your game so we will wait with bated breath.
     
  18. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    Here we go, a new piano cornucopia is ready for you, piano friends. The quiz is divided in 3 parts, as follows.

    A. Name the piece.
    15 short clips extracted from well-known works of major composers. It's mainstream repertoire, so you cannot go wrong! In a few cases, I took the liberty to point to not thematic passages inside a piece, adding a bit of pepper to the discovery process.

    You'll score 1 point for each correct guess.
    You'll lose 2 points for each wrong guess... kidding!

    B. Match the composer.
    15 longer clips from not much played or just unattended works by famous and less famous composers. Since all should have a chance to play (and win), I'll provide a list of composers from which you can pick the right name up for the right clip. Some funny distractors will desperately try to divert your attention from the correct answers. Don't be deceived!

    You'll get 1 point for each correct match (you don't need to name the work - just the composer).

    Here's the composers' list (in alphabetical order):
    Chabrier, Clementi, d'Indy, Debussy, Dussek, Gershwin, Glazunov, Godowsky, Gottschalk, Grieg, Hindemith, Hummel, Lyapunov, Mendelssohn, Milhaud, Moscheles, Moszkowski, Nielsen, Poulenc, Reger, Rejcha, Rossini, Rzewski, Satie, Scarlatti D., Sibelius, Smetana, Strauss R., Sweelinck, Szymanowski.

    C. The ultimate quiz!
    I love this one. Only for true geeks.
    A conductor's rehearsing a piano concerto. He invites the horns to repeat a short difficult passage. The rehearsal was recorded in the 60's and both the conductor and the piano concerto are unmistakably icons for music lovers.

    1. Find out which piano concerto is that (1 point);
    2. Identify the conductor (1 point);
    3. Detect the inconsistency of that passage (3 points).

    Hint #1: that horns passage originates motivically from a main theme.
    Hint #2: the name of the conductor could shed light on the kind of inconsistency.

    So, have fun, a happy weekend everyone, and may the best win!
     
  19. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    Here are the clips of Part B.
     
  20. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    Last, the "ultimate quiz" clip.
     

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