@@Quotenwagnerianer I read that the author is Remo Giazotto, who wrote "Adagio" based on found Albinoni's music fragments in Library. But all over the world she is known as "Adagio Albinoni". It is very interesting fact))
@@adiosmusictest And the source of those fragments remains unresolved. There exists only a photocopy and it is not clear where it came from and whether it really by Albinoni.
I successfully guessed Rosas, as it was the only composer I didn't know and I knew the music did not belong to anyone else. lol Did terribly on Part 1 (5 out of 15), but with the above guess, scored 15/15 on this one!
Another fun video, thanks for posting. From the start, I did not know who Rosas was, but as soon as the melody came up I recognized it. Learn something every day,
I got most of them, guessing Juventino Rosas by the process of elimination, because his was the only obscure name that matched up with his very familiar tune (which I first heard in an Abbott and Costello sketch!), known by the tune but not the composer. Thank you!
Yes, thank you. We already found this out in the comments earlier, I even placed Remo in a quiz on lesser-known composers, So that more people know about this))
@@adiosmusictest Oh, OK. For statistics, 15/15 + 11 composition names, looked at the list a couple of times. Nice videos, thanks for the extra time after the time runs out. We heard Beethoven's 5th and 9th, hopefully 7th in one of the next videos.
Hm... It was published as Op. 39 no.15, "16 Waltzes". Are you sure? Brahms does have a lullaby in the same style also starting with a third from the mediant, and I always confuse it with this waltz.
You’ve got some strange recordings for some pieces, and the sound quality is suffering from audio compressor settings sometimes (see especially Le nozzle di Figaro ouverture). But quite entertaining anyway
Yes, I agree with you - the quality can be average and even bad. In addition, the volume varies at different performances and has to be adjusted manually. We will strive to improve, although my hearing is not very demanding))
Merci pour ce quiz 14/15, il me manquait Brahms. Dès que j’ai vu Juventino Rosas, dans la liste, je me suis réjouie mais vous auriez pu tendre un piège avec lui en laissant Strauss pour la fin ! Il est malheureusement très méconnu, j’avais acheté un coffret de DIX disques 33 tours de valses pour avoir la valse grise de Maurice Jaubert, et bien Sobre Las Olas n’était même pas dedans… ! Deux petites remarques : 1) le canon de Pachelbel n’est pas une pièce pour piano 2) les paroles de l’Ave Maria de Schubert sont en principe en allemand et elles sont très belles aussi.
The piece is Messiah. This reminds me of when my daughter cam home saying she was playing "Allegro giocoso" by Brahms. She didn't even know it was from the fourth symphony.
15/15. Although I had never heard of Rosas either. Melody was very familiar. As the Adagio by Albinoni is considered misattributed to him, perhaps we had thought the melody "Over the Waves" had been written by someone else, like J. Strauss.
That was easy - got them all! The opening and closing music was the the Waltz from Grieg's Peer Gynt Suite no.1. And what else to guide us but Liszt's list.
First, this test is WAY too easy. Second, Albinoni did NOT write that piece. It was written by a 20th century composer named Remo Giazotto. Maybe make sure your answers are correct before you publish tests like this? LAME!
Another niggle. Mozart never used the name Amadey. He was Christened Theophilus (Greek for Love God) then when he learned Italian changed to Amadeo (in 1770) and subsequently Amadè (1777). He used Amadeus in a jokey letter and this caught on in the wider world and appears on his death certificate in 1791. His widow used Amadeus and sometimes Gottlieb. But never Amadey.
Greetings. I've been waiting a long time for a comment on Mozart's name. I have a lot of problems with the transition from Russian to English. In Russian the name Amadeus is read as "Амадей" (Amadey) .. Like other names: "Сергей" (Sergey), "Евгений" (Evgeny), etc. And out of habit, I wrote closer to the Russian read version in Part II. In other parts used "Amadeus". Thanks for the historical information!