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"Lush" Music

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5.5K views 19 replies 16 participants last post by  shirime  
#1 ·
I see this term used to describe classical a lot, in your opinion what are some of the lushest works out there? Daphnis et Chloe immediately comes to mind, but I'm curious if there are any others that could surpass it in lushness. I want to feel like I'm drifting down a river of honey in ancient Greece.
 
#2 ·
I think Daphnis is rather threadbare in spots - Ravel wrote with great clarity. Other composers of his generation wrote much more lush orchestrations. If it's ancient Greece you want, look no further than the works of Sir Granville Bantock:

The Cyprian Goddess
The Helena Variations
Sappho
Sapphic Poem
Thalaba the Destroyer
Pagan Symphony
Omar Khayyam is pretty great too, but awfully long.

Great, heady, lush, atmospheric music. Horrible neglected nowadays, but fortunately there's a superb collection on Hyperion and the price is right!

 
#11 ·
The Smith brothers are good for a wallow.
Well, they aren't really brothers.
And they aren't actually "Smiths", in the English sense.

Franz Schmidt ( 1874 - 1939), an Austrian composer, pianist and cellist, wrote four rather lush symphonies and an opera titled Notre Dame.


Florent Schmitt (1870 - 1958), a French composer, is perhaps best known today for his La tragédie de Salomé, Op. 50, a long-time favorite musical slushy for me.


And ... don't forget the Russian Smith: Rimsky-Korsakov. (Okay, that one's a stretch.) But Scheherazade sounds lush to my ears.


Surprisingly perhaps, some of the lushest music comes from early work by the atonalists, Schoenberg, Berg and Webern. Check out the Verklärte Nacht, Op. 4 (1899) and Gurre-Lieder by Schoenberg. Berg offers the Lyric Suite, especially in its string orchestra version, and Webern will delight with Im Sommerwind (1904) and the Langsamer Satz (1905).
 
#13 ·
some pieces worth mentioning:

Sorabji - Gulistan (if you want to listen lush, intoxicating and decadent piano music, you should check this out, and the other nocturnes too). It's almost a musical drug.

Charles Loeffler - La mort de Tintagiles

John Foulds - Three mantras

Alphons Diepenbrock - Marsyas