Current location - Music Encyclopedia - QQ Music - Pure music suitable for the beginning of winter
Pure music suitable for the beginning of winter

1. "First Snow"

Selected from Bandari's album "Mist". Bandari's music sounds quietly, and comes calmly, like the indifference of winter snow. Bandari's music is as elegant as winter, without ups and downs, and just quietly falls into the mortal world and enters the heart.

"First Snow" is a beautiful and sentimental piano piece. The piano is soothing and determined, just tapping the beat, tapping out the melancholy and tenderness key by key. The background string music is like a gentle breeze, spreading out into the endless silvery white, which makes people endlessly imagine.

2. "Four Seasons: Winter"

The Italian composer Vivaldi was the first to use music to describe the "four seasons". He wrote the following text for the first movement of "Winter": "In a world of ice and snow, with biting wind, people are shivering, their teeth are chattering, and their whole bodies are frozen." In this movement, the melody is the soul of the piece, and Vivaldi uses extremely vivid musical vocabulary to depict a winter for us. The north wind is blowing and the snow is blowing.

3. "Buenos Aires: Winter"

"Four Seasons" has been written by many composers, and the most unique form is undoubtedly the Argentinian composer Piazzolla. "Four Seasons in Buenos Aires" was written in the 1960s. "Winter in Buenos Aires" uses columnar chords to bring out the feeling of the slow coming of winter. It is lingering, romantic and gentle, and brings the listener no coldness, but warm and cheerful vitality.

4. "Symphony No. 1 in G minor"

This piece of music describes the scenery of Russia in winter. The first movement "Dream of a Winter Journey" depicts Tchaikovsky's The winter scenery of Russia during the journey from Moscow to Petersburg is a unique musical diary of the journey: snowstorms, forests, desolate folk songs and the ringing of horse-drawn carriages. Its tone is melancholic, but listening to it feels like having a free "winter dream."

5. "Etude: Winter Wind"

The etude "Winter Wind" is famous for its revolutionary enthusiasm. These fast sound clusters are like the winter wind blowing the dead leaves. Rolled up, it looks like dead leaves dancing in the air. During the performance, the pianist's right hand continues to play fast and difficult sound groups, while his left hand plays an undercurrent of melody. In this piece, the violent sound flow is even worse than "Autumn Wind Sweeps Fallen Leaves", so the piece is called "Winter Wind", also known as "Withered Leaves", and it is one of the more difficult masterpieces among "Chopin's Etudes".