---Original Message---
Black Sabbath songs covered by medieval music band Rondellus
http://www.sabbatum.com/
“Sabbatum” is a tribute album like no other – 12 Black Sabbath classic songs
played by early music band Rondellus and sung in Latin language.
Can You imagine what Black Sabbath would have sounded like if Ozzy Osbourne,
Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler and Bill Ward would have formed the band in the 14th
century? Would “War Pigs” or “The Wizard” have been as powerful if played on
medieval
instruments like lute, fiddle and harp?
Curious? So was Rondellus, the renowned Estonian medieval music band. They took
12 Black Sabbath classics and turned them into something totally unheard.
You don’t have to take history lessons to get the feeling. It’s all on the new
CD Rondellus recorded – “Sabbatum”. An amazing collection of Black Sabbath tunes
played on medieval instruments and sung in Latin language.
>Curious? So was Rondellus, the renowned Estonian medieval music band. They
took
>12 Black Sabbath classics and turned them into something totally unheard.
>
Is this another of those Cage things? 4' 33'' X 12?
bl
No, somebody noticed all the news articles about some Finnish professor who
made recordings of Elvis Presley songs translated into Latin, and decided
they wanted publicity like that:
http://www.mndaily.com/daily/1996/10/09/editorial_opinions/ofin.op/
--
Matthew B. Tepper: WWW, science fiction, classical music, ducks!
My personal home page -- http://home.earthlink.net/~oy/index.html
My main music page --- http://home.earthlink.net/~oy/berlioz.html
To write to me, do for my address what Androcles did for the lion
War is Peace. ** Freedom is Slavery. ** It's all Napster's fault!
--
Matthew H. Fields http://personal.www.umich.edu/~fields
Music: Splendor in Sound
Brights have a naturalistic world-view. http://www.the-brights.net/
It would not have sounded like anything, because the chaps would have
been taken to be burned at the stake so fast that their feet would not
have touched the ground.
> Would “War Pigs” or “The Wizard” have been as powerful if played on
> medieval
> instruments like lute, fiddle and harp?
No. Vastly more comical, though.
> Curious? So was Rondellus, the renowned Estonian medieval music band. They took
> 12 Black Sabbath classics and turned them into something totally unheard.
In a related story, the Finnish cello quartet Apocalyptica have been
playing and recording heavy metal for years.
--
Regards,
Jaakko Mäntyjärvi
Helsinki, Finland
"Nil significat nisi oscillat. Du vap. Du vap. Du vap."
>Who knows...maybe it will turn some metalheads onto early music!
Hah.
--
-Kolle; 15 A.A. #2035
Koji Kondo, Yo-Yo Ma, and Gustav Mahler are my Gods.
Madly Insane EAC Scientist.
Hey, if the Kronos Quartet can play Jimi Hendrix, why shouldn't a
cello quartet play heavy metal? Just another badly-needed case of the
lead pipe being pulled out of classical music's ass. The medieval
Black Sabbath CD reminds me that years ago I saw Sabbath when they
were touring with Blue Oyster Cult (the "Black and Blue" tour). In
between acts, they played Lizst and Wagner orchestral pieces. And it
worked too!
But a single hearing of that track proves conclusively that the KQ *can't*
play Hendrix. I've seen Nige Kennedy make a fair crack at Purple Haze
though...
--
Deryk Barker (To email remove nospam.)
> In a related story, the Finnish cello quartet Apocalyptica have been
> playing and recording heavy metal for years.
And fellow Finns "Ensemble Ambrosius" play the music of Frank Zappa on period instruments:
http://www.ensembleambrosius.com/zappa.html
http://www.united-mutations.com/e/ensemble_ambrosius.htm
> And fellow Finns "Ensemble Ambrosius" play the music of Frank Zappa
> on period instruments:
Whose period? Zappa's?
Ciao
A.
Francesco Zappa perhaps?
> > And fellow Finns "Ensemble Ambrosius" play the music of Frank Zappa
> > on period instruments:
>
> Whose period? Zappa's?
Right. Resurrect Don Preston's modular Moog, Eddie Jobson's Hammond, dig
up a Synclavier for the late 80s stuff....
V.
--
email me: first name at last name dot net
>Hey, if the Kronos Quartet can play Jimi Hendrix,
...badly.
--
"Flames are discouraged, except for those which quote famous (or
not-so- famous) Stooge lines. For example, it would be acceptable to
threaten to 'tear out your tonsils' or to 'gouge your eyes out'."
- alt.comedy.slapstick.3-stooges FAQ
So they play Zappa on the same instruments that were current when he
wrote his music? Far out.
--
BTR
The Glass Marble, mistaking the No. 37 Penpoint for the Four-Holed
Button, pushed it into the Yawning Chasm.
To hear music by a peerless metal guitarist, who has always maintained
that there was no discernable difference between metal and classical,
visit:
Oh, PLEASE tell me he's not back.
-Sonarrat.
> I don't make this stuff up, honest!
> -Neb
>
> ---Original Message---
> Black Sabbath songs covered by medieval music band Rondellus
> http://www.sabbatum.com/
>
> “Sabbatum” is a tribute album like no other – 12 Black Sabbath classic songs
> played by early music band Rondellus and sung in Latin language.
And they're doing quite nicely, thank you. Apparently they've made $30,000
on this one project alone. See:
http://www.cdbaby.org/stories/03/08/05/0321232.html
I have a fondness for classical versions of rock music -- when it works, it
works, and when it doesn't, it's pretty hilarious. Examples:
The Balanscu Quartet's versions of Kraftwerk are fitting because Alexander
Balanscu is an emotionless, stacatto and robotic violinist. Hearing him
reproduce the electronic beeps of "Pocket Calculator" and the doppler sounds
of car horns on "Autobahn" is amusing.
The two orchestral arrangements of Sex Pistols songs ("God Save the Queen"
and "EMI") from the soundtrack of "The Great Rock and Roll Swindle" are very
strong, but ruined by campy vocals. There was once a version of the LP
without the vocals, but I can't find a copy.
There is a whole series of "String Quartet Tribute to <ROCK BAND NAME HERE>"
CDs which are really awful. Perfunctory, and devoid of any style. Avoid at
all costs.
For pure hilarity, I recommend "The Doors Concerto", featuring Nigel
Kennedy. It made me laugh out loud a couple times.
ignatz topolino
damn I wanted to hear some 17th century wah-wah.
> Andrej Kluge <thew...@onlinehome.de> wrote:
>>> And fellow Finns "Ensemble Ambrosius" play the music of Frank
>>> Zappa on period instruments:
>>
>> Whose period? Zappa's?
> Right. Resurrect Don Preston's modular Moog, Eddie Jobson's
> Hammond, dig up a Synclavier for the late 80s stuff....
Well, in case nobody noticed my remark was meant ironically. Because,
IMHO, "period instruments" usually refers to instruments of the period
in which the musik was originally composed, right? That's why "music of
Zappa on period intruments" sounded ridiculous to me.
Ciao
A.
I watch out for my friends when they're about to have their periods.
Irony is lost on r.m.e, at least. We're pre-iron age--only classic "rock"
means anything to us ... ;-)
--
Jerry Kohl <jerom...@comcast.net>
"Légpárnás hajóm tele van angolnakat."
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOooooooooooo
******************************
Got wood?
Check out my exotic hardwood pennywhistles at fair
prices...http://www.Busmanwhistles.com
> It's hard to set hands on an analog minimoog now.
http://www.vintagesynth.org/moog/voyager.shtml
> I have a fondness for classical versions of rock music -- when it works, it
> works, and when it doesn't, it's pretty hilarious.
Transplanting one style to another is usually hilarious.
http://music.lycos.com/artist/default.asp?QW=Run+C%26W
Hearing Stevie Wonder's clavinet lines (on Superstition) played on a
banjo still cracks me up.
I have this - its very good, much better than I expected.
--
Mike Borella
mike at borella dot net
http://www.borella.net
Avant Music News: http://www.borella.net/mike/blog/
... other than compositional complexity and harmonic depth, you mean?
stePH
--
NP: Echolyn, "Until it Rains"
> clamnebula wrote:
> > I don't make this stuff up, honest!
> > -Neb
> >
> > ---Original Message---
> > Black Sabbath songs covered by medieval music band Rondellus
> > http://www.sabbatum.com/
> >
> > ěSabbatumî is a tribute album like no other ń 12 Black Sabbath classic songs
> > played by early music band Rondellus and sung in Latin language.
> >
> > Can You imagine what Black Sabbath would have sounded like if Ozzy Osbourne,
> > Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler and Bill Ward would have formed the band in the
> > 14th
> > century? Would ěWar Pigsî or ěThe Wizardî have been as powerful if played on
> > medieval
> > instruments like lute, fiddle and harp?
> >
> > Curious? So was Rondellus, the renowned Estonian medieval music band. They
> > took
> > 12 Black Sabbath classics and turned them into something totally unheard.
> >
> > You donít have to take history lessons to get the feeling. Itís all on the
> > new
> > CD Rondellus recorded ń ěSabbatumî. An amazing collection of Black Sabbath
> > tunes
> > played on medieval instruments and sung in Latin language.
>
> I have this - its very good, much better than I expected.
Isn't there a recording of the music of Mettalica done on a dozen or so
cellos?
-Owen
Yes, I think it was a string quartet. I heard a little of it and what I
heard was interesting but not remarkable. Eventually I hope to track it
down...
>
>Isn't there a recording of the music of Mettalica done on a dozen or so
>cellos?
>
>-Owen
Oh yes I've heard their stuff as well. Apocalyptica is a quartet that
does Mettalica songs on cellos. Here is their website:
http://www.apocalyptica.com/home/index.php
David Whitbeck(delurking)
You might want to check these out:
All right, Mr. Nitpicker, how about shredding, thrashing and annihilation?
Try the Meridian Brass Ensemble. They've covered Bach/Gesualdo/Gibbons and
Zappa (different albums of course). While some of their CDs have shown up
in the cutout bins, they deserve a much better fate. Good musicians, plenty
of heart and ability.
http://www.meridianartsensemble.com/disc.htm
Well worth exploring
Oops -- sorry, I screwed up both links.
>acet...@earthlink.net (stePH) wrote in message news:<59e1106e.0308...@posting.google.com>...
How about you go to hell and stay there?
"To screw up one link is tragic. To screw up both links is simply
careless."
--
Peter T. Daniels gram...@att.net
> http://home.earthlink.net/~eschoenberg/ramblinman.ra
Funny. I like the orchestral strings and their
I'm-going-to-play-my-rawhide-cliches-no-matter-what-the-melody-does
bloody mindedness.
Metallica did some things with strings, but ultimately, all these attempts
are doomed to failure imo. Mere attempts to "legitimise" one genre in terms
of another.
Strangely though, or perhaps not, if one has heard several early music
groups using really old instruments such as clackhorns, crumhorns, rattles,
weird sounding percussion instruments, bagpipe drones, then one can
appreciate and see some kind of connection with the more abrasive texture
which Rock often brings, textures which have been lost with the advent of
modern silky stringed orchestras, and muffled sounds coming from the rear.
Regards,
# http://www.users.bigpond.com/hallraylily/index.html
See You Tamara (Ozzy Osbourne)
Ray, Taree, NSW
In that latter part, are you referring to Spinal Tap's "Break like the Wind"?
>Metallica did some things with strings, but ultimately, all these attempts
>are doomed to failure imo. Mere attempts to "legitimise" one genre in terms
>of another.
I'm in pretty much complete disagreement. Rock bands doing a song
with strings can work. Ex: Eleanor Rigby. And I don't think the
purpose of using strings is to legitimize rock. The purpose is to use
a different kind of sound that a band or singer think is more
appropriate.
David Whitbeck
> It's hard to set hands on an analog minimoog now.
There's a real cult thing now for the sound of the analoque synthesizers so
I've been told.
--
Patrick
Brighton, England
"Lets Make The Water Turn Black" in the style of the Plague years...
> ridetheory <ridet...@notmail.com> wrote:
>
>> I have a fondness for classical versions of rock music -- when it works, it
>> works, and when it doesn't, it's pretty hilarious.
>
> Transplanting one style to another is usually hilarious.
>
> http://music.lycos.com/artist/default.asp?QW=Run+C%26W
>
> Hearing Stevie Wonder's clavinet lines (on Superstition) played on a
> banjo still cracks me up.
>
> V.
How about rock or folk versions of classical music?
Try Sandy Bull's arrangement of Carmina Burana played on 5-string banjo! Ray
Manzarek's arrangement (Produced By Philip Glass and Kurt Munkacsi) is a
more substantial piece and one that generally works.
The Mass, long a focus of classical music, gets a heavy-rock treatment in
Ceremony: an Electronic Mass by Pierre Henry performed by Spooky Tooth. One
review: "There are some albums out there that completely defy genre
categorization. But every once in a blue moon, an album comes along that
manages to completely defy all rational explanation. This would be one of
those albums." As a fan more of Pierre Henry than Spooky Tooth, I find this
fascinating and rewarding listening...
Not quite Metalica but consider...
Cream - As You Said: Jack Bruce on cellos,
Velvet Underground with John Cale.
Goddammitt.
I wish I had a recording of the folk-night when Cavalorn sang the folk-
version of Paranoid by Black Sabbath, accompanying himself on the
bodhran...
Lucy
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lucy Bond : www.technokitty.com sells Dane cybery tops, dresses & bustiers,
glammy fake fur, Cybertart fun, glittery make-up, rubber spiky goodness & all
things futuristic! *Updated! New goodies now available!*
or should the link fail, go to Amazon.com popular music and look up
Opium Jukebox
regards
KGH
"clamnebula" <SHELLcl...@netscape.netSHELL> wrote in message news:<bi52b.11334$99....@fe03.atl2.webusenet.com>...
> I don't make this stuff up, honest!
> -Neb
>
> ---Original Message---
> Black Sabbath songs covered by medieval music band Rondellus
> http://www.sabbatum.com/
>
> ?Sabbatum? is a tribute album like no other ? 12 Black Sabbath classic songs
> played by early music band Rondellus and sung in Latin language.
>
> Can You imagine what Black Sabbath would have sounded like if Ozzy Osbourne,
> Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler and Bill Ward would have formed the band in the 14th
> century? Would ?War Pigs? or ?The Wizard? have been as powerful if played on
> medieval
> instruments like lute, fiddle and harp?
>
> Curious? So was Rondellus, the renowned Estonian medieval music band. They took
> 12 Black Sabbath classics and turned them into something totally unheard.
>
> You don?t have to take history lessons to get the feeling. It?s all on the new
> CD Rondellus recorded ? ?Sabbatum?. An amazing collection of Black Sabbath tunes
> played on medieval instruments and sung in Latin language.
I'm the other way around. I found it tough going at first, but now I think
it's a masterpiece.
Rock music/heavy metal will never escape what gives it popular status:
constant drumming and cyclic song structure. Although Metallica's "Orion"
was a big step toward escaping this, something unequaled until "Det Som
Engang Var."
Share mp3s of ambient, industrial, synthpop, metal, folk, classical,
romantic and popular music on the neoclassical music hub, using the
DirectConnect file sharing network.
Site:
http://www.anus.com/metal/about/mp3/neoclassical/
Hub:
dchub://neoclassical.no-ip.org:412
Were any of these actually attempts to "legitimise" or "escape", or
were they perhaps just attempts to distinguish one sound from another
within a genre?
--
Matthew H. Fields http://personal.www.umich.edu/~fields
Music: Splendor in Sound
Brights have a naturalistic world-view. http://www.the-brights.net/
For an even stranger transplant, try Dynamite Hack's covers of 'Boys in
the Hood' and 'Gin and Juice'.
You'll never take gangsta rap seriously again *if you ever did in the
first place*
And leave us not forget "Mass in F minor" by the Electric Prunes. I've
never heard it, but I saw it in a record bin.
Barry Goldwater
Play that Funky Music, Cyborg
http://www.geocities.com/stagevitaminic/cyborg.htm