Pachelbel - Chaconne in F Minor
Uploader Comments (HARMONICO101)
Top Comments
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People is unfair saying that Pachelbel is a "one hit wonder" cause they only know his Canon.
I like people who knows before to talk.
This piece is so beautiful, I love it...
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Terms such as "one hit wonder" should be used in their historical context only. In his time, Pachelbel was immensely popular and influential. If 300 years from now "Let It Be" was the only widely known Beetle's song because everyone was enamoured of that lovely 8 chord progression, that wouldn't mean they were a one hit wonder in their time.
All Comments (70)
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@Cojonimo is Pajelbel, Pahelbel haha
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after Buxtehude's Chaccone in E minor, This is the most beautiful, i love to Pachelbel
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@HARMONICO101 @peres010492 Well, Bach is a composer of the Northern German organ style, while Pachelbel was a southerner. Northerners (like Seelinck or Buxtehude) liked to use more disharmonies and their musical thinking was more complex (see the Art of the Fugure, for example). Southerners' works are more solemn, and in some sense, more religious (maybe an Italian influence). But there are similarities, that's undeniable.
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@TheMusicalmasquerade aparently it's sha - cun (or so a website told me?)
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As i remember, Johann was a friend of Bach's family, until he moved to Erfurt. Anyway, Johann Sebastian Bach has no chance to evade Pachelbel's influence.
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how do you pronounce chaccone? (stupid people phonetics please :P)
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0 people...Oh wait
How is Pachelbel correctly pronounced??
Is there maybe any recording of the pronunciation of his name on youtube?
Couldnt find one.
Cojonimo 2 years ago
Pah-Kell-Bell
:)
HARMONICO101 2 years ago 8
There is some (not tooooo much, but some) similarity between Bach and Pachelbel works, no?
peres010492 3 years ago
Yes. Bach was not a direct pupil of Pachelbel, but there is a bit of his influence in Bach's organ music.
HARMONICO101 3 years ago