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    Tendo City Tendo City: Metropolitan District Ramble City Hello

     
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    Hello
    Rocky Raccoon
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    #1
    25th April 2006, 7:55 PM
    hey everyone, allow me to introduce myself. I'm Rocky (not my real name) and I'm an alchoholic--no wait, wrong forum. I'm Rocky Raccoon and I randomly found this place so I thought I'd post. so... how is everyone? and what is a tendo?

    oh I get it, ninTENDO. Haha, clever. ;)

    so say hi or call me a n00b or whatever. maybe i'll post again. :loopy:
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    Smoke
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    #2
    25th April 2006, 8:33 PM
    How the hell did you find us? The jig is up, everybody scram! No seriously how? Oh and welcome.
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    A Black Falcon
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    #3
    25th April 2006, 9:40 PM
    ... It's not an IP anyone on this site has used before, so it probably is actually a new person... :)

    Generally new people come here for one reason: When a current member tells someone they know about it. Though the google bots do seem to love us...
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    Weltall
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    #4
    25th April 2006, 9:53 PM
    [COW]kllk[/COW]

    Anyone whose name is a Beatles song reference is okay by me!

    Link

    Ha, he lives in Colorado and he's the same age as OB1... conspiracy theories abound!
    YOU CANNOT HIDE FOREVER
    WE STAND AT THE DOOR
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    Dark Jaguar
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    #5
    25th April 2006, 10:13 PM
    I thought he was refering to that game Pocky and Rocky...
    "On two occasions, I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able to rightly apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question." ~ Charles Babbage (1791-1871)
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    The Former DMiller
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    #6
    26th April 2006, 2:57 AM
    No, he's from the black mountain hills of Dakota...except those hills are in Colorado. Anyway, always good to see our yearly new member. Don't let the lazyfatbum scare you away.
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    Rocky Raccoon
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    #7
    26th April 2006, 5:38 AM
    such a kind welcome! yes indeed, my name is from the awesome beatles song! i really did randomly find this place while searching for nintendo por--er, while searching for rev info on google. and yah, i live in colorado as you can see. i'd tell you the town but i'm afraid of stalking.

    actually i lied, i'm a google bot. ask me a question, i'm like the god bot thingy but even better.
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    etoven
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    #8
    26th April 2006, 6:26 AM
    Well see how much he likes this place after lazy posts... :)

    Ow. and welcome Mr. Raccoon!
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    lazyfatbum
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    #9
    26th April 2006, 7:26 AM
    WTF that is unfair! Confused you have no right to say that I purposely try to scare away new members, WHY would I do that? You cant just suddenly accuse someone of doing something like that. Jesus.
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    Great Rumbler
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    #10
    26th April 2006, 8:50 AM
    Colorado? Hmm...
    Sometimes you get the scorpion.
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    lazyfatbum
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    #11
    26th April 2006, 11:51 AM
    No, i think the pic was taken in Africa, or Montreal.
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    A Black Falcon
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    #12
    26th April 2006, 12:04 PM
    Quote:WTF that is unfair! you have no right to say that I purposely try to scare away new members, WHY would I do that? You cant just suddenly accuse someone of doing something like that. Jesus.

    Maybe because you do exactly that? :)
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    Great Rumbler
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    #13
    26th April 2006, 12:40 PM
    Quote:No, i think the pic was taken in Africa, or Montreal.

    No, I was referring to Rocky Raccoon putting that down as his location.

    That picture is really disgusting, by the way.
    Sometimes you get the scorpion.
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    A Black Falcon
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    #14
    26th April 2006, 1:18 PM
    That was why he posted it, I'm sure.
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    lazyfatbum
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    #15
    26th April 2006, 1:24 PM
    It is beautiful post modern expressionism.

    but boy look at the ass on him! he's sucking that hole dry, I bet the cows like that farm. but here's the question of the day; why suck out the cow feces when you could kill and eat the cow and make your OWN feces?
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    Rocky Raccoon
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    #16
    26th April 2006, 2:23 PM
    Wow, well that was interesting. so what exactly is wrong with colorado, and why does it seem like people think that I'm someone else?
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    A Black Falcon
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    #17
    26th April 2006, 6:47 PM
    Lazy usually does his work through text, not pictures, but the sentiment was the same... :D

    He's just like that sometimes, you'll get used to it or leave.
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    Rocky Raccoon
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    #18
    26th April 2006, 6:49 PM
    i'll remember not to eat while browsing the forum then. :D
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    Weltall
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    #19
    26th April 2006, 10:26 PM
    lazyfatbum Wrote:No, i think the pic was taken in Africa, or Montreal.
    rotflmao
    YOU CANNOT HIDE FOREVER
    WE STAND AT THE DOOR
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    EdenMaster
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    #20
    27th April 2006, 7:14 PM
    The reason we're thinking you're someone else is a fairly prestigious and well-known member here was your age and also from Colorado, and he left a while ago in a huff vowing never to return. The coincidences make us giggle.

    But welcome! Not much to see here but...um...I can't think of a good way to end that sentence. Enjoy your stay, though.

    I thought at first glance his name was an homage to those annoying guys on the SMB3 airships that threw hammers at you. Weren't they called Rocky Raccoons?
    The Earthworker Race has ended.  Everybody wins.
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    Weltall
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    #21
    27th April 2006, 7:55 PM
    Now somewhere in the black mountain hills of Dakota,
    There lived a young boy named Rocky Raccoon(na)
    And one day his woman ran off with another guy
    Hit young Rocky in the eye
    Rocky didn't like that he said I'm gonna get that boy
    so one day he walked into town
    Booked himself a room in the local saloon

    Rock Raccoon checked into his room
    Only to find Gideon's bible
    Rocky had come equipped with the gun
    to shoot off the legs of his rival

    His rival it seems had broken his dreams
    By stealing the girls of his fancy
    Her name was Magill, and she called herself Lil
    But everyone knew her as Nancy

    Now she and her man who called himself Dan
    Were in the next room at the hoe-down
    Rocky burst in and grinning a grin
    He said Danny boy this is a show down

    Daniel was hot he drew first and shot
    And Rocky collapsed in the corner
    Da, da, da, da, da

    Now the doctor came in stinking of gin
    And proceeded to lie on the table
    He said Rocky you met your match
    And Rocky said, Doc it's only a scratch
    And I'll be better
    I'll be better doc as soon as I am able

    And now Rocky Raccoon he fell back in his room
    only to find Gideon's bible
    Gideon checked out and he left it no doubt
    To help with good Rocky's revival
    Ah, oh yeah, yeah
    Da, da, da, da
    YOU CANNOT HIDE FOREVER
    WE STAND AT THE DOOR
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    A Black Falcon
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    #22
    27th April 2006, 8:22 PM
    Quote:The reason we're thinking you're someone else is a fairly prestigious and well-known member here was your age and also from Colorado, and he left a while ago in a huff vowing never to return. The coincidences make us giggle.

    I thought that the only way I'd ever pass him in posts is if he quit, and well... only a bit under 9,000 behind now... :)
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    Rocky Raccoon
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    #23
    28th April 2006, 5:24 AM
    Ryan Wrote:Now somewhere in the black mountain hills of Dakota,
    There lived a young boy named Rocky Raccoon(na)
    And one day his woman ran off with another guy
    Hit young Rocky in the eye
    Rocky didn't like that he said I'm gonna get that boy
    so one day he walked into town
    Booked himself a room in the local saloon

    Rock Raccoon checked into his room
    Only to find Gideon's bible
    Rocky had come equipped with the gun
    to shoot off the legs of his rival

    His rival it seems had broken his dreams
    By stealing the girls of his fancy
    Her name was Magill, and she called herself Lil
    But everyone knew her as Nancy

    Now she and her man who called himself Dan
    Were in the next room at the hoe-down
    Rocky burst in and grinning a grin
    He said Danny boy this is a show down

    Daniel was hot he drew first and shot
    And Rocky collapsed in the corner
    Da, da, da, da, da

    Now the doctor came in stinking of gin
    And proceeded to lie on the table
    He said Rocky you met your match
    And Rocky said, Doc it's only a scratch
    And I'll be better
    I'll be better doc as soon as I am able

    And now Rocky Raccoon he fell back in his room
    only to find Gideon's bible
    Gideon checked out and he left it no doubt
    To help with good Rocky's revival
    Ah, oh yeah, yeah
    Da, da, da, da

    thank you ryan. i was going to cry from everyone thinking that my name came from anything other than the awesome beatle's song. don't you people like the beatles? who doesn't like the beatles??
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    lazyfatbum
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    #24
    28th April 2006, 8:24 AM
    Yoko Ono
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    The Former DMiller
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    #25
    28th April 2006, 1:46 PM
    I knew it was from the Beatles song. They are #3 in my Top 5 Best Musicians of All-Time.
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    Dark Jaguar
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    #26
    28th April 2006, 1:52 PM
    They seem so "floaty". Eh, I don't dislike them. I've just never been compelled to listen to them.

    But hey, anyone else play that Pocky and Rocky game on the SNES long ago? I think it involves magical leaves or something.
    "On two occasions, I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able to rightly apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question." ~ Charles Babbage (1791-1871)
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    The Former DMiller
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    #27
    28th April 2006, 2:39 PM
    "Floaty?" Never really heard that used to describe a band before, but I think I know what you mean. The Beatles' songs are much deeper than their catchy melodies will lend you to believe, though.
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    Rocky Raccoon
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    #28
    28th April 2006, 4:19 PM
    lol, what does floaty mean in this context?
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    lazyfatbum
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    #29
    28th April 2006, 6:26 PM
    Floaty

    \Float"y\, a. Swimming on the surface; buoyant; light. --Sir W. Raleigh.


    Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, © 1996, 1998 MICRA, Inc.

    floaty

    adj : tending to float on a liquid or rise in air or gas; "buoyant balloons"; "buoyant balsawood boats"; "a floaty scarf" [syn: buoyant]


    Source: WordNet ® 2.0, 2003 Princeton University

    floaty

    n : Dark Jaguars dislikes certain types of sound. All jaguars that are dark have no musical ability (see bitter), they will often retaliate by demanding that its opinion be shared though it is uneducated on the matter and is unrealistic, often credited for bad word use. "eh, I dont dislike them" --Dark Jaguar; "They seem so floaty." --Dark Jaguar

    Source: Tendo City ©, 2006 lazyfatbum ®
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    Rocky Raccoon
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    #30
    28th April 2006, 7:09 PM
    so the beatles make light music?
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    Great Rumbler
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    #31
    28th April 2006, 7:48 PM
    I don't think DJ really knows much...well, ANYTHING actually, about most of the things that we take for granted.
    Sometimes you get the scorpion.
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    Smoke
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    #32
    28th April 2006, 10:51 PM
    No, The Beatles are great. I was at a party one time and told someone I liked Led Zeppelin. They said "you probably like The Beatles too" as if it were an insult.
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    A Black Falcon
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    #33
    28th April 2006, 10:56 PM
    Quote:I don't think DJ really knows much...well, ANYTHING actually, about most of the things that we take for granted.

    I'm one of the more music-illiterate people out there, but I do at least know the Beetles... but then again, my mother was a fan, so she played it sometimes. It's alright. But like most music cds (I may not buy them, but we've got many lying around the house, if I had interest) I don't listen to it.

    Quote:But hey, anyone else play that Pocky and Rocky game on the SNES long ago? I think it involves magical leaves or something.

    Fun shooter-ish game, wasn't it?
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    Rocky Raccoon
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    #34
    29th April 2006, 6:25 AM
    so what kind of music do you guys like? mostly videogame music or somethin?
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    Great Rumbler
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    #35
    29th April 2006, 7:04 AM
    Ray Lynch, Vangelis, Van Halen, Queen, Pink Floyd, They Might Be Giants, and Steve Roach.
    Sometimes you get the scorpion.
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    Rocky Raccoon
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    #36
    29th April 2006, 7:37 AM
    that's cool.
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    Paco
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    #37
    29th April 2006, 7:51 AM
    Rocky Raccoon Wrote:so what kind of music do you guys like? mostly videogame music or somethin?

    everything, and I do have one video game soundtrack, Kameo (it's fucking beautiful).

    My current obsessions are the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Sneaker Pimps, Madonna, Gorillaz, Goldfrapp, and Tracy Bonham.

    Welcome.
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    The Former DMiller
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    #38
    29th April 2006, 8:45 AM
    I like a lot of music. My current top 5 would be Led Zeppelin, The Who, The Beatles, Bruce Springsteen, and the Rolling Stones. Other bands I like include Wilco, The Flaming Lips, Elvis Costello, Snoop Dogg, Johnny Cash, Tom Petty, and Ben Folds.
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    lazyfatbum
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    #39
    29th April 2006, 12:38 PM
    grateful dead, moby, doors, prince, miss patricola, sting, floyd, beatles, temptations, starship, simon and garfunkle, bing, massive attack, willie nelson, zeppelin, elvis, motorhead/propeller etc, jackson, queen, eagles, ludicrous, rotting christ, jamiroquai, nin, godflesh, elton, marylin manson, sinatra, oingo boingo, guns and roses, rolling stones, vaughn de leath, james fucking brown, helen kane, hendrix, rem, al jolson, jelly roll, parker dizzy miles thelonious benny duke billy buck basie mulligan way too many to list... and of course my big bands which i cant live without lets just copy paste from wiki


    Louis Armstrong
    Count Basie (Count Basie Orchestra)
    Cab Calloway (Cab Calloway Orchestra)
    Rob McConnell (the Boss Brass)
    Tommy Dorsey (Dorsey Brothers Orchestra, Tommy Dorsey Orchestra)
    Jimmy Dorsey (Dorsey Brothers Orchestra, Jimmy Dorsey and His Orchestra)
    Eddy Duchin (Eddy Duchin and His Orchestra)
    Duke Ellington (Duke Ellington Orchestra)
    Gil Evans
    Maynard Ferguson
    Bob Florence (the Limited Edition)
    Jan Garber (Jan Garber Orchestra)
    Benny Goodman (Benny Goodman and His Orchestra)
    Gordon Goodwin (Big Phat Band)
    Fletcher Henderson
    Woody Herman
    Harry James
    Isham Jones
    Quincy Jones
    Louis Jordan
    Thad Jones
    Sammy Kaye
    Stan Kenton
    Tom Kubis
    Kay Kyser
    Ted Lewis
    Guy Lombardo
    Billy May
    Glenn Miller
    Vaughn Monroe
    Ray Noble
    Buddy Rich
    Nelson Riddle
    Maria Schneider (Maria Schneider Orchestra)
    Ben Selvin
    Brian Setzer
    Artie Shaw
    Fred Waring
    Chick Webb
    Ted Weems
    Lawrence Welk
    Paul Whiteman
    Gerald Wilson
    [edit]
    Canadian bandleaders

    Guy Lombardo(Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians)
    [edit]
    Australian bandleaders

    Warren Daly and Ed Wilson (The Daly/Wilson Big Band)
    Bob Johnson (The Bob Johnson Big Band)
    [edit]
    British bandleaders

    (taken from Julien Vedey's book Band Leaders (London, 1950):
    Ambrose
    Ivy Benson
    Stanley Black
    Tito Burns
    Billy Cotton
    Harry Davidson
    Ray Ellington
    Geraldo
    Carroll Gibbons
    Henry Hall (BBC Dance Orchestra)
    Ted Heath
    Jack Hylton
    Jack Jackson
    Harry Leader
    Joe Loss
    Major Glenn Miller
    Harry Parry
    Jack Payne
    Oscar Rabin and Harry Davis
    Edmundo Ros
    Harry Roy
    Victor Silvester
    Debroy Somers
    Cyril Stapleton
    Lew Stone
    Billy Ternent
    Jay Whidden
    Eric Winstone
    Michael Senior and Roger Palmer
    [edit]
    German bandleaders

    Roberto Delgado
    Max Greger
    James Last
    Jo Ment
    Günter Norris
    Hugo Strasser
    Kai Warner

    williams, horner, elliot goldenthal, jerry goldsmith, zimmer, james newton howard, glass, elfman, poledouris, silvestri, shore, mark isham gets a mention because the crash soundtrack is cool, cocole tan dun orchestra dunno if i'm spelling that right (with yoyoma), harry gregson-williams but only because of narnia; fuck him we already have a hans zimmer, eric serra, feidel, too many to mention

    SOME OF THESE GUYS SUCK, i have not edited the list its straight from wiki but the vast majority are must-haves. I'd list some greek and roman shit and the like which i'm studying now but unfortunately they didnt write their shit down.

    Early Medieval composers ( Born before 1150)

    Adam de St. Victor
    Pope Gregory I
    Godric (Saint Godric)
    Hildegard of Bingen
    Hucbald
    Notker (Notker Balbulus)
    Odo of Arezzo
    Odo of Cluny
    Tuotilo (Tutilo)
    [edit]
    Middle Medieval composers (born 1150-1300)

    Léonin
    Pérotin
    W. de Wycombe
    Petrus de Cruce (Pierre de la Croix)
    Berenguier de Palou
    Arnaut Daniel
    Giraut de Bornelh
    Marcabru
    Peire Cardenal
    Raymond Lull
    Bernart de Ventadorn
    Bertran de Born
    Dante
    Jaufre Rudel
    Alfonso X of Castile
    Wolfram von Eschenbach
    Walther von der Vogelweide
    Neidhart von Reuenthal
    Azalais de Porcairagues
    Castelloza
    Comtessa de Dìa
    [edit]
    Late Medieval composers (born 1300-1450)

    Philippe de Vitry
    Guillaume de Machaut
    Jehan de Lescurel
    Borlet
    Solage
    François Andrieu
    Francesco Landini
    Gherardello da Firenze
    Andrea da Firenze
    Giovanni da Firenze (aka Giovanni da Cascia)
    Paolo da Firenze (c. 1355 – c. 1436)
    Donato da Cascia
    Lorenzo Masini
    Bartolino da Padova
    Niccolò da Perugia
    Maestro Piero
    Anthonello de Caserta
    Philippus de Caserta (aka Philipoctus de Caserta)
    Johannes Ciconia
    Matteo da Perugia
    Jacopo da Bologna
    Lorenzo da Firenze (d. 1372 or 1373)
    Grimace
    Jacob Senleches
    Baude Cordier
    Zacara da Teramo
    Giovanni Mazzuoli (Giovanni degli Organi) (1360-1426)
    [edit]
    Transitional composers between the Medieval and Renaissance eras ( born 1400-1450)

    Antonius de Civitate Austrie (Antonio da Cividale) (fl. c.1392-1421)
    Johannes Cesaris (fl. c.1406-1417)
    Roy Henry (very likely King Henry V) (fl. c. 1410)
    Pycard (fl. c. 1410)
    Richard Loqueville (d.1418)
    Byttering (possibly Thomas Byttering) (fl. c. 1410-1420)
    Bartolomeo da Bologna (fl. 1405-1427)
    Jacobus Vide (fl.1405–1433)
    John Dunstable (c.1380-1453)
    Hugo de Lantins (fl. c.1430)
    Arnold de Lantins (fl. c.1430)
    Leonel Power (d.1445)
    Gilles Binchois (c.1400-1460)
    Johannes Brassart (c.1400-1455)
    Guillaume Dufay (c.1400-1474)
    [edit]

    Transitional composers from the Medieval era (1400-1450)

    Composers of a transitional period between the late Medieval and early Renaissance eras.
    Giovanni Mazzuoli (Giovanni degli Organi) (1360-1426)
    Antonio da Cividale (Antonius de Civitate Austrie) (fl. c.1392-1421)
    Antonius Romanus (fl. 1400-1432)
    Johannes Cesaris (fl. c.1406-1417)
    Roy Henry (very likely King Henry V) (fl. c. 1410)
    Pycard (fl. c. 1410)
    Richard Loqueville (d.1418)
    Byttering (possibly Thomas Byttering) (fl. c. 1410-1420)
    Bartolomeo da Bologna (fl. 1405-1427)
    Pierre Fontaine (c.1380-c.1450)
    Jacobus Vide (fl.1405–1433)
    Guillaume Legrant (Lemarcherier) (fl. 1405-1449)
    Reginald Liebert (fl. c.1425–1435)
    Clement Liebert (fl. 1433–1454)
    Nicolas Grenon (c.1375-1456)
    John Dunstable (c.1380-1453)
    Hugo de Lantins (fl. c.1430)
    Arnold de Lantins (fl. c.1430)
    Leonel Power (d.1445)
    Gilles Binchois (c.1400-1460)
    Johannes Brassart (c.1400-1455)
    Guillaume Dufay (c.1400-1474)
    [edit]
    Early Renaissance composers (1450-1500)

    Guillaume le Rouge (fl. 1450–1465)
    Nicolaus Zacharie (d. 1466)
    John Browne (?-1505)
    Conrad Paumann (c.1410-1473)
    Johannes Pullois (d. 1478)
    Johannes Ockeghem (c.1415-1497)
    Gilles Joye (1424/1425-1483)
    Johannes Regis (c.1425-c.1496)
    Walter Frye (fl. c.1450-1475)
    Robert Morton (c.1430-after 1475)
    Antoine Busnois (c.1430-1492)
    Juan de Urrede (c.1430-after 1482)
    Adrien Basin (fl.1457–1476)
    Firminus Caron (fl. c.1460-c.1475)
    Juan Pérez de Gijón (fl. c.1460-1500)
    Francisco de la Torre (fl. c.1460-1500)
    Guillaume Faugues (fl. c.1460-1475)
    Juan de Triana (fl. c.1460-1500)
    Richard Hygons (c.1435-c1509)
    Johannes Tinctoris (c.1435-1511)
    Eloy d'Amerval (fl. 1455-1508)
    Colinet de Lannoy (d. 1497)
    Johannes Martini (c.1440-1497 or 1498)
    Heinrich Finck (1444 or 1445-1527)
    Hayne van Ghizeghem (c.1445-c.1480)
    Johannes de Stokem (c.1445-1487)
    Gaspar van Weerbeke (c.1445-after 1517)
    Alexander Agricola (1446?-1506)
    Philippe Basiron (c.1449-1491)
    Josquin des Prez (c1450-1521)
    Edmund Turges (c1450 - ?)
    Walter Lambe (c1450 - after 1504)
    Matthaeus Pipelare (c.1450-c.1515)
    Robert Wilkinson (c1450-1515 or later)
    Heinrich Isaac (c.1450-1517)
    Jean Japart (fl. c.1474-1481)
    Loyset Compère (c1450-1518)
    Arnolt Schlick (c1450-c1525)
    Franchinus Gaffurius (1451-1522)
    Jacob Obrecht (c1453-1505)
    Jacobus Barbireau (1455-1491)
    Jean Mouton (c1459-1522)
    Paul Hofhaimer (1459-1537)
    Pierre de La Rue (c1460-1518)
    Antoine Brumel (1460-after 1520)
    Robert Fayrfax (1464-1521)
    Richard Davy (c1465-c1507)
    William Cornysh (c1465-1523)
    Pedro de Escobar (c1465-1535)
    Juan del Encina (1468-c1529)
    Marchetto Cara (c1470-1525?)
    Carpentras (c1470-1548)
    Antoine de Févin (c1470-1511 or 1512)
    Robert de Févin (fl. late 15th, early 16th c.) (brother of Antoine de Févin)
    Mathieu Gascongne (fl. early 16th c.)
    Francisco de Peñalosa (c1470-1528)
    Bartolomeo Tromboncino (c1470-c1535)
    [edit]
    Middle Renaissance composers (1500-1550)

    Ninot le Petit (fl. c. 1500-1520)
    Pierre Alamire (c.1470-1536)
    Antonius Divitis (c.1470-c.1530)
    Richard Sampson (fl. c. 1516)
    Vincenzo Capirola (1474-after 1548)
    Bartolomeo degli Organi (1474-1539)
    Nicolas Champion (c.1475-1533)
    Filippo de Lurano (c1475-c1520)
    Philippe Verdelot (c1475-before 1552)
    Marco Dall'Aquila (c.1480-after 1538)
    Jean l'Héritier (1480-1552) (also Heretier, Lhéritier, Lirithier)
    Gasparo Alberti (c1480-1560)
    Jean Richafort (c1480-1547)
    Matheo Flecha (the elder) (in Catalan, Mateu Fletxa el Vell) (?1481-?1553)
    Hans Buchner (1483-c1540)
    Jacquet of Mantua (1483-1559)
    Robert Carver (1484-1568)
    Nicholas Ludford (1485-1557)
    Hugh Aston (c1485-1558)
    Clément Janequin (c1485-1558)
    Pierre Moulu (c1485-c1550)
    Martin Agricola (1486-1556)
    Ludwig Senfl (c1486-c1542)
    John Taverner (c1490-1545)
    Leonhard Kleber (c1490-1556)
    Bernardo Pisano (1490-1548)
    Thomas Crecquillon (c1490-?1557)
    Sandrin (Pierre Regnault) (c.1490-c.1560)
    Claudin de Sermisy (c1490-1562)
    Adrian Willaert (c1490-1562)
    Henry VIII of England (1491-1547)
    Francesco de Layolle (1492-c1540)
    Lupus Hellinck (c.1494-1541)
    Lupus (c.1495-after 1530)
    Costanzo Festa (c1495-1545)
    Nicolas Gombert (c1495-c1560)
    David Peebles (fl. c1530-1579)
    Pietro Paolo Borrono (fl. c1531-1549)
    Johann Walter (1496-1570)
    Francesco da Milano (1497-1543)
    Luis de Narvaez (fl. c1540)
    Arnold von Bruck (c.1500-1554)
    Tomaso Cimello (c. 1500-after 1579)
    Heliodoro de Paiva (c1500-1552)
    Cristóbal de Morales (c1500-1553)
    Luis de Milán (c1500-c1561)
    Tielman Susato (c1500-c1562)
    Bartolomé de Escobedo (c1500-1563)
    Jacques Buus (c1500-1565)
    Hilaire Penet (1501?-15??)
    Francesco Corteccia (1502-1571)
    Giovanni Paolo Paladini (fl. c1540-1560)
    Marco da l'Aquila (fl. c1505-1555)
    Jacques Arcadelt (1505?-1568) (also known as Jacob Arcadelt)
    Cornelius Canis (c.1505-1561)
    Christopher Tye (c1505-1572?)
    Thomas Tallis (c1505-1585)
    Johannes Lupi (c1506-1539)
    Bálint Bakfark (1507-1576) (aka Valentin/Valentine/Valentinus Bakfark)
    Paolo Aretino (1508-1584)
    Giovanni Battista Conforti (fl. c1550)
    Jacob Clemens non Papa (c1510-c1555) (Jacques Clément)
    Guillaume Morlaye (c1510-c1558)
    Claudio Veggio (c1510-15??)
    Loys Bourgeois (c1510-1560) (also known as Louis Bourgeois)
    Pierre de Manchicourt (c1510-1564)
    Juan Bermudo (c1510-c1565)
    Antonio de Cabezón (1510-1566)
    Jean Maillard (c1510-c1570)
    Diego Ortiz (c1510-c1570)
    Claude Goudimel (c1510-1572)
    Alonso Mudarra (c1510-1580)
    Andrea Gabrieli (c.1510-1586)
    Giuseppe Guami (1510-1586)
    Dominique Phinot (c.1510-c.1556)
    Vincenzo Ruffo (c.1510-1587)
    Pierre Certon (d.1572)
    Agostino Agostini (d.1569)
    Ambrose Lupo (d.1591)
    Giovanni Domenico da Nola (c.1515-1592)
    John Sheppard (c1515-1559)
    Cypriano de Rore (c1515-1565)
    Tomás de Santa María (c1515-1570)
    Adrian Le Roy (fl. c1550-1580)
    Antonio Carreira (c1515-c1590)
    Leonardo Meldart Fiamengo (fl. c1550-1600)
    Fabrizio Dentice (fl. c1550-1600)
    Gioseffo Zarlino (1517-1590)
    John Black (c1520-1587)
    Vincenzo Galilei (c1520-1591)
    Didier Lupi Second (c.1520-after 1559)
    Claude Gervaise (fl. 1540-1560)
    [edit]
    Late Renaissance composers (1550-1600)

    Hubert Waelrant (c.1517-1595)
    Giovanni Animuccia (c.1520-1571)
    Vicente Lusitano (fl. 1550-1561)
    Philippe de Monte (1521-1603)
    Miguel de Fuenllana (fl. 1553-1578)
    Girolamo Cavazzoni (c1525-after 1577)
    Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (c1525-1594)
    Baldassare Donato (1525 to 1530-1603)
    Hermann Finck (1527-1558)
    Annibale Padovano (1527-1575)
    John Angus (fl. c1562-1595)
    Francisco Guerrero (1528-1599)
    William Mundy (c1528-before 1591)
    Alberto da Ripa (1529-1551)
    Costanzo Porta (c1529-1601)
    Jacobus Vaet (c1529-1567
    Rodrigo de Ceballos (c1530-1591)
    Guillaume Boni (c1530-1594)
    Elias Nikolaus Ammerbach (c1530-1597)
    Fabrizzio Caroso (c1530-after 1600)
    Guillaume Costeley (1530-1606)
    Matheo Flecha (the younger) (in Catalan, Mateu Fletxa el Jove) (c.1530-1604)
    Nicolas de La Grotte (1530-c.1600)
    Claude Le Jeune (1530-1600)
    Orlandus Lassus (c1531-1594) (also known as Orlando di Lasso)
    Jacobus de Kerle (1531 or 1532-1591)
    Hernando Franco (1532-1585)
    Giammateo Asola (1532 or earlier-1609)
    Claudio Merulo (1533-1604)
    Lodovico Agostini (1534-1590)
    Francesco Soto de Langa (1534-1619)
    Antoine de Bertrand (c.1530/1540-1581)
    Pietro Vinci (c1535-1584)
    Filippo Azzaiolo (fl. 1557-1569)
    Girolamo Conversi (fl. c1570-1590)
    Annibale Stabile (c.1535-1595)
    Giaches de Wert (1535-1596)
    Johannes Matelart (before 1538-1607)
    Robert Whyte (1538-1574)
    Paschal de l'Estocart (?1539-after 1584)
    Giovanni Leonardo Primavera (1540-1585)
    Maddalena Casulana (c1540-c1590)
    Vincenzo Bellavere (15??-1587)
    Alessandro Striggio (c1540-1592)
    Francisco de Peraza (fl. c1575-c1600)
    Gioseffo Guami (c1540-1611)
    Hernando de Cabezón (1541-1602)
    Anthony Holborne (?-1602)
    Andreas Pevernage (1542/1543-1591)
    William Byrd (1543-1623)
    Alfonso Ferrabosco (I) (1543-1588)
    Giovanni Maria Nanino (Nanini) (1543 or 1544-1607)
    Francesco Guami (c.1544-1602)
    Girolamo Dalla Casa (d.1601)
    Jacob Polonais (c1545 - 1605)
    Luzzasco Luzzaschi (c1545-1607)
    Giulio Caccini (c1545-1618)
    Marc Antonio Ingegneri (c1547-1592)
    Manuel Mendes (c1547-1605)
    Francesco Soriano (c1548-1621)
    Tomas Luis de Victoria (1548-1611)
    Eustache Du Caurroy (1549-1609)
    Giovanni de Macque (c.1549-1614)
    Emilio de' Cavalieri (c1550-1602)
    Jacques Champion (before 1555-1642)
    Jacobus Gallus (Jacob Handl) (1550-1591)
    Pomponio Nenna (c1550-1613)
    Pedro de Cristo (c1550-1618)
    Orazio Vecchi (1550-1605)
    Girolamo Belli (1552-c.1620)
    Leonhard Lechner (c1553-1606)
    Luca Marenzio (c1553-1599)
    Paolo Bellasio (1554-1594)
    Girolamo Diruta (c1554-after 1610)
    Alonso Lobo (c1555-1617)
    John Mundy (c.1555-1630)
    Nicholas Strogers (fl. c1590-1620)
    Gabriele Villani (c1555-1625)
    Manuel Rodrigues Coelho (c1555-c1635)
    Richardo Rogniono (15?? - 1620)
    Johannes Nucius (c.1556-1620)
    Giovanni Croce (c1557-1609)
    Alfonso Fontanelli (1557-1622)
    Jacques Mauduit (1557-1627)
    Thomas Morley (1557-1603)
    Giovanni Gabrieli (1557-1612)
    Giovanni Bassano (c1558-1617)
    Giulio Belli (c1560-c1621)
    Ruggiero Giovannelli (c1560-1625)
    Antonio Il Verso (c1560-1621)
    Giovanni Bernardino Nanino (1560-1623)
    Peter Philips (1560-1628)
    Hieronymus Praetorius (1560-1629)
    William Brade (1560-1630)
    Dario Castello (c1560-c1640)
    Felice Anerio (c1560-1614)
    Jacopo Peri (1561-1633)
    Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck (1562-1621)
    Hans Leo Hassler (1562-1612)
    John Bull (1562-1628)
    John Dowland (1563-1626)
    Giles Farnaby (c1563-1640)
    Cornelis Verdonck (1563-1625)
    Kryštof Harant z Polžic a Bezdružic (1564-1621)
    Giulio Cesare Martinengo (1564 or 1568-1613)
    Sebastián Aguilera de Heredia (1565-1627)
    Ascanio Mayone (1565-1627)
    Duarte Lobo (c1565-1647)
    Alessandro Piccinini (1566-1638)
    Manuel Cardoso (1566-1650)
    Carlo Gesualdo (1560-1613)
    Thomas Campion (1567-1620)
    Christoph Demantius (1567-1643)
    Claudio Monteverdi (1567-1643)
    Adriano Banchieri (1568-1634)
    Diomedes Cato (c1570-after 1615)
    Giovanni Paolo Cima (1570-1622)
    Joan Pau Pujol (1570-1626)
    Alfonso Ferrabosco (II) (c1570-1628)
    Michael Praetorius (c1571-1621)
    Thomas Lupo (1571-1627)
    Daniel Bacheler (1572-1618)
    Thomas Tomkins (1572-1656)
    Claudio Pari (1574-after 1619)
    John Wilbye (1574-1638)
    William Simmes (c1575-c1625)
    John Coprario (c1575-1626)
    John Maynard (c1576 - before 1633)
    Thomas Weelkes (1576-1623)
    Melchior Franck (1579-1639)
    Sigismondo d'India (c1582-1629)
    Orlando Gibbons (1583-1625)
    Antonio Cifra (1584-1629)
    John Jenkins (1592-1678)
    William Corkine (15?? - after 1617)
    Richard Sumarte (15?? - after 1630)

    (i'm really finicky with barouque, so i wont list anyone, it's a very personal taste and ALOT of it just background music for rich people)

    Baroque era/Classical era transition composers (born before 1710)

    Lodovico Giustini (1685 - 1743)
    Jean-Baptiste Masse (c1700 - c1756)
    Michel Blavet (1700 - 1768)
    Johan Agrell (1701 - 1765)
    Jean-Fery Rebel (the younger) (1701 - 1775)
    Giovanni Battista Sammartini (c1701 - 1775)
    Johann Ernst Eberlin (1702 - 1762)
    Johann Gottlieb Graun (c1702-1771)
    Carl Heinrich Graun (c1703-1759)
    Giovanni Battista Pescetti (c1704 - c1766)
    Baldassare Galuppi (1706 - 1785)
    Georg Reutter (1708 - 1772)
    Michel Corrette (1709 - 1795)
    Christoph Schaffrath (1709 - 1763)
    Giovanni Battista Pergolesi (1710 - 1736)
    Domenico Alberti (1710 - 1740)
    Thomas Arne (1710 - 1778)
    Wilhelm Friedemann Bach (1710 – 1784)
    William Boyce (1711 - 1779)
    [edit]
    Early Classical era composers (born 1710-1730)

    John Stanley (1712 - 1786)
    Johann Ludwig Krebs (1713 - 1780)
    Per Brant (1714 - 1767)
    Niccolò Jommelli (1714 - 1774)
    Gottfried August Homilius (1714 - 1785)
    Christoph Willibald Gluck (1714 - 1787)
    Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (1714 - 1788)
    Georg Christoph Wagenseil (1715 - 1777)
    Hinrich Philip Johnsen (1716 - 1779)
    Johann Wenzel Anton Stamitz (1717 - 1757)
    Leopold Mozart (1719 - 1787)
    William Walond (1719 - 1768)
    Johann Philipp Kirnberger (1721 - 1783)
    Sebastián Ramón de Albero y Añaños (1722 - 1756)
    Karl Friedrich Abel (1723 - 1787)
    Armand-Louis Couperin (1727 - 1789)
    Florian Leopold Gassmann (1729 - 1774)[1]
    Giuseppe Sarti (1729 - 1802)[2]
    Antonio Soler (1729 - 1783)
    [edit]
    Middle Classical era composers (born 1730-1750)

    Joseph Haydn (1732 - 1809)
    François-Joseph Gossec (1734 - 1829)
    Johann Gottfried Eckard (1735 - 1809)[3]
    Johann Christian Bach (1735 - 1782)
    Johann Georg Albrechtsberger (1736 - 1809)
    Michael Haydn (1737 - 1806)
    Karl Ditters von Dittersdorf (1739 - 1799)
    Johann Baptist Vanhal (1739 - 1813)
    André-Ernest-Modeste Grétry (1741 - 1813)
    Andrea Luchesi (1741-1801)
    Giovanni Paisiello (1741 - 1816)
    Luigi Boccherini (1743 - 1805)
    Franz Nikolaus Novotny (1743 - 1773)
    Carl Stamitz (1745 - 1801)
    Leopold Kozeluch (1747 - 1818)
    Joseph Schuster (1748 - 1812)[4]
    Domenico Cimarosa (1749 - 1801)
    [edit]
    Late Classical era composers (born 1750-1770)

    Antonio Salieri (1750 - 1825)
    Antonio Rosetti (c1750 - 1792)
    Dmytro Bortniansky (1751 - 1825)
    Muzio Clementi (1752 - 1832)
    Niccolò Antonio Zingarelli (1752 - 1837)
    Jean-Baptiste Breval (1753 - 1823)
    Vincenzo Righini (1756 - 1812)
    Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756 - 1791)
    Joseph Martin Kraus (1756 - 1792)
    Franziska Danzi Lebrun (1756-1791)
    François Devienne (1759 - 1803)[5]
    Franz Vinzenz Krommer (1759 - 1831)
    Maria Theresa von Paradis (1759 - 1824)
    Luigi Cherubini (1760 - 1842)
    Johann Ladislaus Dussek (1760 - 1812),
    Joseph de Momigny (1762 - 1842)
    Franz Danzi (1763 - 1826)
    Etienne Mehul (1763-1817)
    Simon Mayr (1763 - 1845)
    Franz Xaver Süssmayr (1766 - 1803)
    Wenzel Muller (1767 - 1835)
    Francesco Gnecco (1769 - 1810)
    [edit]
    Classical era/Romantic transition composers (born 1770-1800)

    Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827), German regarded by many as the first romantic composer and one of the most significant composers in history
    Ferdinando Paer (1771 - 1839), Italian composer of opera.
    Johann Nepomuk Hummel (1778 - 1837), German composer, whose music bridged the Classical and Romantic periods
    Fernando Sor (1778 - 1839), Spanish composer and guitarist
    Anthony Philip Heinrich (1781 - 1861), American composer of Bohemian origin, wrote highly original program music; first significant American orchestral composer
    John Field (1782 - 1837), Irish composer and pianist, notable for cultivating the nocturne
    Niccolò Paganini (1782 - 1840), Italian violinist and composer
    Daniel Auber (1782 - 1871), French opera composer, well known in his time, but rarely performed today
    Louis Spohr (1784 - 1859), German composer
    Pietro Raimondi (1786 - 1853), Italian composer of operas and sacred music, noted for innovative contrapuntal experiments
    Carl Maria von Weber (1786 - 1826), German composer, a bridge between the Classical and Romantic styles
    Nicolas Bochsa (1789 - 1856), French composer best known today for his studies and exercises for the harp. One of the most celebrated harpists of the XIXth century.
    Carl Czerny (1791 - 1857), Austrian composer best known today for his studies and exercises for the piano
    Giacomo Meyerbeer (1791 - 1864), German composer, whose spectacular operas such as Les Huguenots were popular in his day, but are less often performed now
    Gioacchino Rossini (1792 - 1868), Italian opera composer, best known for The Barber of Seville and overture to various other operas
    Franz Berwald (1796 - 1868), Swedish composer, little known in his lifetime, but his four symphonies are better known today
    Carl Loewe (1796 - 1869), German composer of lieder
    Gaetano Donizetti (1797 - 1848), Italian opera composer, known for Lucia di Lammermoor and L'Elisir d'Amore among others
    Franz Schubert (1797-1828), Austrian composer, regarded as the first significant lieder writer, also known for his chamber music, piano works and symphonies

    Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827), German regarded by many as the first romantic composer and one of the most significant composers in history
    Johann Nepomuk Hummel (1778 - 1837), German composer, whose music bridged the Classical and Romantic periods.
    Fernando Sor (1778 - 1839), Spanish composer and guitarist
    Anthony Philip Heinrich (1781 - 1861), American composer of Bohemian origin, wrote highly original program music; first significant American orchestral composer
    Daniel Auber (1782 - 1871), French opera composer, well known in his time, but rarely performed today
    John Field (1782 - 1837), Irish composer and pianist, notable for cultivating the nocturne
    Niccolò Paganini (1782 - 1840), Italian violinist and composer
    Louis Spohr (1784 - 1859), German composer
    Pietro Raimondi (1786 - 1853), Italian composer of operas and sacred music, noted for innovative contrapuntal experiments
    Carl Maria von Weber (1786 - 1826), German composer, a bridge between the Classical and Romantic styles
    Nicolas Bochsa (1789 - 1856), French composer best known today for his studies and exercises for the harp. One of the most celebrated harpists of the XIXth century.
    Carl Czerny (1791 - 1857), Austrian composer best known today for his studies and exercises for the piano
    Giacomo Meyerbeer (1791 - 1864), German composer, whose spectacular operas such as Les Huguenots were popular in his day, but are less often performed now
    Gioacchino Rossini (1792 - 1868), Italian opera composer, best known for The Barber of Seville and overtures to various other operas
    Franz Berwald (1796 - 1868), Swedish composer, little known in his lifetime, but his four symphonies are better known today
    Carl Loewe (1796 - 1869), German composer of lieder
    Gaetano Donizetti (1797 - 1848), Italian opera composer, known for Lucia di Lammermoor and L'Elisir d'Amore among others
    Franz Schubert (1797-1828), Austrian composer, regarded as the first significant lieder writer, also known for his chamber music, piano works and symphonies
    [edit]
    Early Romantic composers (born 1800-1820)

    Vincenzo Bellini (1801 - 1835), Italian opera composer, known for I Puritani, Norma and La Sonnambula among others
    Josef Lanner (1801 – 1843) Austrian dance music composer
    Adolphe-Charles Adam (1803 - 1856), French composer best known for his ballet score Giselle
    Hector Berlioz (1803 - 1869), French composer famous for his programmatic symphony, the Symphonie Fantastique
    Mikhail Glinka (1804-1857), Russian whose operas such as A Life for the Tsar are based on specifically Russian themes
    Johann Strauss I (1804 - 1849), Austrian dance music composer
    Fanny Mendelssohn (1805 - 1847), sister of Felix Mendelssohn who herself wrote piano music and songs
    Juan Crisostomo de Arriaga (1806 - 1826), Spanish composer who moved to Paris, France
    Michael William Balfe (1808 - 1870), Irish opera composer, best known for The Bohemian Girl (1844)
    Felix Mendelssohn (1809 - 1847), German composer, known for his symphonies, violin concerto and the overture Fingal's Cave among other works
    Frédéric Chopin (1810 - 1849), Polish composer-pianist, his output includes a number of Polish dances such as mazurkas
    Robert Schumann (1810-1856), German composer, a significant lieder writer, also wrote many short piano pieces
    Franz Liszt (1811 - 1886), Hungarian composer-pianist, wrote a number of tone poems and extended piano technique
    Charles-Valentin Alkan (1813 - 1888), French composer and pianist
    Stephen Heller (1813 - 1888), Hungarian composer and pianist
    William Henry Fry (1813 - 1864), American composer; composed the first opera written and produced in the United States
    Giuseppe Verdi (1813 - 1901), one of the most popular Italian opera composers
    Richard Wagner (1813 - 1883), German opera composer, regarded as one of the most significant composers of the 19th century
    Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst (1814-1865), German violinist and composer, considered by some the greatest violinist of his time after Paganini
    Niels Wilhelm Gade (1817 - 1890), probably the most significant 19th century Danish composer
    Charles Gounod (1818 - 1893), French composer, best known for his opera Faust
    Jacques Offenbach (1819 - 1880), French operetta composer, known for The Tales of Hoffmann
    Clara Schumann (1819-1896), wife of Robert, and pianist who also wrote piano music
    [edit]
    Middle Romantic composers (born 1820-1860)

    Joseph Joachim Raff (1822 - 1882), Swiss-born composer, noted for his eleven symphonies, particular nos. 3 (Im Walde), 4 and 5 (Lenore)
    César Franck (1822 - 1890), Belgian-born composer, noted for his Symphony, also a significant composer for the organ
    Édouard Lalo (1823 - 1892), French composer remembered primarily for his Symphonie Espagnole for violin and orchestra and Cello Concerto
    Anton Bruckner (1824 - 1896), Austrian composer of nine large-scale symphonies (one incomplete and two more unacknowledged, the third dedicated to Richard Wagner who he admired)
    Bedrich Smetana (1824-1884), Czech nationalist composer, perhaps best known for his cycle of symphonic poems, Ma Vlast
    Johann Strauss, Jr. (1825-1899), Austrian composer, known as "The Waltz King", composer of "The Blue Danube"
    Josef Strauss (1827 - 1870), Austrian dance music composer
    Woldemar Bargiel (1828 - 1897), German composer and teacher
    Louis Moreau Gottschalk (1829 - 1869), American composer, incorporated Creole melodies into his work, a forerunner of ragtime
    Anton Rubinstein (1829 - 1894), Russian composer-pianist
    Karl Goldmark (1830 - 1915), Hungarian influenced by Wagner
    Gustav Lange (1830 - 1889), German composer. Two of his best loved piano solos are Edelweiss (Op. 31) and Blumenlied (Op. 39), a.k.a, Flower Song.
    Francis Edward Bache (1833 - 1858), English composer-pianist
    Alexander Borodin (1833 - 1887), Russian chemist and nationalist composer, one of The Mighty Handful, wrote the opera Prince Igor
    Johannes Brahms (1833-1897), German composer seen as following in the footsteps of Beethoven. His first symphony was once called "Beethoven's tenth." Regarded as one of the greatest composers of the romantic era.
    Amilcare Ponchielli (1834-1886), Italian composer
    Camille Saint-Saëns (1835-1921), French composer perhaps best known for The Carnival of the Animals
    Henryk Wieniawski (1835 - 1880), Polish composer and violinist, most famous for his two concertos and character pieces of exceptional difficulty
    Felix Draeseke (1835 - 1913), German composer of the 'New German' school who nevertheless composed in the classical forms: his greatest work is the Symphony No. 3 (Tragica); the Cello Sonata, Op. 51 is also worthy to be ranked with Brahms.
    Léo Delibes (1836 - 1891), one of the first significant ballet composers since the baroque, known for his Coppelia and Sylvia
    Emile Waldteufel (1837 - 1915) was a French composer of popular music as well as waltzes and polkas.
    Georges Bizet (1838 - 1875), French composer famous for his opera Carmen
    Max Bruch (1838 - 1920), German composer, today known mostly for his Violin Concerto No. 1, Scottish Fantasy and Kol Nidrei (for cello and orchestra)
    Friedrich Gernsheim (1839 - 1916), German composer, conductor, pianist and teacher (Moscheles pupil and friend of Brahms)
    Modest Mussorgsky (1839 - 1881) Russian composer, known for his intensely nationalist, original works; famous for his opera Boris Godunov, and Pictures at an Exhibition.
    John Knowles Paine (1839 - 1906) First native-born American composer to acquire fame for his large-scale orchestral music.
    Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893), Russian composer known for his symphonies and other works
    Antonín Dvo?ák (1841 - 1904), Nationalistic Czech composer, famous for his symphonies, especially the late ones.
    Calixa Lavallée (1842 - 1891), Canadian composer best known for the national anthem, "O Canada". Wrote many Operettas and was a contemporary of Sir Arthur Sullivan.
    Arrigo Boito (1842-1918), Italian composer and librettist, known as a composer exclusively for his opera Mefistofele
    Jules Massenet (1842 - 1912), French composer best known for "Meditation" from his opera Thaïs
    Arthur S. Sullivan (1842 - 1900), English operetta composer known for his collaborations with W. S. Gilbert
    Edvard Grieg (1843 - 1907), Norwegian composer who wrote a famous Piano Concerto and several books of Lyric Pieces for the piano
    Karl Michael Ziehrer (1843-1922), an Austrian composer and military bandmaster.
    Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (1844 - 1908), Russian composer, member of The Mighty Handful, wrote operas, the Capriccio espagnol and Scheherazade but probably best known for "The Flight of the Bumblebee"
    Pablo Sarasate (1844-1908), Spanish virtuoso violinist and composer
    Gabriel Fauré (1845 - 1924), French composer, known for his chamber music and a requiem among other pieces
    Charles-Marie Widor (1845 - 1937), French composer, noted for his works for the organ
    Luigi Denza (1846 - 1922), Italian composer of Funiculì, Funiculà
    Robert Fuchs (1847 - 1927), Austrian composer and teacher, taught Sibelius, Wolf, Mahler, Melartin, among others
    Franz Xaver Scharwenka (1850 - 1924), Polish-German composer, pianist, and teacher
    Aleksandr Taneyev (1850 - 1918), Russian nationalist composer
    Francisco Tarrega (1852-1909), Spanish composer who wrote many works for guitar
    George Whitefield Chadwick (1854 - 1931), little known today, but one of the first significant American composers
    Ernest Chausson (1855 - 1899), French composer influenced by Franck and Wagner, seen as a bridge from them to Claude Debussy
    Julius Röntgen (1855 - 1932), German-born, later Dutch composer of the school of Brahms: wrote over 600 works in all the classical forms
    Anatoly Konstantinovich Lyadov (1855 - 1914), Russian nationalist composer
    Giuseppe Martucci (1856 - 1909), Italian composer, conductor and pianist, teacher of Respighi, early advocate of Wagner in Italy who however composed almost entirely instrumental music
    Sergei Taneyev (1856 - 1915), Russian composer, oriented towards classical forms and the central European tradition
    Edward Elgar (1857 - 1934), English composer, famous for his Enigma Variations, symphonies and Pomp and Circumstance Marches, among other pieces
    Ruggiero Leoncavallo (1858 - 1919), Italian opera composer, known almost exclusively for I Pagliacci
    Giacomo Puccini (1858 - 1924), late romantic Italian opera composer (La Bohème, Tosca, Madame Butterfly)
    Eugène Ysaÿe (1858 - 1931), Belgian virtuoso violinist and composer
    Hans Rott (1858 - 1884), Viennese composer
    Mikhail Ippolitov-Ivanov (1859 - 1935), Russian composer, noted for his orchestral suite Caucasian Sketches, which contains the much excerpted Procession of the Sardar
    [edit]
    Late Romantic composers (born 1860-1900)

    Isaac Albéniz (1860 - 1909), first well-known Spanish composer since the Renaissance, composed nationalist piano works such as Iberia
    Gustave Charpentier (1860 - 1956), French composer best known for his opera Louise
    Gustav Mahler (1860 - 1911), Austrian composer of innovative large-scale and sometimes programmatic symphonies
    Hugo Wolf (1860 - 1903), Austrian song composer
    Anton Arensky (1861 - 1906), Russian composer, and a teacher of Rachmaninoff among others. His first piano trio and Variations on a Theme of Tchaikovsky (arranged from the second of his string quartets) are most often played presently.
    Edward German (1862 - 1936), English composer known for his comic opera and light music
    Horatio Parker (1863 - 1919), American composer, highly regarded in the late 19th century
    Hugh Blair (1864–1932), composer
    Richard Strauss (1864 - 1949), German composer, also a noted conductor
    Paul Dukas (1865 - 1935), French composer, almost exclusively known today for his piece of program music, The Sorcerer's Apprentice
    Alexander Glazunov (1865 - 1936), Russian, influenced by Wagner and Liszt
    Jean Sibelius (1865 - 1957), Finnish nationalist composer
    Ferruccio Busoni (1866 - 1924), Italian composer-pianist, known for his operas Doktor Faust and Turandot and his many transcriptions and arrangements of Johann Sebastian Bach
    Amy Beach (1867 - 1944), American, the leading female composer of her time
    Franz Lehár (1870 -1948) Hungarian, mainly known for his operettas.
    Guillaume Lekeu (1870 - 1894), Belgian/Walloon, best known for his violin sonata (1892–3)
    Amadeu Vives (1871-1932), Catalan composer
    Paul Juon (1872 - 1940), Russian-born though much-travelled composer with a large output of chamber works and lieder especially
    Alexander Scriabin (1872 - 1915), Russian,known for his harmonically adventurous piano sonatas and theatrical orchestral works
    Max Reger (1873 - 1916), prolific German composer, known for his Variations on a Theme of Mozart
    Franz Schmidt (1874-1939), Austrian composer, influenced by Mahler
    Reinhold Gliere (1875 - 1956), Russian who wrote pieces in a romantic style well into the 20th century
    Erkki Melartin (1875 - 1937), Finnish composer, pupil of Robert Fuchs, whose six symphonies show the influence of Mahler and Sibelius (and in the vocalise of the fourth, also of Nielsen)
    Isidor Baji? (1878-1915),Serbian composer
    Joseph Canteloube (1879 - 1957), French composer, best known for his Songs of the Auvergne
    Ottorino Respighi (1879 - 1936), Italian composer, known for symphonic poems The Fountains of Rome and The Pines of Rome
    Grigora? Dinicu (1889 - 1949), Romanian composer, best known for his violin showpieces
    Claude Champagne (1891 - 1965), Canadian composer best known for his violin showpiece "Danse villageoise"


    I wont even try to name everyone in the post modernism, experimental and the nine billion genres, just know the above and you'll be happy. arron copland should be a must have, penderecki is an aqcuired taste but brilliant and of course you know all th famous ones

    koji kondo probably the best video game composer but lacks the 'hollywood epic' feel), nobou uematsu (a better composer, but lacks video game soul), yasunori mitsuda (epic, funny, brilliant, heartfelt he should be a film composer), zuntata (hate/love), tadashi kimijima (hate/love), club kukeiha, sada, maezawa, koichi sugiyama, jun ishikawa, ***Hirokazu "Hip" Tanaka*** just 6 notes! shitamachi kajiya, mayu, (I think he's dead), grant kirkhope and graeme norgate obviously and a BUNCH of composers I just dont know but love their music, chibi-robo, battalion wars, wario games (twisted and microgames as well as the platformers) the sonic games, hell all of sega's stuff, beyond good and evil, the music engineers and composer for god of war, ico, shadow of the collosus and of course tetris which i think is litteraly 400 year old russian folk music.

    I will not put him in the same catagory as above because that would be unfair to the other composers;Akira Yamaoka the sound effects and musical director, composer of billions of konami games but specifically silent hill's series -- the best video game soundtrack(s) in history with metroid series being very close 2nd including retro's offerings which would make Hip proud. If you have never heard the orchestral versions of the 8 and 16 bit music you have no idea what you're missing, alot of it is better than anything hollywood pumps out, alot of it sucks too :D

    and i'd mention my favorite ocr arrangers and stage/musicals composers but fuck it i'm tired. I'll think of more later.
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    Rocky Raccoon
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    #40
    30th April 2006, 5:14 AM
    you guys have some good taste
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    lazyfatbum
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    Posts: 4,354
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    #41
    30th April 2006, 8:53 AM
    yay for good taste

    Paco/ Who composed Kameo? Grant Kirkhope or Graeme Norgate? or did they collaborate again? Where'd you find the MP3's? Where do babies come from? The train leaves the station at 3:33 AM, they are serving rats to eat your eyes, how long before a sequel is made?
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