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Other Stuff => General Wargames and Hobby Discussion => Topic started by: Harry Faversham on November 25, 2024, 12:42:15 PM

Title: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: Harry Faversham on November 25, 2024, 12:42:15 PM

Much as I hate to admit this. But I'm suspicioned that you shower are probably a tad more fookin' cultured... than an ex binman from Sheffield!
With this in mind suggestions for soothing classical musicy stuff to paint toys by, please.
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: jon_1066 on November 25, 2024, 01:35:22 PM
Surely it depends on what you are painting?

Germans from WW2 maybe the Wagner Ring Cycle (would give you enough for a very long painting session, though not what you would call soothing)

British maybe Vaughan Williams?  Elgar would fit nicely also.

Fantasy - Lord of the Rings soundtrack

Sci Fi - Sprach Zarathustra by Strauss

In all seriousness Classic FM usually plays pretty accessible classical music (ie not something that sounds like 1000 monkeys let loose in the orchestra pit) so you could just pop that on.
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: zemjw on November 25, 2024, 01:40:19 PM
Rasio 3 is as good a place to start as any. The pieces don't tend to be too long so, even if it's opera (shudder), then something different will be on soon enough :) - and no adverts!

I have a couple of collections that I listen to from time to time (100 soothing classics kind of thing). I also paint along to Helen Jane Long, as it is nice relaxing piano pieces, with no cannon fire to make the brush jump at the wrong moment ;D
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: Kourtchatovium104 on November 25, 2024, 02:04:05 PM
It's a matter of taste of course, but I think Gregorian chants are very soothing.  :)
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: boneio on November 25, 2024, 02:27:06 PM
Being working class absolutely does not imply being less cultured, I can show you a lot of inverse examples  lol

If you have Spotify, I get really absorbed in a playlist called Choir Classics - it's really nice for setting a cosy atmosphere with a perhaps a couple of candles lit as well.. I'm getting old aren't I  lol

More specifically the Tallis Scholars do early music which is then period-appropriate for a lot of wargames... and it's pretty chilled out, no cannons going off and the like as another poster mentioned above.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tallis_Scholars
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: Daeothar on November 25, 2024, 02:51:38 PM
Can't help you much there, as I'm a fully committed metalhead myself, and even though it's soothing to my ear, I'm fully aware that this is not to everyone's taste  :D

But I've never been limited to just one genre, and I do occasionally listen to (modern) classical music too. So here's the not much I mentioned: I find the Canto Ostinato by Dutch composer Simeon ten Holt (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canto_Ostinato) to be especially entrancing and soothing, maybe even hypnotising and I've painted many hours listening to it...
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: Dubar on November 25, 2024, 04:53:27 PM
Classical?!?!?!  Does Dead Can Dead sound about right??? BWAHAHAHAHA

Agnes Obel works too.
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: Michi on November 25, 2024, 04:57:25 PM
Any composition by Bill Murray for BBC‘s Doctor Who. You‘ll find a lot on Youtube.
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: TWD on November 25, 2024, 05:24:09 PM
4'33" by John Cage. On repeat.
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: carlos marighela on November 25, 2024, 05:38:53 PM
Millie Jackson.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tDjNLIN_gXs

Or maybe if you want to impress the neigbours a spot of Phillip Glass.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5lGNtPXcA04

Now if you are doing 7YW, the choice is obvious. Anything from the soundtrack of the film Barry Lyndon. Schubert, Handel etc.



Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: Richard from Bruton on November 25, 2024, 07:25:35 PM
Vivaldi - Nisi Dominus, Stabat Mater. Dufay - anything. Lully - Ballet Music for the Sun King. Monteverdi - Vespro.
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: Andy in Germany on November 25, 2024, 07:30:19 PM
Being working class absolutely does not imply being less cultured, I can show you a lot of inverse examples  lol

Dead right.

I'm not much of a "music" person myself, but I listen to endless reams of podcasts while painting/modelmaking.
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: Von Trinkenessen on November 25, 2024, 07:43:24 PM
If it's speed painting it has got to be Motorhead  ;D
Sorry Guys but for me 90% of classical music is a dead music genre.
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: Cholmondely Percival IV on November 25, 2024, 08:31:39 PM
For Napoleonics it has to be Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 5, popularly known as the Emperor Concerto, albeit for no valid reason. It’s a key work in the canon, without the cannon.
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: 2010sunburst on November 25, 2024, 09:23:26 PM
Following on from the others…..Delius, pretty much anything.  Respighi, Fountains of Rome.  Bach, Brandenburg concertos. Beethoven, Pastoral symphony,  Missa Solemnis and pretty much any of the Piano sonatas.  Elgar, Cello concert (by Du Pres if possible).  Literally anything by Mozart.  Sibelius tone poems. Vaughn Williams, Lark ascending.  These should give you a good leg up.  Trouble is, you might find yourself stopping painting and just getting lost in the music.  Don’t do yourself down either.  My mum was a cleaner and she taught me how to enjoy this stuff….
Don’t bother with Classic FM, by the way.  It only plays bits and pieces of whole works.  Sort of like someone reading your favourite books to you by quoting random chapters….
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: Will Bailie on November 25, 2024, 10:06:19 PM
Dead right.

I'm not much of a "music" person myself, but I listen to endless reams of podcasts while painting/modelmaking.

I agree with Andy.  Tastes in music certainly vary:  I love bagpipes, and could happily have piobaireachd playing in the background, but that won't work for everyone!  On the other hand, I've found myself quite content painting with Tom and Dominic from The Rest is History podcast blethering away and getting deep into the weeds with details about Custer or Franz Ferdinand or whatetever.
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: Cubs on November 25, 2024, 10:26:04 PM
'Peter and the Wolf', by Prokofiev. Pretty much anything by Prokofiev really or JS Bach.

Or the 'Lord of the Rings' soundtrack, all three of them, they're very good.

Personally, my go-to has always been Jeff Wayne's 'War of the Worlds', but you said fancy classic stuff.

Or Timmy Mallet's 'Incy Wincy Teeny Weeny Yellow Polka-Dot Bikini'; I prefer his earlier stuff before he sold out.
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: carlos marighela on November 26, 2024, 04:49:19 AM
I agree with Andy.  Tastes in music certainly vary:  I love bagpipes, and could happily have piobaireachd playing in the background, but that won't work for everyone!

Are you sure bagpipes count as music? I thought they were covered off under the 1949 Geneva Convention? ;)
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: DivisMal on November 26, 2024, 05:33:44 AM
Johann Sebastian Bach. I have his complete works and when I‘m in the mood, I simply play some random stuff. Vivaldi goes in the same range.

PS
Mom was a nurse, dad sold stuff at a kiosk to miners. There’s no connection. Rather as others said, I know enough examples the other way round.
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: Tarnegol on November 26, 2024, 06:33:30 AM
Elgar, Cello concert (by Du Pres if possible)...

I can't paint and listen to this, I can't see through the tears...
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: Michi on November 26, 2024, 07:14:50 AM
I can't paint and listen to this, I can't see through the tears...

Immediate effect of listening to Celli...
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: Tarnegol on November 26, 2024, 08:19:49 AM
Immediate effect of listening to Celli...

You're not wrong, but I think it's an immediate effect of listening to Jacqueline du Pré, and wondering what might have been...
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: 2010sunburst on November 26, 2024, 08:56:52 AM
Yep, good call you guys.  Not one to relax and paint to…..stellar piece though….

Just thought about this a little more, and if you have a CD player in your painting area, just pick up a couple of classical CDs in a charity shop and see how you get on.  Classical music is the greatest bargain in the musical world.  A tenner randomly spent can get you a lifetimes study and enjoyment. 
Title: Re: Question Music to paint by?
Post by: modelwarrior on November 26, 2024, 09:04:21 AM
Dont judge me :o