@@ChristinaPepper I came to this through a rabbit hole starting with the arcade game Pooyan, which uses Dvorak's Humoresque from the first rag as level music. Think I prefer this second one though! Great channel, keep up the good work 👍
What a great find Christina and well played. It looked pretty difficult to play and thanks for putting in all of the opera titles otherwise I would have been at a complete loss.
This is great. In the past, I had a pianola which I had and it used to provide music through the extensive use of strides which I think you are doing. . My first piano teacher was a piano teacher before music was incorporated into films. I think this is the way it would have been played similar to piano rolls. If you have access to piano scrolls, you will get what I mean. The similar effect was used by Gershwin and you can get an actual CD of Gershwin playing his own music onto scrolls and this is converted to CD. It is worth listening to. Regards Russell Petch
The original of this piece was the B-side to his "Nola", the song that brought me to site in the first place! Here is "Nola": th-cam.com/video/SI2ShQOctw8/w-d-xo.html And the Discogs listing of the original 78 that came out over 100 years ago! www.discogs.com/master/1276327-Felix-Arndt-An-Operatic-Nightmare-Nola
This needs more views! Flawless execution, love this!!
@@ChristinaPepper I came to this through a rabbit hole starting with the arcade game Pooyan, which uses Dvorak's Humoresque from the first rag as level music. Think I prefer this second one though! Great channel, keep up the good work 👍
This is terrific. Keep posting. We love watching and listening.
What a great find Christina and well played. It looked pretty difficult to play and thanks for putting in all of the opera titles otherwise I would have been at a complete loss.
This is great. In the past, I had a pianola which I had and it used to provide music through the extensive use of strides which I think you are doing. . My first piano teacher was a piano teacher before music was incorporated into films. I think this is the way it would have been played similar to piano rolls. If you have access to piano scrolls, you will get what I mean. The similar effect was used by Gershwin and you can get an actual CD of Gershwin playing his own music onto scrolls and this is converted to CD. It is worth listening to. Regards Russell Petch
Christina, how cool was that? What a great piece, who would have thought it from 1916? Excellent performance, of course, loved the ending.
The original of this piece was the B-side to his "Nola", the song that brought me to site in the first place! Here is "Nola": th-cam.com/video/SI2ShQOctw8/w-d-xo.html And the Discogs listing of the original 78 that came out over 100 years ago! www.discogs.com/master/1276327-Felix-Arndt-An-Operatic-Nightmare-Nola