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Quick Either Or Questions For The Music Lovers
30 Answers
Like a desert island thing. You can only have the works of one or the other.
(In alphabetical order, to exclude any suggestion of bias)
Verdi or Wagner?
Brahms or Liszt?
Beethoven or Mozart? (I think that's the hardest one)
Bach or Vivaldi?
Berlioz or Tchaikovsky? (these are hard, aren't they)
Chopin or Rachmaninov?
Leoncavallo or Mascagni?
Puccini or Rossini?
(In alphabetical order, to exclude any suggestion of bias)
Verdi or Wagner?
Brahms or Liszt?
Beethoven or Mozart? (I think that's the hardest one)
Bach or Vivaldi?
Berlioz or Tchaikovsky? (these are hard, aren't they)
Chopin or Rachmaninov?
Leoncavallo or Mascagni?
Puccini or Rossini?
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1. Wagner (as long as you don't expect me to listen to the whole Ring Cycle in one sitting - that's when enjoyment slowly turns into suffering!)
2. I'm frequently associated with both Brahms & Liszt around this time of night! I'll opt for Liszt's piano works though.
3. Beethoven as long as I've got the time to listen to it properly. (Mozart if it's just on in the background).
4. Vivaldi, definitely!
5. Tchaikovsky every time!
6. Having had Liszt provide the piano music, I don't need Chopin, so it's Rachmaninov for me.
7. Leoncavallo (because Mascagni only really wrote one great work, Cavalleria Rusticana).
8. How could anyone leave Rossini off such a list!
Some more questions:
Dvořák or Smetana?
Mussorgsky or Rimsky-Korsakov?
Lehár or Offenbach?
Vaughan Williams or Thomas Tallis?
Elgar or Delius?
Leonard Bernstein or Aaron Copland?
(I reckon that they're all 'close calls' but I'll opt for the second one in every case).
2. I'm frequently associated with both Brahms & Liszt around this time of night! I'll opt for Liszt's piano works though.
3. Beethoven as long as I've got the time to listen to it properly. (Mozart if it's just on in the background).
4. Vivaldi, definitely!
5. Tchaikovsky every time!
6. Having had Liszt provide the piano music, I don't need Chopin, so it's Rachmaninov for me.
7. Leoncavallo (because Mascagni only really wrote one great work, Cavalleria Rusticana).
8. How could anyone leave Rossini off such a list!
Some more questions:
Dvořák or Smetana?
Mussorgsky or Rimsky-Korsakov?
Lehár or Offenbach?
Vaughan Williams or Thomas Tallis?
Elgar or Delius?
Leonard Bernstein or Aaron Copland?
(I reckon that they're all 'close calls' but I'll opt for the second one in every case).
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