What I really enjoy about Twitter is not just the conversations, but the
depth
of those conversations. In real life, the following exchange would have
been a non-starter -- unless I was at a convention of public radio
classical music broadcasters.
On Pi Day (3/14/14),
WUOL
Classical 95.5 fm, Fine Arts Radio for Louisville, KY, sent out a tweet
calling attention to their Pi Day-oriented classical programming. It
got my attention, and the following exchange ensued. If it appears a
little obscure, I've included an annotated version directly below it.
The
takeaway from this is simple: on Twitter you can find folks as
passionate and knowledgeable about the same things as you --- no matter
how obscure the topic may seem to the general public. Just as at a
social gathering in real life, if you say interesting and thoughtful
things in a pleasant manner -- and respond to others doing the same --
you'll have a rewarding experience.
The conversation:
WUOL: #PiDay on WUOL means we've been playing
Op. 314, K. 314, BWV 314, RV 314 and HWV 314 all this hour. Did we miss a
connection?
RalphGraves: @WUOL Which Op. 314 did you air? Hovhaness' Symphony 38 or J. Strauss' Blue Danube? #PiDay
WUOL: @RalphGraves Strauss
RalphGraves: @WUOL Well, there's the Pi Symphony itself... youtube.com/watch?v=CGK2i2…
WUOL: of course there is! RT @RalphGraves: @WUOL Well, there's the Pi Symphony itself... youtube.com/watch?v=CGK2i2…
RalphGraves: @WUOL Also, what about Schubert's lieder "Nachtgesang" (D. 314) #PiDay
WUOL: @RalphGraves Good suggestion!
RalphGraves @WUOL Another option: Czerny's Op. 314,
Grande polonaise brillante précédés d’une introduction pour le
pianoforte et violon concertane
RalphGraves: @WUOL With the competing catalog systems,
you could have three Domenico Scarlatti keyboard sonatas for the price
of one! [1 of 2]
RalphGraves @WUOL P. 314, Sonata in C (K.251, L.305); K.314,
Sonata in G Allegro (L.441, P.505); L.314 Sonata in D K.511, P.388) [2
of 2]
WUOL: @RalphGraves there are many ways to slice it.
RalphGraves @WUOL D'oh! Well put.
The annotated conversation:
WUOL: #PiDay
[using this hashtag
creates a link in Twitter, and ties it to all the other tweets using
this hashtag. This is a smart way for WUOL to get into the general
conversation surrounding Pi Day celebrations -- and attract more online
listeners.] on WUOL means we've been playing Op. 314,
[Since
tweets are limited to 140 characters, this is a clever way of
communicating a lot of information. These are all catalog numbers for
various composers. If you know a lot about classical music, you'll know
the composers. The only exception is the opus number. Since it's just a
publication designation, it can belong to any composer prolific enough
to have that many works published (a concept I run with in my
response).] K. 314 [
Mozart: K.314 is his Flute Concerto in D major. K. stands for Ludwig von Köchel, who first cataloged Mozart's music in 1862.] , BWV
314
[Johann Sebastian Bach: Chorale "Gelobet seist du." BWV is an abbreviation for Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis (Bach Works Catalogue), first published in 1950.], RV 314
[Vivaldi:
Violin Concerto in G major. RV stands for Ryom Verzeichnis, the catalog
of Vivaldi's works compiled by Peter Ryom and first published in 1972] and HWV 314
[Handel:
Concerto Grosso in G major, Op. 3, No. 3 -- although this work has an
opus number, so few of Handel's works were published, the HWV catalog
number is a much more useful way of identifying the work. HWV is an
abbreviation for Händel-Werke-Verzeichnis (Catalogue of Handel's Works)] all this hour. Did we miss a connection?
RalphGraves: @WUOL Which Op. 314 did you air? Hovhaness' Symphony 38 or J. Strauss' Blue Danube? #PiDay
[In my response, I also included the Pi Day hashtag to ensure it was
part of the larger conversation. Also, don't be too impressed. I don't
know a lot of opus numbers off the top of my head. I first had to
remember which very prolific composers actually used opus numbers for
their works and got into the 300's. A search of the catalogs of Johann
Strauss the Senior and Alan Hovhaness lead me to the specific works
quite quickly.]
WUOL: @RalphGraves Strauss
RalphGraves: @WUOL Well, there's the Pi Symphony itself...
youtube.com/watch?v=CGK2i2…
[Lars
Erickson composed a symphony based on the numbers in Pi. I provided a
link to the YouTube video of the work (YouTube is an amazing source for
classical music). In Twitter, the link is valid, even though it extends
beyond the character limit. I've added the correct link so you can
follow it.]
WUOL: of course there is! RT @RalphGraves: @WUOL Well, there's the Pi Symphony itself...
youtube.com/watch?v=CGK2i2…
[WUOL
liked the idea so much, they retweeted it.(That's what the "RT" means
-- "retweeted from the name that follows.") The conversation just got
broader.]
RalphGraves: @WUOL Also, what about Schubert's lieder "Nachtgesang" (D. 314)
["D" refers Otto Erich Deutsch, who assigned catalog numbers to all of
Franz Schubert's works. The catalog was published in 1951.] #PiDay
[I didn't have room for the hashtag in the Pi Symphony tweet, but I do here -- keeping the Pi Day conversation linked in!]
WUOL: @RalphGraves Good suggestion!
RalphGraves @WUOL Another option: Czerny's Op. 314,
Grande polonaise brillante précédés d’une introduction pour le
pianoforte et violon concertane [Carl Czerny was a prolific
composer and pianist. I happened to know his opus numbers extended up
into the eight hundreds (he wrote a lot of piano exercises and etudes, each with its own opus number).]
RalphGraves: @WUOL With the competing catalog systems,
[Domenico Scarlatti wrote 550 keyboard sonatas. Three different
musicologists have cataloged his works, and all three systems are still
in use. Alessandro Longo grouped them by keys in the 1920's, Ralph
Kirkpatrick did a chronological
listing in the 1940's, and in the 1960's, Giorgio Pestelli did a
completely revised listing.] you could have three Domenico Scarlatti keyboard sonatas for the price
of one! [1 of 2]
[I couldn't fit this all into one tweet, so my "1 of
2" note says that this tweet is to be read in conjunction with the one
immediately following.]
RalphGraves @WUOL P. 314, Sonata in C (K.251, L.305); K.314,
Sonata in G Allegro (L.441, P.505); L.314 Sonata in D K.511, P.388) [2
of 2]
[P. stands for Pestelli 's catalog listing, K. for
Kirkpatrick's catalog listing, and L. for Longo catalog number. Each D.
Scarlatti sonata has three different catalog numbers, which was my
point; one composer, three different Pi Day numbers! (And no, Scarlatti
didn't number his own works, so there is no "Sonata No.
314"--technically.)]
WUOL: @RalphGraves there are many ways to slice it.
[Brilliant punning reference to pie/pi.]
RalphGraves @WUOL D'oh! Well put.
[That pun was the perfect place to end the conversation so both of us could get back to work. But what fun!]