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would a classical music-lover challenge me, please?

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I'd like to accept a challenge if any classical music-lovers would like to set it me. Classiical music brings out the best in my lush-style writing. Would anyone like to challenge me to base a story on a favourite (or un-favourite) piece? It would be a more exciting challenge if you also specified your own taste or genre (eg, gay, str, or bi; I don't really do sci-fi, but any other genre would answer. You could also tell me what you like or don't like about the piece). You could also specify a word count. If you want I'll read your profile and tailor it to your tastes (though I can't promise too much)
Excellent thought. However, my initial selection, I fear, is way too simple. Berlioz Symphonie Fantastique. I felt the story he wove in this piece from when I first heard it.

Another thought is Stravinsky's The Firebird.
my personal favorite piece is Rimsky-Korsekov's Scheherazade - downside, it's already kind of attached to a story. still... smile

You can’t truly call yourself peaceful unless you are capable of violence. If you’re not capable of violence, you’re not peaceful. You’re harmless.

Great question! Well, since you're a violinist, what could be more erotic than Barber's Adagio for strings?

Slow. Intense. Emotional. Passionate. Gradually building higher and higher. Up to a loud powerful climax. Then gradually back down to a beautiful soft contentment.

So the genre would be "slow sex": a single sex act written as slowly as you can with as many words as possible. OK that's my next Lush story planned out...
The most orgasmic piece of music I know is the love duet from the end of Act I of Puccini's Madama Butterfly. Long slow build, swelling, receding, rebuilding, gradually rising up to the point where both singers are holding a high C over an earth-shattering dominant 13th which, even when it breaks, does so onto a suspended supertonic which just prolongs the ecstasy. (My wife and I sometimes make love with this is on in the background. If we time it right, well...!)

I don't know how you'd surpass this text, though:

Trema, brilla ogni favilla
col baglior d'una pupilla!
Oh! quanti occhi fissi, attenti
d'ogni parte a riguardar!
Via l'angoscia dal tuo cor
ti serro palpitante. Sei mia.
Vieni, guarda: dorme ogni cosa!
Tutto estatico d'amor ride il ciel!
Vien! sei mia!


(and then the orgasm)

The irony is that Pinkerton is a total douche-bag, and Butterfly is going to get totally fucked over by him - and we know that right from the beginning. We should hate his character - but, like Butterfly, we fall for him, because he sings some of the most sublime music ever written. Ah, the genius of Puccini!

GrushaVashnadze's best stories:

Alison Goes to London (RR) - "love this... fun, and funny, and sexy" (sprite)

The Cursed Cunt (RR) - "holyyyyy sheeeiiit.... Your writing is fucking fantastic" (CarltonStJames)

A Worthless Filthy Fucking Smoking Trash Cunt Whore (RR) - "Brilliantly done. Of course." (naughtyannie)

Snow White and the Seven Dildos (RR) - "Fuck. It's perfect.... honestly genius and so fucking well executed." (VioletVixen)

Metamorphoses (RR) - "so imaginative and entertaining" (saucymh)

And There Came Two Angels to Sodom - "What a deliciously worded story! So juicy, so raunchy" (el_henke)

Fuck-Talk (with VioletVixen) - "Jeez. I feel rendered wordless by how much clever fucking fun this is" (Jaymal)

I wrote a gay story for the pride comp last yeah. The Lark Ascending, by Ralph Vaughn Williams was the inspiration.


https://www.lushstories.com/stories/gay-male/-luca-ascending-.aspx

And I mention classical music a lot in my stories, because I love it so much. I've mentioned Erik Satie and Vivaldi in some more recent stories.

Hmmmmm, funeral march could be a good challenge.

Aaron Copeland's Fanfare for the Common Man. Only broadly fits the theme you've chosen (Classical is actual a specific period isn't it?), but a favorite of mine. Love and sex are two things that every person can share and is something the binds us together although, as is common with just about everything else in life, it can also be used as a way to divide us instead of unifying us. Category would be love story.
Meagan
here s just one of my favourite.

My latest love poem has landed

Lover Moon

https://www.lushstories.com/stories/love-poems/lover-moon.

Classical music plays an important part in my last series and two chapters.

First... Carmen which I saw at the Palais Garnier twenty years ago... En France - The Confessions

And dancing to Eric Satie - Gnossiennes in En France - Sur La Plage

If I was to write a story inspired by classical music, it would be this piece. This is usually a piano piece but this adaptation for orchestra is very good: Debussy, Suite Bergamasque

Wow. Thanks everyone for so many ideas. I promise I'll get back to everyone who's replied, you have such fascinating ideas (many of which chime so closely to my own tastes.) I'm too busy now churning them all over in my mind, but I will reply. I've started some stories already (yes, I know I should be replying instead of writing stories, but you know how compulsive it can get. Thanks anyway for the ideas and challenges. I think you're all fantastic people.Gordon
Quote by sprite
my personal favorite piece is Rimsky-Korsekov's Scheherazade


I second this. It's an amazing piece. The Russians of the Romantic era sure knew how to pack emotion into music after they threw out the damn formulaic, tedious rulebook that dominated the Classical Mozart era.

Richer than Classical, and far less twiddly than Baroque (and certainly less harpsichord) I think you'll be fine picking anything from 1810 onward. Prokofiev, Stravinsky, Rimsky-Korsakov, Mussorgsky, Tchaikovsky, ... basically if the composer ends in -sky or -v then you're pretty much guaranteed an octane-fuelled rollercoaster of a ride upon which to base your story. The sex will be turbulent.

Please browse my digital bookshelf. In this collection, you can find 116 full stories, 10 micro-stories, and 2 poems with the following features:


* 29 Editor's Picks, 75 Recommended Reads.
* 15 competition podium places, 11 other times in the top ten.
* 21 collaborations.
* A whole heap of often filthy, tense, hot sex.

One of the most romantic pieces of music IMHO is "Concierto De Aranjuez'. To me the adagio movement would be ideal music to seduce a woman with. I especially like the guitar version by Paco De Lucia.

My bookshelf includes 227 stories, which include 76 collaborations;

One Editor's Pick, Three Series Awards, Fifty-three Recommended Reads, and Eight Famous Stories are included. Go to https://www.lushstories.com/profiles/view/ChrisM/stories

Enjoy

Quote by WannabeWordsmith

The Russians of the Romantic era sure knew how to pack emotion into music after they threw out the damn formulaic, tedious rulebook that dominated the Classical Mozart era.
Prokofiev, Stravinsky, Rimsky-Korsakov, Mussorgsky, Tchaikovsky, ... basically if the composer ends in -sky or -v then you're pretty much guaranteed an octane-fuelled rollercoaster of a ride upon which to base your story. The sex will be turbulent.


WW, I agree wholeheartedly with your assessment of the Russian romantics. However, I feel I must come to the defence of Mozart. If the following is not sexy, I don't know what is:

GrushaVashnadze's best stories:

Alison Goes to London (RR) - "love this... fun, and funny, and sexy" (sprite)

The Cursed Cunt (RR) - "holyyyyy sheeeiiit.... Your writing is fucking fantastic" (CarltonStJames)

A Worthless Filthy Fucking Smoking Trash Cunt Whore (RR) - "Brilliantly done. Of course." (naughtyannie)

Snow White and the Seven Dildos (RR) - "Fuck. It's perfect.... honestly genius and so fucking well executed." (VioletVixen)

Metamorphoses (RR) - "so imaginative and entertaining" (saucymh)

And There Came Two Angels to Sodom - "What a deliciously worded story! So juicy, so raunchy" (el_henke)

Fuck-Talk (with VioletVixen) - "Jeez. I feel rendered wordless by how much clever fucking fun this is" (Jaymal)

Thanks so much for all your challenges. At last, I've completed my first one, and I promise I'll take up some more. Looks as though some of you have taken up your own challenges too. I'd no idea there were so many classical music experts on L S. Shows the quality of the site yet again.

Thanks to our amazing editorial team, I've completed four stories, one on each of Rimsky-Korsakov's 'Symphonic Sketches', the voluptuous 'Scheherazade'. It's been so obsessive I have to apologise for doing very little LS reading and commenting on your stories. I'll make up for lost time on that score. I'm enjoying getting to know you all since I started in July. I hope some of you will want to be friends.

I'm hoping the stories will appeal to the heart, as Lacie's relationships balance giving with taking, teaching with learning, and submitting with wrestling. To the loins, as I hope it adequately oozes what we come to LS for; and to the head, as you seem so knowledgeable about Russian music. The stories hide anagrams, allusions and references to Russian composers and their works. (for instance, the ship is called the Coq d'Or, and a famous bumblebee makes a brief appearance towards the end). If you know Scheherazade well, you will find every description of the music matches its position in the story. Because of my delight in the profile of one of my challengers, a certain Alice Liddell insinuated herself into every story without my volition, and presented a cornucopia of conundrums and concealed citations, from the name of her cat to the mock turtle's definitions of the three R's. I have offered to pm a key if anyone wants.
If you haven't already and would like to read two other musical stories, you might like to read Octet, and Rusalka. I've entered links to those too.

https://"> Scheherazade, Finale: The Festival at Al Nen Drowd; Stormy Intercourse and Shipwreck
<a href="https://"> Rusalka </a>
<a href="https://"> Octet </a>
Quote by GrushaVashnadze


WW, I agree wholeheartedly with your assessment of the Russian romantics. However, I feel I must come to the defence of Mozart. If the following is not sexy, I don't know what is:



This piece, by Mozart is everything it is claimed to be here! Of course the fact that it is being played by Hélène Grimaud, who captures the spirit of the piece, and shows it in her total expression, makes it superb.
Sir, if you wish to hear a piece by a composer who is not as widely known, how about Alexander Scriabin's "Poem of Ecstasy?"

An obvious one would be "Bolero" by Maurice Ravel

I like the one above me. Baroque does not get enough credit for romance and passion. Vivaldi's guitar concertos, for instance. The second movement of the D Major would be very nice, sultry courting or foreplay music (starts c. 3:50, but listen to the whole piece). The 1st might be a livelier flirting or social scene. 3rd? Well, we all know what comes after courting and foreplay, right?

A woman goes shopping in the local mall. But what the heck is she shopping for in that outfit? My Festive Flash comp entry.

Minnie's Merry Mall Christmas