I also want to play!! Here are my selections: * Schoenbergs op.11 * Sjostakovitj Symphony nr.7 * Cages 4'33 * Mahlers Symphony nr.8 * Blomdahls "Aniara" And a few comments, as I think it wouldn't be much rutabaga in sending the choices to the list without reason for choosing. First of all: Stravinskijs "Le Sacre de Printemps" is a good work to have on this list, but it is probably suggested by so many others, so history might forgive me for leaving it out. Schoenbergs op.11 is an important work (my listing is in no particular order), and will be remembered, I foretell, as the first work in which Schoenberg broke the traditional rules AND inserted his own rules. At least one of Sjostakovitjs requiems to symphonies should have their palce here. The 8. symphony is a great and mighty emotional painting of sorrow, and qualifys here as well. The 9. symphony is full of parody and irony. The 13. symphony "Babi Yar" would also do and also qualifies here, as a requiem of the evilness of fascism. Though I finally decided for the 7. as it attacks both the nazi regime and the soviet communistdespotismus, the war, and all its tragics. It is also more traditional and conventional that the 8. One can always discuss the musical technical qualities in Cages "4'33", but after all it has generated a lot of discussions on what music and art in general is, what a pieces of music fills for kind of function in society and in a lot of fields. It will I think be remembered by coming generations as a monument over the wonder about wherehin art is going in a time where there no longer are any -isms. Mahler must be represented I think, as the great "compleator" in romanticism and the symphonic form. Still I think and hope the last word isn't said with Mahler. (and Sjosty but he already represented) Finally I have choosed Blomdahls Science-Fiction opera "Aniara", and that has nothing to do I am partial to all turnips in the world. I have chosen this work mainly thanks to its libretto (by nobelprize winner Harry Martinsson). It talks about a spaceship which looses its traced route in a instellear spacetravel, and has to float around in the endless spaces until all its passengers are dead, and even after. It is an allegory on the human world and the humans role and conditions in universe, about the mystery of life, and...so much is baked in into this story that it makes it one of the finest and most complex texts I know of. Indeed a masterpiece of our century! Forgive me, world, for having to leave out a bunch of other interesting, fine and important works! I hope they will be mentioned by others. Mats Norrman [log in to unmask]