Oh my god i never heard such a music like this .for the first time i hearing french music but it is more than what i actually think😩.It is so confusing we can't say what emotion did it explain
@dieterpeszat21052 ай бұрын
🎨Painting: "Saint Cecilia" by Jacopo Vignali (1592-1664; Italian painter of the early Baroque period); oil on canvas; w 145 x h 140 cm; National Gallery of Ireland.
@marchiomarchio15202 ай бұрын
Que c'est beau et apaisant les chaconnes. À entendre et à jouer c'est vraiment un bon moment.
@FunnyBlockGame-ym7bh2 ай бұрын
It was very very beautiful ❤️🖤♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️
@benlindsay60122 ай бұрын
Molto grazie, Maestro, per la bellissima musica!
@Adventuresawaits-r9q2 ай бұрын
I’ve been looking this piece from my childhood dreams! Thank you so much!!
@andrechan13592 ай бұрын
Johan Halvorsen had been quiet since this dropped.
@petermiles74602 ай бұрын
Few people on the average Clapham omnibus know much about Dieterich Buxtehude - unless they are organists - apart from one of the most repeated sleeve notes in music. This is the story of the twenty-year-old Johann Sebastian Bach in 1705 walking the 250 miles from Darmstadt in central Germany to Lubeck in Schleswig-Holstein in the south of modern Denmark to hear the legendary Buxtehude who was organist at the Marienkirche there. Then in 2007, the tercentenary of Buxtehude’s death (dates 1638ish - 1707) revealed that there was so much more to the man than organ music: chorales and other sacred music, keyboard music, oratorios and chamber music including, very fashionably, trio sonatas. One of the landmark recordings was the series of Naxos recordings from which this is taken (see below). I have a particular fondness for this period of musical history, on the cusp between the Renaissance and the Baroque, but (like finding a marrow in your weekly veg box) I can see that it is not to everyone’s taste. The music tends not to plumb emotional depths like Mahler’s, wring tortured hands like Tchaikovsky’s, reach up to God like Bach’s or burn with Promethean ideals like Beethoven’s. I just happen to like the sounds of that period. That short movement uses a ground base: that is, the intricacies of the music - the variations, the melodies, the musical figures - are underpinned by a single, unvarying, repeated base line. This was hugely popular Renaissance technique that reached its peak in the 1690s across Europe. I think of it as a musical equivalent of the rich, intricate carvings decoration (or fleuron, to use the exact architectural term) adorning the top of a Corinthian column - ornate adornment supported on simple, structural masonry. As a technique it can produce a range of effects. (It can also be very boring such as whenever used south of the Pyrenees, but that’s a different story.) The trick in this piece is that the underpinning bass line on the organ can almost go unnoticed; it can take a while to even realise it’s happening. We are in the hands of a master.
@empirekorea3 ай бұрын
영상 감상 잘하고 갑니다 응원드립니다
@mariogutierrez73363 ай бұрын
❤️
@mariogutierrez73363 ай бұрын
Espléndida
@igorcenturiao4 ай бұрын
wow, this the best version of the passacaglia i ever heard. Have os spotify it?
@Jesuislerameauneur5 ай бұрын
a good find !
@bpdfairydoll6 ай бұрын
1:09
@shnitzeedumple7 ай бұрын
Happy holidays
@hy_9_117 ай бұрын
merry christmas
@drjmansplace51747 ай бұрын
I do believe this piece may have been written for a dulcimer or lute.
@alexandradeuen16107 ай бұрын
Barockposaunen haben so einen klang .da werde ich weich in den knien .
@alexandradeuen16107 ай бұрын
Der einstieg ist schon mal schön .
@alishalileh8 ай бұрын
Probably not by Purcell but incredibly beautiful nevertheless.
@gimu12888 ай бұрын
❤❤❤
@philippegenet47968 ай бұрын
MERCI Monsieur Jean Philippe RAMEAU , Vous êtes Enorme , Délicieux ......
@alishalileh8 ай бұрын
This is an utter gem. Bruhns is such an underrated and unjustly neglected composer!
@gypsygirl7319 ай бұрын
I heard this on a segment of the Tudors series when the choir sang very heart touching
@heikkinylund86179 ай бұрын
Que peregre aquí pronto!
@marcos222169 ай бұрын
So is this a Toccata or a Sonata?
@Billy4767cry9 ай бұрын
Does anyone have the exact sheet music of this ? Because I can't find it anywhere on the internet.
@meirav1110 ай бұрын
What's the name of this amazing piece ? Who's the composer?
@hjct10 ай бұрын
Zo weemoedig mooi.
@AndSendMe10 ай бұрын
If the world were right this would have been part of a series. No one else performs this music with such lively expression.
@jacobolopezcitalan355411 ай бұрын
❤
@christinemartin63 Жыл бұрын
I am a far-gone addict .... I need my Handel fix every single day. (No, there is no cure, and even if there was, I would not take it. The illness ... and the fix ... and the cure are all one: Handel. Helas!)
@PatrickPt Жыл бұрын
Matt Haig zamanı durdurmanın yolları
@alishalileh Жыл бұрын
This is the best performance of this piece I have ever heard. I love the violins coming in at 1:08.
@Scrungge Жыл бұрын
The ending notes: you just know a lot of silliness was going on at the time. The movie Amadeus presented that well eventhough it was the classical period and not the baroque period anymore.
@Scrungge Жыл бұрын
Somehow I feel sad for a time and cultural setting (eventhough for the elite at the time) long gone.
@Scrungge Жыл бұрын
Awesome work. It sounds so intricate and modern but its over 300 years old!
@ENIGMAXII2112 Жыл бұрын
Lovley, wonderful lovley. But sorrowful at the same time...