Оошеломительное впечатление Звучит так,как будто, написано про нашу современную жизнь.Он просто гений,!! !!❤❤❤❤❤ Эта музыка вечна,потому,что вечно стремление человека к жизни.. какая бы она не была
@steveegallo338413 күн бұрын
BRAVO.....from Acapulco!
@steveegallo338413 күн бұрын
A sensational excitement in Music.....BRAVO from Acapulco!
@jieon182029 күн бұрын
쇤베르크 <정화된 밤> 현악 6중주, 후기 조성음악(1기)
@jamesjordan4796Ай бұрын
Does anyone know the painting or painter's name?
@giorgiociomei5030Ай бұрын
💖💖💖💖💖💖
@phoundyqАй бұрын
25:10 an epic moment in the history of music
@ericdevaughn5941Ай бұрын
A great symphony. Hints of Richard Strauss here and there just wonderfully crafted. This is an exciting gem. Lots of melody with color and excellent orchestration. It is very Germanic. Unfortunate that a Basque public didn't appreciate him.
@vespid89602 ай бұрын
A symphony for a trio
@TerryUniGeezerPeterson3 ай бұрын
So much better than his later stuff.
@petew.78703 ай бұрын
Perfectly captures the Transfiguration of Christ himself. Stunning and stirring.
@efun12342 ай бұрын
This is about an honest cheating woman and a friendly husband????
@yat_ii29 күн бұрын
@@efun1234Music is a transcendental means of expression... it doesn't have to only fit in the context of its creation... everyone feels music differently...
@efun123429 күн бұрын
@@yat_ii there is literally a poem about it 💀
@yat_ii28 күн бұрын
@@efun1234 That doesn't matter... just because the piece was written to reflect a poem doesn't mean that's the only way it can be interpreted...
@smokefan40003 ай бұрын
How the hell does he make three instruments sound like an entire orchestra
@MrKitrid3 ай бұрын
I'm disappointed... in myself for not giving her a chance earlier.
@Roadman32353 ай бұрын
dinkin is the one who played in you're sixteen johny burnette
@pauldootson78893 ай бұрын
This peice and 2 others will be played at the proms this year to celebrate his 150th birthday
What a beautiful composition! Thanks for the post. As a classical music collector over the last 45 years, I searched for works of female composers from Clara Schumann to Amy Beach to Jeanne-Louise Farrenc. But Thanks to KZbin, I have found many more female composers whose music are a joy to listen to. I recently heard Dora Pejačević's symphony on Cleveland Radio and was blown away and came here to listen to her other works. I am astonished of the beauty and maturity of her works and shocked that she has been neglected from the classical repertoire.
@steveegallo338413 күн бұрын
Indeed.....BRAVA from Acapulco!
@jyvaski3 ай бұрын
23:00
@pierreboland89104 ай бұрын
un des rares poèmes symphoniques que j'ai adoré dès la première écoute. Tellement simple et original à la fois. Chacun des tableau relate parfaitement chacune des ambiances de mort dans des contextes totalement différents. La mort d'Ostap représente vraiment les vainqueurs qui jouent avec les vaincus comme un chat avec une souris pour bien leur en faire baver avant le massacre final. Et enfin Taras Bulba qui meurt au bûcher emporté sur par la conviction mystique que l'Ukraine zaporète est orthodoxe, donc russe. Vladimir serait-il également fan de ce chef d'oeuvre ?
@Ckrishthofpher5 ай бұрын
Im sorry, but this is certainly not the masterpiece everyone says it is
@AWen-ic5zm5 ай бұрын
this is my song of the summer!!!
@ariciarose69176 ай бұрын
0:47 11:24 molto espressivo
@owondrousmachine6 ай бұрын
you can TELL schönberg was a string player
@javiermarting6 ай бұрын
I do not remember any great composer whose child was also a great composer. It is a kind of unwritten law thar after a genius father follows a mediocre child. Siegfried Wagner may have been an exception, along with some of Bach’s many children, even if he has never got the recognition he probably deserved as a composer. He was taught as a child by his grandfather, Franz Liszt, and Engelbert Humperdinck was his teacher for years, not to mention that his father was always there… This piece seems to me much better than expected on a first hearing. Clement Harris was first introduced to Siegfried in 1889 and the immediately matched. They went on a long trip to Asia in 1892, and there is little doubt they became lovers. Siegfried left upon reaching Port Said in Egypt on the way back home, just in time to attend the rehearsals in Bayreuth. Harris was killed in the Greco-Turkish war, in 1897 at the age of 25. Siegfried always kept a picture of Harris on his desk, and many believe “Gluck” was dedicated to him. A bisexual throughout his life, Harris was probably Siegfried’s love of his life.
@Sun-Limey6 ай бұрын
4:12
@hh08.106 ай бұрын
11:24
@breadandpeanuts7 ай бұрын
I can't listen to this, and god knows how much I tried to like it. How do you guys do it?
@leoribic16916 ай бұрын
Have you read the poem yet? The darker and "stranger" part (around 9:00) fits the story and function as tone painting. It's the woman's fear of telling the truth and losing the only man she's truly loved, guilt over not telling him, regret that she didn't wait and have a child with him instead, terror at the idea of her love despising her, despair at the thought of losing him, and the anguish of all these combined together. This, and the man's love of her leading him to accept and love her child as his own, and the ending of the piece being the beginning of a new family make this piece deeply impactful and tear-jerking for me. :)
@choiyatlam25527 ай бұрын
I know Franck is an organist, but the piano part in movement 1 looked too much like an organ part to me. I can almost hear the church organ playing that.
@joaomelo31667 ай бұрын
6:30
@flippert07 ай бұрын
Sounds sometimes as a continuation of Beethoven's late oevre, but it is also completely his own. Franck was a misunderstood, underapprciated visionary and not just a virtuoso.
@mckernan6037 ай бұрын
I listen to this when major solar events are occurring 😎
@f1f1s7 ай бұрын
I have no memory of when I heard this work - probably somewhere around 2019 - but this sounds like one of the most brilliant Romantic piano concerti - Moszkowski- or Scharwenka-level brilliant, and the melodic lines are waking up in my head after a 5-year slumber. And the like under the video is a proof of that. Thank you for this beauty!
@bugatti1038 ай бұрын
bravo! so good to hear these unknown pieces rather than the same ones played over and over again on radio
@windstorm10008 ай бұрын
Incredible string writing....like another emotional world never captured by strings before, that perfectly captures the passionate orginal poem--- and goes far beyond as music often does....
@andrea_zao8 ай бұрын
I love the mysterious and somber quality of Franck’s music, still passionate, very special ❤️
@serkratos12169 ай бұрын
2:54
@МаргаритаКупцова-к4ч9 ай бұрын
И снова БРАВО!❤ слушаю третий день, не могу наслушаться!❤
@shevek593410 ай бұрын
3:39 This specific chord caused a minor scandal at the time of the piece's publication, and some performers refused to program the piece due to this dominant with a ninth in the bass and the way Schoenberg resolves it in this passage.
@МаргаритаКупцова-к4ч10 ай бұрын
Браво!❤
@Gguy06110 ай бұрын
I would never in a million years expect this much diatonicism from Schoenberg Would be a great soundtrack to the Isle of Dr. Mareau or Dracula, both published around this time
@gerardbegni280610 ай бұрын
This beautiful sonata by the composer Dora Pejačević, who died rather young, is in a quite personal post romantic style.
@まあや-x7m11 ай бұрын
18:50
@andreasbyczkowski343511 ай бұрын
Many “minor”, forgotten and/or “over-shadowed” etc composers really produced totally worthy material! Cello repertoire is actually and thankfully almost “unlimited”! 🌈🌦️
@garygreen384511 ай бұрын
Being only familiar with his violin sonata, Symphonic Variations and Symphony, I probably would not have guessed this was early Franck! This is really an intriguing work!