astonishing counterpoint, as well as harmony and melody, Tchaikovsky was one of those rare talented geniuses like Mozart who mastered their art and was able to put all of what they learned to use to create masterpieces such as this and to express the soul.
@GillPalmer-t1f2 күн бұрын
why can't everyone just settle on a single clef for music...🙄
@LordFloofTM2 күн бұрын
As a clarinetist, the beauty is extracted from the pure suffering of the flutes and clarinets, but it’s a very unique beauty
@willrobinson12292 күн бұрын
Sachertorte from beginning to end 😊
@gonasjoss3 күн бұрын
I love it so much. It makes me so happy every time. Just the most beautiful, charming compositions I know. I listen to this a thousand times it doesn't get boring. Thank you tchaikovsky for bringing this to life
@tashwhimpey81146 күн бұрын
5:17
@RobertEveretteNealTDS-THT7 күн бұрын
This is one of my favorite pieces to listen to and play of all time. I mean it's such a well rounded piece of music. The key, the phrasing is just perfect. The Air is particularly beautiful and emotional. I just love everything about it. Glad to see I'm not alone.
@karllieck90649 күн бұрын
Such a feeble and lifeless performance. Outta here.
@VAbyss197711 күн бұрын
Oh my gosh we played Jig last year for a music competition and as a cello, I LOVED playing the chords at the end! It's something that other composers don't really think about and I'm really happy that Holst balanced out the parts to make them all interesting. Thank you so much for posting this piece along with the full score! Really made my day :D
@alanpotter868013 күн бұрын
11:40 ... sadly another rendition that doesn't follow scores. I hate that abrupt end of such a lush exotic theme, when it was clearly indicated : diminuendo -> morendo -> PPPPPPPPPPPPP!!!
@kgjhskgskgskgskdgfsk13 күн бұрын
1:16
@illlioto18 күн бұрын
2:38
@atjtat-k8t20 күн бұрын
2:25
@Katefox-g7n20 күн бұрын
Just moved up to the orchrestra above and we are playing this piece! Im dying its so hard and fas but its rly fun. (Im play viola btw)
@DK-tv6rk22 күн бұрын
Eco gecko
@DonnaLee-g8q22 күн бұрын
Robinson Nancy Perez Kenneth Martinez Kevin
@misionero300023 күн бұрын
El primer movimiento suena tan mediocre como muchas de las obras del clasicismo <3
@TheHolyMongolEmpireАй бұрын
This is his best composure imo
@stvp68Ай бұрын
We sang the choral part for this in college. The choral part sounds like ann orgasm. We pretended to light cigarettes afterwards.
@hehehowjhdhjw-uz5fcАй бұрын
5:00
@hehehowjhdhjw-uz5fcАй бұрын
46:51
@stubbsmusic543Ай бұрын
What an incredibly inferior composer. Stilted and unimaginative. Did we just have to toss a bone to Scandinavia? What a BORE.
@JouleHedy-t6iАй бұрын
Lewis Mark Harris Kimberly Wilson John
@athanasiospapadopoulos9732Ай бұрын
Immortal, Haendel! We all knee to your greatness in a spirit of love and veneration for you music! Hearing your music one may well understand why Beethoven was crying every time he heard your music and he asserted that you are thd greatest of the composers!
@Gavman_Gaming_09_79Ай бұрын
I had the beginning and the Euphonium solo of March as audition music to get in the top band group in my school. It was hard, but I got in.
@teodorb.p.composerАй бұрын
In my opinion one of the greatest sonatas of 20th century!!
@mdoncompositions26 күн бұрын
Absolutely, Medtner's skill of using each and every motif to drive the piece forward is on full display here.
@teodorb.p.composer26 күн бұрын
@@mdoncompositions Exactly! Medtner's motivic work is so creative and ingenious in this sonata. It's just such a piece only Medtner could compose!
@mdoncompositions26 күн бұрын
@@teodorb.p.composer If I may ask since I see you so often in the comments of Medtner videos; what are your favorite pieces by him?
@teodorb.p.composer26 күн бұрын
@@mdoncompositions So hard to choose. But O would say Night wind, Sonata romantica, Sonata G minor, 2nd and 3rd piano concerto and Second improvisation Op. 47. These are the major one, but I love his shorter pieces, mainly Opus 17, 34, and 40. But it@s so hard to choose, lately, I have listened to more than the half of his work. What's yours?
@mdoncompositions25 күн бұрын
@@teodorb.p.composer All great choices! When it comes to his sonatas, I have a soft spot for the Sonata-ballade, Sonata-skazka, and the Sonata Idylle (but they're obviously all so good, especially the sonata-triade). I have to say that his 3rd concerto is miles ahead of the 1st and 2nd, although the preceding two are wonderful as well. As for miniatures, I'd say his op. 17, 26, 35, and 49. Too hard to choose! Especially when you find that everything he touched was gold, like the Romantic Sketches for the young + the violin sonatas.
@pietrozuffa4718Ай бұрын
12:01
@felipeduenas2968Ай бұрын
exellece pice of music j.s bach was a master
@duckydoesstuffbasic9291Ай бұрын
As someone who was shoved into first chair bc everyone else went abroad count your days
@lisys511Ай бұрын
This lever du jour part sounds like sky children of the light game and joe hisaishi music from studio ghibli movies
@onlyme112Ай бұрын
I've heard that Sleigh Ride melody before! Sounds just like a sleigh rushing across the snow, pulled by a horse (or two).
@coasterdragon155Ай бұрын
incredible omfg
@billpage6487Ай бұрын
Stunning piece of music, so creative and it seems to bring out the best of all these beautiful instruments
@alessiocorrao7153Ай бұрын
14:14
@yiwu1590Ай бұрын
1:17 13:58
@snowmoon1402Ай бұрын
Viola🥺🥺❤️❤️
@CuratorOfRealityАй бұрын
I had to listen to Zubin Mehta's recording after this to cleanse my ears.
@R.ErikLindАй бұрын
53:30 Now THAT is how you write a build up to a climax!
That A-flat in the violas around 0:25 is such a fascinating bit of chromaticism. It's coming from E-flat major, even though most of the chords surrounding that E-flat IV chord are happily in B-flat major. We get this brief moment where the E-flat we've been hearing as a IV is treated in the key of E-flat, only to immediately thereafter revert to A naturals in a dominant chord in the original key of B-flat.
@kneal9203Ай бұрын
This piece is so underrated :(
@XavierHalmАй бұрын
3:23
@JacksonV136Ай бұрын
But why does the third movement remind me of the first movement of Griegs Norwegian Dances?