This is the WILDEST music I know

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David Bruce Composer

David Bruce Composer

Күн бұрын

What's the wildest piece of music you know? How Wild can music get? Is there a limit? Death Metal seems pretty wild, can it get wilder than that? Let's find out!
Research Assistance: Robin Haigh robinhaigh.com/
Thanks to all the viewers who submitted videos of the wildest piece they know - sorry I couldn't include them all!
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Videos featured:
The Confused Girl ♥ Soflan-chan!! Camellia feat. Nanahira • かめりあ feat. ななひら - 混乱少女...
Cannibal Corpse - Eats Moscow Alive
• Cannibal Corpse - Eats...
Josh Wink - Higher STate of Consciousness
• Josh Wink at Ultra 201...
The Shaggs It's Halloween
• It's Halloween
Captain Beefheart Trout Mask Replica
• Captain Beefheart & Hi...
Louis Andreissen Worker's Union
• Louis Andriessen: Work...
Liturgy “HAJJ” - • Liturgy - HAJJ
Birtwistle
Panic - • Harrison Birtwistle - ...
Ives Symphony No.4 • Charles Ives Symphony ...
Wynton marsalis black bottom stomp • Black Bottom Stomp -Wy...
Ryan Latimer - Antiarkie - • Ryan Latimer: Antiarki...
Hiromi Uehara improvises on Canon in D • canon in D but it keep...
Derek Bailey and the Shaking Ray Levis: - • Derek Bailey and the S...
Spike Jones Tchaikovsky medley • SPIKE JONES:Tchaikovsk...
Taiko drumming • Kodo - "O-Daiko" - HD ...
Biber - • Heinrich Biber - Batta...
Paganini concerto 1 • Augustin Hadelich -- P...
Mozart musical joke • W.A.Mozart - A Musical...
Messiaen - turangalilia mvt5 • Messiaen - Turangalîla...
Rolling stones 1964 • The Rolling Stones Liv...
Black sabbath 1970 - • Black Sabbath - "Paran...
Motorhead 1980 - • Motorhead - Ace Of Spa...
Slayer 1989 • Slayer - Live @ Hammer...
Cannibal corpse 1993 • Cannibal Corpse - Eats...
Fanitullen - Magdalena Krzyżak-Türschmid playing hardanger fiddle • Fanitullen - Magdalena...

Пікірлер: 1 500
@DBruce
@DBruce Жыл бұрын
Thanks to everyone who submitted a video answering the question 'What's the wildest piece you know' - I loved including everyone and was only sorry I couldn't include more. If you'd like to be involved in future participatory things like that do follow me on twitter (@davidbruce) or instagram (@davidbrucecomposer).
@Felitsius
@Felitsius Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video! A particular band/collective that I'd have loved to see here is IGORRR - Barrock, heavy metal, Opera, Electronic music and much more all combined into one wild experience. I don't have a particular tune to recommend but they made an awsome making of of their last album "spirituality and distorion" I can't recommend it enough! kzbin.info/www/bejne/o2GlZY2amchsoJI Another two cent's - when you mentioned the mechanic/automatic piano - this would have been a good place to also mention all the developments of electronic music - say skrillex or what not :) I love your videas thank you for all the awsome work and introducing me so so many great artists while making me laugh, smile and gereally enjoy myself :)
@olivernp7515
@olivernp7515 Жыл бұрын
Your teacher was Birtwistle?
@aprendendoguita2119
@aprendendoguita2119 Жыл бұрын
The best harpejos music
@jayzill5348
@jayzill5348 Жыл бұрын
Dude, it's Original Sin - Therapy >>> kzbin.info/www/bejne/sHi7YZawa6llpas
@richjones7313
@richjones7313 Жыл бұрын
charming fella, great content.
@subjectline
@subjectline Жыл бұрын
I think the Große Fuge is pretty wild. It sounds like Beethoven hurled himself through Bach and landed on his head in 1915.
@mileshall9235
@mileshall9235 Жыл бұрын
One of my all time favorites
@mazeppa1231
@mazeppa1231 Жыл бұрын
Will definitely check that out!
@grumpymyotis7764
@grumpymyotis7764 Жыл бұрын
Indeed. If someone played it to me and asked to guess the composer... I would've said Schnittke rather than Beethoven. :-)
@charlottemarceau8062
@charlottemarceau8062 Жыл бұрын
So wild ! (I enjoy the arrangement for two pianists too! Cacophonous & wonderful and i totally agree with the Bach analogy, like a bad tempered clavier!)
@EntelSidious_gamzeylmz
@EntelSidious_gamzeylmz Жыл бұрын
incredible piece
@dylanlapointe6145
@dylanlapointe6145 Жыл бұрын
My favorite wild music has probably got to be death grips. So gritty and stark, yet so damn groovin
@jackzawada4375
@jackzawada4375 2 ай бұрын
Ah I knew someone would beat me to it. Yeah I was gonna suggest "Hot Head" off of Bottomless Pit. The lyrics alone deserve a mention.
@user-bw7se2zg7b
@user-bw7se2zg7b 2 ай бұрын
I just listened to it. Quite good! Thanks!
@pen6816
@pen6816 Жыл бұрын
The Rite of Spring must surely be mentioned. A ballet about sacrificial virgins which caused a riot at the premier; nothing tops that.
@steveruzich3273
@steveruzich3273 Жыл бұрын
You could add this to the criteria of wildness: name a piece which caused a riot in its first performance.
@michaelmedlinger6399
@michaelmedlinger6399 Жыл бұрын
It‘s over a hundred years old, anyone over the age of 10 has heard it any number of times, yet a good performance of The Rite of Spring is perfectly capable of sending shock waves throughout the body! There seems to be some thought that the riot at the premiere was not as extreme as reported, perhaps a setup to push ticket sales - but it‘s too good a story to debunk! Another wild piece: Prokofiev‘s Toccata! A certain amount of that is probably amazement that anyone can play the damn thing! Yet plenty do.
@andrew_owens7680
@andrew_owens7680 Жыл бұрын
The Rites of Spring is a gateway drug. ;)
@JeffHendricks
@JeffHendricks 2 ай бұрын
One of my favorites. Eternally magnificently wild.
@billwesley
@billwesley 2 ай бұрын
good choice
@OphatTaerattanachai
@OphatTaerattanachai Жыл бұрын
What comes up to me for its wildness… - Ferneyhough - La Terre est un Homme - Schnittke - Overture from Gogol Suite, Mvt.2 ‘Toccata’ from Concerto Grosso - Rouse - Gorgon - George Crumb - “Music of the Apocalypse” from Star-Child - Xenakis - Most of his orchestral pieces - Peter Maxwell Davies - 8 Songs for a Mad King
@geo1496
@geo1496 Жыл бұрын
Good to see someone mention Schnittke here. For me his first symphony takes the top spot, being an ultimate exploration of wildness, fun, and intensity, combining pretty much everything you could think of in music in ways almost unimaginable, both seriously and not.
@nikhill5340
@nikhill5340 Жыл бұрын
Xenakis, agreed 100% still cant understand a thing about Herma
@1persme1persme-it36
@1persme1persme-it36 2 ай бұрын
thank you for the list! will try to look for the music. Come to think of it : Rouse wasn't there a sax player by that name .. played with McCoy Tyner?
@AllyCraig
@AllyCraig Жыл бұрын
My first thought would be something by Cardiacs - either The Duck and Roger the Horse, or Eat It Up Worms Hero. They have the compositional intricacy of prog rock, but the energy and intensity of punk or metal. The songs are, on first listen, completely unpredictable, changing key, time signature, and volume without warning. Cardiacs are my standard answer whenever someone asks me what's the weirdest music I like.
@kenvyn123
@kenvyn123 Жыл бұрын
One of the best bands out there. Tim Smith was a genius!
@gwalla
@gwalla Жыл бұрын
Dirty Boy is a pretty good example of the Wild Stubbornness (or possibly Intense Focus On One Sound), with that impossibly extended choral dominant 7th that lasts long past every musician listening to it has ground their teeth down to nubs waiting for it to resolve, and then...
@HoraceMash
@HoraceMash Жыл бұрын
Definitely unpredictable; amazingly listenable; endlessly fascinating; uniquely inventive
@emmasnsteb6996
@emmasnsteb6996 Жыл бұрын
Thinking the same thing, wild but brilliant music
@iLOLZU42
@iLOLZU42 Жыл бұрын
Camellia and the Hyperpop genre are so close to the edge of noise sometimes, it's incredibly wild and fantastic.
@minmax5
@minmax5 Жыл бұрын
If you are interested in Camellia and Hyperpop, you may also want to check out the genre Mashcore. Very wild stuff going on there hehehe
@vwnb
@vwnb Жыл бұрын
Another great example is early Easyfun. Shrek 5 is arguably wilder than those plunderphonic 100 Gecs pieces, and you can dance to Shrek 5
@rainbowkrampus
@rainbowkrampus Жыл бұрын
I can't with that stuff, it makes my ears tired after a minute. Everything is just right up front all at once.
@vwnb
@vwnb Жыл бұрын
@@minmax5 Is it back in fashion? I used to blast Here I Go Again by Toecutter all the time. Geordie Salvation might be my fave track off it
@minmax5
@minmax5 Жыл бұрын
@@vwnb I'm a huge fan of toecutter, prob my favorite mashcore artist. i've noticed quite a few underground breakcore artists dipping their toes into mashcore in the past couple years, im not sure i'd say it's back in fashion? but there certainly is a resurgence to some degree. There have been more mashcore albums documented as released this year and the year prior on rate your music than any time in the past! This is likely connected to the overall expansion of the breakcore scene which has happened in the past couple years.
@mothra3477
@mothra3477 Жыл бұрын
I really like free improvisation/free jazz; it's undoubtedly wild and wonderful. So I would like to recommend everyone two albums: one is Otomo Yoshihide's New Jazz Orchestra's 'Out to Lunch' (a rendition of Eric Dolphy's album), and Zeitkratzer's 'The shape of jazz to come' (an album of standards by a german ensemble which usually focuses on more contemporary music. It is unrelated to Ornette Coleman's album of the same name). I love both albums and I hope you like them too
@MenschenImHaus
@MenschenImHaus Жыл бұрын
The wildest piece is clearly John cage's 4'33" played on a giant construction site during a tornado.
@somegeezer
@somegeezer Жыл бұрын
Always amusing that Death Metal is seen as the wild end of music. Even Metalheads would easily and quickly point to Grindcore as far more against the grain, whilst still having the distorted guitars and heavy drums and gutteral growls. Death Metal is a pretty solid and straight forwards style of music, in the range of all that is music. I think one of my favourite bands for being wild, in my consideration, is Unexpect. Which, as the name implies, defies expectation. Until you've heard it a thousand times, of course. But that first listen hits you like a bus.
@VacantPsalm
@VacantPsalm Жыл бұрын
How the hell did I not think of Unexpect? I've been sitting here racking my brain trying to think of the wildest song I know. Intense? easy. Wild? Not how I would describe a lot of this stuff. Unexpect though, yeah, that's it. But which song? When the Joyful Dead are Dancing?
@ConvincingPeople
@ConvincingPeople Жыл бұрын
I feel like there are some highly experimental death metal bands which can provide a very real sense of wildness, Uzumaki being my go-to, but that's more in how they defy the expectations of the genre than in how they exemplify it. In terms of personal wildness in extreme metal, the collapse into pure chaos on the untitled final track of grind/sludge titans Burmese's Lun Yurn, which is significantly longer than the rest of the album combined, is probably tops, although I would also point to certain particularly grotesque depressive black metal bands, specifically early Todesstoß and Sortsind, as having a genuinely unhinged and inhuman sound to them.
@somegeezer
@somegeezer Жыл бұрын
@@ConvincingPeople Death Metal gets put together with a lot of other things to form microgenres and fusion genres. But in itself, and in the form that David even points to in this vid, has a straightforwards sound. It's quite tight and structured. Its complexity is in its performance, not its musicality. It can be technically and physically difficult. But musically, its most wild feature is its oft atonality. Which is a low bar for being considered wild.
@UndecimeBeatitudo
@UndecimeBeatitudo Жыл бұрын
I would agree in Unecpect here with you
@gwalla
@gwalla Жыл бұрын
Unexpect is great. I'd also nominate Igorrr, which careens back and forth between genres at the drop of a hat, from death metal to breakcore to operatic arias, swing, polka, pretty much anything.
@seanhollandcanada
@seanhollandcanada Жыл бұрын
When I first heard Bitches Brew as a teenager in 1969 or 1970, I thought it was just unorganized noise. But with repeated listens due to my and my friends' quest to be cool, it grew on me. Now I wouldn't be surprised to hear it in an elevator.
@xyshomavazax
@xyshomavazax Жыл бұрын
A lot of moments from Captain Beefheart’s _Trout Mask Replica_ come to mind. And in a sense the music of The Shaggs - completely free of “what you’re supposed to do in music”. (Hah! I made this comment a couple of minutes before you mentioned both. Great minds think alike!)
@dirtysploof5890
@dirtysploof5890 Жыл бұрын
Love both lol The Residents are great too, but in a much different style
@DaveyGage
@DaveyGage Жыл бұрын
Came here for the Shaggs!!
@nathanjasper512
@nathanjasper512 Жыл бұрын
Ohh yeah. Captain beef heart is wild for sure.
@jaelee1005
@jaelee1005 Ай бұрын
Fast and bulbous! Bulbous also tapered.
@aparacity9676
@aparacity9676 Жыл бұрын
Shostakovich 4 is definitely his most wild symphony.
@kevinlaster9447
@kevinlaster9447 Жыл бұрын
“Machine Gun” by Peter Brötzmann. I can 100% guarantee that listening to it all the way through in one sitting is one of the freakiest and most disturbingly beautiful musical experiences you may ever have!
@wojciechdraminski3035
@wojciechdraminski3035 Жыл бұрын
For me it's the peak of European free jazz, wonderful album
@kevinlaster9447
@kevinlaster9447 Жыл бұрын
@@wojciechdraminski3035 absolutely!
@kevinlaster9447
@kevinlaster9447 Жыл бұрын
It would have been really cool to hear Bruce discuss freely-improvised music. There’s a whole tradition of music making that, in my opinion, is quite a bit wilder than anything on this list. But a great video nonetheless!
@rams6702
@rams6702 Жыл бұрын
i read "Machine gun" and thought you meant hendrix but still i thought that was pretty wild too
@celestindupilon2773
@celestindupilon2773 10 ай бұрын
RIP Peter.
@ChristopherRoss.
@ChristopherRoss. Жыл бұрын
I'm going to have to say the entire "Calculating Infinity" album by The Dillinger Escape Plan. I've never heard anything else that even approaches the intensity and chaos of that whole album. Especially when you see live performances.
@ChristopherRoss.
@ChristopherRoss. Жыл бұрын
Honorable mention: "You Won't Get What You Want" by Daughters. Though not the most chaotic, or panicked album (see above), it induces an intense state of panic and chaos in me when listening. For best results, turn it up loud in a room with the lights off, and listen start to finish.
@debrucey
@debrucey Жыл бұрын
Great choice :D
@RabbiEldritchstein
@RabbiEldritchstein Жыл бұрын
Bro i immediately thought of dillinger too especially sonething like pig latin with mike patton
@RohannvanRensburg
@RohannvanRensburg Жыл бұрын
Obscura by Gorguts?
@collinbeal
@collinbeal Жыл бұрын
Check out DollMeat by MouthBreather, Our Puzzling Encounters Considered by Psyopus, Nano-Nucleonic Cyborg Summoning by Behold... the Arctopus!, and Meta by Car Bomb
@joeklemke3227
@joeklemke3227 Жыл бұрын
Meredith Monk deserves a mention for wildest music. I would LOVE a David Bruce episode on Meredith Monk. She really deserves to be better known. Two songs to start with: Madwoman's Vision and Gotham Lullaby.
@jackrobinson5671
@jackrobinson5671 Жыл бұрын
Shostakovich's 4th and 2nd symphonies are pretty wild!
@EdenLippmann
@EdenLippmann Жыл бұрын
I've seen a few comments mention this but Pulse Demon by Merzbow is literally 75 minutes of ear-shredding static and feedback; basically an entire album of exactly the kind of sounds you usually avoid in music production like the plague. Also, in terms of stretching the definition of what music even is: Homotopy To Marie by Nurse With Wound. The first track, called "I Cannot Feel You as the Dogs are Laughing and I am Blind", is three minutes of metal crinkling sound, followed by five minutes of groans, then three minutes three minutes of chewing sounds. For best results, listen with the lights off.
@aksela6912
@aksela6912 Жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same thing, or rather the whole japanoise scene in general. A personal favourite is Hanatarash: kzbin.info/www/bejne/gmjTkHZvhNGBapI&ab_channel=RoiloGolez
@mnchls
@mnchls Жыл бұрын
sorry but Pulse Demon is fuckin entry level Merzbow
@EdenLippmann
@EdenLippmann Жыл бұрын
@@mnchls Oh, go on, then; enlighten me. I know you're gagging to.
@dmrfnk
@dmrfnk Жыл бұрын
I was thinking of Alec Empire & Merzbow CBGB New York live watching this.
@EdenLippmann
@EdenLippmann Жыл бұрын
@@dmrfnk Just listened to that; the first track had a descernable melody and drums. Get this pop bullshit out of here; I want _noise._
@DanielTartarottiSobrosa
@DanielTartarottiSobrosa Жыл бұрын
For me there are two "moments" in the pop era that depicts very well the ideia of wild: Jimi Hendrix playing live, which is the wild meaning "savage", and the instrumental mess in A Day in the Life, meaning "there's no rules".
@themathhatter5290
@themathhatter5290 Жыл бұрын
Hendrix' "Star Spangled Banner" might go down as one of the wildest performances. It wasn't just taking the old and familiar and injecting it with the unexpected, it was almost like it peeled back skin and exposed the organs of what that song truly meant in a more chaotic, dissonant time and place. He managed to turn a song made for praising a country into a thorough thrashing of it. I have nothing but respect for him.
@george474747
@george474747 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, Hendrix. 'Wild' suggests throwing off the shackles of civilised order and just expressing yourself animalistically. I've never seen a musician so uninhibited. It's sexual, it's violent, it's instinctive... When he fucks his guitar and lights it on fire, that doesn't feel an exaggeration of his music. [Now that I think of ritual sacrifice, the energy in Rite of Spring is truly wild as well.]
@SirVoland
@SirVoland Жыл бұрын
I absolutely love reading through the comments and seeing all the different interpretations of wildness in all imaginable musical styles.
@dio52
@dio52 Жыл бұрын
I've been listening a ton to King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard's new album Omnium Gatherum. It's wild to me how many genres of music they cram onto a single album and all done at a high level.
@morrisgautreau6704
@morrisgautreau6704 Жыл бұрын
ME TOO!!! I love that Microtonal stuff! I've order their Flying Microtonal Banana! Can't wait to get it!
@weatheranddarkness
@weatheranddarkness Жыл бұрын
In that department I recommend to you (if you haven't heard it already) Disco Volante from Mr Bungle.
@johnb.1020
@johnb.1020 Жыл бұрын
A wildly eclectic and disappointing band. Tried listening to them two or three years ago, never again.
@fraserhobbs9016
@fraserhobbs9016 Жыл бұрын
great album
@kwgm8578
@kwgm8578 10 ай бұрын
The names are wild enuf.
@wwklnd
@wwklnd Жыл бұрын
Lots of people have mentioned stuff I thought of, but two bands/artists I haven't seen mentioned would be British industrial black metal band Anaal Nathrakh and French experimental producer Igorrr. Anaal Nathrakh's music may not be as "brutal" as some others, but especially their older stuff is _extremely intense._ The first time I heard "The Supreme Necrotic Audnance", I was floored by the massive sound and sheer violence of the vocals, on a completely different level than most death/black metal or grindcore vocalists. They also slip into noise music at times, it's fascinating. Igorrr on the other hand is... odd. He mixes breakcore, black metal, baroque music, classical, jazz, triphop, operatic vocals mixed with guttural screams, and some properly odd stuff like putting a bunch of seed on a toy piano and recording the sound of hens pecking at it. And yet, it somehow works and is entirely listenable (and in my opinion, very good!) Some of my choices for songs by Igorrr would probably be "Tout Petit Moineau", "My Chicken's Symphony", "Cheval", and "Biquette" (feat. Ruby My Dear). :)
@wwklnd
@wwklnd Жыл бұрын
One song I came to think about a bit later is "The Most Unwanted Song" by Komar and Melamid, composed by David Soldier. It's a bit of a joke, where they surveyed a bunch of people asking them to identify what they enjoy least and most in music, then created the most wanted and most unwanted songs they could. It mashes together a rapping opera soprano with cheap drum machine loops, bagpipes, polka, "cowboy music", a children's choir urging the listener to shop for various holidays at Wal-Mart, commentary on the philosophy of Wittgenstein, and political slogans shouted through a bullhorn. "The Most Wanted Song" is also fascinating, but much less wild, haha. Both are also quite interesting perspectives on popular music tastes in 1997. I also remembered that the entire genre of lowercase exists, which consists of recordings of near-silence that have been extremely amplified until you can hear the tiniest noises. One of the most well-known albums in the genre is Steve Roden's "Forms of Paper", which applies this process to him handling sheets of paper.
@wwklnd
@wwklnd Жыл бұрын
And continuing on with conceptual wildness, another genre really pushing the limits would be "danger music", which truly lives up to its name.
@saulgoodman1390
@saulgoodman1390 Жыл бұрын
I absolutely love Igorrr. Came down here to mentioned him
@EdenLippmann
@EdenLippmann Жыл бұрын
Just fyi, if you want the italics to work properly, there needs to be a space after the second underscore, so the full stop should be inside the underscores.
@wwklnd
@wwklnd Жыл бұрын
@@EdenLippmann Thanks! Fixed. :)
@kekez9426
@kekez9426 Жыл бұрын
Expected you would mention 4'33''. It's a classic, still kinda wild
@JackRackam
@JackRackam 6 ай бұрын
Igorr's Hallelujah is the first thing that came to my mind reading the title of this video. I love a good chicken solo
@m4x358
@m4x358 Жыл бұрын
When John Coltrane performed Vigil live in Comblain La Tour in 1965... The beginning when it is a duet with the drummer, that dialogue between sax and drums is just so powerful. And then it transcends when piano and bass join in. The wildest music!
@NaviDoodlez
@NaviDoodlez Жыл бұрын
In terms of pure wildness, I would have to say Merzbow - Pulse Demon album Japanoise definitely boils the rules in acid
@wwklnd
@wwklnd Жыл бұрын
Pulse Demon and Animal Magnetism are probably two of my favourite noise albums. Intense.
@WalyB01
@WalyB01 8 ай бұрын
Deathstorm (Maruosa & Bong-Ra) - We Are Deathstorm nothing has ever beaten that.
@iommi13
@iommi13 3 ай бұрын
Saw the video title and Hocus Pocus by Focus was the first thing to pop in my head. Yodeling, Whistling, and just manic energy through out.
@niroe82
@niroe82 Жыл бұрын
Black midi stuff bewilders me by its ability to sound conventionally good in some aspect while literally making laser sounds out of a piano. The few black midi renditions of Akasha by xi that are around on youtube just absolutely blow my mind.
@WeIsDaTyrantz
@WeIsDaTyrantz Жыл бұрын
Le Toit Du Monde - Gorguts. It is death metal but it's also one of the most intensely immersive experiences, still leaves me feeling absolutely bewildered, almost distraught, and I've been listening to it almost every week for 9 years since it first came out. Hell, the entire Coloured Sands album is its own unique experience.
@arms7260
@arms7260 Жыл бұрын
Good choice, their album Obscura was the first metal album that actually startled me
@RohannvanRensburg
@RohannvanRensburg Жыл бұрын
Amazing record but I concur: Obscura is definitely more unhinged
@TheR971
@TheR971 Жыл бұрын
omg the first tome I see a gorguts fan in the wild. been a massive fan since colored sands!
@palibakufun
@palibakufun Жыл бұрын
Colored Sands is 100% one of the best albums of the 2010s. Maybe even the 2000's as a whole. Maybe ever.
@haydentaylor2101
@haydentaylor2101 Жыл бұрын
Gotta say Schnittke's 1st Symphony, just an hour of stopping every 30 seconds to ask yourself what on earth you are listening to.
@ABC_Guest
@ABC_Guest Жыл бұрын
That one's great! So eclectic. :)
@finnaboing
@finnaboing Жыл бұрын
Wildest song I know is *SDSS1416+13B (Zercon, a Flagpole Sitter)* by Scott Walker. It's an absolutely insane, 21-minute masterpiece that skeeves me out every time I think about it - it's so out-there in the most inconceivable ways to me. I've definitely heard more complex songs before and since, but A Flagpole Sitter just goes for it so hard that it can't not take that top spot of "weirdest song I've ever heard."
@davidcubberly5435
@davidcubberly5435 Жыл бұрын
I was also going to mention Scott Walker's later albums. Definitely "mysterious wild" for me. I'm completely enraptured by those albums.
@mar.pequen
@mar.pequen 5 ай бұрын
This comment introduced me to Scott Walker and after I listened his last 3 albums, I came back from that dark and funny dimension with a new perspective, it changed the way I percieve music now, as a listener and as a composer. Thank you. Now I know the source, the well of ideas from which my personal influences (Bowie, Peter Gabriel, Steven Wilson, Mikael Akerfeldt, Roger Waters, Leonard Cohen) had been drinking on.
@finnaboing
@finnaboing 5 ай бұрын
@@mar.pequen I'm glad I could be of service! I will say, it's worth noting that his albums from the 60's are much, much more normal than his later work, so it's unlikely that the SUPER weird stuff ended up influencing those people you mentioned. his earlier stuff is definitely still worth checking out though if you haven't
@u8qu1tis
@u8qu1tis Жыл бұрын
The opening section of Beethoven's Grosse Fugue is absolutely crazy wild.
@mostlyokay
@mostlyokay Жыл бұрын
I would say Threnody to the Victims of Hiroshima by Penderecki. Not only is it wild in the sense of going against commonplace musical structure and expectation, it chooses to tackle a very upsetting real event and really drive home the horrors of it. I's say it's wild in the sense that it takes something we wouldn't like to think about and places it center stage
@dehanbadenhorst1398
@dehanbadenhorst1398 Жыл бұрын
This video is pretty wild, well done. I've learned and discovered so much, thank you
@rollermusic
@rollermusic Жыл бұрын
A very enjoyable video, David bravo!
@superultramegarobot
@superultramegarobot Жыл бұрын
Amazing list! I would propose Philip Glass's Opera "Einstein On The Beach" as a wonderful example of "wildness through repetition / composition", in a pretty transcendent musical depiction of genius and the miracle of consciousness.
@jwc3o2
@jwc3o2 Жыл бұрын
even more fun is Richard Truhlar's "Glass On The Beach", an obvious homage but performed entirely with extended vocal techniques
@superultramegarobot
@superultramegarobot Жыл бұрын
@@jwc3o2 That sounds amazing! Do you know where it's available - can't seem to find it available anywhere on the internet, for purchase or streaming! Thanks :)
@composingchef
@composingchef Жыл бұрын
This was my thought, exactly.
@SeanTBarrett
@SeanTBarrett Жыл бұрын
I'm going to go with Glenn Branca, Symphony No. 6 (Devil Choirs at the Gates of Heaven) as the wildest music I actually listen to by choice, though I was tempted by the rapid changes of John Zorn's Naked City, and if I didn't qualify it with "willing to listen to it by choice", I might pick The Resident's Third Reich 'n' Roll. (This comment made before watching the video, as requested.)
@wesleynass5971
@wesleynass5971 Жыл бұрын
Love this video. I never really thought about different ways music could be “wild.” Also every time Dorian shows up in your videos it just melts my heart, such a cute little character ❤️
@1persme1persme-it36
@1persme1persme-it36 3 ай бұрын
oh, and thank you very much for a very entertaining little show! Would have loved to hear the examples in full length but you put the adresses in the stuff below the window. Thank you again!
@RedzaMusic
@RedzaMusic Жыл бұрын
Great video! If I were to add one aspect into the conversation, it would be wildness in sound design / production. IDM/Glitch/Breakcore music has been pushing that boundary for a while now. The wildest stuff I can think of right now is Dariacore, a genre consisting of hyperspeed song mashups with over the top synths, bass, and drums that is genuinely enjoyable to listen to. Not wild for wildness sake, but pushing the boundaries of music for the love of music.
@cartesiancoordinates7758
@cartesiancoordinates7758 Жыл бұрын
There are also artists like kobaryo and m1dy who are pushing the speeds of music creation
@diegoparra6918
@diegoparra6918 Жыл бұрын
I love how modern production has been influenced by breakcore, glitch and even nightcore
@AlexanderSuponya
@AlexanderSuponya Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the Turangalîla shoutout! I think musical wilderness can go many ways - on one hand you have artists like Daedelus and Daisuke Tanabe who go to great lengths to micro-engineer a texture to the songs they produce. On the other, it's so fun to see bands like Sigur Rós or composers like Messiaen who wind you up with the sheer mass of their compositions. Stay wild, folks!
@Paolo8772
@Paolo8772 Жыл бұрын
This was a fantastic video and I need to see share it and see it again.
@grasshopper7760
@grasshopper7760 4 ай бұрын
Thank you for a great video!
@brianjenkins7072
@brianjenkins7072 Жыл бұрын
Before looking at other comments I also first thought of Merzbow's Pulse Demon. But for me the wildest piece that is more "comprehensible" that I periodically revisit is Karlheinz Stockhausen's Helicopter Quartet.
@austinwoods466
@austinwoods466 Жыл бұрын
"Windowlicker" by Aphex Twin is pretty wild. "John McLaughlin" from "Bitches Brew" by Miles Davis is very wild. "Hajnal" by Venetian Snares gets a bit wild. "The Litanies of Satan" by Diamanda Galas is also quite wild. It's a wild world, just ask The Birthday Party as they "Blast Off!".
@frankherrgott
@frankherrgott Жыл бұрын
This video is so well documented and edited. Big thanks and big bravo!
@tihomirpetkov8476
@tihomirpetkov8476 Жыл бұрын
Superb! Comprehensive and funny, as usual!
@meloniusman
@meloniusman Жыл бұрын
The Mingus big band can have a very wild and crazy sound with a lot of players doing something different but still in conversation. Haitian fight song and Moanin are good examples of this
@jared_bowden
@jared_bowden Жыл бұрын
Mingus was very heavily influenced by Dixieland and other Earlier styles of Jazz, and he tried to work in the simultaneous improvisation mentioned at 9:39 in this vid. The Mingus Big band pay homage to this...but with an entire big band.
@JoelSyverud
@JoelSyverud Жыл бұрын
I was gonna say either Penderecki’s Threnody, Miles Davis’s On the Corner, or Dillinger Escape Plan’s Calculating Infinity, but reading these comments, I realize there’s a LOT of wildness I need to explore (or had forgotten and need to re-explore!) 5 minutes in and I already know this is a video I’m gonna have to revisit many, many times! Absolutely golden! Thank you so much, David!
@xanderfuhrer5736
@xanderfuhrer5736 Жыл бұрын
Penderecki is pretty insane. Found him through Greenwood's work on There Will Be Blood...Threnody has to be the most terrifying piece I've ever heard.
@hellodavidryan
@hellodavidryan Жыл бұрын
Amazing video and wonderful comments in this thread. Thank you for these explorations.
@tealorturquoise
@tealorturquoise Жыл бұрын
This video is fantastic!
@danielphillips97
@danielphillips97 Жыл бұрын
A few come to mind; Jonchaies by Iannis Xenakis, Threnody for the Victims of Hiroshima by Penderecki, Aberinkula and Drunkship of Laterns by The Mars Volta, Alucard by Gentle Giant, Sugar and Vicinity of Obscenity by System of a Down, Nasty Habits by Oingo Boingo, Micro Cuts by Muse, Out of the Grave by Sigh, The Holy Drinker by Steven Wilson, Aumgn by CAN, Bring the Sun by Swans, The Girl in the Magnesium Dress by Frank Zappa, and Seven Words by Sofia Gubaidulina, and lastly, the band that took the peak intensity of Cannibal Corpse and did something different with it, it would be The Leper Affinity by Opeth.
@theyabib3323
@theyabib3323 Жыл бұрын
I fucking love opeth, but they're not that wild, Gorguts' Obscura is the one. Also I know it's the metal elitist in me, but the way you worded that, that made it seem that cannibal corpse was somehow the most intense death metal band ever, really bugged me... But anyways...
@oldmossystone
@oldmossystone Жыл бұрын
Wildest for me is pretty much anything from John Zorn's project Naked City. Seems that they recorded a bunch of sessions to explore exactly this idea... How wild can it get - pretty wild... and also the idea of using contrast with nearly normal snippets of coherence to stop you becoming completely desensitised to the wild crazy parts. Not sure which track to suggest though...maybe Snagglepuss?
@tjenadonn6158
@tjenadonn6158 Жыл бұрын
The live shows where they bring on Yamantaka Eye to do vocals are easily the farthest I've ever seen jazz get pushed.
@weatheranddarkness
@weatheranddarkness Жыл бұрын
@@tjenadonn6158 Been wading through a lot of answers here to find any mention of Yamantaka Eye or, for that matter Hanantarash
@CanalGuiProductions
@CanalGuiProductions Жыл бұрын
I also think of his Cobra performances as the perfect example of controlled chaos. Using a bunch of cue cards and miscellaneous headgear he's at the centre of the stage telling the players when to play, but not what to play. I wouldn't say it's sonically pleasant but as an audio-visual experience it's really interesting to watch. His Electric Masada project also does that sort of thing in a more controlled setting, particularly Hath Arob on Disc 2 of At the Mountains of Madness, that for me is as wild as it gets.
@ltlukas
@ltlukas 5 ай бұрын
"Dead Dread" and "NY Flat Top Box" for me. I saw him performing the Naked City stuff in 1990 when it was released and half the audience walked out after the first two songs. He told them they could get their money back at the box office as they left. Those of us who remained had a great time.
@manateepink9100
@manateepink9100 Жыл бұрын
this is one of my favorite videos ever now!
@aoznes
@aoznes 5 ай бұрын
the video i didnt know i needed. thanks!
@morayonkeys
@morayonkeys Жыл бұрын
Glad to see Nancarrow on the list, he was one of my first thoughts. Lots of my other ideas on closer listening weren't particularly wild. Intense, yes, but you'd struggle to call them wild in the same way that the pieces on your list are! Surprised no one mentioned any specifically aleatoric pieces though.
@quain5063
@quain5063 Жыл бұрын
I will nominate Lost Rivers by Sainkho Namtchylak, a female Tuvan singer. Compared to a lot of examples in the video that are loud and cacophonous, it is just a single voice, however the quality of the voice is freaking wild (go have a listen you would agree). The wildest part for me is the simultaneous difference and harmony between the intent and the actual realisation - the intent being mourning the lost rivers of her homeland and advocate for environmentalism, and the realisation of noises and cries strengthens that perfectly. A truly amazing listening experience.
@jorgedelgado9331
@jorgedelgado9331 Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@drummersagainstitk
@drummersagainstitk 6 ай бұрын
You've done a great job on this video. It is a difficult subject to keep it interesting. Thank you.
@charlieb8735
@charlieb8735 11 ай бұрын
I love that there’s so much on KZbin now taking theory based thinking and using it to try to understand why things work and derive new understandings. So much of theory is often presented as ironclad rules and that breaking them is bad but I think this kind of thing is exactly what makes theory so valuable. Thank you for making this kind of content
@_Helm_
@_Helm_ Жыл бұрын
I mean as an adult probably Threnody or some of Cage's work but I want to highlight as a younger man, a dyed in the wool metalhead at that (which means I learned a lot about human culture as a teenager THROUGH metal, not learned it outside of metal and then rediscovered it within a metal context) I think a seminal 'wild' piece of music that I still resonate with is the Austin Texas band Watchtower, their second album 'Control and Resistance' that came out in 1989 was definitely wild. It gave birth to the whole progressive metal thing, obviously, and today we could go back and listen to that music and classify it as some sort of fusion. And there's a *lot* of wild fusion, like proper jazz/rock/world music fusion that is wilder than anything any metal band could came up with. But 'wild' is about context, and in heavy metal context, against the conservativism of most rock music trope, Watchtower were fucking wild and they still sound wild. It's not just the riffs and compositions actually, it was their attitude and extra-musical elements that also gave that impression, such as, teenagers wearing USSR t-shirts during the cold war in Texas (even ironically, that's quite a statement!), the punk sense of humour that is antithetical to heavy metal seriousness, and of course the fact that they play this hypercomplex, flowing sort of metal but they're not robust and muscular at all, the drummer sounds like they're half improvising a song they don't remember, yet he's still in pocket. Control and Resistance captures the feel of the late end of the cold war perfectly, the musical programme and the thematic programme are in sync. Now we're heading towards more cold war terror, so the lyrics sound more prescient than ever.... sadly. It was a more abstract, complex and open to interpretation and mood kind of metal music that simply didn't exist before Watchtower invented it. It will always be the 'wildest shit' in my heart even now I have a broader musical horizon. Thank you for asking, David! You are a class act.
@PatrickNathan
@PatrickNathan Жыл бұрын
A particularly wild band to check out is Clown Core. And their album/video Van is interesting to watch too.
@ivanfaigenbom5300
@ivanfaigenbom5300 Жыл бұрын
damn love your videos
@alexchaviramusic
@alexchaviramusic Жыл бұрын
Great homage to your teacher at the end. That was really special!
@brycemedlyn806
@brycemedlyn806 Жыл бұрын
The wildest music I know is probably Gorgon by Christopher Rouse, its very vast paced and dissonant, and it moves between ideas rapidly. It's a work in 3 movements with these percussion breaks in between each movement, which adds to the overall chaotic atmosphere.
@coryeldridge2791
@coryeldridge2791 Жыл бұрын
I'm so happy you cited Liturgy! The level of rage they inspire in purist metalheads is a sure sign they are breaking fences.
@weatheranddarkness
@weatheranddarkness Жыл бұрын
It is wild to me how metal begot the kinds of puritanism it has. Punk has loads of gatekeeping, but not for sound the same way. I think the closest equivalent is like bluegrass purists. Honestly I think it comes from that kind of instrumentalist nerdery that comes with obsessive technical pursuit. Occasionally it crops up in mainline rock, like in "The Rock Bible"
@howardkoor2796
@howardkoor2796 Жыл бұрын
Loving this
@dinnae
@dinnae Жыл бұрын
Wow, so many pieces and songs to listen to after this video. This video is kind of like opening a new section of an encyclopedia and coming away with so many ideas
@Necroblas
@Necroblas Жыл бұрын
What comes to my mind first, when thinking about wild music is Quest for Blood with Yukihiro Isso's self titled album. It's black metal mixed with Japanese folk music, manifested as shouts and more importantly an improvised sounding folky flute solo over practically the entire record, clashing heavily with the western harmonies in the metal parts. They also heavily feature strange piano comping just to make it sound even more unlike anything else. I discovered this album at a point, where I was starting to get a bit bored with music, feeling like I could pretty much predict what's going to happen even in extreme / avant-garde metal, which I was listening mostly at the time. This album felt like I couldn't figure it out even after countless listens and also kinda taught me to appreciate modern jazz and classical at the same time.
@wiesorix
@wiesorix Жыл бұрын
There's this moment in Shostakovich' violin concerto I really love and that I think fits some of the wildness criteria. It's a couple of minutes into the second movement, when the orchestra is heard in full force for the first time in the concerto. It's a big happy tutti, including percussion and a xylophone plonking away but there is something that makes it feel completely over the top, something insincere, like the music is just pretending. Especially after the dark and slow first movement, that just seems to drag itself forward for over 10 minutes. Add to that the dense texture, uneven rythm and technical virtuosity... It just sounds really wild to me, both in sound and emotion. I love it
@robertray9498
@robertray9498 Жыл бұрын
I love your work, David. Always inspiring. Could you do a deep dive into Arvo Pärt?
@thekeyoflifepiano
@thekeyoflifepiano Жыл бұрын
Best video yet!
@ProTobigen
@ProTobigen Жыл бұрын
Either general power electronics, Grindcore and it's derivatives, or one specific classically and jazz influenced death metal album, Imperative Imperceptible Impulse by Ad Nauseum. It's got right left ear dissonance, and all kinds of crazy shit. It's great, genuinely, and feels more like jazz than metal sometimes.
@StIdes-wb3ir
@StIdes-wb3ir Жыл бұрын
seconding the power electronics, something about Ramleh makes my hair stand up
@petergjata1498
@petergjata1498 Жыл бұрын
Pleasant surprise to see Imperative Imperceptible Impulse being mentioned here. I actually found out about this channel because their vocalist/one of the guitarist is subscribed to it ahah
@brianspenst1374
@brianspenst1374 Жыл бұрын
Spike Jones is near the top of the list of wild music. Every note is played to perfection but with out of left field instruments.
@jwc3o2
@jwc3o2 Жыл бұрын
some of the best hocketing around besides!
@charlesgaskell5899
@charlesgaskell5899 Жыл бұрын
Yay, your number one choice for wildness was the one that first came to my mind too! I loved the way that the auto generated transcription managed Birtwistle is several different ways, and managed to hear words in the cacophony that simply were not there...
@20sPlentyNYorks
@20sPlentyNYorks 9 ай бұрын
Stravinsky: Rite of Spring, with the lights OFF. Caused a riot at its premiere in Paris 1913 and still stands out today, its wild relentless and asymetric rhythmic drive and dissonance, deliberately evoking a wild Pagan and ancient ceremony that scandalised Polite Parisian sensibilities and expectations
@tonyaj7
@tonyaj7 Жыл бұрын
I feel like as I listen to more music, my threshold for wildness gets pushed even farther. A few years ago, I would have said Torche and Floor were pretty wild and out there. Now, I've listened to things like Sore Dream and Lingua Ignota and Full of Hell, and Torche is almost easy listening. Edited to add: You mentioned Liturgy and I've been addicted to this album and I almost mentioned them also, except I listen to other death metal also.
@stephenspackman5573
@stephenspackman5573 Жыл бұрын
I find the question itself a little hard to get to grips with. I'm strongly tempted to say Tallis' Spem in Alium, though I can't think of any way to defend that choice to others. But while I was a maths student I used to use Skinny Puppy as my studying music, because it would thoroughly overload the parts of my brain that deal with the concrete, and leave me in a better state to process abstractions. I think (my maths background is showing again here) that there's a great deal of duality in play: I often find big-C Classical music irritating because I can predict it too successfully, and randomness relaxing because I can, as it were, bathe in it. Intensity is found in some middle ground where I am actively tracking a lot of ideas without being too completely defeated…?
@subjectline
@subjectline Жыл бұрын
Spem in Alium is wild in a "hold my beer" sense. I sympathise with your thought.
@davidtatro7457
@davidtatro7457 Жыл бұрын
An excellent group of selections, and l have the exact same staff paper notebook on my own stand!
@victorcobane6644
@victorcobane6644 Жыл бұрын
I think my favorite was the player piano one, and how it almost felt like it had multiple glissandos going at the same time, in different directions, it was so layered, but had so much texture and intrigue with a single instrument, it was awesome
@BlackmetalSM
@BlackmetalSM Жыл бұрын
*Cheval* from Igorrr and *Threnody for the Victims of Hiroshima* from Penderecki are among the wildest musical pieces I know.
@TheR971
@TheR971 Жыл бұрын
I listen to enough mathcore (car bomb, dillinger escape plan, converge) and dissonant death metal (gorguts, ulcerate, sunless) for them to loose some of their wildness. So I'll go with Girl with Mary Turner by Xiu Xiu or Do You Doubt Me Traitor by Lingua Ignota. Also can't believe no one mentioned Deathgrips yet (especially Steroids). also mount eerie's death is real is wild to me because it is the only peace of music so devastating
@daniandres3211
@daniandres3211 8 ай бұрын
The first part of Keith Jarrett's Vienna Concert is such an absolutely wild piece of improvised music. Forty minutes of pure musical and pianistic genius.
@alaeddinabugrara3309
@alaeddinabugrara3309 Жыл бұрын
Amazing video thank you so much i liked how you explained the various ways to be wild in music it made me realize what type of "wild"music i llike that being said my wildest music pieces that comes to mind beside the free jazz and techno Mr bungle Clown core some Zappa/ Captain beefheart and of course the Shaggs
@sndrb1336
@sndrb1336 Жыл бұрын
Frank Zappa's Yellow Shark, his formerly assumed unplayable composition made on the computer performed by the Ensemble Modern, G-Spot Tornado is sublime.
@jaumbz
@jaumbz Жыл бұрын
Penderecki's Threnody, Crumb's Black Angels, Grisey's Vortex Temporum, Kodaly's Cello Sonata and pretty much everything that Sorabji wrote are pretty wild too! Not to mention some Metal acts like Imperial Triumphant's Goliath and the list goes on...
@user-bw7se2zg7b
@user-bw7se2zg7b 2 ай бұрын
Yes, Pendercki absolutely is one of the most intense composers ever. No doubt of that! I also like Koday's cello - have been listening to that for half a century! Wonderful piece of music.
@jaumbz
@jaumbz 2 ай бұрын
@@user-bw7se2zg7b Kodaly's Cello Sonata is amazing!!
@lupcokotevski2907
@lupcokotevski2907 Жыл бұрын
Laura Nyro's stream of consciousness expression of temporary insanity through hatred and murderous intent in Tom Cat Goodby (1969) is intense and scary. Nyro is Songwriters Hall of Fame and Rock Hall of Fame.
@franqytb
@franqytb Жыл бұрын
I was expecting you'd bring up some tracks by Naked City, anyway that is my first thought about Wildest pieces. Thanks for your videos
@padremochismusical
@padremochismusical Жыл бұрын
For number 5 I would add Jane Doe from Converge. First time I listened to it I thought it was deranged and pure noise, it takes a few listens to make out each element and I think it is mostly compositionally simple (compared to other wild pieces here) but that album takes noise to another level.
@joeyhardin5903
@joeyhardin5903 Жыл бұрын
phoenix in flames i reckon
@edelcorrallira
@edelcorrallira Жыл бұрын
All I can say is Troutmask Replica had to be relevant to this conversation. Mosolovs Iron Foundry is really intense, completely atonal yet it can immediately grab the listener. Now, Blotted Science has some exquisite and supremely intense music, while Behold the Archtopus goes a bit too far and has issues... Also I think Cacophony (Marty Friedman/Jason Becker) specifically in their Speed-metal Symphony intro and outro, really push the envelope. Then again Jacob Collier modulating to quarter tones successfully is also far out there. Now ... On the other side, we can consider Wesly Willis to be quite wild (Birdman kicked my ads for example), and similarly I'd say Syd Barret, and other outsider music (Schuman included) ... Are quite wild in the sense that they come from a place where reality is breaking down Stokhauzen has silences way over a minute (and Id argue that makes it irrelevant)... Anyway, this more anecdotal but I remember having listened to a grind core tape. It had 20 or 30 second songs that were rather soundbytes, where they used very dense drumwork, heavily distorted instruments and even ... Someone blowing on a snorkel ... Which was rather silly to me, I listened to about 3 samples. Really interesting train of thought!!
@hazardeur
@hazardeur Жыл бұрын
Meshuggah - I i mean, damn, it's pretty god damn wild
@thedofflin
@thedofflin 3 ай бұрын
On a Mission by Drumcorps is definitely one of the wildest tracks I've ever heard
@vincognito
@vincognito Жыл бұрын
Back in the Eighties I was involved in a meditation group that imported rituals and meditations from various cultures. One striking moment for me was meditating to Tibetan Water Music. (I can't find anything online near it but instead I'm getting results for all sorts of 'soothing' new age sounds.) This 'music' was an intentional cacophony of noises, some sounding like the roar of an elephant alongside arrhythmic pulses from crashing gongs, wood blocks being struck and so on. It slowly faded in and then slowly faded out after it reached a peak for about five minutes or so. It was the avant-garde-est of avant garde music I'd ever heard. The intention, according to what we were told, was to clear out and purify the mind of thoughts. I wish I could find an example online but I simply can't. Everyone seems to think that Tibetans are all about gentle, soothing, meditating culture, and that's all the internet is presenting.
@user-bw7se2zg7b
@user-bw7se2zg7b 2 ай бұрын
found one for you: kzbin.info/www/bejne/aGq2qoaCbJxsldU and another kzbin.info/www/bejne/gmWVcqGJdsmtjtk It is a deliberately discordant cacophony, played with drums, cymbals, and horns.
@tomvesely4008
@tomvesely4008 Жыл бұрын
I've recently gotten into the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band. Most of the jokes in the lyrics still go over my head, but it is incredibly funny and wild music at times. I very much liked some songs off their album called The Doughnut in Granny's Greenhouse. Trouser Press and We Are Normal come to mind. Mike Oldfield - Amarok Legendary Stardust Cowboy - Paralyzed Captain Beefheart has been mentioned... Ornette Coleman, Charles Mingus have some wild tunes. Penderecki - Polymorphia
@tjenadonn6158
@tjenadonn6158 Жыл бұрын
King Crimson circa Discipline was an experiment in tightly ordered chaos. Just listen to tracks like Thela Hun Ginjeet, Indiscipline, and Elephant Talk and you'll understand, especially if you find footage of live performances.
@ameliawrightmusic
@ameliawrightmusic Жыл бұрын
happy
@mazeppa1231
@mazeppa1231 Жыл бұрын
To me, Liszt's Dante Symphony was wild in the context of transcendence in 12:48 , where it transported you to the realm of hell and heaven. The Paradiso (3rd movement) is so majestic, ecstatic, spine-lifting; it feels like you're entering the gates of heaven.
@Toggitryggva
@Toggitryggva 5 ай бұрын
This is just excellent. Lots of stuff I love, and lots I need to check out. Also: John Zorn.
@mvmarchiori
@mvmarchiori Жыл бұрын
Close to the edge, by Yes. That intro is absolutely wild.
@Jack-je1zt
@Jack-je1zt Жыл бұрын
Kawaii is just the Japanese word for cute, and in English refers to a uniquely Japanese style of cuteness. Much in the same wat twee refers to a uniquely hipster/cottage core style of cute.
@Gwunhar
@Gwunhar Жыл бұрын
very interesting question...for my money I think combining the intensity of metal with the unsettling qualities (to Western ears at least) of microtonal music is going to be some of the wildest stuff. Cryptic Ruse's Projected Into the Complex Plane, off of Pineal Algebra, is one of the more listenable examples of this, while still being very challenging to the point of actually headache inducing. I love it.
@gexahedrop8923
@gexahedrop8923 Жыл бұрын
check out "Chrysalid Requiem" by Toby Twining, if you haven't yet : )
@TheR971
@TheR971 Жыл бұрын
that title just is literally a hint I ha on math homework lol
@collinbeal
@collinbeal Жыл бұрын
Jute Gyte is another great example
@krisdelacourt3977
@krisdelacourt3977 Жыл бұрын
thanks for introducing me to the Louis Andriessen piece.
@derelbenkoenig
@derelbenkoenig Жыл бұрын
Ah! As soon as you got to the extreme end of metal I was waiting for you to bring up Liturgy! Awesome music
5 COMPOSERS 1 THEME (ft. Adam Neely, Nahre Sol, Ben Levin & Tantacrul)
27:40
David Bruce Composer
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