very beautiful and relaxing! i love this tune and the scenes blend right to it!
@kalelake3067 Жыл бұрын
Oh my God; nothing like it..
@piano4film12 жыл бұрын
Of course. This is about half of the film, selected by G Henle to be shown in their booth during the Frankfurt Musikmesse last spring. The full version includes a discussion of Symbolist/literary connections. The debussypiano link above has more information.
@shin-i-chikozima6 жыл бұрын
No matter what happens , Debussy's works will resound around the world . Debussy's works are my tranquilizer and comfortable gifts . From chaotic Tokyo of the Land of the Rising Sun ♨️ Where are you watching this from ?
@NisseOhlsen7 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the upload!
@GeraldM_inNC4 жыл бұрын
At 25:00 they have "The Engulfed Cathedral". That was one of my favorite piano pieces to play, I really hammed it up. Debussy was one of the first composers to resonate with me, unlike Chopin and Liszt who never did anything for me.
@tahiragibson64073 жыл бұрын
Luckily Chopin did a lot for Debussy.
@nasirferguson40982 жыл бұрын
Chopin did nothing for you? Wow
@GeraldM_inNC2 жыл бұрын
@@nasirferguson4098 Never did. This is not to disrespect the composer, just to say his music didn't appeal to me personally.
@clichy109 жыл бұрын
bellissimo !!!
@Varese1312 жыл бұрын
@piano4film Well, that is good to know. I guess it just struck me as odd that a film on Debussy would begin with the juxtaposition of Impressionist paintings with his music, when the term "impressionism", was one of several used by those who negatively reviewed his work. Debussy's favorite painters were Turner and Whistler, not Monet or Renoir. He preferred shadows and the realm of dreams to the "play of light" typical of Impressionist painters.
@shin-i-chikozima6 жыл бұрын
The works of Debussy purify the human soul .
@piano4film6 жыл бұрын
Yes they do!
@fabiano67936 жыл бұрын
He wait it...he wait it... :-)
@shin-i-chikozima4 жыл бұрын
@@fabiano6793 Thank-you Be on the alert for Coronavirus infection ! Hang in there !
@ICFinney Thanks so much! I really appreciate that.
@shin-i-chikozima6 жыл бұрын
素晴らしい indescribable impression.
@shin-i-chikozima6 жыл бұрын
I will give exuberant compliments. Greetings from Japan. Which national person are you seeing this video ?
@somedia85985 жыл бұрын
Germany 🇩🇪
@ElZombiePelon5 жыл бұрын
El Salvador, Central America.
@NisseOhlsen4 жыл бұрын
French. Like Claude Debussy.
@stravinskyfan4 жыл бұрын
I am that guy from Indonesia, do you remember me?
@cookaboorra4 жыл бұрын
Italy. I love the deep intuitive views of Debussy
@Varese1312 жыл бұрын
Is this a documentary, or an opinion piece on why the producers think that Debussy was Impressionist/painterly rather than Symbolist/literary, as he thought himself to be? It must be borne in mind that while it is possible to view the music from ones own perspective, the composer's own viewpoint must not be ignored. He hung out with Mallarmé and wrote an opera based on a Symbolist idea. It is not possible to ignore this.
@RoundTopFestivalInstitute7 жыл бұрын
Who did check the pedal markings?
@LudmillaBarilla13 жыл бұрын
At 13:36 it should read "Brouillards" instead of "Broulliards", but that's just nitpicking... A very nice and atmospheric take on Debussy's music. J'aime... :)
@Shaolin-Jesus8 жыл бұрын
21:44 abit of a what around what ?
@corbelius67 жыл бұрын
1:05 saw the most anti-climatiX
@joemeyer68766 жыл бұрын
YAWN. . . . Academics miss the ephemeral, again
@katrinanovaskaya366911 жыл бұрын
so boring comment,,, sorry, but there's no " reflets, flous" (lights expressions) in sound. It amazing to ear these teachers, with respect, say so many banality.... Many people make this mistake to match painting problem with music problem in the same period. Its not subjectivity, its just ridiculous. But we lived in a free country on cyberplanet, so lets go... Each one is free to express ther opinion, and its ok with me. The most important here, I think, its to play and listen this music.
@NisseOhlsen6 жыл бұрын
Applying your logic, there is no light, expressions in paintings, either, since they are all just colors on a canvas. Perhaps you should listen anew.
@debussychopin27664 жыл бұрын
Sorry katrina whatever your name means it is meaningless. Just a bunch of letters to represent or identify you. No meaning behind your name.
@phpn992 жыл бұрын
I'm beyond tired of the kitschy, neo-romantic approach to playing Debussy. All you have to do is listen to the way he played his own piano pieces (recorded on a Welte-Mignon), and it's immediately obvious his compositions are surrealist and not impressionistic. His playing style ressembles Thelonious Monk and not Evgeny Kissin. His discovery of Indonesian gamelan music was a turning point and there is ample evidence in his correspondance that he did not believe in 'agogical' construction of musical pieces. He perceived musical composition as a multi-layered collage of moments and quodlibets, arranged like a cinematic montage and not like Wagnerian program music. Misunderstanding his true character is the reason we always hear played the same three pieces, because they are masterpieces of the "pretty" genre. Debussy was alive during the early years of what would become Jazz, and he was also exposed to a broad variety of iconoclastic composers, such as Mussorgsky and the young Stravinsky. While highly regarded by the Parisian musical intelligentsia, he nevertheless came from a modest upbringing and he never went to school. Ultimately an outsider, he craved freedom as much as he did recognition. Debussy was intensely chauvinistic and he labelled himself a "French composer", because France at the turn of the 20th century was the principal pole of modernity. Debussy can only be understood as his era's contemporary music ; his music is not "nostalgic" ; it is futuristic.
@piano4film2 жыл бұрын
Good points. Tell that to the "scholarly elite" represented in the film, including many of the supposed experts. Debussy is all of those things and more. But I don't think his piano roll recordings are what we should base our interpretations on. 100 years later his legacy has evolved. His music is far more about color and texture than only timing.