I REALLY like how you have Bolero in the background during the entire length of this; it being uninterrupted. This turned this video from a 10/10 to a 20/10. Great video mate.
@nicholastessier85043 жыл бұрын
Oh yeah? And I really, really, really like this image
@June_Hee3 жыл бұрын
6:05 here the music synchronizes with the content, which makes it even better
@wholemilky3 жыл бұрын
@@nicholastessier8504 I like it too.
@orirune30793 жыл бұрын
Me too. Like a minute in I noticed it was just playing uninterrupted in the background, and I though to myself, I sure hope this keeps playing the whole way through
@timschulz95633 жыл бұрын
Like the video by Polyphonic on Walk On By by Isaac Hayes. I really love this style.
@uelssom3 жыл бұрын
Bolero is like OCD in music form. Its like the tetris effect, where you see and think about tetris pieces falling when in stress. Its those nightmares that arent scary, but are weird and repetitive and it never ends
@Alexagrigorieff3 жыл бұрын
I've read that people with PTSD find Tetris quite therapeutical.
@S_Carol3 жыл бұрын
I half agree half disagree. Bolero feels like OCD in that it feels like you only need another repetition for it to sound right, but then it just feels more and more and more wrong, but you still can't stop yourself from listening to the next one in case that one finally feels right (even when you know it won't). It's extremely stressful to listen to. Gives me the wrong type of chills. Skin-crawling.
@darkstudios0012 жыл бұрын
@@S_Carol As someone with clinical OCD, I think that's a great explanation
@mayochupenjoyer5 ай бұрын
@_S_Carol as another person with clinical OCD, i agree. there’s no satisfaction in real OCD
@lunagardvonbingen29 күн бұрын
@@mayochupenjoyer Same here. I get that when I read these comments. if I miss pronounce a word in my head, I have to read the entire comment chain over again. Lol
@michaelaronov44213 жыл бұрын
I'm a great fan of your work and videos and this one particularly struck my interest because I'm a neurologist. With absolutely no disrespect intended to your work, your video, or your research, I'd like to clarify a few points. 1. Wernicke's aphasia is a symptom, not a cause or a diagnosis. Language localizes to several regions of the brain, and the area known as Wernicke's area (which in most people is in the left posterior temporal-occipital area) is specifically dedicated to the comprehension of received language, usually in spoken or written form. Aphasia is a disruption of language skills, so Wernicke's aphasia is specifically a disruption of the comprehension of language. We can't say with certainty what happened to Ravel as we have no post-mortem data, but something that afflicts a specific region of the cortex suddenly as it did in him is almost certainly a stroke. In addition, Wernicke's aphasia does not typically cause motor symptoms, as the motor cortex is in the frontal lobes. While it's possible for a stroke to affect Wernicke's area and the motor cortex, we would expect all the areas in between to be affected as well. The fascinating thing about aphasia however is that usually musical abilities ARE preserved, so it would be very unusual for his aphasia to be the cause of his amusia (loss of musical ability). This suggests he had other symptoms, specifically alexia and agraphia (loss of reading and writing respectively), independent of his Wernicke's aphasia. There are other things about Ravel's case that are interesting, specifically as you alluded to in your video... 2. He had other symptoms besides aphasia, specifically apraxia (inability to perform complex purposeful movements) and memory deficits. When a person begins to suffer this collection of symptoms, the most likely diagnosis becomes dementia - which is a group of illnesses that all gradually rob cognitive faculties, usually slowly and in multiple domains, as was Ravel's case. He most likely developed a particular form of dementia which could be anything from frontotemporal dementia (characterized by loss of inhibition and executive function), corticobasal degeneration (multifactorial decline including of body functions) or even something as simple as post-stroke dementia (if it is true that he lost his Wernicke's area due to a stroke). Dementia is a particularly interesting diagnosis for Ravel because one of the features of dementia is a symptom called perseveration - that is, dementia patients will often repeat themselves even when completely inappropriate to do so otherwise. Of course all of this is made more complicated by... 3. Traumatic brain injury. Ravel suffered from a moderate traumatic brain injury as a result of a motor vehicle accident in 1932, before his decline. TBIs are dramatic injuries and on top of someone who already has signs and symptoms of dementia and stroke, it certainly didn't do him any favors. Long story short; Ravel's cognitive faculties were grievously injured likely by multiple mechanisms, making complex tasks such as composition increasingly difficult. For someone with an artist's spirit like Ravel, who struggled to write complexity for these reasons, a piece that is simple in its conception, composition, and execution like Bolero becomes very attractive and even inevitable. The conclusion of your video is particularly striking and powerful. For someone to create immortal music the way Ravel did with the deficits imposed on him by cruel circumstances speaks volumes about the human spirit and the passion for music he possessed. It will be fascinating to see the future of neurology entangle with music therapy and use the art that the brain generates as a way to heal it.
@atirkahn3 жыл бұрын
Wow, this is fascinating! Thank you for the insight! What always impresses me are the many artists with various disabilities that persevere and create some of the greatest pieces of art despite everything
@hansdekorver73653 жыл бұрын
But the vehicle accident 1932 , the bolero was already composed 1928 ?
@denisebremridge83293 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your medical explanation of these brain conditions....so complex and so mis-understood
@hansdekorver73653 жыл бұрын
@@denisebremridge8329 But not totally clear . After all he composed his 2 piano concertos a few years later.
@sandatoacsen9858 Жыл бұрын
L, arte non vienne generata dal cervello,.. ne musica , ne altro ! Il cervello, se e sanno, esecuta quello che l, anima spirituale le indica ( in altre parole TRADUCE in linguaggio comprensivo, anche ad altri, uno stato d,animo dell, autore).
@zachheilman7843 жыл бұрын
6:10 as an organist I immediate recognize this! Ravel is treating the piccolos as mutation stops, which don't sound at octaves but at fifths or thirds to the fundamental. They are listed as stops with some kind of fractional length to make it immediately obvious to the organist that they don't sound at octaves (as opposed to standard stops which are usually listed in powers of two - e.g. 8 foot (which sounds at concert pitch), 4 foot, 2 foot stops. Mutation stops are usually 2-2/3, 1-3/5, etc
@RosesAndIvy3 жыл бұрын
Yes, they are simply multiples of the fundamental frequency.
@SaxandRelax3 жыл бұрын
I like your funny words magic man 👍
@JulesSchattenberg3 жыл бұрын
An orchestral version of the cornet stop
@trashcan59732 жыл бұрын
"As an organist I immediate recognize this!" was all I was able to understand, from that point on you were speaking a whole different language
@kyleethekelt3 жыл бұрын
I've only just come across your videos and, while the visuals are unavailable to me (I'm blind), your description and synchronisation with the music are amazing. That relentless snare makes me grind my teeth; it almost seems torturous. My late father was a drummer (mainly in brass bands) and he said that piece was one of the most difficult for him and I now see what he means. Everyone and anyone looking for more than a passing appreciation of music should see your videos.
@cthulhutentacles49943 жыл бұрын
I myself cannot stand the piece. I’ve only listened to it once in its entirety, and by the end I felt like stabbing my eyeballs. I’m being serious. I’ve read that when this piece premiered, there was a woman who ran to the stage and yelled at Ravel, “ This piece is madness!” Or something along those lines. I completely understand how that woman felt.
@brasschick42143 жыл бұрын
The side drum part is mind-numbing but needs great precision, I agree it wouldn’t be great to play. He probably didn’t like playing the Floral Dance either.
@S_Carol3 жыл бұрын
@@cthulhutentacles4994 Agree. The first time I listened to this was at a concert when I was 6 and I was frightened almost to the point of crying (and they'd played The Rite of Spring earlier on and I loved it, so it's not that I was easily scared). I still can't quite put my finger on why, but this piece just makes my skin crawl. Like there's some sort of itch inside my head that just gets worse the more I hear. It's extremely stressful.
@jayt96082 жыл бұрын
@@S_Carol, it is the horror being betrayed by mind and body as your intellect and essence are gradually devoured and you are forever lost to yourself while being fully cognizant of it happening and powerless to save yourself.
@dsatt573 жыл бұрын
Monet’s growing cataracts contributed to Impressionism and now I find Revel’s disability led to this masterpiece. Yet we still think the disabled have nothing to contribute.
@mr.boogerbutt66673 жыл бұрын
Yes, this is a very important point. Ravel also composed the two piano concertos as a disabled composer, which are considered masterpieces as well.
@Skitdora20103 жыл бұрын
I had though Beethoven had squashed that prejudice. Artists take their struggles and translate it into other forms. Van Gough suffered major depression and The Nutcracker was written while grieving the death of a much beloved sister. Stephen Hawking's confined to a wheel chair became one of our greatest thinkers. We should all realize that disability does not set people back. Personality does, if a person faces a setback and quits or uses their setback as an excuse. One does not have to be disabled to be a quitter.
@stuckupcurlyguy3 жыл бұрын
Milton was blind when he wrote Paradise Lost too.
@mnadelman3 жыл бұрын
@@mr.boogerbutt6667 Unfortunately, Ravel's increasing disability prevented further composition and he died a few years later.
@theapothecary7773 жыл бұрын
@@Skitdora2010 slight correction, Van Gogh was actually bipolar/manic depressive and also experienced transient psychotic episodes as a byproduct of mania.
@siemp03333 жыл бұрын
I never realised what was so special about this piece. I always thought: "Ravel wrote so many wonderfull pieces like Daphnis et Chloé, his piano concerto, string quartet and Pavane. And THIS is his most well known piece?!" You really opened my eyes with this video, thanks!
@GreenBoy90003 жыл бұрын
Maurice Ravel actually hated Bolero.
@mikesmovingimages3 жыл бұрын
@@GreenBoy9000 Doesn't mean it isn't a great piece!
@dennischiapello72433 жыл бұрын
@@GreenBoy9000 He described it as a "long crescendo... consisting of orchestral tissue, without music."
@GreenBoy90003 жыл бұрын
@@dennischiapello7243 Heh.... Orchestral tissue.
@1andonlyBL4CK0UT3 жыл бұрын
My god, your works just keeps getting better and better. It has always been very good, but just the visuals alone are extraordinary and more so with every new video.
@FilmScoreandMore3 жыл бұрын
It's almost like the channel is one giant crescendo.
@MarcusHF3 жыл бұрын
This has to be one of the most beautifully crafted videos I’ve ever seen. The music, the in-depth narration, the setting, backdrops, animation, the music’s winding trail in the background telling the very same story we see and hear from the screen and narrative. Your work is excellent, and tells the story that has often crossed my mind with a touch of mystery. For many years I had heard and believed the old wive’s tale that Bolero was conceived as an orchestral composition exercise, never meant for the stage. Could there be some truth to this? True or not, now I know with certainty that the story is far from that level of simplicity. Hearing Bolero in person at a performance of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra is an experience I remember vividly. I now understand the cause behind a subtle, yet unsettling tremor throughout the concert hall as the theme repeats. It is buried deep in the history and life of its composer. This is truly the work of a man who grasped onto the feeling of having his life fade away inexplicably from an undiagnosed disease, and used that feeling to create something breathtaking. I choose to find the notion inspiring, that even on the threshold of oblivion one can find a path to greatness. Thank you for creating such a masterful description the composer behind the music, and providing a glimpse of the inside of his mind.
@oderalon3 жыл бұрын
I still remember the first time I listened to the Boléro. I couldn't believe someone had actually written something like that, how just a tune repeated over and over could be so amazing.
@IvanEDaza3 жыл бұрын
I definitely felt something dark was going on this piece long time ago, at several parts I felt his desperation, his madness and his anger, frustration and struggle. I’m impressed how music can actually paint the composer’s emotions so vividly. Thank you so much for this video!
@hannekezijlmans65783 жыл бұрын
As someone with neurological issues... Yes this inspires me to keep going, to keep dancing. ❤️ Brilliant explanation of this masterpiece, cleverly arranged on top of the music itself.
@arielyznardocomposer3 жыл бұрын
Wow Barnaby, this was deeply insightful. When the repetitive flat notes play in the "jazzy" melody, I hear a cry of craze, desperation, exhilaration and pain. Both melodic themes feel like a game between what we see and hear. The first theme as diatonic melody reminds me of the physical world around Ravel, all fitting nicely in the harmony, but the second one, may just be a glimpse of his ever-increasing grip loss on what was happening. A flow, even a ruptured dam of thoughts and dark emotions which only steadily opened for years... not so different from his bolero.
@MaximilianMKGill3 жыл бұрын
You should do a video on the music of Tom and Jerry.
@JeremyTaylorPianoProgress3 жыл бұрын
I had a brief discussion recently with my piano teacher recently about key changes and how effective they can be. He said listen to Ravel’s Bolero as a piece that demonstrates this to the fullest. It stays in C for almost it’s entire duration, before lurching into E Major (I think?) right at the end before crashing back down to C, and how incredible the effect is. Only having listened to this piece in relation to Torvill & Dean, I now see how amazing it really is
@johnsanders21793 жыл бұрын
Please never stop making these videos dude, they're fantastic
@segmentsAndCurves3 жыл бұрын
I love the way you analyze the piece, present all the possible theories for this, and most notably edit and sync the music, visual, and script together. And I love Ravel too! Thank you!
@jasperdigennaro45123 жыл бұрын
It's actually crazy this is one of my favorite KZbin channels and recently I started listening to belero alot and learning to play the solo on from trombone and now you made a video it's crazy how things work
@tightyellowshorts3 жыл бұрын
Just found your videos last month, and they're fascinating! Beyond the knowledge of music and composing, I wanted to compliment you on the overall production. You have the "environment," the sheet music and orchestra synced to the music, and the animation. Fantastic work!!
@georgerickard49153 жыл бұрын
Barnaby from the moment I saw the title I was thrilled to see this video. The story of Ravel’s Frontal Temporal Dementia (I know you use a different term in the video which I think is a broader description of the effect) and its effect on this piece has been one of my favorite stories in music history. A working theory of the underlying cause of the repetition is that FTD tends to disturb and suppress the executive function in the brain, a portion of the brain that to some extent prevents ongoing repetitive thoughts. With that suppression set free, musically in the case of Ravel, or colors and patterns in the case Unravelling Bolero (an interesting play on words in its own right) in the case of Anne Adams, the end result is a maddening repetition in whatever medium in which the artist operates. The video itself - once again masterfully done. Thank you for creating such interesting and educational content.
@klausM543 жыл бұрын
I guess what´s most remarkable about your videos is the amalgamation of precise analytics and music theory with the emotions the piece evokes as well as the historical, social and psychological background of the creation. You find the perfect balance of rational dissection and emotional impression and every video is a musical journey worth undertaking.
@briannenurse46403 жыл бұрын
Bolero is my favourite piece of classical music, and this deep dive into the song and the composer has been lovely! Thank you for sharing your perspective, I really appreciate this video.
@WeirdSide3 жыл бұрын
I thought it was odd that they played this in the japanese olympic opening ceremony - I've always associated the piece with a slow descent into madness, possibly because of what you described here. But it seems like you said, others see it as a triumphant march of perseverance, which appears to represent the olympics better!
@ice-iu3vv3 жыл бұрын
i read somewhere in the mid- 1980s that he was working with an orchestra that wouldnt cresendo gradually enough for him. so he wrote a piece that gets a bit louder with each phrase to make them need to. ive performed the soprano saxophone part with 3 orchestras over the years.
@alexismandelias2 жыл бұрын
This video is so well made. The music relentlessly playing in the background sync-ing perfectly with what you are describing at each moment allows for a much much deeper appreciation both of the insights about Ravel and of the piece itself.
@jacobkaufman92503 жыл бұрын
Ive heard Bolero a few times over the years but it wasn’t until a few weeks ago when I watched a London Symphony Orchestra performance on YT that I fell in love with it. It’s quickly become one of my favorites and I’ve been thinking about it a lot. There’s a compelling beauty to the simplicity of each instrument/section slowly joining in and patiently building up to the crashing climax. I was just looking for some more analysis on the work so this video was perfectly timed. Love your channel btw, keep up the amazing work!
@RickLilShore3 жыл бұрын
The quality is so damn high for a channel this small. This needs to blow up!
@gracewenzel3 жыл бұрын
This reminds me of the Unraveling Bolero Radiolab episode, which I recommend everyone listen to, which connects Ravel’s condition to that of a painter who made a visual representation of Bolero shortly before she passed away. EDIT: Haha, he mentions it at 11 minutes in! Silly me for not waiting until the end to comment.
@Soundcloud7653 жыл бұрын
I listened to it also, Grace.It fascinated me at that time. Nowadays I think that their theory was just a theory and nobody is able to prove it. What we know fo sure is that he wrote absolutely amazing music pieces.
@gracewenzel3 жыл бұрын
@@Soundcloud765 I see! It has been a long time since I've heard it.
@hannekezijlmans65783 жыл бұрын
Not silly at all, rather clever to think of that before it was even mentioned in the video. 😇
@arock16563 жыл бұрын
INSANELY GOOD VIDEO. Really good research and an easy, digestable script. Escpecially loved how you had the music running the entire time in the background, which I thought was a really good idea. You deserve many more subscribers.
@oceansmusicinhkukandgerman70093 жыл бұрын
8:26 Adding to the inspirations of machines, I once read that in alborada del gracioso (no.4 from Miroir), the rhythm was also inspired by the clicking of machines.
@hansi61193 жыл бұрын
I would absolutely love to see your analysis of the Rhapsody in Blue.
@TheMikkis1003 жыл бұрын
Repetition legitimizes. The repetitiveness and the catchy melody of Bolero is what makes it such a know and liked piece. It shows in many way Ravel's understanding of orchestration, harmony and melody. For Ravel melody was everything. But I think Bolero isn't in any way his best work and it's such a shame that it is viewed as his best or most known work. Though it is understandable due to its nature. Look up Daphnis and Chloe, Piano concerto for Left hand and Le Tombeau de Couperin if you want more complex, but as (or even more) ingenious and beautiful music as Bolero.
@segmentsAndCurves3 жыл бұрын
For me, the melodies have already been very "legitimate".
@paterpen98323 жыл бұрын
+Alborada del gracioso
@SraMi3 жыл бұрын
Grosses Kino! Die visuelle Umsetzung in Kombination mit dem Sound der Stimme des Sprechers entwickelt bei mir einen ebensolchen hypnotischen Sog, wie die Komposition selber! Danke, grossartig gemacht!
@gracevictorious143 жыл бұрын
I love the way you crafted the visuals, moving from room to room as we moved through each section of the music.
@degs61693 жыл бұрын
WOW superb. Ive been in tears at the end of many of your videos. Your editing, musical timing, knockout quality graphics, excellent research so well scripted and narrated are a joy. Thank you.
@robertm20003 жыл бұрын
In all these comments, how come I don't see anyone saying "RAVEL IS A GENIUS!" Maurice Ravel had one of the most incredible senses of harmony, and an incredible skill of orchestration. They are amply evident in everything Ravel wrote. He is my favorite composer simply because his music is very satisfying to listen to. I don't need all kinds of scientific nitpicking to know what an incredibly gifted composer Maurice Ravel was.
@samuelnixon38683 жыл бұрын
That was INSANE!!! I got chills like three times!
@segmentsAndCurves3 жыл бұрын
Ah yes, Ravel's "orchestral tissue without music" (The composer words himself). Can't say I disagree but dang did it has some good tunes.
@AsrielKujo3 жыл бұрын
yeaaah
@segmentsAndCurves3 жыл бұрын
@@AsrielKujo yes
@danielduggan54053 жыл бұрын
And still some of the most inventive orchestral colors.
@segmentsAndCurves3 жыл бұрын
@@danielduggan5405 "*Orchestral* tissue"
@danielduggan54053 жыл бұрын
@@segmentsAndCurves Which, in the context of Ravel's quote, would include all the elements that make up the music, but nothing to make it enjoyable or interesting to the listener. You pointed out the melody as a something you enjoy about the work. I most enjoy the orchestration, which is a textbook of techniques composers use to this day.
@sisfantasto70043 жыл бұрын
I have suffered brain damage myself 25 years ago and since then all my senses have gone way up and I could never listen to Bolero again without it triggering severe anxiety, a pounding heart and overall misery. I had no idea about Ravel and this particular health condition of his but hearing this Information now does explain a lot now.
@bartremmelzwaal57753 жыл бұрын
Wow, I’m stunned by the quality of your work, bravo!
@haydenhenley78593 жыл бұрын
In 2018, I marched in a group called the Cavaliers DBC with the show titled "On Madness and Creativity" and we used Bolero as the musical foundation on the show. I remember being told the story of Ravel's neurological issues before we got into the heart of the show and then in college I ended up writing a paper on Ravel and this video just reminded of the whole thing. Amazing work!!
@willardsteele48572 жыл бұрын
You’re telling of this story is brilliant. Ravels predicament made tears in my eyes.
@musicalaviator3 жыл бұрын
Ravel: So I know computers don't exist yet, but I think one day maybe 80 years in the future, "Control+V" will be a thing.
@TheSimonCarlile3 жыл бұрын
You situate this piece so beautifully - like Oliver Sachs “The man who mistook his wife for his hat” you illuminate what it can mean when your brain begins to falter - this takes a particular empathy and intelligence. My congratulations.
@fluffycloud883 жыл бұрын
Thank you for creating such a wonderful video (as always) about this masterpiece. I love this piece, the orchestration is just phenomenal. I had the great pleasure to play this in an orchestra myself, which was a fantastic experience. You realise how each voice, each colour contributes to the creation of this great musical painting. It amount of concentration it requires can be daunting, but makes the finale the more satisfying!
@jackaguirre85762 жыл бұрын
First time I heard it I thought "this really isn't my favorite Ravel piece," but this video gives us a much deeper understanding of the meaning of the piece. Now I see it as a representation of our working lives. That's deep.
@mihajlo961x Жыл бұрын
Just discovered your channel due to the almighty Algorithm, and I just want to give you many, many kudos for the PHENOMENAL job! Not only is your insight interesting and deep, but your editing skills are impressive. Loved the art in this video too and all the ways you combined both audio and visual. Kudos, mate!
@dronesclubhighjinks Жыл бұрын
I can't believe you made a video about Bolero but did not mention Torvill and Dean (GBR)'s iconic ice dance routine at the 1984 Olympics! This music and their program are considered a masterpiece. It's probably the most famous figure skating program known to people who have no other interest in this sport; furthermore, it's probably the reason a lot of non-musical people are even aware of Bolero. I don't know if Torvill and Dean are the reason people see this music as "sensuous"? That adjective/thought never would have occurred to me otherwise. I had assumed Bolero was military in origin but very minimalist compared to the great 19th century marches. That is fascinating about the research study from the University of British Columbia in Canada on the artist, aphasia, and Bolero. Thank you for the video! If you have never seen Torvill and Dean (GBR)'s iconic ice dance routine, please, please look it up!
@barbelarmbroster6524 Жыл бұрын
I was looking for someone mentioning the legendary dance of Torville and Dean. ✨⛸️🎶 💕
@dronesclubhighjinks Жыл бұрын
@@barbelarmbroster6524 I am still surprised it wasn’t mentioned! KZbinrs’ most common age across almost all subject matters is around 30 years old, so maybe they’re too young. But Torvill and Dean’s routine must show up in searches of “[subject] in pop culture”. There is a wonderful video documentary on KZbin regarding the background of and the lead-up to the iconic performance! It’s called “Torvill and Dean - the perfect day” from the channel Yvette _fans. Enjoy!! 😍🙌🎶⛸💫
@wastrel093 жыл бұрын
Interesting video, but remember Ravel composed his final two masterpieces, The Piano Concerto in G and The Concerto for the Left Hand, after Bolero. The piano concertos show Ravel in excellent creative form, with immaculate orchestration and hellish piano parts, especially the cadenza on the left hand concerto. Sadly, he only composed a short song cycle after the concertos.
@Hailey_Paige_19373 жыл бұрын
Didn’t he also compose his opera “L’Enfant et les Sortiléges” around that time, too? Or was that before his Piano Concerti?
@ezekielthiessen70802 жыл бұрын
@@Hailey_Paige_1937 He composed that earlier
@Hailey_Paige_19372 жыл бұрын
@@ezekielthiessen7080 Ah. Thanks!
@MaemiNoYume2 жыл бұрын
I really cried once when I listened to this piece, but not for the same reason I would cry for other pieces. When I started studying music in 2009, Ravel was one of the first composers I studied. The first piece being Gaspard de la nuit and then Miroirs and then Le tombeau de Couperin and then La Valse, and when I finally listened to Bolero I didn't recognize him. It was like seeing my grandma who was suddenly not able to understand things around her, wasn't able to recognize us. If you only listen to Bolero, it would be very hard to notice it, how this piece is like a imprisoned soul, unable to even grab the bars or even cry, unable to be, if you listen to Ondine or any movement from Daphnis et chloë, the difference is the life, the existence of a very real, very colorful soul, very sensual, very very very human with a universe of things being said and memories and stories being felt. So listening to Bolero was painful when I was already in love with all the sensuality of Ravel's music. Can you please, after listening to bolero, go listen to his piano concerto in G major, or listen to La Valse, or Daphnis Et Chloë, listen to his glorious way of really freely being a vibrant glorious poetic soul. I really do believe that the most joyful or his music needs to always be celebrated.
@wallflower6303 жыл бұрын
Wonderful video. Bolero has been a part of my life since I was little. I remember being bored with it early on, it's repeating pattern putting me to sleep and lasting way too long. Yet after rediscovering it recently, and now being much older this has become one of my favorite classical pieces. I did not know much about the composer himself, only that his music made me feel... strongly. There is this tug of war going on within the instruments, I feel. A need to continue, but a driving need to complete as well. Nothing lasts forever does it. Like life itself, passion, artistry, and imagination all have an end. The disillusion of innocence and youth, or the feeling that I'll have enough time to get it all done. The trial of getting up and doing it all over again when one wants to let go and finally sleep, but contribute in a unique way that will immortalize one forever. The ending is a shout "This is all that I am". There is such sadness and yet joy in that reveal, but I could not hear it when I was younger. When I read the title of your video, the first affliction that came to mind was Dementia. Dementia is the deconstruction of memories. I've worked with many dementia patients and they seem to go backwards in their psyche, losing what is most recent, returning to what is the beginning. It is a very sad and heartbreaking thing to witness. Your video is beautifully done. It was engaging and artistically stunning. Thank you for doing it.
@pelmer39483 жыл бұрын
Me, after going onto KZbin: Ooh another Listening in video! On Bolero! Me, after seeing how long it is: Ah, I see where this is going :) Honestly, after seeing this video on Bolero it opened up a lot of thoughts in my mind, I knew Bolero was incredibly popular and I loved it, but I always thought it a bit overrated compared to his other work. However, after watching it and how the simplicity masks the incredibly orchestration, and why he may have chosen to write it, I'm reminded once again of how powerful this piece is.
@rebeccap68783 жыл бұрын
I was literally JUST hoping you'd upload a video on this profound piece!! Thank you for this!!!
@slappy89413 жыл бұрын
I lack the words to properly express the feelings this piece inspires in me; I am at once filled with both nostalgic longing and excited anticipation, as if revisiting a memory of something that is yet to happen.
@Whatismusic1233 жыл бұрын
Feeling of stupidity
@BenihanaX3 жыл бұрын
Well you've managed to drive me to sobbing through analysis of multiple favorite songs now (previously the Star Wars video). I *think* that's a good thing... As for this one, around 11:54, seeing the order visually devolve into chaos at the close of the song, and at the end of his life, is what led to weeping.
@antoniocjp58243 жыл бұрын
I think this video is one of the most beautiful and compelling analysis of a musical piece I ever had opportunity to see. Thank you so much.
@jayt96082 жыл бұрын
I listened to this video, and then I listened to the score as it was performed. The first two thirds to three quarters are soothingly repitious, but it is in the last few minutes that the pieces collapse in on themselves and that which was soothing is now lost in a terrible cacophony of sound. It is the sound of the busiest street in the world, by the busiest airport, above the subway, with the docks on the other side, and behind you the train station, at the same time all of these doors are pouring into the street, the people surrounding, jostling, bumping you, with a platoon of drill seargents screaming at you from all sides, all while you search desperately and hopelessly for a single friendly face that will bring peace. It is beautiful and utterly terrifying. It is the autistic intovert's great joy and phobia given voice.
@mattchu70672 жыл бұрын
Awesome video! Love it! Was learning the bolero rudiment and felt compelled to investigate more history - glad to have found your channel!
@pretzelkch83223 жыл бұрын
I couldn't take this piece seriously anymore ever since I saw the meme of the bass player griping about the bass part. Thanks for shedding new light on the greatness of this piece!
@wellurban3 жыл бұрын
The first time I consciously heard Bolero was in the Italian animated film Allegro Non Troppo, where it accompanied a heavy-handed but evocative allegory of evolution on an alien planet: a steady march of progress, becoming increasingly frenzied and obsessive, ending in paroxysms of ecological destruction. I’ve never been able to shake that imagery since, so Bolero has always felt “au fou” to me.
@wendyweaver87493 жыл бұрын
voltlife - Your connection of Bolero to a film allegory of evolution on an alien planet is how I always react to Stravinsky's "The Rite of Spring." I first heard music from "The Rite of Spring" in a Disney educational film. The animated film was an extended version of a section of "Fantasia," but with narration added. It was about the earth's evolution into a semi-stable planet, with land and seas, through multiple - and violent - encounters (water with lava; earthquakes with volcanic eruptions; unending gales of wind and water) and continues with the evolution of life: from one-celled creatures to dinosaurs. It finishes with the demise of the dinosaurs - followed by massive earthquakes. I cannot hear "The Rite of Spring" without concurrently "viewing" the animated film in my mind.
@BrunoNeureiter3 жыл бұрын
I first heard it at the end of Les uns et Les autres
@allenlinares87583 жыл бұрын
I finally understand why i often play this piece in my head while at work. I happen to work in a factory.
@burningjoe3 жыл бұрын
The idea that Ravel may have been falling apart mentally and leaned on the sounds of his youth, those of the unrelenting churning of a Factory, is just amazing. I imagine that Raymond Scott drew inspiration from Ravel for his piece, Powerhouse.
@barbelarmbroster6524 Жыл бұрын
My first encounter with this wonderful music was at the Olympic Games 1984. Jane Torville and Christopher Dean dancing the BOLERO on ice will forever be written on my mind! ⛸️🎶💕
@josephbonney72553 жыл бұрын
Wow! This is one of the best KZbin videos I've ever seen. Good job!
@Edmonddantes1233 жыл бұрын
This always sends shivers down my spine, so simple and yet so complex, gripping and humorous, just an amazing piece of art. And this video essay was incredibly illuminating and beautiful, thank you!
@grantveebeejay5353 жыл бұрын
Emotionally I have always felt Bolero was about transcending the human condition. This was truly fascinating to hear about Ravel's neurological condition and how his response to it may have been magnificently manifested in Bolero. Thank you for this great episode.
@kofiLjunggren3 жыл бұрын
I forgot how GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOD the quality of your videos is
@jimslancio3 жыл бұрын
The second melody and the sudden modulation at the end are in the Phrygian Mode (a scale whose whole and half steps are based on the white-note scale running from E up to E), which is a hallmark of Spanish music.
@utz28673 жыл бұрын
Awesome vid! Great to learn more about one of my favorite pieces of music!
@Hailey_Paige_19373 жыл бұрын
Ravel is my favorite composer (Seriously, I’ve never heard a piece of his I don’t like!). So, I walked into this video already knowing parts of the Boléro story, but the way you unraveled (pun totally intended) this piece and included anecdotes I haven’t heard yet, it made me fall in love with Boléro all over again. I do think it’s “crazy” yet sheer genius. Ravel’s obsession with mechanical things is totally apparent in here, and I love that. I love the obsessive repetition. I’m Autistic and have ADHD. Repetition/routine is my thing, and I often get lost in various rabbit holes of analyzing things in great detail (literature, psychology, History, and ESPECIALLY music). Classical Music is the biggest interest of mine; I constantly analyze scores, research composers for every scrap of info that’s available in their music and lives, and Ravel is the composer I can relate to the most; his meticulous nature and the surrealism of his world just... Invites me in. Like a friend saying they understand me. Though I love Ravel’s other works more than Boléro (seriously, his “Miroirs” Suite is just -- *AAAAHHH SOOOOO GOOD* and “Le Tombeau de Couperin,” “La Valse,” his Left-Hand Piano Concerto, “Ma Mére l’Oye”............. Etc, lol), I will always have a place in my heart for Boléro. It’s relatable to me as someone with my own disabilities, and it sums up how my mind works in one piece. Thank you for this video. You’ve rekindled my love of this piece again. ❤️🎼
@zdschmitz3 жыл бұрын
Your videos are some of the best on the platform. I love them so much. You do an amazing job with the editing and presentation of the visual elements
@bwonderlandj3 жыл бұрын
Your videos are such a journey. Thank you so much
@gilougilou67133 жыл бұрын
also contains the uplifting part of music we "not all but nearly" people search in music
@changemankind2 жыл бұрын
I watched a very unusal italian film once called "Allegro non troppo", which showed animated visual depictions of several classical pieces like "Prélude a l'après-midi d'un faune" by Debussy, "The firebird" by Stravinsky and "Boléro" by Ravel among others. I liked the animation to "Boléro" very much and watched it several times. This video reminded me of it, because the visual depiction of the music also has this darkness, this madness. It is an inevitable march towards a unknown end.
@wumisuzume3 жыл бұрын
wonderful video again. i don't know much of the context but i wonder if Ravel was aware of pieces like Mosolov's "Iron Foundry" when writing this piece, was really intriguing to hear Ravel's concepts of factory noises
@sir_s3 жыл бұрын
@13.18 my phone went black and white because my 'wind down' started and it was so great, black and white screen, that thunder and au fou au fou. Thanks for that!
@fachex13 жыл бұрын
You've outdone yourself. Congrats!! I hope you keep being inspired and that we can get more of its controlled exposition! Kind regards Barney, hope you're doing well. Take care!
@dojokonojo3 жыл бұрын
The first time I heard Bolero was from watching my high school marching band/color guard perform it. It was hypnotizing but I would have never guessed the reason why Ravel composed it at the time.
@bigogle3 жыл бұрын
Your best video so far: a creative and compelling lecture!
@tayar37973 жыл бұрын
hes great at explaining, the video is interesting, and I also like how the music kinda synchronizes with the content and your great voice.
@pauglader54103 жыл бұрын
Absolutely brilliant video! Looking foreward to watch the next one!
@beck6452 жыл бұрын
OMG as I have said before and will continue to say again, what you do is as important as the music itself. You open the mind to the music’s soul and how it does what it does to us as we listen. No longer do we just listen. Now we get to savor and become intimate with these amazing audio masterpieces. How can we ever thank you enough for what you do? You have put me in tears more than once as the music I love was shown to me in an entirely new way. Bless you young man. What you do has been needed for generations. Thank you! PS. I have to ask if you have heard Keith Emerson’s Abadon’s Bolero that he composed back in the 70’s? He was the brilliant keyboard player from Emerson, Lake and Palmer. Would absolutely love to know what you think of it. Many thanks!
@toddbernstein34073 жыл бұрын
I associate Bolero with the Blake Edwards film 10, having seen it when I was a kid. I've always thought the music was intense in it's relentless build up throughout the piece, but I never knew the history behind it and what it really means. Thank you for continuing to make such incredible videos.
@kevinarthurjr40063 жыл бұрын
The quality of this video is SUPERB
@AndrewMerideth3 жыл бұрын
I could not make it through that Documentary on Curiosity Stream. As a performer of this piece multiple times (even back to back weeks with different orchestras), I can't stand this piece, but this video is the best thing this piece could ask for. Very well done!
@waggawaggaful Жыл бұрын
His early fascination with factories, large machinery and industrialism in relation to this particular piece makes a lot of sense. Both rely on independently small, repetitive processes that cumulatively add up to a new emergent process that is an entirely separate entity from the simpler individual components that make up the whole. The theme of neurological distress makes sense as well. I noticed someone else comment that Bolero is like OCD in musical form. Lots of small, repetitive ritualistic acts meant to sooth and relieve the discomfort.
@JonatasAdoM3 жыл бұрын
What I love about this piece is that each section plays the same passage or phrases. In a sense it is each instrument showing what they can do in a sort of one upmanship. Perhaps cogs in a factory, each doing the same thing in their own way, if we use Ravel's inspiration.
@neemiasamaral6303 жыл бұрын
That's such an amazing content, incredible work, congrats!! If possible, i would love to see something like this about Mozart's Requiem, it would help me so much to get in conducting school
@FilmScoreandMore3 жыл бұрын
This was a very interesting video about a unique piece that's stuck with me since I first heard it a few years ago. It's interesting to see the history of the piece here. As soon as you mentioned the factory connection I could hear it in the music, that mechanical ostinato. I know this video has been overlooked thus far, but I really hope it gains some momentum. Best of luck on your next project!
@briankatona3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing this! Very insightful.
@SM-cs2my2 жыл бұрын
the adams pi painting was a fun easter egg at the beginning of the video. we talked about this in my neuroanatomy class, and i enjoyed seeing it again
@glennac Жыл бұрын
Oliver Sacks, in one of his books, talks about Bolero and the female artist that did the painting based on the work. He discusses how patterns and rhythms are catnip to those (of us) with mental and personality disorders. Fascinating stuff.
@JWP4523 жыл бұрын
To composer Arthur Honegger, Ravel would later say, "I've written only one masterpiece -- Bolero. Unfortunately, it has no music in it."
@tomlarussa8300 Жыл бұрын
Excellent video. Further reading - Oliver Sacks’ Musicophilia - Sacks mentions Ravel’s suffering from Pick’s disease which may have exacerbated his suffering from Wernicke’s aphasia. So interesting.
@maestrobpm9113 жыл бұрын
Stunning. You clearly love this piece.
@howardjohnson21382 жыл бұрын
One of my favorite pieces. Thank you
@josephfong45803 жыл бұрын
I listen to these while doing school work these are so relaxing yet so full of information
@Aditya_Jayaram3 жыл бұрын
My school work is his chemistry homework
@mathildewesendonck72253 жыл бұрын
9.25 the snaredrum rhythm, the industrial clacking of metal, creating music… that reminds me 100% much of Richard Wagner‘s Rheingold, Abstieg nach Nibelheim. The music and the rhythm melts into the rhythmical sounds of hammers on anvils, while in the story an army of blacksmith dwarfs works on the gold of the Rheingold. Gosh, this is fascinating! Thank you for this brilliant video! This Nibelheim music gets me just as much as the Boléro. I wonder how Ravel reacted to Wagner
@mr88cet2 жыл бұрын
Although thinking of it as a monster crescendo certainly makes sense, I tend to think of Bolero as an exploration of tone color. Tone color, and especially extremely-clever and outright amazing control of tone color, is certainly a hallmark of Ravel’s works!