This is one of those pieces that you think about all day and eventually become so excited to return home and listen that it becomes an obsession.
@windstorm10006 жыл бұрын
Yes
@vyvianspipes5 жыл бұрын
Amen!!
@danal815 жыл бұрын
Or you can bring your earbuds and listen to it outside of your home
@ingjpoy4 жыл бұрын
certainly
@ingjpoy4 жыл бұрын
totally agree with u
@johnwalzer9187 Жыл бұрын
This is an exquisite piece but you have to be in the right frame of mind to enjoy it. It's not easy listening or light entertainment. I can't imagine anyone coming home at the end of a long, hard day and saying, "I need to chill and relax - I think Strauss' Metamorphoses would do the trick." No. But if you're in a contemplative mood and have half an hour to focus your attention exclusively on the music and let it carry you along in its very special sound world, Strauss' music can be cathartic. The appearance of Beethoven at the end and those final modulations are unbelievably dark and moving. Like Vaughan Williams and Verdi, Strauss could still conjure magic into his eighties.
@bernabefernandeztouceda73153 ай бұрын
Indeed. He was one of those composers who got better with age. Metamorphosen, Four Last Songs, Oboe Concerto, Daphne... All masterpieces
@rochelle41335 жыл бұрын
The first time I heard this piece, I cried in the theatre. The performers told us the story of its composition, and I could just feel Strauss’s pain exuding from this piece
@brianlocke568 Жыл бұрын
According to Timothy L. Jackson's analysis: 0:00 Exposition, Group I, Motive 1 0:41 Motive 2 1:19 Motive 3 5:58 Group II, Subsidiary Theme 1, Motive 4: m.82 8:33 Transition I: m.130 8:46 Motive 5: m.134 9:15 Subsidiary Theme 2, Motive 6: m.144 11:25 Transition II: m.187 12:39 Development section I: m.213 14:05 Development section II: m.246 15:22 Development section III: m.278 16:12 Transition III: m.299 18:04 Reappearance of Group II Sub. Th. 1: m.345 19:34 Recapitulation begins: m.391 22:21 Overlap of Recap and Coda (Beginning of Coda): m.433 22:39 Transition IV: m.437 23:24 Recap resumes: m.449 25:58 Coda resumes: m.487 27:01 "Coda of the Coda," Paraphrase of Beethoven's Eroica Symphony movt. 2: m.502
@davidecarlassara85254 жыл бұрын
I have discovered this piece through this video when I was about 12, 6 years ago, now I can say it has remained one of my favourite pieces, and it kind of changed my life.
@Ivan_17913 жыл бұрын
You are a pretty sensible person then.
@marioroveda54813 жыл бұрын
It "metamorphoed" your life
@rr7firefly2 жыл бұрын
You've reminded me that when I was 12 years old my father brought home a boxed set of 12 classical records. I always reflect back on that period of discovery with enormous gratitude. None of my friends in grade school or high school had any idea what was stirring in my soul. Oddly, this is my very first hearing of Metamorphosen. It is exactly what I need right now as I think about the recent death of a close friend. She was an exceptional human being, able to rise above the mediocrity of the world around her. Around us all. Davide, I think you have a real advantage in life. I wish you the very best as you embark on your adult life.
@EASYTIGER109 жыл бұрын
This to me is the most extreme music of grief.
@davidfranklin2724 жыл бұрын
Absolutely. Grief.
@violoncello21893 жыл бұрын
Can’t agree more
@MrDSCH-ib2mx11 ай бұрын
I would say that as well. But also to Tchaikovsky's Pathetique Symphony and Shostakovich's 8th String Quartet.
@EASYTIGER1011 ай бұрын
@@MrDSCH-ib2mx I partly agree, but the emotion of Metamorphosen are different from - say - the Pathetique. I'm not sure what the right word is - despair maybe? The Pathetique is full on emotion, it cries with anguish and pain. The emotions are all on show. Metamorphosen is dark and bleak.
@MrDSCH-ib2mx11 ай бұрын
@@EASYTIGER10 That is true! I would say that the Pathetique Symphony and Metamorphosen shows different ways of showing emotion, sorrow, grief etc.
@coolmuso6108 Жыл бұрын
I remember I first heard this piece in 2019. A friend of my mum's had given her two tickets for a recital happening in our town and I went with my sister. The main event of the recital was the Bruch Violin Concerto, but just before that, this piece was played. I had never heard of this piece before (I knew who the composer was) and I didn't know what to expect. I ended up being so captivated and moved by this music. It was so beautifully haunting and tragic that I went home that night with this piece stuck in my head and I had to give it another listen. And here I am still listening to it! A masterpiece.
@3gtheepic10 ай бұрын
25:53 is the saddest part of the piece. it sounds like despair
@MrPSaun3 жыл бұрын
My God... What a phenomenal piece of music! How have I never heard this before!
Having the score is SO helpful. I'm just starting to learn this work and the texture is so rich and dense. Listening while reading along with the score makes it all so much clearer. Thank you
@bensladden35428 жыл бұрын
In my mind this is what Kafka's Strasser heard when his sister played the violin in the living room: a most hauntingly beautiful sound, accompanied with the knowledge that he no longer is what he was. A seemingly irreversible metamorphosis. Yet, music never loses his potency, it heeds no human language.
@flyingmintbunnyouo94076 жыл бұрын
Probably one of the jarring and despairing pieces of literature I have experienced thus far, it will forever be my favourite.
@jodikirsh2 жыл бұрын
@@flyingmintbunnyouo9407 What's the book?
@firoza89942 жыл бұрын
@@jodikirsh Kafka's Metamorphoses
@jusepe4566 жыл бұрын
Such an intensely emotional, pure and inspired masterpiece! Richard Strauss was a true genius composer, well beyond his own era. Thank you very much for posting it
@joshscores33603 жыл бұрын
Toward the end of his life, Richard Strauss underwent a profound aesthetic change that resulted in some of the composer's most intensely personal and philosophical music. Among the most striking of these works from Strauss' final decade is Metamorphosen (1945), written in an atmosphere of devastation following World War II. As a meditation on the bombing of Dresden (which destroyed the city and killed 130,000 of its inhabitants), Metamorphosen represents a significant departure from the more exuberant of Strauss' tone poems -- Til Eulenspiegel's Merry Pranks, Don Juan, Don Quixote -- by that time a half-century old. In contrast to the vivid portraiture of those works, Metamorphosen is wholly unrepresentational, a tragic, pessimistic reflection on a more intimate level than any of Strauss' other music. The work unfolds in a single, long movement. Strauss sustains and develops a series of recurring, interrelated motives that, as the title indicates, are linked by their transformation into new material rather than -- as in conventional variations -- a common thematic identity. The work includes several direct references to the funeral march in the second movement of Beethoven's "Eroica" Symphony; here they sound entirely appropriate and natural within the broader structure, underlying rather than emphasizing the somber nature of the work as a whole. (AllMusic)
@olegi.stepanov6773 жыл бұрын
There are definitely quotes from "Adajio Albinoni". Or rather the origins?
@theonetheycallkad67682 жыл бұрын
only about 25,000 died
@lachenmann2 жыл бұрын
@@theonetheycallkad6768 Not true, and it was an abominable crime.
@steveegallo33842 жыл бұрын
True....Same with that Meistersinger 3rd Act Vorspiel......OMyGod!
@LJBSasha2 жыл бұрын
@@theonetheycallkad6768 From the "Encyclopædia Brittanica:" "It is thought that some 25,000-35,000 civilians died in Dresden in the air attacks, though some estimates are as high as 250,000, given the influx of undocumented refugees that had fled to Dresden from the Eastern Front. Most of the victims were women, children, and the elderly." What shocked me just now is that the bombing of that supposedly-insignificant (militarily) city was executed over a full *THREE days* (1945/02/13-15)...
@Ivan_17913 жыл бұрын
I'm so incredibly happy this channel wasn't erased after all this copyright madness.
@MrMichaelvier5 жыл бұрын
thanks for posting....always in tears when i hear this masterpiece...so beautiful.....fragile .....tragic.....fantastische Streicher ........und ein sehr einfühlsamer Dirigent....
@kyleclef11 жыл бұрын
19:29 when that melody comes back...but a little different with that b flat on the end of the phrase...gets me every time.
@arthurlecomte89505 жыл бұрын
there was also a certain man who came back in 19:29... who did also get certain people every time
@pedrofuster91614 жыл бұрын
@@arthurlecomte8950 The dow Jones just fell down to zero, and its gonna be a fine swell day
@rr7firefly2 жыл бұрын
I envy people who have such a refined understanding of music's structure.
@CharlesM199210 жыл бұрын
Probably my favorite piece of music. Stunning.
@rr7firefly2 жыл бұрын
That is saying quite a bit. You have extremely refined musical appreciation.
@94alhf11 ай бұрын
@@rr7fireflythank you
@futuropasado8 жыл бұрын
This art piece is so beautiful... one of the most sincere and purest expressions of the soul...
@javiermedina53135 жыл бұрын
authentic music, not prefabricated, not materialistic
@jwalts3710 жыл бұрын
that chord around 0:32-0:33 completely overwhelmed me.
@keithruddell18009 жыл бұрын
absolutely beautiful i had to grab my bass and try some voicings of it. F-7(9)/C
@futuropasado8 жыл бұрын
what chord is it? wow
@futuropasado8 жыл бұрын
how do you add a ninth to a chord in the piano? I know F minor 7 are 4 notes, it would be 5 notes?¿
@jasondonald98307 жыл бұрын
Just follow up the notes of an aeolian minor scale skipping every other note. Tonic #3 5 #7 9 which is just a 2 an octave up. 2 plus seven equals 9. You can do this all the way up to 13. Same for dominant chords using the mixolydian scale and for major chords using the lydian scale also.
@jasondonald98307 жыл бұрын
b3 and b7 I meant to say...
@GBN_0111 жыл бұрын
Even though the score is that of the septet version, the recording in this video is the one for the "23et" version. This version has some changes including an expanded violin section and more intrincate voicing. The music is the same though, that's why you can follow the video. Another amendment Strauss made was he eliminated the E-minor chord at the end, that's the way it is in my score. So there is no strange sound effect or non syncing of the video, simply the chord is not being played!
@maxclavenna44954 жыл бұрын
I didn't know about a septet version ; is it original from the author? Thanks
@GBN_014 жыл бұрын
@@maxclavenna4495 I believe so, in fact, it may very well be the first version he crafted. I remember reading something about it in Norman del Mar's 3rd volume on the commentary of Strauss' life and work. I don't have it at hand but it's worth checking out
@maxclavenna44954 жыл бұрын
@@GBN_01 Thank You very much
@etiennetavitian33614 жыл бұрын
G.B.N. Strauss didn’t write the septet version, he left only a few sketches. Rudolph Leopold realized this version in the 1990. But it was probably Strauss’s first intention, before Paul Sacher commissioned the larger version.
@herrbrahms11 күн бұрын
Leaving it to die on C minor is the better choice. That focuses attention on the contrabass C2, G1, C1.
@FinanceAlex Жыл бұрын
Beautiful beyond words! Such complexity yet simplicity at the same time
@kevinbeck88366 жыл бұрын
"No one can really know himself, detach himself from his inner being Yet, each day he must put to the test, What is in the end, clear. What he is and what he was, what he can be and what he might be. But, what goes on in the world, No one really understands it rightly, and also up to the present day, no one desires to understand it. Conduct yourself with discernment. Just as the day offers itself; Think always: it's gone well up to now, so might it go until the end." Wikipedia says he wrote this in his journal while composing this
@lukashf84406 жыл бұрын
it is Goethe
@windstorm10006 жыл бұрын
Lovely
@peterb31812 жыл бұрын
That was very enlightening. An insight into Strauss' own thoughts. Thank you for sharing.
@aritraahamed99074 жыл бұрын
Look, how deep and condensed this is! It will not give you even the break to feel your own fascination while listening it.
@grundvater Жыл бұрын
Echt cooler Kanal. Gut gemacht und perfekt zum Lernen.
@jimparkin2345 Жыл бұрын
No one scores the death of Western civilization quite like Richard Strauss.
@AhrkFinTey4 ай бұрын
?
@jimparkin23454 ай бұрын
@@AhrkFinTey Strauss composed this piece after the Third Reich bombed the Vienna opera house to inaugurate a new Nazi culture for Germans. In this way, Metamorphosen seems especially appropriate while similar rampant and deliberate cultural demolition takes place all over the waning modern West right now.
@UaM175 жыл бұрын
Since around 40 years this music haunt my soul, i have no words to say Why, still at this time...
@unidentifieduser5346 Жыл бұрын
So at least youre 50 years rn?
@shockwave22915 жыл бұрын
I heard the first 5 minutes of this piece on the radio and I just had to look this up online to hear the rest of it. Hauntingly beautiful.
@ChrisBreemer4 жыл бұрын
One of the most beautiful, skillful, and touching pieces ever 💖
@GabrieleSpampinatoComposer4 жыл бұрын
The best string piece ever composed in my opinion. Perfection of form, style, architecture, contrapunctum. And also the last European classical work, the climax of a style that reaches its perfection.
@davidecarlassara85254 жыл бұрын
Agreed
@arthurlecomte89505 жыл бұрын
Strauss was born in 1864, he lived through these years where Europe exceeded the world on almost every level. He grew up with the modernistic idea that history was a story of constant progression, and that they reached a moment of exponential growth. Imagine that feeling of enthusiasm for the future... How utterly bitter it then must have been to see how wicked his own people became. His own nation, full of smart and creative people, flew too close to the sun; and Strauss saw them fall. How all these marvelous cities, with their beautiful buildings, turned into complete ruins. The Götterdämmerung had become real. And in the twilight of his own life, he saw it all happen. Richard Strauss was like Ezekiel after the destruction of Jerusalem. How deserted lies the city, once so full of people! How like a widow is she, who once was great among the nations! She who was queen among the provinces has now become a slave.
@maxxiejohn22634 жыл бұрын
History has never been a constant progression. America had marvelous cities too. Many of these were destroyed through the great fires of the 1870s and 1880s. The rest went farewell through expositions across the United States. We cannot replicate the architecture of yesterday. We have become incapable of the old beauty and its technology. Maybe someday in the future we can reach the great heights of the old and even higher. This piece is dealing and addressing what has happened.
@Joshy...4 жыл бұрын
He worked for the Nazi's too his job was to suppress any music coming from non-aryans
@mediolanumhibernicus33534 жыл бұрын
Beautifully written comment. Thank you!
@GreenTeaViewer4 жыл бұрын
Well, yes, but it was WW1 that shattered Europe and the narrative of progress once and for all.
@Dikvanluik2033XL7HS4 жыл бұрын
Arthur Lecomte very beautiful writing, thank you Arthur.
@fatmadridibenaissa35139 жыл бұрын
Metamorphosis, Metamorphoses in French, is a work written for 23 string instruments by Richard Strauss completed April 12, 1945. This is an order from Paul Sacher but most of Metamorphoses was already written before. They were composed under the influence of emotion caused by the devastation of part of Germany during the Second World War. Beautiful!
@christopherbelland72408 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@elrold82593 жыл бұрын
Cuando empecé a dejar los placeres banales y encontrarme conmigo mismo y saber en realidad quien era yo y que me gusta de este mundo. Por alguna extraña razón sentía como gustos totalmente desconocidos por mi, empezaban a llamarme más y más. Ahora estoy acá, con 26 años y sintiendo uno de los mejores placeres al escuchar esta exquisita pieza musical.
@thebestofrockandworldmusic33932 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/Y4CQd2ecr6aoptU
@sergiohman10 ай бұрын
Supongo que para renunciar a esos placeres antes debes excederte en tal cosa o al menos haber probado todo tipo de estos. ¿No? Me recuerda a las enseñanzas de Herman Hesse que trata en varios de sus libros.
@elrold825910 ай бұрын
@@sergiohman Desde mi experiencia, si. Primero tuve que perderme en esos "placeres" que la mayoría de la sociedad los asimila con la felicidad. No me arrepiento, pero no los repetiría. Estuve perdido nuevamente, pero esta vez por "amor", supongo que eso es la vida, estar luchando y experimentando diferentes placeres y experiencias, pero creo que lo importantes es nunca dejarnos perder y renunciar a nuestra naturaleza. Llevaba un año sin escuchar esta pieza. Gracias a tu comentario lo pude hacer, el libro que mencionas ya lo agregue a mi lista. pinta ser muy bueno. ¡Saludos!
@sergiohman9 ай бұрын
@@elrold8259 De nada, amigo. Yo solo espero que algún día pueda vivir y encontrarme también conmigo mismo. Y sí, si lees a Hesse pienso que te identificarás demasiado, mis favoritos por cierto son Siddartha, Demian y Gertrude. ¡Saludos de vuelta y suerte!
@ThomasTJDavis10 жыл бұрын
Dang! That is such an incredible sound!
@123must11 жыл бұрын
Beautiful work for this absolute masterpiece : the score is so important ! Thanks a lot
@flylooper8 жыл бұрын
What an interesting work. Low strings playing on the edge of harmonic tonality. Extreme legato. Emotionally riveting. Reminds me in some ways of Mahler's unfinished 10th.
@emilebensdorp180210 жыл бұрын
probably the best ever written.
@tailleferrestan3 жыл бұрын
Absolutely amazing. My new favorite work, for me, it's the height of human art. Everything before this leads here!
@helenamarie43376 жыл бұрын
the counterpoint at times is stunning
@blastait3 жыл бұрын
I feel embraced by this piece. It’s so beautifully dense
@raticida1234569 жыл бұрын
Hear that melancholy and nostalgia after war
@davidemura44449 жыл бұрын
The harmony in this piece is like getting punched while having sex while burning while eating rose-flavoured chocolate while getting your heart ripped off your chest while kissing the most beautiful creature upon earth.
@windstorm10009 жыл бұрын
+Davide Mura off beat--but spot on musical analysis!!
@lukecash35008 жыл бұрын
The same could be said of Janacek's Intimate Letters. It's funny how such different music could fit that description.
@ammalbhatia39447 жыл бұрын
Twice
@steveegallo33847 жыл бұрын
Yes, you're right! It's so profoundly sad, complex, multi-layered: It's like driving a hearse to the wholesale liverwurst outlet when suddenly a hermaphrodite in a piano truck backs out of a crackhouse driveway and, as your shoes catch fire, pirouetting across Ricardo Montalbán Boulevard, slapping the truck driver six times in the loins with a Chattanooga road map, even though he was only humming "The Pussycat Song."
@tedfitz8824 Жыл бұрын
@@steveegallo3384 glad someone said it
@edgimzewski8096 Жыл бұрын
Sublime performance of a masterpiece.
@음악감상용-r5w2 жыл бұрын
The song of change, pain, and victory that breaks down stereotypes in an instant with simple, novel, and unconventional progression from the first measure, and silent shouts within a framework based on noble reason
@cristinaolaru828719 күн бұрын
These partitures are written in the techniques of basso ostinato, ritornello and poliphony and in Molto Lento ---- LARGO RHYTHMS, Very beautiful, makes me return to my inner hopes and aspirations for New Years Eve 2024 - 25.FELIZ ANOS NOVOS Y MUITO FELICIDADE !!! FLIZ NATAL !!! EVERY DAY CAN BE CHRISTMAS , I PHANTASIZE A LOT ...GREETINGS FROM ROMANIA .
@wordcel Жыл бұрын
“The Lord has rejected all the warriors in my midst; he has summoned an army against me to crush my young men. This is why I weep and my eyes overflow with tears. No one is near to comfort me, no one to restore my spirit. My children are destitute because the enemy has prevailed.”
@xenasloan68595 ай бұрын
please tell uneducated me the source of this quote
@wordcel5 ай бұрын
@@xenasloan6859 it's from the Book of Lamentations, 1:15
@erlendlangseth46727 жыл бұрын
Wow... Glad I found this piece. Haunting.
@djrbfmbfm-woa12 жыл бұрын
mate, your devotion is amazing, and this type of video is so illuminating. thank you. j.
@rivermundcatradora70619 жыл бұрын
This is the version I've been looking for the past year! Wow.
@WimGrundy9 жыл бұрын
This and Paul Paray's Detroit Symphony version of Franck's Symphony in D Minor were played at maximum room volume for my dad on his deathbed.
@alexreik4249 жыл бұрын
+Wim Grundy I hope he was hard of hearing
@alexreik4248 жыл бұрын
Hinky: perhaps your whole family were congenitally hard of hearing
@alexreik4248 жыл бұрын
Hinkshit Your noises are little more than the abject commentaries of a puerile poseur. You have, apparently, missed your true calling as a bear-trainer or swine-herd. I have some Mistletoe, left over from Xmas, it's taped to the small of my back, please feel free to come over and put it to use....anytime....
@steveegallo33847 жыл бұрын
Wow....you wordsmiths really GET IT ON....and with preternatural wit and elegance ("Mistletoe"...Who'd've thought?).....Now...TAKE IT OUTSIDE....DON'T MAKE ME COME UP THERE!
@bronermccoy51035 жыл бұрын
@@alexreik424 you are a poet
@damienheemskerk4 жыл бұрын
The passage at 22:35 gets me every time, so heartbreaking
@Ivan_17912 жыл бұрын
Sounds like people crying for their lives.
@CastelProd19 жыл бұрын
Many thanks for the score during the playing!
@NanaKwame9611 жыл бұрын
Such a powerful, emotion, tragical, piece. Thank you for sharing.
@pietrogie5052 жыл бұрын
Today I was listening to this remarkable composition -once again, while crossing my fingers and hoping for the best for (all) the people in Ukraine....
@Tamadehenzhan12 жыл бұрын
großartige Sendung, danke1
@markleneker99233 жыл бұрын
I am thanking you almost 10 years in the future from your original upload for this lovely piece!
@wehaveasituation8 жыл бұрын
astonishing...now more than ever..
@xenasloan68595 ай бұрын
People, isn't it strange that some of the musical cognicsenti challenge R Strauss' place in the compositional pantheon. Even more bizarre Strauss himself pre-empted these doubts. Have had a love affair with his music since first hearing Aus Italien nearly 60 years ago. Love you RS xx
@3gtheepic2 жыл бұрын
I love how all the soloists are playing rubato, it makes it sound so much more intense and emotional
@zgart2 жыл бұрын
I love how u have an ekko pfp
@mlbrown0136 жыл бұрын
Wonderful! Saw the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra perform this piece today and it was excellent and moving.
@SergeyNeiss5 жыл бұрын
Astonishing beauty
@danieljrossofficialmusic Жыл бұрын
So deep Yet so clear in direction
@clydeblair96228 ай бұрын
"The most terrible period of human history is at an end, the twelve year reign of bestiality, ignorance and anti-culture under the greatest criminals, during which Germany's 2,000 years of cultural evolution met its doom." Composer Richard Strauss
@windstorm10009 жыл бұрын
Strauss wrote this masterwork in part as a commission but also as homage to a Europe that was no more--
@TenorCantusFirmus7 жыл бұрын
Richard Strauss himself wrote in his private Diary it practically was a "Requiem" for a Continent that annihilated itself with two world wars and nazism and other brutal totalitarian regimes. And such a Music is the best possible commentary for such an horrible "mass suicide" ;( ;( ...
@sethdavid74767 жыл бұрын
I can't believe I've never heard this piece before
@derekrawlins726712 жыл бұрын
Do you think Strauss had been listening to Verklarte Nacht? There's a family resemblance, although Strauss's textures are more relentlessly dense than Schoenberg's. Seeing the score is a revelation- I hadn't realised just how close the music comes to being atonal. It's constantly shifting key, and the first twenty bars or so don't seem to settle in any key at all.
@estebanabad27954 жыл бұрын
Does anyone know of any similar pieces to those two?
@matiasnorenamuriel70694 жыл бұрын
Esteban Abad Von Zemlinsky's second quartet is a close call to me. Very ultra-chromatic.
@SmeagolTheBeagle4 жыл бұрын
Esteban Abad - if u haven’t heard Beethoven quartet 14 that possesses a similar deep and rich riddle like quality of this masterwork. Schoenbergs gurre-lieder tho very long and different to the varklte nacht houses the same sort of indescribable genius that I’m sure u will die for. There is a rather chaotic anton bruckner quartet that If memory serves is in F which boasts a chaotic similarity to the two pieces. Tchaikovsky quartet 3 is a beautiful but twisted and dark work as well. It’s hard to compare anything to metamorphosen and varklate nacht because they’re so unusually genius and unique tho I’m sure somebody with a superior knowledge could conjure up more reminiscent pieces I tend to find this work reminds me of Bach’s compositional approach for some reason. That all being said if ur looking for something truly world destroying and ingenious I would recommend the liszt piano sonata in B minor, specifically Cziffras version. It is a sonata inside of another sonata! And carries a similar kind of compositional dark world light world theme to varklate nacht despite being a piano work. And if ur after a pure heart bleeding soul throbbing tear streamer then I recommend Rachmaninoff symphony 2 or perhaps his piano concerto 2. Good luck to u sir.
@estebanabad27954 жыл бұрын
@@SmeagolTheBeagle thank you very much for your answer, some of those i already know, but i will take a look at the new ones
@Khayyam-vg9fw4 жыл бұрын
@@estebanabad2795 Franz Schmidt's music generally (including the symphonies and organ music), but especially the chamber works. Here is the Adagio from the Second String Quartet: kzbin.info/www/bejne/jIPUfWWfp9ekhdU
@pedroa.cantero944910 жыл бұрын
En mi andadura musical, Metamorphosen remueve lo más hondo. Siento en esta obra el vigor de cuanto hemos cegado y puja a modo del magma que bulle bajo el volcán en la imperiosa necesidad de emerger. Cuánto daría por saber que hay en mí algo de ese magma y resurgir en él, aun si fuera última emanación, abrasadora y fértil una vez fuera a la merced de líquenes, sazonada por cuanta ave viniera a asentarse para ser al fin nueva tierra y nuevo cobijo.
@javiermedina53135 жыл бұрын
hermosas palabras
@lc17154 жыл бұрын
The string orchestra as an ensemble is simply not written for enough. Such gorgeous potential often overlooked-not here, of course, in the hands of Strauss. Sublime.
@treesny12 жыл бұрын
Thanks for uploading. To refer to "Strauss' original septet version" is slightly midleading, however. I believe he began the piece for 11 solo strings, then shifted to 7, completing this version in short score (not unearthed until 1990!). A "realization" of the septet version has been published and recorded, but it must be stressed that the definitive version, and the only one Strauss actually authorized in his lifetime, is the familiar one for 23 strings.
@marybess27063 жыл бұрын
Glorious, otherworldly
@miguelm57648 жыл бұрын
Requiem for romanticism.
@arthurlecomte89507 жыл бұрын
Requiem for Europe
@didierschein85157 жыл бұрын
und für Deutschland
@javiermedina53135 жыл бұрын
Requiem for Europe boy, Europe is dead since 1945, specially Germany. Now degeneracy and absolute materialism reigns.
@thijmenkrijgsman24175 жыл бұрын
Younger sister of ‘Ein Deutsches Requiem’ Brahms, be like :
@IgnacioClerici-mp5cy4 жыл бұрын
@@javiermedina5313 what do you mean?
@stevenwoodham80984 жыл бұрын
This is a very beautiful and rather complex work which unfolds slowly yet ineffably speaks of our strengths and weaknesses so succinctly.
@lukecash35008 жыл бұрын
Always have to sub a channel that does videos which take this much work and provide us all with another marvelous service. Thanks Thomas ;) Support these channels, folks! Takes a couple of second to help spread culture and educational material.
@simonkawasaki42294 жыл бұрын
One of Strauss’s last works... perhaps his farewell to the world.
@vaclavmiller80323 жыл бұрын
I take this to be his farewell to the German culture that he loved, destroyed by the cataclysmic nihilism of the Nazi party. His farewell to the world is surely the Vier Letzte Lieder. Utterly devastating either way.
@rr7firefly2 жыл бұрын
I was listening to Strauss' "Im Abendrot" earlier today. If you do not already know it, look for the one with Jessye Norman.
@bayerischemotorenwerke52522 жыл бұрын
@@vaclavmiller8032 Nihilism of Nationalism? How retarded
@MD-cn1nt7 жыл бұрын
Extraordinary.
@MyPaulocorrea8 жыл бұрын
Beautiful...
@johnjephcote7636 Жыл бұрын
I remember hearing this ( a long time ago now) introduced by Hugh Wheldon on 'Monitor' in a film about R.Strauss by Ken Russell.
@lavoceinmaschera96655 жыл бұрын
Il più bel brano per archi mai composto.
@malcolmx19324 жыл бұрын
This composition makes a lot of sense for those who lived in Germany in 1918 and 1945.
@JafuetTheSame3 жыл бұрын
yeah, strauss of all ppl should be a voice of suffering during those years, right? i wonder what would schoenberg or even schulhoff said about that...
@AmericanIdiot20027 жыл бұрын
The "somewhat flowing" section is so beautiful
@jessj83132 жыл бұрын
This piece is so obsessive. The climax at 19:05 its masterful. It's not marked but I like to see a hint of an allargando there.
@mingmonk Жыл бұрын
It’s the longest most beautiful chorale…
@achoacho468 жыл бұрын
thanks for upload this masterpiese
@ezequielstepanenko32297 жыл бұрын
OUTSTANDING
@sergiohman3 жыл бұрын
Es una preciosidad esta obra, una belleza para mis oídos.
@thebestofrockandworldmusic33932 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/Y4CQd2ecr6aoptU
@ThomasF271112 жыл бұрын
Tief, verträumt, zeitlos.
@忠憲-s2t2 ай бұрын
@brianlocke568 1 年前(編集済み) According to Timothy L. Jackson's analysis: 0:00 Exposition, Group I, Motive 1 0:41 Motive 2 1:19 Motive 3 5:58 Group II, Subsidiary Theme 1, Motive 4: m.82 8:33 Transition I: m.130 8:46 Motive 5: m.134 9:15 Subsidiary Theme 2, Motive 6: m.144 11:25 Transition II: m.187 12:39 Development section I: m.213 14:05 Development section II: m.246 15:22 Development section III: m.278 16:12 Transition III: m.299 18:04 Reappearance of Group II Sub. Th. 1: m.345 19:34 Recapitulation begins: m.391 22:21 Overlap of Recap and Coda (Beginning of Coda): m.433 22:39 Transition IV: m.437 23:24 Recap resumes: m.449 25:58 Coda resumes: m.487 27:01 "Coda of the Coda," Paraphrase of Beethoven's Eroica Symphony movt. 2: m.502
@jorgeapg5 жыл бұрын
Sublime!
@jacquesgeorges10412 жыл бұрын
Un adieu poignant à un monde qui s’écroule. Avec les Quatre derniers Lieder, le chant du cygne de l’Allemagne éternelle et plus largement de l’Europe comme civilisation. Après ce sera autre chose, tout autre. A rapprocher de Crisantemi de Puccini, écrit quelques décennies plus tôt, mais déjà marqué par la finitude et le destin.
@garyralph97492 жыл бұрын
I think it is worth emphasizing that the work you are listening to is NOT the work represented in the score provided.
@rimatus20 күн бұрын
Huh?
@DavidA-ps1qr4 жыл бұрын
If you pick this score to pieces, you will see how complex this music is. Probably Richard Strauss' greatest composition (subject to debate). But this inspirational piece is a perfect example of writing almost "perfect" music. Has anyone ever written "perfect" music?
@ChrisBreemer4 жыл бұрын
Yes, Bach !
@DavidA-ps1qr4 жыл бұрын
@@ChrisBreemer Good reply Chris. I was hoping someone would say exactly that!
@copricornus9 жыл бұрын
O! yeth! this i`s beautiful- absolutely anything- but my prof.spoke with a human voice It is the best instrument.
@ijdoti11 жыл бұрын
in fact, it is an E minor chord. it sounds like a C minor chord because of the unusual inversion (the double bass is not playing E, but instead playing the G of the chord) which gives it a flavour almost like a Cmin 2nd inversion chord, which is how your ear interprets it, given that the chord is surrounded by C minor chords... interesting aural effect
@javiermedina53135 жыл бұрын
what chord
@Aaron-e6f9b2 жыл бұрын
Yes, it written as an E minor chord in first inversion, however in this performance it is played as a C minor chord in first inversion. If you listen to a recording of this being played as a septet, it really does sound like an E minor chord.
@Aaron-e6f9b2 жыл бұрын
@@javiermedina5313 the penultimate one.
@fabianblumcomposer99625 жыл бұрын
A true inspiration
@PointyTailofSatan6 ай бұрын
I can't waltz to this!
@шимапантсу7 жыл бұрын
I don't like people comparing classical music to orgasms or sex. Orgasms are cheap; this is touching on something so much higher.
@my_family_journal6 жыл бұрын
It can be intense in a spiritual way also though.
@jameswilson8076 жыл бұрын
Sex isn't cheap- plenty of women make a living from it.
@yvesjaillet518611 жыл бұрын
Nesbi what marvellous création!! isnent'it
@caboclozeitgeist5 жыл бұрын
This opus the really presents the Zeitgeist of its time.
@ethansaltmere3 жыл бұрын
cadence in bar 7-8 is just so heartbreaking. In this rendition the opening is too slow though - this is NOT a funeral march but rather a exploratory and complex symphonic work that does not reveal its true sinister nature until the very final few bars.