This is merely my own interpretation: Whenever I listen to this music, I hear the last violin falling from the high key to the lower key as a description of the guy who could not keep holding someone's hand whom he was trying to save. "I could have saved one more life, one more person, but couldn't". Similar things I read about Mr Sugihara who issued the visa for Jewish refugees at the Japanese Consulate in Kaunas, Lithuania. His last words on the train at Kaunas station were "Please forgive me, I cannot write (for visas) anymore" I feel that those people who risked themselves to save others for ethical reasons probably would never say proudly "I saved the lives of those people". They rather would remember their suffering feelings about those they could not save due to time and other restrictions. This music describes these feelings amazingly.
An exceptional composition. Great performance by Itschak Pêrlman.
@brendabrown78645 жыл бұрын
Hauntingly Beautiful Itzhak Perlman plays with so much passion 🎻 he was one of David Garrett teachers another one of my favorite Violinist 🎻 so sad but so very beautiful. His violin 🎻 is singing 🤎🎻🤎