When I was a college student, I watched this movie (Platoon) in Shibuya, Tokyo after a banquet one day. I was very drunk, but when I started watching this work, I was immediately drawn to it. I didn't have time to feel drowsy until the end of the work. It's a good memory of my school days. I still have the feelings of those days.😷
@ktaichiissuperhypedrightnow4 ай бұрын
Just describing this piece "beautiful" seems insufficient. The melody holds a hauntingly heart-wrenching yet tranquil quality, almost like discovering solace amidst utter darkness. This is never getting old.
This song makes me feel like I survived WW II but lost all my family..
@shin-i-chikozima Жыл бұрын
This wonderful music washes away the secular dirt This solemnity and beauty speak to the soul
@delleetecson5375 Жыл бұрын
This music impact's the entire humanity not only in our galaxy, but the entire universe. Each note serves in the awakening of our consciousnesses. It is like the whole creation is crying to be liberated from million years of imprisonment.
So many people describing this music as "sad". I dunno....it seems so much more than that. It encompasses so many human emotions. I feel that 'contemplative' or 'introspective' are more fitting than 'sad'. While futility is present in the melody, hope and majesty are subtly intertwined in a profoundly realistic manner. Something about this piece strikes a chord with the soul of humankind and/or all biological life. It remains one of my favorite classical pieces...though ironically, I'm a percussionist.
@dtc1091 Жыл бұрын
I feel “contemplative and introspective” and THEN… become sad … 🥺
@area048 Жыл бұрын
プラトーンの映像が鮮明に浮かび上がる トップクラスに好きな映画
@delzworld20072 жыл бұрын
Sir Simon Rattle is certainly one of the top conductors in the world today. He always manages to get the best out the orchestras he conducts, especially at this performance.
@jbbevan Жыл бұрын
In about 1969 my sister, a young cellist, came back from a Summer at the Music Academy of the West and she had played the Adagio while there. She immediately bought the LP with Ormandy & the. Philadelphians and it became an overnight hit in the family and a favorite ever since. It is undoubtedly one of the most gorgeous pieces for strings of the 20th Century. Toscanini was the first to play the orchestral version with the NBC Symphony back in the '40's and allegedly took it on tour to South America where he used it as an encore for concerts presented in Argentina. Sir Simon's direction with the unparalleled BPO is a wonderful video souvenir of what has become, for me, a "desert island" piece of music.
I know there are tears in it. But, when I hear it I hear the glorious love of my beloved husband. I almost cannot stand it, as he is gone now. Still, it is the beauty of him that I hear most. The beauty of us.
This is the BEST filming of an orchestra I have ever seen.
@tteradanissan8 жыл бұрын
初めてこれを聴いた時は鳥肌が立った。
@user-gi4pw9sr3h3 жыл бұрын
私もそう思いました。
@ricardosalazar57439 жыл бұрын
Mind blowing, some deep sound to the heart. Make the heart cry and the tears of sorrow.
@Voytash8910 жыл бұрын
This is sooo beautiful, one wants to cry.
@user-ke5ye9us2d3 жыл бұрын
走馬灯の様に過去がめくるめく曲、でもこれからの希望が湧き出るマジックな曲。
@hirofumimaeda13604 жыл бұрын
胸に迫る悲しい曲、だけど、なぜか元気をもらえる。
@hetorembsp4 жыл бұрын
The presence of the Viola and how it grows in this composition simply makes me breathless, it's a very deep emotional instrument. But no doubt the other stringed instruments are not far behind.
@elisabethforsyth57322 жыл бұрын
Nimrod makes me cry but this piece calms me right down. Absolutily, beautiful. Thank you