Sro ascoltando per la prima volta ed è incredibile come sento dentro di me questa musica. Mi sta smuovendo sentimenti in profondità... Sto avvertendo il biaogno di liberare lacrime. Ma non sono triste. Anzi, avverto una grande pace interiore. Spero sia lo stesso per chi sta ascoltando ora . Buona vita a tutti 🙏❤️
It is not sadness, it's the point where your whole existence unfolds and is about to make sense, eternally. And the master saw it, and put it to music.
Everyone is concerned about a pandemic right now. A few months ago my father died. I have had other losses that haunt me still. But this music tells me about the poetry of fear and sorrow, and how life can seem hopeful and beautiful once more, and yet the sorrow need not be denied, the dead need not be forgotten or unmissed. The human heart can contain it all and still be joyful, filled with beauty, and grateful. Good luck to everyone. Wash your hands. Don't be fearful. I think Beethoven is suggesting here that we see the beauty around us, now, today, and not be terribly concerned about how many more days we have. Now. Today. Look around you.
@@thomasfortnerconductor Appreciate that, thanks. Of course, equally great artists-Dostoyevsky and Thornton Wilder come to mind-tell us we usually fail to be in that place as much as we might. But it's good to at least think about it. Be well yourself, and thanks again.
Great comment. Wish more of YT comments were of this sort. Unfortunate that is not our human nature. Lost my mom in March of non-Covid causes -- a long battle with Alzheimers and such. One learns to LIVE with the whole in one's soul, I suppose.
This music is almost unbearably intimate, filled with such profound understanding of life's triumphs and tragedies. It is as though Beethoven is reaching across time to tell us everything will be all right, if you can only let go. It is transcendent and otherworldly, and I am so grateful for it.
Thank you for putting words on my exact thoughts, yes it is almost unbearably intimate! It's music in its purest form of universal expression as it is a reflexion on the realization of the gift and beauty of life through intense pain, fear and misery. This is usually a path walked totally alone, often at the end of one's life/at the worst of ones' life. We can hear the extreme emotions here: despair, heartfelt gratitude, the eurêka moment and the most sincere hope/joy turned into music. It is incredibly endearing and also comforting. I am deeply moved by this choice to share such fragility and hidden moments so directly and truthfully with everyone. This is proof of complete devotion to music as well as a will to share wisdom and a hope for music to be a saviour somehow.
Strange synchronicity. I've just performed Edgar Allen Poe's Annabel Lee on my channel and the first thing I see after doing so is your name and reply. "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio , than are dreamt of in your philosophy". Hamlet
This movement was composed while Beethoven was ill with intestinal inflammation. The doctor just prescribed Beethoven to not drink coffee, alcohol or use spices and to move to the countryside and drink fresh cow milk. It is meant to show an alternation between Beethoven singing a hymn of thanksgiving to god, and feeling new strength and reawakened feeling. He even writes those words on the score itself! My favorite finding is that Beethoven seems to have prescribed this movement as treatment itself writing to the doctor "Doctor, close the door to Death! Music will also help in my hour of need!"
After he started again drinking coffee and alcool, so he composed "Grosse Fugue" op. 133 ahahah In any case i think this movement is one of the best slow movements of ever
I listen to this piece,since I was a geeky teenager, at moments of joy, sadness & loss or just because It 2am on an autumn night. It has never failed, in 45 years, to centre me, be grateful for all my life has been able to give & never cease to wonder what possibilities lie ahead, & if there are none to accept that with grace.
Me too! I started into this piece in my late teens and over the years it has become so intimate and an essential part of me. We've been through a lot together. It has wrapped it's arms around me in times of crisis, and helped pull me through as I was sobbing on my knees begging for God's help and mercy. I'm 65 now and Beethoven's music, especially this piece, means the world to me.
@@waynem4496 This comment sent shivers down my spine. I feel exactly the same way, I'm 48 though. I know it's objectively wrong (because of the undeniable subjectivity of my next sentence) but for me, this piece is the last frontier as far as potential deepness and impact of any art. For me,Nothing ever comes close to it in it's beauty, majesty, sapiency, "essentiality", mastery... Its, indeed, a revelation.
The greatness of music speaking for it self. I´m feeling an enormous gratitude listening to this. ( had have listened 1.000.000 time in the past 30 years!). Lost my father during the pandemic, and music helps me understand why we exist. Happy to read beautiful comments. Love from Brazil.
Mahler adagietto is all about a long and pretty melody with the harmony playing a supporting role..this piece is harmony driven with the most haunting 6 to13 note repeating melody ive ever heard in my life returning again and again like the voice of God or the voice of a man pleading to God for another few months to live. The piece is a mastercourse in the power of harmonic progression and dynamics alone driving a piece but rhe recurring melody thrown again and again and shared in fugato between voices the third or fourth time around is one of the most powerful things ever put to string quartet. Mahler is cool but Jesus Christ this is Beethoven at his apex.
It is that kind of melody and you feel blessed for everything. Blessed for being able to hear this, blessed for a man like Beethoven. It's just so beautiful.
Man, Beethoven's late quartets can get so intimate, so personal, so human. This is Beethoven's best slow movement, bar none. No singular work has this deep of a connection to the soul as this one. From the deep, almost trance-like prayer, the absolute manifestation of thankfulness, to the pure joy of your newfound strength. From sickness to health, (as shown in op. 132 in full) Ludwig always chose that path, despite the many ailments that befell him, especially in the latter half of his life. His increasing deafness, (which by this point, was total) his rather unsuccessful love life, and an almost fatal sickness, he shows us that, no matter how cloudy the skies are, no matter how dark it gets, the sun always comes back out.
Arguably. It seems to speak directly to our experience of life as beautiful in spite of and because of its ephemerality. He was sick, and fearful, then grateful to be spared, then felt a surge of joy and strength, and yet went forward remembering all those emotions. Profound, existential stuff. And arguably I think the perception of beauty is itself a form of thankfulness. Now I'm going to go listen to "Tropical Hot Dog Night" because it's that kind of late-night UA-cam deal.
Stephen Hawking also was introduced to this by Aldous Huxley from reading "Point Counter Point" as an undergraduate. Later, in 1992 on the BBC Radio 4 "Desert Island Discs" program, Stephen stated: "“If I knew that a tidal wave was on the way to overwhelm my desert island, I would play the third movement of this quartet.” R.I.P. - Stephen William Hawking CH CBE FRS FRSA (8 January 1942 - 14 March 2018)
If Huxley had been a christian, I think he would have chosen Bach to be his musical heaven-builder in Point Counterpoint, rather than Beethoven. What he says about this piece is truer of Bach's work, at least for me.
One of the most profound experiences of my musical studenthood was the day my theory professor spent an entire class making us listen to the second movement of the seventh symphony He earned his place in the pantheon with his beautiful late slow movements
This is some of the finest music Beethoven ever wrote. In 1924, while composing his Seventh and last Symphony, Jean Sibelius drew upon this portion of Beethoven's Fifteenth String Quartet as the basis for the second theme of his work (a Symphony in one long, extended movement, based on three themes, the last of which, played on the Trombones, turns out to be the theme on which the entire Symphony is based as a Rondo).
50 years of age. And I've just discovered what true love and true life is. In the shape of an exceptionally beautiful woman and through this piece. Both have merged in rapturous, transcendental harmony. As the apostle Paul says, " I knew a man who was in the third heaven, I know not whether he was alive or dead". God is very real. It's just us who sometimes are not.
I was thinking exactly that, just think in a deaf sick Beethoven, only living for composing this piece.. that kind of feeling Is transmitted througt the piece and whenever you feel your life Is pointless this piece can simply change your mind. Then you understand nieztches quote.
In my opinion, Beethoven composed the most profound climaxes of all time. The minute from 15:30 to 16:30 is from another world (hear also the ones in his last sonata and the Diabelli variations, to name a few)
As a violinist, I'm also partial to the slow movement of the Beethoven violin concerto for it's sweeping beauty that pokes my tender heart to tears almost every time I listen
17:29-18:29 In my opinion this is the most revealing fragment you can find in all music. I actually can't understand how a human being managed to create such a sublime piece from extremely simple ideas. The way he exploited the materials he chose and the way he connected all what he used into a perfect form is beyond belief. Most people won't understand what I'm referring to, but I'm pretty certain about this bit I highlighted to be the most significant moment of the piece. Even more so than the big climax with the 1st violin and cellon in canonic imitation. This movement alone is a feat of abstraction and human thought pretty much no other piece can compare too. If you have doubts about what I said let me know, I would love talking about it with someone else.
@@jgMaximo_ Like you would like me to explain what I meant? I might do a video analysis about it at some point actually, because it's quite long even though the idea is simple. But it's abstract.
Absolutely! Through the sublimation of already simple ideas - everything that played before, and the climax - in that passage, the music always gives me the impression that is telling, in a whisper, all the truths that are implied in the human condition, and the way to accept them gracefully... For me, the music that changed my life and got me out of addiction. The most profound piece of art, masterfully composed and weaved together. Incredible stuff! Edit: and the master heard it, and put it to paper
I love his symphonies, and the Moonlight Sonata started me on the path of listening to classical music in a time where it wasn't "cool", but I absolutely fell in love with the late quartets. To think he was deaf when writing these, and could only hear them in his mind ...
The late quartets are in my opinion "quartets perfected" there is no need to write another one by anyone as there is nothing left to say. at least that's how I feel about it.
@@bradleyscarffpiano2921 That ist what Schubert said after having listened to Beethoven's op. 131: "So, after all, what is left for us to write?" An awkward legacy for all the composers after!
I gave my brother this piece of music to celebrate his daughter's birth after I listened the first time on the day she was born. I too came to this piece through Aldous Huxley, my literary and mystic hero, like others below.
@@Leon1949Green I'm just getting into a lot of this music, and I'm intrigued by your comment. This movement may be the most beautiful piece of music I've ever heard. Can you give a few pieces/movements that you consider better and more powerful? Less-famous examples would be good, too, since it seems like you are very well-versed. Thank you!
@@mkohare It has been almost 50 years, but we studied the last quartets of LvB in Music History class, senior year, Univ. of Kansas, Prof. Edward Williams. I expect it is up to individual tastes. I like the 14th quartet best. But they all are sublime. What Louis could do with just four notes! The Brahms piano quartets. The Schumann; Schubert; Borodin; Tchaikovsky; Shostakovich; Chausson, Debussy, Faure. The string quartet version of Bach's "Art of the Fugue." I had the Nonesuch recording back in the day. Enjoy!
Beethoven ! The Man who was probably the only man to have understood what the life all about is -and this "Molto Adagio" is the Evidence for that !! Just Sublime !!
an example of how music can take us beyond the narrow parameters of language and transport us off the wheel of time and the curvature of space and take us to a more celestial place...
Gavin : agreed. The amazing thing is that he achieves all this while RESTRICTING himself to one particular musical mode - the 'lydian'. I learned much from this fascinating lecture : ua-cam.com/video/4c-R544gF8s/v-deo.html. Regards.
Oh. I studied this piece in school. I was reading an article about it but it didn't note the Quartet #15, Op 132 as I know it. I imagine golden light and healing when I listen to it..
Such instrospective beauty. It stretches the boundaries of dissonance/resolution, way ahead of its time. I can't even imagine how difficult this piece is to perform. And a crime that Beethoven never heard this piece himself.
Whoever said that a movement such as this needs no comment, is quite right. What can one say, other than thank you for the beautiful upload...Thank You!...
Sincerely, one of the most perfect musical pieces that I have ever listened. It's amazing the lightness of this music. Truly, sublime. A Beethoven really inspired. Thank you!
This is sad, knowing the struggle Beethoven went through. Beethoven once said,”I always have a picture in my mind, and try to follow the lines”. Those words just made me realize how wise and how much of a genius he was. May he Rest In Peace.
Just as Michelangelo's Pieta was a product of God's hand on his, a deaf Beethoven had the hand of God on his hand as he wrote this most heartfelt and sublime music. As the years go by and civilization moves forward men will die, and princes will be brought to naught. But this music will live on impervious to culture, language, beliefs or time.
"sitting on a bank, Weeping again the king my father's wreck, This music crept by me upon the waters, Allaying both their fury and my passion With its sweet air". Ferdinand, The Tempest, act 1, scene 2. William Shakespeare
I remember Huxley described and analysed this piece in "Counterpoint" from Maurice Spandrell's perspective. Thanks to youtube I was able to experience this part of the book from a whole new perspective.
Muzak of all sorts assails us everywhere we go, so much so that silence has become preferable, and such a rare find. And then... this. Listening to this, letting it sink below one's skin, metabolizing it, only to find that eternity is as close to us as the air that we breathe. Last year, I had the good fortune of attending a performance of the "Heiliger Dankgesang" at the Library of Congress, in Washington, D.C. The Quartetto di Cremona was playing Stradivari instruments. The intonational challenge of the third movement (this one), which should be played without vibrato, was met triumphantly. The resulting pure chords seemed to come from the telluric soul. Words fail to describe what we all experienced during that performance.
Perfect piece to listen to during Thanksgiving. Considering the theme of this piece. Unfortunately we don't really celebrate Thanksgiving in Switzerland. But I am excited to go to the USA and join the thankgivings! Or maybe we can establish it as a National Holiday over here too.
The greatest summit of all beautiness, all arts, and from all entire human creation, in the deepest and more spiritual and haunting musical piece ever.
I have listened to this piece carefully and quietly and although it is haunting and profound I don’t agree with most of the comments that it’s the most beautiful piece ever, it does not move me or give me the goosebumps feeling I get from some of the great mans other music, such has his Piano Sonata No. 8 in C, Op 13, Piano Sonata 14 in C, Op.27 (Moonlight), Piano Concerto No.5 (Emperor), (the slow movement is sublime), and especially moving and humbling is the 9th Symphony (Choral) also composed during his period of great suffering but what a triumphant ending!! With these and all of his works I just thank God and/or the universe for sending us LV Beethoven!
I think people find it beautiful because it's such a more intimate sound. the timbre is very intimate more so than piano which in Beethovens works can sound quite symphonic. I really enjoy this piece though it is by no means my favourite. however I find Schubert had a point when he said "after this what is there left for us to write" in my opinion these pieces are the epitome of completed Quartets. they say everything a quartet can and are on another level and it's a shame they aren't as well known as other pieces.
With 280 comments (as of the point I'm writing), this may have already been answered, but: Which quartet is playing? I've never heard such quiet ecstasy, such searing agony, such ultimate, life-affirming acceptance. These people GOT IT. (And I would like to have the recording, if available.)
Beethoven kept vedanta (Hindu scriptures) that went beyond particular gods under the glass on his desk or table. Carlos is right . Your whole existence unfolds with this music. It is influenced by those transcendental scriptures.
Wow la versión es lenta! Estoy acostumbrado a Tokyo String Quartet y Emerson. Wow! Gracias, muy bonita, Quartetto Italiano? Slower tempo than the two I know but I liked it!!
En este cuarteto el movimiento LENTO es el más accesible que Beethoven subtitulo "acción de gracias a la divinidad por haberme curada de una enfermedad" siendo como una meditación al estilo de un himno de suprma franqueza musical.ver explicac ión de los otros cuartetos de Beethoven en el ópus 132.
Sro ascoltando per la prima volta ed è incredibile come sento dentro di me questa musica. Mi sta smuovendo sentimenti in profondità... Sto avvertendo il biaogno di liberare lacrime. Ma non sono triste. Anzi, avverto una grande pace interiore. Spero sia lo stesso per chi sta ascoltando ora . Buona vita a tutti 🙏❤️
It is not sadness, it's the point where your whole existence unfolds and is about to make sense, eternally. And the master saw it, and put it to music.
Carlos Bas I love your Comment.
Very well said.
Exactly! 100%
Yes, how true.
the absolute
Everyone is concerned about a pandemic right now. A few months ago my father died. I have had other losses that haunt me still. But this music tells me about the poetry of fear and sorrow, and how life can seem hopeful and beautiful once more, and yet the sorrow need not be denied, the dead need not be forgotten or unmissed. The human heart can contain it all and still be joyful, filled with beauty, and grateful. Good luck to everyone. Wash your hands. Don't be fearful. I think Beethoven is suggesting here that we see the beauty around us, now, today, and not be terribly concerned about how many more days we have. Now. Today. Look around you.
Thank you for sharing this beautiful comment. I agree wholeheartedly, Beethoven can teach us something here. Be well.
@@thomasfortnerconductor Appreciate that, thanks. Of course, equally great artists-Dostoyevsky and Thornton Wilder come to mind-tell us we usually fail to be in that place as much as we might. But it's good to at least think about it. Be well yourself, and thanks again.
Great comment. Wish more of YT comments were of this sort. Unfortunate that is not our human nature. Lost my mom in March of non-Covid causes -- a long battle with Alzheimers and such. One learns to LIVE with the whole in one's soul, I suppose.
www.bbc.com/culture/article/20200720-beethoven-250-the-ultimate-song-of-health-after-illness
Beautiful message too, thank you so much Mr Freeman
This music is almost unbearably intimate, filled with such profound understanding of life's triumphs and tragedies. It is as though Beethoven is reaching across time to tell us everything will be all right, if you can only let go. It is transcendent and otherworldly, and I am so grateful for it.
Thank you for putting words on my exact thoughts, yes it is almost unbearably intimate! It's music in its purest form of universal expression as it is a reflexion on the realization of the gift and beauty of life through intense pain, fear and misery. This is usually a path walked totally alone, often at the end of one's life/at the worst of ones' life. We can hear the extreme emotions here: despair, heartfelt gratitude, the eurêka moment and the most sincere hope/joy turned into music. It is incredibly endearing and also comforting. I am deeply moved by this choice to share such fragility and hidden moments so directly and truthfully with everyone. This is proof of complete devotion to music as well as a will to share wisdom and a hope for music to be a saviour somehow.
Strange synchronicity.
I've just performed Edgar Allen Poe's
Annabel Lee on my channel and the first thing I see after doing so is your name and reply.
"There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio , than are dreamt of in your philosophy". Hamlet
"if you can only let go".
What prevents the letting go?
Have you ever said thank you to someone so many times and yet it never felt like you said it enough? Beethoven touches the most human of emotions.
First time I've ever considered a 19-minute piece of music to be too short.
The OP didn't put this in the description, but this is the Quartetto Italiano recording.
thank you
This movement was composed while Beethoven was ill with intestinal inflammation. The doctor just prescribed Beethoven to not drink coffee, alcohol or use spices and to move to the countryside and drink fresh cow milk. It is meant to show an alternation between Beethoven singing a hymn of thanksgiving to god, and feeling new strength and reawakened feeling. He even writes those words on the score itself! My favorite finding is that Beethoven seems to have prescribed this movement as treatment itself writing to the doctor "Doctor, close the door to Death! Music will also help in my hour of need!"
After he started again drinking coffee and alcool, so he composed "Grosse Fugue" op. 133 ahahah
In any case i think this movement is one of the best slow movements of ever
please which quartet is playing? because the orchestration is excellent.
And whenever my heart cries out for wordless prayer this is the first piece of music that comes up
@@RoyTooldipendent right up there with the string quartet version of the Barber adagio
@@Nicole-ww4lg nah, this is greater. Barber copy/pasted that from the slow movement of Bruckner 7th symphony.
If I found out I was going to heaven and knew it would take 20 minutes to get there I would request this for my elevator music.
Thank you Beethoven for giving us the strength to live during such tough times.
Beethoven wrote this hymn of thanksgiving while convalescing from a serious illness. It expresses deep gratitude and hope. So beautiful.
I listen to this piece,since I was a geeky teenager, at moments of joy, sadness & loss or just because It 2am on an autumn night. It has never failed, in 45 years, to centre me, be grateful for all my life has been able to give & never cease to wonder what possibilities lie ahead, & if there are none to accept that with grace.
Precisely this. Thank you good sir
Me too! I started into this piece in my late teens and over the years it has become so intimate and an essential part of me. We've been through a lot together. It has wrapped it's arms around me in times of crisis, and helped pull me through as I was sobbing on my knees begging for God's help and mercy. I'm 65 now and Beethoven's music, especially this piece, means the world to me.
@@waynem4496
This comment sent shivers down my spine. I feel exactly the same way, I'm 48 though. I know it's objectively wrong (because of the undeniable subjectivity of my next sentence) but for me, this piece is the last frontier as far as potential deepness and impact of any art. For me,Nothing ever comes close to it in it's beauty, majesty, sapiency, "essentiality", mastery... Its, indeed, a revelation.
@@1193joao Große Gefühle, starke Worte - danke!
@@eckhardvo9422 danke!
The greatness of music speaking for it self. I´m feeling an enormous gratitude listening to this. ( had have listened 1.000.000 time in the past 30 years!). Lost my father during the pandemic, and music helps me understand why we exist. Happy to read beautiful comments. Love from Brazil.
🥰 🥰🥰
We're with you brother and know exactly what you mean, sharing your sadness and your happiness.
The most beautiful melody on the history of Western classical music.
Razumovski! Schubert! Mozart 488! Mahler adagietto! European music is rich! Goldberg variations!
This piece is about form tho.
Mahler adagietto is all about a long and pretty melody with the harmony playing a supporting role..this piece is harmony driven with the most haunting 6 to13 note repeating melody ive ever heard in my life returning again and again like the voice of God or the voice of a man pleading to God for another few months to live. The piece is a mastercourse in the power of harmonic progression and dynamics alone driving a piece but rhe recurring melody thrown again and again and shared in fugato between voices the third or fourth time around is one of the most powerful things ever put to string quartet. Mahler is cool but Jesus Christ this is Beethoven at his apex.
Beethoven is always ahead of the music game
It is that kind of melody and you feel blessed for everything. Blessed for being able to hear this, blessed for a man like Beethoven. It's just so beautiful.
I am not crying because it is sad.
I am crying because it is beautiful. ;w;
Man, Beethoven's late quartets can get so intimate, so personal, so human. This is Beethoven's best slow movement, bar none. No singular work has this deep of a connection to the soul as this one. From the deep, almost trance-like prayer, the absolute manifestation of thankfulness, to the pure joy of your newfound strength. From sickness to health, (as shown in op. 132 in full) Ludwig always chose that path, despite the many ailments that befell him, especially in the latter half of his life. His increasing deafness, (which by this point, was total) his rather unsuccessful love life, and an almost fatal sickness, he shows us that, no matter how cloudy the skies are, no matter how dark it gets, the sun always comes back out.
Arguably the most beautiful piece of music in existence?
absolutely true
Arguably. It seems to speak directly to our experience of life as beautiful in spite of and because of its ephemerality. He was sick, and fearful, then grateful to be spared, then felt a surge of joy and strength, and yet went forward remembering all those emotions. Profound, existential stuff. And arguably I think the perception of beauty is itself a form of thankfulness. Now I'm going to go listen to "Tropical Hot Dog Night" because it's that kind of late-night UA-cam deal.
Arguably? Yes.
A hymn with interludes of angelic jubilation
I think so.
Stephen Hawking also was introduced to this by Aldous Huxley from reading "Point Counter Point" as an undergraduate. Later, in 1992 on the BBC Radio 4 "Desert Island Discs" program, Stephen stated: "“If I knew that a tidal wave was on the way to overwhelm my desert island, I would play the third movement of this quartet.” R.I.P. - Stephen William Hawking CH CBE FRS FRSA (8 January 1942 - 14 March 2018)
What a melodramatical statement!
I came to know about it through God delusion.
If Huxley had been a christian, I think he would have chosen Bach to be his musical heaven-builder in Point Counterpoint, rather than Beethoven. What he says about this piece is truer of Bach's work, at least for me.
One of the most profound experiences of my musical studenthood was the day my theory professor spent an entire class making us listen to the second movement of the seventh symphony
He earned his place in the pantheon with his beautiful late slow movements
@@mateuszandrzejewski3616 Nah. Perhaps it could have been said in a happier way, but melodramatic is not the right word.
This is some of the finest music Beethoven ever wrote. In 1924, while composing his Seventh and last Symphony, Jean Sibelius drew upon this portion of Beethoven's Fifteenth String Quartet as the basis for the second theme of his work (a Symphony in one long, extended movement, based on three themes, the last of which, played on the Trombones, turns out to be the theme on which the entire Symphony is based as a Rondo).
50 years of age. And I've just discovered what true love and true life is. In the shape of an exceptionally beautiful woman and through this piece. Both have merged in rapturous, transcendental harmony. As the apostle Paul says, " I knew a man who was in the third heaven, I know not whether he was alive or dead". God is very real. It's just us who sometimes are not.
Thank you Huxley for showing us this masterpiece.
I just finished reading "Point Counter Point" again after many years.
This movement encapsulates Nietzsche's quote : "Without music, life would be a mistake."
I was thinking exactly that, just think in a deaf sick Beethoven, only living for composing this piece.. that kind of feeling Is transmitted througt the piece and whenever you feel your life Is pointless this piece can simply change your mind. Then you understand nieztches quote.
@@marcossidoruk8033 !!!
In my opinion, Beethoven composed the most profound climaxes of all time. The minute from 15:30 to 16:30 is from another world (hear also the ones in his last sonata and the Diabelli variations, to name a few)
As a violinist, I'm also partial to the slow movement of the Beethoven violin concerto for it's sweeping beauty that pokes my tender heart to tears almost every time I listen
After this, what more can be said? No words, Sublime.
17:29-18:29 In my opinion this is the most revealing fragment you can find in all music. I actually can't understand how a human being managed to create such a sublime piece from extremely simple ideas. The way he exploited the materials he chose and the way he connected all what he used into a perfect form is beyond belief.
Most people won't understand what I'm referring to, but I'm pretty certain about this bit I highlighted to be the most significant moment of the piece. Even more so than the big climax with the 1st violin and cellon in canonic imitation. This movement alone is a feat of abstraction and human thought pretty much no other piece can compare too.
If you have doubts about what I said let me know, I would love talking about it with someone else.
No doubts whatsoever ...but go on, sir
@@jgMaximo_ Like you would like me to explain what I meant? I might do a video analysis about it at some point actually, because it's quite long even though the idea is simple. But it's abstract.
@@Ivan_1791 please do that, It would be nice. This piece worth the effort.
Absolutely! Through the sublimation of already simple ideas - everything that played before, and the climax - in that passage, the music always gives me the impression that is telling, in a whisper, all the truths that are implied in the human condition, and the way to accept them gracefully...
For me, the music that changed my life and got me out of addiction. The most profound piece of art, masterfully composed and weaved together. Incredible stuff!
Edit: and the master heard it, and put it to paper
I love his symphonies, and the Moonlight Sonata started me on the path of listening to classical music in a time where it wasn't "cool", but I absolutely fell in love with the late quartets. To think he was deaf when writing these, and could only hear them in his mind ...
!!!
The late quartets are in my opinion "quartets perfected" there is no need to write another one by anyone as there is nothing left to say. at least that's how I feel about it.
@@bradleyscarffpiano2921 That ist what Schubert said after having listened to Beethoven's op. 131: "So, after all, what is left for us to write?" An awkward legacy for all the composers after!
@@bradleyscarffpiano2921 Extremely self-limiting line of thought, especially for young composers.
Absolutely. Its stupendous
I gave my brother this piece of music to celebrate his daughter's birth after I listened the first time on the day she was born. I too came to this piece through Aldous Huxley, my literary and mystic hero, like others below.
Surely the most beautiful movement in all Chamber Music!!
in all of western music
@@tractotus I would vote it in the top 25, not the top 20.
@@Leon1949Green I'm just getting into a lot of this music, and I'm intrigued by your comment. This movement may be the most beautiful piece of music I've ever heard. Can you give a few pieces/movements that you consider better and more powerful? Less-famous examples would be good, too, since it seems like you are very well-versed. Thank you!
@@mkohare It has been almost 50 years, but we studied the last quartets of LvB in Music History class, senior year, Univ. of Kansas, Prof. Edward Williams. I expect it is up to individual tastes. I like the 14th quartet best. But they all are sublime. What Louis could do with just four notes! The Brahms piano quartets. The Schumann; Schubert; Borodin; Tchaikovsky; Shostakovich; Chausson, Debussy, Faure. The string quartet version of Bach's "Art of the Fugue." I had the Nonesuch recording back in the day. Enjoy!
@@tractotus So you have heard all of Western music
The stillness of eternity, and a gift of joy and longing.
Excellent way to put it
Beethoven ! The Man who was probably the only man to have understood what the life all about is -and this "Molto Adagio" is the Evidence for that !! Just Sublime !!
an example of how music can take us beyond the narrow parameters of language and transport us off the wheel of time and the curvature of space and take us to a more celestial place...
Gavin : agreed. The amazing thing is that he achieves all this while RESTRICTING himself to one particular musical mode - the 'lydian'. I learned much from this fascinating lecture : ua-cam.com/video/4c-R544gF8s/v-deo.html. Regards.
@@alancrabb Me too!
Oh. I studied this piece in school. I was reading an article about it but it didn't note the Quartet #15, Op 132 as I know it. I imagine golden light and healing when I listen to it..
I think Surrender sounds like this. When you love and just love and can't do nothing about it, so you give yourself to the Eternal.
Such instrospective beauty. It stretches the boundaries of dissonance/resolution, way ahead of its time. I can't even imagine how difficult this piece is to perform. And a crime that Beethoven never heard this piece himself.
One of the most beautiful pieces of music I've ever heard
One of the most beautiful pieces of music the world has ever heard!
It gets shorter every time I listen to it. I just want it to go on forever.
aye
I never thought a 17-minute movement could be too short! I listen to it twice when I listen to this quartet.
I repeat and listen.
Whoever said that a movement such as this needs no comment, is quite right. What can one say, other than thank you for the beautiful upload...Thank You!...
I thought for years lento cantabile semplice ( Dawn Upshaw) was the best on earth
...now I realise op 132 of Beethoven is the absolutely perfection..
Sincerely, one of the most perfect musical pieces that I have ever listened. It's amazing the lightness of this music. Truly, sublime. A Beethoven really inspired. Thank you!
I like this movement the best of all the late quartets of Beethoven.
Me too.
Point Counter Point.
Thank you Huxley.
Meravigliosa, sublime, trascendentale musica!
Ahahahah beethoven nada de nuevo 😂
@flavianofloris4459💀
These late quartets & Bach's AoF stand at the very pinnacle of human civilisation. Perhaps with a da Vinci & Michelangelo work thrown in.
And egypt pyramids
Must add something by Mozart (Don Giovanni would get my vote), Wagner (Tristan) and Shakespeare (Hamlet).
It would be Western civilization, not human civilization.
Please don’t rain on the parade @טורו יודה
This is sad, knowing the struggle Beethoven went through. Beethoven once said,”I always have a picture in my mind, and try to follow the lines”. Those words just made me realize how wise and how much of a genius he was. May he Rest In Peace.
Interesting. I see an endless river braid of colors when I listen to the slow parts - soft pinks, yellows, greens, blues, purples
Just as Michelangelo's Pieta was a product of God's hand on his, a deaf Beethoven had the hand of God on his hand as he wrote this most heartfelt and sublime music. As the years go by and civilization moves forward men will die, and princes will be brought to naught. But this music will live on impervious to culture, language, beliefs or time.
I never want this to end
I've lost count of how many times I've just listened to this piece in a row... 4 I think!! Superb... *Thank* *you*
Per me il più bel brano di musica in assoluto.
This music elevates the energy of the energetic field
"sitting on a bank,
Weeping again the king my father's wreck,
This music crept by me upon the waters,
Allaying both their fury and my passion
With its sweet air".
Ferdinand, The Tempest, act 1, scene 2.
William Shakespeare
Aldous Huxley, thank you!
I´ve read the novel, it´s beautiful !!!!!
I remember Huxley described and analysed this piece in "Counterpoint" from Maurice Spandrell's perspective. Thanks to youtube I was able to experience this part of the book from a whole new perspective.
portishphonic me too!!! Hehe
Thanks beethoven
4:10 and 15:20. The two most beautiful moments in all of music
Muzak of all sorts assails us everywhere we go, so much so that silence has become preferable, and such a rare find. And then... this. Listening to this, letting it sink below one's skin, metabolizing it, only to find that eternity is as close to us as the air that we breathe.
Last year, I had the good fortune of attending a performance of the "Heiliger Dankgesang" at the Library of Congress, in Washington, D.C. The Quartetto di Cremona was playing Stradivari instruments. The intonational challenge of the third movement (this one), which should be played without vibrato, was met triumphantly. The resulting pure chords seemed to come from the telluric soul. Words fail to describe what we all experienced during that performance.
Magnifique mouvement!
I would like to know why the sad parts go deeper in my heart than the happier ones.
Will never get bored of this. On again
Perfect piece to listen to during Thanksgiving. Considering the theme of this piece. Unfortunately we don't really celebrate Thanksgiving in Switzerland. But I am excited to go to the USA and join the thankgivings! Or maybe we can establish it as a National Holiday over here too.
I let my dying goldenfish listen this, then he revived. I was amazed at the power of music.
A prayer beyond words... every note is a tear. ~G~
This is what you hear when you walk with God.
The greatest summit of all beautiness, all arts, and from all entire human creation, in the deepest and more spiritual and haunting musical piece ever.
thank you so much... this piece needs no comments... so thank you for sharing
今、最も好きなクラシックです。よく聴きます。
Happy Birthday Beethoven!!
🎂
Ah.... get more personal as I grow older
A singular achievement.
Transcends time! Perfectly imperfect!
I have listened to this piece carefully and quietly and although it is haunting and profound I don’t agree with most of the comments that it’s the most beautiful piece ever, it does not move me or give me the goosebumps feeling I get from some of the great mans other music, such has his Piano Sonata No. 8 in C, Op 13, Piano Sonata 14 in C, Op.27 (Moonlight), Piano Concerto No.5 (Emperor), (the slow movement is sublime), and especially moving and humbling is the 9th Symphony (Choral) also composed during his period of great suffering but what a triumphant ending!! With these and all of his works I just thank God and/or the universe for sending us LV Beethoven!
I think people find it beautiful because it's such a more intimate sound. the timbre is very intimate more so than piano which in Beethovens works can sound quite symphonic. I really enjoy this piece though it is by no means my favourite. however I find Schubert had a point when he said "after this what is there left for us to write" in my opinion these pieces are the epitome of completed Quartets. they say everything a quartet can and are on another level and it's a shame they aren't as well known as other pieces.
Give it time.
Brillante interprétation qui met tous nos sens en effervescence ; la beauté et la profondeur du son, l'harmonie parfaite entre le violon et le piano .
Piano?
I think it not sad but more reflective..
Viscerally reflective.
Qué clase de genio puede componer algo así?
Beautiful, thank you.
Insieme al trio d'archi op45 di Schoenberg, è un monumento nella storia della musica classica occidentale.
masterpiece ❤️
T.S. Eliot brought me here. It was one of his favourites.
Perfect way to start the new year feeling fresh
With 280 comments (as of the point I'm writing), this may have already been answered, but: Which quartet is playing? I've never heard such quiet ecstasy, such searing agony, such ultimate, life-affirming acceptance. These people GOT IT. (And I would like to have the recording, if available.)
Its the italian quartet. This is a recording of the full string quartet ua-cam.com/video/2bfOc9z8b5E/v-deo.htmlsi=JM1qX02TWEkf4eCy
It's the Quartetto Italiano
Haunting.
Thank you beethoven
Around 15:00 my soul begins to shatter
I understand.
Visage of a tone - poet
Beethoven kept vedanta (Hindu scriptures) that went beyond particular gods under the glass on his desk or table. Carlos is right . Your whole existence unfolds with this music. It is influenced by those transcendental scriptures.
Beauty is truth
Incredible
Thank You
Profound
Along with Schoenberg's string trio op45, it is a monument in the history of Western classical music.
Thank you for this! :)
es la gratitud por la Vida hecha música...
Nice recording at a suitably slow tempo for a movement marked _Molto_ adagio. It would be awesome to know who recorded it, and when they did so.
Quartetto Italiano - late 60s/early 70s
Quartetto Italiano - late 60s/early 70s
Superbe version! Qui est ce?
I think it's the Quartetto Italiano.
The path to my father's grave is identical to this picture.
perhaps because they are meditative .. we think more.
Wow la versión es lenta! Estoy acostumbrado a Tokyo String Quartet y Emerson. Wow! Gracias, muy bonita, Quartetto Italiano? Slower tempo than the two I know but I liked it!!
I think this tempo is good.
We can hear the details of the music.
Ineffable...
it builds... and death is a dance...
Fear in a handful of dust.
En este cuarteto el movimiento LENTO es el más accesible que Beethoven subtitulo "acción de gracias a la divinidad por haberme curada de una enfermedad" siendo como una meditación al estilo de un himno de suprma franqueza musical.ver explicac ión de los otros cuartetos de Beethoven en el ópus 132.