listening to this because i’m playing it for my orchestra, absolutely stunning but i have never wanted to kms more over any piece of music before in my life
@@VlogSquadders yeah i did this piece for my last concert!! it wasn’t too bad, but i was sick during it and utterly exhausted. it went very well and we sounded amazing tho :3
you all prolly dont give a damn but does any of you know a tool to log back into an instagram account?? I stupidly lost my account password. I would love any assistance you can give me!
@Grayson Rocco I really appreciate your reply. I got to the site on google and Im trying it out atm. Seems to take a while so I will reply here later with my results.
We’re playing the finale of this piece for our school concert this year! Favorite song I’ve played in my three years as a middle school orchestra student.
This is my all-time favourite Borodin symphony, and also I`d like to dedicated to my best friends who like Borodin as well as Sibelius and other composers such as The Strauss Family of Vienna and I remember that I bought the album called-The World Of Borodin for his birthday on the 7/7/1985, which includes the second symphony as well as In The Steppes Of Central Asia, the famous Nocturne [from String Quartet No.2], and Polovtsian Dances [from the opera-Prince Igor], and my favourite movement is the second, because it`s beautifully written and very well performed.
I’m playing this in an orchestra I’m in right now and I am a French horn player; I have the beautiful solo in the beginning and multiple others throughout the piece ☺️
I've forgotten how much our youth orchestra slowed down that 2nd movement - this version almost feels rushed as a result, but then the transition into Allegretto is soooo much more lovely!
I think, between the "five mighty" Borodin is such known as Rimskiy-Korsakov and Musorgskiy. I think, Balakirev and Kui are much less famous. Borodin was a famous chemist and composer.
Иван Преображенский Totally Agree. In addition, Mussorgsky is more famous on his opera (To Western Listeners, and also definitely some famous tune, such as Picture Exhibition). Korsakov is famous because of his two students(Also His Very Profound Understanding on Harmony)...You know who I am talking about.
@@haoranzhou9103 Well, there are options: Prokofiev, Stravinsky, Myaskovsky, Glazunov are very well-known students of Rimsky-Korsakov. Also he edited and prepared for publication nearly all composition of Moussorgsky and is famous by operas and symphonic pictures ("Sheherazade", "Tale of Tsar Saltan" etc.) and is sometimes called "Russian Berlioz" for having written the manual of orchestration.
Иван Преображенский Yep, Korsakov is a more schooled composer...That’s why he teach so many good students: I was talking about Stravinsky and Prokofiev, but yeah of course there are many other options haha, my bad (Those two enjoy too much game).
Exactly. Some of them later reflected that it's all too easy to correct Borodin's idiosyncrasies but what you're left with is diametrically different from the original and quite dull.
Neither Rimsky nor Glazanov revised this symphony. Rimsky advised Borodin to lighten the brass in places. Glazanov had nothing to do with it. Glazanov completed and orchestrated the first two movements of Borodin's unfinished 3rd Symphony.
But that theme is written in crotchets for strings alone and deliberately contrasts the weight of the double minim emphasised by the horns and trombones of the previous bar.
listening to this because i’m playing it for my orchestra, absolutely stunning but i have never wanted to kms more over any piece of music before in my life
XD what instrument lol
@@mrman12w string bass 💔💔💔
@@gutdrool7123 its not that bad when u get the fingerings right, like aa lot of the stuff in the 4th movement doesnt require shifting at all
@@VlogSquadders yeah i did this piece for my last concert!! it wasn’t too bad, but i was sick during it and utterly exhausted. it went very well and we sounded amazing tho :3
I'm doing 2nd violin and the massive decorative scale from 22:56 and 24:54 are giving me an *aneurysm*
1 часть.
00:01 - гл.п.
01:30 - п.п.
04:00 - п.п. в разработке.
6:30 - г.п. в увеличении
2 часть
06:49 - г.п.
09:59 - п.п.
08:19 - тема трио.
3 часть.
11:32 - г.п.
13:33 - п.п.
4 часть.
19:15 - г.п.
20:14 - п.п.
21:27 - новая тема в разработке.
Спасибо тебе, добрый человек!
🔥
Спасибо ❤❤❤
you all prolly dont give a damn but does any of you know a tool to log back into an instagram account??
I stupidly lost my account password. I would love any assistance you can give me!
@Grayson Rocco I really appreciate your reply. I got to the site on google and Im trying it out atm.
Seems to take a while so I will reply here later with my results.
Симфонія №2 "Богатирська"
І ч. Allegro moderato. Сонатна форма. "Збори богатирів"
Експозиція:
00:01 - ГП 1 тема h-moll
00:20 - ГП 2 тема D-dur
01:30 - ПП D-dur
02:00 - ЗП D-dur
Розробка:
02:53 - Вступ
03:28 - 1 розділ
04:00 - 2 розділ
04:21 - 3 розділ
Реприза 04:44
Кода, ГП в збільшенні 6:30
ІІ ч. Scherzo. Molto vivo. Рондо. "Богатирські ігри"
06:49 - ГП F-dur
07:20 - ПП Des-dur
08:19 - Тема Тріо D-dur
09:34 - Реприза
ІІІ ч. Andante. Сонатна форма "Пісня Баяна"
Експозиція:
11:32 - Вступ Des-dur
11:53 - ГП Des-dur
13:33 - ПП e-moll - C-dur
Реприза:
16:33 ГП Des-dur
17:13 ПП Des-dur
Кода 18:36 Des-dur
IV ч. Фінал. Allegro. Сонатна форма. "Богатирський бенкет"
Експозиція:
19:15 - Вступ H-dur
19:35 - ГП H-dur
20:12 - ПП A-dur
Розробка:
21:07 Вступ
21:26 1 розділ
22:15 2 розділ
Реприза 22:47
валера, ты супер!
таки да, супер!) спасибо )
дякую!!!
Thanks
@@user-qs44 вали от сюда, англосакс! Тут только Славяне братья
Симфония N2 «Богатырская»
1ч
Экспозиция
00:01 - ГП1
00:20 - ГП2
01:30 - ПП
02:53 - Разработка (начало)
2ч
06:49 - ГП
07:20 - ПП
08:19 - центральный эпизод
3ч
11:32 - вступ
11:53 - ГП
13:33 - ПП
16:33 - реприза (начало)
4ч
19:35 - ГП
20:12 - ПП
Спасибо!
6:30 гп в увеличении
My youth orchestra is playing the first mvt. YAY!
That's great! I hope you have fun!
Same!
00:33 - Excerpt 1
16:34 - Excerpt 2
19:34 - Excerpt 3
Incredible symphony!
UA-cam needs to add more add's...there's a symphony in between
adblock time
We’re playing the finale of this piece for our school concert this year! Favorite song I’ve played in my three years as a middle school orchestra student.
1 часть
00:01 гп h
1:30 пп D
2 часть
6:49 ГП F
8:19 Трио F
3 ч
11:32 Гп Des/b
13:33 Пп a
4ч
19:15 Вст и гп H
20:14 Пп D
This is my all-time favourite Borodin symphony, and also I`d like to dedicated to my best friends who like Borodin as well as Sibelius and other composers such as The Strauss Family of Vienna and I remember that I bought the album called-The World Of Borodin for his birthday on the 7/7/1985, which includes the second symphony as well as In The Steppes Of Central Asia, the famous Nocturne [from String Quartet No.2], and Polovtsian Dances [from the opera-Prince Igor], and my favourite movement is the second, because it`s beautifully written and very well performed.
I’m playing this in an orchestra I’m in right now and I am a French horn player; I have the beautiful solo in the beginning and multiple others throughout the piece ☺️
Is this of any interest for us? Someone has to do this job...
@@michaelfischer5800 it was a legitimate comment
Thank you so much for posting this!
Excerpt 19:18
that 1/1 time signature at 2nd mvt tho
Whole note at 166. It was...exciting to play.
I've forgotten how much our youth orchestra slowed down that 2nd movement - this version almost feels rushed as a result, but then the transition into Allegretto is soooo much more lovely!
@@DJSchreffler My youth orchestra is starting this piece, I'm pretty excited to play it!
It acctually got pretty easy after a little for me
wonderful music!
Trying to rehearse the scherzo and last movement as a first violin is such a task.
This speed sounds not only rushed but also not natural, especially when it's fast. Somebody has been tampering with it, I think.
6:50 Almost sounds like a petrushka Chord (Polytonal Relation Of Keys that are Tritone apart)
Why doesn’t every one know who Borodin is?
I think, between the "five mighty" Borodin is such known as Rimskiy-Korsakov and Musorgskiy. I think, Balakirev and Kui are much less famous.
Borodin was a famous chemist and composer.
Иван Преображенский Totally Agree. In addition, Mussorgsky is more famous on his opera (To Western Listeners, and also definitely some famous tune, such as Picture Exhibition). Korsakov is famous because of his two students(Also His Very Profound Understanding on Harmony)...You know who I am talking about.
@@haoranzhou9103 Well, there are options: Prokofiev, Stravinsky, Myaskovsky, Glazunov are very well-known students of Rimsky-Korsakov. Also he edited and prepared for publication nearly all composition of Moussorgsky and is famous by operas and symphonic pictures ("Sheherazade", "Tale of Tsar Saltan" etc.) and is sometimes called "Russian Berlioz" for having written the manual of orchestration.
Иван Преображенский Yep, Korsakov is a more schooled composer...That’s why he teach so many good students: I was talking about Stravinsky and Prokofiev, but yeah of course there are many other options haha, my bad (Those two enjoy too much game).
Borodin was a famous chemist and music was only a hobby, and that`s why he`s also a composer of beautiful and great Russian music.
Wow what a great piece!
So fun to play. Reminds me of Tchaikovsky.
Start of #4: 16:33
“The next time you listen to Borodin, remember....”
Obrigado por essa audição com partitura.
16:33 is my favorite piece of music ever
19:57 what is that tambourine doing?
Being late
It's just a basic roll, you usually pull your thumb across the head
@@marlmachine Pls look at the score. Pirate Quadrate is right.
You can hear where John Williams “ripped” a few ideas from Borodin
capolavoro
am i stupid or is the time signature in the second movement marked as 1/1?
3:56
讚👍
16:34
Jean Martinon.
self note: 3:57 , 19:34
Awesome! All the other ones I’ve heard were too slow.
and this one too quick I think !
ラヴェルのお気に入りの交響曲
masterpiece 19:54
4th movement: Beef. It's what's for dinner.
What did Rimsky-Korakoff and Glazunov revise?
Exactly. Some of them later reflected that it's all too easy to correct Borodin's idiosyncrasies but what you're left with is diametrically different from the original and quite dull.
Neither Rimsky nor Glazanov revised this symphony. Rimsky advised Borodin to lighten the brass in places. Glazanov had nothing to do with it. Glazanov completed and orchestrated the first two movements of Borodin's unfinished 3rd Symphony.
9:07
What the hell? That fourth movement…. Copland?
3:56
5:16
16:34
19:35
21:38
11:34
Half way into it i realized its not Dvorak.
for me for practicing
1:40 5:34 8:33
Is there a non-revised version? This sounds like the castrated version.
yup- probably Martinen's doing. Just awful. wrong bowing- wrong articulation- wrong tempi. Rotterdam Phil is much closer to the original.
6:45
11:30
19:13
Pretty much every Highschool or community orchestra has played this.
And probably sounded more in tune and in rhythm. This is a truly terrible performance, but on the other hand, the engineering isn't very good.
A scherzo in 4??
No, it's in 1. The time signature is 1/1
Well, are you going to be _horrified_ when you find out about the scherzo for his third symphony!
21:09
第1楽章の冒頭の主題
ラヴェルのお気に入り
4:30
4:35
0.75
а еще быстрей можно было?
Perez Robert Brown Brenda Jones Joseph
Terrible tempo! It should sound at the beginning heavily
But that theme is written in crotchets for strings alone and deliberately contrasts the weight of the double minim emphasised by the horns and trombones of the previous bar.
Terrible tempo.
Terrible comment.
@@kennethdower7425
Terrible reply.
Start of #5: 19:20
1:31
8:53
1:45