What a fantastic video piece! It’s marvelous in its analysis and in its choice of musical examples from the performance. Please create many more “Upbeat” pieces like this one. I already loved Rachmaninoff’s piece, but your work enhanced my appreciation of it immensely.
In this case I think the combination of the name of this series and the piece is giving me whiplash. Because if there is one thing the "Isle of the Dead" is not, it is upbeat. ;)
@berlinphil im aware of daishin but on Noah’s right side there is (on some excerpts of this video) another violinist, very strangely on the right side of the actual concertmaster noah who plays the soli
@@ricardo2434 She is Vineta Sareika-Völkner, who is also a first concertmaster of the orchestra. But I don't understand either, why all three of them are sitting there
Funny that someone still thinks Furtwängler was a good conductor. Furwängler had great concepts of how something should sound and out of sheer luck sometimes succeeded in reaching that concept. But he was severly lacking in technique, so much that more often than not he failed to deliver. Which is very apparent in all the very mediocre and sketchy played recordings that exist.
@@Quotenwagnerianer he was a great conductor , certainly for his time. Listen to his Tristan f.i. Don't forget the orchestras at that time weren't up to the level we consider nowadays acceptable, only the conductors were better. I dont think if one put Furtwängler, Mengelberg or Toscanini nowadays in front of an orchestra it will be a success....
Furtwängler was arguably one of the greatest conductors who ever lived. This was also said by famous musicians who knew him personally. Besides that he was also a remarkable composer (even though not everybody agrees with that one). On the other hand I fear Petrenko (who i respect a great deal) is neither of these things….
The (I believe) third chair cellist watching the concertmaster solo with joy is everything!
More educational series like these, please! Awesome job❤
What a fantastic video piece! It’s marvelous in its analysis and in its choice of musical examples from the performance. Please create many more “Upbeat” pieces like this one. I already loved Rachmaninoff’s piece, but your work enhanced my appreciation of it immensely.
I attended one of the concerts last week. It was mesmerizing!
Extraordinary clever and sensible walkthrough of this piece, hand-in-hand with the famous painting and this very special Conductor. VD !
A very insightful summary. I look forward to hearing the orchestra in Ann Arbor.
Surely one of Rachmaninoff's most impressive scores. A brilliant piece!
In this case I think the combination of the name of this series and the piece is giving me whiplash.
Because if there is one thing the "Isle of the Dead" is not, it is upbeat. ;)
Beautiful! Thank you
Schönheit, wie ich sie sehe.
Finally!
What is the piece at the beginning of the video?
Pictures at an Exhibition by Mussorgsky.
Ravel's Ma Mere L'oye, Laideronette
Sorry, mistake I think it's Ravel.
Yes, Ravel Mother Goose Suite. 100%
Hello! This is an excerpt from the third movement of Ma Mère l’Oye by Maurice Ravel.
Wait why did someone sit next to Noah bendix on his right - playing violin? And who is it 😮
Hello, this is Daishin Kashimoto, first concertmaster of the Berliner Philharmoniker.
@berlinphil im aware of daishin but on Noah’s right side there is (on some excerpts of this video) another violinist, very strangely on the right side of the actual concertmaster noah who plays the soli
@@ricardo2434 She is Vineta Sareika-Völkner, who is also a first concertmaster of the orchestra. But I don't understand either, why all three of them are sitting there
This is very likely Vineta Sareika, one of the concertmasters of the BerlinPhil. She will leave the orchestra in Feb 2025.
Probably because they are going on tour with multiple concert masters.
ペトレンコの私服が黒いの、予想通りすぎる
Please just write in English or German
@@_rd_kocaman I don't see why, since we can just click to get a translation ...
Very uninteresting conductor this Petrenko. Unbelievable the BPO took him after Furtwängler, Karajan or even Abbado and Rattle. Very strange choice!
Oh he is back again, Hector the judge of musical quality! Did you ever with this „uninteresting“ conductor? I did! 😉
Funny that someone still thinks Furtwängler was a good conductor. Furwängler had great concepts of how something should sound and out of sheer luck sometimes succeeded in reaching that concept.
But he was severly lacking in technique, so much that more often than not he failed to deliver. Which is very apparent in all the very mediocre and sketchy played recordings that exist.
@@Quotenwagnerianer he was a great conductor , certainly for his time. Listen to his Tristan f.i. Don't forget the orchestras at that time weren't up to the level we consider nowadays acceptable, only the conductors were better. I dont think if one put Furtwängler, Mengelberg or Toscanini nowadays in front of an orchestra it will be a success....
Furtwängler was arguably one of the greatest conductors who ever lived. This was also said by famous musicians who knew him personally. Besides that he was also a remarkable composer (even though not everybody agrees with that one). On the other hand I fear Petrenko (who i respect a great deal) is neither of these things….
@@Quotenwagnerianer This is almost as ridiculous as to say: funny that someone still thinks bach was a good(!) composer… etc.
Kirill Petrenko first Conductor in the World 🎶
Sono assolutamente d'accordo
@@francesconiccolai6592 Absolute nonsense !