"Gloriosa" Symphonic Poem for Band · SMU Symphonia
Вставка
- Опубліковано 6 січ 2013
- SMU Symphonia
Singapore International Band Festival 2012
The Republic Cultural Centre | 20 July 2012
Conducted by Adrian Chiang
"Gloriosa" Symphonic Poem for Band
Yasuhide Ito
SMU Symphonia's Facebook Page:
/ smusymphonia
watched this more than 10 or even 20 times, never got bored of it
This is by far the best rendition of the 2nd mvt flute solo I've ever heard
it imprsses me so when band members do vocal parts. It is always good too. This is one beautiful dedication
This music was dedicated to the Japanese Christians during the 17th Century in Feudal Japan. DYNAMIC POWERFUL!!!
This was composed in 1990...
Felipe Alvarado Yes, and? It is a contemporary piece, set to capture the feelings and honor the memories of a repressed minority in history. Christianity was viewed as a subversive external influence in Japan in the 1600s, and people caught practicing were executed. Real witch-hunt-y stuff.
Felipe Alvarado Composed in 1990 but dedicated to Japanese Kakure Kirishitan or Hidden Christians. Nobody ever said it was composed in 17 the Century Japan
@@DaveMastersXP I never said this composition was written during the 17th century. i was quoting the the history of how the Japanese Kakure Kriishitans sacrificed their lives during the 17th century. And to Mr. Felipe Alvarado, this is a wonderful composition you wrote. KUDOS!
This was written as an elegy to Amakasou Shirou and the Hidden Christians of Japan. What a sublime last movement.
Thanks @TheChurchInAsia who tweeted about this.
Was at the band festival that very same year and had the honor of seeing this live. Truly a masterpiece well played by a mature band.
Really thought the balance and color of this ensemble’s sound is just magnificent.
This piece is about the Kakuro Kirishitan, the hidden Christians of the Edo period when Christianity has been persecuted. The kept their faith given from one generetion to the next from the 17th century until 1873 when religious liberty was established. Many died for their faith.
Bravo to the soloist this is by far my favorite interpretation of that section of music absolutely beautiful
I loved playing the last movement of this piece! The entire work is absolutely beautiful and a great joy to listen too!
i played this piece as a 1st trombone player in my school band for competition and it killed me with the high notes >.
HAHAHA! I know what you mean. Our polytechnic was actually one of the 1st to play this piece for SIBF back in 2008. We were like 17-20yr olds. I remembered our conductor was telling us we have flaws (Because not all have the time to commit for practice), but this piece can cover up the flaws with the hidden talents in the the band coz not many will take up this piece. 🤣🤣🤣Our very 1st competition but we got 2nd. Never felt happier.
00:08 - I. Oratio
07:34 - II. Cantus
13:01 - III. Dies Festus
Beautifully conducted and played. Outstanding!
I did not expect this to go that hard whatsoever 😳
Nice performance, and that little bear on the trumpet players lead pipe is adorable. I kinda want one for my horn now lol
Fantastic!!
Living in S. Dakota I am somewhat familiar with our native american flutes. If you listen to both them and this Japanese flute. They have different tone and timbre but the soul of where they come from is very much the same.
Beautiful. Good camera work also.
was really magnificent! :)
Did they seriously get an actual Japanese ryuteki? That's awesome!
This is our show music!! for marching band arranged in a certain way but it's so beautiful!!! if you want to check it out look up NFMHS marching Knights :)
RYUTEKI solo! So nice glissando!
Sounds like plainsong at the beginning - Pange Lingua?
アジアのぐるりよざ…素晴らしい!
この曲をライブなら
#tmea
よくがんばった
この曲を生きるなら
SP band pioneered this piece in SG in the mid to late 90s
龍笛。フルートと同じとはいえ、ポルタメントや記譜上の↑↓は表現が難しかったろうに。
龍笛奏者でない方に、PIc.ではなく、本物を奏させたあたり、楽団の意気込みを感じます。
これは指揮者の責任やね。