@@HOwNOTthink Yes, you lost. Take your L. Your opinion is just yours but so many more people disagree with you that it's is just the whining of a sad person. BTW, it's up two more people now.
Russian in composer only, it is very much German in terms of style. Russian classical tends to make subdued use of the brass section with more woodwinds, and tends to use the strings to support massive chords. Germany following the first vieenese school used the strings melodically, the woodwinds countermelodicaly, and what we might term big brass that eventually became the brass ensemble of Sousa and Miller.
Always a fun tradition. It seems though that this video omits one part of the fun, the fireworks. We're out in a small boat every year and the fireworks during the 1812 are always spectacular!
@@chrisarseneault5617 The main fireworks do cap off the night. However, over the past few years (10 maybe, skipping the hurricane year) there have been fireworks at the tail end of the 1812 and at the end of the Stars and Stripes Forever. More recently the Stars and Stripes Forever have moved from the barges to the Esplanade.
SO beautiful; I was there in 1976 for our nation's Bicentennial. Mommy, Gram and I sat on that famed lawn and experienced every spectacular moment. Every time I see this video and watch y'all on TV, I pray for those soldiers and all soldiers, for their safety and blessings. Thank you, Boston Pops, for being back at the Hatch tonight (July 4 2022), for contributing to our collective healing in the wake of the Pandemic. God bless you, ALL.
Tchaikovsky: I want this number to really go out with a BANG. Conductor: OK, so we'll use more kettle drums. Tchaikovsky: Nah, I was thinking something bigger. They used cannons in the war, right? Conductor: Yeah, they did, but we don't have anything to simulate cannons. Tchaikovsky: Then we should use real cannons. Conductor: Tchaikovsky, NYET! Tchaikovsky: TCHAIKOVSKY, DA!
This is FANTASTIC! It brought me to tears. The 1812 overture was the only piece of any type of music my dad would listen to. He passed nearly 20 years ago and we played this particular section at his funeral. The cannons sounded magnificent in the church. This piece absolutely took me right back to the days I’d sit on my dad’s knees waiting to hear those majestic cannons. Thank you for share this xx
We are all humans, at the end of a day. Russians are using Robert Schumann's (German) Träumerei piece in loop, in their most sacred wwII memorials (Stalingrad/Volgograd's Hall of Glory, on the cemetery in St.Peterburg, where one million of late civilians is buried and in the Brest Fortress in Belarus). Russian radio announced capitulation of Germany on 5/9/1945 and after that announcement someone in radio let it be played. It probably captured the feeling of relief and tragedy of horrific losses so well, people related to it completely. I will add link to two videos, Stalingrad memorial and of Horowitz playing Träumerei in Moscow with everybody in audience crying.
I’m so sad it won’t be happening this year... it’s been a family tradition since I was young to listen to this song and wait for the breath taking fireworks... perhaps next year...
I like to imagine this song is used in a game where zombies appear in Napoleonic times and they have to defend a bridge until a boat comes in by some random soldier named Jean who rings the bells so that a boat saves them
I am so glad that the conductor did not cower to the "woke,liberal and cancel culture " who wanted to eliminate this music simply because its russian. Art is art to be enjoyed by all. MUCH ADMIRATION FROM ALL OF US
Crowds for this in Boston are enormous...local streets are essentially shut down when everyone leaves at the end...mobs of walking people block every street.
Abertura de 1812 foi escrita em 1882 e não tinha nada a ver com a guerra de 1812 dos americanos Foi tocada pela primeira vez na consagração de uma igreja em Moscou para comemorar o fim da invasão francesa da Rússia pelo exército de Napoleão. Seus temas musicais incluem o hino nacional francês, "La Marseillaise", e um hino russo, bem como tiros de canhão e sinos de igreja. Quando é executada com tiros de canhão em grande escala (usando espaços em branco), a "Abertura de 1812" geralmente exige que os músicos usem tampões de ouvido e uma musica russa que muitos americanos acham que se trata da guerra que ocorreu o objetivo do compositor era divulgar seu pais e conseguiu pois ate os americanos gostam dela embora o compositor nao gostava achava a musica feita para leigos e nao amantes de musica orquestrada
Quite interesting to see all that waving of American flags at the performance of a piece of music that was comisioned to celebrate the defeat of the man that sold the USA half her present territory and inspired quite a substantial bit of her legal system.
Year 1812 Solemn Overture, festival overture in E♭ major, Op. 49, popularly known as the 1812 Overture,[1] is a concert overture written in 1880 by Russian composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky to commemorate the successful Russian defense against Napoleon's invading Grande Armée in 1812. The overture debuted in Moscow on August 20, 1882,[2] conducted by Ippolit Al'tani under a tent near the then-unfinished Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, which also memorialized the 1812 defense of Russia.[3] Tchaikovsky himself conducted another performance at the dedication of Carnegie Hall in New York City.[4] That was one of the first times a major European composer visited the United States.[5] The 15 minute overture is best known for its climactic volley of cannon fire, ringing chimes, and brass fanfare finale. It has also become a common accompaniment to fireworks displays on the United States' Independence Day.
@@war_robots7911 It isn't a song! It's a piece of orchestral music. There is no singing. Why do Americans ALWAYS get that wrong? And you don't " here" it, you hear it. Duh!
No one: Absolutely no on in the last 104 years:.... Me at 14:09: BOOOOOOOZHEEEE TSAR'YAAAAA KHRANIIIIIIII, SIIIIIIIILNIYYY DYEEERZHAAAAAAVNIIIIII, TSAAAAAR'STVUY NA SLAAAAAAAVUUUU....
I can't tell if you're genuinely curious, so I might as well answer if you are. This was for the 4th of July, the day of American Independence. I'm pretty sure the only reason they do this piece is for the cannons, I think. lol
The fireworks nor the cannons were originally written into the piece however, they are all part of the same performance organized by the boston pops. Although you can not hear them in the recording every single church in boston rings its bell as the cannons fire and that is also organized by the pops.
@@LaKellita Then I must not understand the question. You are asking if the fireworks display is part of the song, and I am saying that although the fireworks are not written into the music they are part of the same celebration organized by the Boston Pops that is why it is called the Boston Pops Fireworks Spectacular. In my original reply I also included the fact that the church bells and cannons although also not written into the piece are organized by the pops and are intend to be there. Does this answer your question and if so please rephrase it.
Orchestra Owner: Mr. Tchaikovsky which instrument we are going to use to simulate the sound of a Cannon?
Tchaikovsky: Simulate?
actually indeed good question I didn't know
Tchaikovsky, cannons are not instruments
@@argavyonTchaikovsky: Well now they are
@@argavyonI disagree 110%!
@@argavyon"Yes they are, and I am going to use 21 of them."
"Tchaikovsky, no!"
"Tchaikovsky yes! Tchaikovsky always yes!"
What'd you do in the Army?
I was in the band.
Oh, what section?
The field artillery section.
Overused and terrible joke
@@HOwNOTthink 168 people disagree with you. Better find something else to whine about.
L
@@HOwNOTthink Yes, you lost. Take your L.
Your opinion is just yours but so many more people disagree with you that it's is just the whining of a sad person.
BTW, it's up two more people now.
@@mattz1230 ua-cam.com/video/nuCIA31LfIUh/v-deo.htmlttps://youtube.be
"Yeah I served as a musician, I played the flute and occasionally the field artilerry."
Ngl the dude in the middle was into it like he was saving the world with every shot! We need more dudes like him!
"We getting out of the catacombs with this one" 🗣️🗣️🔥🔥
DA BAOT IS HERE BRO 🙏🔥🔥🔥🗣🗣
I FELL INTO THE WATER BRO 🔥🔥🔥🔥
I BROKE MY LEGS DONT SHOOT!1 🗣️ 🔥
@@eggyeeter957
"Hehehe"
*Cocks sound*
DON’T TALK TO JEAN LET SAPPERS COOK🗣️🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Russian music, american celebrations :-) Great combination.....
This didn't aged well
don't blame the music on politics
Don’t forget the Chinese added to this as well (gunpowder) 😂😂😎.
Russian in composer only, it is very much German in terms of style. Russian classical tends to make subdued use of the brass section with more woodwinds, and tends to use the strings to support massive chords. Germany following the first vieenese school used the strings melodically, the woodwinds countermelodicaly, and what we might term big brass that eventually became the brass ensemble of Sousa and Miller.
@@Harlem55 Tchaikovsky deserves to be respected in his own right. He needs not to be called Russian or German inspired he is only Tchaikovsky
0:38 the best part ever
Always a fun tradition. It seems though that this video omits one part of the fun, the fireworks. We're out in a small boat every year and the fireworks during the 1812 are always spectacular!
It certainly is a great way to cap off the night!
The fireworks take place after they play Stars and stripes forever
@@chrisarseneault5617 The main fireworks do cap off the night. However, over the past few years (10 maybe, skipping the hurricane year) there have been fireworks at the tail end of the 1812 and at the end of the Stars and Stripes Forever. More recently the Stars and Stripes Forever have moved from the barges to the Esplanade.
@@sebbohnivlac yes I agree. I was not full in my answer
i see fireworks happening in the background at 1:00
I LOVE THE ARTILLERY FIRES LIKE A MUSIC SYNC THE ARTILLERY SO CRAZYYY
that's good
Cool!!! Greeting from Russia!
🇷🇺🇺🇸
I wish this could’ve continued
@@luigimrlgaming9484 god bless America my bro
@@Keef19661 no I mean peace
God bless American people
Actual cannons. Very good.
0:38😊❤❤❤❤
SO beautiful; I was there in 1976 for our nation's Bicentennial. Mommy, Gram and I sat on that famed lawn and experienced every spectacular moment. Every time I see this video and watch y'all on TV, I pray for those soldiers and all soldiers, for their safety and blessings. Thank you, Boston Pops, for being back at the Hatch tonight (July 4 2022), for contributing to our collective healing in the wake of the Pandemic. God bless you, ALL.
Tchaikovsky: I want this number to really go out with a BANG.
Conductor: OK, so we'll use more kettle drums.
Tchaikovsky: Nah, I was thinking something bigger. They used cannons in the war, right?
Conductor: Yeah, they did, but we don't have anything to simulate cannons.
Tchaikovsky: Then we should use real cannons.
Conductor: Tchaikovsky, NYET!
Tchaikovsky: TCHAIKOVSKY, DA!
Lol
The russian part really is the cherry on the top 🤌🏻
At least there are fireworks and a great song/orchestra! 💖 God Bless America! 🇺🇲🎶
*Russian great song!*
Wow look at the Fireworks since it aired on January 4, 2018 and 4 people doing cannons
It's a spectacular sight to witness in person I highly suggest making the trip to Boston if they ever do it again
those are the best cannons I've heard, I wished I could have listened to the whole thing live
This is FANTASTIC!
It brought me to tears.
The 1812 overture was the only piece of any type of music my dad would listen to.
He passed nearly 20 years ago and we played this particular section at his funeral. The cannons sounded magnificent in the church.
This piece absolutely took me right back to the days I’d sit on my dad’s knees waiting to hear those majestic cannons.
Thank you for share this xx
The irony of waving an American flag to Tchaikovsky’s 1812 overture! Amazing!
We are all humans, at the end of a day. Russians are using Robert Schumann's (German) Träumerei piece in loop, in their most sacred wwII memorials (Stalingrad/Volgograd's Hall of Glory, on the cemetery in St.Peterburg, where one million of late civilians is buried and in the Brest Fortress in Belarus).
Russian radio announced capitulation of Germany on 5/9/1945 and after that announcement someone in radio let it be played. It probably captured the feeling of relief and tragedy of horrific losses so well, people related to it completely.
I will add link to two videos, Stalingrad memorial and of Horowitz playing Träumerei in Moscow with everybody in audience crying.
ua-cam.com/video/yibf6QNjgGU/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/XU_ccvjxq6o/v-deo.html
The same with Saddam. He used Whitneys "I will always love you" during his elections.
It’s a Boston thing. You wouldn’t understand. 😌
Russian Empire with the US had a good relationship with each other
#Happy4th❤️🤍💙🇺🇸🍻🎊🎇🎉🎆🍺 everyone back home!!! I miss you all!!! Enjoy the festivities & fireworks tonite!!!!
Real Heavy Metal Music
What a moment at The Esplanade. Basically perfect performance by all of a masterpiece overture. Brings me to tears as it should.
Growing up in Cambridge was so epic
You people would never imagine the memories Growing up here.
Happy4th 2 all
How come this is not on tv 📺 anymore .. I am in mOntana and miss seeing this live 😭😭😭🇺🇸🇺🇸 Arthur Fiedler style 💯🙏🏼
Because people are too stupid now to appreciate this
It is, it’s in Bloomberg
it's a Russian piece why the us flag
"We are going to make it to the boat this one... but why the canon look so weird?"
That not even a cannon
"They borrow it from americans, maybe"
I think i remember seeing some accurate ones near the bridge of Notre Dame
I’m so sad it won’t be happening this year... it’s been a family tradition since I was young to listen to this song and wait for the breath taking fireworks... perhaps next year...
They could still have fireworks.
Did you ever get back to doing this?
Saludos a ese gran pais desde Argentina
Long Live Freedom, damn it!! 🇦🇷🇺🇸❤️
Can you imagine the Officers learning their artillery was being used for this? I can't tell if they'd be furious, excited, or laugh their ass off.
1812 Overture is my 💙Favorite❤️ 🎻Classical🎻 🎵Music🎶.
God bless America, God bless our troops, now ladies and gentleman.. START… YOUR… ENGINES!!!! 🎉🎉
#Happy4th♥️🤍🩵🇺🇸🎆🥳🍺🎉 everyone back home!!!! I miss you all soooo much!!!!
Que bello sería ver esta presentación, pero en la Plaza Roja de Moscú, y con las campanas de la catedral de San Patricio sonando ❤
Love u Bernie I miss u so much. Especially when I hear this
I like to imagine this song is used in a game where zombies appear in Napoleonic times and they have to defend a bridge until a boat comes in by some random soldier named Jean who rings the bells so that a boat saves them
0:39 YEAHHHHHHHH
THEY DID IT
Greeting from Prague!
Bloody fantastic performance.
Those crews were doing great
There's even still burning propellant in the blank at 0:58 that spills out
how big were Tchaikovsky's balls to write a piece of music that used cannons and actual church bells as instruments in it.
and a choir
Orchestra Owner: Mr. Tchaikovsky which instrument we are going to use to simulate the sound of a Cannon?
Tchaikovsky: Simulate?
Beautiful!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Looking forward to this tonight!!! Missing you all but I'll be streaming from fort wayne Indiana
Looked like the 2-15th FA/ 10th MTN DIVARTY just by looking at the patch on the one soldier. MOUNTAIN THUNDER!!
woah.... those men on the cannons were bad ass!!!!
"Wait that ain't blank shots" 💀💀💀
I really love this.
Incredible
I am so glad that the conductor did not cower to the "woke,liberal and cancel culture " who wanted to eliminate this music simply because its russian. Art is art to be enjoyed by all. MUCH ADMIRATION FROM ALL OF US
0:38 😊❤❤❤❤
Wait for the boat
Too late, fell in the water
I wonder how confused anyone not in the gnb community is rn
Ah... The last normal year
❤️❤️
fireworks in background stand no chance to artillery
Agreed. Cannon line is the coolest instrument.
Красавчики
wonderfull
Get on the boat 0:39
Crowds for this in Boston are enormous...local streets are essentially shut down when everyone leaves at the end...mobs of walking people block every street.
10th Mountain DIVARTY, Climb to Glory!
🎉🎊 Boston Pops 🎉🎊
I hope they upload the one for this year. I missed it
I wonder if American people know what is this classical song about and what's the meaning of the cannons and the bell towers in this song
It's not a song! There is no singing!
"Dont talk to jean yet let the sappers build" ahh song
How dramatic are those cannon guys? 😂
Irónico pero hermoso
The only thing missing was the Quaker Puffed Rice - Shot from Guns!
Gg BABY I GOT GLORY TO THE SURVIVORS ACHIEVEMENT
these americans waving their flag while the music is made by the russian💀
bootiful
I miss the hatch shell with stars, it looks so empty now...
Is only make possible in Great America
Make WHAT possible?
Abertura de 1812 foi escrita em 1882 e não tinha nada a ver com a guerra de 1812 dos americanos Foi tocada pela primeira vez na consagração de uma igreja em Moscou para comemorar o fim da invasão francesa da Rússia pelo exército de Napoleão. Seus temas musicais incluem o hino nacional francês, "La Marseillaise", e um hino russo, bem como tiros de canhão e sinos de igreja. Quando é executada com tiros de canhão em grande escala (usando espaços em branco), a "Abertura de 1812" geralmente exige que os músicos usem tampões de ouvido e uma musica russa que muitos americanos acham que se trata da guerra que ocorreu o objetivo do compositor era divulgar seu pais e conseguiu pois ate os americanos gostam dela embora o compositor nao gostava achava a musica feita para leigos e nao amantes de musica orquestrada
Im a musician
Oh what instrument do you play?
The Howitzer
Молодец!
i love America ~ I love Russia ~
Love it when Americans celebrate great Russian victories
No !! No entiendes!! Campanas es el credo y los cañones es la defensa ante un invasor externo😊
0:39 wait for the boat
Quite interesting to see all that waving of American flags at the performance of a piece of music that was comisioned to celebrate the defeat of the man that sold the USA half her present territory and inspired quite a substantial bit of her legal system.
Year 1812 Solemn Overture, festival overture in E♭ major, Op. 49, popularly known as the 1812 Overture,[1] is a concert overture written in 1880 by Russian composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky to commemorate the successful Russian defense against Napoleon's invading Grande Armée in 1812.
The overture debuted in Moscow on August 20, 1882,[2] conducted by Ippolit Al'tani under a tent near the then-unfinished Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, which also memorialized the 1812 defense of Russia.[3] Tchaikovsky himself conducted another performance at the dedication of Carnegie Hall in New York City.[4] That was one of the first times a major European composer visited the United States.[5]
The 15 minute overture is best known for its climactic volley of cannon fire, ringing chimes, and brass fanfare finale. It has also become a common accompaniment to fireworks displays on the United States' Independence Day.
wheres da giant 150 tons churchbell?
Oh I love this opra
It is not an opera, it is an overture.
@@VRichardsn I here this song when there’s a school play
@@war_robots7911 It is awesome!
PS: it is also not a song, because it contains no lyrics.
It's not a song! Do you hear any singìng? No. It's a piece of orchestral music. @@war_robots7911
@@war_robots7911 It isn't a song! It's a piece of orchestral music. There is no singing. Why do Americans ALWAYS get that wrong? And you don't " here" it, you hear it. Duh!
只能按讚...
Tchaikovsky: “Napoleon - Get OUUUT!”
FIRE THE CANNON!!!!
Nice :) but next time a B21 oder a B2 ....
2019 when people still cared about this country.
doubt that can happen this year, with the threat of corona and all :'(
We lived across the river and could hear and feel the canons in our building a few seconds before they came on live TV. It was so cool.
No one:
Absolutely no on in the last 104 years:....
Me at 14:09: BOOOOOOOZHEEEE TSAR'YAAAAA KHRANIIIIIIII, SIIIIIIIILNIYYY DYEEERZHAAAAAAVNIIIIII, TSAAAAAR'STVUY NA SLAAAAAAAVUUUU....
Same
The canons are in the score??????
Yes
Arent the cannons supposed to be on beat
But why do they play this on the 4th of July...it does not make any sense....
Tchaikovsky, Cannons are not instruments.
Yes they are, and I'm going to use 21 of them.
Tchaikovsky no...
Tchaikovsky yes.
*TCHAIKOVSKY ALWAYS YES!!*
0:39 Russian anthem? 🤔
Ancient imperial anthem, yes
Howitzers just do not do it for this music need something more loud
In Russia, if you don’t like the orchestra they repoint the cannon.
Am I the only person who looks at the conductor of this performance and sees Tucker Carlson aka the trained bare?
whats funny is that this is a russian patriotic song
White*
I have always wondered about that fireworks display happening downriver. Is that part of the 1812 overture, or is it a separate show somewhere else?
I can't tell if you're genuinely curious, so I might as well answer if you are. This was for the 4th of July, the day of American Independence. I'm pretty sure the only reason they do this piece is for the cannons, I think. lol
@@Jake_Broer Im genuinely curious but I think you misread my question.
The fireworks nor the cannons were originally written into the piece however, they are all part of the same performance organized by the boston pops. Although you can not hear them in the recording every single church in boston rings its bell as the cannons fire and that is also organized by the pops.
@@owenharrington8704 that has nothing to do with my question
@@LaKellita Then I must not understand the question. You are asking if the fireworks display is part of the song, and I am saying that although the fireworks are not written into the music they are part of the same celebration organized by the Boston Pops that is why it is called the Boston Pops Fireworks Spectacular. In my original reply I also included the fact that the church bells and cannons although also not written into the piece are organized by the pops and are intend to be there. Does this answer your question and if so please rephrase it.
The main reason why they play that is cannon🤭
cannons were off sync...
and yes, I memorized when the cannons play. Don't ask why 💀
Meanwhile in some place near Boston:
HELp THrTe HUgE SHeLS DEYstOyinG OUR ToW;N ahHazhahajsjs s
10- seconds from disaster
HeY wHaTs ThAt ReD tHiNg In ThE sKy