A playlist to feel like you're inside a Hopper painting
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- Опубліковано 15 сер 2022
- Also, I decided to open another channel focused on language, literature and linguistic. Follow me there too for more content. Here is the link:
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A playlist to feel like you're inside a Hopper painting
timestamps / (author/s)
00:00 intermezzo (charlie spivak)
04:28 charmaine (mantovani)
08:35 melody of love (wayne king)
11:46 auld lang syne (guy lombardo)
15:15 body and soul (coleman hawkins)
18:54 poinciana 'song of the tree' (david rose)
22:48 do you believe in dreams (francis craig)
26:56 twilight time (three suns)
30:31 intermezzo aka 'souvenir de vienne' (wayne king)
34:39 orchids in the moonlight (enric madriguera)
39:12 warsaw concerto (freddy martin/jack fina)
43:24 deep in my heart dear (troubadours)
48:00 dancing in the dark (artie shaw)
all songs are slowed w/ reverb
↓ PAINTINGS ↓ / (timestamps + info)
00.00 nighthawks, 1942
04.28 lighthouse hill, 1927
08.35 morning sun, 1952
11.46 summer evening, 1947
15.15 office in a small city, 1952
18.54 sun in an empty room, 1963
22.48 new york office, 1962
26.56 chair car, 1965
30.31 rooms by the sea, 1951
34.39 new york movie, 1939
39.12 the sheridan theatre, 1937
43.24 cape cod morning, 1950
48.00 hotel lobby, 1943
#art #music #playlist #hopper #edwardhopper #america #jazz
Original playlist by "nobody" YT channel
I decided to open another channel focused on language, literature and linguistic. Follow me there too for more content. Here is the link:
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ua-cam.com/channels/mRxBQpopIxcaRIkFrAhMjw.html
What beautiful music. Others may disagree, but all I hear is melancholy jazz.
Why did you steal the channel Nobody's playlist? You're honestly a really sucky person. Come up with your own ideas please
Nothing like being crushed by your own sense of insignificance while drinking a scalding cup of double strength coffee.
Don't forget the shot of whiskey in the cup of coffee
Shitty society made depressive men something very common back then.
and the massive shit I took in it
that sounds like the ending of a monologue for a really morally flawed but oddly endearing movie protagonist
@@Raichupacabra I will accept that as a glowing review of my personality.
Edward Hopper grew up in my home town, and his residence has since been turned into an exhibit. I am spoiled in that from an early age I have been exposed to his work and legacy firsthand. His breadth of work is simply astounding and accurately captures all the goods and bads of an America before the age of communication; an America where most people were alone. When he was nine years old, Hopper made a portrait on the back of his school report card. It was a self portrait of his nine-year-old self, alone, looking over an empty Hudson River. I'm convinced that the sense of lonesome melancholy is an innate part of the soul, and contextualizes the greater majesty of the world. I like to believe that the isolation in his painting isn't a sad one. Instead, the isolation is a seamless experience for the lone figures, akin to watching the sun rise from a mountaintop, or finding the simple beauty of a street corner lit only by moonlight and vacant shops. It's a feeling you can only experience if you're alone, even if you're with other people; a small glimpse into a fragile moment, otherwise unassuming when in company. Similar can be said of your music selections! Thank you for creating this playlist and pairing each track with a painting. Such a beautiful and unique emotion you've captured here!
thank you for sharing mate
I also grew up there as well. Even growing up, you feel the isolation in many of his works
@@TheDemonx55 If you've ever walked to memorial park on the more brisk mornings, watching the sun rise over the Hudson and bathe the Hook in yellow light, or walked down mainstreet before the shops open but after the bars clear out, you've felt that wonderful sense of awesome melancholy. Taking the trail up to Dutchtown early morning in the autumn is such an enveloping experience. I'm not sure if they're still there, but there used to be a series of benches in the clearings adjacent to the cliffs.
Well said. Nyack is a great town too.
"I like to believe that the isolation in his painting isn't a sad one" - Yes! It always frustrates me when I read critics putting a negative emotional spin on Hopper's work, it is melancholy, but there is a certain warmth in understanding that this is a shared feeling. For me, his work evokes a kind of reflective, cosy loneliness. He captures moments we all experience where, for a brief moment, we seem to exist outside and apart from the passing of time.
Hopper’s stunning visual depiction of situational human melancholia here reminds me of Robert Frost’s blunt and unsettling poetic depiction of our melancholic place in the Cosmos: “We are microbes crawling across the patina of this least of globes.” The music here profoundly captures that spirit of universal creaturely awareness of misplacedness.
Stunning visual depiction?? That’s a stretch
@@LordGreystoke this is one of my favourite paintings and I agree with the OP. I have a print of it on my wall. It gives me a feeling of melancholia and makes me nostalgic for my past and perhaps for another life I never lived. Hard to describe.
Ha😊
Watching a Lana Turner movie right now 🎉
@@bendietrees The vapourwave music and aesthetic evokes similar vibes
@@LordGreystoke I mean it get's the job done with nothing more than an image and the way it's composed, that's somewhat stunning in and of itself
Dreamy. The Nighthawks is such a mesmerising piece of artwork. Hopper was a master artist.
Have you ever read Herman Wouk's novel Youngblood Hawke? There's a passage in it right after the main character's sister gave birth and several of the other characters gather in a half-empty diner in the middle of the night. Reading it make me visualize Hopper in my head.
@@christianpatriot7439 Weird how everything lined up from you reading that book, ending up on this video and reading the original comment and deciding to reply
@@dickmcwienersonIII It's been nearly 30 years since I read the book, but Wouk tends to stick with you.
Wouk was a great writer
how so
40s music is such a deeply comforting thing for me. Reminds me of my childhood at my grandma’s house. I’m only in my 20s but my grandparents’ house was frozen in time since the 70s, and the only shows I’d be watching all day were Tom and jerry, 90s Batman episodes, the hundreds of tv shows from the 50s that my dad had, etc. the old radios, TVs, phones, rooms, furniture. Etc. I’d spend my summers and winters there as a kid and get engulfed in this nostalgic era
sounds awesome
You're not alone in that experience friend
a time I wasn't part of but look back on fondly
Housewide temporal capsule. Unique !
As someone who works in the late night food service industry this mood is all too relatable
im working in the morning food service industry and it is cool too
Honestly if you just start feeling like you’re in a movie and like everything around you is “aesthetic” life gets a lot more interesting
@@emsa5034 im gonna try that
@@emsa5034 do not do that that is called depersonalisation
@@stranded9225 depersonalization is a much more serious thing that results from anxiety or trauma. it's harder to control. what the other person described is just simple fantasizing which is harmless.
The loneliness and isolation of modernity.
His art doesn't seem lonely to me, its peaceful, not big events and moments that will be told as witty anecdotes, just real life in all its unhurried beauty, simply beautiful and the music matches wonderfully :)
I like that viewpoint :)
I have always felt his paintings depict a melancholy and detachment, which is a hard thing to paint within such vivid colours, similar to van gogh in a way, full of colour yet with an underlying tone, both great artists
The quiet night has always been a friend to me.
Really well put together. Captures that feeling of emptiness, melancholy, with a tinge of nostalgia and dreaminess in Hopper's work. More art galleries should have specific music pieces paired with paintings to enhance the experience.
Perfect desciption here ... the melancholy is real my friend.
I feel like Hopper paints the time in between the busyness, pleasure, and pain of life. The moments that are peacefully insignificant.
Thats what i was thinking with this peice.
It feels like a bereavement in life. A moment of stillness and quite.
Excellent comment. Sometimes in these moments adventures are brewing in our heads, but just in our heads.
"Blissfully mundane" is my word for it.
Besides Hopper's paintings, this playlist gives me Overlook Hotel vibes from The Shining
They've introduced a foreign protein to the menu, Bob.
You have always been the caretaker, Mr Torrance.
God, I'd give anything for a drink.
Midnight The Stars and you
ua-cam.com/video/-fN-Xjpd-qE/v-deo.html
I had never heard of Edward Hopper before I clicked on this video, and actually thought that the thumbnail was something from The Shining or at least inspired by it
shout out to the guy in the window in the top left
That’s me. I’m not the main character but I was an integral part of those men in the dinner. Said part is neither me or the gentleman know what’s really going down. It’s such a dark fight. Even now when your reading this is just another distraction to try to blend me into the real world. Life’s a Big B. Don’t let it, how I say Meh fed up done ostavladbt pic ccnixl 🦾😺 lol really good 👍 we
Creepy
That guy has style.😎
I dont see any guy
NEVER noticed him
Gives the painting surprisingly more depth.
Thx for pointing him out 🤙
Try as I might, I can't help but connect with that feeling of ghosts playing. It's both comforting and unsettling, like dreams of the deceased.
If sweet dreams are heaven, and nightmares are hell, this would be right in the middle.
You know those photos or paintings that people pose for, for the preservation of the memory or to commemorate the moment or event? These paintings emphasize what is just outside of the border. What isn't in the photo that nobody cares about. Its so easy to get sucked in while looking at these since they create feeling of negative space that wants to be filled.
I think Hopper's painting expresses very well the emptiness and loneliness amidst the abundance that I felt in America.
We used to have a poster of "Gas" by edward hopper, I was fascinated by it as a child. There's such a profound 'emptiness' in his paintings, it feels like there's something missing, I think it has something to do with the lighting and the lack of movement that give it that melancholic feel. I have at times attempted painting a similar scene, but can never quite get it right...
Most of them seem to also depict liminal spaces; they are views that you should witness while passing by, focused on your destination. I believe this makes them feel so cold -- one expects the woman on the bed in the morning sun to get up and perform her daily duties any minute, and in the first image you are probably on your way home after a late night event, tired and eager to sleep. When moments usually so brief captured forever in a painting, the painting preserves the feeling of emptiness and slight anxiety that are usually felt in such moments, and as the painting awkwardly prolongs the moments, it adds a sense of eeriness. It feels like you have broken the fourth wall of reality when you take in the mundane as if it was important. These moments don't exist in our daily lives; they disappear as soon as we reach our destination. We don't associate any feelings or interesting experiences with them; when connecting the scenes to your memories, it is like you are trying to access a feeling that you have never felt.
@@2lizard559 you wrote this so well, wow. Great analysis & now I finally understand why liminal spaces are so intriguing
I guess it's up to me to say the stupid thing: no painting has movement :)
@@Bobo-ox7fj they can, I've seen it, they go wha bam wha bam
@@Bobo-ox7fj My first language isn't english, I guess I used the wrong word, I meant it's not dynamic, there's nothing really happening in the scene. Your comment sounds sort of condescending though, hope it wasn't meant that way
I remember having to analyze this painting for one my classes. Everything just looks so empty. However despite how dark the painting may appear to some people, I still find beauty in it. It shows two people sitting by, casually having drinks. There’s this other man sitting on the left side, left with no one to talk to. Honestly it just seems so lonely when there’s not a lot of people around. It feels isolating. The colors seem dull. In contrast to other paintings where there’s usage of bright color palettes, this one seems to be lacking just that. Overall, I’d probably hung a replica of that particular painting in my space somewhere. I just admire the atmosphere kind of.
There are no people contacting each other in his paintings. All characters depicted in his pictures are... "isolated", as they don't speak and don't even look at each other. This makes you feel the emptiness I guess. Or feeling that something doesn't seem right.
this painting has always given me a feeling of comfort. the quiet company in that diner after a good night downtown is so relatable, just rest your bones at the bar and soak it in. a quiet conversation a few seats down, the bartender tiredly wiping down, and you're nursing a cup.
Such a compelling comment coming from an amonguy
amomomama
real question is how do they get out
You all are so pure. Thank you so much. And the one who's reading this, slow down a bit, step back if you have to, take a deep breath and enjoy the process. I know it's difficult but you know yourself the result will make you happy and will give you freedom. Keep pushing forward. You can do it. ❣
Thanks, I think I will.🙂
Beautifully said 😎
this playlist is underrated as hell
It was originally made by this guy
ua-cam.com/video/qE7DI2uakCE/v-deo.html&ab_channel=nobody
@@shane1948 thank you!
Funny, he'll probably has more stars, but this music, mood, the painter, the writer expressing themselves, with talent, heaven..!!! O my, o me, honey the universe is calling again!
@@shane1948 Thank you. On that page it is also written that on Spotify his name is Nowt
I didn't know it was rated. What's the rating?
There will be a time in our lives, where we look back at this current decade and reminisce. We'll feel almost exactly the same way we felt when we looked at these paintings, the only difference being is that we lived through it and that will be a true moment of melancholy.
you're so right.
This music reminds me when I was a little boy shopping with my mum over 50yrs ago, some of the big stores would play music like this, ah nostalgia 😢
The figures in Hopper's painting are always so surreal and dream-like to me. Its as if there is no one else that exists in the world save for those figures in the frame.
This was already done by nobody, the exact songs and everything. Look it up
never delete this. please
Very reminiscent of the musical style in Everywhere At the End of Time by The Caretaker!
ha! Just commented about this and saw this. Caretaker is great stuff. Cheers.
I feel like the music is portraying that something is missing in the painting or that Hopper was missing something while he was painting it. It rlly matters how you listen and look at it but it just feels lonely, empty.
You and I are every drop of paint in “Nighthawks.”
There's something about this painting + music that makes you feel empty and have a scary sense of insignificance in the grand scheme of things. Like you just finished a tough day at work, you ask yourself what any of this even means, but regardless, you'll help yourself to a cup of coffee and pastry at the local cafe just to enjoy a brief moment of your closely approaching end.
best description i’ve read
That's right
I went on a rabbit hole of possible surrealistic conversations they keep having. Posing each other questions about what is real and what constructs reality and every time the characters get confused I anchor them back into "remember its just a painting" But we all know its much much more than that... Wow and im not even high!! I should be a writer of sorts.
This guy's paintings is literally the embodiment of melancholy
Edward Hopper
this playlist is underrated as hell. This guy's paintings is literally the embodiment of melancholy.
the channel Nobody actually was the one that created this playlist. This channel just copied it
"Everywhere at the end of time" type of vibes
I experience two sides to Hopper's paintings: The first is that sense of loneliness and isolation I read so much about, the other is of being on the cusp of something expansive and inclusive -- what can't be experienced unless/until one is "initially" lonely and isolated. Upon crossing that divide, he can then be anywhere, and it doesn't matter. What he sees from then on never goes away. Hopper brings that incredibly deep juxtaposition through austere simplicity. An ordinary street corner becomes almost Zen-like, a meditation on lines, angles, and shadows.
I find myself relating more with Edward Hoppers paintings the older I get, the melancholy, loneliness, feeling of isolation, and also a longing for when I may have been happy. Hopper was a tortured soul as was his lot of artists and someone very astutely pointed out the similarity between Hopper and Frost.
These are like liminal spaces with people in them. That’s hard to do
This was a wonderful idea man. I fell in Love with Hopper’s “Office in a Small City” ever since I first saw it years ago. It’s just so relatable, you know. Every once in a while I catch myself looking up from my desk and remember this piece. How a man can capture so closely human sentiment in our modern society I will never understand.
I just looked up the painting on your recommendation. What a beautiful, melancholy piece of art.
The office building the man sits in is painfully beige. There's no glass in the windows, so he's both juxtaposed against and inseparable from the brown mundanity that surrounds him. I love the very faint glow in the distance. It's like hope is just barely obstructed -- it's just out of reach but it's along the man's sight line, so your eye can't help but be drawn to it. It's success yearning for success. Life yearning for life.
I've lived in a small city like this for most of my life. Maybe I'm projecting my experience onto the painting, but it made me feel real feelings! Thanks for expanding my horizons.
We need the morning version of this -- like the feeling of waking up and fetching the newspaper from the kid on the bike in a Levittown on a sunday morning in the 1950s. Like Lady and the Tramp vibe.
Langorous, slow-paced, soothing, if not ever so slightly eerie. Oozes nostalgia of a 20th century quaint lifestyle
Great paintings. Great songs. All of this deepens my sadness and gives me the urge to go away from here. Thanks.
Throughout this depressive period of mine I actually found this mix quite soothing. As in normal states of desperation you'd feel like your thoughts overwhelm you, the calming sounds from these tracks feel like they carry you over pink clouds through the darkness of the night. In that sense it's like you move forward to different times. Not necessarily better, but different.
Thank you for putting this to words 🙏
I had similar feeling, although I am not depressed, the world is depressing.
@@thaysapc3058 I'm sorry to hear that. We all can survive it but just reach out
With the potential to be better. How you doing now?
@@dannydesiderio5921 really all the same but I guess it gets better somehow.over time
this playlist is immaculate, the feeling of misplacedness
Hopper's paintings reminds me of the first couple days of the pandemic when absolutely no one was outside and I took my chance to see the city empty.
I knew I shouldn't have, but I guessed that I would be the only one fascinated with seeing it.
This painting always makes me think of arbys because when I was younger me and my family would go to arbys almost every Wednesday afternoon and they had this painting on the wall right next to our table
I cannot stop listening to this. At first I thought it was haunting but I got over that and now I can’t stop listening to it. I’d love it if you did something like this with Christmas music.
Maybe try this one? ua-cam.com/video/1R7p8ur05sk/v-deo.html
It's from the channel that actually made this playlist back in March, so it may have a similar vibe to it.
What's miraculous is how Hopper survived financially as a goddamn artist during the Great Depression
This sounds like the music they played in "The Shining " in the end when jack nicholson is found inside of the picture.
The biggest compliment, although I have many, of the series Mad Men, is if you pause virtually any scene it resembles a recreation of a Hopper painting.
8:35 Recently I got a job and moved into a new apartment, its nothing fancy but its much better and bigger than the small overpriced studios i was staying in for years. Everybody congratulated me and expected me to be excited/happy about it. Not that I specifically wasn't; I knew rationally that it was a great achievement and I knew it was better than the ones before, which would bring me comfort in the long run. In those moments however, it just didn't feel....great? It didn't feel, for a lack of a better word, special? I was just sorta... there. Not having a sense of achievement, nor happiness, just simply being.
I was so tired after the house-hunting, the stuff-moving and the yet-to-unpack boxes that I couldn't even properly enjoy it, perhaps. So that day I just sat in my bed, no sheets on it, looking at the big window I have in front of me. There are trees and little houses in front. I can't say I was feeling much, besides the physical sensations of tiredness. I didn't feel overwhelmed (with joy or whatever) like expected, nor underwhelmed (guilt tripping myself for being numb or "not thankful"). I just accepted that I moved into a new place, and took a moment to relax. This is exactly what this painting means to me. The woman is nor happy nor sad, she is just there. Not out of place, not really integrated into the space either. Perhaps tired, perhaps just being, in between seconds of existence. A small moment that will pass by and be forgotten amongst other major events in life. But a real moment nonetheless, where we don't know exactly what we feel or think and isn't that the purest of emotions, not being able to comprehend it nor put it into words.
Sometimes being alone is very necessary for your mental balance.
At least give credit to the original video by nobody (that's the actual channel name)
EDIT: There is a credit in the description now. Thanks for the honesty!
fr
fr fr
Whos nobody?
@@LeonardoReyes-ob7hv the channel that originally posted the playlist. The original video barely has 300k views, while this copy more than 1 milion. The youtube algorithm is weird
He actually does give credit. It’s at the bottom of the description.
It was raining, so I went for a night walk to this. It was lovely, thank you.
how it feels to me when i see his works, is when you go against your normal routine to get something done. whether its staying late at school/work to talk business with someone and you are impatiently wanting to get home and get back to "the usual" but youre stuck where you are. that or some other form of waiting, waiting for your food, or your package to arrive, or to some large change in your life that hasnt come yet
This is my first time seeing Hopper's masterpieces and I just sit here feeling this really strange feeling of loneliness and nostalgia. The paintings almost seem like a dream and very distant as if I were an invisible spectator viewing the mundane everyday life or being alone in confined spaces or seeing the world in black and white when technology has not taken over the world. Just being alone can be very lonely and like a ghost, but at the same time being alone can make you feel refreshed with your thoughts as you just contemplate and let the world go by. Also, the use of contrast in his masterpieces is what makes his masterpieces a masterpiece, so dull yet so bright and dream like.
i can see it in a different perspective. a contentedness they have with the dullness and loneliness they are currently experiencing. a contrast to our lives, saturated in entertainment and distractions, which makes us see the dim mood as greater than the feelings they actually have. they may be melancholy, but they are satisfied with what they are experiencing
@@Wulfjager an ability to feel contentedness in simplicity is probably the thing i envy the most. preach
I just turned 83 and this is the most amazing experience I have ever seen and had. Edward Hopper has always been my favorite artist
But add this beautiful music and Here I am teary eyed and feeling so content.
Finally a playlist to perfectly compliment my favorite artist ever.
This always brings tears to my eyes. I don't know why it reminds me of the bliss of childhood, holy fuck now that I'm an adult do I understand it.
Wish I was articulate enough with enough mental energy to even start to describe the pairings of hoppers work and this soundtrack. Best I can muster is feeling your outside of the fold looking in
This makes me feel like I have always been the caretaker at the Overlook hotel.
Sir did you know they’re trying to bring an outside imaginary draft pick into this situation, did you know that?
@@Robbstark2024 they're very wilful indeed
I beg your pardon, sir, but you have always been the caretaker at the Overlook Hotel. I should know, sir, I've always been here.
@@Robbstark2024 Did you correct them?
Ive been heree for 25 minutes now, listening to this playlist while staring at art this playlist is an absolute trip. I like to just look, listen and then analize the painting while really taking iz in. Brillant!
my grandfather had this painting in the guest room i would stay in, i'd stare at it till i fell asleep creating scenarios for what was going on in the scene😂this video unlocked that random memory and odd nostalgia i had completely forgotten about lol
At the height of the pandemic I kind of lost my shit and just went outside. Having the entire Embarcadero to myself was horrifying. 2 hours in the busiest place in a major city without encountering another human being.
I'd like to live in one of those paintings. Frozen in time in the golden years.
@18:54 Poinciana, David Rose Orchestra paired with Hopper's "Sun in an empty room" is beautiful in its stark and lonely nature. Almost diametrically opposed in their nature. The song; trade winds blowing softly through palm trees in the South Pacific. Wide open with no boundaries. While the room with its surrealistic view of claustrophobic isolation, presents an eerie counter point to the lovely atmosphere and (as It appears to this writer) a hopeless and sad point of view. These are indeed excellent pairings!
Charlie loved the night shift at the diner. It wasn't a career by any means, but it was a comfortable job and hey, the tips weren't bad some nights. His favorite part was the people. Anyone could walk in, sit down, and the words would just pour out like the hot coffee he was serving. It was fascinating. Hanes made his usually order; French toast. Even for how late (or early) it was, just the thought of that much sugar and bread in one sitting made Charlie's stomach fill queasy.
'A little rainy tonight,' Hanes commented, to no one really.
'Yeah, the weatha-man says we might get some rain for the next couple of nights," Charlie replied, to no one really.
"Yeah," Hanes cut the first loaf of the mushy bread and chewed silently. Hanes was more quiet than usual. Might be his job again.
Hanes hadn't peaked his curiosity. But the new couple who just walked in had. Charlie greeted them and they order two cups of black coffee and the little lady order a slice of pie. They were a young couple, good looking, and obviously were together in some way or another. Even from the heavy spots of the rain on their coats, they were like in light spirits.
The gentlemen was rolling words off faster than a Cadillac on asphalt, "So I says to him, oh thanks chief," he the gentlemen nodded to Charlie as they brought the fresh cups of Joe. "So I says to him, 'Buddy, if that ain't worth a fortune, then a pope aint Catholic,"" This made the girl giggle and the giggle made even Charlie blush. He was already hooked.
"Oh George," she pretty brunette next to him says, "You are so full of it," she smiled as she cut into her key lime pie. It was the special. Charlie had never watched anyone eat their food, but he liked how her red lips smiled at him as she took the first bite.
The man spat off a hackle, "I swear to ya," he said, "I wasn't gonna leave without an answer I'll tell you that right now. De-Nial ain't just a river in Egypt,"
"So what did you say next?" the young lady said. Charlie was just thinking the same thing.
George, the man in the hat took sip of the night-mans elixir. He liked it and took another. "That's good coffee, Mac," He raised it briefly to the kid.
"Um, thank ya lot," Charlie nodded and pretended to clean something waiting for the conversation to pick up again. It did not. They finished what they had, paid their check and left without even a goodbye. It was the last time Charlie ever say her again. And that's usually how it goes.
Hanes brought his finished sticky plate to the counter. "Thanks, kid. See you around,"
"Stay dry out there, Mr. Hanes," Charlie said.
"Sure. You do the same,"
Not gonna lie, I came here expecting to be disappointed, but I actually DO feel like inside of a Hopper painting with this music. AMAZED!
That feeling when you find the perfect playlist to match the mood of the story you're writing and you marvel at how many other minds out there needed it too.
It's amazing how his paintings give off the feeling of emptiness and loneliness while still containing enough detail to be considered realism and also, still, including people. This phenomenon has always interested me and recently has also interested the internet. Specifically with the concept of liminal spaces. This is a concept I find that I can easily get lost in on my own and not need anyone else to share the same interest but since the concept is, in itself, so lonely I feel that not having anyone to explain this feeling to, makes the art almost pointless as if it is a beauty that I have to keep to myself.
I remember when I first discovered Edward Hopper maybe last year, it was Nighthawks as the cover for a relaxing study video that played oldies over the rain. It came up on youtube suggested and my girlfriend said that she studied the painting at school however I misheard her and thought she said she studied to the video. When I put it on she mentioned that the cars (which the creator had added in as an animation) weren't there previously, I clicked that she meant she had the painting as an artwork to study for her class. I then sat watching the video and listened to the music and then eventually went on to just looking at some of his works online I was amazed by them even though its pretty simple paintings compared to some others. The feeling it made me feel at the time was like no other. I had previously been pretty deep into the rabbit hole of so-called liminal spaces and the concept of the backrooms where it all came from however this was the most intense feeling of this that I had ever felt from simply looking at these works of art.
I watch a UA-camr called the librarian who makes videos where he explores community-created maps for the game gmod which are based on the concept of liminal spaces. I think the feeling that you get from liminal spaces which you also get from Hopper's paintings is a very odd one to describe. I personally feel as if its complete dread that we can be living in such a plain dull world but that feeling that even though the world is so bland it fills me with bliss because of all the amazing things that happen despite that dullness. The Librarian has a good way of being able to put it into words as I'm sure he has good practice for it as he has to do it for his videos. He came up with a concept that I think is the best way to broadly describe the feeling. The Creepy Comfy concept he came up with is that Creepy and Comfy are very much related. I think this a very good theory for this feeling and my explanation for this is that creepy images and concepts are usually normal things with something slightly ascue to the norm like a person with a strange face. It's similar in the way your house is comfy when it's your own furnishings and decor however if it's derelict and empty it would be creepy.
Whenever I get this feeling for whatever reason; a rainy lazy day, an empty street that would normally be busy, or a calming song plays while I'm alone in the house and I look over the city I can just about see the skyline of from my parent's bedroom window, I feel that it often comes with a feeling of existentialism too. A feeling that if Edward Hopper's paintings can convey exactly the way he viewed the world and felt about things in a specific way and it doesn't matter that he has since passed away and Images of his painting still convey that feeling to me that it doesn't really matter what mark we leave on earth because even if it's not you who specifically created the painting or artwork or even the city skyline that gives people the same feeling it gave you, that feeling will still live on in others even if you didn't contribute to it. If I had to summarise it I would say these feelings I get prove that no matter what mark I leave the next generations will feel the same way I do so a part of me carries on through that.
I find the afterlife to be a hard concept to believe it however I hope that if Edward Hopper can see this that he knows that his artwork has been able to do exactly what he intended for it to do and I hope that he finds some comfort in that. I also hope that anyone else reading this who also gets the same feeling I have talked about can be happy to know that although you might feel lonely and that might be exactly what you wanted to be feeling anyway that other people do share that same feeling and its one of the best to have.
That was well described. Thank you
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Incredibly written, i myself have been complete obsessed and fascinated with the whole liminal vibe that got really popular I think maybe as a result of the pandemic. It’s absolutely fascinating
The first painting of Hopper that I saw was the night restaurant painting from the cowardly pink dog cartoon, my child self got so hooked up on it, I like the painting so much, it brought me extreme nostalgia and peace of a life I didn’t know, I feel like I could just sit there and watch the customers and chef there all night.
I was so happy when I saw the og one and the author name, I downloaded all of his works, I love them all so much but the restaurant, the gas station and the door to the sea one are my favorite
Hopper’s painting elicit the same feeling of tuning out of the world on your bed at 3am, crushed by the limitless weight of melancholy and insignificance, listening to nothing but the sounds of the city and faint 50s music coming from a broken phone speaker, with light only emitting yellowish light from a flickering hand-me-down lamp
His use of light and shadows is incredible
A beautiful and peaceful mood invades one's questing soul....
The first painting looks like The Batman scene when the riddler surrenders inside the cafe.
“I went out the kitchen to make coffee - yards of coffee. Rich, strong, bitter, boiling hot, ruthless, depraved. The life blood of tired men.” Raymond Chandler, The Long Goodbye
I am honestly in love with this playlist. it suits my melancholic soul so well
That bit at 5:40 is so beautiful
A real feeling of being inside the painting, but literally - trying to communicate with this world from within
For some reason, the first piece of music immediately makes me think of the vintage computer game 'Grim Fandango' one of my all time favourites.
Yeah, inside a Hopper painting but why do I have the feeling while I am listening any moment Jack Nichelson can enter waving an axe!?
Here's Hopper!
Nicholson
yup i also get looney tunes vibes as well lmao
yesterday i saw this painting in person. it is my absolute favorite painting in the entire world. i got so emotional being able to see it in person, in real life. i stood there for nearly half an hour. it means so much to me
Sometimes I look at the people in these masterful works and I wonder what they are thinking. Where have they been, what have they done and who they have lost that has brought them to this particular point in their lives. Sometimes I look in the mirror and ask those questions to myself also. Hopper’s works make me feel some type of way that I never feel when I look at other art. Not that I don’t appreciate others, there’s just something about these. A dreamlike quality, but at the same time, a quiet sense of discontent.
Edward Hopper's works have always encapsulated Hemingway's short stories for me.
listening to this while reading la nausée by jean-paul sartre really gives it a whole other meaning. i love hopper and this feeling that in his paintings, "the earth is walkable" and we are but dust covering its steps. truly mesmerising.
The first song already got me feeling sentimental and dreamy. I love this playlist, thank you!!!
I was not searching for this, but this is exactly what I was looking for
I feel that, what were you searching for? So this is super random, but do you want to be on my podcast? It is supposed to be all about interviewing strangers. Its called "Tyler Talks to Strangers" I record over zoom. Let me know! Cheers
This brings me back nostalgic memories of the years I haven't even lived. The person who is reading this comment, I wish you great success, health, love and happiness!
I've seen Nighthawks in person, and it's stunning to see how he captured so much with so little. I love the way he captured intense urban liminal environments, and mixed it with these fresh paintings from the coast.
Lovely choice of music! The muffled and distant lo-fi sound totally suits the atmosphere of the images. Good work. New subscriber here!
The vibes are indescribable. I love this. It gives nothing but sweet melancholy.
Fun fact: my brother got this painting for my stepdad and it’s hanged up in the dining room but at the same time I can understand this painting it’s a masterpiece but with like a sad background idk probably my imagination, sometimes I think I’m the guy sitting by himself.
Thats an interesting title for a video. As I listened to the music and looked at the paintings, I found myself reminiscing about the movie "Summer of '42" without realizing that that is the year that Dennis Hopper created the first painting.
The young lady staring out of the window, holding the envelope, coupled with the haunting music, sent chills down my spine.
Me encanta como la música y las pinturas se complementan de una manera hermosa y cuentan una historia sin necesidad de palabras.
Some of these paintings are unsettling, Hopper was literally painting liminal spaces
This clip should be posted in every reputed modern art museum in the world. Amazing audio accompaniment to classic Hopper pictures.
I didnt know that I needed this until i heard it. Holy shit, the opening song. It sucked me in by the very first note. Thank you for spending time creating this masterpiece. Really made my day!!
This really makes me feel like I'm realizing I forgot to paint the exit
This feels like everywhere at the end of time but less scary and traumatic. Instead it's just sad and lonely
Edward Hopper's "Nighthawks" a truly magnificant work of understated elegance and somber reflection. It has become one of the most caricatured scenes because it captures the essence of being alone even with a small group. The couple with nothing to say to each other, possible on the verge of a break up. The solo patron. A traveling salesman perhaps? Did he make some good sales or was it another wasted day pounding the pavement? A husband tossed out by a mad spouse? A guy who just lost his job and now pondering his future and how to make ends meet? The silence is deafening. The server who has heard every sad story and world weary, but at least he has a job, no matter how poorly it paid. He will serve endless cups of bad acidic coffee thats been burning in the warmer and cold slices of yesterday's pies to patrons who either dont have two nickles to rub together or have two nickels but no heart to taste or care.
Just an amazing study in loneliness.
The "Theater Usher" standing there waiting for the movie to end while the audience watches. She has her own problems and worried. She is not entranced by the celluloid magic. Perhaps she is worrying about going to college. Maybe deciding whether to go to college. Perhaps she is wondering if her boyfriend is faithful or whether he will survive the war. She is lost in her own world of pensive wondering and prefera tome alone time. Perhaps wondering if her future is to work in this theater for the next 45 years.
The harsh lighting, the bright sun isn't warm. It makes all the wrinkles and emotional scars visible. The frozen position of suspended time, caught in mid freeze of anger, rage, defeat, or surrender to life's grinding pain, a slow miserable drip, drip, drip of disappointment and hurts loke a Chinese water torture until it wear a person to suicide.
Can anyone explain to me why I have such a vivid memory of being actually in this painting? Like I can see it in first person… like I was there? I’ve always felt this way lingering like “This is way to familiar” But in my memory it’s raining but like a sprinkle it’s not coming down hard. And I’m smoking a cigar and meeting with people. I wonder if it’s like a past life and I was in a gang and meeting with the boss at the diner. Idk. I always felt like this painting is something of a memory for me.
Absolutely the same feeling
it’s one of my favourite playlists on youtube ever, thank you
The echoes of this music with the added reverb sounds like a dream. When you look at the images, you see a life long gone. A moment in time which has faded away and all of those that were in it. We too will fade and so shall our troubles.