A visit with Darius Milhaud

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  • Опубліковано 1 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 92

  • @bc4315
    @bc4315 Рік тому +12

    Milhaud, a true microtonal pioneer. Thanks for posting!

  • @johnrandolph6121
    @johnrandolph6121 Рік тому +16

    Wow, he has nice vibrato on his piano.

    • @markokassenaar4387
      @markokassenaar4387 Рік тому

      This way, I can actually feel drunk without having to drink (and no hangover!) 😉

  • @stuartkaufman4387
    @stuartkaufman4387 3 роки тому +8

    What a gem of a documentary! The astonishing range of Milhaud's compositions still engage us nearly fifty years since his death. We only wish that his music was performed more often on American stages.

  • @gardengit
    @gardengit 4 місяці тому +2

    Unbelievable documentation from another world… a normal world.

  • @lika332
    @lika332 7 місяців тому +1

    This is an incredible find.

  • @dexblue
    @dexblue Рік тому +2

    A priceless gift from the near past. Unpretentious, warm, full of the love of music for its own sake! Thank you for posting this mini-doc ...

  • @1lavrentiberia
    @1lavrentiberia 2 роки тому +4

    The man is amazing..his wife is reading poetry to him....he just continues composing...without being distracted...he even composes in the car! waiting for his wife to return from the shop....some concentration! chapeau!

  • @Mimi12350
    @Mimi12350 3 місяці тому +1

    Oh un interview de Darius MILHAUD 🤩🤩🤍🤍🤍

  • @Mezzotenor
    @Mezzotenor Рік тому +5

    Yeah, the pitch waivers during the music, but the spoken parts are incredibly interesting. Many thanks for posting this gem!

  • @rodterrell304
    @rodterrell304 Рік тому +3

    Great Video, I can't believe its been here for 4 Years and I'm just finding it today. I enjoy his music. I practiced his Rag Caprice for Piano long ago.

  • @licoricestic
    @licoricestic 4 роки тому +5

    wow even footage of les six. Thank you!

  • @murphman7448
    @murphman7448 4 роки тому +3

    A very interesting documentary about the composer's life. Thanks for taking the time to share this.

  • @DavidMiller-bp7et
    @DavidMiller-bp7et Рік тому +2

    Very enjoyable; a unique document indeed. Thank you for sharing it. Puts the lie to the idea that such musical geniuses are somehow outrageous, bohemian outliers. Love this.

  • @lokmanmerican6889
    @lokmanmerican6889 3 роки тому +4

    This is truly a jewel of a video.

  • @jerkerjohansson3642
    @jerkerjohansson3642 5 років тому +5

    Thanks for sharing this film! Absolutely fantastic!

  • @srothbardt
    @srothbardt Рік тому +2

    This is a great source of important material. Thank you for saving it!

  • @MrBones130
    @MrBones130 Рік тому +4

    after his 1917-1918 visit to Brazil, among the works he composed was Corcovado
    my take ...
    two minutes of soaring beauty

  • @khalilkafrouni
    @khalilkafrouni 5 років тому +3

    Such an amazing video! Thank you for sharing.

  • @maestroclassico5801
    @maestroclassico5801 2 роки тому +6

    In the scene around 27:00 he's talking to fellow composers from Les Six. Poulenc is very recognizable. Poulenc (in a mix of French and English) mentions working on a large work....he almost surely means the Opera " THE DIALOGUE OF THE CARMELITES" premiered on 1957..one of his most famous works! I believe the other 2 are Auric, and Honegger. Honegger would've died very soon after this in November 1955. Milhaud 's wife Madeline, already looking very middle aged here, lived until 2008 aged 106!!!

    • @catchoupiote
      @catchoupiote 2 роки тому +3

      it is indeed the Dialogue, Poulenc mentions it a few seconds after the passage you mention. I don't recognise Honegger in this reunion.There's Poulenc and Henri Sauguet.

    • @maestroclassico5801
      @maestroclassico5801 2 роки тому +1

      @@catchoupiote Thank You.. Sauget....though not in Les Six, I do enjoy his Music....truly most French composers from this period I enjoy. Even those who came a bit later like Jean Francaix. I can't explain why they were all so good at writing for Woodwinds.

  • @dr.frick4552
    @dr.frick4552 3 роки тому +2

    What a charming and kind individual. 🙌🏻😎

  • @leslieackerman4189
    @leslieackerman4189 3 роки тому +5

    Fascinating! At that time, many famous composers etc were still alive (Auric, Poulenc!) Pity for those of us who don't understand French.
    Yes, the music sounds distorted, but voices are fine. Wife Madeleine's devotion to her husband was incredible. Copyright shows 1955.

  • @patrickcollins9091
    @patrickcollins9091 Рік тому +1

    what a gem, better than can be imagined

  • @NothingFunnyAboutTheseCarpets
    @NothingFunnyAboutTheseCarpets 4 роки тому +2

    This is amazing!!!! Thank you so much

  • @udomatthiasdrums5322
    @udomatthiasdrums5322 3 роки тому +2

    still love it!!

  • @robertwalker2052
    @robertwalker2052 Рік тому +2

    He was a continuous presence at the music tent in Aspen Colorado where he lived from 1965 to his death in 1974, unfortunately in a wheelchair because of arthritis.

  • @ikmarchini
    @ikmarchini 3 роки тому +11

    I wonder if there is a computer program that could straighten out and make constant the pitchs as the various film speeds do not?

    • @mrswag535
      @mrswag535 3 роки тому

      idk of any specifically but yes, that can be done

    • @classicaljewels-m.l.cleyne5575
      @classicaljewels-m.l.cleyne5575  Рік тому

      I have a video editor, but since it’s a long video, it takes a lot of conversion capacity from a PC. And to avoid my PC to crash, I posted it like this some years ago. I know a pity the music howls, but the voices are ok.

    • @psijicassassin7166
      @psijicassassin7166 Рік тому +1

      Milhaud should just record his music and play every ten seconds at different speeds so he would be light years ahead of the garbage made by Babbitt and Feldman.

    • @orlandoscalia1164
      @orlandoscalia1164 Рік тому +2

      I like the piano wobble on every note haha

    • @finosuilleabhain7781
      @finosuilleabhain7781 Рік тому

      @@psijicassassin7166 Feldman was a fantastic composer.

  • @KKIcons
    @KKIcons Рік тому

    I love this narrator. Reminds me of the CBC Glenn Gould: On the Record, Off the Record, and In the USSR documentaries.

  • @Toscarpia
    @Toscarpia Рік тому +4

    Is there a way to have the same with the right pitch ? Who can enjoy such distorted music ? Thanks !

    • @classicaljewels-m.l.cleyne5575
      @classicaljewels-m.l.cleyne5575  7 місяців тому +1

      I takes a lot of work to adjust such a video. I don't have the proper tools for it. The beginning is the worst, but as a documentary I wanted to share it like it is.

  • @KKIcons
    @KKIcons Рік тому +1

    A dream brought me here. I am watching this while wondering if this was the composer who walked into a personally significant dream several years ago where I heard his music. Maybe I can find the music now.

  • @thetoynbeeconvector
    @thetoynbeeconvector 5 років тому

    Thank you.

  • @Twentythousandlps
    @Twentythousandlps 3 роки тому +2

    Date is 1955 according to the credits at the end.

  • @KKIcons
    @KKIcons Рік тому

    I wish I could hear the original score. It sounds like it would have been very dynamic. As it stands there are some microtonal and low fi gems.

  • @thepianocornertpc
    @thepianocornertpc 5 місяців тому

    Fantastic film. Pure nostalgia. People were so courteous in those days. Compared to the present day's " wassup my man..."..

  • @sitarnut
    @sitarnut Рік тому +1

    The intro has some familiar Satie like chords.....

  • @finosuilleabhain7781
    @finosuilleabhain7781 Рік тому +1

    As well as Brubeck his pupils included Burt Bacharach and Stockhausen.

    • @robertwalker2052
      @robertwalker2052 Рік тому

      Bacharach and Stockhausen. Never before mentioned in the same sentence. Also, another colleague: Charles Jones, the Canadian -American composer who also taught in Aspen, Colorado.

    • @finosuilleabhain7781
      @finosuilleabhain7781 Рік тому

      @@robertwalker2052 Also Glass, Reich and Xenakis. Quite remarkable, really.

  • @johnatwell2753
    @johnatwell2753 3 роки тому +4

    Wow, Darius was doin' "X" in Provence? I'm gonna use the funky trailer from this movie to create some really weird music some day.

    • @leslieackerman4189
      @leslieackerman4189 3 роки тому +3

      It’s Aix

    • @KKIcons
      @KKIcons Рік тому

      Looking forward to that. Maybe from that piano jazz improv part too. A commenter drew my attention to that part.

    • @KKIcons
      @KKIcons Рік тому

      @@leslieackerman4189 thanks, somehow I never knew how to pronounce that.

  • @jeffdawson2786
    @jeffdawson2786 8 місяців тому +1

    To me, he is just as important as Schoenberg and Stravinsky.

  • @catchoupiote
    @catchoupiote 2 роки тому +5

    Funny how is wife calls him "Milhaud" at 9:02

    • @1-JBL
      @1-JBL Рік тому

      I had a friend whose wife always referred to him by his last name. Who knows what that was all about. Maybe Milhaud's wife had the same idiosyncrasy.

  • @TheCWMHALL
    @TheCWMHALL 5 років тому +2

    Eric Satie's mother was English .

  • @shawnzeppimiller
    @shawnzeppimiller Рік тому

    Magnifique, even though the dialogue was heavily scripted. Hard to imagine Oakland and Santa Barbara used to look like that before they were despoiled. But more to the point, why does Brubeck's trumpet player think he can empty his spit valve on the Milhaud's floor @14:00?

  • @jbthepianist
    @jbthepianist Рік тому

    I was completely ignorant about the pronunciation of “Milhaud” until this video.

    • @ondinehd6889
      @ondinehd6889 Рік тому

      Most French musicians actually don't pronounce it "Millaud" or Miyaud" though, most pronounce it "me-lo."

    • @jbthepianist
      @jbthepianist Рік тому

      That was my point. I had no idea.

  • @jgesselberty
    @jgesselberty Рік тому +4

    Such a shame that the sound is so variable in pitch.

  • @MeAndMichaelOeuo
    @MeAndMichaelOeuo 4 роки тому +3

    2:43

  • @LucasFigueiredoBR
    @LucasFigueiredoBR 7 місяців тому

    1:07 does anyone know what piece that is?

  • @amiro47
    @amiro47 4 роки тому

    Which piece is heard at the very beginning, before we hear the master at the piano?

    • @derrickcrane4290
      @derrickcrane4290 4 роки тому +1

      someone please answer this question

    • @classicaljewels-m.l.cleyne5575
      @classicaljewels-m.l.cleyne5575  4 роки тому +1

      @@derrickcrane4290 Perhaps it's the violin and cellosonata written expressly for this film (as I read on the film).

  • @johnlindstrom9994
    @johnlindstrom9994 3 роки тому +1

    Where's Ron Crotty? Joe Dodge?

    • @classicaljewels-m.l.cleyne5575
      @classicaljewels-m.l.cleyne5575  3 роки тому

      Perhaps only with Brubeck in formal sessions. This was informal :-p

    • @johnlindstrom9994
      @johnlindstrom9994 3 роки тому

      @@classicaljewels-m.l.cleyne5575 Desmond was also connected to the group, but never a student of Milhaud, I think.

  • @barney6888
    @barney6888 Рік тому +1

    If my Austrian wife caught me composing while she ran around on errands she'd beat the you know what out of me and leave me to die in the forest.

  • @Twentythousandlps
    @Twentythousandlps 2 місяці тому

    I must say I find this film somewhat unfortunate. To make it interesting to the great American public, they brought in Dave Brubeck rather than focus on a major 20th century composer, with forty-plus years of music to talk about. The middle brow thing of having culture but only in a diluted form. But thank you for the upload.

  • @steveschwartz8944
    @steveschwartz8944 Рік тому

    The musical soundtrack is painful. Wow so huge it reminds me of a corduroy road.

  • @LearnCompositionOnline
    @LearnCompositionOnline Рік тому +1

    where can you find such man as narrrators today?

  • @hdesertrat
    @hdesertrat Рік тому +1

    10:38 did he send her in to Food Town for a six-pack?

    • @gerstube1
      @gerstube1 Рік тому +2

      In French they call it 'les six royale'

    • @hdesertrat
      @hdesertrat Рік тому

      @@gerstube1 I like that - and it is a happy coincidence as well.

  • @川口健太郎-m5e
    @川口健太郎-m5e 5 місяців тому

    ひどい調律
    当時の演奏家はこれほどひどい調律で演奏していたのかな
    当時の録音をリマスタリングすると、こうなるのか❓
    古楽よりも低い調律で、さらに狂っているのか

  • @thefrankonion
    @thefrankonion 5 місяців тому +2

    The sound is completely awful. This shouldn't be shown.

    • @thepianocornertpc
      @thepianocornertpc 5 місяців тому +1

      It's perfect. We love the retro-vintage sound.

    • @k4kafka
      @k4kafka Місяць тому

      I disagree