Mozart - Lacrimosa [5000% Slower] ua-cam.com/video/ehMwgkLN39s/v-deo.html Mozart - Kyrie eleison, Mass in C Minor [500% Slower] - ua-cam.com/video/PuQDWf8JA04/v-deo.html Slowed Down Movie Soundtracks: ua-cam.com/play/PLWadCaz8nV_HZkfTNBkC0S3GRsPIZ1COa.html Skyrim Soundtrack: ua-cam.com/play/PLWadCaz8nV_GThzVkdc5726KxDNbN-yKD.html
@@MiloMcCarthyMusic that’s literally the point. It’s a high quality stretch whereas most time stretches are complete shit without good software. Yeah, it just so happens that if you distort variables of any given thing, the whole gets distorted from original
@@MiloMcCarthyMusic Is this just a rigid grammatical stance on the word distorted? Your point isn’t all that clear to me. The sound quality is minimally distorted in tone. The duration is augmented by 500%, or, “distorted” according to you. That fact is in the title. OP specified sound quality, not adherence to original timescale
This feels like something apocalyptic. It’s like you’re experiencing something so tragic and all encompassing. You can’t look away, run away. You can only watch the slow destruction of it all. It’s beautiful.
my grandfather always told me that the greatest composers wrote music that could sound equally as beautiful when played slowly or quickly. mozart is truly one of the greats.
Mozart only composed about the first 8 bars of the lacrimosa, and then he passed, the requiem was completed later, this is awfully slow and not mozart, but i love lacrimosa, amazing work indeed.
This feels like pure agony to me. Every chord, every note change, every voice feels so deliberate. That last chord, the light at the end of the tunnel.
I’d listened to Requiem for weeks non stop when had suicidal thoughts and it helped to survive that unbearable pain. Thank you sir Mozart, you made me feel when I couldn’t feel anything at all
@@TheAurelianProject Honestly I tend to agree. There’s a lot that sucks but there’s also a lot that’s great about it! I myself have been in numerous situations where I feel completely hopeless, whether it be my job, family, friends or general mental well-being. What I have learned is that if you are feeling that way, you need to make a major change in your life. That could be something like a new job, new hobby, a holiday, new friends or even moving to a new country! When your situation changes so does your outlook. I know it may seem completely hopeless and I obviously don’t know the situation you are in, but it makes me sad to hear you feel that way and I truly believe there is something that can be done for everyone. You certainly aren’t alone and if you really try, it can get a whole lot better!
To those who question the idea of slowing down this piece. It changes the experience, the mood and allows you to reflect on the effect music has on us. Also as many have underlined, it suggests a more modern composer, or a film theme... I agree but why? What has changed in our appreciation and understanding of music through time ? I find this interesting. I love listening to Mozart and am also thankful that someone had the idea to push the tempo to this extreme, truly an interesting and emotional experience. And also.... I can always listen to Mozart at the intended tempo anytime. Cheers to all curious enough to be here.
I did this with Tool's 'Sober' when I was a teenager and it's pretty damn spooky. Like a demented spirit has risen from the depths of hell to ask some hallucinatory questions
Sincerely fighting against my own mind, the resentment and depression. But this made me feel grateful to be alive. I'm thankful to be alive and enjoy the opus music paints in the tissue of space. We will overcome.
@@H.P.Blavatsky thank you for you advice, but a driven man can't fight resentment with only stoicism. Although there are some useful elements in there, mostly it's not something I can use for intensely stressful periods of time. I need something more global, more durable. I need my own path
@@chaskiandciewhat helped me is to use certain parts of different things and ways of living. For instance, stoicism and Buddhism. You don’t have to be fully committed to every aspect of being a Buddhist of stoic, but you can learn from it and use certain aspects of it. What also helped were different forms of meditating, working out, staying active and eating healthy food. While being with people you love is also important, being alone is also very good for personal growth and to deal with stuff.
What the last guy said. Nobody’s ever gotten hurt goin to Jesus. He straightened out my Spirit a few days ago fr. You don’t gotta look either, He’s within
It sounds like something horrible has/is or will happen, but somehow still feels meditative. Sometimes, when you slow down a work of art, only then do you connect to the spirit of the work.
This whole track sounds like everything finally unfolding itself, the truth coming out, the star exploding, earth dying, the Universe folding itself and you are there to witness it all. And all that in super slow motion, so you can actually see everything and with proper detail.
I dunno. It reminds me of cumulus clouds with the sun blazing through them in the vaults of the sky. But at first it did remind me of when I skimmed the edge of eternity.
At the same moment as this version of the piece is intimidating and has the ability to make you feel small, it's also quite calm and has a mood of "accepting your fate". I can quite easily fall asleep to it, it's a very relieving feeling.
This is like knowing something bad is going to happen, agonisingly slowly, but accepting that there is nothing you can do to stop it. Waiting patiently for the inevitable.
Thats a great way to describe, if a writer ever has to write such a scene then i Imagine listening to this in the background would really get you into such a state of mind
Im from Chile, and i went to europe a few months ago, i visited many countries and cities, and im a big fan of old architecture, so i went to every cathedral, church, everything that i could reach, and i can tell you, this video, expresses perfectly how it feels and sounds entering to any of those cathedrals, i went to the city of vatican, Rome, Prague and every single one, felt like this, i feel so lucky to even experience all of that and in such a short age (im 15) i visited around 7 countries and i even went to louvre, thats something ill never forget, specially Saint Nicholas Church (in prague, czech republic) and when i remember all of those places, this echoes in my head. Love this video!! (Srry if i made any mistakes, still working on my english!)
Fun fact Mozart died before resolving the chord 8 measures in at about 0:53 of this version. He left little notes here and there and his student finished the song
It's incredible, the original one makes me feel like my time is ending and the world is close to the end, but this version instead, makes me feel the eternity, like if I will last for 500 years or 500 centuries! I'm amazed. Congrats.
Yes! It does feel like that. You put it perfectly. I also get sense that I'm falling forever, like in a perpetual state of drifting or floating or sinking as if there is no end. 😅
*Vine por Jaime Altozano y es verdad, el Lacrimosa de Mozart ralentizado al 500% realmente suena al tema de Interstellar de Hans Zimmer. Ahora necesito una versión acelerada de Zimmer al 500% para ver si suena a Mozart.*
In our age some pretty fantastical music pieces have been designed entirely for our fictional worlds. Great composers that bring Lord of the Rings, Dune, etc. to life and give them astonishing identity through music. But then I hear pieces like this and I remember: this music is for OUR world, for us, for our waking reality- it enlivens our senses towards the real gravity of our nature and the nature of the cosmos.
I'm not objecting to the genius of Mozart's work, but I disagree with this dichotomy. Magnificent scores can be applied to our real universe and be equally descriptive and profound in their essences.
I performed the Requiem with our local choral society about a month ago. With it so fresh in my mind, hearing the Lacrimosa like this gives me that uncanny valley vibe of something familiar yet off in a way that you can't put your finger on. Chills me to the bone. Kudos for the cool idea. 👏
This evokes such strong emotions in me. It sounds as though a myriad of angels are slowly descending from the heavens, yet the skies are darkening whilst colossal clouds as black as ink loom over the earth.
I clicked on this thinking it would sound ridiculous, and it’s profound. Like the camera is slowly panning over the aftermath of something horrific, and it won’t cut away until you notice every detail.
i used this as background noise while learning. It felt invigorating. I felt the hubris of man slipping out my fingertips and wrapping around my hands like a prayer. A dimly lit room, and a desperate student listening to the lulling sounds of eternity at an ungodly hour. It felt as if a veil had separated me from both space and time in this moment. A moment of clarity escaping from the other unfathomable side. I did listen to it for 3h straight, so it might also be that.
Most of the Lacrimosa is NOT by Mozart who only wrote the opening bars (the first 4 minutes of this video). The rest was written by Sussmayr, a musician of no reputation, who is not famous for any music other than his completion of Mozart's Requiem. We know that Mozart's version would have been different because additional sketch material has since turned up which bears no relation to Sussmayr's working (a fugue on the word "Amen" which is incompatible with what Sussmayr wrote).
@@drewyt3109 In the imagination or alternate universe of the playwright Peter Shaffer in his fictional drama "Amadeus", we see more than a bit of artistic licence with Salieri "helping" Mozart complete the "Confutatis maledictis" movement of the Requiem with Mozart dictating the orchestral parts. Shaffer does have Salieri contributing to the Lacrimosa. In fact, Mozart left sketches of the Confutatis fully written out but only in short score. The instrumentation we hear in the film which the Salieri character marvels at as being so "remarkable" and astounding is not by Mozart: this is the well known orchestration by Franz Sussmayr written after Mozart's death. Josef Eybler's version, written before Sussmayr's involvement but again after the demise of Mozart is different and has been judged to be superior.
Feels like a different *REQUIEM MASS* now. Like it tells a different story, as if I did something that I cannot fix, and now I'm haunted by what I have broken.
@@hindenburg1596 Forgive me if this is pedantry, but, it is not a 'song' is a choral work with soloists. Just the same for example with Gregorian chant.... this too is not a song, but liturgical chanting, albeit by means of voice.
@@antoineduchamp4931 You literally just stated the exact definition of the word "song", a choral work is per definition a song. You can call a piece an instrumental work, played with one or multiple instruments, it still is a piece
How does this sound so beautiful, darl, haunting, and comforting at the same time?!?!?! I would have never thought about the idea of slowing classical music down like this but I love it!!!!!!
Lacrimosa is decribing the day of Judgement where we are all judged and finally sent to our place either heaven or hell for eternity. This video really gives you chills if you think of what Lacrimosa is about. I love Lacrimosa and this video just made it a bit better.
It's cool to be able to hear each harmonic change down to each note, even one still resonating as the next one is played. Furthermore it seems like a nice tool as a choral singer to listen to how precise your consonants are, especially the "s!"
This actually brought me to tears... I have no words to describe how beautiful this is. So so powerful and moving. Thank you for this. Also to anyone reading this, I highly recommend listening with headphones blaring, sit back, and close your eyes. Breathtaking.
My roommate’s cat passed away tonight. It was her mother’s cat before her mother passed. She has been all over America, and finally landed at my home in Yosemite, Ca. She had a good 5 years here. This is why the past month she has been in and out of the ER an hour away, so we got motel rooms next to the ER vet so we had constant access to her. Tonight, after constant visits and all the care we gave her, she did not make it. This song completely expresses every no full breath, every heart punch, and every moment of trying to function as a human after a loss you couldn’t control. R.I.P. sweet Willow💖
Very inspiring, hearing the chords become louder and louder brings so much anticipation and rich feelings , what can i say.. what a dreadful yet satisfying roller coaster. Good work.
This feels like the wind. Soft and shapeless, a building cacophony, a driving moment, beautiful and destructive, a silent breath, all to begin again, always building, always resolving, but never to come to rest. This is beautiful.
Something quite ethereal is unlocked listening to the Lacrimosa this way. Something buried deeply in the music comes alive. That which is deeply buried in the music, beyond the values of the notes, the progressions, the melodic shapes. The voice in Mozart.
honeslty incredible. mozart was already one of my favorite composers due to the complexity his music has, but slowing it down really just highlights how incredible he was. aside from how outstanding it is theory wise, slowing the tempo down changes the feeling drastically. Going from the day of judgement where your fate it ultimately decided to the universe collapsing. to knowing that everything you did was for nothing, that you ultimate fate is sealed with no way to alter it. as someone who feels like their life is currently imploding, it perfectly encapsulated how I feel. despite all the tragedy the sound of the choir in this version sounds somber, but with a tinge of hope. a reminder that even though right now your universe may be collapsing dear stranger, one day it will be okay.
I love this , this is a masterpiece . But why do i feel like this is something you’re suposed to hear when it’s the end ? Like im not supposed to be here , right now listening to this . Im way too early i think . This should be listened way later . I feel frightened , but i can’t stop , or rather I don’t want to , its too beautiful .
Like ur body is leaving ur body & is ascending 2 the gates of heaven, slowly. Knowing that its been widely speculated that Mozart was writing this piece 4 his own death, it kinda makes sense.
You know, this is just what I needed in the background for a scene I'm writing for my sci-fi novel. There is something very alien and futuristic about this song. Like past meeting future.
It sounds a lot like some of the tracks that Hans Zimmer composed for Dune - Dune Sketchbook and especially Art and Soul of Dune. Highly recommend I use them for studying a lot, some are very high tempo intense, some ethereal, but a lot of tracks are very unique from the movie
i haven't heard much of dune's soundtracks but based on your descriptions, i'd also recommend his work for dark phoenix. the movie itself was decent, but the soundtrack is absolutely hair-raising imo, a meshing of ambient classic sounds with heavily distorted effects. the man's a wizard with capturing atmosphere. my favourites off that soundtrack is probably intimate and coda, intimate especially has a section probably around the two minute mark that makes me want to scream into my hands lmao @jeanne5135 @GuineaPigEveryday
I’ve always found this piece beautifully sad (obviously haha) but this is hauntingly desolate. I never thought about slowing classical music down like this, thank you!! Makes me think of exploring a dead universe
I've only recently discovered these tracks, to me, this genre of music speed is the musical equivalent of looking through a microscope, every single note laid bare. Absolutely stunning!!!!
Yes! I've been doing this with classical pieces for a long time and now I find your channel! There's a world inside these pieces that can only be revealed by slowing down that much.
Listen at 0,25x, and you're now listening to Lacrimosa (2000% slower). BEWARE: You will be exposed to the universe biggest secrets, secrets you might not be ready to hear.
It's crazy how haunting classical music can sound when you bask in each and every chord slowly. The voice leading isn't telegraphed at all, so each tense chord is its own battleground, and you never really know what's happening next. This would be epic for a video game shadow realm-y type scene, where the entire world is slowly bleeding into smoke.
Was looking for a piece of music, actually quite frantically to be played during my vampire counts playthrough in total war warhammer 3. You, Sir provided it. Haunting and perfect.
"And I watched, my soul turning to nothing but bitter dust, as that thing encompassed what i had once loved. Rage, sorrow, hatred, fury, and destitution did not describe me. The laughter of that thing, it ripped at what remained of myself, and struck deep into my heart. It clanged and it roared, drowning out the screams of those i once loved. I could not save them. I could not hold them or touch them. I could not keep my promise and THAT was what brought me low. As i watched my world, my home, be burned to ash like all those before it, i knew my weakness. The chains tightened around my hands and around my feet. They had put me through hell, and now i was free. Freedom, though, is not always beneficial. FOOL was I to think that letting my souls desire be to live forever was to be a wise choice. FOOL was I to neglect to think of the eternity i would now spend in the void of space, devoid of life and devoid of all. But foolishness was in the past. As those things disappeared in a luminescent burst, the last remaining scraps of my home vanished into the distance, Along with the remainder of my spirit." -me just now idk lol
It's amazing that you can hear in this how music is fractal-shaped: the melody one recognises from hearing the normal version can also be heard within the expanded shorter intervals of the voices and instruments interacting on each note.
Imagine trespassing into an old, abandoned and rumored haunted building/apartment complex, and while exploring and making your way through all the rooms, the absolute silence that guaranteed your peaceful solemness is broken by this music...
I have to put my dog down tomorrow, for 17 years he's been part of my family, I grew up with him by my side. I'd come home from a bad day and he'd be there waiting for me, big goofy grin on his face. For some reason I find peace in this music, knowing his pain will be over but also his life. The last day I'll spend with my best friend. I love you Bear, you were a good boy.
I, too, had a dog named bear that grew up alongside me. I had to take her to get put down once both of my grandparents had passed, she was about 15, deaf, and blind in one eye. The biggest regret of my life is being too chicken to stay there with her in her last moments. I now have a big cane corso who's attached to me even more than bear was. I'm not going to make the same mistake again. Rest in peace, bears.
You really appreciate dissonances in this tempo and thus appreciating this work even more, plus this photograph... It really is like staring into forever and eternal darkness.
I know by heart the "Lacrimosa"...And yet I rediscover it as if it were "an echo of the stars"...Sublime tribute... Je connais par coeur le " Lacrimosa "...Et pourtant je le redécouvre comme si c'était " un écho des astres "..Sublime hommage..." Bonjour " From France... Michel-Henri....
im going to be 100% honest with strangers, alias you guys: this touched me so deeply i cant even comprehend. first i teared up how beautiful it was, then its strenght filled me with energy at the middle and when i reached the end i was thinking about so many things going in my life, even giving up and restarting(suicide) came to my mind as a good idea which lasted for 30-40 seconds. and by the time I write this down, i realised how stupid it is even to send this out. this was a rollercoaster holy f
I’m glad you’re so honest about it because to be fair at some stages of our lives pretty much any piece of art, however cheesy or iconic or ‘simple’ can really dig deep and cause an intense reaction. I’m glad that as humans unpredictable and sometimes almost ethereal and otherworldly feelings can come over us. I can only imagine thats what religious people channel a lot. As someone who isn’t, I love that art can really just take you out of this world, whether visual or auditory or otherwise.
Glad to hear there are extremely emotional people in the world just like you, gifted with a special heart and sensibility. Just keep in mind that life holds hope, and that it is always worth it, always. The world needs you. Beautiful comment btw
I listend to this when I was really high. The number one reason, why I would smoke again 😂 absolute amazing video - felt like I listend INTO space itself.
Mozart - Lacrimosa [5000% Slower] ua-cam.com/video/ehMwgkLN39s/v-deo.html
Mozart - Kyrie eleison, Mass in C Minor [500% Slower] - ua-cam.com/video/PuQDWf8JA04/v-deo.html
Slowed Down Movie Soundtracks: ua-cam.com/play/PLWadCaz8nV_HZkfTNBkC0S3GRsPIZ1COa.html
Skyrim Soundtrack: ua-cam.com/play/PLWadCaz8nV_GThzVkdc5726KxDNbN-yKD.html
I NEED THIS IN 16D
Hello dude
@@johannsebastianbach316 You're Welcome
I wamt this completely in flac or wav formate))
please make a slow version of Dies Irae - Mozart
I am thankful to be born in an era where even as a nobody I am able to listen to the music of every era and place whenever I want.
Какие гениальные слова!
Youre not a nobody.
i understand your comment and let me tell you... SAME.
It has its down downside like anything else though.
except anything in the future
I'm amazed by how the sound quality did not get distorted.
It did
thank you milo mccarthy music for the clarification
Probably (something like) Paulstretch was used. Which is an intelligent timestretching software for audio files.
@@MiloMcCarthyMusic that’s literally the point. It’s a high quality stretch whereas most time stretches are complete shit without good software. Yeah, it just so happens that if you distort variables of any given thing, the whole gets distorted from original
@@MiloMcCarthyMusic Is this just a rigid grammatical stance on the word distorted? Your point isn’t all that clear to me.
The sound quality is minimally distorted in tone. The duration is augmented by 500%, or, “distorted” according to you. That fact is in the title. OP specified sound quality, not adherence to original timescale
It hits 500% deeper into your soul.
WSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSİKTİR GİT
Ayooo
@@madscientixx4417can not
@@madscientixx4417 wtf are you ayyoing about?? go to a therapist
@@madscientixx4417seriously?
This feels like something apocalyptic. It’s like you’re experiencing something so tragic and all encompassing. You can’t look away, run away. You can only watch the slow destruction of it all. It’s beautiful.
Yh, society.
Larga de ser carente doido vira gente e comenta igual homem
exactly correct@@emanuelmonteiro8553
The work's name, "lacrimosa" (tearful), fits that description.
its judgement day
my grandfather always told me that the greatest composers wrote music that could sound equally as beautiful when played slowly or quickly. mozart is truly one of the greats.
Damn, my grandfather just beat me
@@AstroRick152beat him back
"beat him back" - @@clementbr5216
Top quote of 2024
rip mozart he would've loved nightcore
Yeat sounds pretty good wit a lil reverb
It feels like you're lost in space or in slow mo in a tragic scene of a movie. This is so freaking cool
I'm picturing a car crash in slow motion while listening to this. If only because I was once in a nearly fatal one.
I listen to this while i am reading the Divina Commedia. This song give to me this vibes
Like interstellar
It's like Cliff Martinez soundtracks
picture yourself as a particle in the quantum realm
this is criminally underrated. absolute chills. Mozart's music is eternal.
Mozart never got to hear this version though
@@InappropriateShorts He hears it
At this speed, yes.
Mozart only composed about the first 8 bars of the lacrimosa, and then he passed, the requiem was completed later, this is awfully slow and not mozart, but i love lacrimosa, amazing work indeed.
@@HighWideandHandsome what
This is like clouds slowly moving into a towering formation
bruh
wtf bro
So ch10 of Ulysses by James Joyce?
Didn’t know you could hear that
The breathtaking Cumulus Congestus clouds, i hear what you're saying too.
This feels like pure agony to me. Every chord, every note change, every voice feels so deliberate. That last chord, the light at the end of the tunnel.
It sounds more scary than most horror movies nowadays
Every chord you take,every sec you shake,I'll be watching you
I’d listened to Requiem for weeks non stop when had suicidal thoughts and it helped to survive that unbearable pain. Thank you sir Mozart, you made me feel when I couldn’t feel anything at all
Never give up
@@Gunther_The_BraveI’m about to tbh
@@TheAurelianProject What’s making you feel that way?
@@Gunther_The_Brave Because the world sucks and I am losing my hope for it.
@@TheAurelianProject Honestly I tend to agree. There’s a lot that sucks but there’s also a lot that’s great about it! I myself have been in numerous situations where I feel completely hopeless, whether it be my job, family, friends or general mental well-being. What I have learned is that if you are feeling that way, you need to make a major change in your life. That could be something like a new job, new hobby, a holiday, new friends or even moving to a new country! When your situation changes so does your outlook. I know it may seem completely hopeless and I obviously don’t know the situation you are in, but it makes me sad to hear you feel that way and I truly believe there is something that can be done for everyone. You certainly aren’t alone and if you really try, it can get a whole lot better!
You can hear each and every vibration of the strings.
pretty sure the "vibrations" are just artifacts of the music being slowed down; not the actual vibrations of the strings
The harmonics are easier to be listened
No you can't. This reverberation is a digital artifact of Paulstretch, which is the algorithm used to produce this track.
@@Tulanir1 i bet you dont have friends
@@Tulanir1 Every frequency as longer it is sustained makes it easier for one's ear to hear the harmonics.
UA-cam suddenly found out i was sad now and proposed me the best Mozart piece slowed by 500% to cheer me up
Ohh ikr me too! XD :(
XD
Me rn
Yep same
They are on to you man
To those who question the idea of slowing down this piece. It changes the experience, the mood and allows you to reflect on the effect music has on us. Also as many have underlined, it suggests a more modern composer, or a film theme... I agree but why? What has changed in our appreciation and understanding of music through time ? I find this interesting. I love listening to Mozart and am also thankful that someone had the idea to push the tempo to this extreme, truly an interesting and emotional experience. And also.... I can always listen to Mozart at the intended tempo anytime. Cheers to all curious enough to be here.
Reading this in patrick bateman's voice currently
It's not that deep, but it's still good for ya ears.
I did this with Tool's 'Sober' when I was a teenager and it's pretty damn spooky. Like a demented spirit has risen from the depths of hell to ask some hallucinatory questions
@@jonblon-II Ah! That made me laugh. Thanks 👌☺️
@@jonblon-II unbelievably cringe
Damn bro… this feels like somebody slowed down Lacrimosa by 500%
500%, you say? That’s… more than 100%
I dropped my phone on my face because of this
Hol up
what a brilliant smart ass
my favorite❤
Wait.. REALLY? Holy mackerel! Thanks for pointing that out! True lifesaver!
Sincerely fighting against my own mind, the resentment and depression. But this made me feel grateful to be alive. I'm thankful to be alive and enjoy the opus music paints in the tissue of space. We will overcome.
I highly recommend reading about the stoic philosophy
@@H.P.Blavatsky thank you for you advice, but a driven man can't fight resentment with only stoicism. Although there are some useful elements in there, mostly it's not something I can use for intensely stressful periods of time. I need something more global, more durable. I need my own path
@@chaskiandciewhat helped me is to use certain parts of different things and ways of living. For instance, stoicism and Buddhism. You don’t have to be fully committed to every aspect of being a Buddhist of stoic, but you can learn from it and use certain aspects of it. What also helped were different forms of meditating, working out, staying active and eating healthy food.
While being with people you love is also important, being alone is also very good for personal growth and to deal with stuff.
I pray you find Christ Jesus. Godbless you friend
What the last guy said. Nobody’s ever gotten hurt goin to Jesus. He straightened out my Spirit a few days ago fr. You don’t gotta look either, He’s within
It sounds like something horrible has/is or will happen, but somehow still feels meditative. Sometimes, when you slow down a work of art, only then do you connect to the spirit of the work.
to me it sounds like nothing will happen anymore, but in a bad way, like you've come to the end of the road, all alone and you've got nowhere to go
What a time to be alive and listen to this! Thinking about the end of our civilization too much?
It's like confronting the ending of something and you realize you can’t do nothing about it
@@pitilessnightmare6879 absolutely! Resignation is the word that comes to my mind when I hear this. The acceptance of one's own fate.
@@JFM284 kinda gives me terminal lucidity from dementia vibes.
This sounds like a whole different piece but it's amazing⚠️
Piece*
song? study much?
Do forgive me, this is not a song: this is a requiem mass.
@@mrJohnDesiderio incorrectly correcting people, uh yes, one of the most frustrating sites to see.....
Yea a shittier version of someone having a sloth as a conductor
This whole track sounds like everything finally unfolding itself, the truth coming out, the star exploding, earth dying, the Universe folding itself and you are there to witness it all. And all that in super slow motion, so you can actually see everything and with proper detail.
“then on the shore
Of the wide world I stand alone, and think
Till Love and Fame to nothingness do sink”
Like made in heaven, from JoJos bizarre adventure.
@@cefinau love will never sink to nothingness
that’s how most of ligeti’s music sounds
I dunno. It reminds me of cumulus clouds with the sun blazing through them in the vaults of the sky. But at first it did remind me of when I skimmed the edge of eternity.
It's amazing how the tension between voice and instruments is magnified. Speaking of intervals etc...
this video cured my constipation. Thank you Mozart and CMSD
disgusting human body
😂😂😂
Real
Fake
@@lenzfab27 no it works
The way the strings go from being staggered with vocals to being inline with them 😩🤌🏻
All is one... slowed down... speeded up.... one.
@@waldwassermann this is the greatest comment ever wow how did i not notice
I want this to be used in a dramatic scene in a war movie so bad.. the atmosphere it creates is just too good
The original version of this music was used in "Come and see" 1985 war movie
@@VidaCultural17 But this slowed one gives off a more tragic and resonant feeling. It should be used in some war or interstellar-like movie.
Interstellar
I feel like it’d be amazing for a medieval fantasy with a tragic ending
It feels like... you're watching the earth beautifully disintegrate from space.
When you find heaven… empty…
This gave me chills
Well you're the first one there haha .
When everyone is trying to escape heaven.
Oooh I felt that reading this! I do not want to go there anymore, take me to hell. :(
bro thats an insanely cool concept
At the same moment as this version of the piece is intimidating and has the ability to make you feel small, it's also quite calm and has a mood of "accepting your fate". I can quite easily fall asleep to it, it's a very relieving feeling.
It gave me the "creepy/eery but oddly beautiful" feeling and still fell asleep to it
This is like knowing something bad is going to happen, agonisingly slowly, but accepting that there is nothing you can do to stop it. Waiting patiently for the inevitable.
Thats a great way to describe, if a writer ever has to write such a scene then i Imagine listening to this in the background would really get you into such a state of mind
Like an impending tornado in the night.
This is oddly beautiful and terrifying at the same time. Well done
Im from Chile, and i went to europe a few months ago, i visited many countries and cities, and im a big fan of old architecture, so i went to every cathedral, church, everything that i could reach, and i can tell you, this video, expresses perfectly how it feels and sounds entering to any of those cathedrals, i went to the city of vatican, Rome, Prague and every single one, felt like this, i feel so lucky to even experience all of that and in such a short age (im 15) i visited around 7 countries and i even went to louvre, thats something ill never forget, specially Saint Nicholas Church (in prague, czech republic) and when i remember all of those places, this echoes in my head. Love this video!! (Srry if i made any mistakes, still working on my english!)
Fun fact Mozart died before resolving the chord 8 measures in at about 0:53 of this version. He left little notes here and there and his student finished the song
What does it mean for you?
@@rahan7664reported
@@brynmurphy7858 ?
@@brynmurphy7858 what lol
I wonder if Mozart wanted it to be a happy fun song and the note said “make it heavenly” but unfortunately the student was a hardcore edgelord
It's incredible, the original one makes me feel like my time is ending and the world is close to the end, but this version instead, makes me feel the eternity, like if I will last for 500 years or 500 centuries! I'm amazed. Congrats.
Yes! It does feel like that. You put it perfectly. I also get sense that I'm falling forever, like in a perpetual state of drifting or floating or sinking as if there is no end. 😅
10:10 the most heavenly thing I have heard in a while
For real
totalmente...
Justo estaba pasando por esa parte. Sentí un escalofrío
Sounds like a sound that will play when the rapture happens.
@@salinaschristian4522 ahhh the Rapture 🙂✝️
This is a profound experience. The crescendo is soul destroying
*Vine por Jaime Altozano y es verdad, el Lacrimosa de Mozart ralentizado al 500% realmente suena al tema de Interstellar de Hans Zimmer. Ahora necesito una versión acelerada de Zimmer al 500% para ver si suena a Mozart.*
So have a chair (a good one) and wait...
@@anabain jajajajaja
when I clicked on it, I didn‘t expect it to be so great
In our age some pretty fantastical music pieces have been designed entirely for our fictional worlds. Great composers that bring Lord of the Rings, Dune, etc. to life and give them astonishing identity through music.
But then I hear pieces like this and I remember: this music is for OUR world, for us, for our waking reality- it enlivens our senses towards the real gravity of our nature and the nature of the cosmos.
Fictional "worlds" music composers try to emulate the Masters of Academic Traditional Music. All possible existent music is Our World Music.
Yes, that is so well said!
@@hexwolfi Hey thank you!:)
Well said
I'm not objecting to the genius of Mozart's work, but I disagree with this dichotomy. Magnificent scores can be applied to our real universe and be equally descriptive and profound in their essences.
This is a magnification into it’s beauty. You are experiencing the atomic level of this music.
I performed the Requiem with our local choral society about a month ago. With it so fresh in my mind, hearing the Lacrimosa like this gives me that uncanny valley vibe of something familiar yet off in a way that you can't put your finger on. Chills me to the bone.
Kudos for the cool idea. 👏
This evokes such strong emotions in me. It sounds as though a myriad of angels are slowly descending from the heavens, yet the skies are darkening whilst colossal clouds as black as ink loom over the earth.
shut up
3:47 that hit me at a personal level
The spirit of Mozart is coming inside me
ayo
ayoo what?
Lmao
pause
Woah, hope he used protection.
It's amazing how you can still percive the same song but it's completely different thing.
I clicked on this thinking it would sound ridiculous, and it’s profound. Like the camera is slowly panning over the aftermath of something horrific, and it won’t cut away until you notice every detail.
i used this as background noise while learning. It felt invigorating. I felt the hubris of man slipping out my fingertips and wrapping around my hands like a prayer. A dimly lit room, and a desperate student listening to the lulling sounds of eternity at an ungodly hour. It felt as if a veil had separated me from both space and time in this moment. A moment of clarity escaping from the other unfathomable side. I did listen to it for 3h straight, so it might also be that.
Most of the Lacrimosa is NOT by Mozart who only wrote the opening bars (the first 4 minutes of this video). The rest was written by Sussmayr, a musician of no reputation, who is not famous for any music other than his completion of Mozart's Requiem. We know that Mozart's version would have been different because additional sketch material has since turned up which bears no relation to Sussmayr's working (a fugue on the word "Amen" which is incompatible with what Sussmayr wrote).
By whomever, it's still beautiful. Hybrid!
Sus
Actually it was written by Salieri as he slowly killed Mozart to get his revenge on God.
@@drewyt3109 In the imagination or alternate universe of the playwright Peter Shaffer in his fictional drama "Amadeus", we see more than a bit of artistic licence with Salieri "helping" Mozart complete the "Confutatis maledictis" movement of the Requiem with Mozart dictating the orchestral parts. Shaffer does have Salieri contributing to the Lacrimosa.
In fact, Mozart left sketches of the Confutatis fully written out but only in short score. The instrumentation we hear in the film which the Salieri character marvels at as being so "remarkable" and astounding is not by Mozart: this is the well known orchestration by Franz Sussmayr written after Mozart's death. Josef Eybler's version, written before Sussmayr's involvement but again after the demise of Mozart is different and has been judged to be superior.
@@MrBulky992 It was a joke.
Feels like a different *REQUIEM MASS* now. Like it tells a different story, as if I did something that I cannot fix, and now I'm haunted by what I have broken.
Song? no it isn't, it is a requiem mass. This is not a modern piece.
@@antoineduchamp4931 You still can call it a song, because it is sung, a "song" doesn't have to be modern, or is every folk song modern
@@hindenburg1596 Forgive me if this is pedantry, but, it is not a 'song' is a choral work with soloists. Just the same for example with Gregorian chant.... this too is not a song, but liturgical chanting, albeit by means of voice.
@@antoineduchamp4931 bro stfu youre being pretentious for no reason other than to be an ass and correct an otherwise fine comment
@@antoineduchamp4931 You literally just stated the exact definition of the word "song", a choral work is per definition a song. You can call a piece an instrumental work, played with one or multiple instruments, it still is a piece
As a major listener of ambient music I love this, it basically coverts a classic piece into an ambient work.
How does this sound so beautiful, darl, haunting, and comforting at the same time?!?!?! I would have never thought about the idea of slowing classical music down like this but I love it!!!!!!
Lacrimosa is decribing the day of Judgement where we are all judged and finally sent to our place either heaven or hell for eternity. This video really gives you chills if you think of what Lacrimosa is about. I love Lacrimosa and this video just made it a bit better.
i feel like this is what you hear when the world is ending.
i am obsessed. ✨it's so hauntingly beautiful omg.
It's cool to be able to hear each harmonic change down to each note, even one still resonating as the next one is played. Furthermore it seems like a nice tool as a choral singer to listen to how precise your consonants are, especially the "s!"
This actually brought me to tears... I have no words to describe how beautiful this is. So so powerful and moving. Thank you for this. Also to anyone reading this, I highly recommend listening with headphones blaring, sit back, and close your eyes. Breathtaking.
I did not expect this to sound this good.
My roommate’s cat passed away tonight. It was her mother’s cat before her mother passed. She has been all over America, and finally landed at my home in Yosemite, Ca. She had a good 5 years here. This is why the past month she has been in and out of the ER an hour away, so we got motel rooms next to the ER vet so we had constant access to her. Tonight, after constant visits and all the care we gave her, she did not make it. This song completely expresses every no full breath, every heart punch, and every moment of trying to function as a human after a loss you couldn’t control. R.I.P. sweet Willow💖
Ngl at first it seemed like an absurd idea but i kept listening and actually its genius my guy youve really changed this piece
Harbiden öyle oldu
This is the Leonard Bernstein tempo hahah! Seriously though, this is amazing! Thank you for uploading this!!
oh my god YES HAHHAAH
Very inspiring, hearing the chords become louder and louder brings so much anticipation and rich feelings , what can i say.. what a dreadful yet satisfying roller coaster.
Good work.
It feels like an eternal moment.
This slow version helps show the theme that this piece aims to create, which is a theme of grief, weeping and almost sympathy. I love it.
This feels like the wind. Soft and shapeless, a building cacophony, a driving moment, beautiful and destructive, a silent breath, all to begin again, always building, always resolving, but never to come to rest. This is beautiful.
Feels like discovering a time capsule of this piece's early recording 10,000 years in to the future after an apocolypse
i love it when it sounds like its almost echoing in and out of reality
I'll be honest. I came in to troll everyone and call this a "song", but this is breathtaking. I can't. I'll go back to the Prokofiev Symphonies.
why dont you go back to where you came from!! :(
so that was you after all
good to meet you sir
@@gokalpyelken16 And you as well!
@@gokalpyelken16 Whazgoinon??
It makes you feel alive and at the same time like a lost and lonely soul.
Something quite ethereal is unlocked listening to the Lacrimosa this way. Something buried deeply in the music comes alive. That which is deeply buried in the music, beyond the values of the notes, the progressions, the melodic shapes. The voice in Mozart.
honeslty incredible. mozart was already one of my favorite composers due to the complexity his music has, but slowing it down really just highlights how incredible he was. aside from how outstanding it is theory wise, slowing the tempo down changes the feeling drastically. Going from the day of judgement where your fate it ultimately decided to the universe collapsing. to knowing that everything you did was for nothing, that you ultimate fate is sealed with no way to alter it. as someone who feels like their life is currently imploding, it perfectly encapsulated how I feel. despite all the tragedy the sound of the choir in this version sounds somber, but with a tinge of hope. a reminder that even though right now your universe may be collapsing dear stranger, one day it will be okay.
I love this , this is a masterpiece . But why do i feel like this is something you’re suposed to hear when it’s the end ? Like im not supposed to be here , right now listening to this . Im way too early i think . This should be listened way later . I feel frightened , but i can’t stop , or rather I don’t want to , its too beautiful .
Like ur body is leaving ur body & is ascending 2 the gates of heaven, slowly.
Knowing that its been widely speculated that Mozart was writing this piece 4 his own death, it kinda makes sense.
Wow I feel exactly the same way
It's all good 😂
You know, this is just what I needed in the background for a scene I'm writing for my sci-fi novel. There is something very alien and futuristic about this song. Like past meeting future.
It sounds a lot like some of the tracks that Hans Zimmer composed for Dune - Dune Sketchbook and especially Art and Soul of Dune. Highly recommend I use them for studying a lot, some are very high tempo intense, some ethereal, but a lot of tracks are very unique from the movie
@@GuineaPigEveryday oh yeah I'm a big Dune fan, the movie's soundtrack is one of my go-to's!
i haven't heard much of dune's soundtracks but based on your descriptions, i'd also recommend his work for dark phoenix. the movie itself was decent, but the soundtrack is absolutely hair-raising imo, a meshing of ambient classic sounds with heavily distorted effects. the man's a wizard with capturing atmosphere. my favourites off that soundtrack is probably intimate and coda, intimate especially has a section probably around the two minute mark that makes me want to scream into my hands lmao @jeanne5135 @GuineaPigEveryday
Sounds like the kind of a background music inside the Sith academy in Star Wars. Amazing
so accurate fk now i want a sith movie 😭 but knowing disney
😆😆
“your feeble skills are no match for the power of the dark side.”
#VaderFanGal 💄
I’ve always found this piece beautifully sad (obviously haha) but this is hauntingly desolate. I never thought about slowing classical music down like this, thank you!! Makes me think of exploring a dead universe
I've only recently discovered these tracks, to me, this genre of music speed is the musical equivalent of looking through a microscope, every single note laid bare. Absolutely stunning!!!!
This totally reminded me of Tchaikovsky's Hymn of the Cherubim. Amazing.
Yes that Hymn is so amazing
Me too
People have also slowed Hymn of the Cherubim down as well, it's pretty awesome
But it's like the perfect opposite. Like the Hymn of the Damned, the music at the gates of hell.
Yes! I've been doing this with classical pieces for a long time and now I find your channel! There's a world inside these pieces that can only be revealed by slowing down that much.
Listen at 0,25x, and you're now listening to Lacrimosa (2000% slower).
BEWARE: You will be exposed to the universe biggest secrets, secrets you might not be ready to hear.
0.25 = 2000%?? Are you sure
@@zorancalic65 0,25 = 1/4 -> four times slower. 500 * 4 = 2000 :)
@@michaelhardy34 what is 500?
4 times slower is 400%
@@zorancalic65 correct but the video is already 500% slower, so it's 4 times slower than 500% which is 2000%
The tension and releases this builds are insane. the anticipation and payoff really give me goosebumps
It's crazy how haunting classical music can sound when you bask in each and every chord slowly. The voice leading isn't telegraphed at all, so each tense chord is its own battleground, and you never really know what's happening next.
This would be epic for a video game shadow realm-y type scene, where the entire world is slowly bleeding into smoke.
Pure brilliance at any tempo. Thank you for sharing this.
The soundtrack that will accompany us at the end of everything, or at the beginning of something else.
Was looking for a piece of music, actually quite frantically to be played during my vampire counts playthrough in total war warhammer 3. You, Sir provided it.
Haunting and perfect.
"And I watched, my soul turning to nothing but bitter dust, as that thing encompassed what i had once loved.
Rage, sorrow, hatred, fury, and destitution did not describe me. The laughter of that thing, it ripped at what remained of myself, and struck deep into my heart. It clanged and it roared, drowning out the screams of those i once loved. I could not save them. I could not hold them or touch them. I could not keep my promise and THAT was what brought me low. As i watched my world, my home, be burned to ash like all those before it, i knew my weakness. The chains tightened around my hands and around my feet. They had put me through hell, and now i was free.
Freedom, though, is not always beneficial.
FOOL was I to think that letting my souls desire be to live forever was to be a wise choice.
FOOL was I to neglect to think of the eternity i would now spend in the void of space, devoid of life and devoid of all.
But foolishness was in the past. As those things disappeared in a luminescent burst, the last remaining scraps of my home vanished into the distance,
Along with the remainder of my spirit."
-me just now idk lol
so good
bro summoned his inner Victorian Writer Stance
Damn I thought you where quoting someone on the eastern front
@@jaydencrimsoneverett6731 aww thanks
@@brycerutledge4396 dang wow ❤️
It's amazing that you can hear in this how music is fractal-shaped: the melody one recognises from hearing the normal version can also be heard within the expanded shorter intervals of the voices and instruments interacting on each note.
humanity end game theme song
It's amazing - you slow down Mozart and he transforms into Arvo Part! I'll never stop being amazed at music's ability to transform before our eyes.
oooh good comparison
very precise comparison! kudos
the vocals are pärt but the strings are kinda giving ligeti, it’s a team up that would have been so cool
Imagine trespassing into an old, abandoned and rumored haunted building/apartment complex, and while exploring and making your way through all the rooms, the absolute silence that guaranteed your peaceful solemness is broken by this music...
I have to put my dog down tomorrow, for 17 years he's been part of my family, I grew up with him by my side. I'd come home from a bad day and he'd be there waiting for me, big goofy grin on his face. For some reason I find peace in this music, knowing his pain will be over but also his life. The last day I'll spend with my best friend. I love you Bear, you were a good boy.
I hope you are doing better, and I hope this piece of music continues to help and guide us. 💓
I understand. Be strong and remember the good.
I, too, had a dog named bear that grew up alongside me. I had to take her to get put down once both of my grandparents had passed, she was about 15, deaf, and blind in one eye. The biggest regret of my life is being too chicken to stay there with her in her last moments. I now have a big cane corso who's attached to me even more than bear was. I'm not going to make the same mistake again. Rest in peace, bears.
You really appreciate dissonances in this tempo and thus appreciating this work even more, plus this photograph... It really is like staring into forever and eternal darkness.
made me realize how tragically those notes intertwine… sounds like pure anguish
almost like a horror fantasy film soundtrack.
the power of slowing things down and relishing every measure. invaluable.
I'm totally using this in a D&D session.
I never thought I would enjoy a slowed down version so much, I loved it
This, is incredible.
I got goosebumps listening to this at max volume
every time I listen to this I just can't get over 5:15, it's so so beautiful
The aesthetics of this whole upload >>>>>>>>
who knew it would sound so magical
I know by heart the "Lacrimosa"...And yet I rediscover it as if it were "an echo of the stars"...Sublime tribute...
Je connais par coeur le " Lacrimosa "...Et pourtant je le redécouvre comme si c'était " un écho des astres "..Sublime hommage..." Bonjour " From France... Michel-Henri....
Эхо звёзд - очень красивый образ, заберу себе, спасибо!
im going to be 100% honest with strangers, alias you guys: this touched me so deeply i cant even comprehend. first i teared up how beautiful it was, then its strenght filled me with energy at the middle and when i reached the end i was thinking about so many things going in my life, even giving up and restarting(suicide) came to my mind as a good idea which lasted for 30-40 seconds.
and by the time I write this down, i realised how stupid it is even to send this out.
this was a rollercoaster holy f
I’m glad you’re so honest about it because to be fair at some stages of our lives pretty much any piece of art, however cheesy or iconic or ‘simple’ can really dig deep and cause an intense reaction. I’m glad that as humans unpredictable and sometimes almost ethereal and otherworldly feelings can come over us. I can only imagine thats what religious people channel a lot. As someone who isn’t, I love that art can really just take you out of this world, whether visual or auditory or otherwise.
Glad to hear there are extremely emotional people in the world just like you, gifted with a special heart and sensibility. Just keep in mind that life holds hope, and that it is always worth it, always. The world needs you. Beautiful comment btw
Put the song on repeat capture the appreciation for it and apply that may the Lord comfort you. Stay strong brother
Stay strong King. We are happy You are here.
Discovered Lacrimosa through UA-cam's recommended the other day. I had never heard it before. I prefer this version. Thanks for the upload!
Welcome to Catholicism
I’d recommend you to also listen to the domine Jesu and Lux Aeterna and the rest of this requiem if you enjoyed it :D
So you prefer the ruined version.
@@FC-rr5qo I do, yes.
@@FC-rr5qo Your opinion is wrong
This goes hard. Worth the listen 🔥
I listend to this when I was really high. The number one reason, why I would smoke again 😂 absolute amazing video - felt like I listend INTO space itself.