It's crazy how they fit a metaphor not only for sleeping alone in bed but throughout all of life. When you grow up enough to live on your own and even when they are no longer with us.
@@eduardomiranda7094 There were no audition. Every year (except this year because of covid) there is a competition in the Amsterdam concert hall between the orchestras of about 12-15 high schools. Then after everyone performed before the judges you have rehearsal with all the orchestras together for the final piece and then you perform it. I went five years in a row and we played Romeo and Juliette overture, Swan lake, Jupiter etc. it's a really awesome initiative that let's school kids perform in a massive orchestra on a stage you'd normally never be able to play on.
I once read a comment stating something along the line of “my wife walked down the aisle to the music starting at 2:55” Brilliant. Absolutely brilliant.
That's my plan too. Getting a mini full orchestra minus the French Horns. I'd solo the French Horn part (I play French Horn) while she's walking down the aisle.
Dear Nick, since this is the Internet & you could be from anywhere in the world, please forgive me if I'm telling you something you already know, (especially if you are British). Here in GB the music from 2:55 is in fact a hymn called "I Vow to Thee My Country". In England we don't have our own national anthem (aside from the obvious National Anthem of "God Save the Queen"). All the other countries of Britain have a second anthem except England. Many people want to have "I Vow To Thee My Country" as England's secondary anthem & there have even been petitions sent to Parliament to make it so. (I think it'd be a good choice, especially at the moment, the words resonate for this country!). A second contender for the role of England's national anthem is "Jerusalem". Very worthy too, but I prefer the former for the reasons stated above & also as it has Holsts amazing music too! ;)
Amazing music choice in Bluey sleepytime, combined with stunning visuals and a beautifully delivered message it brought me to tears, and I'm a grown man with no kids.
same, theres somthing rather magic about that episode, cant help thinking it would make for an incredible experience in VR though, just imagine experiencing it all through Bingo's eyes... now THAT would be magical
I was listening to this piece at maximum volume & my next door neighbor liked it so much that he threw a brick through my window so he could hear it better! I feel so honoured by their genuine appreciation for this masterpiece. 🎇
Played the slow part for a fellow musicians funeral. So emotional. We will never forget him or that moment we shared. It strengthened all of us as a group and we will always miss him
+The Talented Mr Ridley Rite of Spring was premiered about a year before this was published, so... I'm going to say it's more likely that Rite of Spring influenced this.
I remember playing this in a large brass ensemble in college, 4:19 was absolute dominance by the low brass section, specifically my fellow tuba players!
@@ImaginaShip o/ fuck yes. Yes it was. Loved playing this piece, played eb euphonium and a tuba so I got to play with the horns and the bass depending on the day, was just epic!
I heard this song when I was a child. When I was growing up, I kept singing this melody but still couldn't figure out where did I hear this. Now, I finally find this masterpiece, what an amazing moment of my life.
@@sawomirmiklas9422 Quorthon from Bathory thought of himself as a legend, so he added it to his own album to be played at his own funeral? Yeah, makes sense.
In my senior year of high school, we played The Planets in both marching band and wind ensemble and these songs have stuck with me since. The utter beauty of these pieces nearly brings me to tears each time I hear them. It's so good to see the number of people on here who are as moved by this music as I am.
All these comments about how similar this piece is to something from a movie they saw or a game they played is a testament to just how influential Holst was.
+Noah Angott Yeah, I remember at about 2:01 I was like 'oh my god, this ... this sounds like the Moody Blues!' Come to find out, they were living next to Holst's house when they wrote that album. Which just ups the awesome factor for both, to me...
@@hugejackedman7423 I vow to ther my country was based on this. Surprisingly, im one of the rare breed of people to have heard this version first before I vow to thee my country.
It completely kills the mood when you come here in the hope of listening to Jupiter, but you have to watch the silliest unskippable Old Spice ad of all time.
Played this piece with my band at Carnegie Hall last year and every time I hear 2:54 it sparks a bit of sadness knowing that I will never be able to be in that moment again :(
i know this feeling so well. each time i play a piece that i absolutely love with a band, i get goosebumps and that amazing thrill of performing it and will never feel that same feeling ever again. that's why i love performing... it's awesome being part of something so incredible
I actually heard this in forza horizon radio channel "Timeless" .first I thought the were playing battlefield theme (considering they were playing halo theme earlier )
Wait until someone on this planet has enough money to send another probe to Jupiter, if their company's public relations department has any brains in it, they'll make an advertisement for the probe and have this as the background music to sweeping CGI footage of the probe passing by Jupiter and its many moons.
2:54 this brought back so many memories as a flute player playing this in band and i really loved this piece its the best piece ive ever played but it brought back sad memories as well since i dropped out of band but this piece makes me feel happy since i played this when i started out in band at high school
I (trumpet) have a transscript of the chorale in the middle and I love it so much. Makes me almost jealous of french horns. Still some awesome trumpet parts to it though...
I'm playing this song at the moment in the orchestra and it gives me chills everytime we get to 2:55. I think this is one of the best orchestral pieces of all all time. 😃🙏
One day, when interplanetary travel becomes possible, there should be a tour of the Solar System for the general public. On the way to each planet, they should play every song in Holst's Planet's suite, in a way where the buildup of each movement is playing, and as the ship arrives at the planet, the emotional climax of each piece plays. Just imagine: 0:00-2:54 is playing on the way to the planet, as the pilot gives facts over the intercom about Jupiter, building up excitement. Then, he tells the passengers to take in all of Jupiter's glory at 2:54.
+holykiller1191 That would unfortunately involve traveling many times faster than the speed of light, requiring far more energy than the universe contains, for a visual spectacle that most planetariums could have created circa 1985. I'm glad to report that you can probably see your vision realized for a very small investment, depending on where you live.
+Rebel 420 it isn't so simple to teach yourself a musical instrument without a teacher. I'm a music major and before college I did not have a private teacher. I came a long way but to truly become a master of the craft you have to study under someone.
music is such a complex topic that you can't teach yourself and have the confidence that you're going to know you're stuff. you have to spend years studying and analyzing and even then, there's more to learn. you have to be trained in many different ways. your ears, your reading skill, your ability actively look at more than one part, how literally each note functions within the piece. this stuff takes immense amount of study and work to he able to compose something like this. definitely not something that is self teach able. I learned that the hard way.
@@NeatoUnused I’m sure this looked pretty ridiculous out of context. This music was used in an episode of a children’s show called Bluey. Directly above my comment is a quote from that episode, my comment was the response from that same episode.
@@Saru12249 What a great show and I don't have kids myself but I'm the family babysitter. in past the grandkids now it's the greatgrand kids. I watch even when none are at my house. (lol) This piece of music is now on my favorites list. I'm so happy to have found , "Bluey" the tv show.
When I hear this song performed in person, my life will be complete. If I ever had the privilege to perform it, I'd probably just ascend to heaven right there on the spot.
I can for u. I played it for 4 years. Every graduation in high school. Made me cry when I heard it play at my graduation. By far my fav song I ever played
My granny’s funeral was yesterday and this song was the opening song. It was the first thing to make me cry during the funeral. It was so so beautiful and I know she would of loved it 🙏🏻
2:54 - My favorite part: _I vow to thee, my country, all earthly things above,_ _Entire and whole and perfect, the service of my love;_ _The love that asks no question, the love that stands the test,_ _That lays upon the altar the dearest and the best;_ _The love that never falters, the love that pays the price,_ _The love that makes undaunted the final sacrifice._ _And there's another country, I've heard of long ago,_ _Most dear to them that love her, most great to them that know;_ _We may not count her armies, we may not see her King;_ _Her fortress is a faithful heart, her pride is suffering;_ _And soul by soul and silently her shining bounds increase,_ _And her ways are ways of gentleness, and all her paths are peace._
It's a British poem that was put with the music by Gustav Holst as it's lyrics to make a patriotic song: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Vow_to_Thee,_My_Country
2:55 You step out of the spacecraft as it lands on unfamiliar terrain, after drifting for years through the endless expanse of space. After the Earth's demise decades ago, your family is one of many who have become refugees and pilgrims, searching for a new home, fruitless until now. You step out of the craft cautiously, breathing through the helmet you have on. Although the government has told you that this newly-discovered planet is hospitable for human life, you still doubt taking off your helmet, even though you can breathe this foreign air. All around you, you see humans pouring out of their spacecrafts- humans of every sort. Caucasians, Africans, Asians, Latin Americans. People of every race are staring in bewilderment at this new frontier. Humanity- fragile, sturdy, broken, beautiful humanity has found a place to live at last. Children are racing ahead of their parents, gazing in wonder at the majestic mountains in the distance and vast, unspoiled sky. Alongside you is your childhood friend, who has stayed with you since the collapse of Earth. They take off their helmet, smiling that familiar smile at you, taking a deep breath of the new air. "We're home now."
This is so beautifully written. I can feel all the feelings, especially with the swell of the music. As both a writer and a musician, this touches my soul. :))
And then, three seconds later, you land on this planet, trying to fight an unknown enemy, a ruthless one, and you are tasked to protect this planet. You try your best, only to fail. You lose your team one by one, then the last mission. You must get the package, and send it back. You succeed one time. Then you are left on this planet, and you fight, but you eventually get tired, and you die as you see this planet fall. Remember Reach
2:54 "I vow to thee, my country, all earthly things above, Entire and whole and perfect, the service of my love; The love that asks no question, the love that stands the test, That lays upon the altar the dearest and the best; The love that never falters, the love that pays the price, The love that makes undaunted the final sacrifice."
And there’s another country I’ve heard of long ago Most dear to them that love her most great to them that know We may not count her armies We may not see her king Her fortress is a faithful heart her pride is suffering And soul by soul and silently her shining bounds increase And her ways are ways of gentleness And all her paths are peace
I never thought a brutal One-Punch Man Manga chapter would bring me here: (Update 187/ Chapter 144). This is the music Homeless-Emperor was playing while he was trying to kill Tatsumaki.
My whole family are classical music lovers, when we hear the opening bars, we stopp whatever we are doing and everyone will whisper "it's Jupiter" and we listen in silence, each one of us in their own private paradise. On one occasion Jupiter interrupted a heated family argument, and at the end we all hugged each other the argument long forgotten.
+KariRae12 he probably played an easier arrangement. One of the orchestras in my high school tried to play the full version last year and lets just say it wasnt their best work. Granted, it was the lowest orchestra in our school (We have 5)
my school is playing it for part of our marching band show. it's so amazing. our show is about people who hear a signal from another planet and go explore it, and so far we've only learned half the show but it's really fun.
Sheet Music I got: *doesn't match* Video: *reaches **2:54* Sheet Music: *matches* Me: *realization moment* ohhhhhhh... Also, Me: *looks at a piano sheet of it online* You know who: *looks at violin sheet* Me: Now this makes sense!
2:55 So so incredibly powerful. Utterly inspiring. To me it sounds like finally overcoming a tremendous obstacle and that satisfied but exhausted feeling when you finally, finally get recognised for your suffering
Playing 'The Planets' was so enjoyable in my highschool symphony orchestra, but Jupiter was by far my favorite!! We were awful, but I like to think we did Mr. Holst proud with Jupiter!!!
Yes I played a few of them as well while in high school. Mars was my favorite. And I love how the teachers tell you to just "fake it" for some of those crazy runs lol "Just everyone hit the last note together and loud!" haha
***** Yeah the cello part in this song has quadruple stops (plucking all four strings, with a different fingering on each) so it was like playing a guitar perpendicular to the ground. My hands hurt so bad after every performance haha.
Same high school orchestra experience here. I doubt we were that good, but we tried. I remember I was freaked out with my multiple parts (not too complicated but obvious if I screwed up) that started at about 1:10 - bells to triangle to tambourine back to bells - 2:09 was fun. It was one of the better auxiliary percussion parts I had. Most of the time I was counting measure of rest and getting busted with the rest of the drums...because our section was always getting busted for something - even if the trumpets started it...
I heard this song when I was in 7th grade and never forgot it. I finally found it again a few years ago; I was on Cloud 9 for a few days (haha). The horns are beautiful. The power of music is pretty amazing!
BREAKING NEWS: NO COMMENTS ON THIS VIDEO ARE OF PEOPLE SAYING THEY WERE BORN IN THE WRONG GENERATION! Internet we have done it! We have sent all of those people back to the generation they belong in!
Because there was no generation. This was written in the fucking 1800s. EDIT: After a quick google search I found out it was written 1914. Oh well, close enough.
I cannot hear this song without remaining teary-eyed throughout starting at just before the 3 minute mark. The majestic beauty and swelling ecstasy...it just keeps getting bigger and more beautiful...like the music itself is weeping for joy. I don't know of any other piece produced in all of musical history that feels like this.
The part following 2:54 makes me feel... complete. I just close my eyes and enjoy my private paradise while trying not to breathe with the rhythm. May no radio show I'm listening to ever play this while I'm driving. XD
Around three minutes in and I feel like I'm listening to a national anthem of some great nation. This is a wonderful piece of work and it my favorite in the suite, with Mars as a second. God bless you Holst.
The Bluey episode is S2 #0 titled "Sleepytime".I found out the name of the piece of music because I had the closed captioning on & they credited Gustav Holst the title of the piece. Made my day to be able to come here & find it for that reason.
Don’t listen to the guy who says you made it up. I’m in orchestra and this exact thing happened to me too. Like not full-on crying but I definitely teared up. We were playing the Four Seasons by Vivaldi and we got to that really famous part that everyone knows where it’s like “da da da da, da da da da, da da da da DA, dada” and just with all of us playing at once it was so loud and I was right in the middle of it, it was almost like I could feel it going THROUGH me and it got to me. It felt amazing:)
2:54-4:38 is legitimately the greatest melody ever composed. It's perfect. I only hope I can write music even close to the quality of this masterpiece.
Usually in orchestral pieces there are 2-3 sections that I really like listening to, but this one... I could keep jumping back and forth through the entire piece like "this is the best part. no this is the best part. No THIS is the best part!" And in the end, I spent an hour listening to it.
This piece was in a movie my dad and I watched together all the time. When he died in June I knew right away we had to have 2:54 at the funeral, so we did and it was stunning
I agree, but a majority of the morons here refer to this "piece/movement" of 'The Planets' as a "song"!!! What a multitude of millennial fucking idiots we have to endure! I weep for humanity!!!
I know marching band will never compare to the orchestrated version (maybe dci) , but the first time I heard this, I was in 6th grade learning the flute, and my brother's marching band played this. When I listen to them play it at state, I was moved to tears and my only dream was to play this. This piece is what pushed me to stay a musician and I'm so glad I get to play this in marching band five years later. I hope we get to inspire someone, like how five years ago, my brother's marching band inspired me.
Just heard the Chicago Symphony Orchestra play the entire Planets piece. Jupiter was by far the best. Guest conductor Cristian Macelaru recently retired from the NY Symphony Orchestra.
@@Yunngbratz not really, murata still has to follow ONE. He doesn't have the right to change anything without ONE's permission. That said though since TTM isn't very significant in the webcomic, we might get a death here.
Brian Tully According to the Star Wars DVD special features, George Lucas wanted a musical score for Star Wars that would be reminiscent of the late Romantic style of early Hollywood film music composers like Erich Wolfgang Korngold who, along with Max Steiner and Alfred Newman, was considered one of the founders of film music. Steven Spielberg then told Lucas, "The guy you gotta talk to is John Williams. He did 'Jaws' and he's the greatest composer in the world today." It was John Williams himself who was influenced by the works of Gustav Holst, specifically 'The Planets,' as well as other Hollywood composers like Jerry Goldsmith, James Horner, and Hans Zimmer.
2:54 makes me look forward to being a father of a little girl and watching her grow up to get married and live a beautiful life and then I live out the rest of my days peacefully but with gradually worsening health issues finally to die with a smile on my face
Watch Bluey mate(best show for both kids and parents)(quoted best guide for fatherhood/motherhood)(shows the father of the year 2019, Bandit Heeler) Also The show Bluey features this song(Episode 26 season 2)
I was recently listening to this while crunching through the snow on my way home, and I swear, when it came to the section at 2:55, I suddenly felt as if I were celebrating the end of the igloo wars that had raged far too long for humanity to recall; my comrades and I guzzling down unhelpful amounts of Goldschlager, clinking glasses with zeal, rejoicing in the glorious day ahead and pondering the future for the Eskimo people who had at last been liberated from their extraterrestrial captors. One of the most uplifting pieces of classical musical you will find. P.S. No drugs were harmed in the making of this story.
My future fiancée can plan our wedding however the hell she wants, so long as she allows me to have a full orchestra play 2:54 as she walks down the aisle, and 5:01 after "you may kiss the bride."
If you haven’t seen the kids show Bluey, and you like this song, if you are a parent you have to watch Sleepytime in season 2 💕 you will never see this song the same agin 💕
@@IndigoMouse64 I don't know when the show Bluey started airing on the Disney Channel & Disney Jr but I came across about 3 months ago & it's on another level with the storytelling & characters. Just all around awesome! I babysit a 2 almost 3 yr old. This & Coco Mellon stops her in her tracks and she'll watch and smile until both end.. I saw the episode this week with this piece of music & WOW!!! I rewound it to catch the title and saved it on my DVR. This is the 3rd episode that made me teary. The first was Chili was telling the story of how she felt when Bluey wasn't as advanced as the other babies in the group-that ending! So heartwarming! The 2nd was when Chili and the girls went to visit her father.This show is as good or better than many live action family comedy/dramas
2:55 sounds like the morrowind theme. If I remember, Jeremy Soule, the compiser for the elder scrolls III, IV, and V, said he drew inspiration from the planets for some of his songs.
I hope you guys realized that this song was the one playing on your royal highness prince Philip's funeral and Murata-san made his tribute on chapter 144 of One Punch Man.
Damn, what a piece of music... I listen to some music by modern composers and think "oh this is really cool sounding." And then at some point or another I always come back to this and just think "wow, holst was just on an entirely different level." Just everything about this movement astounds me.
2:55 to 4:40 is not only one of my favourite pieces of music, I think it is one of the best pieces of music ever put to paper.
Sounds a lot like the Shrek orchestral theme...
Nase Pybus this piece was written about 100 years ago doe. Shrek is love, Shrek is life, but Shrek aint a composer
Every time I listen to that section it makes me want to cry. It's the most beautiful thing I've ever heard.
I played this one year at my high school graduation, and I loved playing this part :)
This section never fails to give me goosebumps! It is such a moving and beautiful piece of music
2:55 “Remember I am always here for you, even if you can’t see me, because I love you.”
"And at that moment, there was not a single dry eye in the house of those who watched as they were hit in the soul like a freight train of emotion"
@@BronyumHexofloride nah that was the dino killer asteroid of emotions
It's crazy how they fit a metaphor not only for sleeping alone in bed but throughout all of life. When you grow up enough to live on your own and even when they are no longer with us.
💙💙💙
What's that from? Reminds me of Violet Evergarden episode 10.
Played this with about 400 people in the Amsterdam concert hall today. Felt really awesome playing such a masterpiece with that many people.
Lea Kenny the audition process most have been a big chaos.
Lea Kenny that's amazing. Ive always wanted to know what it feels like to play such a majestic piece in an orchestra
Playing music is truly one of the best feelings
Lea Kenny I would have cried while playing, that sounds so cool
@@eduardomiranda7094 There were no audition. Every year (except this year because of covid) there is a competition in the Amsterdam concert hall between the orchestras of about 12-15 high schools. Then after everyone performed before the judges you have rehearsal with all the orchestras together for the final piece and then you perform it. I went five years in a row and we played Romeo and Juliette overture, Swan lake, Jupiter etc. it's a really awesome initiative that let's school kids perform in a massive orchestra on a stage you'd normally never be able to play on.
“I’ll always be there for you, even if you can’t see me… because I love you”
I’m sobbing
That's beautiful! Where is it from?
@@Wallguardian the show Bluey, it’s an adorable kids show
Same
So I’m not the only one tearing up over the kids’ show and looking for more Jupiter! 😂
No cap that part destroyed me!
2:54 is my favourite part of any song ever written.
yessss cx
+itisbridie It is nice to have a slow but still joyful fanfare, like it kinda makes you feel appreciative somehow
+itisbridie Randall Z Stroope made this section into a beautiful choral piece called Homeland. Check it out if you can.
+itisbridie Great musical taste!
+itisbridie Absolutely, Thank You for posting so , )
I am playing this in Pre School! im so excited im 1st Kazoo
Pff, I'm playing this as a fetus, first umbilical cord.
+UnequivocallyHuman 😂😂
Ok. I lol-ed.
And I'm sure you will do it justice.
I will play the 2nd fisher price violin, we will do great.
this song is so......big.
Thats it.
It's big. The song sounds big.
Like Jupiter.
Oh my
flyingpegasi lol
Oh my god, becky. Look at that song. It's just...so big!
kristof1018 uh....wat? It's a big song. Jupiter is big.
Shannon Hensley lol great reply.
flyingpegasi *piece
I'm just here because of One Punch Man 144 but its surprisingly great.
Same
X3
(Light spoiler, maybe)
It was such a good experience to read Fubuki's speech while matching with the calmed part of the symphony (2:54).
X5
Same
You can hear where a lot film composers draw their inspirations from in The Planets. It's a true masterpiece.
Not just film composers; many video game composers do this as well. I love hearing the references in Super Mario Galaxy.
I hear a lot of stuff like this in games like Final Fantasy and Lost Odyssey!
At 0:25 I'm almost sure I can hear something very similar to the Ocarina of Time's main motif...
Geez yeah.. At 1:47 for example, It's pretty much one of Conan the Barbarian's ost. Although Basil Poledouris is awesome on his own.
basically Star wars ripped mars so hard and is in clear denial lol
I once read a comment stating something along the line of “my wife walked down the aisle to the music starting at 2:55”
Brilliant. Absolutely brilliant.
That's my plan too. Getting a mini full orchestra minus the French Horns. I'd solo the French Horn part (I play French Horn) while she's walking down the aisle.
That is such a great idea!
It is like the queen of serenity and wisdom walking into large space, or something very much like that!
Dear Nick, since this is the Internet & you could be from anywhere in the world, please forgive me if I'm telling you something you already know, (especially if you are British). Here in GB the music from 2:55 is in fact a hymn called "I Vow to Thee My Country". In England we don't have our own national anthem (aside from the obvious National Anthem of "God Save the Queen"). All the other countries of Britain have a second anthem except England. Many people want to have "I Vow To Thee My Country" as England's secondary anthem & there have even been petitions sent to Parliament to make it so. (I think it'd be a good choice, especially at the moment, the words resonate for this country!). A second contender for the role of England's national anthem is "Jerusalem". Very worthy too, but I prefer the former for the reasons stated above & also as it has Holsts amazing music too! ;)
I think it was Prince William who said that. Kate Middleton walked down the aisle to the said music.
Amazing music choice in Bluey sleepytime, combined with stunning visuals and a beautifully delivered message it brought me to tears, and I'm a grown man with no kids.
fr thats what brought me here
Me too 🥹❤️
same, theres somthing rather magic about that episode, cant help thinking it would make for an incredible experience in VR though, just imagine experiencing it all through Bingo's eyes... now THAT would be magical
Just scrolling through the comments to see who else is here cause of Bluey.
3:00 "I have to go I'm a big girl now."
*SOBS UNCONTROLLABLY*
I was listening to this piece at maximum volume & my next door neighbor liked it so much that he threw a brick through my window so he could hear it better! I feel so honoured by their genuine appreciation for this masterpiece. 🎇
Underrated comment
Lol!!!
Ok😂😅
Wow.
@@Planetmango48 indeed
NASA should've played this as Juno arrived in Jupiter's welcoming arms.
I was thinking the same thing!
lol welcoming arms. juno was built more like a tank than a space ship.
rather they should play this when Juno is decommissioned and sent into jupiter
Eh, I wouldn't say so. This musical piece is innocent and celebratory, and Juno's de-orbit into Jupiter will end in disintegration.O.O
The melancholy central chorale should be played when they de-orbit
2:54
"I have to go, I'm a big girl now."
And then come the tears
Bluey??
Played the slow part for a fellow musicians funeral. So emotional. We will never forget him or that moment we shared. It strengthened all of us as a group and we will always miss him
Crying thinking about this scene….. you must be really strong people
But remember, he will always be there for you, even if you can't see him, because he loves you.
Remember that his memory is alive in you and continues through the inspiration you bring to others.
Thanks for the lightshow, Homeless Emperor.
No stfu
@@Cookie-gw1vv Jerk
@@Cookie-gw1vv Jerk
I just saw ur post on reddit
So I'm hearing hints of Star Wars, Rite of Spring, Shrek, Lord of the Rings, Skyrim, and Rhapsody in Blue. Just how much did this guy influence?
Just about everything after him.
+The Talented Mr Ridley Rite of Spring was premiered about a year before this was published, so... I'm going to say it's more likely that Rite of Spring influenced this.
And a teeny tiny hint of pirates or the caribbean
Tyler Morse Actually, this suite took two years to compose, so it could just be a coincidence
I think it'd be easier listing off songs he didn't influence
Life is like a good Holst piece.
Hard to play but great to remember.
Oogway
I remember playing this in a large brass ensemble in college, 4:19 was absolute dominance by the low brass section, specifically my fellow tuba players!
I've found it painful to remember (life I mean).
Played this in symphonic orchestra in high school on timpani. That was a workout!
@@ImaginaShip o/ fuck yes. Yes it was. Loved playing this piece, played eb euphonium and a tuba so I got to play with the horns and the bass depending on the day, was just epic!
I heard this song when I was a child. When I was growing up, I kept singing this melody but still couldn't figure out where did I hear this.
Now, I finally find this masterpiece, what an amazing moment of my life.
PLEASE ITS A PIECE NOT A SONG
@@theyeetwarrior1877 PLEASE NOBODY CARES
@@eh86055 YOU SURE ABOUT THAT
@@theyeetwarrior1877 YES
HUHHHHHHHH
2:55-4:42 is the perfect song to send off a legend R.I.P
who is the legend?
@@davidslivnyak4866 for example Quorthon from Bathory, who used this part in his own song titled: "Hammerheart" from "Twiligh of the Gods" album.
@@sawomirmiklas9422 Quorthon from Bathory thought of himself as a legend, so he added it to his own album to be played at his own funeral? Yeah, makes sense.
In my senior year of high school, we played The Planets in both marching band and wind ensemble and these songs have stuck with me since. The utter beauty of these pieces nearly brings me to tears each time I hear them. It's so good to see the number of people on here who are as moved by this music as I am.
Except it was probably in a different key, like they did my senior year
We did too. Think my sophomore year. Still have the sheer music. Haha.
i love marching band!! i was in colorguard in high school :)
me too, played it twice in school bands in middle and high school
same. played this in high school
All these comments about how similar this piece is to something from a movie they saw or a game they played is a testament to just how influential Holst was.
+Noah Angott Yeah, I remember at about 2:01 I was like 'oh my god, this ... this sounds like the Moody Blues!'
Come to find out, they were living next to Holst's house when they wrote that album. Which just ups the awesome factor for both, to me...
I got a hint of Shrek at 2:54
For me, i heard it in an anime when a character launched an attack called "jupiter" the source song is even cooler!
Holst was a genius.
And how crappy the US public school system is.
2:54 - 4:39 seriously changed my life when I first heard it when I was 10
Frédéric François Chopin It's the internet, I didn't necessarily expect anyone to, it's just me commenting about a piece of music
Frédéric François Chopin *Reaches divine enlightenment*
Noah Cason my favorite part of Jupiter
Noah Cason I am playing that for my concert
Noah Cason I love it very much
The chapter was Divine. Masterpiece.
I see you’re a reader of culture as well, OPM Manga was brutally awesome.
@@leom.r1107 Cultured men listen to cultured music ;)
OPM chapter 137 released on 3 January 2020
And one piece chapter 1000 released at same day.
Blast said chapter 1000 was fire
absolutely brutal chapter tho
The suspense when you're at 2:30 and read everyone saying 2:54 is the best ever 😮
I was shaking in anticipation
Dude I’m only at 00:59
@@hugejackedman7423 I vow to ther my country was based on this. Surprisingly, im one of the rare breed of people to have heard this version first before I vow to thee my country.
I prefer 1:34
It completely kills the mood when you come here in the hope of listening to Jupiter, but you have to watch the silliest unskippable Old Spice ad of all time.
and why don't you have Adblock Plus on, sir?
true😂
I'm rich, so I can afford to pay the dickhead leftists who run this joint so I dont get ads. All good by me
Trinity Psalm and the
@@garrettsmith553 literally just get adblock instead of giving them your money
When the day comes when civilization can land on other planets in this solar system, they need to make each one of these their "planet anthems"
Poor Mars residents will have to sing some lyrics to BLABLABLABLAAAAAH BLAAAH BLAAAH BLAAH.... BLAAH BLAAH BLAAH BLAAH BLAAH. BOOOOOOOOOOM.
Liam O'Connor
That's so metal.
Liam O'Connor Would you really call them Poor Mars Residents if they had that as an anthem?
Jupiter is a gas giant. I don't think you can 'land' on it.
shhhhh... leave it to the future generations
or just land on the bajillions of moons it has and they can be the United Moons of Jupiter
If this doesn’t give you goosebumps you aren’t human
Very true, although after many times of rewatching this in the last month i hate to say it goes away.
@@petrolmonkey1973 Yes, you can never hear it again as the first time.
Well it only gives me goosebumps when I'm watching this in the morning :/
I don’t have any goosebumps
i like it..but i didnt get goosebumps...my body is broken
The title doesn't lie, this is making me feel pretty damn jolly
The King of the Penguins yup
TRUTH
Wow that just made my day😂💗
Played this piece with my band at Carnegie Hall last year and every time I hear 2:54 it sparks a bit of sadness knowing that I will never be able to be in that moment again :(
Beautiful transition. And I applaud you, The Planets is not an easy piece to play ( school band from 6th grade to Sophomore year in College)
i know this feeling so well. each time i play a piece that i absolutely love with a band, i get goosebumps and that amazing thrill of performing it and will never feel that same feeling ever again. that's why i love performing... it's awesome being part of something so incredible
Don’t be sad that it’s over, be glad that it happened
Whoa whoa whoa... I Vow to Thee My Country was based on this? I had no idea! That melody came up and I was just stunned!
I felt goosebumps when I vow to thee my country started to play!
Yeah Holst was asked to give the hymn a tune, so being an efficient man he just lifted that section from Jupiter since it already fit extremely well.
I actually heard this in forza horizon radio channel "Timeless" .first I thought the were playing battlefield theme (considering they were playing halo theme earlier )
Same. I was like ".... Ey yo wait a minute, I know this!"
Until I read your comment; I was going to switch off because I thought I had the wrong video! I’m amazed too!
2:54 to 4:40 is the greatest piece to ever be orchestrated
Wait until someone on this planet has enough money to send another probe to Jupiter, if their company's public relations department has any brains in it, they'll make an advertisement for the probe and have this as the background music to sweeping CGI footage of the probe passing by Jupiter and its many moons.
@@martianbuilder5945someone give this man a job at nasa.
they do have the money, we just sent a probe, Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer.@@martianbuilder5945
I got to see the President's Own and Marine Corps band play this in D.C. for the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 launch! It was incredible!
Wow that's awesome
Jesus, that would have been awesome to see. Consider me thoroughly jealous.
2:54
this brought back so many memories as a flute player playing this in band and i really loved this piece its the best piece ive ever played but it brought back sad memories as well since i dropped out of band but this piece makes me feel happy since i played this when i started out in band at high school
Also 2:54 Bathory Hammerheart. Search it..
I can say as a French Horn player, the slow part of Jupiter is really fun to play. Got it memorized lol I love it that much.
True. This whole movement is awesome for horns! Its a blast!
I (trumpet) have a transscript of the chorale in the middle and I love it so much. Makes me almost jealous of french horns. Still some awesome trumpet parts to it though...
Trombones are better
The slow part makes me cry every time every time lol
Me, a French Horn: Ayyyyyyy
I'm playing this song at the moment in the orchestra and it gives me chills everytime we get to 2:55. I think this is one of the best orchestral pieces of all all time. 😃🙏
In my opinion, one of the greatest pieces of music ever written.
One day, when interplanetary travel becomes possible, there should be a tour of the Solar System for the general public. On the way to each planet, they should play every song in Holst's Planet's suite, in a way where the buildup of each movement is playing, and as the ship arrives at the planet, the emotional climax of each piece plays.
Just imagine: 0:00-2:54 is playing on the way to the planet, as the pilot gives facts over the intercom about Jupiter, building up excitement. Then, he tells the passengers to take in all of Jupiter's glory at 2:54.
Fantastic Idea and description. I'm sure its all in the future.
If the future can take a quick tour if the solar system they damn well can time it perfectly
+holykiller1191 Have you ever thought of putting that idea on a science-fiction novel or story? It sounds like it could make a great story.
+holykiller1191 That would unfortunately involve traveling many times faster than the speed of light, requiring far more energy than the universe contains, for a visual spectacle that most planetariums could have created circa 1985. I'm glad to report that you can probably see your vision realized for a very small investment, depending on where you live.
+steveasat2 no we could just use an Alcubierre drive to fold space!
Damn. Give thanks to people who take Music majors in university so that they can make stuff like this.
Sorry about being $100k in debt.
+Rebel 420 it isn't so simple to teach yourself a musical instrument without a teacher. I'm a music major and before college I did not have a private teacher. I came a long way but to truly become a master of the craft you have to study under someone.
music is such a complex topic that you can't teach yourself and have the confidence that you're going to know you're stuff. you have to spend years studying and analyzing and even then, there's more to learn. you have to be trained in many different ways. your ears, your reading skill, your ability actively look at more than one part, how literally each note functions within the piece. this stuff takes immense amount of study and work to he able to compose something like this. definitely not something that is self teach able. I learned that the hard way.
"but to truly become a master of the craft you have to study under someone."
Nein. Wahre Inspiration braucht keinen Lehrmeister.
Thanks man.
I am starting my music major next year
Remember I’ll always be here for you. Even if you can’t see me.
Because I love you.
I’m a big girl now.
who the fuck even are you
@@NeatoUnused I’m sure this looked pretty ridiculous out of context. This music was used in an episode of a children’s show called Bluey. Directly above my comment is a quote from that episode, my comment was the response from that same episode.
@@Saru12249 i love bluey
@@Saru12249 What a great show and I don't have kids myself but I'm the family babysitter. in past the grandkids now it's the greatgrand kids. I watch even when none are at my house. (lol) This piece of music is now on my favorites list. I'm so happy to have found , "Bluey" the tv show.
Played this at my Dads funeral,passed away 12 months ago today,brilliant..RIP Dad...
+Sandy Harper I don't know why... But your comment seems very sarcastic
+Rocket Raccoon it's the word "brilliant" that makes it seem sarcastic. Sorry bout your dad though. That sucks.
What a beautiful choice of music...
+Russell Penman
my condolences , my friend
+SGF Corp. Inc. dude look at his profile pic, it's very likely he's telling the truth :/ and I send my respects to you and your father
Everyone’s talking about 2:54 and how it’s the best thing ever, but I like 1:36 more
Exactly!
sounds like a Runescape theme
I like the whole thing better. :)
Got to agree!
Your wrong
When I hear this song performed in person, my life will be complete. If I ever had the privilege to perform it, I'd probably just ascend to heaven right there on the spot.
come to our concert
Kevin Eichelberg I agree the piece is just that good
You don't ascend to Heaven until you hear Mahler 2 in person
@@charleyhibschweiler4555 honestly, that could happen!
I can for u. I played it for 4 years. Every graduation in high school. Made me cry when I heard it play at my graduation. By far my fav song I ever played
We reunite again for a new chapter!
My granny’s funeral was yesterday and this song was the opening song. It was the first thing to make me cry during the funeral. It was so so beautiful and I know she would of loved it 🙏🏻
Ella Sneddon that must have felt good and sad in your heart
2:54 - My favorite part:
_I vow to thee, my country, all earthly things above,_
_Entire and whole and perfect, the service of my love;_
_The love that asks no question, the love that stands the test,_
_That lays upon the altar the dearest and the best;_
_The love that never falters, the love that pays the price,_
_The love that makes undaunted the final sacrifice._
_And there's another country, I've heard of long ago,_
_Most dear to them that love her, most great to them that know;_
_We may not count her armies, we may not see her King;_
_Her fortress is a faithful heart, her pride is suffering;_
_And soul by soul and silently her shining bounds increase,_
_And her ways are ways of gentleness, and all her paths are peace._
Er... I think that I got the reference somehow, but I don't know if I'm right ('cos I'm so not in), but is this Lord of the Rings? :|
It's an English song
Ah ok, that's why... I'm french :/
It's a British poem that was put with the music by Gustav Holst as it's lyrics to make a patriotic song: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Vow_to_Thee,_My_Country
Sang that in choir, amazing song. ^^
Everyone saying 2:54 is the best part. Now I feel like the only one who prefers 1:35
1:35 best
0:00-7:36 is the best
I like that to
7:37 is trash
"Well, nobody was talking, so I figured I'd say something." -The first trumpet throughout this piece
2:55
You step out of the spacecraft as it lands on unfamiliar terrain, after drifting for years through the endless expanse of space. After the Earth's demise decades ago, your family is one of many who have become refugees and pilgrims, searching for a new home, fruitless until now.
You step out of the craft cautiously, breathing through the helmet you have on. Although the government has told you that this newly-discovered planet is hospitable for human life, you still doubt taking off your helmet, even though you can breathe this foreign air. All around you, you see humans pouring out of their spacecrafts- humans of every sort. Caucasians, Africans, Asians, Latin Americans. People of every race are staring in bewilderment at this new frontier. Humanity- fragile, sturdy, broken, beautiful humanity has found a place to live at last. Children are racing ahead of their parents, gazing in wonder at the majestic mountains in the distance and vast, unspoiled sky. Alongside you is your childhood friend, who has stayed with you since the collapse of Earth.
They take off their helmet, smiling that familiar smile at you, taking a deep breath of the new air.
"We're home now."
This comment is underated
You should write a story!
This is so beautifully written. I can feel all the feelings, especially with the swell of the music. As both a writer and a musician, this touches my soul. :))
God f$&king damn mate. Publish a book about this and let the money pour, lad!
And then, three seconds later, you land on this planet, trying to fight an unknown enemy, a ruthless one, and you are tasked to protect this planet. You try your best, only to fail. You lose your team one by one, then the last mission. You must get the package, and send it back. You succeed one time. Then you are left on this planet, and you fight, but you eventually get tired, and you die as you see this planet fall.
Remember Reach
My friend just sent me this in honor of the probe Juno finally reaching Jupiter lmao
yes juno will peer through the clouds of jupiter
I am excited to find out more about jupiter
young messiah
Alaska is a LONG ways away...
2:54 "I vow to thee, my country, all earthly things above,
Entire and whole and perfect, the service of my love;
The love that asks no question, the love that stands the test,
That lays upon the altar the dearest and the best;
The love that never falters, the love that pays the price,
The love that makes undaunted the final sacrifice."
Needs Royal Union Flags for This scene!
Never fails to rouse my patriotic spirit! God bless Mother Britannia! 🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
Rule britannia!
My cup of water turned into tea
And there’s another country I’ve heard of long ago
Most dear to them that love her most great to them that know
We may not count her armies
We may not see her king
Her fortress is a faithful heart her pride is suffering
And soul by soul and silently her shining bounds increase
And her ways are ways of gentleness
And all her paths are peace
I never thought a brutal One-Punch Man Manga chapter would bring me here: (Update 187/ Chapter 144). This is the music Homeless-Emperor was playing while he was trying to kill Tatsumaki.
lmao hahahaha
My whole family are classical music lovers, when we hear the opening bars, we stopp whatever we are doing and everyone will whisper "it's Jupiter" and we listen in silence, each one of us in their own private paradise. On one occasion Jupiter interrupted a heated family argument, and at the end we all hugged each other the argument long forgotten.
Keith Grove It was me playing that song keith. I knew you all were arguing so it needed to be played
I played an arrangement in 7th grade. It was so pretty
+ThatNerdLake Dude, you played this in 7th grade? Some of these notes are almost as high as a dog whistle! Your orchestra must be amazing.
+KariRae12 he probably played an easier arrangement. One of the orchestras in my high school tried to play the full version last year and lets just say it wasnt their best work. Granted, it was the lowest orchestra in our school (We have 5)
We actually played the full arrangement this year, and I'm in seventh grade. It didn't sound too bad.
I played this song in my orchestra, back in 6th grade (it was a super watered down version). good memories :')
+maka paka It's cause I'm on here waaaaaay to much xD
We almost played this in the 6th grade too but it was the cello melody aversion so nobody wanted to do it . lol
I played this in MARCHING BAND. Beat that. :)
+Devin Faux +1
Played this on Sousaphone, in 112° F. at competition. Awesome composition.
my school is playing it for part of our marching band show. it's so amazing. our show is about people who hear a signal from another planet and go explore it, and so far we've only learned half the show but it's really fun.
Sheet Music I got: *doesn't match*
Video: *reaches **2:54*
Sheet Music: *matches*
Me: *realization moment* ohhhhhhh...
Also, Me: *looks at a piano sheet of it online*
You know who: *looks at violin sheet*
Me: Now this makes sense!
Naoto Pagaspas
Facts
what
whos "you know who"
@@fungling7982 it will always be a mystery
I'm getting major Shrek vibes.
My dad introduced me to this as a child... The entire suite is a feat of composition and orchestration. I’m in awe...
2:55 So so incredibly powerful. Utterly inspiring. To me it sounds like finally overcoming a tremendous obstacle and that satisfied but exhausted feeling when you finally, finally get recognised for your suffering
Playing 'The Planets' was so enjoyable in my highschool symphony orchestra, but Jupiter was by far my favorite!! We were awful, but I like to think we did Mr. Holst proud with Jupiter!!!
Yes I played a few of them as well while in high school. Mars was my favorite. And I love how the teachers tell you to just "fake it" for some of those crazy runs lol "Just everyone hit the last note together and loud!" haha
***** Yeah the cello part in this song has quadruple stops (plucking all four strings, with a different fingering on each) so it was like playing a guitar perpendicular to the ground. My hands hurt so bad after every performance haha.
Same high school orchestra experience here. I doubt we were that good, but we tried. I remember I was freaked out with my multiple parts (not too complicated but obvious if I screwed up) that started at about 1:10 - bells to triangle to tambourine back to bells - 2:09 was fun. It was one of the better auxiliary percussion parts I had. Most of the time I was counting measure of rest and getting busted with the rest of the drums...because our section was always getting busted for something - even if the trumpets started it...
TuberosityTime Blaming the trumpets, I see? So does everyone. But to be honest, we screw up quite a bit...
ZooTycoonReptiles It is always good to blame the trumpets, it is usually their fault
Is it just me, or as 7:17 is anyone else picturing the Enterprise leaving orbit and heading for the next planet?
Holst was used as an inspiration for both the Star Wars and Star Trek scores especially post TMP.
+HASEnoncorperated The song played after Luke fires the missiles in the exhaust port of the Death Star is literally the ending of Mars.
Redcoat The Regular
"great shot kid that was one in a million!"
The "Mars" movement heavily influenced a lot of John Williams' compositions including theme music from Star Wars and also Indiana Jones.
This was used in The Right Stuff as John Glenn is orbiting Earth!
That was a really good show, Homeless Emperor.
I heard this song when I was in 7th grade and never forgot it. I finally found it again a few years ago; I was on Cloud 9 for a few days (haha). The horns are beautiful. The power of music is pretty amazing!
Joi S Haha my dad used to play this song when I was a little kid, I would run around the house when he played it, it made me so energetic!
Joi S It means something more than you know!
+Joi S This song is nice!
+Joi S More like Planet 9
Omg I found this song when I was in 7th grade too lol
There's so much I can hear in this, reminds me of Conan, Star Trek, LOTR, Harry Potter, all wrapped up into one.
BREAKING NEWS: NO COMMENTS ON THIS VIDEO ARE OF PEOPLE SAYING THEY WERE BORN IN THE WRONG GENERATION! Internet we have done it! We have sent all of those people back to the generation they belong in!
+Aidan Sullivan But I'm born in the wrong generation, everyone listens to bad music..... THUMBS UP IF YOU WERE BORN IN 2016!
I was born yesterday.
+Samsid no not born until 2020 so I'm ahead of my time!!!! 😉
it's been 84 years
Because there was no generation. This was written in the fucking 1800s.
EDIT: After a quick google search I found out it was written 1914. Oh well, close enough.
I cannot hear this song without remaining teary-eyed throughout starting at just before the 3 minute mark. The majestic beauty and swelling ecstasy...it just keeps getting bigger and more beautiful...like the music itself is weeping for joy. I don't know of any other piece produced in all of musical history that feels like this.
The part following 2:54 makes me feel... complete.
I just close my eyes and enjoy my private paradise while trying not to breathe with the rhythm. May no radio show I'm listening to ever play this while I'm driving. XD
Fun Fact: Jupiter is so large, it can fit 2 football fields on it.
Jupiter is the biggest planet in the world.
I live in jupiter california...its in middle of Stanislaus national forrest
Wait a sec
Dude, two football fields? It will take more than a thousand Earths to fill up Jupiter. It is Majestic!!!
@@israelasiku3975 thats the joke laddie
No Problem bro
Around three minutes in and I feel like I'm listening to a national anthem of some great nation. This is a wonderful piece of work and it my favorite in the suite, with Mars as a second. God bless you Holst.
You practically are. If you haven't heard the piece "I Vow To Thee My Country", I would look it up! :)
I’m here because of the kids show Bluey there’s an episode who’s soundtrack was inspired by this masterpiece. One Punch Man is awesome too
The Bluey episode is S2 #0 titled "Sleepytime".I found out the name of the piece of music because I had the closed captioning on & they credited Gustav Holst the title of the piece. Made my day to be able to come here & find it for that reason.
Cool
This is probably the best piece of classical music by an english composer.
Hamish Wallace don’t forget about 21 savage
I would nominate "Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis" by Ralph Vaughan-Williams. But I get what you mean. Holst's "The Planets" is incredible.
@@danielcropp8553 I agree, it is another one of the most levitating greats!
Daniel Cropp
Ahh, yes! Ralph Vaughan Williams 🥺🥺
It's definitely in the top 10. But I must say I prefer Gibbons' "This is the Record of John".
When I played the 2:54 section in 6th grade, I actually started crying in the middle of our concert WHILE PLAYING. It’s so BEAUTIFUL
Ah that'd be so cool if you hadn't made it up
@@Snookbone bruh
Don’t listen to the guy who says you made it up. I’m in orchestra and this exact thing happened to me too. Like not full-on crying but I definitely teared up. We were playing the Four Seasons by Vivaldi and we got to that really famous part that everyone knows where it’s like “da da da da, da da da da, da da da da DA, dada” and just with all of us playing at once it was so loud and I was right in the middle of it, it was almost like I could feel it going THROUGH me and it got to me. It felt amazing:)
@@kaylasilverstein4137 you've definitely made that up seeing as Beethoven didn't write the Four Seasons.
@@Snookbone LOL
2:54-4:38 is legitimately the greatest melody ever composed. It's perfect. I only hope I can write music even close to the quality of this masterpiece.
Usually in orchestral pieces there are 2-3 sections that I really like listening to, but this one... I could keep jumping back and forth through the entire piece like "this is the best part. no this is the best part. No THIS is the best part!" And in the end, I spent an hour listening to it.
This piece was in a movie my dad and I watched together all the time. When he died in June I knew right away we had to have 2:54 at the funeral, so we did and it was stunning
You should listen to "I Vow To Thee My Country". The music is taken straight from 2:55, and the lyrics are beautiful.
We all have to admit that 2:55 is the greatest part of any piece of music ever written, ok?
Yep
Vow to thee my country
Nuh uh it’s 2:54
I agree, but a majority of the morons here refer to this "piece/movement" of 'The Planets' as a "song"!!! What a multitude of millennial fucking idiots we have to endure! I weep for humanity!!!
@@SordidGuy seems a bit harsh.
I know marching band will never compare to the orchestrated version (maybe dci) , but the first time I heard this, I was in 6th grade learning the flute, and my brother's marching band played this. When I listen to them play it at state, I was moved to tears and my only dream was to play this. This piece is what pushed me to stay a musician and I'm so glad I get to play this in marching band five years later. I hope we get to inspire someone, like how five years ago, my brother's marching band inspired me.
bubbyworship good for you..
This is deadass the only song that makes my spine shiver. The chorale is god tier
I once saw this whole suite played live in dimmed lighting with a screen showing NASA images of the planets- it was great!
I saw this at the Royal Albert hall
the single most motivating thing on this planet
Wait a minute...
Just heard the Chicago Symphony Orchestra play the entire Planets piece. Jupiter was by far the best. Guest conductor Cristian Macelaru recently retired from the NY Symphony Orchestra.
toronto symphony for me
Jupiter often gets overshadowed by Mars but honestly is the better and more grandiose of the two
Both are good
RIP Tanktop Master😔✊
You'll never be forgotten
Edit:Nvm he's actually alive let's gooooo
Only monster died in OPM series...
TankTop will return
@@Mt2Lemos u never know manga is a completely different story now
@@Yunngbratz not really, murata still has to follow ONE. He doesn't have the right to change anything without ONE's permission. That said though since TTM isn't very significant in the webcomic, we might get a death here.
@@markn.7914 Murata job is only to draw the all changes in manga are made by One
Murata has no effect on current events in manga
F TANKTOP
I feel like John Williams got inspiration from The Planets for the Star Wars film score.
IsThisRealLife Close Encounters of the Third Kind as well
+IsThisRealLife John Williams, Jerry Goldsmith(R.I.P.), James Horner(R.I.P.), Hans Zimmer.... the list goes on.
+IsThisRealLife Lucas apparently wanted to just use The Planets, outright, but Spielberg convinced him otherwise.
Brian Tully According to the Star Wars DVD special features, George Lucas wanted a musical score for Star Wars that would be reminiscent of the late Romantic style of early Hollywood film music composers like Erich Wolfgang Korngold who, along with Max Steiner and Alfred Newman, was considered one of the founders of film music. Steven Spielberg then told Lucas, "The guy you gotta talk to is John Williams. He did 'Jaws' and he's the greatest composer in the world today." It was John Williams himself who was influenced by the works of Gustav Holst, specifically 'The Planets,' as well as other Hollywood composers like Jerry Goldsmith, James Horner, and Hans Zimmer.
He definitely did!
*waits for **2:52*..... ahhhhh there we are :)
yes
Very patriotic
blazednlovinit shivers go down my spine at this part
blazednlovinit omg i played that part with ma school band
blazednlovinit Funny thing. That's my church's offertory response.
2:54 makes me look forward to being a father of a little girl and watching her grow up to get married and live a beautiful life and then I live out the rest of my days peacefully but with gradually worsening health issues finally to die with a smile on my face
Watch Bluey mate(best show for both kids and parents)(quoted best guide for fatherhood/motherhood)(shows the father of the year 2019, Bandit Heeler)
Also The show Bluey features this song(Episode 26 season 2)
So... beautiful :")
Bruh wtf lol
It seems there are more ‘Bluey’ fans here 💙🧡
Whenever 2:45 hits, i dont cry, i weep. Ugly cry my heart out, this just makes me feel things, I don't know what, i could never explain.
2:54 - when you piss after holding it in all day
Lewis Ferry nice profile pic, 737-800?
Jajajaja
facts
How could you say something so controversial yet so brave
When you beat the final boss of a very hard game with 1% HP remaiming.
I was recently listening to this while crunching through the snow on my way home, and I swear, when it came to the section at 2:55, I suddenly felt as if I were celebrating the end of the igloo wars that had raged far too long for humanity to recall; my comrades and I guzzling down unhelpful amounts of Goldschlager, clinking glasses with zeal, rejoicing in the glorious day ahead and pondering the future for the Eskimo people who had at last been liberated from their extraterrestrial captors. One of the most uplifting pieces of classical musical you will find.
P.S. No drugs were harmed in the making of this story.
when the theme changes after the build up at 1:35..... amazing
OPM manga/webcomic bros we are almost there...
My future fiancée can plan our wedding however the hell she wants, so long as she allows me to have a full orchestra play 2:54 as she walks down the aisle, and 5:01 after "you may kiss the bride."
EtherealFeline I had this at my wedding ceremony
2:54 brings tears to my eyes every time and I don't even know why. I don't think anyone would object to such brilliant wedding plans lol
Go for it. it works. 29 years on I can vouch for it.
I want it played at my funeral
And the last 2 minutes of Saturn
Same,but i have a different reason for tears
It amazes me that one person came up with something as brilliant as this
0:19
Catherine OST: Stage 1 - Underground Cemetery
Stage 2 - Prison of Despair
Yes!
to think murata and one putting songs as chapter names 😩😩
2:54 is THE part everyone knows and loves, but for me 1:36 is just so insanely catchy and addicting
Same I actually dont like that 2:54
So right my two fav parts
If you haven’t seen the kids show Bluey, and you like this song, if you are a parent you have to watch Sleepytime in season 2 💕 you will never see this song the same agin 💕
I thought I was the only one here that came from there. It's my favorite episode of the whole show
@@IndigoMouse64 I don't know when the show Bluey started airing on the Disney Channel & Disney Jr but I came across about 3 months ago & it's on another level with the storytelling & characters. Just all around awesome! I babysit a 2 almost 3 yr old. This & Coco Mellon stops her in her tracks and she'll watch and smile until both end.. I saw the episode this week with this piece of music & WOW!!! I rewound it to catch the title and saved it on my DVR. This is the 3rd episode that made me teary. The first was Chili was telling the story of how she felt when Bluey wasn't as advanced as the other babies in the group-that ending! So heartwarming! The 2nd was when Chili and the girls went to visit her father.This show is as good or better than many live action family comedy/dramas
2:55 sounds like the morrowind theme. If I remember, Jeremy Soule, the compiser for the elder scrolls III, IV, and V, said he drew inspiration from the planets for some of his songs.
Ooh, new One Punch man chapter. That's quite nice.
I see you’re a reader of culture as well, OPM Manga was brutally awesome.
I hope (if it ever gets adapted to anime) they use it as the soundtrack for that scene.
I hope you guys realized that this song was the one playing on your royal highness prince Philip's funeral and Murata-san made his tribute on chapter 144 of One Punch Man.
@@chuckdam prince Phillip?
@@Bestjamesbond Yes, the Duke of Edinburgh that died last week, husband of your majesty the queen Elizabeth II from England.
skip to 2:55 if you want to hear possibly one of the best pieces of songwriting on earth (may I say even on Jupiter? :D )
AlmostKentish XD
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHH I SEE WHAT YOU DID THERE
Damn, what a piece of music... I listen to some music by modern composers and think "oh this is really cool sounding." And then at some point or another I always come back to this and just think "wow, holst was just on an entirely different level." Just everything about this movement astounds me.
I hear Ocarina of Time, Star Wars, Lord of the Rings, Morrowind, and even Shrek (a.k.a. Ogrelord).
+BarackObamaLikesPoop Many of the Star Wars themes were based on the Planets suite.
+BarackObamaLikesPoop Also The Right Stuff ~6:50
+BarackObamaLikesPoop
The difference is, this came a century before any of those other scores.
+BarackObamaLikesPoop Goes to show you how influential this piece is to modern classical music
+BarackObamaLikesPoop Braveheart too...
This, Pomp and Circumstance, and Rhapsody in Blue are three of the best pieces ever written. I will die on this hill