Part 1: ua-cam.com/video/QL6pJ2_O92w/v-deo.html Part 2: ua-cam.com/video/iX7MhogtiYo/v-deo.html Part 4: ua-cam.com/video/WFbjfU8tDAk/v-deo.html Which pieces should be in part 4?
ALSO I recognize ''voices of spring'' as the music in the planting the fields segment in Baby Macdonald, Mozart's ''Overture'' as the intro of Baby Noah *AND* Habanera from the same episode as Overture, that episode being Baby Noah, I did say I recognize these pieces from those episodes of Baby Einstein so yeah
No. 11 - Elger's "Pomp and Circumstance" - Should have had the caption that it was also known as "Land of Hope and Glory" in the UK, with lyrics written by A.C. Benson in 1902. The piece is most well-known for being played at graduation ceremonies.
4:15 Making his way to the ring, from Sarasota, Florida, weighing 252 lbs. "Macho Man" Randy Savage! 6:39 And his opponent. From Parts Unknown, weighing in at 239 lbs. Doink the Clown!
Pianoman333, for "20 Songs you don't know the Name of 4", here are some songs. 1. Stravinsky: The Rite of Spring 2. Mussorgsky: Night on Bald Mountain 3. Verdi: Aida: Grand March 4. Paganini: Caprice No. 24 5. Vivaldi: The 4 Seasons: Autumn 6. Schubert: Trout Quintet 7. Mendelssohn: Violin Concerto No. 2 8. Bizet: L'Arlesienne Suite No. 2 9. Tchaikovsky: Nutcracker Suite: Miniature Overture 10. Mozart: Eine Kleine Nachtmusik 11. Chopin: Winter Wind Etude 12. Beethoven: Fur Elise 13. Handel: Water Music 14. J.S. Bach: Prelude in C Major 15. Liszt: Feux Follets 16. Lully: March of the Turks 17. Dvorak: Symphony No. 9 "From a New World" 18. Gounod: Funeral March of Amerianette 19. Smetana: Die Moldau 20. Grieg: Wedding Day at Trolhaugen.
I never see Wedding Day at Toldhaugen ever getting any love so I'm happy at least to see it listed here in this comment! Always been one of my favorites!
I'm proud of myself for knowing Habanera and disappointed in myself for not knowing Mvt. 2 of Beethoven's 9th. That's my favorite song from before the 20th century.
Number 10 gave me FLASHBACKS! That piece has been used by the English Department for Work & Pensions as their hold music for at least two decades, I'm sure. Because I spent a VERY long time on hold with them in my late teens and early twenties.
lol, nice response. I am familiar with Verdi's "La Traviata," but not 'Triviata" either. It does sound like opera buffa. Maybe someone will pen it someday.
6:03 is an early CGI film which was a karoke song about Camp Grenada. 6:26 Electronic osclillators remind us the even God was a woman at one time. Frogs do this as well. On a lighter note 6:41 is Carnival Night Zone from Sonic The Hedgehog 3.
Apparently, I have a big gap in my musical knowledge which more or less spans the 19th century. Because I only recognized about half of the music from the time, and of the other half, I mainly didn't know the composers.
I always heard it as "ENTRY" of the Gladiators, not "ENTRANCE" of the Gladiators although it doesn't make a real difference either way. But what it really reminded me of was a really old music program (ancient by computer standards) which could play four-note harmony on the internal PC speaker. This program was written when integrated sound was still fairly rare and expensive on computers. I can remember enjoying Entry of the Gladiators played by that program, although the quality depended a lot on where and how your computer's internal speaker was mounted and the quality of the speaker. Some computer speakers did not sound very good, but many sounded quite impressive.
It is funny to see a piece I've played myself in that list. It's the number 5 (the chopin prelude). While hearing this, I noticed something was off. At the end of your play, you jumped with the left hand to the finish, while the right was playing its normal part. (I noticed it, because the harmony was a bit off. But it's a nice choice for this video. Just needed to correct the tiny mistake.)
How does someone not know waltz of the flowers. Then again, I'm someone who does theatre and had to dance to this in a sleepy hollow play, I kinda have to know the music which are my cues.
I’m watching the keys and so impressed by anyone who plays piano. I never could get the hang of this amount of multitasking 😅 I’ll stick with the violin melody
As a pianist, I'd say the exact same this about Violin, I'm impressed with the people who can play smoothly, without shaking or sounding like a tortured cat, I haven't googled it but have no idea how you know which notes are which when the neck doesn't seem to have any indicator as to where the notes are- I guess it really depends on what we're used to ^^
Actually, I was humming it the other day and couldn't remember the name, so I was quite grateful for this video. I knew Vivaldi Spring, Pachelbel's Canon, and Stars and Stripes Forever, but didn't know the names of the other ones.
For that song it is surprisingly much easier to forget the name than people would think. But the tune is always gonna be bolted in the brain. Like I immediately knew what it was I just couldn't remember the name.
1. I heard it when I played the game, and it was the first piece. My favo Tchaikovsky piece, too. But my biggest hope for his piece is Piano Concerto 1 1st mvt. 2. My favorite Beethoven symphony. Did you know that this was arranged by Liszt ? (All Beethoven's symphonies are covered by Liszt) 3. Most popular piece from Carmen 4. IDK 5. I think it'll be my one of favo Chopin Prelude (not 1st) 6. Yes !!! Liszt !!! La Campanella !!!!! I was looking for this piece. :) 7. My second favo Verdi piece :) (and also my second favo opera composer.) 8. IDK about Le Nozze di Figaro, I just heard the name 9. I know the piece, but I didn't heard about Lohengrin. 10. I heard when I was young 11. I know this piece, but I didn't know about English translation. 12. I just heard the composer name 13. My favo Pachelbel piece. Beautiful ^^ and it was samplinged for many songs. 14. IDK 15. IDK 16. IDK 17. IDK 18. IDK 19. I heard about it !! Also, did you know that Berlioz had the same name of symphonic piece ? 20. I heard Symphony No.9, but I only know about Mvt 4
Only one of these is truly a 'song' ("Libiam" from La Traviata), and "Land of Hope and Glory" was created much later than Elgar's orchestral march. The rest are tunes, melodies, pieces, works etc but they are not songs. Songs have words and are meant to be sung by the human voice.
#10 is the bane of anyone trying to call the UK Government, especially with regards to any kind of benefit claims. I would be surprised if more than a slim minority of people didn't know #13, given it's long-standing popularity and robust memetic value.
It took me a long while and watching this video that a certain background song in Goose Goose Duck was actually Chopin Prelude Op. 28 No. 4. I really thought the devs made something wonderful as you went on meetings, but it was this classical song all along.
Suggestions for Songs you don't know the name of 4: 1.Liszt-Etude 3 in Bb major 2.Franz Schubert Ave Maria 3.Mozart-Ave Verum Corpus 4.Henry VIII- Greensleeves 5. Haydn-Symphony no 94 2nd Movement 6.Ricketts-Colonel Bogey March 7.Vivaldi-Concer for 4 Violins in B minor 8.Beethoven-Sonata in G Major 9.Grieg-In the hall of the mountain king 10.Arne-Rule Britannia 11.Sousa-Washington Post March 12.Khachaturian-Sabre Dance 13.Chopin-Nocturne in Bb Minor 14.Petzold-Minuet in G 15.Gounod-Ave Maria (From Bach's Prelude no 1 in C) 16.Joplin-Pineapple Rag 17.Offenbach-Tales of Hoffman 18.Rossini-Barber of Seville Overture 19.Saint Saens-Danse Macabre 20.Satie-Gnossienne no. 3
Idk anyone who couldn't name the 5th symphony of Mozart, or canon and D. Maybe I just surround myself with the right people. I thought both of those were well known lol
Gotta say, the immediate fear I felt hearing Entrance of the Gladiators was something only indicative of a rain world fan who's witnessed the clown rot mod. and that I am
#9 everyone knows the title of, at least anyone who's played piano for weddings which my mom has, I was not gifted with the talent to play the piano though. I know the titles to some classical pieces. Another one that's played at weddings a lot is Johan Pachelbel's Canon In D. which I find is more beautiful than Wagner's Bridal Chorus. I also love Trans-Siberian Orchestra's version of Canon in D called Christmas Canon and Christmas Canon Rock, I sang the rock version once at Christmas time. I also knew the title to #10 one of my favorite pieces and it comes from a pretty good movie as well. 11 I knew the title to also, been to so many graduations and the title is in the programs. I knew the title to 14 also. The funny thing is I do not like Classical music very much, I listen to a little of everything, but Classical is something I rarely listen to or even like. I like it more as movie scores instead because it's more upbeat.
Ugggh, that automatic sound of the program sounds horrible. But I am used to listening to human-played music, so I have high expectations. The program doesn't change the force of the key push, as a human playing piano would (sometimes pressing gently for quiet tones, other times wildly smashing the piano trying to play all the notes Chopin said there must be XD ). Other than this, nice video!
Part 1: ua-cam.com/video/QL6pJ2_O92w/v-deo.html
Part 2: ua-cam.com/video/iX7MhogtiYo/v-deo.html
Part 4: ua-cam.com/video/WFbjfU8tDAk/v-deo.html
Which pieces should be in part 4?
Dance of the cygnets and winter 2nd movement
Brahms’s lullaby
Charles Gounod's "Funeral March of a Marionette"
André Rieu's "Boléro"
Mozart's "Eine Klein Nachtmusik"
Chopin - Waltz in A minor
La Campella (Etude Of Paganini) - Waltz Of The Flowers - Symphony No. 5 And Habanera. waltz of the flowers (From The Nutcracker
You seem to have a knack for deciding _very correctly_ which of the pieces to play a longer and which a shorter while. I approve of this.
ALSO I recognize ''voices of spring'' as the music in the planting the fields segment in Baby Macdonald, Mozart's ''Overture'' as the intro of Baby Noah *AND* Habanera from the same episode as Overture, that episode being Baby Noah, I did say I recognize these pieces from those episodes of Baby Einstein so yeah
I absolutely knew Sousa's "Stars and Stripes Forever". I've had to play that monstrosity in the past.
The choir I sing with did an arrangement with lyrics a few years ago.
No. 11 - Elger's "Pomp and Circumstance" - Should have had the caption that it was also known as "Land of Hope and Glory" in the UK, with lyrics written by A.C. Benson in 1902. The piece is most well-known for being played at graduation ceremonies.
And for when the late, great Randy "Macho Man" Savage made his way to the ring.
4:16 If you've ever been in a high school band, this moment probably gave you flashbacks.
I just heard this song at my graduation a few days ago
I sure did 💀😂
Yes, yes it did
Piano Man 333 is the king of knowing what songs we definitely know but don't remember the names of. Keep this series up bro!
well, depends on who you ask...
4:15 Making his way to the ring, from Sarasota, Florida, weighing 252 lbs. "Macho Man" Randy Savage! 6:39 And his opponent. From Parts Unknown, weighing in at 239 lbs. Doink the Clown!
Pianoman333, for "20 Songs you don't know the Name of 4", here are some songs.
1. Stravinsky: The Rite of Spring
2. Mussorgsky: Night on Bald Mountain
3. Verdi: Aida: Grand March
4. Paganini: Caprice No. 24
5. Vivaldi: The 4 Seasons: Autumn
6. Schubert: Trout Quintet
7. Mendelssohn: Violin Concerto No. 2
8. Bizet: L'Arlesienne Suite No. 2
9. Tchaikovsky: Nutcracker Suite: Miniature Overture
10. Mozart: Eine Kleine Nachtmusik
11. Chopin: Winter Wind Etude
12. Beethoven: Fur Elise
13. Handel: Water Music
14. J.S. Bach: Prelude in C Major
15. Liszt: Feux Follets
16. Lully: March of the Turks
17. Dvorak: Symphony No. 9 "From a New World"
18. Gounod: Funeral March of Amerianette
19. Smetana: Die Moldau
20. Grieg: Wedding Day at Trolhaugen.
I never see Wedding Day at Toldhaugen ever getting any love so I'm happy at least to see it listed here in this comment! Always been one of my favorites!
@@CJMaysCompositions-PianoChris You're Welcome.
Now, that is what I would call a list of pieces I could binge listen to
Dido’s Lament - Purcell
Erlkonig - Schubert
Summer mvt 3 - Vivaldi
Ysaye sonata No 3, “Ballade”
Mendelssohn violin concerto No. 1
Beethoven 7 2nd movement
Shostakovich string quartet 8 2nd movement
The last two on your list are two of my favorites! Also, the Waltz from Aram Khachaturian’s Masquerade Suite should be played more often.
I'm proud of myself for knowing Habanera and disappointed in myself for not knowing Mvt. 2 of Beethoven's 9th. That's my favorite song from before the 20th century.
Recognized Habanera from Family Guy of all places
@@ToxiChaos Don't feel bad. I learned about Habanera as a child from Disney's "Aristocats."
i recognised it instantly upon hearing the 3 note motif from the beginning [of symphony 9 mvt 2], absolutely love that movement
¿¿ BEFORE the 20th Century ?? You must be One HUNDRED Years PLUS as we're now in the 21st century
The best I got on any of these was previously having known them but not being able to remember.
That's great! You could change the title to "songs you've heard on looney tunes cartoons or on hold" and you'd still nail it. 😉
PianoMan333: (plays Ponchielli's Dance of the Hours)
Me: Hello muddah... hello faddah... here I am at... Camp Grenada...
Camp is very....entertaining....and they say we'll have some fun when it stops raining!
You remember Jeffrey Hardy? They’re about to organize a searching party.
I went hiking with Joe Spivey. He developed poison ivy.
@@fredgarvin716 You remember Leonard Skinner? He got ptomaine poisoning last night after dinner.
I sang along!!!
6:41 is the theme of all of Twitter.
Agreed
Haven’t got there yet, so lemme guess. Entry of the Gladiators?
I was right!
Fr
7:01 I will always think of the EBU intro music from Eurovision 😁
I'm proud of myself for knowing the names of 18/20 of these, 15 and 19 were the only ones that tripped me up.
19 I know well...
6:39 remove "i" from the creator's name and that is what he would have thought if he saw what internet culture uses this song for
Not me going “polka dot Afro” in my head 💀😂
trying to type "wedding march" and only finding the one by mendelssong. thank you vv much for this video.
Okay how many of you sang "Hello Muddah Hello Faddah" along with #15? Or am I dating myself with that one?
How many called #20 "The Huntley-Brinkley Report"? Talk about dating oneself...
It definitely popped in my head, and I'm fairly young. My parents made sure that I'd know a few older references, though.
I did! Also I’m in that weird spot where I don’t feel like I’m old but the internet says I am 😂😂😂
i certain sang that. I had just listened to it not long ago.
"Camp is very
Entertaining
And they say we'll have some fun when it stops raining" 😂
For number 17:
Me: FINALLY AFTER 5 YEARS OF TRYING TO FIND THIS SONG I FINALLY FOUND IT
pomp and circumstance is my nemesis. played that mess for hours over three years until i graduated.
5:42 IS THAT A FREEDOM REFERENCE RAAAA 🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅
That was the liveliest interpretation of Pachelbel's Canon in D that I've ever heard!
That's because it's in the middle after everyone has come in and done the slow stuff.
@@DJSchreffler those poor cellists
Memories. Great song. I think that’s what it’s called anyway.
I was so happy when you played Pomp and Circumstance and I knew it!!! We have to play it in my highschool band every year for graduation.
6:46 also known as "Theme of the 2022 Ferrari Strategy Team"
And the 2023 Ferrari team apparently
I love how much effort your put into these videos!
🤖
# Disney's Fantasia (1940);
Several Mario bros themes;
NES - Cicus Charlie;
Nokia cellphone theme
Number 16 also has a really good song based on it called "Imaginary Places"
7:00 All rise for the Eurovision anthem
Number 10 gave me FLASHBACKS! That piece has been used by the English Department for Work & Pensions as their hold music for at least two decades, I'm sure. Because I spent a VERY long time on hold with them in my late teens and early twenties.
Never heard of "La Triviata" before 😄. And now I imagine some sort of sitcom opera with people singing gossip.
I've seen it live, and you're not that far off actually.
lol, nice response. I am familiar with Verdi's "La Traviata," but not 'Triviata" either. It does sound like opera buffa. Maybe someone will pen it someday.
1:04 the intro is used in NXDE by (G)I-dle
6:03 is an early CGI film which was a karoke song about Camp Grenada. 6:26 Electronic osclillators remind us the even God was a woman at one time. Frogs do this as well. On a lighter note 6:41 is Carnival Night Zone from Sonic The Hedgehog 3.
Apparently, I have a big gap in my musical knowledge which more or less spans the 19th century. Because I only recognized about half of the music from the time, and of the other half, I mainly didn't know the composers.
As a ballet dancer I think I spent more time trying to remember the dances I did to each sing because I have danced to majority of them
Awww
I know I just commented on the other video but...
4:17: Ooooooooo yeah!
"MACHO MAN'S READY!"
I have a feeling that you take some of these pieces from the video "100 Most Famous Classical Pieces". And I like it
5:54 Hello, Muddah; Hello Faddah
I always heard it as "ENTRY" of the Gladiators, not "ENTRANCE" of the Gladiators although it doesn't make a real difference either way. But what it really reminded me of was a really old music program (ancient by computer standards) which could play four-note harmony on the internal PC speaker. This program was written when integrated sound was still fairly rare and expensive on computers. I can remember enjoying Entry of the Gladiators played by that program, although the quality depended a lot on where and how your computer's internal speaker was mounted and the quality of the speaker. Some computer speakers did not sound very good, but many sounded quite impressive.
Watching Looney Tunes and Tom & Jerry all those years ago!
Same! Now I associate some of those songs to wacky events unfolding!
It is funny to see a piece I've played myself in that list. It's the number 5 (the chopin prelude). While hearing this, I noticed something was off. At the end of your play, you jumped with the left hand to the finish, while the right was playing its normal part. (I noticed it, because the harmony was a bit off. But it's a nice choice for this video. Just needed to correct the tiny mistake.)
Thank you so much for these lists. Very useful. 🙂
How does someone not know waltz of the flowers. Then again, I'm someone who does theatre and had to dance to this in a sleepy hollow play, I kinda have to know the music which are my cues.
Most of these songs were on my old computer's library for sampling, like the last song.
why do you write the name so early we wantet to make a guessing game but after a few seconds the title was to read. often before the main theme
I thought 7:32 was a theme from an anime I watched for a second
Zoldyck theme 🙏🏻
I’m watching the keys and so impressed by anyone who plays piano. I never could get the hang of this amount of multitasking 😅
I’ll stick with the violin melody
As a pianist, I'd say the exact same this about Violin, I'm impressed with the people who can play smoothly, without shaking or sounding like a tortured cat, I haven't googled it but have no idea how you know which notes are which when the neck doesn't seem to have any indicator as to where the notes are-
I guess it really depends on what we're used to ^^
Number 19 was my favorite song on Piano Tiles.
5:31 We are currently receiving countless reports of unidentified hostile organisms that we'll refer to as Alternates.
That rendition of Chopin's Prelude no. 4 was shocking.
what’s the circus music called?
entrance of the gladiators
😳
i searched through pt 1 and pt 2 just for entrance of the gladiators, worth it
my band has to play pomp and circumstance for like 20 mins straight every year and it’s terrible. I have the whole thing memorized.
Number 2 is so famous how would anyone forget that piece😂
I read your comment before starting the video, and despite not being spoiled, i immediately called what song it was gonna be
Actually, I was humming it the other day and couldn't remember the name, so I was quite grateful for this video. I knew Vivaldi Spring, Pachelbel's Canon, and Stars and Stripes Forever, but didn't know the names of the other ones.
For that song it is surprisingly much easier to forget the name than people would think. But the tune is always gonna be bolted in the brain. Like I immediately knew what it was I just couldn't remember the name.
I knew it just from looking at the thumbnail for this video
1. I heard it when I played the game, and it was the first piece. My favo Tchaikovsky piece, too. But my biggest hope for his piece is Piano Concerto 1 1st mvt.
2. My favorite Beethoven symphony. Did you know that this was arranged by Liszt ? (All Beethoven's symphonies are covered by Liszt)
3. Most popular piece from Carmen
4. IDK
5. I think it'll be my one of favo Chopin Prelude (not 1st)
6. Yes !!! Liszt !!! La Campanella !!!!! I was looking for this piece. :)
7. My second favo Verdi piece :) (and also my second favo opera composer.)
8. IDK about Le Nozze di Figaro, I just heard the name
9. I know the piece, but I didn't heard about Lohengrin.
10. I heard when I was young
11. I know this piece, but I didn't know about English translation.
12. I just heard the composer name
13. My favo Pachelbel piece. Beautiful ^^ and it was samplinged for many songs.
14. IDK
15. IDK
16. IDK
17. IDK
18. IDK
19. I heard about it !! Also, did you know that Berlioz had the same name of symphonic piece ?
20. I heard Symphony No.9, but I only know about Mvt 4
I knew the name of 2 of them
But I recognized 10 of them in total
I should've known the name of cannon in D
Wow, so many memories- my first Nokia ringtones, first windows xp songs on it...
I play the piano and i recognize every single one, is this not normal
Only one of these is truly a 'song' ("Libiam" from La Traviata), and "Land of Hope and Glory" was created much later than Elgar's orchestral march. The rest are tunes, melodies, pieces, works etc but they are not songs. Songs have words and are meant to be sung by the human voice.
7:11 I laughed at this point. Am I, a HUGE ESC fan, supossed to now know Te Deum?
same, I live, laugh, breath eurovision lol
It was used as a jingle of the Eurovision broadcast organization played before any international TV broadcast, so also before the ESC.
7:32 - 7:55 : i only knew that song as the intro for "The Apprentice" 😭
#10 is the bane of anyone trying to call the UK Government, especially with regards to any kind of benefit claims.
I would be surprised if more than a slim minority of people didn't know #13, given it's long-standing popularity and robust memetic value.
It took me a long while and watching this video that a certain background song in Goose Goose Duck was actually Chopin Prelude Op. 28 No. 4. I really thought the devs made something wonderful as you went on meetings, but it was this classical song all along.
I played waltz of the flowers as a cello as a freshman in high school, I have no clue if I love it or hate it.
1:23 reminds me sm of penthouse (I am a classical music student btw so yes opera is supreme)
I already knew the name of spring..
Because I had to play that song when I had piano classes..
15. I will forever know that as Hello Muddah, Hello Faddah thanks to Allan Sherman.
0:43 it sounded like judge judy
i got la campanella, stars and stripes forever, spring, symphony 5, and pomp and circumstance
The euro vision song contest theme dosnt seem to work on the piano
Suggestions for Songs you don't know the name of 4:
1.Liszt-Etude 3 in Bb major
2.Franz Schubert Ave Maria
3.Mozart-Ave Verum Corpus
4.Henry VIII- Greensleeves
5. Haydn-Symphony no 94 2nd Movement
6.Ricketts-Colonel Bogey March
7.Vivaldi-Concer for 4 Violins in B minor
8.Beethoven-Sonata in G Major
9.Grieg-In the hall of the mountain king
10.Arne-Rule Britannia
11.Sousa-Washington Post March
12.Khachaturian-Sabre Dance
13.Chopin-Nocturne in Bb Minor
14.Petzold-Minuet in G
15.Gounod-Ave Maria (From Bach's Prelude no 1 in C)
16.Joplin-Pineapple Rag
17.Offenbach-Tales of Hoffman
18.Rossini-Barber of Seville Overture
19.Saint Saens-Danse Macabre
20.Satie-Gnossienne no. 3
Well now we know their names, dammit
He did hall of the mountain king.he should probably so 1812 overture
I cried when badinerie played at 6:20 music gcse students understand my pain studied this for 2 years of my life…ptsd 💀
Where can I get those midi files to play with my synthesia ? For personal uses only please.
RIP to the person named Fucik.
I know 1,2,3,4,7,8,9,10,13,15,and 17 it sounds like Afro circus from Madagascar
I could not resist singing along to Voices of Spring #penthouse
"Libiamo ne' lieti calici" is also known as "The Drinking Song" or "brindisi" from La Traviata.
Number 13 started playing and in my head I heard “Suckadk suckadk suckamadafkn dk”
Idk anyone who couldn't name the 5th symphony of Mozart, or canon and D. Maybe I just surround myself with the right people. I thought both of those were well known lol
Bro, that's the 5th symphony of BEETHOVEN not MOZART
@@levraidunoob same thing
@@Bako751 no, that's two differents composers
My screen is melting upwards after staring at all the falling notes lol
Why did you change bizet habanera into major at the end?
Gotta say, the immediate fear I felt hearing Entrance of the Gladiators was something only indicative of a rain world fan who's witnessed the clown rot mod. and that I am
#9 everyone knows the title of, at least anyone who's played piano for weddings which my mom has, I was not gifted with the talent to play the piano though. I know the titles to some classical pieces. Another one that's played at weddings a lot is Johan Pachelbel's Canon In D. which I find is more beautiful than Wagner's Bridal Chorus. I also love Trans-Siberian Orchestra's version of Canon in D called Christmas Canon and Christmas Canon Rock, I sang the rock version once at Christmas time. I also knew the title to #10 one of my favorite pieces and it comes from a pretty good movie as well. 11 I knew the title to also, been to so many graduations and the title is in the programs. I knew the title to 14 also. The funny thing is I do not like Classical music very much, I listen to a little of everything, but Classical is something I rarely listen to or even like. I like it more as movie scores instead because it's more upbeat.
7:00 haha eurovision jingle go brrr
I learned something really cool from this video.
n.20
when you try to play a complex song but your hands and fingers all wanna do the same thing
I knew a few of these already.
When your ex invites you to his wedding and you pay the musician to keep playing this music 3:30 with this music 6:39
2:28 my alarm in the morning
6:41 I bet y’all shouted out ‘CIRCUS THEME’ here
3:11
Ouran High School Host Club anyone?
I watched all videos just to find out part three on seventeen has entered the gladiators
Entrance of the Gladiators? I’ve just been calling it the circus music!
3:36 now I could’ve guessed that one
whoever chose that chopin's prelude op 28 no 4 would be played THAT fast should be fired imo
nice trivias
Ashamed to have said "a Nokia ringtone" at 6:20 🤣
Every high school student knows Pomp and Circumstance.
Ugggh, that automatic sound of the program sounds horrible. But I am used to listening to human-played music, so I have high expectations.
The program doesn't change the force of the key push, as a human playing piano would (sometimes pressing gently for quiet tones, other times wildly smashing the piano trying to play all the notes Chopin said there must be XD ). Other than this, nice video!
The thirteenth song gave me flashbacks to a horror game that came out on the Wii…
Funny how I know the name of every single one of those already