Aaron Copland: The Tender Land Suite (1949) [DDD]

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  • Опубліковано 24 сер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 150

  • @user-wb1kz6it3k
    @user-wb1kz6it3k 4 місяці тому +6

    What a genius Copland was to put a break in this piece at the 16 min mark so that a commercial could run. Most composers leave a little space at the start so we can see ads.

  • @hemiolaguy
    @hemiolaguy 5 років тому +91

    Thank you, Mr. Copland, wherever you may be, for this affirmation of the human spirit. The world is a better place because you lived and worked in it!

    • @Renee2004lr
      @Renee2004lr 4 роки тому +11

      Mr. Copland and (ironically) Mr, Bernstein both died a few months apart in 1990. This work is at the top of my list of 'Best works of Copland'

    • @scotthammer5261
      @scotthammer5261 3 роки тому +2

      @@Renee2004lr You may already know that there is a bust of Copland in a glade at Tangelwood. In front of the bust are two plaques that say "Aaron Copland 1900-1990" and " His Memory is Preserved in this Bower by Family and Friends".

    • @sidpheasant7585
      @sidpheasant7585 3 роки тому

      Agreed that the human spirit is in the music, but also I am convinced the Holy Spirit. Since the Paraclete resides or can reside in each one of us, perhaps there is really not too much difference between the two concepts?

    • @stephenkamens587
      @stephenkamens587 Рік тому

      I couldn't even have expressed those thoughts as you just did, any better. Mr Copland raises the "Human Spirit" in such a way. His music "Speaks" to All "Common Men", especially during these "Uncommon Times".

  • @andyhowlett2231
    @andyhowlett2231 Місяць тому

    Beautiful. Copland has always impressed me with his talent for capturing the 'wide open spaces' not only of the American continent, but of the human spirit. I find myself breathing heavily during these sequences as he conjures up the great freedoms of our world.

  • @jaddison1112
    @jaddison1112 3 роки тому +21

    I feel the serenity and majesty of the American landscape of long ago in this Aaron Copland musical masterpiece. So many heart touched emotions of the promise and spirit of our lives. The painting of the road and car reminds me of visiting Iowa and my grandmother in the early 1950s.

  • @jfkmiller
    @jfkmiller 15 днів тому

    Thank you for posting, friend. Another elevating piece by Copland, and your choice of Hogue as the accompanying image was inspired.

  • @sierrasix2003
    @sierrasix2003 3 місяці тому +2

    This is my favorite Copland work. It never fails to make me smile!

  • @Belfreyite
    @Belfreyite 6 років тому +65

    The Promise of living is so quintessential American in every way. Despite all the turmoil and fears for the future, we have this.
    I speak as an Englishman.

    • @tomchicago01
      @tomchicago01 6 років тому +9

      thank you. We need to be reminded of our own grandeur sometimes.

    • @brianbaumgarn5795
      @brianbaumgarn5795 6 років тому +13

      I am taking that as a compliment, Robert. Hopefully, we can become that quieter and better nation again. The music is good for anyone's soul.

    • @chpnlzt
      @chpnlzt 5 років тому +3

      @ Robert CROSS - OR ANY GOOD ENGLISHMAN OUT THERE, HOW IS IT THAT SO MANY OF THE ENGLISH HAVE SUCH AN INTEREST IN CLASSICAL MUSIC, WHAT IS IT ABOUT THE ENGLISH CULTURE THAT IS SO ENRICHING THAT YOU GUYS ALL SEEM TO KNOW AND LOVE SO MUCH CLASSICAL MUSIC ? I'VE JUST NOTICED A LOT MORE ENGLISH ENJOYING THIS CATEGORY ON HERE THAN AMERICANS...

    • @nicholasgray1057
      @nicholasgray1057 5 років тому +2

      I hope to God you are right.

    • @Ohlfahrt
      @Ohlfahrt 5 років тому +3

      Feel free to emigrate to these hallowed shores; check-out the view from Ellis Island, and tune-in to our Public Radio Stations. The Promise is alive in America!

  • @rodterrell304
    @rodterrell304 7 місяців тому +2

    Beautiful Music from an amazing composer.

  • @stephenkamens587
    @stephenkamens587 Рік тому +6

    After reading All of your beautiful comments, regarding this "Piece", by Aaron Copland, and on his "Other Works". YES, his Music does speak To, and Of, the Human Spirit. At times, I can hear it while reading, "The Human Comedy". Or watching the Movie, "Best Years of Our Lives". There were even times, that I could hear "Copland" in my ear during my trials, as a combat medic, in Vietnam. Especially, this piece being played right now. God Blesses you, Aaron Copland, you Get it.

    • @sidpheasant7585
      @sidpheasant7585 Рік тому +1

      Reading that, in combination with "The Promise of Living" playing in the background drew yet a further tear from my eye, Stephen.
      And the way you end your post is a triumph.
      So right...
      The Holy Spirit showed me how to see, when He came to me (when I begged) on 28-2-21.
      Now I Get it a little bit ... Copland likewise (atheist though he probably tried to be).
      And so do you, my friend!
      These are such awful times we live in, but you will already have done some awful times in your life, I see.
      May we both (and all) come through on to the other side of 2022!
      In whatever way that happens.

    • @josephcarlbreil5380
      @josephcarlbreil5380 Рік тому +2

      Hugo Friedhofer, who composed the Oscar-winning score for "The Best Years of Our Lives" stated that Copland's lean diatonic 'Americana' style was the perfect model for his composition.

  • @josephcarlbreil5380
    @josephcarlbreil5380 6 років тому +67

    I have seen grown men reduced to tears upon hearing The Promise of Living. Copland at his most inspired.

    • @brianbaumgarn5795
      @brianbaumgarn5795 6 років тому +6

      Yes, I have been listening to it here at work, and recently, too!!

    • @alexkije
      @alexkije 6 років тому +5

      Really moving. Great harmony.

    • @lynnbrannan4578
      @lynnbrannan4578 6 років тому +11

      I am a grown woman it reduces me to tears! lol.

    • @bryanscammell5557
      @bryanscammell5557 5 років тому +3

      Joseph Carl Breil my;

    • @brianstewart1205
      @brianstewart1205 5 років тому +8

      I am one of those grown men. Gets me every time.

  • @matthewbrazille9849
    @matthewbrazille9849 2 роки тому +11

    Typical Copland......all one can do is listen, imagine and appreciate what you're hearing and wondering what this gifted man had in his head as he was composing this (and all his others) beautiful piece of music. This music just makes one want to drift through beautiful white clouds and a beautiful blue sky....so touching on this late October 27, 2021 day.

  • @sergeomiller4267
    @sergeomiller4267 10 місяців тому +2

    One day I will be there. In freedom world. I can dress how I want, love who I want and not be afraid for my life...

  • @notaire2
    @notaire2 4 роки тому +7

    Wunderschöne Aufführung dieses typisch US-amerikanischen Meisterwerks mit gut harmonisierten und perfekt balancierten Töne aller Instrumente. Der geniale Maestro dirigiert das perfekt trainierte Orchester im angemessenen Tempo mit angenehmer Dynamik. Echt hörenswert!

  • @KijiroBugboy
    @KijiroBugboy Рік тому +3

    If ever there was an all-encompassing American classical composer whose music has truly come to embody the American spirit, it would be Copland. Certainly not the first American composer to experiment with sounds divorced from the European canon, but the first of renown to create a cohesive, specifically American sound.

  • @mrbear1302
    @mrbear1302 5 років тому +15

    We played the Promise of Living in marching band in high school. Such a magical piece of music. I played tenor sax and the part at 17:50 was our little "solo" and was so great to play.

  • @wsc1955
    @wsc1955 2 роки тому +4

    One of my favorite! So underated. Its as good as Appalation Spring. What I listen to when feeling crappy. Always helps!.

  • @pjaygeorge8016
    @pjaygeorge8016 4 роки тому +5

    @wScott caywood. Know how you feel/felt. After half bottle of wine, I nervously approached Copland coming out the stage door at Tanglewood, telling him I loved his music and was a great fan (booze talkin'). He seemed genuinely taken aback and thanked me. Next time was his (80th?) birthday concert at Carnegie Hall. When he came on stage to a standing ovation, I welled up such that both my contacts popped. I also subsequently had the honor as acoustician for the Concert Hall at the Copland School of Music at Queens College, NY. Great man, great music.

    • @davismiller4369
      @davismiller4369 3 роки тому +4

      I'm very envious of your time in Copland's company, no matter how brief. Just for the heck of mentioning it, I donated the Marcos Blahove portrait of Copland that hangs in the Queens College Aaron Copland School of Music. Copland was indeed a great composer and man, and one of our better angels.

  • @izzytse2905
    @izzytse2905 4 роки тому +30

    The producers of Civilization V do have an amazing taste of music!

    • @jessieg58
      @jessieg58 2 роки тому +1

      Aha, I knew this sounded familiar!

  • @carlosmontejano3334
    @carlosmontejano3334 6 років тому +12

    I Love that Copland included Zions Walls in the The Promise of Living, and is the amazing to hear orchestrated instead being sung . Since I introduced to Copland's Music. I still find this piece is breath taking from start to finish, and truly is one of the best of the songs that Copland ever wrote!

    • @sidpheasant7585
      @sidpheasant7585 3 роки тому +1

      Gracias tambien al Espiritu Santo - vive en esta musica, verdad?

    • @lizh4933
      @lizh4933 Рік тому +1

      I was first introduced to Copeland with Appalachian Spring. My favorite. Much thanks.

  • @wsc1955
    @wsc1955 2 роки тому +4

    I can't listen to this without the tears flowing. At the end I'm just a meer puddle.

  • @ericjensen6815
    @ericjensen6815 2 роки тому +3

    Right, Copland hits you right where it counts. Bravo the repudiation of cynicism. We need, have always needed, more of this spirit. Tolstoy said art has a moral obligation. Again, bravo Copland.

    • @sidpheasant7585
      @sidpheasant7585 2 роки тому

      How very interesting that you deploy the word "spirit"! [See my comment above]

  • @RedEyrisFilms
    @RedEyrisFilms 2 роки тому +2

    Beautiful work, I just heard this on the radio in New York glade I tuned in at the righttime.. amazing.... I love strings...

  • @5botball
    @5botball 2 роки тому +5

    The chord at 19:51 fills my heart with such resolution and a sense of American pride

    • @sidpheasant7585
      @sidpheasant7585 2 роки тому +2

      While a lover of Americans and the American landscape (not so much of policies and leaders!), and while never forgetting and appreciating the security we all get under the American "umbrella", I can tell you that this music speaks of America, even as it also speaks to those of us who live beyond your shores. The section "The Promise of Living" is divinely-inspired and can reach every human being on this planet in wonderful ways. Typically for things that carry truth from the Holy Spirit, this section is exciting and inspiring and motivating, even as it also seems irrevocably nostalgic and sad. For God those aspects of love are all one, and that is why we gasp with astonishment at the wonder of it, even as the tears flow. I can never decide if I like the non-sung version or the sung (opera) version more! But the syncopation and crescendo achieved in that part are like nothing I've ever heard in music before and since. It's genius, it's Copland's genius, but it comes from above, and so our thoughts as we hear it are carried above in a transcending way too...

  • @jslasher1
    @jslasher1 4 місяці тому +3

    Surely one of Copland's most heartfelt works. It never fails to impress. An evocation of an America that one was, but, sadly, no longer is.

  • @alexkije
    @alexkije 6 років тому +10

    Just found out it was composed in 1949. I had an LP with this on one side and APPALACHIAN SPRING on the other conducted by Copland. I had few records. But I enjoyed them. Now I have waaaay too many records and a record player that sounds bad. So I am so glad for UA-cam! Now I can cope. ahahaha No groove noise. Digital when recorded right can be wonderful. Watch out for overmodulation.

    • @raymccrea
      @raymccrea 4 роки тому +1

      I also had that record. As far as I know, this is the only recording of this piece.

    • @matthewweflen
      @matthewweflen 4 роки тому

      You can buy this recording pretty cheaply on Presto Classical, in CD quality FLAC. Just search "copland tender land elgin."

  • @ambercrombie789
    @ambercrombie789 6 років тому +9

    I've driven that road. North of Cowtown. // Odd how Copland captured the West so wonderfully though he was from New York. // And certainly, beautiful work as usual.

    • @alexkije
      @alexkije 6 років тому +1

      reminds me of the road to the Palisades in eastern SoDak. Near MN border.

  • @williamrubinstein3442
    @williamrubinstein3442 3 роки тому +9

    One important thing to keep in mind is that this is based on an American folk song, as are many of Copland's most famous works, like The Promise of Living in Appalachian Spring. He was trying to bring American folk music into Classical works, as composers like Dvorak, Kodaly, and Vaughan Williams did in Europe. This has little or nothing to do with politics.

    • @sidpheasant7585
      @sidpheasant7585 3 роки тому +2

      This is not QUITE so, William. Copland and his male lover doing the lyrics for the opera WANTED "The Tender Land" (including its incredible and literally DIVINE sequence "The Promise of Living") to be controversial/"edgy", and to make some kinds of statements. But the Holy Spirit had other plans, and he ensured that the pair created something timeless and transcending with it, saying a lot to everyone about the cosmic link with the land that farming folk (and probably all of us on the planet) are able to feel. Such is the wonderful gentle-yet-all-powerful Paraclete - he/it knows us, loves us, helps us, inspires us, cleanses us; but our true surrender to him/it means we get taken in directions we may or may not have expected. Why do you think I am writing this here and now? Before February 2021 I would not have spent my time on such an effort, but now here I am - serving the Lord in my tiny way, as is my obligation but also my ecstatic joy and pleasure. May His love and mercy be with you too, William, my friend!

  • @davebearden1
    @davebearden1 6 років тому +20

    Thanks to the great Elgin Symphony Orchestra and Maestro Robert Hanson for this wonderful recording.

  • @robthetraveler1099
    @robthetraveler1099 3 роки тому +5

    How odd. As soon as I loaded the video, I recognized exactly where the painting is set. That's looking north on US 287 from a point north of Fort Worth, Texas, near Avondale & Haslet. Here: 32.94632, -97.38545.

  • @michaelawford7325
    @michaelawford7325 3 роки тому +5

    We don’t hear enough good American “serious” music here in Europe, I only knew Appalachian Spring , Rodeo, Dance by Copeland and Samuel Barber Adagio and Violin Concerto, and Ashokan Farewell.
    I do like this Tender Land piece, unmistakable Copeland. I’m going to dig around for more. Did you know Johan Pachelbel’s son was American?
    We wish you luck recovering from your dreadful mistake of a President, a truly despicable person 👍

    • @davismiller4369
      @davismiller4369 3 роки тому +2

      Michael, hi. Thank you for your kind note and lovely wishes. Oh, how we need them. Regarding Copland, I love so much of his rich and varied work and consider him the one genuinely great American composer to date. His ballet, "Billy the Kid" is extraordinary, as are his film scores for "The Red Pony" and "Our Town." I'm also very taken with his composition for piano.

    • @ImVee10
      @ImVee10 3 роки тому +2

      Now we have a despicable President with full-on dementia and a horrid, ghastly unpopular Vice President, so wherever you live, watch your back.

  • @strangeown423
    @strangeown423 8 місяців тому +1

    Great musical composition. she has the whole spirit of personal freedom.

  • @Twentythousandlps
    @Twentythousandlps 4 роки тому +3

    The opera The Tender Land premiered in 1954. Copland himself premiered the Suite from The Tender Land in 1958.

  • @srothbardt
    @srothbardt 11 місяців тому +1

    Good performance.

  • @davebearden1
    @davebearden1 3 роки тому +2

    Rhome and Decatur are in Texas. Robert Hanson was the conductor of the Elgin Symphony Orchestra for 24 years. Followed Margaret Hillis as the ESO Music Director/Conductor.

    • @aaronjobe606
      @aaronjobe606 2 роки тому

      The painting in the video is probably set near where the Texas Motor Speedway is today. Ironic considering Alexandre Hogue made this piece as a direct commentary on the encroachment of modern infrastructure on the natural beauty of the land.

  • @ogredad55
    @ogredad55 3 роки тому

    Dear Past_Notes3: I really appreciate your sharing this, thanks, Pal! I'm 70 years old and I must say, "Now THIS IS Music!" Mr. Copland: U R A GENIUS! God Bless! (Is he even alive)?

    • @sidpheasant7585
      @sidpheasant7585 3 роки тому

      God IS alive, as is His Holy Spirit, which clearly inspired and resides in this amazing music. For years I could see its immense power and beauty, but it made me sad, because I kept thinking of the passing of the seasons, and of people with them. Now, thanks to my having been visited by the Spirit back in February, I "see" better the deep joy in this apparent melancholy. So yes, Copland was indeed a genius (even in some ways an unlikely one) - but he had a little extra help from a Paraclete always delighting in enhancing our talents so that we can reach to a higher level. Of course, God cared not that Copland was gay, and that he created The Tender Land with his male lover! God's endless and boundless love, mercy and forgiveness is spread in this way, including thanks to the music - and including between you and I, ogredad, though I guess we will never meet. I'm a bit younger than you, but sadly not in perfect health. But God as Three in One has indeed been incredibly kind to me, and I adore him for that. May He be with you too, my friend!

  • @lantose
    @lantose 6 років тому +10

    Great Music! I couldn't help but notice on the painting, but the location is exactly at the SE/corner of Texas Motor Speedway at the Hwy 114 and I-35 junction and heading West. It's exactly 9 miles to Rhome and 24 miles to Decatur. The artist couldn't of imagined what was going on to date!

    • @davidmaschek9188
      @davidmaschek9188 6 років тому +3

      That's a great observation, but I think it's a little bit west. I would put it past 156 near the high school stadium where there is still a road cut. Also, the road a little farther on bends to the left just like in the painting. (Thanks to Google Earth.) Of course the artist may have been using artistic license!

    • @brianbaumgarn5795
      @brianbaumgarn5795 6 років тому +4

      that is great to know. I have only been by the motor speedway once, but the painting looks like the cover of a Steinbeck novel, too, don't ya think?? Priceless stuff

    • @LucyLocket67
      @LucyLocket67 5 років тому +3

      I Thank you for that LANTIE I was also drawn by the painting and want to know his/her name Do you know who was the painter? ,Difficult to date the imagery is of the late 1930s/early 1940s Copland did indeed put American made classical music on the map of the world Reminds me a little of our own George Butterworth = killed on the Somme 1916 and - Gustave Holst.

    • @pjaygeorge8016
      @pjaygeorge8016 4 роки тому +1

      @@@LucyLocket67 The artist was Alexandre Hogue - see credit at top/heading

  • @oliverscratch
    @oliverscratch 7 днів тому

    The picture is "Road to Decatur" by Alexandre Hogue, 1938. (edited to add date)

  • @geraldjohnson4013
    @geraldjohnson4013 4 роки тому +1

    This music reminds of Missouri where I lived for 17 years 15 of them in Kansas City and two in Jefferson City. Missouri is a beautiful state and this piece reminds of the Show Me State.

  • @brianbaumgarn5795
    @brianbaumgarn5795 7 років тому +37

    If you want a real trip into the past, buy or read "Let Us Now Praise Famous Men" by James Agee w/ photos by Walker Evans. It was the impetus for writing this opera.

    • @46metube
      @46metube 6 років тому +4

      i have a paper back copy and will never let it go.

    • @lynnbrannan4578
      @lynnbrannan4578 6 років тому +9

      I now must read this. Copeland's work really touches my soul.

    • @hankrogers8431
      @hankrogers8431 4 роки тому +3

      Walker Evans bless his heart for capturing to film Americas great old buildings and homes for HABS!

    • @litsci1877
      @litsci1877 4 роки тому +1

      What a wonderful book. Yes, mine's been falling apart for decades, is still on the shelf.

  • @notprovided1131
    @notprovided1131 4 роки тому +4

    The ending is particularly moving.

  • @pauldeanify
    @pauldeanify 2 роки тому +1

    Aaron Copland is the U.S.A. wonderful music

  • @davekingpt
    @davekingpt 7 років тому +24

    Love this piece. Interesting choice in artwork.

    • @gradyivie9013
      @gradyivie9013 7 років тому +1

      Looks to be Highway 287 in North Texas.

    • @RHINOSAUR
      @RHINOSAUR 7 років тому +2

      @davekingpt -- Not really. It looks to be a Grant Wood piece (or reasonable style mimic), and Wood's work is as American as Copland's music.

    • @TiticatFollies
      @TiticatFollies 7 років тому +3

      Grady
      You're right. Rhome and Decatur are in Texas.

    • @josephcarlbreil5380
      @josephcarlbreil5380 6 років тому +1

      There is no 'e' in the spelling of Copland.

    • @TiticatFollies
      @TiticatFollies 6 років тому +1

      Where do you see an "e"?

  • @williamospino1676
    @williamospino1676 5 років тому +2

    Beatiful, wonderful. Thank.

  • @sidpheasant7585
    @sidpheasant7585 11 місяців тому

    Nothing can exist this beautiful, meaningful, deep and soulful without God, without there being a God...

  • @terrace3205
    @terrace3205 7 років тому +7

    Thanks for downloading complete suite. Enjoyed it very much although there seems to be a glitch going from movement 2 to movement 3.

  • @lawrencelolli7666
    @lawrencelolli7666 9 місяців тому

    A great man, a greater composer.
    Love him

  • @giuseppedimarco8358
    @giuseppedimarco8358 7 років тому +5

    Wonderful!

  • @chpnlzt
    @chpnlzt 5 років тому +8

    THE ARTWORK REMINDS ME OF GRANT WOOD'S WORK !!!

    • @Lobito-qz9pz
      @Lobito-qz9pz 5 років тому +1

      Agreed. It's reminiscent of "American Gothic" by him. Very innocent, very simplistic style of art, shades of color that are very warm to the eyes

    • @thomaskeesman9145
      @thomaskeesman9145 4 роки тому +2

      I think it's "Road To Decatur" by Alexander Hogue, a regionalist painter from Texas.

  • @GweegeStudios
    @GweegeStudios Рік тому +1

    69 secs of rigor and then float away on a river of clouds...

  • @emilsabatini4038
    @emilsabatini4038 Рік тому +2

    That's Aaron Copland ! His music helping man to see the world in a better and true light!

    • @sidpheasant7585
      @sidpheasant7585 Рік тому

      TBH, that's also the Holy Spirit, reaching out to the atheist composer ... whether he even realised it or not!
      I got the same treatment, DID realise it (probably because I had been broken and reduced to begging for mercy and cleansing), and was changed.
      I look back on my comments regarding this piece, whose beauty I could alwayse see - but then I noticed the poignance and melancholy because all things pass and change, including out on the American farmlands.
      But now I come back to the piece and (also) see the ecstatic joy of it, in it and through it.

  • @garydavidderby
    @garydavidderby 2 роки тому +1

    NICE FIND . WITH CLASSIC GRAMMY AWARDS 1960

    • @garydavidderby
      @garydavidderby 2 роки тому

      I'VE CREATED NEW COLLECTION OF FINE MUSIC

  • @roberttaylor6108
    @roberttaylor6108 5 років тому +4

    What's strange is in that image there I think that spot that is portrayed there is a place called Five Points right up North from where I live in Saginaw Texas

    • @heterosectional
      @heterosectional 5 років тому

      Reminds me of the road to Garretson, South Dakota. The first road you turn nort off after crossing into South Dakota. We have made several movies there. No permits.

  • @garydavidderby
    @garydavidderby Рік тому

    GREAT FIND

  • @albertomanoelruschel4458
    @albertomanoelruschel4458 Рік тому

    Ouvindo o Aaron Copland por aqui esperando o Caetano scatena me passar o seu celular !!!

  • @Gusrikh1
    @Gusrikh1 5 років тому +1

    ....beautiful..

  • @charlesdoria2290
    @charlesdoria2290 7 років тому +4

    A wonderful piece, but wish AC had used lines from Dickinson and Whitman. Still that's all he wrote and I'm grateful for every note!

    • @gerthenriksen8818
      @gerthenriksen8818 6 років тому

      What do you mean? Used lInes where?

    • @hemiolaguy
      @hemiolaguy 4 роки тому

      Copland did set poems of Emily Dickinson in his only song cycle. He originally wrote it for voice and piano, and later he produced voice with orchestra versions of some of the songs.

  • @benflint
    @benflint 3 роки тому +1

    Hmmm Rome and Decatur are both in Georgia. But it's not spelled Rhome; and they're not 15 miles apart.

  • @brunocostapiano
    @brunocostapiano 7 років тому +4

    Muito bom!

  • @tremoo5987
    @tremoo5987 5 років тому +3

    6:27 - 9:38 gorgeous

  • @chronoboat5533
    @chronoboat5533 3 роки тому

    Where the Picture Art come from you show as the cover for this video??????

  • @paulrowan4421
    @paulrowan4421 3 роки тому

    At 13:10 has "Jesus Love Me Yes I know" idiom, after a build up alluding to this theme.

    • @sidpheasant7585
      @sidpheasant7585 3 роки тому

      Thanks for this key information, Paul! I do believe this music is divinely inspired and has the Holy Spirit in it, but I did not know there was a direct godly reference.

  • @LISZTIZATION
    @LISZTIZATION 6 років тому +2

    IS ROBERT HANSON RELATED TO HOWARD HANSON....... THE COMPOSER ?

  • @davidrennie9814
    @davidrennie9814 3 роки тому +2

    To the future..

    • @sidpheasant7585
      @sidpheasant7585 3 роки тому

      What a beautiful comment, David - more loaded with content than maybe you even know. As you will see, most people see this music as redolent with nostalgia and the past, and hence beautiful and melancholy ... and lost to us. As an admirer of Copland's work for decades, I was among such people - I could never see joy or optimism in this music, even though I loved it dearly and it moved me deeply every time. Then the Holy Spirit paid me a visit, when I begged for help at a time of desperation that turned to amazing inspiration. My blindness gave way and I could "see" the joy in this music. So - in more ways than one - I am with you, my brother. Let us see the future in this music, as well as the past, and - of course with God's help and in line with His plan - build something higher, deeper and kinder than we have at the moment. Paradoxically, COVID has shown us that so many things have to change - not least the chemicals and overuse of water that are a slight and an insult inflicted on that "Tender Land". WE CAN do this, I know we can.

  • @baglanzhagypar9308
    @baglanzhagypar9308 4 роки тому +6

    civ 5

  • @eottoe2001
    @eottoe2001 5 років тому +5

    15:10

  • @patowiku8345
    @patowiku8345 3 роки тому

    18:00 favourite motif

  • @pinqballs
    @pinqballs 6 років тому +2

    artist of painting?

    • @aprilstevenson1870
      @aprilstevenson1870 5 років тому +1

      "The Road to Rhome" / "El camino a Rhome," by Alexandre Hogue, 1938 (from notes above--)

  • @chronoboat5533
    @chronoboat5533 3 роки тому

    Does anyone know where this cover artwork came from on this music video? The car going down the road???

  • @tinafarrar2527
    @tinafarrar2527 2 роки тому

    Aaron Copland couldn't write anything ugly. It sounds like America plus able to use in soundtracks.

  • @chronoboat11
    @chronoboat11 3 роки тому

    Anyone know where this artwork comes that shows on this video.

  • @jasonhurd4379
    @jasonhurd4379 2 роки тому

    I am happy to see so many comments praising Mr Copland's spirit, especially considering that he was a Communist, a homosexual and a Jew. Perhaps bigotry in America is not as virulent as the past five years had led me to believe.

    • @mihaialexandru1229
      @mihaialexandru1229 2 роки тому

      I am a Right-wing Homophobe Antisemite Bigot and I love His music. Go Brandon!

    • @sidpheasant7585
      @sidpheasant7585 2 роки тому +1

      The Holy Spirit takes a certain even eccentric delight in proving his points, just as he did with St. Paul!
      For his part, Copland was hoping to achieve more bite and criticism and controversy (and maybe even a touch of insightful mockery) with this opera ... but it did not work out that way, in the event.
      With the help of the Spirit, the composer created something of such genius and beauty that it soars beyond the shallow, the cynical, the sarcastic, the satirical, the political.
      This music can never divide, only unite ... as it leaves breathless.
      The beloved Holy Spirit - with that unique mix of effortless power, gentleness and wisdom - knows what It/He is doing, so we can forever trust Him/It to deliver us a commanding level of insight, love and truth that reach and melt the most hardened of hearts.

  • @juliolarraz583
    @juliolarraz583 Рік тому

    No credit for the art work. Who cares.

    • @sidpheasant7585
      @sidpheasant7585 9 місяців тому +1

      My dear friend, as I listened to this stunning wonderful music of divinity, I came across your comment, and it opened up a new vista for me, for which I thank you so much!
      I have come to this UA-cam multiple times and thus seen "Road to Rhome" (1938) by Alexandre Hogue. And, indeed, the painting with the sign actually does seem to be a kind of ... SIGN. As you may know, Copland and his male lover wanted this Opera to be full of certain tensions, but that just never worked out, because the beauty and truth here is just too great and people want treat the music "straight", as a celebration of rural America - that tender land coaxed by love and hard work into offering the promise of living...
      But the painting actually offers further tension, as it is intended to illustrate the beginnings of the erosion that led to the Dust Bowl! It was one of a series actually given the name "Erosion".
      The title is a pun from the start as we know that all roads lead to R(h)ome, which is in Texas, as is Decatur, though both are close to the NM border. The road is apparently State Highway 114. Rhome honours Col. Byron Crandall Rhome, who brought Hereford cattle into that region. Decatur (TX) is one of a number across the USA named after the hero of the Revolution.
      Mr Hogue, who died aged 96 in 1994 was raised by his own mother to believe in "Mother Earth" - he took it so literally that he always tried to tread softly on the soil, making as little noise and disturbance as possible.
      This is kind of amazing as I do this too (at least when I am in a certain kind of mood which the Holy Spirit can inspire).
      In contrast, his dad was a Presbyterian Pastor who may have espoused the belief that human beings has the right to rule nature. On that basis it is quite interesting to note the CONTRASTING New Testament emphasis in which Jesus tells us that the Earth provides us with food (without us needing to worry about it) thanks be to God. While Jesus surely refers a lot to cultivation and farming and gardening, as well as fishing, the dominance over an exploitable Earth noticeable in the Old Testament is not writ large at all.
      When Hogue saw what was happening to the land, he wanted to condemn his fellow Texans, not praise them in any way.
      So the picture actually DOES match Copland's desire for tension, better than it matches any iddylic visions of ours.
      In the series he also includes a stark work called "The CRUCIFIED Land", which is again a great paradox as the music here is "The Tender Land"!!
      Another in the series is "Mother Earth laid bare", and we actually see her lying there exposed by erosion!
      Hogue believed workers should be on and in the land, finding jobs in that way (as in the "Promise of Living" song which is the core element of this work of Copland's). Hogue had no time for tractors (meaning machines that pull), and in fact learned from the culture of the Pueblo people that no metal should ever be brought to the land for fear of harming Mother Earth!
      Hogue's fears about exhausting the Earth put me in mind of the marvellous movie "Interstellar" in which Matthew M's character says something about the Earth becoming tired of humankind - that scene made my cry, in a movie that has the same effect. It was filmed in Alberta - a place that ought to still support the native grasslands that Hogue loved so much.
      Hogue believed his paintings HAD to continue in this primal way, and so he made great efforts to avoid having his style more sophisticated or more influenced by other art or artists!
      He presumably believed he had something pure to convey that could not be transformed in any way.
      Apparently, Alexandre Hogue did care (as we can read in somebody's academic thesis atcore.ac.uk/download/pdf/17213882.pdf) .
      And so do I.
      I hope you do too!

  • @nstix2009xitsn
    @nstix2009xitsn 6 років тому +7

    "Nonetheless, the opera contains a subtle social critic against McCarthyism, from which Copland became a victim for his leftist associations two decades before this political occurrence."
    That's a lie. Copland was a communist, but never joined the Party, and was never blacklisted. (Thus, the small "c.") Communists love to weave tales of their victimization, and that of other Reds. However, to my knowledge, Copland never made up such stories.
    However, communists love to blacklist their opponents, though they prefer to imprison, torture, and murder them by the tens of millions.

    • @alexkije
      @alexkije 6 років тому +5

      I didn't care for the words. Smarmy fruity junk. I grew up on a farm. And it was far from this. Tis the music ONLY that moves me.

    • @josephanthony8585
      @josephanthony8585 5 років тому +4

      Often "Communism" is confused with Fascism.

    • @brianjungen4059
      @brianjungen4059 4 роки тому

      @@josephanthony8585 there is no confusing the outcome is the same.

    • @josephanthony8585
      @josephanthony8585 4 роки тому +2

      @@brianjungen4059 It depends on what definition of "communism" we are talking about: With a small "c" it is "a theory or system of social organization based on the holding of all property in common, actual ownership being ascribed to the community as a whole or to the state.
      With an upper case "C" it is "a system of social organization in which all economic and social activity is controlled by a totalitarian state dominated by a single and self-perpetuating political party" which IS Fascism.

    • @acav5405
      @acav5405 3 роки тому

      @@josephanthony8585 And both kill incentive, motivation and the human spirit!