The greatest 30 seconds of Classical Music

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 29 сер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 499

  • @pablov1323
    @pablov1323 Рік тому +696

    If only Mozart (or Schubert, among others) would have had ten more years of life... their latest works were so outstanding...

    • @enjoyclassicalmusic6006
      @enjoyclassicalmusic6006  Рік тому +87

      I totally agree...imagine 20 years more, like Beethoven had. Or 40, if they'd done a Haydn! Scarcely imaginable...

    • @Treepusher1
      @Treepusher1 Рік тому +21

      But as they say in show business -always leave them wanting more.

    • @paules3437
      @paules3437 Рік тому +26

      And Mendelssohn and Bizet and Gershwin. If I get to the afterlife and find out those guys haven't been composing for the past two centuries, I'm gonna be mad!

    • @pavaomrazek
      @pavaomrazek Рік тому +15

      If Mozart finished his Requiem, I believe it would be the greatest piece ever written.

    • @paules3437
      @paules3437 Рік тому +7

      @@pavaomrazek I know you meant "Piece" but actually it might have BEEN thee "greatest peace" as you say!

  • @propman3523
    @propman3523 Рік тому +39

    Five separate themes?! For Mozart, master of the the opera, this is his forte. How blessed humanity has been!

  • @codonauta
    @codonauta Рік тому +36

    Mozart composed this last symphony in 15 days, not the last movement, 15 days for the entire symphony. It's incredible he made this 5 themes fugue work in such a few time. An usual composer spent months to do something like that. And worst, this symphony was not performed more than 2 or 3 times.

    • @garydmcgath
      @garydmcgath 3 місяці тому +3

      You seem to be assuming he didn't start on the 41st until after he had completed the 40th. It's at least as plausible that he was working on the three last symphonies in parallel, The time from the completion of the 39th to the completion of the 40th was just about a month, and the 40th is shorter than the 41st. It seems more likely to me that when he completed the 40th, he'd already done a lot of the work on the 41st, so the remainder took less time. Mozart was a fast composer, though. He wrote the "Linz" Symphony in 4 days, so it's possible you're right.

  • @editingsecrets
    @editingsecrets Рік тому +79

    Perfect example of why it's said that you can listen to great music over and over and notice new things each time. Your color coding of each theme is very helpful.

    • @thonbrocket2512
      @thonbrocket2512 Рік тому

      >over and over and notice new things each time
      Yeah, kinda like Futurama repeats.

    • @Loupa57
      @Loupa57 Рік тому +3

      And then if you’ve the chance to actually be IN the orchestra creating that music. Well, it’s a privilege.

    • @editingsecrets
      @editingsecrets Рік тому

      @@Loupa57 Which I've been, in orchestras and string quartets and concert choirs. Listening all around for your cues in context is such a wonderful way to learn how a masterful piece is constructed!

  • @richardkoenig5399
    @richardkoenig5399 Рік тому +15

    A brilliant professor of my college years offered a survey course of classical music for those of us who knew nothing. To get a seat in the classroom, located in the basement of an ancient-seeming campus building, you had to arrive early. Kids who weren't even enrolled would crowd in. Mozart's 41st was the first piece we studied. We learned there was a musical architecture within the magic, and yet the magic ultimately defied explanation.

  • @steveruzich3273
    @steveruzich3273 Рік тому +37

    This passage is stunningly complex, but sounds natural - easy and buoyant. Mozart's genius is unsurpassed.

  • @javiermedina5313
    @javiermedina5313 Рік тому +25

    Mozart is an absolute master of the orchestral counterpoint.

  • @maryhook9478
    @maryhook9478 Рік тому +4

    Thank The Lord that we were lucky enough to haave Mozart on earth for 36 years!

  • @johnparrott2052
    @johnparrott2052 Рік тому +7

    "An inconceivably beautiful pool of music.". Well put.

  • @barney6888
    @barney6888 Рік тому +101

    All of Bach's output is the greatest 30 seconds of classical music., because after 30 seconds of pondering his work, one cannot think anymore and is left speechless.

    • @frenchimp
      @frenchimp Рік тому +14

      Mozart got lucky in that Bach is considered by musicologists to be a baroque, not a classical composer...

    • @brianr.3085
      @brianr.3085 Рік тому +3

      All of his output? Even the exercises for pedal, or the early keyboard toccata and fugues like BWV 913, or his secular cantatas?

    • @user-fu7zf4ck9z
      @user-fu7zf4ck9z Рік тому +9

      @@brianr.3085 yes

    • @frenchimp
      @frenchimp Рік тому +1

      @@brianr.3085 The secular cantatas are wonderful. I don't know about the exercises for pedal.

    • @brianr.3085
      @brianr.3085 Рік тому +4

      ​@@frenchimp Some of them have enjoyable movements, but they hardly rank among the best of Bach, let alone the best 30 seconds of music ever.

  • @laurenlofton9039
    @laurenlofton9039 Рік тому +3

    Didn’t even have to watch the video. Saw the score in the thumbnail and knew instantly what it was.

  • @SA-bc6jw
    @SA-bc6jw Рік тому +6

    How could I have lived so long without hearing this? OMG!

  • @violjohn
    @violjohn Рік тому +89

    This is for me the finest music in the symphonic genre; it’s lively, magisterial, human and exhilarating. It never fails to overwhelm me. We are all lucky to have this music. Thank you for lifting the curtain on some of its glory

    • @tesmith47
      @tesmith47 Рік тому

      thank you for the identification " symphonic genre"

  • @hymnodyhands
    @hymnodyhands Рік тому +8

    I remember when I first heard this section of Mozart's 41st, and realized why viscerally that he is considered among the world's greatest composers ... halfway between the last great works of Bach and the last great works of Beethoven, there is that thirty seconds of perfection in the middle, looking both ways!

  • @katrinat.3032
    @katrinat.3032 Рік тому +60

    Thank you! I was the one who asked you before to explain fugues more after your last video. You said you would and you did!! I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been driving in my car with this symphony blasting!!! Love Mozart’ s Jupiter. I love Gustov Host Jupiter too but that’s for another day. Thank you!! Love the color coding and little comments.

    • @enjoyclassicalmusic6006
      @enjoyclassicalmusic6006  Рік тому +10

      Thank you. I'm never sure whether to add more or less comments during the music sections...

    • @katrinat.3032
      @katrinat.3032 Рік тому +8

      @@enjoyclassicalmusic6006 What you did was the perfect amount

    • @fob3476
      @fob3476 Рік тому +2

      @@enjoyclassicalmusic6006 Good video, but IMO, the popping sounds & weird pictures between 0:11 and 0:25 are unnecessary

    • @brians9508
      @brians9508 Рік тому +2

      @@fob3476 Always a critic. I guess the videos that you have made and put on youtube don't do that?

    • @TorchwoodPandP
      @TorchwoodPandP Рік тому +1

      Loved the Tom Lehrer quote. And the colour coding.

  • @alhfgsp
    @alhfgsp Рік тому +13

    Mozart can always give us a lesson in counterpoint.

  • @Ennuisix
    @Ennuisix Рік тому +4

    Many years ago, my girlfriend, a conservatory grad, asked me my "desert island" choice of music. I immediately said "The Jupiter". It would remind me of what music is all about. Nicely parsed, young man.

    • @ianl707
      @ianl707 Рік тому +1

      My choice also. (Mozart, not girlfriends...)

  • @alv2617
    @alv2617 Рік тому +43

    Excellent video - such a beautiful way of unpacking the subtle complexity. Bravo!

  • @christinelloyd8775
    @christinelloyd8775 Рік тому +3

    Mozart’s genius will continue to astound classical music lovers for ever. I love this symphony and have played maybe thousands of times. This part of the great 41 is definitely my favourite and I always ponder afterwards how does someone come up with these amazing pieces of music. But of course, Mozart is not just someone, he one of the greatest, or maybe the greatest composer of all time.

  • @TheHandyDandyHandle
    @TheHandyDandyHandle Рік тому +18

    The second you said fugue I know it was the Mozart symphony 41 final movement, it is divinely brilliant. 5 part invertible counterpoint in fugue form using 4 musically beautiful subjects taken from the movement all leading to a triumphant coming together with the 5th and finale remaining motive of the piece. Well played Her Mozart, well played.

  • @erichodge567
    @erichodge567 Рік тому +48

    Outstanding, but I thought you were going to bring us the moment toward the end of the movement where Mozart inverts the theme. This just blew me away as a fifteen year old discovering the music. How beautiful it all was...

    • @MonteAGarrett
      @MonteAGarrett Рік тому +5

      Your comment about inverting the theme has piqued my interest. I'm going to have to print the score and study that. By training, I am a choral person ... and am reminded of the "Laudate pueri" (4th movement) of Mozart's Solemn Vespers where he does this in the voice parts.

    • @waflan
      @waflan Рік тому +1

      @@MonteAGarrett i believe its around mm360!

  • @dykegolfer
    @dykegolfer Рік тому +102

    I have loved classical music for over 65 years and final movement of Jupiter never ceases to amaze me. If I could only listen to 1 piece of music for rest of my life..this is it. How can 1 human brain create such genius as this.!!

    • @katrinat.3032
      @katrinat.3032 Рік тому +6

      I know! I drive in my car with it blasting! I love it

    • @bruce_c_in_nz
      @bruce_c_in_nz Рік тому +2

      Are you familiar with Schubert's string quintet? It would be my choice of the only piece. Although there is some doubling, most of the work shows what can be achieved with five independent voices. He's probably not as clever as Mozart, but in my reckoning he stands out in the beauty department head and shoulders above him.

    • @beckylink
      @beckylink Рік тому +1

      @@bruce_c_in_nz NOBODY stands out head and shoulders above Mozart in the Beauty department!! Impossible. 😊

    • @beckylink
      @beckylink Рік тому +1

      Mozart’s beauty makes me weep either with joy or sorrow, every time. He had a gift straight from God.

    • @beckylink
      @beckylink Рік тому +2

      @Gary Allen Who’s “we?”

  • @oraclewjr1
    @oraclewjr1 2 місяці тому +1

    Excellent video. This is my favorite movement of my favorite piece of classical music and I am still probing its depths. One cannot imagine what another 35 years of this musical genius would have given the world!

  • @1950francesca
    @1950francesca Рік тому +25

    Excellent analysis. I’ve always loved this last movement of the Jupiter but never truly understood all the things that were happening in it. Your unpacking it and revealing the five melodies has made my appreciation of it far deeper and richer. Thank you!

  • @iwatchtoomuchtwoset
    @iwatchtoomuchtwoset Рік тому +8

    mozart is a genius. no one can dispute.

  • @aminnkellsein
    @aminnkellsein Рік тому +11

    I could tell just from the thumbnail it was gonna be the Mozart 'Jupiter' Symphony. (I recognized the sheet music.)

  • @SillyWillyFan47
    @SillyWillyFan47 Рік тому +13

    Thank you for making my appreciation of Mozart's language richer today. Wish your videos were around when I was at school. Color coding. combined with page of score and the orchestral sound. We live in blessed times indeed.

  • @ianbarbarafry575
    @ianbarbarafry575 Рік тому +4

    Just plain brilliant - if only my 'structure' lessons were this clear 50 years ago!

  • @masterpye69
    @masterpye69 Рік тому +3

    This piece of the 41st symphony gave me almost highest note for the music exam at high school final exams, (Baccalauréat), so I will always remember it with love an nostalgia!

  • @Griwhoolda
    @Griwhoolda Рік тому +2

    Oh my gosh.... I knew what exactly what this would be, just from the TITLE of the video! One of my favorites!

  • @jonathanirvin2201
    @jonathanirvin2201 Рік тому +2

    I recall a similar episode of a radio program entitled "Music West" many years ago, perhaps 25. At the time i was not the biggest Mozart fan, much more interested in L.V. Beethoven and the later romantics.The program I heard, on public radio, destroyed my preconceptions of W. A. Mozart's canon and left me in tears. This episode of 'Enjoy Classical Music' has recharged my passion. While I wish I could find the Music West episode, this production will more than adequately fill the void!

  • @ryuaoyama2580
    @ryuaoyama2580 Рік тому +2

    I think out of all movements of the Jupiter Symphony, the first and the last movements are outstandingly masterful, while the second and third movement is beautiful.

  • @jamesmclean5790
    @jamesmclean5790 Рік тому +2

    I could just nod in agreement when you revealed the piece in your claim. This passage is the only music in Mozart’s repertoire that has brought me to tears, for it’s creativity and execution.
    When I first sat down and gave this symphony all of my attention, as a young teenager in the 70’s, the thought struck me that Mozart might have known this was his last symphony and was pressed to give all he had left within him into the score. It truly is the moment in the performance I always anticipate. Hence, I judge a performance by this passage - it’s clarity and precision.

  • @schwindsichtigaderechte5293
    @schwindsichtigaderechte5293 Рік тому +3

    Wow! Thanks for explaining some of the intricacies of that piece! I've grown up with classical music and love it, but the way you pick it apart before putting it back together again just makes it a lot easier to understand why it is considered such a great body of art. Thanks for that!

  • @CougheePls
    @CougheePls Рік тому +8

    I didn't even realize it was a fugato, very pleasing to hear! My favourite part in classical music is the Millionen X Ode to Joy double fugue in the last movement of Beethoven's 9th

    • @KrystofDreamJourney
      @KrystofDreamJourney Рік тому +5

      Mine as well. Beethoven’s 9th, IVth movement “Ode to Joy” especially rehearsal marks K and L. Tears every time… Beyond human comprehension.
      Also entire Passacaglia in C Minor - J.S.Bach.

  • @geoffstemen3652
    @geoffstemen3652 Рік тому +3

    Music so noble yet exhilarating, in a word Jovial!

  • @jimw2566
    @jimw2566 Рік тому +4

    Thank you! I've tickets to experience Mozart's Jupiter with the Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra next month and have been binging on various versions and explanations in preparation. I love this!

  • @NicoDraak74
    @NicoDraak74 6 місяців тому

    Thanks so much for making this video. I have been looking for a video like this last year when I wanted to show friends and family the beauty, briljante and complexity of the 4th movement.
    Your video perfectly captures both graphical in in words, so even a layman without knowledge about scores can understand it.

  • @RichardASalisbury1
    @RichardASalisbury1 Рік тому +1

    In the last few years, I've come to believe that the "Jupiter" can stand alongside any of Beethoven's symphonies and not suffer by the comparison.

  • @ignaciourena5692
    @ignaciourena5692 Рік тому +1

    "The greatest 30 seconds of Classical Music" ... maybe ... this is celestial music ...

  • @DanJS
    @DanJS Рік тому +8

    Love this video. One of my favourite 30 seconds of music as well. An absolute masterpiece this work is!

  • @johncoppola8105
    @johncoppola8105 Рік тому +12

    I always thought this part of 41 was absolute genius as well. I wait anxiously every time for it to arrive.

  • @AbdelOveAllhan
    @AbdelOveAllhan Рік тому +1

    For extended greatness in music I turn to Handel in such works as the 'Amen' chorus at the very end of his Messiah. The contrapuntal manipulation including fugal and canonic imitation, stretto and inversion all to serve a massive dramatic orchestral/choral effect is overwhelming.

  • @RaysDad
    @RaysDad Рік тому +6

    The first movement of symphony 40 is also complex, and quite emotional.

    • @sjaaktrekhaak253
      @sjaaktrekhaak253 Рік тому +1

      Oh that's a doozy, that one.

    • @eameece
      @eameece 6 місяців тому +1

      yes indeed, and we should remember how deeply the entire last half of the 41 finale touches the heart too. I think some folks miss this, or don't comment on it enough.

  • @3sierra15
    @3sierra15 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for opening my ears to this wonderful piece. Truly, I will never hear it the same way again.

  • @pawkie2
    @pawkie2 Рік тому +1

    I always felt it was special but having no musical training do not have the ear to pick out the genious. Thank you.

  • @ltrizzle12
    @ltrizzle12 Рік тому +4

    Mozart only lived 35 years. Almost 36.

  • @stubbsmusic543
    @stubbsmusic543 Рік тому +2

    Glorious! Thank you for breaking this down so visually.

  • @basstian
    @basstian Рік тому +7

    Magnificent analysis!

  • @reznik232
    @reznik232 Рік тому +7

    "Genius" is such an overused word, thrown about seemingly any time someone does something cleverly or well.
    Mozart is one of the very very very few people I feel is worthy of the word absolutely.

    • @KrystofDreamJourney
      @KrystofDreamJourney Рік тому +1

      Agree !
      A Mother says : “My kid is a genius ! He Can name all of the U.S. Presidents from memory !”

  • @bbbartolo
    @bbbartolo Рік тому +3

    reminds me when I realized how much Mozart had managed to pack into the finale of Cosi fan Tutte - it seemed in every line there was a new emotion represented, and yet it flowed as one melody. Now I have to listen to 41 from the beginning...

  • @dauphindauphin6607
    @dauphindauphin6607 Рік тому +1

    Great composers dying so young means there is still so much great classical music to be written !

  • @SKySWiM
    @SKySWiM Рік тому +6

    Great job analyzing this work. Even though I was brought up on classical music (playing it also on piano and trombone), and even playing many years in various bands and orchestras, I never cease to be amazed at how much I am missing in much of the music. As with many, I am not a big fan of most of Mozart's music. But then again, I admit that I probably have not actually broken down any of his symphonic works like you have. It seems that Mozart's genius hides in its SEEMING simplicity. But I would argue that this is both the main good and bad aspect of classical music. There is so much subtlety, that most people with NO musical training (or at least little exposure) in classical music, that they find it BORING.
    I wish it was not so, but it seems to me that it is next to impossible to open the eyes (or should I say ears) of the masses to the GENIUS of Mozart and other classical composers, without having them IMMERSED in classical music, and at least to some degree, formally trained in it.
    Along with many of my peers, I feel that it is my duty to keep classical music alive by my performing it. But it seems that more than that is needed. Education, in hopefully fun and interesting way, seems to be needed. Thanks to the entertainment industry, THEY have effectively decided on what kind of music people should be listening to. Even early school education has abandoned classical music, best I can tell. And before I am called a snob, I do enjoy many other genres of music, and even compose in a lot of them, sometime mixing aspects of classical music into it.
    I guess what I am finally getting around to saying, is that I think this video (and possibly your others, I just discovered your channel) is serving an important part in educating the masses, regardless of what level of musical background they might have. I encourage you to continue your important work!

  • @truBador2
    @truBador2 Рік тому +11

    Well done. Love that Jupiter ever since muh student years. The main theme, if you should somehow manage to forget it, is the pitches of the keys of the four Brahms symphonies in a row: C - d - F - e. Any more videos like this one are welcome. Thanks.

    • @CAGED1702
      @CAGED1702 Рік тому

      Walter Lloyd Gross "borrowed" the same intervals (in Eb) for his song "Tenderly" in 1946. Please take this with a pinch of salt... 😉

  • @CRAEager
    @CRAEager Рік тому +6

    Wunderbar! 🥲 Thank you!

  • @hoangkimviet8545
    @hoangkimviet8545 Рік тому +7

    Exceptional video idea.

  • @bunkyman8097
    @bunkyman8097 Рік тому +4

    My favorite 30 seconds (actually longer than 30 seconds) of classical music is Leos Janacek's Sinfonietta, the last movement at the Allegretto. This is the theme that starts the piece. if you dont have goosebumps when this ends you are dead! Treat yourself and listen to the entire composition while following the score. It is a testament to mankind and I always feel empowered at the last chord. I can't imagine hearing it in an orchestra hall live. Im sure I would die, but that's ok! Enjoy this powerful piece of music!

    • @ignaciourena5692
      @ignaciourena5692 Рік тому +1

      I just felt in love with the Leoš Janáček - Sinfonietta Op 60 ... thank you

  • @MrPatrick1414
    @MrPatrick1414 9 днів тому

    truly unbelievable integration of themes

  • @drzlecuti
    @drzlecuti Рік тому +1

    Thanks--that was very enjoyable. The contrapuntal combination of all the themes towards the end is indeed a tour de force and shows how thoroughly Mozart had absorbed Bach's method. Each theme is made so that it will later work with the others--avoiding traffic jams, in a phrase I heard Elliott Carter once use to describe how he wrote his string quartets that were actually double duos.

  • @jtt6650
    @jtt6650 Рік тому +1

    This movement is #1 on my deathbed playlist

    • @eameece
      @eameece 6 місяців тому

      A fine gateway to the life beyond

  • @judylav5
    @judylav5 Рік тому +2

    I love your explanations… I listen and hear the music differently…better. Thank you.

  • @colinadevivero
    @colinadevivero Рік тому +4

    I really like your work. Please keep up the good work. Your energy and easy conversational approach is very helpful 😊

  • @cindipeckham1296
    @cindipeckham1296 Рік тому +1

    Incredibly satisfying and joyous! Thank you!

  • @johncoppola8105
    @johncoppola8105 Рік тому

    Mozart was a real genius of music. No hype, no exaggeration for posterity. Really genius.

  • @leslieackerman4189
    @leslieackerman4189 Рік тому +4

    Very well created. It unravels GENIUS

  • @ThecatofCheshire
    @ThecatofCheshire Рік тому +1

    Hmm...I think the algorithm gave me a gem of a channel! From the bottom of my heart I wish you all the success sir!

  • @danjtitchener
    @danjtitchener Рік тому

    The best score annotation video I have EVER seen. Great job.

    • @enjoyclassicalmusic6006
      @enjoyclassicalmusic6006  Рік тому +1

      Could I recommend Smalin on youtube, who really makes fantastic classical music animation videos..

  • @DougHanson2769
    @DougHanson2769 Рік тому

    30 fantastic seconds
    Beautiful Fugue

  • @dhoffheimerj
    @dhoffheimerj Рік тому +1

    A fine small lecture on a fine contender for the best 30 seconds.

  • @Hailey_Paige_1937
    @Hailey_Paige_1937 Рік тому +2

    My favorite 30 seconds is the beginning of “Lever du jour” from Ravel’s Daphnis et Chloé. ❤

  • @arcturus4067
    @arcturus4067 Рік тому +2

    Thanks for this video! Very well and clearly explained. This part of the symphony is my favourite and it's a masterpiece of counterpoint!

  • @achantus1
    @achantus1 Рік тому +1

    I first heard this when I was 17. I didn't understand all the subtilities, of cource, but I knew instinctively that this was something special. Now I understand that you have to have a sence of Plato's "The Good, The True and The Beautiful" to fully appreciate somerhing like this.

  • @riverstun
    @riverstun Рік тому +1

    The greatest couple of minutes are the last section of the last contrapunctus in the art of fugue. The first part is a fugue on theme 1, the second part is a double fugue on theme 2 and on theme 1. The third part, he introduces a third theme (his own name) and then combines it with themes 1 and 2 - and at the point where the manuscript ends, it is playing theme 1, theme 2 in canon with itself, and theme 3. This fugue is unfinished, but it has been shown that you can not only add a fourth theme (the main theme of the work as a whole), BUT you can invert all four themes at the same time.
    What Mozart does here is trivial by comparison. A four note theme, a couple of trills, and a few scales.
    Mozart achieved far better elsewhere. For example, the end of Don Giovanni, and of course the Requiem.
    But for combining melodic lines, there's just no comparison with Bach.
    For Beethoven, the finale of the Choral symphony is exceptional. Especially where the 4 soloists go crazy right at the end. "Wo dein sanfter flugel weilt". The music is on the point of disintegration, but it just ends breaking your heart.
    Mozart, again, does nothing close to that here.

    • @derykbarker9634
      @derykbarker9634 Рік тому

      Surely the whole point of this movement, musicologically speaking, is that it is a brilliant melding of fugue *and* sonata form, not that it is a great fugue? The only comparable music I know is the last movement of Bruckner's 5th.

  • @michaelkum
    @michaelkum Рік тому +2

    Thank you for this very well done video showing Mozarts genius in a nutshell!

  • @OctopusContrapunctus
    @OctopusContrapunctus Рік тому +11

    I grew up with the Jupiter symphony and, though i am well over my "classicism superiority" Phase, this symhponyhas always place in my Heart. Hope you'll do more if this videos.

  • @cufflink44
    @cufflink44 Рік тому +1

    Very well done video! Thank you!

  • @jamesmoran8294
    @jamesmoran8294 Рік тому

    Thanks for putting it in the description so I can skip the video and take you up on your recommendation.

  • @otherworlder1
    @otherworlder1 Рік тому +3

    Always gives me chills. ❤️❤️❤️

  • @SRenee-dq8bl
    @SRenee-dq8bl 2 місяці тому +1

    -- You had me at Mozart.!!

  • @fryerre
    @fryerre Рік тому +1

    Very nicely done. I mean the video. The music is genius, of course..

  • @1685mymusic
    @1685mymusic Рік тому

    Conducting this gives me more joy than almost anything! Xxx😊😊😊😊😊

  • @KayNewnam
    @KayNewnam Рік тому +6

    And, although more typical of Beethoven, Mozart previews the 4-note theme in the Trio of the Minuet. :).

    • @grahamsax
      @grahamsax Рік тому

      I wasn't aware of this but it is true! Thanks!

    • @OlivierDALET
      @OlivierDALET Рік тому

      I think he does similar in the 40th.

  • @drgeoffangel5422
    @drgeoffangel5422 Рік тому

    What you described most clearly, was the work of a genius! which Mozart was. I firmly believe that all the best, or should I say, the most popular music composers were given the same gift of music! You cannot contrive such a masterpiece by thinking about it, or trying to engineer it, it is a divine gift, and I believe that the music is already in them, just waiting to come out!

  • @eye_sing
    @eye_sing Рік тому +1

    Loved this! Thank you!

  • @judyjones5089
    @judyjones5089 Рік тому

    Listening to this piece is like looking at the repetetiveness of variegated yarn. Very cool!

  • @Lyphatma
    @Lyphatma Рік тому

    I couldn't stop hearing your 1st theme each time...

  • @LukeFaulkner
    @LukeFaulkner Рік тому +1

    1:42 Until this point the 4 bar theme was presented one-after the other. Here, the first note of theme starts on the last note of the previous iteration which picks up the pace and precipitates a cadence before launching into the 2nd theme. It's a simple gesture, but important as it allows the music to escape the 4-square regularity and push forward.

  • @rathinbasu8299
    @rathinbasu8299 Рік тому

    Wonderfully explained! You've revealed the underlying beauty for us lay persons to enjoy. Thank you for such generous sharing of your knowledge.

  • @smartsmartie7142
    @smartsmartie7142 Рік тому +1

    I love this simphony, it is so great

  • @emitch9213
    @emitch9213 Рік тому

    Thank you, such a pleasure of simplicity for new ears and old ears.

  • @almostfm
    @almostfm Рік тому

    One advantage I have from playing for almost 50 years is that I can always pick out multiple lines at the same time-so even if I didn't have the score, I could hear those various restatements of the little musical themes.
    I don't know how else to describe it to someone who can't do it.

  • @jamesbungert3155
    @jamesbungert3155 Рік тому

    Every year after I teach this section of this movement, I inexplicably need a cigarette. And I haven't smoked for over 2 decades. Two mind-blowing additions: (1) although I don't know the specific compositional history of this piece off the top of my head, Mozart famously often composed symphonies in his head, only actually writing a manuscript copy or two before copying out the parts. (2) I taught mostly non-music-majors (college level), and once I got them singing the very catchy snippets (introduced throughout the movement and written in "neumes" on the board), they very much understood what was going on without needing to read music. The only tricky thing was convincing them of the often discouragingly difficult set of contrapuntal rules that Mozart is both following and thumbing his nose at. Much to say there technically, of course. The point is, as you mention, any sense of difficulty melts away in the easy, effortless sounding music. :)

  • @Bwv1046
    @Bwv1046 Рік тому +5

    Very nice, mine is the last 30 seconds of Beethoven's eroica finale

    • @hjo4104
      @hjo4104 Рік тому

      the whole coda is just tonic-dominant-tonic-dominant... that yelling of brutally banal harmonies is not even comparable with this fugato

    • @Bwv1046
      @Bwv1046 Рік тому +3

      @@hjo4104 Thank you for your opinion sir but I adore revolutionary music and strong loud symphonies just like Beethoven's third it's my most favorite piece
      I equally love both Mozart and Beethoven and I don't think its appropriate to make a comparison between two of the greatest composers of all time they're like two sides of the same coin

    • @ianl707
      @ianl707 Рік тому

      It is worth taking a look at this master class by Dame Mitsuko Uchida, one of the great pianists: Mitsuko Uchida Masterclass - Comparing Beethoven N.4 in G Major and Mozart’s K. 503
      ua-cam.com/video/3mBzp5_yR18/v-deo.html

  • @PCHUANG-yk9pw
    @PCHUANG-yk9pw Рік тому

    The riot of colours, the image of the Garden of Eden, the glimpse of the Paradise, the ultimate joy for no reason at all but being simply alive, the ode of creation. All glory to God.

  • @francescaemc2
    @francescaemc2 Рік тому

    Have always adored this. Refreshing that it's not Bach. I am addicted to Bach-- Have subscribed. Thank you.

  • @branimirzivkovic8684
    @branimirzivkovic8684 Рік тому

    Very good video, Thank You very much !!! :)

  • @tomburns4187
    @tomburns4187 Рік тому +1

    Nice buncha notes!

  • @lindadavies6109
    @lindadavies6109 Рік тому +1

    Joyful moments! 👏👏👏

  • @verstengenericks
    @verstengenericks Рік тому

    🎉 I have always loved but never appreciated this music as I can now after watching this video 🎉 Thank you! 😄

  • @m4rcus988
    @m4rcus988 10 місяців тому

    I am currently playing this symphony in the second violin part. I kinda like how it's almost like a classical version of an electronic track where you make some rhythm and melody and you can throw it in and mix it with various parts of the song lol.