BEETHOVEN Piano Sonata No. 14 (Moonlight Sonata) Reaction
Вставка
- Опубліковано 5 жов 2024
- G'day guys, today we are doing something as little different. We are reacting to Beethoven Piano Sonata No. 14, better known as Moonlight Sonata.
I hope you find something on my channel that interests you and you like. Please let me know if you like a video in the comments section.
For donations please use this link here: streamlabs.com...
If you would like to support me make quality content please check out my Patreon, link here: / patrolgaming
Join this channel to get access to perks:
/ @patrolnation
I do not own this content, content used under the fair use policy*
*Copyright Disclaimer
Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. No copyright infringement intended. ALL RIGHTS BELONG TO THEIR RESPECTIVE OWNERS*
Original video link here: • Beethoven - Moonlight ...
Follow me on Twitter: / patrolgaming11
Like me on Facebook: / patrolgaming
Beethoven was a metalhead and that third movement proves it!
I love listening to classical music, pretty much what plays around our house every day. There's just so many great composers, and it always blows my mind how they could create something this beautiful. You should definitely check out more. Try Liszt, Chopin, Vivaldi and of course every pianist's favorite, Bach
I remember the first time I heard this, I was 7 years old. My sister was taking piano lessons & I heard her practicing this one. I stood behind her, watching her fingers & looking at the music notes that were given to her to practice. After she was done, I sat down & started playing it. I had no idea what notes I was playing, I just copied what she did. My mom heard, thought it was my sister, came into the room & let's just say she was rather shocked that it was me. And thus my love for playing the piano was born. Thank you for giving this back to me, Pat.
Which movement?
Who wouldn’t want to listen to the whole thing? My son is a classical and jazz pianist so I’ve listened to many classical concerts. Can’t help but think of DP though when I hear Moonlight Sonata. My favorite classical music is Gustav Holst, The Planets Suite.
Everytime I hear this I think of how amazingly fast the fingers must work to make this beautiful piece - it's masterful
I had my kids (I teach music K-5th) react to this today.
Are you kidding me?! Beethoven on my birthday :-) LOL
Thanx Linda
Happy birthday Astrid!!
Thanx. Best birthday!!
Happy Groundhog's Day! since, I already said Happy birthday twice to you. So, no need to say Happy Birthday to you again. But, happy groundhog's day. Hope you celebrate you better then the groundhog. Happy Birthday Astrid really.
Thanx Heidi. Had a lovely day!
I couldn't do reaction videos for music. I grew up as an audiophile, ... I LOVE music. I've listened to so much music over my life that I've heard most of the best. My music collection is fairly large. I have my preferred tastes, but I grew up with classical, country and bluegrass.
David's lyrics popped in my head
Classical music is entrancing and I love it a lot but my most favourite piece is Rachmaninov concerto #2 in C minor. I played viola in high school and the pianist was a Conservatory music student, the most epic thing I’ve been involved in and probably why it’s my favourite, even 45 years later.
Rach PC 2 was the very first thing I played in university orchestra when first learning the double bass! It’s a great piece.
If you’re looking for another classical piece to listen to I definitely suggest Chopins Ballade No. 1 in G Minor, OP 23. An incredible piece
Beautiful. My daughter plays and teaches piano. when I tried to learn I memorized the hand movements but sucked at reading music. When the music got complicated I had to confess I memorized the sound and the hand movements! My great uncle played second violin in the Detroit symphony but played by ear when he came here from Hungary and had to learn to read music to play in the symphony. Said it was the hardest thing he ever did! I believe him.
Thank you. My all time favorite. Years ago I learned it from an old music book of my dads! Can't play it anymore but sure love listening ♥
One of my favorite classical pieces is Handels Water Music. But I will play any classical music low when reading a good book.
Growing up I lived in a town and area that was in the country outside of New York City. Many famous people lived around there because it was within train commuting distance. One was Leonard Bernstein and he arranged for youth concerts. They would explain the music and then play it. It was pretty amazing and taught me an appreciation of classical music and jazz.
Good ol' Sonata #14...my go to relaxation music..this piece carries you along with it..just lovely 🎹🎶🎵🎹🎵🎶
Morning tea at a civil time lol Classical music is my go to for relaxing after a Stressful day it sooths and speaks to the soul my go to is an album by the royal philharmonic orchestra and the London Philamonic Ochestra 50 greatest pieces of classical music Album, no matter how hard the day it recharges me thanks mate a beautiful stream enjoying a coffee listening to it
Thank you for reacting to this! Love classical as well. I sat here with my eyes closed and listened to the entire thing …
my blood pressure is down 10 pts, I’m sure! 😂
Thank you for this Lyle! David Phelps lyrics popped in my head and made me appreciate even more, his creative talent!
Like several of the other comments, I too could hear David Phelps singing his lyrics to this first movement. I must admit though, this is the first time I've heard this all the way through. You threw out the challenge to listen to the whole piece so I accepted. Thank you for educating me on a beautiful music classic.
Most of the classical music I am familiar with is from Looney Tunes cartoons - I am sorry to say. I have heard the first movement of this but, this was the first time hearing the rest. It is magnificent. BTW, I saw you fingering the notes.
Am looking forward to learning/hearing more this coming year.
Another comment/question for you. What is your music background? You are so knowledgeable and you obviously play. Would love to hear you play sometime.
More Beethoven, please?
If you like this one, consider checking out F. Chopin's Op. 28 No. 15, sometimes called the "raindrop sonata". It doesn't use quite as much dynamic range (that was kind of Beethoven's thing, possibly because he was going deaf), but it is similar in other ways, notably in showcasing the strengths of piano as an instrument and using them to inspire emotional response in the listener. It's my favorite piece of music for solo piano, and probably also my favorite Romantic piece.
On the other hand, you might also want to back away from this rabbit hole, because it goes _really_ deep. I mean, Beethoven already spans two major genres (Romantic, and Classical), and if you go down both of those rabbit holes you're going to be down there a good long while. And then you might be tempted to complete the trifecta by checking out some Baroque music, and that rabbit hole literally has no bottom. Twenty-five years later you'll be saying stuff like "I can't believe I've never heard this piece before, given how much I enjoyed Dieterich Buxtehude's other music for harpsichord." And then people give you that look that says "wut".
My favorite piece of music overall is BWV 1080, The Art of Fugue; but that one is much too long to do as a reaction video. (When distributed on physical media, it generally requires a second record/tape/CD/whatever, because it is too long to fit on one. The Well-Tempered Clavier is even longer.) I suppose you could just pick out one movement (say, contrapunctus ii) and react to that. I'm particularly fond of the Munchinger stringed-ensemble recording, though Vladimir Feltsman's piano performance is also good, and somewhat more traditional.
Yes it will take decades of exploration to get very deep into it! But soooooo worth it!
I’m always so sad (or laughing) that the video of this with 183 million views that everyone reacts to is a MIDI using a not very good sample library (or at the very best just played on a really cheap digital piano, but I think it’s probably preprogrammed too), rather than a real live performance by an actual pianist on a real piano. I mean it’s fine, it gets the point across, all the notes are there and played clearly, it sounds mostly like a piano, and even has some rudimentary expression in terms of slowing down and speeding up, getting louder or quieter, or accenting certain notes. So you can still hear Beethoven’s brilliance and a bit of expression, it’s just a little sad it isn’t Rudolf Serkin or Anton Rubinstein or Valentina Lisita or someone (anyone!).
Some other favorites of mine are the Waldstein (played by Annie Fischer), and the Pathetique or Appassionata (for the latter I like Barenboim from his live Chicago recitals).
This is also one of my favorite Beethoven pieces.
Love it and I’m along for the ride.
Love this piece of music 🎶 an another piece I love is The 1812 Overture
luba tv ouvindo musica classica
It’s also my favorite composer but let’s start calling the composer by his proper family name: ‘van Beethoven’ as like in ‘van Halen’ and ‘van Buren’…. It would be also weird and wrong to call the 8th President of the USA just ‘Buren’, wouldn’t it ? 😂
I have always loved this. Thank you for playing it. Who is the pianist?
I think it is a MIDI, sadly. I mean it works for the purpose and does have enough basic expression programmed in to get the point across, but still it would be nice if by far the most popular recording ever made of this piece were some real performance played by a real pianist on a real piano. (It’s not even using a very good sample library.)
I think it is a MIDI, sadly. I mean it works for the purpose and does have enough basic expression programmed in to get the point across, but still it would be nice if by far the most popular recording ever made of this piece, which is the one EVERYONE reacts to, were some real performance played by a real pianist on a real piano. (It’s not even using a very good sample library.)
기대됩니다 알림설정하고 기다릴게요
Who is on the piano? Pianist name?
Just search on UA-cam for Line Rider Moonlight Sonata (or Beethoven 😄) 👍
This is the version we listened to for class. ua-cam.com/video/OsOUcikyGRk/v-deo.html
I had them do a free form line drawing (put your pencil to the paper and don't lift it as you move your hand/pencil to the music.) This was for 4th grade. 5th grade are doing research presentations over the Classical Period, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, and Haydn.
I recommend you listen to Schubert ErlKonig. It was written to Goethe's poem of the same name. I will post the version I had my 4th graders react to.
Yes Valentina Lisita is excellent.
You do know he wrote his last piece(s) completely death? Never heard his own music…
Yep, imagine writing Ode To Joy and not hearing it, but he already heard it in his mind...which was most likely just as amazing. Also I know you are Dutchy...death means dead, deaf means can't hear.
LOL but the th - d - t - ph - f are killing me sometimes. But writing music being death is even more supernatural! 🤣
That same awful midi file again. Listen to a real person playing this.