Mozart dicta su "Réquiem K. 626 Confutatis" a Salieri | Película Amadeus 1080p Subtitulado Español
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- Опубліковано 5 жов 2024
- Magistral escena de la película "Amadeus" (1984), en la que Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart compone su famoso Réquiem en Re menor, K. 626: VII. Confutatis, ayudado por Antonio Salieri, quien le hace la labor de transcriptor.
Valga mencionar que la escena es una ficción cinematográfica, es decir, no tiene asidero real en la historia de la composición de tal obra. Por supuesto, no por ello resta magia y asombro, ante esta poderosa escena imaginada, de un Mozart componiendo junto a Salieri.
La edición del video no me pertenece, créditos para el autor correspondiente. Sólo realicé y agregué los subtítulos en español.
Video original del cual fue tomado: • Confutatis Amadeus mov...
#Amadeus1984 #MilosForman #MozartMusic #RequiemMozart #ComposiciónMusical #CineDeCulto #AmadeusEscenaRequiem
Magistral escena de la película *"Amadeus" (1984),* en la que Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart compone su famoso Réquiem en Re menor, K. 626: VII. Confutatis, ayudado por Antonio Salieri, quien le hace la labor de transcriptor.
Valga mencionar que la escena es una ficción cinematográfica, es decir, no tiene asidero real en la historia de la composición de tal obra. Por supuesto, no por ello resta magia y asombro, ante esta poderosa escena imaginada, de un Mozart componiendo junto a Salieri.
Más de acuerdo no puedo estar, magistrales actuaciones de ambos actores, con respecto al vídeo es una excelente explicación de la composición de esta obra musical.
@@noeangelmartinezcomino649 Mas não só isso, o roteirista.
Magnífico análisis , michas gracias
… ed il regista. Costumisti, direttori fotografia, ecc ecc … tutti magistralmente bravi in questa opera d’arte di film
You son of a bitch :-) Saludos desde Polonia. No se, como lo hiciste, pero es una pinche maestria. Obra de arte. En serio, estoy mirandolo una vez y otra y decima. Y me fascina. Es genial, cabron, es precioso.
Gets me choked up just thinking about how Mozart wrote this on his deathbed. A piece that if it were not for other composers would've remain unfinished. Technically it is considered unfinished.
To me that is rather apropos. I think most of us die feeling our life is not finished and we may realize how frivolous we have spent our life.
I actually don't understand deathbeds. I mean, who would buy that?
He actually didn't. This part is all fiction. Salieri was never Mozart's "enemy" either.
Nice story, but he didn’t do this in his deathbed much less with Salieri. It’s a fantasy.
@@Etatdesiege1979yes he did…lol.
The added graphics for the musical notes just made a great scene even better. That was amazing to see and I don't even read music. It gave me a deeper appreciation for what I'm hearing.
I've sung this Requiem so many times in choirs over the years. It's my all time favourite. So moving, it's difficult not to cry even while performing.
Mozart had an entire orchestra in his head.
so did Bach and Beethoven, thats why they were put in the voyager's golden record !
@@dirkdesnerck8277 no Mozart IS the best ever
Like most composers
Metaphorically speaking, every Composer "has an entire Orchestra in their head", if you are trying to convey Mozart's preeminence above all other Composers, you gotta kinda refine the emphasis on the exemplary righteous excellence, you feel he embodies.
@@Attrouche there's no composer that's objectively the best. Widely, Mozart is considered to be one of the greats but not THE best.
Holy Hell! This is fantastic! This sheet music sequence should have been in the movie.
Todo el ‘Requiem’ de Mozart es mi obra favorita de la vida. Dura 55 minutos. Los invito a escuchar la versión dirigida por Karajan que fue grabada en 1975. ¡Perfección pura!
Lo he escuchado en bucle (y lo sigo haciendo) millones de veces, horas y horas y horas.
55 minutosss? si normalmente las canciones pop duran 4 minutos
@@cristiangately2478 ._.
Está en UA-cam esa versión?
@@CarlosRojasOficial qué agradable sujeto
This helped me to understand how complicated classical music is and you can fully understad it only with musical education. Then you see it as in this video at the end. And then it's just a masterpiece.
Despite Mozart going very fast, Salieri kept up which is beyond impressive. I wouldn't be able to write notation down that fast. Let alone with ink and quill.
Very true. I mean I’m pretty sure most of these guys were apprentices to other composers so they’ve definitely had a lot of practice. Still bloody impressive.
I love this aspect, too. It really shows that Salieri was indeed a very high trained musician and composer with a great talent
It's a movie. It's fiction.
@@JobBouwman And that's why I like this scene. They could have gone the easy road like "Salieri was jealous because he didn't have any talent while Mozart was talented af" (looking at you little Amadeus). In fact, Salieri was a talented musician and composer.
@@xenopis7862oh, most definitely. Imitation was also the ultimate form of flattery in that time. But what I find just as impressive if not more so is the ability to know what notes to use without being told. I’m a musician with a good understanding of theory (I went to music school in college and university), but I wouldn’t know what notes to use if I was given lyric diction.
This is a great video with its visuals showing the complications of what is in Mozart's head and how it is translated in real time. The score is not only genius, but to me, bodes what music Mozart must now create before God.
Muy interesante, es increíble cómo podía fabricar toda una orquesta en su cabeza.
Así hacia Vico C
Tenía oído absoluto, por eso antes de componer o escribir ya sabía cómo iba a sonar, lo tenía en su cabeza!
@@josiasponce471 oído absoluto y memoria fotográfica.
@@eltiogottlieb.4911 Correcto, por eso está considerado el primer niño prodigio (musical) de la historia, al menos documentado!
El oído absoluto no es lo que aquí mencionan, y aunque es algo que a veces viene natural, se puede educar y practicar. Todo músico decentenente entrenado y con la entereza de componer puede hacerlo de esta manera. La cosa es asirse a las reglas que te guían. Por lo regular, si las sigues, o si sabes romperlas bien, no hay problema. Por ejm, aquí, lo genial es la melodía de las voces. El acompañamiento de los metales "va con la armonía", como él mismo dice. No tiene mucha ciencia. Aquí se debe saber qué disposición funciona más. Por lo general en 5tas u octavas. Y aquí lo usó para acentuar los acordes. El ostinato de las cuerdas es una práctica que no es difícil de hacer. Lo complejo es compactarlo con esa melodía seguida ascendente que hizo sin contravenir al bajo y los acordes. La melodía de las voces es lo principal y ahí está la verdadea magia. Es sencillo hacer armonías "fáciles" que nuchas veces funcionan por sí solas, pero la melodía es, según mi humilde opinión, lo que más maestría muestra en un compositor, y esta es sublime. El resto de instrumentos solo hace armonía adornada. El mérito de Mozart es alcanzar esa maestría y haber sido tan creativo, prolífico e influyente con tan poca edad a la que murió, así como la calidad de su obra. No todos pueden alcanzar esa cima, pero no es inconquistable. La frase dice: el trabajo duro siempre ganará al virtuosismo (o algo así).
It is the most beautiful presentation of polyphony and the form of composition that Mozart thought very easily in his memory and his brilliant head. Any composer should or should see this short film presented with the digital technique that many are still trying to understand how to compose classical music.
Yes, I've always mentioned to people that it is like the instruments (polyphony as I am now educated) are having a conversation with each other and we get to listen in.
This video was absolutely astonishing and beautifully created. A true testament and tribute to Mozart's brilliant mind. Bravo!
Quien realizo la edición del video creo su propio Requiem... 👏👏👏
he was not from our world... he was best. never be anyone like him anymore
only bach! the grandfather!!
Chopin was also extremately insane
There might be gifted people out there but due to their circumstance their genius is never revealed. Sad
@@marusselpernites991I agree. So many gifted people exist in the world but much of their effort or existence goes to waste.
I'm 38 and started reading sheet music for the first time last year as I've begun to learn piano/violin and this is really really cool to see. Years before would probably have not given this much thought at all.
as much as i love F Murray the academy not giving the oscar to Hulce was criminal. it wasnt only the goofy stuff he had to actually learn all of the parts. he is even in tune as he sings them. that was hard as hell
Una escena magistral merecía un video magistral como éste. De las joyas que guarda UA-cam.
Fue abrumador lo que sintió Salieri cuando se enfrento al portentoso y asombroso poder de composición de Mozart .
To be able to understand all of this is why I don’t take for granted my music education. Shout out to all my music theory professors!
La mente humana pudiendo crear obras maestras, y en la actualidad la gente adora a "cantantes" sin talento alguno.
Hoy el satanismo cubierto por reggaeton es lo que suena por todos lados pero eso va a cambiar
And this was made 200 years ago. Music devolved indeed
Este es uno de los mejores videos que e visto en UA-cam desde que lo comencé a usar, increíble y justamente vi esta película ayer!! me da escalofríos de lo hermoso que es
Un niño que desde muy temprana edad , en sus 5 ya dominaba cualquier instrumento y era capaz de componer y a lo largo de sus 35 años de vida nos fue transmitiendo la música que sentía desde su corazón hasta que finalizó su camino y nos dejó su última y maravillante composición , la kv 626 el réquiem.
This video is such an amazing representation of the time: remix great older content, added context and amazing comments. Love it!❤
Me encanta esta edición además de las anotaciones musicales que ponen en los subtítulos.
Habría sido genial ver está edición con la partitura en la película
I'm literally overwhelmed. Thank you so much! Thanks. This is a divine thing.
gracias por hacer este video mi hermano, lo veo de vez en cuando para motivarme, es una gran pieza de arte.
You addition to the clip should’ve been part of the movie. Masterfully done. Thank you.
- Confutatis, pluma y hoja, rápido
- A ver seño
- Escribe las voces bajas, baritono y tenor **le dicta tan rápido como tu profesor que dice que dicta lento pero ni el título hiciste**
- Súper isi
- Ya bien bien, ponle lo más bajo al trombón bajo y al segundo fagot
- No sea malo pues mozart
- Calla hombre, ahora ponle tenor a los trombones tenores y al primer fagot
- Va demasiado rápido
- Lo tiene?
- Que va demasiado rápido🙁
- Que si lo tiene!👹
- Repítame lo último plis
- Tenor a los trombones y al primer fagot
- Tal cual?
- Tal cual pues! Le siguen las trompetas y los timbales
- No entiendo joven **c estresa**
- Trompetas en Re, casi lo mismo pa los timbales, los dos al mismo tiempo **le indica con la mano**
-🤯o mai ya entendí, eso nomás?
- Nono, ahora a todas las cuerdas ponle lo mismo, ostinato en la arriba abajo y por compás sube en el pentagrama **le dicta y como tiene oído absoluto lo entiende**
- A no pues, esto suena de maravilla
- Lo sé lo sé, ve a la voces, alto en do y soprano con un intervalo de tercera arriba, todo al 1% de volumen **le dicta**
- Yastá, es así, no?
- Sipi, ahora a lo que sigue de canción a los violines ponles arpegios bajando en corcheas **le dicta y canta** y luego ponles ostinato de nuevo, eso nomás, le entendiste?
- No le digo que va demasiado rápido que me espere un segundo **escribe**
- ...
- Listo
- Dámelo todo desde el principio rápido ¡rápido! **lo visualiza***
SUBLIME
Most incredible the notation and the digital that went along w this... you did a phenomenal job
this is just a translation. the real "work" was done by the original editor, who is listed in the video description.
Forever my favorite film!!!!!! So heartbreaking. I feel it still from 1985 alone in the theater.
This may be as brilliant a movie scene 4:43 ever done, one of many in this movie-
Great script, great acting, great cast…
La pelicula es una obra maestra. Tu análisis y montaje de video son increibles
This Requiem is right out of God's heart and it is overwhelmingly sensitive to mine.♥
Muchas Gracias Antadino por el fragmento y por el trabajo de edición añadido, de verdad esta genial!!!!
Increible la edicion. Muy buen gusto. Bravo !
This is genius on so many levels. Thanks for this brilliant video.
What a magnificent composer and interpreter of music he is!
Excelente escena de una magnifica obra. Tuve el placer de cantar esta obra como Bajo varias veces, con el Coro Estable de Opera de Aragua, Venezuela .....
Que emoción y gran honor, FELICIDADES a mi también me hubiera gustado cantarla, me encanta 😊 pero no soy una profesional de la música.
Brutal el video! No suelo comentar nunca ningún video pero sinceramente me ha sorprendido mucho! Sigue así!
Un saludo desde España!
Fabuloso el trabajo gráfico 👍. Lo estaba esperando en la cinta
Pura emoción ❤ maravilloso, la interpretación de los actores 👏👏👏👏
I have basic knowledge close to layman terms. This was presented in a way that I could get a gist of it. Amazing and fantastic is how I feel about how it was presented.
Siempre me impacta esta escena. Magistral. Gracias por subirlo en buena calidad.
My heart is pounding so hard I can't control my joy , this is a masterpiece of Music within the masterpiece of Visualization.
Una maravilla este vídeo... gracias por tanta belleza ilustrada. ❤
En la pelicula NO se ven esas partituras, eso es un agregado a la escena por parte de quien editó el video. Es muy recomendable ver o volver a ver toda la película, "Amadeus" , una joya del cine.
Me encanto lo que hicieron...gracias!!
How on earth this has only 700k views? This is the best classical-music-related thing I have ever seen.
So cool to see the notes as he’s seeing and hearing them! Thanks
Que p. maravilla todo. La peli original, el montaje que has hecho, Salieri,.... y por encima de todo, Mozart.
Probablemente la película más vista de mi vida, simplemente fantástica. Me pareció muy interesante que los solfeos de los actores fueran muy buenos en la escena. Mis felicitaciones por editar los audios y las partituras junto con la escena, estuvo increíble.
nice corporation, Mozart teaching Salieri the ropes - the most beautiful and hopeful scene i can imagine.
Amazing video!!! Thank you for making this. The mind of Mozart - to compose in his head like this!
Que coisa maravilhosa de ver 👀 e ouvir 👂
Parabéns pela belíssima edição. Saludos de Brasil. Mozart foi o maior para mim.
Genial, mi escena favorita de la película y viendo la partituras al mismo que la música todavía me gusta mas😀😀
I love the editing of this video. Amazing!!! Can follow the whole music piece.
I'm not sure how this ended up in my feed but muy bien
DAMN, COMPOSERS OF THE PAST WERE THE TRUE GODS OF MUSIC.
Wow, amazing video you made, great skill to put the music on the pages like that.
De verdad amo la música clásica estos si son músico 😭😭
Hermoso y tan educativo
it is unbelievable. it is real miracle to me. as a normal person can not understand his inspiration. his inspiration does not belong in this world. it is from heaven.
Excelente composicion. Felicitaciones!
Ay grandes enormes músicos de la historia, pero para mí este es el más talentoso de todos los tiempos, aunque incomprendido y no tan exitoso como Beethoven, definitivamente si el más talentoso.
1° Mozart
2° Beethoven
3° Bach
4° Chopin
5° Vivaldi
6° Handel
7° Schubert
8° Wagner
9° Paganini
10° Scarlatti
11° Liszt
Este es mi top de los mejores músicos de la historia (que recuerdo) y muchos otros más que ahora se me olvidan
Piel de gallina gracias y,enhorabuena por el video
absolute genie harmony
Great Job Andante!! Even better to see Amadeus scene with multimedia effects. Awesome!!
La película fue hecha para Mozart un genio. Pero la persona que hizo este video apreciativo también debe ser un músico genial. Felicitaciones.
Qué satisfacción da todo el video 🥰
Poder sentir exactamente lo que dice la letra.
I keep seeing Mozart as Ari from Entourage and I can't unsee it
This movie is just so unspeakably good that we have to remind ourselves that it’s a work of fiction and that Antonio Salieri really did not kill the real Mozart, but rather it was based on a play supposing that “what if“ he did, but it’s been said so often and so loudly for the last 40+ years because of the stupendous movie that people actually do believe that Salieri murdered Mozart. But it is, however awesome to think that this might have been a window into the past, as how this one of the most stupendous pieces of classical music ever written by the hand of man, was written:a page, a beat, a bar at a time…
We wont ever know how they truly felt about eachother but the thing about the play & film is that.. IT WORKS , hear me out here.
The film is about Salieri , reminiscing and explaining his life to a priest while beeing old and demented. What he says to the priest is Salieri’s own perspective on what happened. An old and confused and tormented man. So fiction yes , but YET it works. That detail makes it less fiction then if say the movie would have not had that element in it.
Swell, how brilliant! If only I could see this, I mean, every single note appears synchronized with the voice, in the original film itself.
no body is speaking english here, so i am.
manchou os comentários
congrats...
Me too bro
Moi aussi je comprends rien
و أنا أيضا
Tremendoo, estuvieron en otro nivel comparado a los músicos de hoy en día
Beautiful video. Thank you for this.
Excepcional,sublime...inigualable!!!..ver este video como músico no deja de emocionarme al imaginar gracias ha esta edición como pudo haber Sido ese momento en el que Mozart armaba toda esta obra maestra!! Es como si estuvieramos en sus pensamientos y escucharamos y viéramos lo que imaginaba en elomento.!!...gracias por este video.!
Pure genius, so why did he have to die alone, ignored, penniless, dumped into a commoners gave with no appropriate tribute to the incredible sacrifice he made for us all, a lifetime of work going unappreciated until years later? It breaks my heart. Granted, I know of his character, perhaps enjoying life a bit too much, but he deserved so much more praise for his gifts while he was still alive then what he was given, it should NOT be centuries later……. up until my 20s, music was my life (I was diagnosed then with stage 4 intestinal cancer, and Crohn’s disease, over 3 decades they removed 95% of my GI tract, died twice, and my cancer relapsed 4 times, ending my musical career), especially classical music, and opera. I literally had dreams every week that I was working with him, getting to watch his genius come to life. The scary part was when I finally saw a picture of what he really looked like, it was identical to the person in my dreams. The movie “Amadeus” was wonderful, but, it didn’t really capture his essence, his frivolity, his passion, zeal, and joy for life. So much of me wishes I was alive during that time, because my dreams, despite decades passing, only intensified, as though I’m getting to know him, but that’s impossible. I think it’s my deep admiration for him, and just how incredibly gifted he truly was, that inspired my dreams and my life (he still does to this day), as though he were still alive. I know that doesn’t make much sense, only because I can’t explain it, all I know is, he deserved so much better than he was given when he was still alive. People should not have to die before their works are appreciated to their full extent. I’ve always had a unique passion for Mozart, but also for Liszt, Beethoven, Chopin, and his other contemporaries of that period. I started composing at the age of six, by 11 I had already written two pieces, which, with great honor, were by the Toronto Symphony Orchestra at Massey Hall (my music teacher was a member of that orchestra), one of the oldest theatres in the city, but sadly lost to a fire only days after the concert, I was devastated. I always wondered what Mozart would’ve said about my work, but this video, and the music in it, is shockingly close to what I wrote. I was only a child, we had no Internet back then, and I had never heard this piece of music back then….. I know it sounds crazy, but for the briefest of moments, it felt as though he himself used my hands to write his last Concerto. Unfortunately, after decades of surgeries, chemotherapies, radiation, medication’s, and illness, I have completely forgotten what I had written. The only copies were the originals I gave to the TSO conductor. They lost many originals in that fire, I’d give anything to hear it again, despite racking my brain, I cannot, for the life of me, remember exactly what I had written back then, but the music in this video sent a chill down my spine, as it was frightening similar. I don’t believe in things like reincarnation, as others have suggested, but I cannot explain it. I am, however, rediscovering my passion, and hope to re-create it, and with luck, I will. When Mozart mentions “and now for the fire”, that is exactly how I write my music, with the fire and passion, with emotion and subtlety, combined with love, hate, rage, and the most powerful of emotions, because it’s emotion itself that guides my hand on the empty scores.
These 7.35 minutes that this masterfully edited video lasts, left me speechless. I saw Amadeus in 1984 and I have never forgotten that amazing recreation of the great Wolfang in the cinema. Likewise, I have read your comment and I have captured through it your anguish for forgetting the compositions you created at an early age and the consequences of an immeasurable battle to live. Let me tell you, it was a pleasure to read your impressions and intimacies. My cordial greetings from Chile.
Your story, in its own way, is much like Mozart’s, with such struggles…
I hope this finds you well!
@@marcfleischmann9911 thank you!
Solo atino a decir GRACIAS!.
What a scene,what a movie
Amadeus sits atop my list of favorite movies and has, ever since I first saw it. To me, F. Murray Abraham won his Oscar when the priest says to him, "All men are equal in God's eyes." Salieri turns and stares at the priest and says, "ARE they!"
Beautiful work, thank you!
Sinceramente yo no se absolutamente nada del idioma musical , y al ver este fragmento de una película mi cerebro 🤯 si el otro que se entiende, también era músico no entendia ni jota , yo 😮😮😮😮😮😮 , increíble por algo Mozart y muchos más a pesar del paso del tiempo su musica sigue vigente 👏👏👏👏👏👏💕
Smekam klobouk! Naprosto dokonale udelane video. Pro nas, kteri maji radi klasickou hudbu. Ale nevladnou hudebnimi nastroji. Naprosto s citem vytvorene video. A krasna pocta Mozartovi, jeho hudbe a uzasnemu filmu mého krajana Milose Formana. Jeste jednou velke dekuji.
The light that burns twice as bright burns half as long
Thank you for sharing this video. It’s mazing to see how Mozart’s worked in real time. Definitely he was a music machine.
This video is GREAT!!! Excellent work! Gracias
Un genio, espectacular
Love it!! In a purely audible format, this is how music comes to my head when I write it.
excelente edicion me encanta
De FATO, MERECEU OS OSCARs que Recebeu: BRAVO, BRAVO, BRAVÍSSIMO
Não apenas demostrou como Mozart era um GÊNIO, como expôs a COMPLEXIDADE DA ARTE E CIÊNCIA DA MÚSICA, a Importância da NOTAÇÃO MUSICAL como método de Linguagem Universal, e por esse motivo que não sabemos exatamente como eram as musicas da Antiguidade ANTES da Adoção da Notação Musical Moderna, pois cada País tinha a sua Própria e não temos muitos registros disso para comparar.
Mozart: "Do you believe in Hellfire?"
Salieri: "Yes."
Mozart: "It's possible." _ends up writing the last music he'll ever hear in his head, based on the fear of hellfire_
Ah no pues... así sí pues. Admito que vi muchas veces está escena pero cuando lo dictaba parecía complicado y eso que he cantado el Réquiem de Mozart en varias ocasiones.
Gracias 🙏
Los ultimos estudios se revelo que salieri estuvo con mozart antes de morir ,eran amigos y saliere un admirador ,fuera aprovechado o no esta escena es una posibilidad que se podria desmentir o no ... gran pelicula .ESPERO salga pronto en 4k.chile santiago.
i just watched it and it was beautiful the actor was on point
The movie is (of course)far away from the truth, but what I like about this scene is that you can understand that Salieri isn't just some random mediocre musician who happens to play at cord (or worse: An untalented fool how show as little Amadeus portrayed him). You need to be a very high trained musician to do what he does and not everyone can reach this level. It is kind of sad that so little of his own work survived.
Obra magnífica este réquiem de Mozart
Bravo, this was really really good