1:13 Holy 9th overtone! Listening to the rest of the track, there's definitely something amplifying that frequency; probably a room mode or something resonating somewhere, but that doesn't take away from how heavenly it sounds!
What piece are the series of cadences at the end from? Also, I'm always amazed at how big Jackson's voice can be and still hold through multiple measures with a good sound
But I might have misread your question, if you’re talking about the very end. My answer was more pertaining to the whole thing, hope it’s still helpful!
I love how much Ryan gets to shine in this arrangement.
Ah yes! more The Newfangled Four videos to serve as my sustenance...
That ending cadence though!
I enjoyed this so much! I need more acapella versions of classical (or baroque) pieces!
Yes please! This was wonderful, please more of this stuff
Gashouse Gang's got their hand in classical pieces! Look up their Mozart and Beethoven works
@@harleyludy6596 yesss I’ve listened to those!
1:13 Holy 9th overtone! Listening to the rest of the track, there's definitely something amplifying that frequency; probably a room mode or something resonating somewhere, but that doesn't take away from how heavenly it sounds!
Vivaldi's music. Bach's arrangement, but Vivaldi's music.
Newfangled Four's arrangement. Bach's version; Vivaldi's original composition.
@@itskarl7575 ok thanks, but of what piece ...
@@bonjourclash5903 Vivaldi concerto grosso in D minor
@@itskarl7575actually 139th st quartet’s arrangement (and they called it bach’s fugue for a particular gag at the end)
I need this to play every time I enter a room
First time I saw this the 139th Street Quartet did it. Bravo!
That's not a Bach fugue. It's Vivaldi concerto grosso in D minor (the famous one) first movement.
It is movement 2
@@7he0 three if you count the largo.
I think Bach just arranged the concerto for organ.
Ryan is magnificent here
What piece are the series of cadences at the end from?
Also, I'm always amazed at how big Jackson's voice can be and still hold through multiple measures with a good sound
I may be wrong, but I believe it’s from the Bach double violin concerto (also in d minor), and if it’s not, it sounds very close
But I might have misread your question, if you’re talking about the very end. My answer was more pertaining to the whole thing, hope it’s still helpful!
@@eleahleng Yeah, I just meant froom 1:09 to the end
@@xthatghomiex2939 Its in the Bach version, taken from the original Vivaldi concerto
All right, somebody could please give a link to an orchestral version ? I'd love to hear it on an organ, too... Thanks
Found it : ua-cam.com/video/VjIEHLRUwoI/v-deo.html ending is at 4'50. But the Newfangled Four developped the ending a lot
Soooo good👍
Great fugue!
fuck it ALL tag
This is from Swingle Singers.
How to hide a necessary breath on an EXCEPTIONALLY long note!
Bravo!
Yeh❤️
this is Vivaldi, concerto grosso, not Bach!
This is a Vivaldi Fugue
They misnamed it so they could make a "Batch" joke
Aleks Jenner No, it’s actually written by Bach, but originally written by Vivaldi, Bach brought it to the organ
Originally Vivaldi Op. 3 No. 11 (Middle part of 1st Mvt.), then transcribed by Bach for Solo Organ - BWV 596
Starting at 1:09 it gets good
it's good before that!