That was as rich a tribute to Stravinsky in under 20 minutes as there is ever likely to be. You really drove home the vibrancy and color of his music particularly as it pertained to ballet. It serves as a reminder to many of us who only know these as concert pieces, that they are ballets that tell stories with sensual dancing and elaborate visual stagings. What a charmed life he lead as a composer who impacted the world of classical music in the 20th century like no other, and received the recognition and accolades he so well deserved. There is so much inspiration to be had here.
I admire Stravinsky’s trajectory! “Inside The Score” has captured and revealed this extraordinary life of creative genius, beauty, and chaotic energy. I’m not ashamed to say I cried as Stravinsky became pure light and jumped to light speed in the last few seconds! We’ll done, Oscar and crew.
Little note: Sergej Diaghilev wasn't a choreographer, he was the producer and director of "Les ballets russes". He wasn't even a dancer, but he has worked with arts for his whole life, mainly as a producer. The Firebird and Petrushka were choreographed by Michel Fokine, and other ballets like Rite of Spring were choreographed by Nijinsky himself.
Hey just letting you know these videos on composers put together better than any other on classical music subjects. Much more entertaining which is more important than just the info alone. Thanks
Many thanks! Now I have a more complete idea of Stravinsky's work and development. Wonderful musical examples, using great audio. And a sympathetic examination of Stravinsky's life and work.
I love the passion you describe these works and composers with. Your explanations really help understand and appreciate even more this music that I love, but am unable to read. Thank you so much!!
Thank you for introducing me to the idea of musical “primitivism”. That’s a great word for so much music that I enjoy. Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring was the direct influence on the great Japanese composer Akira Ifukube. Would love if you did a video essay on Ifukube’s music. Though best known in the West for his film scores, his classical/concert repertoire is quite impressive, and much of his music I think would count as primitivism, particularly a favorite of his-Sinfonia Tapkaara-which is his tribute to the traditional dance music of the native Ainu people he grew up among.
This was a great survey of the master...certainly a titan of the 20th century. I thought you gave some great examples from each period of his amazing career, a concise overview for beginners...one note though, did you say Handel was from the Renaissance??? You meant to say Baroque right???
Could you please do a video on Wagner! I love his music, and I would love a video that dives deeper into his life and how he was influenced musically! He's truly composed some of the most complex yet beautiful music that I've listened to.
Love this video! May I suggest that you should probably put a d'esser on your voiceover, as some parts can be very piercing with plosives lots of p and s sounds! other than that though, great video very informative and exciting
'Petrushka', 'The Firebird' and 'The Rite Of Spring' are my absolute favourites. Just magical stuff. P.S. 'Les Noces' is revolutionary in its own way too, it's just not as good as the other three I mentioned.
I'd have to disagree: Les Noces is my favourite piece of his. It's shorter than any other of his ballets but incredibly unique and well crafted, like a jewel. To me it serves as a development on the style pioneered by the Rite of Spring, with a ensamble more fine tuned to the percussive nature of his Russian period, but also an expansion on it's emotional pallete, getting more restrained percussive passages that nevertheless maintain the wild energy of the Rite and some genuinely warm elements. And man, that ending is just devine. Apparently the man himself also found Les Noces to be his best work, it certainly took him the longest.
Hey @insidethescore I just came from watching your videos about Mozart. Lovely videos. You should make a video about Salieri to judge if he was truly mediocre like the movie Amadeus says or if he was a genius
That would be from the Rite of Spring, specifically the "Spring Rounds" section. The music then transitions to the "Coachmen and Grooms Dance" from Petrushka.
Listen to his Dumbarton Oaks Concerto! Love it. He goes Baroque a bit. Memorable melodies with Counterpoint. The Knights have a great recording. It’s on UA-cam.
Thank you for recommending 'The Knights'. performance of Dumbarton Oaks. Wonderful, exciting performance. My Damascus moment in music was The Firebird which I first heard in 1969.
@@Paul49GiloiThe Firebird was mine also. The group YES introduced many to the Firebird Finale as they opened their show. Maybe you too had that introduction to Stravinsky? A friend lent me his vinyl Firebird Suite. Loved it as it lullaby’d me and then shook me awake with the Orchestra Blast! lol. My song Bass Face opens with that Blast sampled. Glad you enjoyed the Knight’s version of DOaks. “BassFace” ua-cam.com/video/rdW9IzrF0vE/v-deo.htmlsi=1TZ0WugzYEhxbH3f
For some strange reason I associate Stravy with Freddie Mercury. A few days ago I was listening to the "March of the Black Queen" and immediately thereafter I had to listen to The Rite of Spring. Now I can't stop.
Just adding to the earlier comment and someone really needs to fact check these things. Anyone with a basic knowledge of the Ballet Russes knows that Diaghilev was a great impresario (equivalent to a modern-day producer) but that he didn't contribute artistically to the works, even though he also had studied privately with Rimsky-Korsakov. Not to discount his contribution in the least. He brought together so many great artistic talents to work together from composers like Stravinsky and Ravel with choreographers like Fokine and Nijinsky to artists such as Picasso and Kandinsky and even designers like Coco Channel herself.
I know for sure he would have hated you calling him a rebel. It’s funny you say he is revolutionary when in his lessons at Harvard (that you quoted but probably not read) he sarcastically answered that the revolution is the movement of an object coming back to it’s initial position
This is in all UA-cam plataform a true excellence channel to those that realy love and know Music. Bravo and deep congratulations!You shinnes. And I speak as a mature classical composer with a high intelligence degree I would like your analisys concerning my composition "Re edited What if YanAyrton had a Bösendorfer Imperial?|’The stoicTrip of the elephants!{Stomping hardᴴᴰ" It is unique and so is its artistic purpose.just discover it and listen to it carefully. Thanking in advance, Sincerely, ― Yan Ayrton a young composer from XXI century Ano Dommini (Note the complex sequences of compasses that I used the extremely fast QUADRI-FUSE notes (twice faster than the semi-fuse ones. The QUADRI-FUSE special note tempo was created by me to the history of human Music and perhaps, only the exceptional gifted Franz Liszt did know how to use them with mastery and domminium ) YAN AYRTON
If one is smart, one can use serialism as a starting place with rules or randomly constructed forms. After so doing, adjust the resulting composition to ones´ own aesthetic and discard the self imposed form. Make some rules and then break the rules.
His works before he left Russia are wonderful, but his only great work after he emigrated was the Symphony of Psalms (although there are a few good moments in the Symphony in Three Movements).
glowing words of praise communicate little but your enthusiasm, which is infectious. if you want to learn how to communicate about music on another level, i recommend watching adam neely. not sure about the spelling. his technical breakdown of a piece or a style cuts through the ambiguity of subjective adjectives in a way i can really understand. he is well grounded in history, so this subject would be right up his alley. not affiliated. ☮️
Hang on. You missed out a huge portion of Stravinsky's early composing life, and you speak as though the Firebird was virtually his first significant work. I realise you tried to pack a lot into 20 minutes, but there are many very significant pieces which led up to the three great ballets of 1910-1913. Moreover, what you describe as "cinematic" is the wrong way round. It is film producers and composers who drew from Stravinsky's works and used (copied) them into their film scores. Stravinsky was not only uninterested in composing for film but actually hated his music being used for cinema. Diaghilev was NOT a choreographer but an IMPRESARIO.
1) it doesn't, most of time 2) when it does, it's because almost all film composers, including John Williams, pilfered Stravinsky (and aknowledged it) ; not to diminish the quality of said film music!
@@mikechad27 sorry, my comment was half joke half I genuinely noticed resemblance to some scenes such as Death Star before explosion. I appreciate this music and I know it was John Williams who took inspiration
Revolutionery music are the Dimitry Shostakovish and not Stravinsky. Stravinsky has some modern classical music as Rite of Spring but the rest are mostly just classical.
Burgericans are fascinated by Stravinsky because he lived in Burgerica for a time. He's not even played in Europe so much anymore. That's a good thing.
These classifications of 'era' are complete nonsense, regardless of whether or not they're broadly accepted. Style isn't associated with time, era is. The definition is literally "a long and distinct period of history with a particular feature or characteristic." - You classified works from say 1920 into an era with one from 1951 and then at the same time interjected works from another 'era' within it like Les Noces from 1923. These works are of different styles but not of different eras or phases. They are interweaved and therefor cannot be different eras. An era is mutually exclusive to other era's, they cannot overlap.
That was as rich a tribute to Stravinsky in under 20 minutes as there is ever likely to be. You really drove home the vibrancy and color of his music particularly as it pertained to ballet. It serves as a reminder to many of us who only know these as concert pieces, that they are ballets that tell stories with sensual dancing and elaborate visual stagings. What a charmed life he lead as a composer who impacted the world of classical music in the 20th century like no other, and received the recognition and accolades he so well deserved. There is so much inspiration to be had here.
Every time I re-visit it The Rite of Spring amazes me how new that 110 years old piece sounds.
I admire Stravinsky’s trajectory! “Inside The Score” has captured and revealed this extraordinary life of creative genius, beauty, and chaotic energy. I’m not ashamed to say I cried as Stravinsky became pure light and jumped to light speed in the last few seconds! We’ll done, Oscar and crew.
Wow perfectly timed!
I'm a teacher and was gonna be talking to my students about Stravinsky soon. Thanks!
Little note: Sergej Diaghilev wasn't a choreographer, he was the producer and director of "Les ballets russes". He wasn't even a dancer, but he has worked with arts for his whole life, mainly as a producer. The Firebird and Petrushka were choreographed by Michel Fokine, and other ballets like Rite of Spring were choreographed by Nijinsky himself.
Thank you. Love Stravinsky since I first heard his music. My favorite piece of his is Oedipus Rex.
The narration and this presentation has transformed the subject! Scary, provocative!!!
Hey just letting you know these videos on composers put together better than any other on classical music subjects. Much more entertaining which is more important than just the info alone. Thanks
Great video, thanks for sharing !
Many thanks! Now I have a more complete idea of Stravinsky's work and development. Wonderful musical examples, using great audio. And a sympathetic examination of Stravinsky's life and work.
I can't thank you enough for introducing me to Les Noces. My life hasn't been the same ever since.
New Inside the Score video! Lets gooooooooooooo 🎶 🎶 🎶
I love the passion you describe these works and composers with.
Your explanations really help understand and appreciate even more this music that I love, but am unable to read. Thank you so much!!
Great video!! Stravinsky has been a huge influence on me and many others!
Thank you for introducing me to the idea of musical “primitivism”. That’s a great word for so much music that I enjoy. Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring was the direct influence on the great Japanese composer Akira Ifukube. Would love if you did a video essay on Ifukube’s music. Though best known in the West for his film scores, his classical/concert repertoire is quite impressive, and much of his music I think would count as primitivism, particularly a favorite of his-Sinfonia Tapkaara-which is his tribute to the traditional dance music of the native Ainu people he grew up among.
This was a great survey of the master...certainly a titan of the 20th century. I thought you gave some great examples from each period of his amazing career, a concise overview for beginners...one note though, did you say Handel was from the Renaissance??? You meant to say Baroque right???
My favourite piece is the ending of the Psalm Symphony
Thank you for this video!! (and thanks for including Les noces, which is sadly underrated)
Les Noces was Stravinsky's favourite work.
I ABSOLUTELY ADORE YOUR ANALYSIS AND VIDEOS
I love his elegie for solo viola. It's a true rendition of grief!
His Firebird is my favourite ballet!
Very interesting presentation about one of my favorite composers. Btw, Handel was not a renaissance composer.
Yeah, Handel as “renaissance” was an odd statement in otherwise well stated little essay.
Could you please do a video on Wagner! I love his music, and I would love a video that dives deeper into his life and how he was influenced musically! He's truly composed some of the most complex yet beautiful music that I've listened to.
I'm very thankful for this video. I enjoyed every second of it and learned a lot! Thanks!
Amazing biography. To me musical genius of the s XX.
Hearing The Rite live is a trascendental experience!
About to see the Orlando Phil playing Stravinsky‘s Rite of Spring this Saturday. Your video came out at the perfect time!
YES YES MY MAN STRAVINSKY
I was waiting for this video
We probably wouldn't have metal without Stravinsky.
I’ve been saying this for twenty years and you’re the first person I’ve seen say it other than myself. You get it.
Right
Him and Shostakovich.
@@TenderVictuals x to doubt.
It's a common thing to hear from metalheads.
If you want real heavy though, try Xenakis
Love this video! May I suggest that you should probably put a d'esser on your voiceover, as some parts can be very piercing with plosives lots of p and s sounds! other than that though, great video very informative and exciting
Excellent!
ah yes!
my favourite composer!
excellent taste
Accurate and concise. Thank you.
'Petrushka', 'The Firebird' and 'The Rite Of Spring' are my absolute favourites. Just magical stuff.
P.S. 'Les Noces' is revolutionary in its own way too, it's just not as good as the other three I mentioned.
I'd have to disagree: Les Noces is my favourite piece of his. It's shorter than any other of his ballets but incredibly unique and well crafted, like a jewel. To me it serves as a development on the style pioneered by the Rite of Spring, with a ensamble more fine tuned to the percussive nature of his Russian period, but also an expansion on it's emotional pallete, getting more restrained percussive passages that nevertheless maintain the wild energy of the Rite and some genuinely warm elements. And man, that ending is just devine. Apparently the man himself also found Les Noces to be his best work, it certainly took him the longest.
Great video, great work. I was wondering, have you planned one for Jean Sibelius? I would be so happy to watch it... And yes, its a suggestion! 🙏
Greatly done❤
what an amazing video, congrats!!
I'm glad you picked Les Noces as well as the more famous pieces. For me, it is as original as The Rite! Thanks!
Hey @insidethescore I just came from watching your videos about Mozart. Lovely videos. You should make a video about Salieri to judge if he was truly mediocre like the movie Amadeus says or if he was a genius
My second favorite piece of Stravinsky's, after The Rite of Spring, is his Octet for Wind Instruments, from early in his classical period.
stravinsky will always be my favorite composer
I love Stravinsky! Thank you for giving us this content!
The firebird music and ballet are incredible and beautiful.
Really good documentary; great explanations of techniques for composers! Thanks
Thank you, I enjoyed watching ❤
Literally ... my hero!
Fantastic video and a great tribute to the inmortal Igor Stravinsky
I did not know I shared my birthday with Stravinsky 😮. This is a good video tho, very educational :)
A man who was ahead of his time musically
Thank you as always!
7:30 should Eb dominant 7th instead?
Adore this video!! Does anyone know the name of the music at 10:15?
That would be from the Rite of Spring, specifically the "Spring Rounds" section. The music then transitions to the "Coachmen and Grooms Dance" from Petrushka.
IMO the greatest of all music creators.
another unclockable video excellent thank you!
Listen to his Dumbarton Oaks Concerto! Love it. He goes Baroque a bit. Memorable melodies with Counterpoint. The Knights have a great recording. It’s on UA-cam.
Thank you for recommending 'The Knights'. performance of Dumbarton Oaks. Wonderful, exciting performance.
My Damascus moment in music was The Firebird which I first heard in 1969.
@@Paul49GiloiThe Firebird was mine also. The group YES introduced many to the Firebird Finale as they opened their show. Maybe you too had that introduction to Stravinsky?
A friend lent me his vinyl Firebird Suite. Loved it as it lullaby’d me and then shook me awake with the Orchestra Blast! lol.
My song Bass Face opens with that Blast sampled.
Glad you enjoyed the Knight’s version of DOaks. “BassFace” ua-cam.com/video/rdW9IzrF0vE/v-deo.htmlsi=1TZ0WugzYEhxbH3f
Thank you,ITS. Marvelous!!!⭐🌹⭐
I want to hear your opinion about Prokofiev and Tchaikovsky
Fun fact: Stravinsky saw Tchaikovsky conduct and outlived The Beatles
Beautiful.. thank you.. shukran
Yea Rite of Spring is one of my favorite
works
For some strange reason I associate Stravy with Freddie Mercury. A few days ago I was listening to the "March of the Black Queen" and immediately thereafter I had to listen to The Rite of Spring. Now I can't stop.
Would you make some guides on Mahler 1,3,4,5,6,7,8,9 just like those on brahms? This actually give people the passion to listen to the whole piece
Thanks
Next topic maybe Bartók?
Why listen to Stravinsky?
Because he's the God of Harmony 🎉❤
Igor was my friend
There are so many sounds from the rites of Spring which clearly inspired the Jurassic Park BO
Just adding to the earlier comment and someone really needs to fact check these things. Anyone with a basic knowledge of the Ballet Russes knows that Diaghilev was a great impresario (equivalent to a modern-day producer) but that he didn't contribute artistically to the works, even though he also had studied privately with Rimsky-Korsakov. Not to discount his contribution in the least. He brought together so many great artistic talents to work together from composers like Stravinsky and Ravel with choreographers like Fokine and Nijinsky to artists such as Picasso and Kandinsky and even designers like Coco Channel herself.
11:59 ! 🤩🙏
I know for sure he would have hated you calling him a rebel.
It’s funny you say he is revolutionary when in his lessons at Harvard (that you quoted but probably not read) he sarcastically answered that the revolution is the movement of an object coming back to it’s initial position
СПАСИБО.❤❤❤
Erm, at 7:23 it’s actually an E major chord against an Eb DOMINANT seven chord ☝️🤓
Regrettably you didn’t mention Apollo [Musagète] which is a unique masterpiece unlike any others of Stravinsky.
This is in all UA-cam plataform a true excellence channel to those that realy love and know Music.
Bravo and deep congratulations!You shinnes.
And I speak as a mature classical composer with a high intelligence degree
I would like your analisys concerning my composition
"Re edited What if YanAyrton had a Bösendorfer Imperial?|’The stoicTrip of the elephants!{Stomping hardᴴᴰ"
It is unique and so is its artistic purpose.just discover it and listen to it carefully.
Thanking in advance, Sincerely, ― Yan Ayrton a young composer from XXI century Ano Dommini
(Note the complex sequences of compasses that I used the extremely fast QUADRI-FUSE notes (twice faster than the semi-fuse ones.
The QUADRI-FUSE special note tempo was created by me to the history of human Music
and perhaps, only the exceptional gifted Franz Liszt did know how to use them with mastery and domminium ) YAN AYRTON
If one is smart, one can use serialism as a starting place with rules or randomly constructed forms. After so doing, adjust the resulting composition to ones´ own aesthetic and discard the self imposed form. Make some rules and then break the rules.
You missed to talk about the Histoire du Soldat
Gracias
Renaissance work by Handel or the likes?
The greatest of all time.
His works before he left Russia are wonderful, but his only great work after he emigrated was the Symphony of Psalms (although there are a few good moments in the Symphony in Three Movements).
Les Noces is a great work! (among others)
You should do a Why listen to Chopin?
A cavil: Handel wasn't a Renaissance composer, he was late Baroque.
Wait, Handel was Renaissance?
Nope.
glowing words of praise communicate little but your enthusiasm, which is infectious. if you want to learn how to communicate about music on another level, i recommend watching adam neely. not sure about the spelling. his technical breakdown of a piece or a style cuts through the ambiguity of subjective adjectives in a way i can really understand. he is well grounded in history, so this subject would be right up his alley. not affiliated. ☮️
You should talk about Khachaturian 👀
I love Stravinsky and much of his beautiful music, but I agree with Adorno, he is "the restoration" the real progress is Schoenberg.
Hang on. You missed out a huge portion of Stravinsky's early composing life, and you speak as though the Firebird was virtually his first significant work. I realise you tried to pack a lot into 20 minutes, but there are many very significant pieces which led up to the three great ballets of 1910-1913. Moreover, what you describe as "cinematic" is the wrong way round. It is film producers and composers who drew from Stravinsky's works and used (copied) them into their film scores. Stravinsky was not only uninterested in composing for film but actually hated his music being used for cinema. Diaghilev was NOT a choreographer but an IMPRESARIO.
Why all his music sounds like Star Wars soundtrack?
1) it doesn't, most of time 2) when it does, it's because almost all film composers, including John Williams, pilfered Stravinsky (and aknowledged it) ; not to diminish the quality of said film music!
stravinsky bad john williams good?
Oh no! did Stravinsky really just time travel to future to STEAL star wars idea??? 🤬🤬🤬🤬
what overrated film music does to a mf:
@@mikechad27 sorry, my comment was half joke half I genuinely noticed resemblance to some scenes such as Death Star before explosion. I appreciate this music and I know it was John Williams who took inspiration
Love Stravinsky...almost as revolutionary as Charles Ives.
Soldier's Tale? Polka fir Elephants...
He helped create prog rock also
Revolutionery music are the Dimitry Shostakovish and not Stravinsky. Stravinsky has some modern classical music as Rite of Spring but the rest are mostly just classical.
His wonderful sense of beautiful melody? No?????
Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's son was 'Andrei' and not 'Vladimir'.
It's sad that such a great composer was straving.
Did Igor Stravinsky have adhd? I mean, his creativity had to have come from somewhere right?
WHY DO YOU DISPLAY A RACHMANINOFF PICTURE IN AN ARTICLE ABOUT STRAVINSKY????????????
I like E
So, academically speaking, heavy metal is just musical serial primitivism with electric guitars?
Burgericans are fascinated by Stravinsky because he lived in Burgerica for a time. He's not even played in Europe so much anymore. That's a good thing.
These classifications of 'era' are complete nonsense, regardless of whether or not they're broadly accepted. Style isn't associated with time, era is. The definition is literally "a long and distinct period of history with a particular feature or characteristic." - You classified works from say 1920 into an era with one from 1951 and then at the same time interjected works from another 'era' within it like Les Noces from 1923. These works are of different styles but not of different eras or phases. They are interweaved and therefor cannot be different eras. An era is mutually exclusive to other era's, they cannot overlap.