Why Listen to Schubert?

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  • Опубліковано 29 тра 2020
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    An analysis of Schubert's song (lied), Gretchen Am Spinnrade, but also a general talk on his music, his life, and how it might relate to us now in this new age of staying at home.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,3 тис.

  • @InsidetheScore
    @InsidetheScore  4 місяці тому +2

    Discover more music with Apple Music Classical, the streaming service for classical music. apple.co/InsideTheScore
    Search for 'Schubert Essentials' or 'Schubert: Undiscovered' to hear much more of his greatest!

  • @judedoesclassics9169
    @judedoesclassics9169 4 роки тому +2346

    "Wer die Musik liebt, kann nie ganz unglücklich werden."
    "He who loves music can never truly be unhappy"
    -F. Schubert

    • @instantgratification3925
      @instantgratification3925 4 роки тому +59

      Irony is that I listen to Schubert to feel unhappiness.

    • @donde2k
      @donde2k 4 роки тому +26

      Jude does Classics - I listen to Schubert to know that I am not alone in my unhappiness.

    • @libramoon2
      @libramoon2 4 роки тому +2

      Jude.....So true.

    • @zackwyvern2582
      @zackwyvern2582 4 роки тому +2

      Unless he is deprived of music.

    • @Wuozlinga
      @Wuozlinga 4 роки тому +1

      @@ve1803 its a mixture of both in German

  • @exiszentriker2952
    @exiszentriker2952 4 роки тому +1467

    It is almost like he knew that he would die early, the amount of music he created is astonishing, he really wasted no time, because he knew that it is limited.

    • @lkj974
      @lkj974 4 роки тому +116

      He did know he was dying, from his mid-twenties. Syphillis then was like AIDS in the 80’s and 90’s. You knew you had it, and you knew everyone who got it eventually died from it.

    • @DaoKyle
      @DaoKyle 4 роки тому +2

      Raz

    • @jessicali8594
      @jessicali8594 3 роки тому +4

      Many had had tuberculosis for years as well.

    • @barretthoven
      @barretthoven 3 роки тому +15

      He reminds me of Hamilton.
      Why do you write like you’re running out of time?! Why do you write like you need it to survive?!

  • @atallaedits
    @atallaedits 3 роки тому +2693

    "we don't put schubert in the same ranks as bach, mozart and beethoven"
    *...... wait. we don't??*

    • @noname_0187
      @noname_0187 3 роки тому +57

      Lol i thought the same

    • @metteholm4833
      @metteholm4833 3 роки тому +108

      MOST people don´t.

    • @atallaedits
      @atallaedits 3 роки тому +52

      Franz Schubert nooo franzie :( you’re number one in my heart

    • @susanhawkins3890
      @susanhawkins3890 3 роки тому +20

      Mostly, he wrote for friends and their parties. He apparently enjoyed the dancing, drinking, etc. and died with flu or pneumonia in winter.

    • @erikhaegert5426
      @erikhaegert5426 3 роки тому +4

      I dont

  • @user-ep8ss5gj3u
    @user-ep8ss5gj3u 4 роки тому +901

    Why listen to Schubert? Why eat food? Why breathe air? There’s no such pure and genuine music quite as Schubert. Schubert’s music is a prime example how you can achieve so much while having and using so little.

    • @iknowexactlywhoyouare8701
      @iknowexactlywhoyouare8701 3 роки тому +5

      Except Beethoven was the master of the Romantic era and probably the first ever composer to write music that evokes his personal feelings and raw emotions

    • @user-ep8ss5gj3u
      @user-ep8ss5gj3u 3 роки тому +19

      wouldn’t you like to know music as we know exists for at least 1000years. Every composer tried to evoke emotions, music without emotions doesn’t exist. Also, Beethoven wasn’t quite a romantism composer but rather a man of his own style (especially considering his deafness).

    • @scruffysean3640
      @scruffysean3640 3 роки тому +5

      The String Quintet. The freaking C major String Quintet.

    • @nadaklen3254
      @nadaklen3254 3 роки тому

      Bravo, I agree with You.

    • @franziskakre8309
      @franziskakre8309 3 роки тому +4

      @@iknowexactlywhoyouare8701 Beethoven was a Master of the Classic Period, not Romantic.

  • @InsidetheScore
    @InsidetheScore  4 роки тому +2485

    I MADE A MISTAKE!!! When Beethoven was 29, he was still writing his FIRST symphony! I wrote the wrong number when typing the script out and that wound up making the final cut - sorry! But that makes this fact even cooler.
    Also apologies for my bad German. It's great to be back.

    • @VisiblyJacked
      @VisiblyJacked 4 роки тому +14

      Yes I did a double take on that...thanks for the correction!

    • @DrymouthCWW
      @DrymouthCWW 4 роки тому +21

      Well...give us about 10 years and maybe then we can forgive this grave error. :p

    • @f3rdy1307
      @f3rdy1307 4 роки тому +14

      Dein Deutsch ist sehr gut!

    • @ashen_one462
      @ashen_one462 4 роки тому +1

      Would you make another “Listening Club”, won’t you ?

    • @jacobscardino4330
      @jacobscardino4330 4 роки тому +16

      This was a very informative and excellent video, I feel a deeper appreciation for Schubert as a result. I would love to see more “why listen to ...” videos about other composers that aren’t necessarily house hold names, ie. Mendelssohn, Satie, Poulenc. Thank you for the well put together content!

  • @olivierbeltrami
    @olivierbeltrami 4 роки тому +1225

    Imagine if he had lived for another 10-20 years.

    • @samaritan29
      @samaritan29 4 роки тому +69

      imagine if beethoven had lived for another 20 years

    • @Pijanoo
      @Pijanoo 4 роки тому +53

      He might have got confidence to write a concerto. Something along the lines of wanderer fantasy.

    • @pf1326
      @pf1326 4 роки тому +19

      In my opinion irrelevant... when you wrote so many great pieces there is nothing left to say.

    • @moreaulerence-ler2531
      @moreaulerence-ler2531 4 роки тому +7

      imagine if Kalinnikov had lived for another 30 years.He would have written more great symphonies

    • @mr-wx3lv
      @mr-wx3lv 4 роки тому +13

      Maybe they wouldn't have composed much music at all had they lived another 20 years. Thinking of Rossini and Sibelius, they virtually packed it in and lived many more years..

  • @mox.kartal
    @mox.kartal 4 роки тому +520

    Ave Maria is one of the most beautiful melodies that I have ever heard.

    • @jjpeterson9628
      @jjpeterson9628 4 роки тому +18

      Yes, I completely agree. It's like ...where or how did Schubert come up w/ that. I'd love to come up w/ a melody like that.

    • @zavidlan6166
      @zavidlan6166 4 роки тому +1

      JJ Peterson well boy you can trace down all the way to renaissance period

    • @stefanie3831
      @stefanie3831 4 роки тому +6

      Really? -.- From all of Schubert's famous works I like this one the least. It's cheap, not comparable to some of his masterpieces.

    • @RichMitch
      @RichMitch 4 роки тому +2

      Absolutely

    • @adannanmezi3672
      @adannanmezi3672 4 роки тому +30

      stefanie3831 maybe you’ve become desensitized to it because its often played

  • @matthewkemmer
    @matthewkemmer 4 роки тому +490

    Schubert is one of my favorites! As a pianist, my favorite thing about his songs (that you made clear, but I don't think outright stated) is that he makes the accompaniment integral to the piece; not just as a complement to the singer, but part of the larger whole, where one cannot exist without the other. My overall favorite thing about Schubert is that he appeals so much to someone like me who would happily drown in melancholy. He sometimes pushes into outright depressive areas, but so much of his music has such a perfect tinge of sadness that really keeps me emotionally engaged.

    • @jonathanDstrand
      @jonathanDstrand 4 роки тому

      “he makes the accompaniment integral to the piece . . .” this could be said about many composers

    • @MayimHastings
      @MayimHastings 4 роки тому +16

      Jonathan Strand Yes, but none so well as Schubert.

    • @piikkikruunu
      @piikkikruunu 3 роки тому +1

      This. Thank you. 🙂

    • @LalaBee4now
      @LalaBee4now 16 днів тому

      @@jonathanDstrandI always wonder what infirmity of the spirit moves someone to bother with a comment like yours

  • @clavichord
    @clavichord 4 роки тому +1676

    Thanks for the video. Just a friendly correction: "Lieder" is German for "songs" (plural). "Lied" is German for "song" (singular)

    • @phy2sp33
      @phy2sp33 4 роки тому +43

      Rechtschreibung!

    • @graham7276
      @graham7276 4 роки тому +27

      Klugschei*er
      😋

    • @bnatrual
      @bnatrual 4 роки тому +13

      @@phy2sp33 was passt den an der Rechtschreibung nicht

    • @Wuozlinga
      @Wuozlinga 4 роки тому +11

      @@bnatrual denn*

    • @asamvav
      @asamvav 3 роки тому +3

      Elfen lied.

  • @greatcornholio
    @greatcornholio 3 роки тому +124

    Me at 17:
    Schubert at 17: composes two songs a day including masterpieces

    • @baronvonluchz5874
      @baronvonluchz5874 2 роки тому +3

      Well, he was old at that time

    • @TupDigital
      @TupDigital 2 роки тому

      Me at 17: can't describe on UA-cam comments

    • @baronvonluchz5874
      @baronvonluchz5874 2 роки тому

      @Jordan - being 17 in that time is closer to death then today

    • @Itibitydetsku
      @Itibitydetsku Рік тому +1

      Me at 17:
      I'm not even 17

  • @briannabrittany3127
    @briannabrittany3127 4 роки тому +237

    Schubert is the master of modulation. "Shifty Schubert" - he can slip the piece into a new key so subtly that you don't even realize he did it until he's already moved past it. Mozart shifts key with variations to the tune, Beethoven hammers the leading tone at you, but Schubert does it in the voice leading, where it's not as obvious. His use of harmony is is so colorful, it's hard to describe. The four hand piano fantasy, the Bb sonata, the Wanderer fantasy, the C maj quintet, the last movement of the 9th symphony. Die Schöne Müllerin is an opera for singer and pianist, where the piano is an equal partner with the singer; a talented stage designer or filmmaker could do something with that. He's a vastly underrated composer.

    • @Wuozlinga
      @Wuozlinga 4 роки тому +7

      I've just completed my final exams of Abitur in Germany (something between high school and college phase) and one of my focuses was Schuberts Kunstlieder (Solo songs, accompanied by a single piano), and I can only approve. Packing so many things in only the accompaniment which in itself isn't even all that hard to play and moreover, having the meaning of the original lyrical piece in mind at all times and reinforcing it through the music is a real achievement, maybe on of its kind.

    • @benjaminkoch2380
      @benjaminkoch2380 3 роки тому

      Oh yes these chord shifts are so special

    • @gergelybodi3728
      @gergelybodi3728 2 роки тому

      The same thought I had about anything Dvořak wrote

    • @tjhooker824
      @tjhooker824 2 роки тому

      I am going to look for this in his music now lol

    • @dominikweber4305
      @dominikweber4305 2 роки тому

      I like that hammering though because i feel like if you modulate the key then it should have a noticeable effect

  • @VisiblyJacked
    @VisiblyJacked 3 роки тому +66

    Me at the record store looking for Schubert:
    "Take me to your lieder."

  • @bronxemail7180
    @bronxemail7180 4 роки тому +286

    And let's not leave out the most beautiful song ever written: Schubert: Ständchen, D 889

    • @thereyougoagain1280
      @thereyougoagain1280 4 роки тому +12

      It’s really lovely. I’m learning to play Liszt’s solo piano arrangement of it now.

    • @markusengelstad2030
      @markusengelstad2030 4 роки тому +16

      Jacob Selmon I just finished learning Lizt’s arrangement. It’s absolutely magnificent, especially the "echo” part. I get shivers just thinking about it. It’s a piece that is not that hard to learn, but to musically master it is near impossible. The man closest to that task is Horowitz, in my opinion. His recording is mind blowing. You can really feel Shubert through his playing, the extremely difficult simplicity in Shubert writing. It’s a piece that is very easy to "over romanticise”, as done by many performers. It’s the complex simplicity that is so hard to show through the playing, but Horowitz manages it. You should definitely check his recording out (if you don’t have already)

    • @jjpeterson9628
      @jjpeterson9628 4 роки тому +2

      Absolutely...Ständchen..beautiful!!

    • @ericwong1387
      @ericwong1387 4 роки тому +10

      I think it's D. 957 No. 4 that you're all thinking of here! Schubert has more than one song titled Ständchen, and the famous one is the one set to poetry by Ludwig Rellstab ("Leise flehen meine Lieder") from his last set of songs the Schwanengesang, D. 957, and not D. 889. The latter is a different serenade that's set to a German translation of Shakespeare!

    • @thereyougoagain1280
      @thereyougoagain1280 4 роки тому +2

      Eric Wong you’re right, I didn’t see that! Thanks for pointing it out.

  • @applin121
    @applin121 3 роки тому +35

    There is no doubt: Schubert was and is one of the greatest composers to have ever lived. His music enriches and comforts and consoles and will do so for all time.

  • @alaaobaid3363
    @alaaobaid3363 2 роки тому +39

    why is Vivaldi never mentioned as one of the greats and giants ?!! his music was so influential and ahead of its time , even Bach recognised his works and interpreted some of them on the Organ. Vivaldi is overlooked very often and I still can't understand why .

    • @laceandribbonsviolin
      @laceandribbonsviolin Рік тому +4

      We do a lot of his stuff in book 4 of Suzuki violin book

    • @elementsofphysicalreality
      @elementsofphysicalreality Рік тому +3

      Vivaldi an Purcell are both next to Bach for me. All 3 combined complete the genre.

    • @arnoldhau1
      @arnoldhau1 10 місяців тому +1

      He was talking about the exponents of Viennese classic in that time...

  • @MutantsInDisguise
    @MutantsInDisguise 2 роки тому +9

    Franz Schubert has quickly become my favorite composer of all time as I have been rediscovering classical music these two years. His music is intimate, little in scale, but powerful in emotions.

  • @RayMak
    @RayMak 3 роки тому +500

    But his ranking is still quite high up there...

    • @rifahtamanna5227
      @rifahtamanna5227 3 роки тому +8

      i see you in twosets comment sections as well.

    • @MichaelWilliams-ow9ue
      @MichaelWilliams-ow9ue 3 роки тому +13

      He is among musicians, but i feel like as a household name most people don't know who he is. Like i didn't even learn who he was until a couple years after i really starting to listen to classical music a lot (that might also be because he didn't write much solo work for the oboe to be fair).

    • @jonathanscherpenbach9913
      @jonathanscherpenbach9913 2 роки тому +2

      @@MichaelWilliams-ow9ue Exactly. I adore Schubert, but also many, many other composers. And still there's none I've actually heard every piece of. There are too many greats and many were too productive. It just happens I got lucky among all of Schubert's work before possibly moving on i.e. mainly "Der Erlkönig" and "Nur wer die Sehnsucht kennt".

  • @Sarah-bu1pi
    @Sarah-bu1pi 3 роки тому +14

    My dads best friend came from a long line of German aristocrats and he actually inherited Schuberts piano. I got the honour to play some pieces on the piano before he donated to the German state. It was truly a magical experience. He also inherited Adolph Menzels original sketches and rough drawings and his own personal sketchbook and i often look through the notes and the scribbles and almost masterpieces of themselves while i visit him.

  • @Tolstoy111
    @Tolstoy111 4 роки тому +248

    When Beethoven was 29 he hadn’t completed his first symphony yet.

    • @InsidetheScore
      @InsidetheScore  4 роки тому +76

      Thank you! See pinned comment. I actually wrote that in my handwritten script, but then typed it up wrong and it somehow made the final cut. Thank you for flagging this!

    • @sophiaperennis2360
      @sophiaperennis2360 4 роки тому +24

      Beethoven didn't feel the same pressure and actually deliberately postponed introducing his more radical ideas in order to secure a stable career. All of the works he published initially are quite clearly intentionally "safe", with some exceptions here and there. That guarded attitude went out the window when he realized the loss of his hearing meant any hope for a successful public career were now crushed.
      Schubert on the other hand didn't have to hold anything back because Beethoven had already plowed the way before him.
      We also need to keep in mind that this obsession with achieving mastery as early as possible is a fixation that only started after Mozart popularized the idea of the prodigy. Before that artists were not encouraged to write masterpieces at an early age at all. Maturity and experience was more valued than precocity. When Couperin was asked why he waited so long to publish his keyboard works he replied that a composer shouldn't publish anything until he was in his 40s. Bach too waited until he was past his 40s before publishing his major keyboard works, and to be honest i find that attitude preferable. I don't see the point of trying to write a masterpiece before you have mastered your craft.

    • @detectivejonesw
      @detectivejonesw 4 роки тому +2

      Maybe there's hope for us yet then

    • @konstantinosmparmpounis6464
      @konstantinosmparmpounis6464 4 роки тому +6

      What a loser am I right?

    • @Maqalx
      @Maqalx 4 роки тому +7

      @@sophiaperennis2360 you have a point but if Schubert thought this way we probablty never would've seen his music.

  • @chentheartist
    @chentheartist 4 роки тому +24

    Schubert is my favourite composer. His music is so beautiful.

  • @Andrea-hc4kz
    @Andrea-hc4kz 4 роки тому +72

    The Standchen/Serenade is so beautiful. He's such a lyrical composer.

    • @triptisingh5844
      @triptisingh5844 3 роки тому +2

      Exactly, it's absolutely art. They are just poetries and I can feel each and every notes on my skin. I want to forget their memory and listen them for the first time and feel lost in his music again.

    • @kacht345
      @kacht345 2 роки тому +3

      Liszt did it justice too

    • @Itibitydetsku
      @Itibitydetsku Рік тому

      Agreed

  • @EpicSymphonicRock
    @EpicSymphonicRock 4 роки тому +227

    Thanks for this great contribution.

  • @vchan8888
    @vchan8888 11 місяців тому +2

    Of all the great composers, Schubert’s music is always closest to my heart.

  • @directionofease
    @directionofease 4 роки тому +18

    Beautiful. Thank you. “Schubert is the poet of home and the lost of home.” - Roger Scruton

  • @joaodecarvalho7012
    @joaodecarvalho7012 3 роки тому +127

    Imagine growing up in a culture where these songs are part of the folklore.

    • @joafus
      @joafus 3 роки тому +3

      Dude, brazilian folklore is just wild, choros, sambas, bossa, what do you mean with "imagine"?

    • @hanielm.7802
      @hanielm.7802 2 роки тому +4

      @@joafus yes, in the 80's... Nowadays all we have is Anitta, Funk, Pop. Brazilian music became depressing

    • @KanariRingo
      @KanariRingo 2 роки тому

      Hi

  • @joncaju
    @joncaju 2 роки тому +7

    Around one month before his death, Beethoven was presented with handwritten copies of various Schubert songs. After looking into the works of the younger composer, Beethoven is said to have exclaimed: “Truly, in this Schubert there dwells a divine spark!.”

  • @kalixberen
    @kalixberen 4 роки тому +177

    Schubert has alway been one of the greatest for me. He really was a genius. Thanks for the video about his work.

    • @apostolismoschopoulos1876
      @apostolismoschopoulos1876 4 роки тому

      Go listen Beethoven :D

    • @kalixberen
      @kalixberen 4 роки тому +11

      ​@@apostolismoschopoulos1876 ... And Rachmaninov, Bach and many other great composer, Still Shubert is on the very top for me. :-)

    • @graingerthomash.n.8900
      @graingerthomash.n.8900 4 роки тому

      I agree

    • @samaritan29
      @samaritan29 4 роки тому

      @@kalixberen why would you put rachmaninoff on the same tier as bach and beethoven LMAO, unless of course, you unironically enjoy listening to corny, over noted, sappy, lush, and sentimental music that sounds like movie soundtrack..? hmm, let me guess, i bet your favourite piece by rach is his piano concerto 2/3 ? ;-)

    • @Alessandro90933
      @Alessandro90933 4 роки тому +3

      @@samaritan29 Bah, all these romantic, over-sentimental drama queens ;)

  • @ryanpmcguire
    @ryanpmcguire 4 роки тому +27

    People say “do we really need a Mozart symphony 42”? “Do we really need another Beethoven”? Schubert is the evidence that yes, we already have.

  • @fitzwilliamdarcy3328
    @fitzwilliamdarcy3328 3 роки тому +15

    If you listen to Fischer-Dieskau sing Schubert and remain unconvinced Schubert is one of the best lyricists, nothing will convince you.
    Schubert is not regarded as the equal to the Bach, Beethoven etc but there is undoubtedly beauty and genius in what he did.
    And he suffered through life which showed in his songs. The cost of the paper he wrote his music on was more than the money he earned from it. He was not bitter about this and musicians have to remember this when they interpret. And to this day, we continue to listen to it...

  • @ivoseixas
    @ivoseixas 4 роки тому +25

    I completely desagree Schubert is in back sits. For people who really know classical music, he is indeed one of the greatest in history.

  • @partylikeits1944
    @partylikeits1944 4 роки тому +25

    You lost me at " we don't normally put Schubery in the ranks of...". I do! Schurbert's massive.

  • @josiah566
    @josiah566 4 роки тому +57

    The Coda in Gretchen Am Spinnrade is so deeply Viennese and philosophically draws from the sonata allegro form where a return to the opening theme feels drastically different if the composer has done their artistic job of writing a rich development, which Schubert does here. "My peace is gone, my heart heavy" can be dually considered to be a return to Gretchen's previous state of despair, but the words themselves could ALSO mean that her peace has been replaced by desire and lust, her heart is heavy with yearning and infatuation. The "coda" is a stroke of genius - not even Gretchen knows how far her heart has travelled until she sings those familiar words again with a fresh perspective.
    The mark of a great homage to sonata allegro is if you can come back to the opening theme with more than one meaning and impression in tow.

  • @Dile0303
    @Dile0303 3 роки тому +28

    Shubert is genuinelly my most loved classical musician, the feeling his pieces bring is unmatched. But i have to say, Mozart at 17 whrote his 25th Symphony, one of the best pieces i've ever heard. I mean, both pieces and both compositors are incredibly great, but Shubert is better in my eyes by the emotions he can transmit. It's just that he died too young, i wish he had more time for us to really see what he was able to do

  • @mona1017
    @mona1017 4 роки тому +140

    I love this. Since we’re all in quarantine, I’m compelled to play Schubert myself. My boyfriend recently passed away and he was also a musician. This would’ve been the perfect time to learn and play Schubert together.

    • @kennystimpson2775
      @kennystimpson2775 3 роки тому +19

      I’m sorry for your loss, hope you’re doing and playing well

    • @luisdiazlopez3712
      @luisdiazlopez3712 2 роки тому +5

      Schubert wrote the EVEREST work of wester music: his quintet with two cellos. He wrote this quintet along his late three month of life.
      Forgive my bad english. Mi mother language is spanish.

    • @bruce_c_in_nz
      @bruce_c_in_nz 2 роки тому +3

      @@luisdiazlopez3712 Your English is good enough to be understood (and much better than my Spanish!). I share your opinion 100% - it is my all time favourite piece of music, across all genres that I have encountered. It has been so for more than 50 years. The only serious challenger (for me) from another composer would be the slow movement of Beethoven's Choral Symphony.

    • @ALPalmos
      @ALPalmos 2 роки тому +2

      So sorry for your loss - I hope you found solace in Schubert?

    • @hpsmash77
      @hpsmash77 Рік тому +1

      I'm sorry for your loss

  • @tdog7326
    @tdog7326 4 роки тому +9

    The Eb major piano trio is one of my favorite pieces of music ever

  • @rainergro4055
    @rainergro4055 4 роки тому +22

    Yes, Schubert is a true master.
    Some of his songs (e.g. "Der Wanderer") are like little operas, stuffed with drama, emotion, and a genius composition of musical inventions.
    Thank for explaining that so brilliantly.
    A masterpiece of a video!

    • @mrp4242
      @mrp4242 4 роки тому

      Rainer Groß, Erlkonig is one of my favorites

  • @isis_mv_alves
    @isis_mv_alves 4 роки тому +13

    Schubert is undoubtedly one of my favorite composers. The way that he is able to convey emotion through his music is absolutely breathtaking. “Du Bist Die Ruh” was one of the first compositions I learned when I began studying opera, and it will always have a special place in my heart.

  • @tyrionlennister1020
    @tyrionlennister1020 4 роки тому +15

    Schubert is one of my absolute favourite composers of all time if not the favourite. Schuberts music touches my heart like noone else does. He is an absolute genious. I played so much Schubert on piano the last 2 years and I always try to show my friends how great Schuberts music is. Thank you for this video!

    • @bruce_c_in_nz
      @bruce_c_in_nz 4 роки тому +1

      I agree that his music penetrates more deeply than any other. My limited piano repertoire is about 50% Schubert.

  • @mgraysonhay
    @mgraysonhay 4 роки тому +44

    Wow, I think I am going to have to explore some more of Schubert’s masterpieces! As a classically trained singer, I have learned many of his Lieder and have grown to love them so much. I also love his 5th Symphony since it is probably the most played on my classical music radio station, and that symphony can put me in a happy mood no matter what is going on in life. But I think this video has just gone to show me that there is so much other greatness from Schubert that I have not yet listened to, and that I need to seek it out and find it. Plus, your explanation as to why “Gretchen Am Spinnrade” is so excellent is just so self-explanatory and simple that almost anyone can be persuaded as to just how great a work it is! I just want to let you know that I absolutely love your channel. As a young classical music enthusiast, your videos help deepen my love of classical music with every video I watch of yours, and this one was definitely no exception. Keep up the excellent work, and thank you for inspiring me to continue to fall deeper in love with classical music!

    • @VallaMusic
      @VallaMusic 4 роки тому +2

      i particularly love the first movement of the 5th symphony - what a joy it is !

    • @johannesbluemink4581
      @johannesbluemink4581 4 роки тому +2

      Totally agree! I'll whistle it right now!

  • @psykodiffeqparty
    @psykodiffeqparty 4 роки тому +24

    WOW! I cannot believe The Algorithm suggested this to me. This was amazing, seriously amazing. I saw Winterreise many years ago and it knocked me senseless. Literally. I spent 15 years studying it, and I finally sang the entire piece, even though I don't speak German and I am a completely self taught musician. The power of the music was THAT strong, and I am forever grateful that it hit me and changed me. I can share my clumsy attempt at the masterpiece if you are interested, but that is not important. Schubert is important.

  • @VallaMusic
    @VallaMusic 4 роки тому +45

    for me Schubert is very near and dear to my heart - I have been listening to (and composing) classical music since I was a child - of all the symphonies i have heard and loved, it is now the Schubert Symphony # 6 that has emerged as my most favorite in the last few years - i don't think there is another piece of music that I enjoy so thoroughly - i truly love to listen to it over and over again - it just goes to show that each one of us may discover some music not as well known and find that it speaks to us better than works that are much more established in the regular concert hall repertoire

    • @renzo6490
      @renzo6490 4 роки тому +1

      Val Lamon - on your last point.... I have found that to be so true many times.

    • @joekbaron1205
      @joekbaron1205 2 роки тому

      Can you tell me your preferred recording of the 6th symphony?

    • @VallaMusic
      @VallaMusic 2 роки тому +1

      @@joekbaron1205 probably a somewhat obscure choice, but the one I love the most is from 1994 with the Failoni Orchestra of Budapest conducted by Michael Halász

    • @joekbaron1205
      @joekbaron1205 2 роки тому

      @@VallaMusic thanks, I will give it a listen, if I don’t like it for some reason, do you have another recommendation? I will listen to it now btw

    • @VallaMusic
      @VallaMusic 2 роки тому

      @@joekbaron1205 not really - lol - honestly i have my small list of favorites for various symphonies and i stubbornly stick with them - but i guess that's the fun of it for all of us to find our favorites - although i imagine many classical music listeners are not nearly so narrow-minded and picky as me !

  • @evanoelle4031
    @evanoelle4031 4 роки тому +4

    Thank you so much for making this video! Schubert is my favorite composer and I love analyzing his stuff!

  • @manikyaverma6593
    @manikyaverma6593 5 місяців тому

    I have loved watching this channel grow over the years!

  • @AkiMoonlight
    @AkiMoonlight 4 роки тому

    Your videos are really the most interesting ones!! I love the format! Thanks 😊

  • @paulpaulsen7245
    @paulpaulsen7245 4 роки тому +10

    I am really and deeply impressed!
    I was never able to understand musical patterns and music in general - I not even learned to play an instrument, besides training my voice in a choir I had no musical understanding beyond maybe the average - but while going through that Corona shutdown I came to your side and was magically fascinated and immediately drawn to this video, dear Insight the Score!
    And you made me want to know more on Schubert...
    Greetings, many thanks and respect from Ger,many!

  • @davididiart5934
    @davididiart5934 3 роки тому +7

    4:22 Those strings are doing an AMAZING impression of a piano.

    • @spendroid8952
      @spendroid8952 2 роки тому

      Lmao

    • @ekoms1355
      @ekoms1355 2 роки тому

      5:06 is it just me or is this guitar awfully backwards

  • @dreamer_4937
    @dreamer_4937 Рік тому

    Beautiful music! Thank you for introducing it to us.

  • @dleov4645
    @dleov4645 4 роки тому +2

    Loving all the new videos recently.

  • @DerkMiester
    @DerkMiester 3 роки тому +6

    Love your breakdown of Gretchen and Spinnrade! I had the pleasure of working with a Russian opera conductor as he did a similar analysis of Chopin's Prelude in D Minor, breaking down the notation and musical structure with the story it was telling. Please do more of this on your channel-would love to see more!

  • @BigBlobProductions
    @BigBlobProductions 4 роки тому +12

    I've always loved Schubert

  • @ljubomir.milanovic
    @ljubomir.milanovic 2 роки тому

    Your videos are pure gold!

  • @theyaretoblame5875
    @theyaretoblame5875 4 роки тому

    I just discovered your channel and I absolutely love it! Please don't ever stop making videos they're so so interesting!!

  • @Amy_mee
    @Amy_mee 3 роки тому +3

    Thank you so much for this, I am in love with Schuberts music. Greetings from Germany!

  • @Hyrtsi
    @Hyrtsi 4 роки тому +3

    I grew up listening to music by F.Schubert. Even before I was born, those stories reached me. When my father practised the lieds of Winterreise and Die Schöne Mullerin, I played under the grand piano and listened the music. It was the soundtrack of my childhood, my life. The emotions every single Schubert piece makes me feel is greater than life. The warmth and the attitude is the basis of my musicality. My father was able to perform Winterreise one more time in a concert before he finally died a few years ago. Hopefully I am able to continue where he left.
    Thank you for this amazing video

  • @WarinPartita6
    @WarinPartita6 3 роки тому +1

    Big​ thanks​ for​ this​ wonderful​ video.

  • @baiterfish7901
    @baiterfish7901 3 роки тому +1

    I love these videos so much. It gives me such a deeper appreciation for music and the composers who wrote it

  • @TheKingpaulus
    @TheKingpaulus 3 роки тому +44

    I think the reason he has not become that popular is:
    People often want to listen to great music with good structure and genious ideas but at the same time they don´t want to be thrown off course emotionally.
    Schubert´s music (at least) equals in the brilliance and creativity the great ones, but it is so intriguing you are remembered of things of your own past, you get involved in epoch, you start identifying with different characters, you think about god, death, relationships, nature and the situation of the composer himself.
    And here we get to the problem:
    His life story is always told in such a depressing way, that he was a poor human being always struggling in life. No woman, no sleep, death in his mind, die young, blabla... If you are biased in that way, well off course you connect that to all the music and might feel depression.
    Many people are biased on Schuberts life situation and therefore cannot experience his whole oeuvre because its emotionally too much.

    • @alexanderkoo5355
      @alexanderkoo5355 Рік тому +1

      Tolstoy would disagree

    • @laceandribbonsviolin
      @laceandribbonsviolin Рік тому

      Or because it makes them uncomfortable being that intimate of an acquaintance with death and the afterlife

  • @hassansoliman970
    @hassansoliman970 4 роки тому +50

    Thank you for this!!! I never understood why some consider Schubert as inferior to the 'Great Masters', I have always thought of him as one of them, if not one of the greatest of them, his quintet is one the greatest pieces of music ever written, and is Arthur Rubinstein's favourite piece of music (according to him in an interview). As for Vladimir Horowitz, he said in an interview that Schubert was the greatest genius of all of them, his music was futuristic, he then said that the beauty of Schubert's music was unmatched, and he said this "Beethoven could never write one note of Schubert's music". So please, let's not feed this wierd consensus that Schubert is inferior, it's actually quite the opposite, in many ways he is superior.

    • @fredneecher1746
      @fredneecher1746 4 роки тому +8

      Many years ago I had the opportunity of interviewing the great Paul Tortelier (as amazing in the flesh as his cello playing) and I asked him (don't cringe) if he had a favourite piece of music (I was very young at the time). He said not really, explained that all music was like a river with many tributaries, and then with characteristic generosity he gave me a one-minute potted history of Western music on the piano. Then he said, "Ah, but there is one piece which is very special to me." It was Schubert's string quintet. "Because," he said, "in the second movement you can hear two souls touch one another. I rushed out and bought the record, and he was right. You can.

    • @hassansoliman970
      @hassansoliman970 4 роки тому +4

      @@fredneecher1746 oh yes!! Especially when the bows get to sing with the pizzicato, you are so right, there is a video of Arthur Rubinstein(just type Arthur rubinstein schubert gateway to heaven) he says in the interview that he always told his wife to play a record of this quintet when he's in his death bed, he said this piece (especially the second movement where the pizzicato just tickles your soal) is his gateway to heaven where he resigns happilly. Schubert wrote this great quintet shortly before his death, (sorry for the cringe) but it's almost as if it's his farewell to music and life.
      And thank you for that beautiful account of your interview with Paul Tortelier, it always gets me whenever the greats speak so profoundly about one particular piece of music.

    • @joangarcia-alsina2932
      @joangarcia-alsina2932 3 роки тому

      Establishing categories between artists is uselessly risky. There is something much simpler, preferences: I prefer Beethoven's sonatas but I fully understand those who might prefer Schubert. I have recently followed a video of the recital that Andras Shiffty gave in 2018, with the D 960 sonata, followed by Beethoven's No. 32, op 111. I recommend watching this video because it allows you to perfectly compare two masterpieces, wonderfully performed. In the end I stayed with Beethoven, but I understand that others prefer otherwise. In any case, great music.

  • @Enzomacarrao
    @Enzomacarrao 3 роки тому

    One of the best channels on yt! Thanks for the GREAT content. Greetings from Brazil

  • @ermy94
    @ermy94 3 роки тому

    You are very good at narrating and great insights

  • @ianuzzi
    @ianuzzi 4 роки тому +9

    He’s amazing. Would love to see a video on his Piano Trio no. 2 D. 929, specifically the second movement. The breadth of emotion in that piece is huge and I’d definitely like to learn more about where it came from for the composer.

  • @ritamargherita
    @ritamargherita 4 роки тому +20

    I could not imagine a life without Schubert.

  • @SamStormsKBD
    @SamStormsKBD 4 роки тому

    Excellent job, man! Keep up this master work you've been doing here

  • @nickedani
    @nickedani 2 роки тому

    Thanks for the rich education! Shout out from Brazil!

  • @TheMarcHicks
    @TheMarcHicks 4 роки тому +191

    Why listen to Schubert......is that a rhetorical question? 😉

  • @shredxworkout366
    @shredxworkout366 3 роки тому +19

    7:18 the translation is: "Gretechen AT the spinning wheel" :-)

  • @Alexagrigorieff
    @Alexagrigorieff 3 роки тому +1

    Growing up in Siberia region of Soviet Union, I didn't have easy access to classical recordings. Yet, my mom had a few LP's - Beethoven's Appassionata with Richter, and piano sonatas 14 and 27 with Walter Gieseking, Chopin's concerto 1 with Galina Czerny-Stefanska. When I got my first pocket money as Uni stipend (55 rubles monthly!), I spend some of that to buy records. One day I bought an LP with Schubert sonatas 13 A minor, 14 A major, recorded by Sviatoslav Richter. I fell in love with this music instantly. Later I got an LP with sonata 7, recorded by Nassedkin. When CDs become available, I bought Richter recordings of more Shubert sonatas. They are amazing.
    Shubert is one of the greatest, there's no doubt.

  • @adamsutcliffe4558
    @adamsutcliffe4558 2 роки тому +1

    There is something about Schubert's astonishingly beautiful and melancholy music that touches my tear ducts - I can't help but cry. Crazy but wonderful. Thank-you for this summation.

  • @kaidoloveboat1591
    @kaidoloveboat1591 4 роки тому +13

    RIP Sir Roger Scruton

  • @lumilenm__m5304
    @lumilenm__m5304 2 роки тому +3

    I was so scared that this yt channel might've been inactive since this was posted a year ago and classical music isn't exactly a "hot" topic that gives you new material on a regular basis, but I saw last video being made 4 weeks ago and I can't describe how happy I am 💗 Please, don't stop making videos like these. it's very, very much needed 🖤

  • @sahandhosseini4533
    @sahandhosseini4533 3 роки тому

    Very enjoyed watching this video! Thanks for creating such a good content!

  • @rclark565
    @rclark565 4 роки тому +5

    Thank you so much for this. Schubert is my favorite composer and it makes me sad he is often overlooked. I'm always excited to see stuff like this that will hopefully bring more interest and appreciation for him.

  • @emanuel_soundtrack
    @emanuel_soundtrack 3 роки тому +9

    I never see someone overlooking him, only not knowing him.

  • @sanguinefan1734
    @sanguinefan1734 2 роки тому

    Brilliant video. Thank you!

  • @jujudustypages5605
    @jujudustypages5605 3 роки тому

    Wonderful. Many thanks indeed. So glad to have found your channel.

  • @luis_lng
    @luis_lng 4 роки тому +4

    You should get millions of subs your videos are so amazing!

  • @lorrainebrown7263
    @lorrainebrown7263 4 роки тому +4

    As a person who was hardly exposed to classical music when growing up, I was captivated by these songs by Schubert - they literally blew my mind.

  • @rogue0007
    @rogue0007 3 роки тому +1

    this analysis is amazing! schubert is surely one for my favorites. thank you so much for sharing.

  • @VeridicoIV
    @VeridicoIV 4 роки тому

    What a beautiful analysis. Fantastic video.

  • @fredericktarr8266
    @fredericktarr8266 4 роки тому +29

    Schubert was a fast life-history strategist type of genius, like Pascal.

    • @VisiblyJacked
      @VisiblyJacked 4 роки тому +4

      I don't think it was his plan to live so fast...

  • @GillianGeraldine
    @GillianGeraldine 4 роки тому +3

    The way Schubert's melody touches our souls.

  • @LouisPereraPianistConductor
    @LouisPereraPianistConductor 3 роки тому

    This presentation is extraordinary!! Thank you so much!!

  • @Max-jf5vu
    @Max-jf5vu 4 роки тому +3

    Wow, brilliant analysis!

  • @ssartre5240
    @ssartre5240 Рік тому +4

    Tú has llevado la comprensión de la música a un nivel superlativo, sublime. He disfrutado cada segundo de este maravilloso relato. No sé nada de música, no tengo ninguna habilidad para tocar algún instrumento, no obstante, casi de forma intuitiva he disfrutado la música, especialmente la ópera. Tus videos me han dado una motivación para profundizar en el conocimiento y entendimiento de este maravilloso arte. Muchas gracias por tus invaluables videos.

  • @laurencestaiff7338
    @laurencestaiff7338 4 роки тому +4

    Terrific video, I love the music of the “The Little Mushroom!”

  • @edwardgraham6025
    @edwardgraham6025 2 роки тому

    Thank you for so seamlessly igniting passions and sharing these gems.

  • @eriktempelman2097
    @eriktempelman2097 3 роки тому +1

    Many thanks for this excellent video essay.

  • @bruce_c_in_nz
    @bruce_c_in_nz 4 роки тому +3

    It might be worth mentioning that Schubert wrote two lovely songs for single voice, piano and a wind instrument ("Auf dem Strom" - horn - and "Der Hirt auf dem Felsen" - clarinet). In addition, he wrote several works for multiple voices with or without any accompaniment, and some of these are extremely beautiful although rarely encountered.

  • @gnarthdarkanen7464
    @gnarthdarkanen7464 4 роки тому +11

    "Works of art are not ever finished... only abandoned."
    Da Vinci was most recently (to my knowledge) accused of this quote... ;o)

    • @lrm9298
      @lrm9298 4 роки тому +1

      sounds right

    • @gnarthdarkanen7464
      @gnarthdarkanen7464 4 роки тому

      @@lrm9298 It's one of my favorite quotes, regardless of who they accuse of it. ;o)

  • @franciscobiro7047
    @franciscobiro7047 3 роки тому

    Thank you so much! You have a really beautiful and communicating voice which really, together with the content, captivated me and caught my attention and feelings.

  • @mauriciopradillo7221
    @mauriciopradillo7221 4 роки тому

    I played this while driving. This was beautiful! Thank you.

  • @magnusgro4366
    @magnusgro4366 4 роки тому +8

    Great video, Schubert is one of my favorite composers too. His masses are great too, for example check out his Mass in Eb Major, the Credo is an absolute masterpiece of music.

  • @AmiJurgl
    @AmiJurgl 4 роки тому +3

    The opening haunting few bars of the "Unfinished" 2nd movement, is what first drew me to classical music as a twelve year old youngster.

  • @1lazypen
    @1lazypen 4 роки тому

    Can we appreciate the beautiful pictures and painting places excellently... Beautiful

  • @gabrielhollander8121
    @gabrielhollander8121 4 роки тому

    I love your channel! What a great composer you’re focusing on!

  • @BobK5
    @BobK5 4 роки тому +14

    Franz Schubert, I love his music, it is so full of soul, passion, emotion and honesty, the full human spectrum. He is the Greatest as far as I’m concerned, others are also Great but I put him at no.1. His early death, along with the equally early death of Jimi Hendrix (also created sounds in music to reflect the whole human spectrum) are to me the most tragic losses in musical history.
    If Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, Chopin, Wagner, Rachmaninoff, Tchaikovsky, Vivaldi, Rossini, Verdi (all favourites of mine) and Schubert had all been on the Titanic and there was room for only one more in the lifeboat, it would be Schubert who got the seat, sorry guys lol

    • @johannesbluemink4581
      @johannesbluemink4581 4 роки тому +1

      Victor Borge said that all composers would be seated in the Heavenly hall, but Mozart would have his own suite, ha ha. But your reasoning is even better!

  • @JB-dm5cp
    @JB-dm5cp 4 роки тому +6

    I am Dutch and I learned German for many years at school, so I feel very much at home (pun intended) in Schubert’s songs, which is a great bonus, because I love Schubert’s music in general. I also love Constable’s beautifully Romantic paintings, they fit very well with Schubert.
    P.S. Who is the singer in Gretchen am Spinnrade? Kiri Te Kanawa? Maybe not. Anyway, a wonderful performance, from what I hear.

  • @wandererli
    @wandererli 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you so much for making this. Such a great presentation which allows even beginners to have a glimpse of the greatness of this masterpiece. Respect for the effort and couldn't wait for more to come.

  • @manfred4766
    @manfred4766 3 роки тому

    thanks a lot for uoloading this moving information ! I love music, since I am a violinist, a quartett player, but also playing the fantastic fantasy with piano.Such intrinsic melodies !!!