Beethoven - Moonlight Sonata
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Moonlight Sonata
Пікірлер: 936
Beethoven was honestly the metal guy of his time. Moody, brooding, huge crescendos of triumphant melancholy. Even his happier stuff could be manic and bold. Like, metal guitarists playing super low chunky power chord rhythms wouldn't exist if Beethoven was a super happy guy.
@xcellent-records
3 жыл бұрын
Beethoven's "Moonlight Sonata" was the "Still Loving You" by the Scorpions of its time.
@davidi.w.c2368
3 жыл бұрын
Liszt was more metal than beethoven
@jasminejo2424
3 жыл бұрын
i really think rite of spring stravinsky is the most metal clasical i have heard to date, listening to it on my old vhs of fantasia as a kid was probably what got me into both classical and metal
@sammylane21
3 жыл бұрын
He was music history's first headbanger too. Tell me you don't see Beethoven in mosh pit in Metallica show, huh?? Haha!!
@SuperTicklemonsters
3 жыл бұрын
@@davidi.w.c2368 Liszt's very late works studying atonality are definitely precursors to metal riff construction imo
Beethoven was hearing impaired when he wrote Moonlight Sonata. He started noticing hearing difficulties when he was around 28. By 1820 he was almost completely deaf but after he went deaf he wrote many of his most famous pieces like his 9th symphony. It's also a nice coincidence that it is little less than 3 months to Beethoven's 250th birthday when you uploaded this video.
@fonsecorona
3 жыл бұрын
You my man have been following the talented yet dramatic path of one of the greatest... I'm just glad that someone here is pointing out the usually ignored, but most remarkable facts about the genius from Bonn...
@PokeAlexB
3 жыл бұрын
@Michael Mathers His 9th symphony was his last and greatest. Every other number is unrelated.
@chaost4544
3 жыл бұрын
@Michael Mathers The 9th Symphony is one of the greatest musical works of all time and created when he was completely deaf. They literally played Beethoven's 9th in celebration when the Berlin Wall came down. The symphony seems to be inspired by God.
@Kaefer1973
3 жыл бұрын
@@PokeAlexBThat's possible, but who cares. I at least will take 5 over 9 in almost every mood I'm usually in.
@johncassles7481
3 жыл бұрын
It is inspiring to think that even though he became deaf, that from the beginning, God infused the music in his whole being as a gift of love, so much so that he could hear it in his mind. You may say, how do we know that he could hear it in his mind. I say how could he not, to create such beauty.
Beethoven was almost deaf when he wrote this and if was alive today he would compose METAL 100%.
@nemo4907
3 жыл бұрын
Add some drums and guitar and it would play today.
@Tosse901
3 жыл бұрын
na, he wasn't when he wrote this.
@lylechipperson3407
2 жыл бұрын
he was not almost deaf when he wrote this, let's not part from true history and also make people confused and think he's like superman lol. those "beethoven went deaf at 4 years old" rumors discourage so many children from persuing music further.
@janneliimatainen6186
Жыл бұрын
Perhaps, but honestly J.S. Bach would be HEAVY METAL if alive today ;)
@kevhynaleks2631
16 күн бұрын
No, he became deaf later. This is op.27, so an early work of him. He became deaf aroun op.90. So he wrote 137 opus works. The last music"s of him, Missa Solemnis, Grosse Fugue and his last quartetts, his last piano sanatas - you will hear that he increasing the sounding intio a surreal level... He using disharmony delibaretely, like 20th century composers, he predicting the future musical styles as a kind of profet... He was unerthly genious...
Hard to believe that was composed in 1801. Ludwig was rocking out!!
@Canalbiruta
3 жыл бұрын
That 3rd movement is the shit! But for me the best is still the 5th symphony (the whole piece). He starts so metal, and does like 15 minutes of one motiff being resued in so many clever ways.
@ycgoh9215
3 жыл бұрын
It will be harder to believe someone compose a piece like this today. Basically such incredible classical music are mostly composed in 1700s to 1800s
@acactus2190
11 ай бұрын
@@ycgoh9215debatable, a lot of good classical (or neo classical) music was composed in the 20th and even 21th century. Take composers like Prokofiev and Shostakovich for example, two of the greats in the 20th century. If you want to go beyond that there comes Schoenberg with his 12 tone method and atonality, and then the new complexity movement with composers like Finnissy and Ferneyhough (both of which are still alive today).
3rd movement slays every time
Need to check out Chopin's Nocturnes...personally it is the most moving piece of classical music l've experienced.
@slothkng
3 жыл бұрын
Absolutely
@atomfallen2409
3 жыл бұрын
I was gonna suggest that too
@Tortuosit
2 жыл бұрын
Yass
1st movement, Romance 2nd movement, Playful 3rd movement, Boom chicka wow wow
Another sick reaction would be to Vivaldi's Four Seasons.
@MargoKms
3 жыл бұрын
Omg Yes!!!
@bjhellstream
3 жыл бұрын
There is a video by a quartet of Italian violinists ripping it in smart suits on a derelict industrial site. Can't remember their name now.
@larrykinnard
3 жыл бұрын
Or a modernized version The Vivaldi Metal Project
@Canalbiruta
3 жыл бұрын
I start listening summer already get sweaty lol and than starts to rain and i thank god!
@gaetagirl
3 жыл бұрын
Or the planets
I'm a total metal head that went to high school in the 80's. However, this is one of my favorite compositions. I listen to it nightly before bed.
Give Beethovens piano sonata no. 8 (Pathetique) a go if you want another version of "how does one mind come up with such perfection of notes"
@dipampathak6675
3 жыл бұрын
This
@lizarrington3636
2 жыл бұрын
Yeeesssss
@thabangmotea6025
Жыл бұрын
Appassionata would be great too
@Christobanistan
Жыл бұрын
I've been listening to several of his sonatas including no. 8. I honestly still like this one the best. None of them quite have the brooding beauty or intense anger of Moonlight Sonata. Maybe I'm biased, having fallen in love with it as a child when my music pastor would play the first movement to put us kids to sleep on busy, stressful days, and the third for fun. He started a nationwide Assemblies of God music festival/competition that put our national high school competitions to shame, and filled our lives with the most magnificent music! I miss those times so much! ;;;-)
If you wanna hear some truly metal classical music, I recommend Bach's Tocata & Fugue in D Minor. Plus, I'll echo the other people mentioning Carmina Burana by Orff. Oh! Also The Planets by Holst.
@MargoKms
3 жыл бұрын
Carmina Burana would be very interesting to watch:D And Bach could be easily metal nowadays for sure
@jochoa1570
3 жыл бұрын
Bach's Tocata & Fugue in D Minor is what I was thinking as well.
@slydogger
3 жыл бұрын
Uggh! D-Minor--the saddest of all keys.
@openmusic3904
3 жыл бұрын
This harpsichord concerto is Bach at his most metal, as far as I can see. Actual harpsichord shredding, the mad man! kzread.info/dash/bejne/faSlz5OhqMquXdo.html
@redgunnit
3 жыл бұрын
AND WATCH AN ORGAN PERFORMANCE, TOCCATA WAS LITERALLY MADE FOR IT.
This makes me feel happy for being alive. This is one of the greatest things humankind ever did
It's so fckng hilarious seeing Vin listening to Beethoven with a hood pulled up like that 😂🤣😅
React to TINA S Playing Moonlight Sonata 3rd Movement on an electric guitar. She is only 16 years old on that video!
@onetymebigtyme
3 жыл бұрын
yes pls
@rajamcraja
3 жыл бұрын
It kinda ruins it with the metal guitar tone, doesn't beat a piano player shreding it. Claudio Arrau does a great performance
@_veikkomies
3 жыл бұрын
Dr. Viossy's version is far better
@_veikkomies
3 жыл бұрын
@@rajamcraja A matter of preference I guess
@32a34a
3 жыл бұрын
Tina S is a truly amazing guitar player. I like everything she does. Her version of Gary Moore's The Loner is just amazing
The genius of Beethoven cannot be overstated.
Classic music , this is heavenly. A great rendition.
Eddie Van Halens father conducted symphony orchestra at a very high level. Eddie was trained for years in classical music as a young child. That influence made him innovative, the best rythem guitar player ever, and one of the best lead guitar players of all time. The rather and complexity.
@fonsecorona
3 жыл бұрын
Most of those 20th and 21th centuries rockers were in huge part influenced by Bach mainly...
@333char1ie
3 жыл бұрын
fonsecorona Dave Mustaine said that if Vivaldi was still alive he would be playing in Megadeth lol
@fonsecorona
3 жыл бұрын
@@333char1ie Then Dave would have to supply good'ol Antonio with an electric fiddler.. 😎
The music is sublime; had me in tears, goosebumps, the whole nine. You can clearly hear the roots of much modern rock. Truly inspired.
Beethoven's music sheets were covered in corrections. He didn't memorize. As a contrast, Mozart's music sheets were written with ZERO corrections. He composed his entire work in his head before writing it down. Beethioven busted his ass with trial and error while Mozart simply created masterpieces. They had very different styles even though Mozart was Beethoven's idol.
Classical conspiracy! This was so so cool. Rly enjoyed this, looking forward to more soon.
I never thought in a million years that you would react to this. This is my all time number one favorite piece of music. Thank you!
I have to recommend you guys listen to Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto 2, it's seriously one of the most beautiful pieces of music I've ever heard.
@DiedrichKnickerbocker1783
3 жыл бұрын
Rachmaninoff, seriously one best names in history.
@ThePolo77j
3 жыл бұрын
That first movement man .. Also, Concerto 3 is magnificent .. same level
interesting fact! :beethoven eventually went deaf,and he already showed the first symptoms while composing this,his later work where he was completely deaf is just as astonishing.
any of these kids that say that they can't stand classical music should watch this...shows how beautiful that music is...and how powerful this music is. Agreed if Beethoven was alive to day he would make the greatest metal music ever. But beethoven's music hits all the emotions and feeling.
First time I heard the first movement I was looking at images from WWII. Dead bodies, beautiful buildings turned to rubble, whole landscapes where even the trees were destroyed. The heaviness of that first movement seemed to fit those images perfectly. Now that song and those images are forever intertwined in my memory.
Watch Tina S playing 3rd Movement on Guitar. Mind Blowing
Fantastic! If you liked the 3rd movement you need to do Bach - Toccata and Fugue in D minor This shit was baroque metal
@Canalbiruta
3 жыл бұрын
The piece starts and the shivers already goes down the spine lol
@beastmasterbg
3 жыл бұрын
I am afraid of lord Orochimaru spawning if I listen to it again
@collectorofcats294
2 жыл бұрын
Especially when it is played on the organ in the Frauenkirche Cathedral in Dresden, Germany…
I have to listen with my eyes closed, relaxed, lay back and absorb it all in. Such beautiful composition. This creation will live forever. How lucky we are to have heard this in our lifetime. Thx Vin and Sori for both playing and reacting to this. Great job:). Peace, health, and happiness to you and all in chat ...
I'm sure that person had it memorized, as they typically do to put all the appropriate nuances into it with that level of clarity, but there are people who can sight read at that pace and level. I know several, and they always impress me when i hand them a piano accompaniment that others say they need a few months to get down, and they plow through it on the first read, even adjusting for the soloist changing tempos and rhythms.
@beastmasterbg
3 жыл бұрын
yeah but I feel he made some mistakes on some keys
@anishmaddipatla3530
2 жыл бұрын
ig there is one person i know of who can sight read that fast, he is Jordan Rudess of dream theater. That man sight reads so fast especially the guitar unison sections its amazing
He not only gives goosebumps but makes your spinal cord chill
Sori, sorry but yes you can. Check out Tina S. Moonlight Sonata cover on electric guitar,
@daniellstn
3 жыл бұрын
Amazing cover!!
@emperialAnthems
3 жыл бұрын
Tina S version is great, but I think that Dr Viossy's one is even better !
@Svartsejd
3 жыл бұрын
@@emperialAnthems Dr. Viossy crushes Tina's "cover", because it's more or less just his version that she and everyone else is playing.
@stevenanderson7461
3 жыл бұрын
She is really good
@Jabronie0
3 жыл бұрын
Also check out The Human Abstract - Moonlight Sonata, a metal cover
I just love how Sori get really immerse in the feeling of the song. Cliff Burton used this as inspiration for his bass solo Pulling Teeth (Anesthesia) It would be great if you react to it.
@jhamilton1007
3 жыл бұрын
I can definitely hear that in this.
Try “O Fortuna” or “Fortune Plango Vulnera” by Carl Orff. Some of the most epic pieces of classical ever composed.
@benabel7326
3 жыл бұрын
"O Fortuna” definitely.
@user-SeniorClay
3 жыл бұрын
🤘🏽O Fortuna 🤘🏽
@TheLastGarou
3 жыл бұрын
The entirety of 'Carmina Burana' is fantastic. But you're right that none of the rest of it matches 'O Fortuna' on the "Epic" scale. Edit: if you do listen to the whole thing, make sure to get a translation of the lyrics, there is some hilarious stuff in there. One of the solos is the lament of a swan as it's being cooked.
@flaviovergottini652
3 жыл бұрын
*I second this comment wholeheartedly* It's something everyone should listen to!🤘💥🤘 The shuffle mode of my car is programmed to stop when "O Fortuna" comes in... and, fair warning to everyone, DON'T mess with me during that masterpiece!😤 👋🇮🇹🖖
@luckymustard
3 жыл бұрын
Listen to this traditional arrangement - kzread.info/dash/bejne/eYx6ta1pn8rLl5c.html Then this non-traditional arrangement - kzread.info/dash/bejne/eqCI3JmOpK7PiKQ.html
Mozart's Requiem next, it's great!
@ThePolo77j
3 жыл бұрын
Lacrimosa at the very least
@richey4287
3 жыл бұрын
Yes!
YO DUDE VIN AND SORI! BRAHMS'' CARMINA BURANA '' MY FAVE CLASSICAL PIECE! BRO YOU HAVE TO! THIS IS EPIC
1st and 3rd movments always give me goosebumps
@jamesbattista1466
3 жыл бұрын
Oh man, you ain’t lying
@acactus2190
11 ай бұрын
2nd movement is underrated imo
Oh my, what a pleasant surprise. A beautiful piece, what a genius request this was
If Beethoven was born on this century, he would have a Prog Metal band
Loved this reaction soooooooo much.
My wife and I walked down the aisle to this piece....simply haunting...which is fitting, as my wife still is after nearly 30 years together. Love you guys, stay safe.
Moonlight sonata has a very strong emotional feel for them who have a ear for it
Heavier than any metal song ever. Always gives me chills
I know this is mind-blowing... but the performer not only has it memorized... but is actually looking at the music a few bars/measures ahead of what they are actually playing. It's insane the amount of concentration involved, and then to make it look like it's so effortless....
What a treat! Classic Instrumental Jazz next! Scott Joplin, Thelonious Monk, Charlie Parker, John Coltrane, Miles Davis. Fusion! Weather Report, Mahavishnu Orchestra!
Do some Chopin pieces
@williamandres1042
3 жыл бұрын
Yeaaaaaaaaaah please!
@fonsecorona
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for saying 'pieces'..and not 'songs'..like I'm hearing say here.. 😐
@fyessssss
3 жыл бұрын
@@fonsecorona lol yea I hate when people say that
@PCGamingHDable
3 жыл бұрын
Oh yes! I'd love to see them react to Nocturne
@fonsecorona
3 жыл бұрын
@@meursault-ey7wq 🙂 I tell you what would fire up Vin right at the onset...and maybe Sori too 😉 ...A piece called Mazeppa, from Franz Liszt.. 😎 Check it out.. kzread.info/dash/bejne/lHmGqtGam5mZdqQ.html
Now this is a fine change of pace for y'all...
@johnwescott3846
3 жыл бұрын
Now all you need Vin to do is headbang to it, search for the lyrics to analyze and make a Biblical explanation out of it. You DO know that these two ain't no musical genius. Hell, Moonlight Sonata is the first thing I learnt on piano and still can play it without the sheets. Can they? I don't think so. This was the MOST wrong choice for them than the others.
@neomoscoso10
3 жыл бұрын
@@johnwescott3846 Sori did say "we're all losers".
@johnwescott3846
3 жыл бұрын
@@neomoscoso10 Well, she admits it then! Good for her. So, why isn't this channel down yet? If they're "losers" and "suckers" at music, then why keep pushing it?
@fonsecorona
3 жыл бұрын
@@johnwescott3846 But we did get to see Vin headbanging to the third movement.. 😅
@brontsmoth671
3 жыл бұрын
@@johnwescott3846 You sound bitter.
REALLY cool you guys are doing classical tracks!!! SOOOOO many great pieces out there. It's the basis of so many modern songs today. Beethoven was pure genius... as in an actual one!
ok, i knew this sonata for a long time, but just because of this video, i realise how much work it is.... jeeeesus, how can you remember all the notes???? that`s why beethoven is the real OG ^^
@DankLonk1980
3 жыл бұрын
When you slave away at an instrument for hours at a time just to get to the level to play this piece, you spend a lot of time on individual sections. You start chunking those together like a puzzle and eventually, you've remembered it
Beethoven liked it loud. His Ninth symphony was scored to one of the largest orchestras ever, at the time, plus four solo singers and a full chorus.
@NicholasCorvin
3 жыл бұрын
*That's why it is the hymn of the European Union.....*
Ode to joy, 9th symphony. His best work.
@bigg2988
3 жыл бұрын
The ending movement of Mahler's 2nd.... just as astoundingly moving with the final choir. The problem - Mahler's symphonies seldom take less than an hour (the man tried to encompass the entire universe in them), and listening to just 1 separate movement loses the impact of developing musical "narrative" with recurring themes and building tension.
My favorite Beethoven Sonata is either Hammerklavier or Op 111. Bach’s Well Tempered Klavier is The Old Testament of piano music . Beethoven’s 32 piano Sonatas is The New Testament. So happy you appreciate this . Continue down the rabbit hole.
@Trooman20
2 жыл бұрын
My favorite Beethoven piano sonatas would be like 21, 8, 23, 29, 2
Beethoven became deaf later. This is op.27, so an early work of him. He became deaf aroun op.90. So he wrote 137 opus works. The last music's of him, Missa Solemnis, Grosse Fugue and his last quartetts, his last piano sanatas - you will hear that he increasing the sounding into a surreal level... He using disharmony deliberately, like 20th century composers, he predicting the future musical styles as a kind of profet... He was unerthly genious...
There's a reason that EVERYBODY knows Beethoven's name.
Hi Vin and Sori, i have a suggestion for you and i think you must do it but of curse that is on you. My suggestion is to react to Tyna S who was a teenager at the time, playing Moonlight sonata on electric guitar. I know you will be amazed.
Ok I love when you guys make the rock reactions and stuff, but this is another hole level. Personally your the first reactors of classical music that I'm seeing right now. THANK YOU FOR EVOLVE
Goosebumps every single time 😌
No Metal without classical music. That's why when you ask me if I could only take one piece of music with me on an island it will always be Bach (yes, although Mozart lived in my hometown for a while ;) ) This is music stripped down of everything, in its purest form. No words that clog our mind with meaning, no percussion just melodies and sound. In a way this is therefore way more spiritual for me. There's is something to find there because your attention isn't devided between music, beat and singing. It's only music. Btw here is a metal version of the 3rd movement m.kzread.info/dash/bejne/hmp_rdqmYNjgfZM.html You can hear how Metal those composers really where. In a way we are all still re-mixing and salvaging what they already put out there hundreds of years ago because what they did defines the word pinnacle. Something that can't be made better but can be explored by creating variations based on it.
@fonsecorona
3 жыл бұрын
Amen....And perhaps we may want to add a foot note here...Anything from Emerson Lake and Palmer, particularly Keith Emerson, would attest to that... 😎
@heavyrules6699
3 жыл бұрын
No any genre of western music without classical, they are all based on harmony, theory and instruments developed and used in classical
Vin: "What was HE hearing??" Me: "Not much...." Buh dum tiss
All three movements. Yes. Beautiful, haunting, face melting. All in one.
Awesome man my brother Vincent even though nothing beats going to a Rock Concert or being at a Metal Show i do agree! But i find beauty in Classical Music and Country and Gospel and R and B just going with the 2 songs and the dedication were trying to bring great music and bands that don't get their shine that were around at same time as bigger groups or those, who made a impact but for whatever reason made their mark in a short span of time! That is what the Syndicate mission is about with keeping in the channel is about. " Maybe your sick because of your secrets or maybe you knew to much". The Syndicate
Please react to Tina S Moonlight Sonata. You Will be amazed...
Hearing Beethoven for the first time is like being utterly seduced by someone you never saw coming! This was incredible to watch!
@revo1336
3 жыл бұрын
Discovered this in my 30s . If I could only hear one piece of music forever. It’s Op 111
Honestly the best piece of classical musical ever written.
Musicians train their whole lives to master their instrument of choice. I remember as a young boy (6-10 years old) listening to my mother play the 1st movement on our piano. It always had a soothing/calming effect. One of my fond childhood memories.
Beethoven was almost completely deaf when he wrote this
@99Doogs
3 жыл бұрын
Amazing.
@TRENLORD
3 жыл бұрын
What stupendous genius that requires.
@GordonHeaney
3 жыл бұрын
@Treva Land Okay, I'll rephrase it. He did have real issues with his hearing and towards the end, all he could really distinguish was the low notes. Debilitating for a composer, but it was so gradual, it never got in he way of his composing, but he hated it.
@Svavarsk
3 жыл бұрын
His hearing was mostly gone by the time he wrote arguably his greatest composition, his 9th symphony, suffering from extreme depression and difficulties in his personal life, he wrote one of the, if not the most beautiful movements of music there ever was, putting music to Gothe's: Ode an die freude, an ode to joy
@SuperTicklemonsters
3 жыл бұрын
How deaf he was in 1801/1802 is certainly up for debate, what we do know is that he was very affected by his hearing loss at the time. The Heiligenstadt Testament, an unsent letter to his brother, dates from 1802 and in it he talks about his deafness as well as contemplating suicide because of it. It's a really interesting peek into what he was going through.
Next do Prokofiev - Dance of the knights, for some classical heavy riffing :)
@IXINineIXI
3 жыл бұрын
Hell yeah! Prokofiev is some good stuff!
I cant read music but years ago I glued myself to a keyboard for a mouth and now I can play the first minute 38 seconds. It's a dream when i listen to this everytime.
It's one thing to be able to play it, but to compose this, pure genius!
Honestly, the more you guys listen to Classical music, you'll soon realize that Metal is heavy influenced by Classical music.
"I can 100% the hardest song in Guitar Hero." Cool story bro The skill needed to play the masterpieces classical can be insane.
Beethoven's Symphony No. 3 in E♭ major, Op. 55, (Sinfonia Eroica, Heroic Symphony) is a wonderful piece of music. The work is in four movements: Allegro con brio (12-18 min.) (E♭ major) Marcia funebre: Adagio assai (14-18 min.) (C minor) Scherzo: Allegro vivace (5-6 min.) (E♭ major) Finale: Allegro molto (10-14 min.) (E♭ major) The 1957 performance by The Cleveland Orchestra conducted by George Szell is one of my favorites.
Such a beautiful piece of music. Such a different pace.
Now you should react to Tina S guitar cover of the third movement!
Guys just gonna say Beethoven absolutely had metal hair.
@Canalbiruta
3 жыл бұрын
The 1st movement in the 5th symphony is already some metal shit orchestrated.
Talk about a rabbit hole. You could literally fall forever in the classical genre. Centuries of music. Endless style changes. You should check out some choral music too. “Ode To Joy” from Beethoven’s 9th is incredible.
so glad you got to hear the 3rd movement of this great piece, the 1st movement is the most widely known, the bombastic of the third is really moving, the real name of this masterpiece is piano sonata n° 14 and the moonlight name was given by a music critic from germany, he said that hearing the first movement was like sitting in the garden watching the moonlight or something like that, and the if was known by that name from then on. For me sounds more like a funeral march or a mourning melody, and the 3rd movement is like a resurrected soul full of life and power. Beethoveen, Back and Wagner are the shit man, those guys were for real the first true metallers, if they were still alive they´ll be doing power metal for sure.
You should try Transiberian Orchestra... Mephistopheles Reurns from the album Beethoven's Last Night... They are an actually orchestra but a very metal one if you know what I mean... All the album it's very interesting in where you can hear very familiar Beethoven's songs...
@larrykinnard
3 жыл бұрын
Or the Vivalidi Metal Project.
Grieg's In The Hall of The Mountain King would be a great piece to check out.
There's a reason Beethoven is in the pantheon of world composers. Beyond epic, and the video is bad ass too.
If we're going down the classical rabbit hole, Pavarotti doing Nessun Dorma will blow your damn minds. It's next level.
Prokofiev: Romeo and Juliet, Op.64 / Act 1 - 13. Dance Of The Knights here´s more classical needs to be react
@Empiricist14
3 жыл бұрын
I wanna listen to it right now! Thank you!
GENIUS!! I friggin love this idea and fully support other splinter alliances to get them off the rock/metal hard-line....i LOVE rock and metal but, there is so much more music out there i'd love to expose them both to! Or beyond that, get their thoughts on, and hear the conversations they might spark! Good stuff :0)
Love classical music, it always blows me always how much knowledge and creativity these guys had. Not to mention that guys like Beethoven, Vivaldi, Paganini Richard Wagner and above all (and my personal favorite) Tchaikovsky were metal af
The windbreaker shuffle at about 6:40 adds a maraca element I've never thought of when listening to this before, 😁
Another great classical peace for you to react would be Come Sweet Death by Bach
Does anyone know who is actually playing? The second movement was missing something for me, and I LOVE all three movements generally. While the visual effects were cool, the pianist has some work to do, I think. Great potential but I don't really thing he's feeling it maybe? Just my opinion. Maybe if you are going to listen to Beethoven, try listening to Daniel Barenboim play. Everyone has their favorite pianist and this one is mine. He might not be yours though so no worries :)
@jamesbattista1466
3 жыл бұрын
You nailed it, bud!
Nice video. So cool to see the clasical music that is so big part of the more techical death and black metal
You asked about Beethoven's upbringing. His father wanted to make him into another prodigy like Mozart, whom he could parade around Europe for fame and fortune, as it was sometimes perceived Leopold Mozart had done in regards to his children. To this end, he would wake Ludwig from bed at night to play for his friends from the pubs, he would beat Ludwig severely if he missed a note, etc.
*WAGAKKIBAND / Sakura Rising with Amy Lee of EVANESCENCE (Animated Lyric Video)
To all watchers of this channel ignore Vin and do listen to classical music and no you don't need visual aids to enjoy it. :D
I didn't expect this! It's incredible how music without any voice can be so powerful and emotional. Great reaction and I know you could enjoy Penderecki "Chaconne In Memoria Giovanni Paolo II" and Tomaso Albinoni "Adagio In G Minor", really strong, emotional, overwhelming music, both of you will love them. Great reaction!!!
Love your reaction. I am most like a rock guy but this keeps blowing my mind since the very first time.
@jamesbattista1466
3 жыл бұрын
There’s nothing like having your eyes opened.
Should try some Chopin. He's what actually got me into classical.
@MargoKms
3 жыл бұрын
True. I was very much exposed to classical music when I was a kid. Exposed to Mozart, Beethoven, Bach etc etc. But of course as a teenager I absolutely rejected stuff that my parents liked. Years forward and I accidentally stumbled upon Chopin and it literally converted me into a classical music lover. I went back and relistened all the Mozart, Bach, Vivaldi etc. and was blown away by how genius this stuff is... I thank Chopin for that:)
@ThePolo77j
3 жыл бұрын
Lizst - Hungarian Rhapsody #2
You should do Scatterbrain’s cover of Mozart’s Sonata #3 or Sonata #11
This was excellent! More please.
The second movement is like a jolly, dancing clown hiding a bloody knife behind his back who then harmlessly leaves in the end. On the surface it is a pretty little tune like Mozart would write, but some odd janky notes start creeping in. It gets slowly creepier with more discordant chords, then returns to the happy theme at the end.
Listen to Claudio Arrau's version..
@fonsecorona
3 жыл бұрын
Or Alfred Brendel's...
J.S. Bach, founder of Heavy Metal.
@dexterjankaren
3 жыл бұрын
Tocatta and Fugue would be a great reaction video.
Just got done watching y’all’s reaction to second movement. About to watch third (personal favorite) can’t wait to see y’all’s reaction LOL
one of my favorite songs. i always though of a story when i heard this sonata. before /during / and after a concert or party.