Mozart / Serenade for 13 Winds in B-flat major, K. 361 "Gran Partita" (Mackerras)
Музыка
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Serenade No. 10 for 13 Winds in B-flat major, K 361/370a "Gran Partita" (1781-82)
00:00 - Largo. Allegro molto
09:14 - Menuetto - Trio I - Trio II
19:31 - Adagio
25:02 - Menuetto. Allegretto - Trio I - Trio II
30:24 - Romanze. Adagio - Allegretto - Adagio
37:45 - Thema mit Variationen
47:18 - Rondo. Allegro molto
List of Performers:
Oboe - Stephen Taylor (principal) & Melanie Field
Clarinet - William Blount (principal) & Daniel Olsen
Bassett Horn - Gary Koch (principal) & Mitchell Weiss
Horn - Stewart Rose (principal), Scott Temple, William Purvis, and Russell Rizner
Bassoon - Dennis Godburn (principal) & Marc Goldberg
String Bass - John Feeney
Performed by members of the Orchestra of St. Luke's under the direction of Sir Charles Mackerras. Recorded by Telarc in 1994.
"The Serenade in B-flat major for 13 wind-instruments, K. 361, is far from an arrangement. Mozart had begun it in Munich at the beginning of 1781, at the time of the performance of Idomeneo, and completed it in Vienna, at the time of his most strenuous efforts to escape from the bonds of Salzburg. In composing it he probably had in mind the excellent wind-players of Munich, as well as the intention of once more trying to insinuate himself into the favor of Carl Theodor by means of an extraordinary piece. We have no evidence that the 13 players ever actually came together in Vienna; there exists an arrangement of this work for the four customary pairs of winds (K. Anh. 182), which may very well have been Mozart's own idea. The contra-bassoon is not named in the autograph: Mozart calls for a double bass. But this in no way contradicts the 'open-air' character of the extraordinary work, which, in any case, rises above any question of purpose into ideal regions. Whether the title Gran Partita, which perhaps hints at performance in the open, was affixed by Mozart himself, is uncertain-the authenticity of the handwriting of this title in the autograph is doubtful.
"The fascination of the work emanates from its sheer sound. There is a continuous alternation between tutti and soli, in which the part of the soli is usually allotted to the two clarinets; a constant reveling in new combinations: a quartet of clarinets and basset horns, a sextet of oboes, basset horns, and bassoons over the supporting double bass; oboe, basset horn, and bassoon in unison, with accompaniment-a mixture of timbres and transparent clarity at the same time; an 'overlapping' of all the tone-colors, especially in the development section of the first movement. No instrument is treated in true concertante fashion, but each one can, and strives to, distinguish itself; and just as in a buffo finale by Mozart each person is true to his own character, so each instrument here is true to its own character-the oboe to its aptness for cantabile melodies, the bassoon likewise and also, in chattering triplets, to its comic properties. The two pairs of horns furnish the basic tone-color; but the fact that Mozart uses only the first pair in the first slow movement, a Notturno, is an indication of his supreme taste and skill: this is a scene from Romeo under starry skies, a scene in which longing, grief, and love are wrung like a distillation from the beating hearts of the lovers. The counterpart to this lyricism is found in a 'Romance' whose sentimentality is carried towards the point of absurdity by means of an oddly burlesque Allegretto, an 'alternativo.' A third slow movement, an Andantino with variations, has an episodic effect, each variation, however, offering new evidence of mastery. The same is true of the two Minuets, the second Trio of the one being in G minor, and the first Trio of the other in B-flat minor, and all the sections differing in character. A somewhat noisy Rondo forms the conclusion; one might call it a Rondo alla turca, for the theme of which Mozart seems to have recalled the Finale of his youthful four-hand clavier sonata. The Theme and Variations are taken from the Mannheim Flute Quartet K. Anh. 171-if this movement is authentic. But it probably is; very possibly, after the exertion and outpouring of invention of the first five movements, Mozart was willing to permit himself a little relaxation." - Alfred Einstein
Painting: Gesellschaft in den Gärten der Villa d'Este, Johann Wilhelm Baur
Пікірлер: 706
19:30 Omg I wanna hug him for making such wonderful music, that lasts for centuries! ❤ he is my favourite composer!
@frankl1175
4 жыл бұрын
As much as I admire the man for his musical genius, I would advise against hugging him. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Wolfgang_Amadeus_Mozart
@m.zn_11
11 ай бұрын
Thank you
@godisreality7014
9 ай бұрын
@@frankl1175 Mozart was poisoned to death in a ritual murder that took place over at last one year. His death was calculated and he knew it. He realized he was writing the requiem for himself.
@HR-yd5ib
3 ай бұрын
@@frankl1175 , you would never have hugged him because he died of an acute bacterial infection that could easily be treated today?
As a Beethoven's lover and follower of his art for a lifetime, I have to recognize that this is the greatest work for woodwinds assembly of the history, and one of the greatest works ever conceived by a human mind. A truly gift to mankind by Herr Mozart.
@klematiszszimonettarose1797
5 жыл бұрын
You are right, Beethoven's music is amazing too, he and Mozart are my favourite composers ❤
@dubbelhenke854
4 жыл бұрын
I rank them Mozart, Bach, Beethoven, always in that order, but no 4 is sometimes Handel, sometimes, Verdi, Wagner, Schubert etc.....
@agritrend4812
4 жыл бұрын
@@dubbelhenke854 I agree with your ordering. And just cannot shake the feeling that there is a gap between Mozart and the rest. When will we have another Mozart? Will it be in our lifetimes?
@dubbelhenke854
4 жыл бұрын
@@agritrend4812 No the only thing we will have is a lot of brainwashed, stupid and uncultured Smartphone Zombies.
@agritrend4812
4 жыл бұрын
@@dubbelhenke854 Do not worry too much! Some of us use our smart-phones to play Mozart to our three year olds!!!
1) Largo: 0:00 2) Menuetto: 09:14 3) Adagio: 19:31 4) Menuetto Allegretto: 25:03 5) Romanze: 30:25 6) Thema mit Variationen: 37:46 7) Rondo: 47:20
@ohsnapdude1601
6 жыл бұрын
Lucy Farrimond thank you
@dougllaslopes3527
6 жыл бұрын
Lucy Farrimond Thank you!
@_PROCLUS
5 жыл бұрын
TY
@chrismontoya7831
5 жыл бұрын
10q
@denilsonalvim.fanfilms20sat50s
3 жыл бұрын
Lucy Farrimond, Félicitations pour votre vocation. J'adorerais entendre ça. J'imagine quelle belle voix tu as!!!
Some say Mozart is a master of simplicity. Others say Mozart is a master of complexity. I say Mozart is a master.
@dejanstevanic5408
2 жыл бұрын
:-)
@robinpclarke
2 жыл бұрын
Actually it was all composed by his wife (and previously his sister) but the patriarchy has covered this up. Also the fact that the Mozarts were Black Muslims.
@Dayserking
Жыл бұрын
@@robinpclarke congratulations 🎈🍾🎊🎉
@lorenzoschwarzetorres9374
Жыл бұрын
Mozart es sólo Mozart....un genio que vino de otra dimensión y nos visitó y dejó joyas de arte para que nosotros los simples mortales, a más de 200 años de su muerte, disfrutemos simplemente...Saludos María.-
@mygreneyhyportnex4182
Жыл бұрын
a slight correction: THE Master
I was listening to this while studying for over two years ... when i finally finished i bought a ticket to rome and went to see the villa d'este for myself. There, below the steps up to the stately house i listened to it again and felt the weight and burden of my student years lift up and fly away on notes of pure delight. Danke Wolferl!
@rr7firefly
2 ай бұрын
I love stories like yours, covering a wide range of interconnected experiences. I was a student in Rome in Notre Dame's Architecture Program. I remember the first time I walked into the Piazza San Pietro to see the Basilica I had the soundtrack of "Shoes of the Fisherman" by Alex North playing in my head. kzread.info/dash/bejne/ZKidu7ayp9LVlbQ.html
Definitely a ‘desert island ‘ piece. I’ve performed this twice. One of the most breathtaking performances of my life!!
While Beethoven created his music, Mozart's "is so pure that it seem to have been ever-present in the universe, waiting to be discovered by the master." *Albert Einstein*
@amerrylittlemonarch
3 жыл бұрын
I automatically lost my respect for that man. Who’s to say that my music was not ever-present?
@jesusmanriquezsantana1590
3 жыл бұрын
@@amerrylittlemonarch Haha hello beethoven Sure, your music is wonderful, but Mozart's compositions are magical :)
@amerrylittlemonarch
3 жыл бұрын
@@jesusmanriquezsantana1590 My music is magical, as well. Take a look at my 32nd Sonata, the slow movements of any of my symphonies or sonatas, and the 5th Piano Concerto.
@DaviSilva-oc7iv
2 жыл бұрын
@@amerrylittlemonarch I love the third movement of your ninth symphony and the second movement of the pathétique sonata.
@guillaume.4093
2 жыл бұрын
Mozart and Beethoven they met, really. 🎶
Didn’t expect to feel this way but, the clicking of the keys on the instruments actually makes it even better. I feel like I’m there
@dskim24
3 жыл бұрын
You know, it's funny, the first time I noticed clicking winds was on this recording of Daphnis and Chloe. That's a piece, if any, where you want to be swept away from the practical nature of the creation of music and see the fantasy. Yet still, those clicking keys were always something I enjoyed about that recording. Great observation!
@caterscarrots3407
2 жыл бұрын
I don't hear the key clicks, I just hear the music itself.
How anyone can down vote this celestial music is beyond me. This is the music angels play while on holiday in the divine regions.
@prabhudhasivanson7110
3 жыл бұрын
Rightly said - Only tone deaf idiots will vote it down!
@godisreality7014
9 ай бұрын
Mozart had and still has a great number of envious detractors.
What an absolutely stunning performance of this. His balance and handling of articulation is energetic and at the same time elegant. Something else.
Ive played this on contrabassoon, twice. This is by far the hardest movement. It was clearly written for a string bass. There is NOWHERE to take a breath. But, goosebumps every time Ive played it and hear it.
@xura7CB
2 жыл бұрын
Can you share some video/album recording of that version? I would like to hear how contrabasoon works in the piece, but it is hard find really. It is always a bass
@MJT777X
5 ай бұрын
KV 46 I believe is what you are looking for @xura that @carlos was referring to. Although only one recording of this *seemingly* exists, it is proof that the whole serenade was once a string quintet. So yes you are right, and you are welcome 🤗💕
I love the scene in Amadeus where Salieri is describing the adagio.
@celloswiss
6 жыл бұрын
That scene where Salieri refers to the Adagio is from the Clarinet Concert.
@celestemanca3587
6 жыл бұрын
In the scene where he first sees Mozart, Salieri is reading the score to this adagio, when Wolfie snatches it away off of the music stand.
@alexstivi1
6 жыл бұрын
Me too
@amirosh
3 жыл бұрын
I know Right
This is considered the gold standard of woodwind serenades for all composers in all music periods.
Absolutely spellbinding. Only Mozart could have composed this!
@rubenfeighelstein9218
6 жыл бұрын
asi como la novena de Beethoven la pudo escribir solamente Beethoven esta partitura la pudo escribir solo Mozart
@IrizarryBrandon
4 жыл бұрын
Equally remarkable, for the same reasons, is his Wind Serenade in C Minor, K 388.
@heribertoramonayalagomez7204
4 жыл бұрын
Mozart, sinónimo de música del Paraíso!
@seanmarshall7529
3 жыл бұрын
@@rubenfeighelstein9218 Only Mozart? Bach composed in Mozart style befor Mozart's birth... The Beethoven's quartets are without paralells.. Mozart composed well... ecco. lo gho ditto! (Venetian)
@justme-yr2xf
3 жыл бұрын
No #TowerOfBabelRecords
I have Sir Neville Marriner's conducting of the Gran Partita which is really wonderful. This performance with Sir Charles Mackerras is an equally wonderful and beautiful interpretation. Each instrument with its own special timbre of this recording is simply outstanding in this beautiful Mozart piece. Bravo to both Sirs.
@TheSharoncat
6 жыл бұрын
Guess It Was Fate i realy don’t like Beethoven, take his mad face off from , Mozart subject here !
The Menuetto - Trio I - Trio II at 09:14 reminds me of my dad. Although he wasn't there for much of my life growing up, and even now, he introduced me to classical music and for that I am eternally grateful. That part always brings back memories of the few times I spent with him. Together with the second movement of the Flute and Harp Concerto, I'm always almost moved to tears when i listen to them. Mozart is the best!
The whole piece is bewitching, but the final Rondo is the definition of Joy. ❤️
This is a truly one of Mozart's Masterpieces!!
@-Muzikalite-
3 жыл бұрын
Requiem?
@Fm-xu9id
3 жыл бұрын
DON GIOVANNI, MASS IN C MINOR, PIANO CONCERTOS 20 & 24, QUARTETS & QUINTETS FOR STRINGS, ETC.
@jesusmanriquezsantana1590
3 жыл бұрын
Jupiter?
@dlelllfkdlelel5459
Жыл бұрын
@@jesusmanriquezsantana1590 Pariser? Haffner? Linz?
The greatness and wonderfulness of Mozart ’s music is off the charts
If I recall: Mozart and friends in Mannheim were getting the piece ready to play, and the bass player couldn't show up, flu or something, so they got the [court] bassoonist and Mozart wrote him out a part.
@comic4relief
7 жыл бұрын
...so Serenade for 12 winds plus Bass became Serenade for 13 Winds.
@olavtryggvason1194
3 жыл бұрын
@@comic4relief That's the explanation ! But was it really in Mannheim ? The famous Mannheim orchestra had moved to Munich in 1779.
@seanmarshall7529
3 жыл бұрын
the contrabasson is the instrument of choice, for me..
Il più grande genio musicale, Mozart rimarrà insuperabile.
Third movemennt of this is amazing. It is simply one of the best pieces music of all time.
@luisarroyo9694
5 жыл бұрын
THIRD? ROMANCE IS BEST BEAUTIFUL. AND SIX MOVEMENT..............WONDERFUL....
Mozart’s music quenches the dryness of the soul, and is an exilir to purify the soul If only Mozart had lived as long as Telemann❗
@godisreality7014
9 ай бұрын
I agree. His foes, of which Mozart had many and he knew it, killed him off ritualistically and really made him suffer before the final death knell got him just after midnight on December 5, 1791.
@shin-i-chikozima
9 ай бұрын
@@godisreality7014 Thankyou Wonderful comment From A corner of shining Tokyo, which Is full of delicious foods of🇯🇵🍤🍚🍙🥘🥧🥟🍡🍥🍜🍜🍣🍣🍱🍱🍢🍢🎌
@godisreality7014
9 ай бұрын
@@shin-i-chikozima Thank you for accepting the truth.
@shin-i-chikozima
9 ай бұрын
@@godisreality7014 Good luck See you again Tokyo Is very hot and humid
@godisreality7014
9 ай бұрын
@@shin-i-chikozima It was hot and humid here also - today is better. It is all engineered, oxygen depletion. No one can breathe.
it begins like a rusty old squeezebox and then soaring high above it an oboe which is taken over by a clarinet and turns it into a phrase of sweetest delight. Why don't they make movies like this anymore?
Deux minutes de bonheur entre 16:12 et 18:12 avant l'extraordinaire adagio commençant à 19:30. Quel génie ce Mozart...
@sr.sendra3225
2 жыл бұрын
Reminds me to Vivaldi at his RV 156
I wish more of the great masters wrote music for wind bands!
Thanks to works like this, I feel happy to be alive. Thank you, herr Mozart.
This is exquisite! First heard it on the radio, Charles MacKerras conducting, and had to buy the same recording. I used to go down from the mountains after a day's skiing listening to Sir James Galway's interpretation of Mozart's fute concerto..Himmlich!
The Adagio section is ... transporting. Music of such glassy transparency one feels one is peering into heaven.
@shermanhawkins187
7 жыл бұрын
Marc DeFrancis
@DavidRice111
6 жыл бұрын
Just had to wax poetic eh?
@hertzair1186
4 жыл бұрын
Marc DeFrancis : that’s actually a good definition of any Mozart work...
Each era in classical music provides a unique perspective on the world and human emotions. Exploring and understanding the history of classical music offers insights into the culture and mindset of that period.
La musique de Mozart et sa poésie se font comme l'amour se fait ; un échange de sang, une étreinte totale sans aucune précaution, sans aucune protection. Le grand saut à chaque fois !!🤗
@roobookaroo
3 ай бұрын
Thanks for this amusing description of French sex, of overwhelming emotion blinding the pre-frontal cortex, very romantic in a fictional, make-believe way. The reality is more pedestrian. Sex is not a "grand saut a chaque fois" (a big jump each time). Sex is done primarily because it feels good, as a very down-to-earth, fundamentally natural, device of evolution to make sure that somehow the species continues. Hopefully there is no "echange de sang" (exchange of blood) as it would mean that one of the partners is seriously sick and bleeding. The "etreinte totale" (total embrace) is a wonderful exaggeration that perhaps teenagers still experience the first time. "Sans aucune precaution, ou protection" (Without any precaution or protection) is valid only for very foolish young people totally unaware of what's going on in the world. And nowadays they're not easily found, not in our Western world, and our modern times. This kind of description in no way applies to Mozart or his music, where emotional power is always intimately linked to high-level technical skill and inherent, self-sure control. In short, this kind of characterization of Mozart's poetic spontaneity "c'est de la litterature, pour faire des phrases pour faire impression mais qui n'apprennent rien a personne". (This is pure fiction-writing, to make sentences apparently impressive, but that do not provide any info). Let's be frank: this kind of comment is pure old-fashioned pretentious French hogwash, perhaps linked to the French, Catholic-derived, fantasy of "le grand amour" (the all overwhelming love that transcends ordinary living).
So sublime, this is unreal, celestial.
One of the most beautifull songs in music history, Mozat was in a vibe of his own
@godisreality7014
9 ай бұрын
Mozart was an Angel of the real God.
@roberthill799
5 ай бұрын
Mozart was a flesh and blood human being. No silly superstitions are required to appreciate his genius.
the trio after 16:11 is simply divine, thank you for this great recording
Obrigada por ter existido, Mozart...
Can't get enough of the Adagio, Largo and Menuetto
escuché esta serenata por primera vez en 1983, en un homenaje a Mozart que organizaron varias orquestas de Caracas, varios musicos de la actual orquesta sinfónica municipal de caracas la tocaron y me enamoré del adaggio, compré el disco y ya no recuerdo cuantas veces la he escuchado. El dialogo entre los instrumentos inisinúa el amor en todas sus manifestaciones: parental, de pareja, entre amigos, amor por la naturaleza y el universo. gracias Mozart
@foilmagazine
7 жыл бұрын
Dilfredo Ruiz I
Music for the soul!
'it looked nothing on the page. Bassoons, basset horns. like a rusty squeeze box...' (Amadeus - 1985)
@looeyt4767
8 жыл бұрын
great scene
@fruitcocktail64
7 жыл бұрын
too many notes.
When one hears such sounds, what can one say, but.... Mozart.
@kakabukkake0
8 жыл бұрын
lol
@samazwe
7 жыл бұрын
lol, the irony in that joke!
Many thanks, I hope other listeners will also appreciate seeing the names of the artists as well. I performed with a number of them, and almost wrote in my last message, "I'll bet $1000 that could be nobody else but Steve Taylor on oboe."
A single note unwavering!
Rondo at the end is just mind blowing! Love it! So different that anything else at the time. he went out side the box AGAIN
Great rendition ! This familiar music has now been recorded many times, but seldom as effectively as it is here. Sir Charles Mackerras is a superb Mozartean, and this performance just brims with life. The rhythms are crisp and clearcut, the phrasing loving, and the balances consistently superb. Telarc's recording, with its lifelike presence, is another positive factor
@ianlowery6014
Жыл бұрын
He was also principal oboe of the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, having learned from the great Evelyn Rothwell who has had a profound influence on thousands of oboists since she wrote her wonderful tutorials. It helps explain Mackerras's wonderful lyricism.
My favourite bits 16:12 to 16:29 and naturally: 19:31 to 20:33 50:10
When one hears such sounds, what can one say but...there are never enough notes.
Mozart. The best composer throughout the ages. By far.
@thom6746
3 жыл бұрын
I agree. Bach did a lot of good things, Beethoven a few great symphonies and concertos, but WAM! 200 hours of great music.
@jesusmanriquezsantana1590
3 жыл бұрын
@@thom6746 240* :)
@wlrlel
3 жыл бұрын
@@thom6746 nah it's dumb to think like that
@thom6746
3 жыл бұрын
@@wlrlel This being social media, of course it's "dumb" to think like me, and not dumb to think like you. And this being social media, I'll take that comment with all the seriousness it deserves.
@amerrylittlemonarch
3 жыл бұрын
I thoroughly disagree. Beethoven was greater.
Thank you KZread for bringing beautiful music to us.
ESTA SERENATA, É UMA DAS MAIS PRODIGIOSAS OBRAS DO SUPER GÊNIO DE SALZBURGO. COMO SEMPRE SE NOTA EM SUAS MÚSICAS SEJA PARA PIANO, DE CÂMARA, SINFONIAS, PEÇAS SACRAS OU ÓPERAS E ETC. SÃO RIQUÍSSIMAS EM MELODIA, HARMONIA, CONTRAPONTO E RITMO. MOZART É ÚNICO ENTRE OS ÚNICOS ANTES E DEPOIS DÊLE.
My favorite! 19:30 to 25:00 in particular.
@julia_anagf
5 жыл бұрын
Mine too
I was there for gran partita lande theater 26/01/2006 SALZBURG, we went out for bell 🛎memory I think 20:08 ! Amazing Magic ❤️
Another good piece by Mozart. He was a good composer who accomplished so much.
@hertzair1186
4 жыл бұрын
Marty. Monforte : you are a master of understatement...
I have played classical music all my life, but my loss, never this piece. One of my bucket list that probably will never materialize. This music is brilliant, inspired and breathtaking. This piece identifies him as a Master.
El tercer movimiento, el adagio, es precioso. Aparece en la película Amadeus dirigido por el personaje de Mozart.
Wonderful and soothing to listen too. As a person who suffers from tinnitus l cannot describe in words how this helps with calming 'the noise' down, and give me relief, if only for those few precious minutes. Most comments mentioned this from 'Amadeus'. This music was also used in the dinner scene in an even older movie 'Soylent Green'. Whomever posted this, two simple words. THANK YOU.
@roberthill799
Жыл бұрын
@Robert McQueen "Soylent Green Is People!"
@robertmcqueen289
10 ай бұрын
@@roberthill799. Shsss, that's the secret. Thanks for replying.
Something oddly refreshing about this work - the timbres, the colours - and I have vastly more to say on this work which will have to keep
Obra maestra de Wolfgang. Gran lectura de Sir Charles.
So wonderful!! Love it!! Thank you!!
Mozart lives.
@hertzair1186
4 жыл бұрын
Klaus Toth ...absolutely
This is the voice of god,as Sallieri express it Love this /Fredrik
@paulrath7764
3 ай бұрын
Amadeus brought me here
Beautiful!
beautiful I cannot get this out of my head! particularly the opening clarinet
Mozart... Rest In Peace. Your Music; Eternal ! ! !
music -- nothing more, nothing less; you don't need words, it's one of the perfect definitions of "music" by Mozart
eternal Mozart, true perfection
@thomasborgsmidt9801
7 жыл бұрын
No it is not perfection: This is Mozart hard at work to make the woodwind do what he wants them to. Strings are not a problem, because he and Haydn knew all about them. The tempered piano also not a problem - Bach had solved that. But the woodwind!! That what he presented was somehow written by God? No, or God needed a lot of hard work and all the help he could get. There are lots of fragments for woodwind where he works with Anton Stadtler to see what the clarinette can actually do. His brother was specialised on the basset horn - which is more akin to the cello.
@DenzilBoydJr
7 жыл бұрын
'Tis hard work giving the illusion of perfection
@carsonphillips524
5 жыл бұрын
As close to perfection as we'll likely ever here in our lifetime or thereafter. That's the hallmark of Mozart's music. Balance, inventiveness and endless, effortless melodies. No other composer was so prolific. Doesn't sound like he struggled to create a masterpiece to me.
@lenhummel5614
4 жыл бұрын
@@carsonphillips524 I agree Mozart was very much inspired and it flowed, but yes: it no doubt took INTENSE concentration. Supreme genius. An utterly amazing output.
@godisreality7014
9 ай бұрын
@@lenhummel5614 Imagine they hadn´t killed Mozart at 35.
Absolutely love the sixth movement!
Great performance of this wonderful piece.
thank you so much for uploading this! one of the most beautiful pieces I know
One of my favorites
Mozart was so good at writing for wind instruments
See also 'Salieri describing the music of Mozart' in side panel. One of the most moving moments in all cinema....
@fruitcocktail64
7 жыл бұрын
Too many notes.
@mizofan
5 жыл бұрын
bowing to great music- for the peak of cinema, see Sansho the Bailiff
Lovely, beyond words, beyond praise.
This is definitely the best version I found on KZread!
Beautiful performance! ! Thanks for sharing!
absolutely beautiful thank you for the upload
I love the adagio part so much😍😍
I love mozarts music
A beautiful rendition. A lot of listeners may not know this, but Sir Charles was a fine oboist in his young days, indeed was Principal Oboe in the Sydney Symphony for a while.
His music completes me. I miss playing it.
Achingly beautiful ❤️
Wish there were more uploads like this on YT! Thank you so much
LOVE THE LAST MOVEMENT! very melodic!
Who is the recording genius (the orchestra, yes. the maestro of course) but the sound engineers deserve some kind of medal
@Martin_Adams184
3 жыл бұрын
I completely agree. I tend to like recordings that are lightly engineered. That is one of several reasons why a majority of recordings I have bought are of live, public performances. (I generally prefer to go to a concert than listen to a recording.) I don't know the history of this recording in that respect. I can tell there's some engineering going on; but it's so subtle and so well balanced that it has the kind of sonority that can pass for a live performance in a fairly resonant hall. As you say - medal-deserving!
Yes, the playlist for that film is just spectacular.
Very sweet and calm! As always, the music of mozart amazes me from time to time! I love Mozart! Very! :))))
Thanks for this Mozart:
@minh9545
5 жыл бұрын
If he didn't die at the age of 35, then there would certainly be more astonishing composition.
@Prod.Protonic
4 жыл бұрын
That’s why I hate salieri
@alejandrosoza8006
4 жыл бұрын
PROtty !!! Dude they were friends
@Prod.Protonic
4 жыл бұрын
I know they were friends but there are conspiracies that said Salieri killed Mozart because he was a better composer
@alejandrosoza8006
4 жыл бұрын
@@Prod.Protonic Not true tho
Never mind the unreachable quality of the music. Canon, Sony, Panasonic, Leica et al, are still to come up with a camera able to take a picture with the luminous quality of that painting. And here we are in the 21st century so inanely confident of our achievements.
@godisreality7014
9 ай бұрын
I agree. Electricity is the downfall of mankind.
Fantastic ! Can't wait to hear it 'live' in Clifton Festival, Bristol.
ESPETACULAR. MARAVILHOSO...!
Thanks so much for posting.
We people with our digital technology could not hold a candle to the creative and constructive abilities of the men who precede us.
@godisreality7014
9 ай бұрын
all purity has been alchemically degraded.
Rondo his top 3-5 sections of any work i think. Does anyone love Mozart's wind pieces as much as I do!? Can't find anything else like it.
Fantástico performance.
una de las mejores versiones que escuche...Excelent!!!!!
Thank you very much for posting this
Excellent
The best things in life take Time to acknowledge And appreciate...such as Mozart.
Wonderful melodic lines
This is the first Mozart piece where one part is written in the key of 5 flats. It's the first trio of the 2nd menuetto, in Bb minor. Usually Mozart never wrote in keys with more than 3 key markings.
Concordo! O adagio é absolutamente perfeito. Eleva o espírito das criaturas mais embrutecidas.