Yevgeny Mravinsky: Soviet Conductor, Russian Aristocrat

Yevgeny Mravinsky: Soviet Conductor, Russian Aristocrat

Пікірлер: 159

  • @user-gi3iu8wx2m
    @user-gi3iu8wx2m3 жыл бұрын

    Быть честным перед самим собой, не лицемерить, жить в ладу с совестью, иметь гениальную музыкальную и человеческую культуру - это эталон человеческой природы. Мир Вашей душе и царствия небесного....

  • @Dionysus_333

    @Dionysus_333

    2 ай бұрын

    Wow, that is beautifully said. I will spread this message

  • @denisrey-bellet5514
    @denisrey-bellet55144 жыл бұрын

    My great musical love since 50 years. Mravinsky !

  • @user-tp1zi7rh3n
    @user-tp1zi7rh3n5 жыл бұрын

    СПАСИБО!!!!!святые воспоминания....мой отец 40 лет работал в ЗКР в оркестре великого музыканта Е. А. Мравинского. я выросла в этом оркестре....слушала репитиции концерты....какие незабываемые счастливые были дни проведенные там наверху на хорах...Он обладал невероятной магической силой....Спасибо судьбе давшей мне возможность слушать и видеть величайшего музыканта МИРА.

  • @miriamyakobi7014
    @miriamyakobi70143 жыл бұрын

    A true Master! Only a real musician understands a need for hard work,constant demand from yourself and fellow musician of perfection!

  • @armensargsyan9263
    @armensargsyan92634 жыл бұрын

    Имел счастье слушать величайшего маэстро живым.

  • @jocelynhenkel4
    @jocelynhenkel4 Жыл бұрын

    Love the whole presentation...magnificent...and thank you greatly!♥️

  • @EvgeniiaDolinenko
    @EvgeniiaDolinenko6 жыл бұрын

    I love the way he interpreted the 5th symphony of Tchaikovsky. Very special version (on KZread can be found).

  • @znbr1
    @znbr17 жыл бұрын

    He was a Great Musician and was an Aristocrat in music making. You can hear his soul playing while conducting. He will be remembered and loved!

  • @gddecker

    @gddecker

    3 жыл бұрын

    His shoe sole? Or do you mean his soul? ;-)

  • @znbr1

    @znbr1

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@gddecker sorry...his soul

  • @antoniofabi9721
    @antoniofabi97214 жыл бұрын

    Forse il più grande del Novecento. Un gesto inimitabile, un piglio "scientifico", da brividi, sempre.

  • @VoxAcies
    @VoxAcies5 жыл бұрын

    A fascinating person. He struggled against the state, but he still was a product of his era. I think it's worth listening to his music just because of his unique perspective.

  • @margaritadubrovina7063
    @margaritadubrovina7063 Жыл бұрын

    Я счастлива, что могла себе позволить не пропускать выступления нашего оркестра с Евгением Александровичем! Царствие небесное! Великий маэстро!❤

  • @kurbatska
    @kurbatska7 жыл бұрын

    Спасибо за этот фильм....Душа преподнялась и очистилась.....

  • @straumeeee

    @straumeeee

    4 жыл бұрын

    Только это от слова приподняться , а не преподобный:)

  • @kurbatska

    @kurbatska

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ny bivaet :) I esli vasha dysha" pripodnialas" toje, znacit moia gramaticeskaya oshibka prinesla nas v pravilnoe mesto :))

  • @afrofinka
    @afrofinka8 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Mr. Marks, for this video, a fantastic testimony about Mravinsky's fine art of conducting. Let's hope to find again another great documentary about him, produced by the ZDF (directed by Wolfgang Schreiber and Hubert Ortkemper) in 1988, broadcast on Arte in the early 1990s.

  • @elaineng7522
    @elaineng75224 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for uploading this.

  • @kevorkzabounian3794
    @kevorkzabounian37942 жыл бұрын

    He was a genuine Aristocrat,The first time I saw him condacting, "An unusual higher personality!

  • @antoineduchamp4931
    @antoineduchamp49313 жыл бұрын

    This man was a very very great Russian conductor. There is very great respect for him amongst classical music lovers in the United Kingdom.

  • @222mozart

    @222mozart

    2 жыл бұрын

    Soviet conductor

  • @antoineduchamp4931

    @antoineduchamp4931

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@222mozart Music has a lot in common with the 'universal spirit of mankind' or in Jungian terms "archetypal" - therefore a musician's national origin or culture has very limited or zero effect on the interpretation of classical music. It is linked to the universal spirit of mankind.

  • @222mozart

    @222mozart

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@antoineduchamp4931 ????

  • @anhumblemessengerofthelawo3858

    @anhumblemessengerofthelawo3858

    Жыл бұрын

    @@antoineduchamp4931 _as being the universal (cosmic) mind is channeled through the archetypal mind which is channeled through planetary mind which is channeled through the racial mind which is channel through the subconscious mind, there are many layers. You may be drawn towards those of your own race, as though sharing a portion of this deeper mind. It's okay. The earth is NOT all one people. Having such a wild mix is not particularly common in the cosmos, by the way. But this explains much. Reform school is quite the spice. Sprinkle that on your symphony. Jk._

  • @anhumblemessengerofthelawo3858

    @anhumblemessengerofthelawo3858

    Жыл бұрын

    _it's okay to appreciate how different races accentuate different, shall we say, parts of speech. The valid part about varying races is that each of the race, there are people's having lived perhaps for thousands of years in a particular place, engaging in particular customs, with particular laws, and most importantly with particular ways of viewing the heart of the self, and of viewing the heart of the self of others. Forget jeans, this exists in the morphogenic realm. The memory is alive. It is magnetic and exists in the magnetic field of the earth as time. No race can be said to be better than another. However a certain race had their DNA altered by Yahweh. Yahweh being the creator of the human race, which was accomplished by taking the genetic material from those living on Mars and mixing it with apes. the importance is not whether the body is real or is not real, but what is important is the amount of emphasis placed on whether it is real or not real._

  • @musicstewart9744
    @musicstewart97445 жыл бұрын

    28:00 Raising the score as an icon - what a defining act to do👍

  • @lestermatos9226
    @lestermatos92267 жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much for this documentary!!!! Ive been trying to get a hold of it for a long time

  • @scuunjieng
    @scuunjieng3 жыл бұрын

    Many thanks for this deeply appreciated post

  • @johnschlesinger2009
    @johnschlesinger20094 жыл бұрын

    Only one thought occurs to me about this wonderful man’s music making: “The truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.” His cancellation of the concert in which he was to conduct the Bruckner seventh because the concert would not equal what had been achieved in rehearsal is a course of action that would have not occured to a “professional”.

  • @ml-ei3nz

    @ml-ei3nz

    Жыл бұрын

    Professional means being comprised at the level of Money for your Work. He didn’t have to be a professional, cause he had all the Power over the orchestra. I think even Karajan was jealous about the freedom of using power to get his musical goals as Mravinski had. Karajan compensated with having more Fun in enjoying the live and possibilities outside the Orchestra in the free world. Both conductors did the best out of circumstances they had around them.

  • @straumeeee
    @straumeeee4 жыл бұрын

    Самый великий ,глубокий, дирижёр России, неповторимый...

  • @luczegoth
    @luczegoth Жыл бұрын

    Documentaire très intéressant sur un immense musicien que je découvre actuellement.

  • @ZhenyaKwatch
    @ZhenyaKwatch Жыл бұрын

    Музыка выбирает Сосуды необыкновенной Красоты и Высоты откуда Музыка Волшебным образом проливается и преобразует и питает жизнью. Только энергия Жизни даруется , а инструментами являются избранные. Мравинский одарил не только звуком , но и грацией благодарю всех, кто через него материализовал драгоценный щедрый дар растущим и учащимся любить безусловно. Благодарю за видео

  • @svetabyrnosova3378
    @svetabyrnosova3378Ай бұрын

    СПАСибо 🙏❤ за ТАКОЕ ПРОСВЕщение.🌏☀️

  • @AZEM15874
    @AZEM158747 жыл бұрын

    Genius

  • @paololaconi4036
    @paololaconi40362 жыл бұрын

    Grandissimo Maestro. Grazie

  • @mariarosanovello7803
    @mariarosanovello78032 жыл бұрын

    Vi ringrazio di cuore per questo bel documento...conoscevo il suo nome sempre abbinato alla Filarmonica di Leningrado ma non avevo mai visto neanche una sua foto...apprezzavo molto la qualità delle esecuzioni ma ora ne capisco i motivi...

  • @shin-gg2rk3mt3d
    @shin-gg2rk3mt3d4 ай бұрын

    若き日のマエストロの指揮姿を拝めて大変興味深かった。「ワルキューレの騎行」に乗って突然日本公演のシーンになったのでびっくりしたw マエストロは現在の日本においても深い敬愛の対象です。

  • @QualeQualeson
    @QualeQualeson6 жыл бұрын

    Very interesting. Though I have no personal contact surface with any of it, I think I learned something. The art vs craft question, the shadow play and the human psyche and finally the intense political/ideological animosity that you can find even in this comment section today. I wish I could tell my own preference with regards to how it sounded, but that would take some serious effort to resolve.

  • @user-fl2fw9wg2l
    @user-fl2fw9wg2l7 ай бұрын

    Первые кадры-мой отец,В.С.Марголин...Завтра его день рождения.101 год со дня рождения...

  • @michaweinst3774
    @michaweinst37744 жыл бұрын

    Am I the only one who senses some parallels between Mravinsky and Furtwängler?

  • @emmanikitina8859

    @emmanikitina8859

    3 жыл бұрын

    Micha Weinst mostly phisically

  • @Hishammahadi1

    @Hishammahadi1

    3 жыл бұрын

    No you are not

  • @Leibo07
    @Leibo077 жыл бұрын

    Soviet Union, and GDR, sheer greenhouses of music love and genius.

  • @johnkblanchard

    @johnkblanchard

    4 жыл бұрын

    And death.

  • @gddecker

    @gddecker

    3 жыл бұрын

    Not really. Dictating what kind of music could be written, played and/or listened to does not describe a "greenhouse" of music love and genius.

  • @drugvash4899

    @drugvash4899

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@gddecker it's called censorship. Without censorship the West is producing trash

  • @Irina653630
    @Irina6536307 жыл бұрын

    Концерты Евгением Мравинским не пропускала

  • @debashismitro3255
    @debashismitro3255 Жыл бұрын

    Kleiber, Celibidache & Mravinsky, the three greats.

  • @Hentai_Student
    @Hentai_Student4 жыл бұрын

    生涯始終貴族の佇まいで非常に格好いいです

  • @abcnowcontrol
    @abcnowcontrol7 жыл бұрын

    Aristocrat Russian conductor.A great artist.

  • @jocelynhenkel4

    @jocelynhenkel4

    Жыл бұрын

    Right you are!

  • @takisalameh
    @takisalameh5 ай бұрын

    Mravinsky is my favorite conductor, his videos inspire me more than anything else. Is there somewhere that I could purchase DVDs of his conducting? I am not sure where to look.

  • @markokassenaar4387
    @markokassenaar43872 жыл бұрын

    The remark about his 50 years being the chief conductor in Leningrad, and thus being in that position "longer than any music director" is not entirely correct: Willem Mengelberg served as the conductor of the Concertgebouw Orchestra from 1895 to 1945, which is also 50 years.

  • @charlesreesink7850
    @charlesreesink78503 жыл бұрын

    "Music, he is quoted as saying, is played for God, not for the people", according to a France Musique Special on Soviet conductors. and I agree that, from a French perspective, he is too polished a director : "compassé", as Proust from a corner would have pastiched him majestically, with his unique humour! A little academic, étouffe-chrétien, like Puvis de Chavannes in painting historiography.

  • @palashvictor
    @palashvictor3 жыл бұрын

    Love this

  • @pianistegolfeur
    @pianistegolfeur Жыл бұрын

    Le plus grand de tous les chefs d'orchestre russes.

  • @akshaygowrishankar7440
    @akshaygowrishankar74404 жыл бұрын

    I miss Mariss Janssons.

  • @emmanikitina8859

    @emmanikitina8859

    3 жыл бұрын

    Akshay Gowrishankar me too

  • @davidowen1408

    @davidowen1408

    2 жыл бұрын

    Saw him twice in London, 1998 with Vienna Philharmonic, and around 2001 with London Symphony Orchestra. Both times very special! He was always my wife's favorite three times at the Vienna New Years Concert. Like Mravinsky He always brought something special to each performance but I believe his Shostkovich recordings are especially valuable.

  • @alcestify
    @alcestify7 жыл бұрын

    개인적으로 지휘 역사상 푸르트벵글러와 더불어 가장 위대한 인물.

  • @jeanparke9373

    @jeanparke9373

    5 жыл бұрын

    특히 두 사람의 베토벤은 전혀 다른 방향으로 너무나 탁월하지요.

  • @vijinanadu1962

    @vijinanadu1962

    2 жыл бұрын

    One more Celibidache: three perfectionists

  • @user-yd9ui9cx1w

    @user-yd9ui9cx1w

    11 ай бұрын

    Фуртвенглер был учеником Евгения Мравинского

  • @armensargsyan9263
    @armensargsyan92634 жыл бұрын

    Когда предатели из дому,то и быка можно выташить через форточки.

  • @DateTwoRelate
    @DateTwoRelate3 жыл бұрын

    He appears to have grabbed the ultimate riches available to him in the Soviet State and distributed them to others in the form of golden notes.

  • @user-yd9ui9cx1w
    @user-yd9ui9cx1w11 ай бұрын

    Мне кажется - Мравинского нельзя называть аристократом...Он великий дирижер , музыкант и служил своему отечеству СССР

  • @user-fl2fw9wg2l

    @user-fl2fw9wg2l

    7 ай бұрын

    Вам это кажется.

  • @straumeeee
    @straumeeee4 жыл бұрын

    Это не классическое , в плане сдержанности,это " классическое," в плане глубочайшего понимания трагедийности музыки Чайковского , в частности, 5 симфонии..

  • @dieterbarkhoff1328
    @dieterbarkhoff13283 жыл бұрын

    I have always found that Kurt Sanderling - both conductors of the Leningrad from 1942 or so until 1960 when Sanderling went to Berlin - was a greater musician. Well, Sanderling's music-making has always made more sense to me, much more humane, less frenetic, more 'soulfull'. The 'Dawn on the Moscow River' was Mravinsky's greatest work.

  • @ogulcicek
    @ogulcicek11 ай бұрын

    Who is the director of the documentary? Thanks

  • @TheTympanist
    @TheTympanist7 жыл бұрын

    C 'était un grand Monsieur , avec Toscanini c' est celui que j' admire le plus

  • @akshaygowrishankar7440

    @akshaygowrishankar7440

    4 жыл бұрын

    Avec Karajan aussi.

  • @BytomGirl
    @BytomGirl Жыл бұрын

    After watching the documentary I feel sad, the hated system changed his life, took away sheer happiness and only nature and music seemed to bring some of it. He demanded too much of himself, a perfectionist until the end and maybe that perfectionism was a cover for his fear. In any case, he was a great conductor but in many ways I feel sad for him as a person

  • @user-dr2yx9bq3e
    @user-dr2yx9bq3e4 жыл бұрын

    Язычники. Поминают водкой и льют огонь на прах гения.

  • @marie-armelle458
    @marie-armelle4587 жыл бұрын

    quellegrande distingtion

  • @brianmcdonagh8477
    @brianmcdonagh84774 жыл бұрын

    Listen to John Denver's " You light up my senses"

  • @EvgeniiaDolinenko
    @EvgeniiaDolinenko6 жыл бұрын

    @tzar2007 it's not so bad

  • @EvgeniiaDolinenko
    @EvgeniiaDolinenko6 жыл бұрын

    @Denis Plutalov Why so much hatred towards this talented man? Your anger says more about you, not about him. Of course.

  • @xerox92
    @xerox92Ай бұрын

    5:43

  • @xerox92
    @xerox922 ай бұрын

    4:56 9:53 11:34 8:07

  • @MrPianoevil
    @MrPianoevil4 жыл бұрын

    read the memoirs of artisti Gavriil Glikman about him! Those of you who can read russian~

  • @xerox92
    @xerox9226 күн бұрын

    13:37

  • @sophiatalksmusic3588
    @sophiatalksmusic35884 жыл бұрын

    Nothing on Shostakovich's falling-out with Mravinsky due to his refusal to conduct the 13th in 1962? Huh.

  • @MrPianoevil
    @MrPianoevil4 жыл бұрын

    MRAVINSKY'S FIRST 1938 RECORDING OF SHOSTAKOVICH'S FIFTH IS A DISASTER, WHERE THE ORCHESTRA IS 20 TIMES NOT TOGETHER.

  • @Ivan_Preobragenskiy

    @Ivan_Preobragenskiy

    4 жыл бұрын

    This is quite evident. Mravinskiy joined the Leningrad Philarmonic orchestra exactly in 1938, when it was one of the worst and laziest orchestras of the country. The point is that he could convert it in the best during the years of conducting!

  • @TheTympanist

    @TheTympanist

    3 жыл бұрын

    Avez vous déjà conduit un orchestre ? à votre commentaire je suis sur que non ! moi oui !

  • @user-eq5we2iw7l
    @user-eq5we2iw7l6 жыл бұрын

    5:11 Hair style looks like Furtwangler?

  • @emmanikitina8859

    @emmanikitina8859

    3 жыл бұрын

    Philip Liu phisically they are alike, yes

  • @andreaguarino8207
    @andreaguarino820711 ай бұрын

    Great conductor. Soviet? Yeah but in the elite. Anyway he was great human being, not politically involved like Gergiev, Obraztsova, Nesterenko and Temirkanov

  • @xerox92
    @xerox92Ай бұрын

    6:50 31:21

  • @peterhelbich3334
    @peterhelbich33346 жыл бұрын

    mravinsky was not an atheist........facts and love from vienna austria........where it all began...haydn,.mozart,.beethooven,.schubert,.,.etc...................

  • @philipmay3548

    @philipmay3548

    4 жыл бұрын

    Mravinsky was beloved in Vienna. At the end of his life, he got a lot of medical bills, and his wife was almost left penniless. The Vienna Friends of Music paid all of his medical expenses.

  • @antwerpsmerle1404

    @antwerpsmerle1404

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@philipmay3548 that’s good to hear! It’s sad when artists who give so much pleasure fall on hard times. The Heldentenor Peter Hoffmann, for example: he (and Chereau and Boulez) created the most electrifying Act 1 of Die Walküre ever seen, and 34 years later he died in penury. Life can be very cruel.

  • @denpl
    @denpl7 жыл бұрын

    Mravinsky's conducting repertoire was even more limited than that of Toscanini. As for orchestral training, it was Kurt Sanderling, who made it sound great until 1960, when he left for the Berlin Symphony. It can clearly be heard in the Leningrad Phil recordings.

  • @TheTympanist

    @TheTympanist

    7 жыл бұрын

    are you so jalous ?

  • @denpl

    @denpl

    7 жыл бұрын

    I'm telling you the truth which no one else will tell.

  • @harinagarajan2296

    @harinagarajan2296

    7 жыл бұрын

    I am not entirely convinced by what you say of the repertoire of Toscanini Sir. Toscanini conducted a huge amount of Opera (including those by Russian and French composers). His range within each composer apart from Beethoven and Brahms was perhaps limited. Hari

  • @denpl

    @denpl

    7 жыл бұрын

    I'm talking about Toscanini's symphonic repertoire and also about the fact that he ousted Mahler out of the MET, as well as Mengelberg and Klemperer out of New York. Mravinsky was a mediocre asshole. Remember the fact that he did not allow ANYONE to conduct his Leningrad Phil, including even Stravinsky in 1962, who had to conduct Leningrad Phil2, which was the Radio orchestra formed by Eliasberg. Also, none of the Leningrad conductors including Eliasberg, Rabinovich, and Music, were allowed to conduct his orchestra. He was the evil beast who was also a devoted Stalinist throughout his life.

  • @harinagarajan2296

    @harinagarajan2296

    7 жыл бұрын

    Your observations on Mravinsky are interesting. But Mahler stopped conducting at the MET owing to illness and was insulted by the board of NYP and he left. Toscanini seems to have asked NYP to hire Mengelberg as associate conductor for the 1927 season. I have seen those letters. Something seems to have happened during one of the rehearsals in 1928. Toscanini's case as a symphonic conductor is quite fascinating. I spent some time researching this when years ago i was a student in the U.S. He seems to have conducted at most 30 wholly symphonic concerts during the first 30 years of his conducting life! And it is not up until 1925-26 he was conducting orchestral music with any regularity. Mind you he was conducting Brahms, and Debussy and some of Ravel when these composers were around. Not to mention Verdi, Puccini and Leoncavallo. The repertoire question is a much more problematic. Most of the conductors' (Nikisch, Mengelberg, Furtwangler, Walter and Klemperer) core repertoire was Beethoven and Brahms. In fact some of the great Pianists had even more smaller repertoire. But on to Mravinsky. In spite of everything his Tchaikovsky 4th and 6th are marvelous (as is his Shostakovitch (5, and 8 especially) as well as some of Bruckner and Brahms. Hari

  • @user-no2rm7rl9f
    @user-no2rm7rl9f2 жыл бұрын

    КАКОЙ. ПРИМИТИВНЫЙ И НАГЛЫЙ

  • @Anthonyprinciotti
    @Anthonyprinciotti4 жыл бұрын

    He was obviously a master of his craft from the standpoint of being able to command the attention of an orchestra, and his knowledge of the scores he conducted was utterly comprehensive. I find some of his interpretive concepts interesting, particularly his avoidance of maudlin romantIc clichés in Tchaikovsky. Nonetheless, I have to confess that his music-making consistently strikes me as mind-numbingly pedestrian. The phrasing is rarely compelling, significant harmonic changes are plowed through without acknowledgement, and the music lacks an essential quality of being "breathed".

  • @andreaguarino8207
    @andreaguarino82073 жыл бұрын

    He was great but I prefer Kondrashin and above all the great Rozdestvensky

  • @dmitryburkov3759
    @dmitryburkov3759 Жыл бұрын

    Деятели культуры культурной столицы поливают могилу Мравинского водкой из бутылки - это впечатляет. Или это была святая вода?

  • @sgsmozart
    @sgsmozart4 жыл бұрын

    Setting aside all else....I don't care for his actual "stick technique".

  • @user-jn6rx8bh1m
    @user-jn6rx8bh1m Жыл бұрын

    Антисоветчиной не надо заниматься. Евгений Мравинский раскрылся именно как Советский человек а музыкант и дирижер это уже профессия. Великий человек! Творческая личность и ведать очень одинок в личной жизни был. Но очень востребован в общественной Советской среде.

  • @tatyanakoleso8318

    @tatyanakoleso8318

    Жыл бұрын

    А если бы к власти в 1917 году не пришли эти уголовники и террористы, то не раскрылся бы, да?))

  • @tatyanakoleso8318

    @tatyanakoleso8318

    Жыл бұрын

    Образование-то до революции получил, и нам до того образования и воспитания никогда уже не добраться!

  • @user-jn6rx8bh1m

    @user-jn6rx8bh1m

    Жыл бұрын

    Не будем заниматься гаданием если бы. Есть факт исторический именно рассвет русской а затем и Советской культуры пришлось на СССР. Евгений Мравинский реализовал себя и обогатил нашу культуру, ещё раз хочу подчёркнуть Советскую именной народную а как не крутите хвостом это класс рабочих, и он именно к нему и относился. Но были корни семейные аристократические и он хочу заметить ни когда не трындел что он аристократ. А был тружинеком профессинальным работал честно, ответственно и спрашивал с других, по этому все считали его не из миро сего.

  • @joansebastiacolomer3163
    @joansebastiacolomer31634 жыл бұрын

    What's that shit about "aristocratism"?

  • @drugvash4899

    @drugvash4899

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes I know ridic

  • @vadymvashchenko3036
    @vadymvashchenko3036 Жыл бұрын

    Странное суждение о богах... И о том, что для них нужно играть... Для Яхве или для Нептуна играть, или может для Геры - не уточняют. Без людей и богов нет... Музыку играют люди и для людей: красота - в глазах смотрящего. Судя по фильму, современным либералам присуще всё время что-то перетирать, перемалывать, искажать, лгать - во всём искать неумеренность и вычурность. Начиная с богоизбранности воспитанных в теле Советов гениев (которые воспитаны, в освновном, Коммунистическим строем, правильно построенным интеллектуальным трудом и заботой о ближнем). Может атеист Ландау и Колмогоров - тоже избраны Яхве? Нет, вроде, таких несовместимых с жизнью недостатков у этих людей не наблюдается. Мера, как говорили Древние Греки, - одна из наивысших добродетелей. Она была и в Евгении Александровиче - в его чувстве ритма, в его слухе, в его тонком чувстве ткани произведений. И, да, он жил в аристократическом строе - в Советском. Который, не смотря на сильные пережитки Капитализма, является на данный момент, до достижения Человечеством Коммунизма, лучшим образцом государственности.

  • @The1976spirit
    @The1976spirit3 жыл бұрын

    The same mindset as Karajan

  • @sgsmozart
    @sgsmozart5 жыл бұрын

    I don't like the clarinet tone of this orchestra. ...open and hollow....not warm.

  • @user-fn1xl6kx7r

    @user-fn1xl6kx7r

    Жыл бұрын

    I absolutely agree with you. This is especially evident in the recording of "Francesca da Rimini", where the clarinet solo plays "Francesca's story".

  • @johnkblanchard
    @johnkblanchard4 жыл бұрын

    Russian Aristocrat = Conducting Authoritarian

  • @Gavriil-mj9gx
    @Gavriil-mj9gx4 жыл бұрын

    А что же 13-ю слабо было ему исполнить?

  • @yuryyuryev7701
    @yuryyuryev77012 жыл бұрын

    Козлина,Никитин! Советскую власть не признавал?! Ту, которую Его купала в достатке и не прикосновенности?!

  • @tatyanakoleso8318

    @tatyanakoleso8318

    Жыл бұрын

    А ты за что её признаёшь? Поклонник террористов уголовников и серийных убийц что ли?

  • @MrPianoevil
    @MrPianoevil4 жыл бұрын

    Кстати, ЛЮБИМЫМ ДИРИЖЕРОМ ШОСТАКОВИЧА БЫЛ САМУИЛ САМОСУД, А НЕ МРАВИНСКИЙ, КОТОРОГО МАРИЯ ЮДИНА ПРЕЗРИТЕЛЬНО НАЗЫВАЛА ЖЕНЬКОЙ!

  • @johnkblanchard
    @johnkblanchard4 жыл бұрын

    Perhaps he had to rehearse more because the orchestras were bad!?!

  • @MT-gj3gv

    @MT-gj3gv

    3 жыл бұрын

    What are you - an idiot ?