The 5 Best Key Changes in Classical Music

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  • čas přidán 28. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 321

  • @pseudotonal
    @pseudotonal Před rokem +379

    Number 4 wasn't a key change, just a progression. And it wasn't an A flat 7, it was a an augmented sixth (German 6/5) chord which is a device in the parallel C minor. Mozart prepares us for it by giving us an F minor chord, the subdominant in C minor, then a D flat major chord which is a submedient in F minor. The A flat is in both C minor and F minor, so we accept it. It properly resolves to the tonic 6/4 and then has the V-I to satisfy us.

    • @Cherodar
      @Cherodar Před rokem +15

      The really neat thing about that moment is how the first movement does practically the same thing in its recap, and both the first and fourth movements have similarly different things (involving just a minor iv, no Neapolitan) in their expositions! An unusual bit of inter-movement harmonic-choice linkage.

    • @Dylonely42
      @Dylonely42 Před rokem +11

      Wow you are too good in music

    • @arthurfleiss
      @arthurfleiss Před rokem +11

      Show off.

    • @enelabe
      @enelabe Před rokem +2

      Same with number 4

    • @HankySwankles
      @HankySwankles Před rokem +28

      @@arthurfleisshe’s right though. For it to actually be a key change, we’d have to sit in whatever key we’re moving to for a least a little while to make it feel like “home.” Just because there is a brief intonation of a certain chord doesn’t mean we’ve changed keys to that chord.

  • @Nobilangelo
    @Nobilangelo Před rokem +90

    That blazing, heaven-storming transition from the 3rd to the 4th movements in Beethoven's 5th Symphony is one of the greatest moments in all music.

    • @planetproofreading2234
      @planetproofreading2234 Před rokem +2

      There are plenty of great bursts of flight in music, but yeah, that's sure one of them. At 30, I was a latecomer to classical, but the 5th was my baptism.

    • @mrbryansanguinitoorchestra
      @mrbryansanguinitoorchestra Před rokem +2

      Had there ever been a time before in any symphony where there wasn't a pause in between movements? Just another Beethoven innovation!

    • @MSalt69
      @MSalt69 Před 7 měsíci

      Agreed! And then a few bars later in the horn chorus Beethoven sticks in an heroic motif that is pure uplifting Hollywood and could have come out of any of the Star Wars themes. Beethoven inventing film music before there were films!

  • @Casutama
    @Casutama Před rokem +18

    I love the finale of Mozart's 41st symphony, it never fails to get my heart rate up

  • @Aussiemarco
    @Aussiemarco Před rokem +17

    Isolde’s Liebestod is absolutely one of the greatest pieces of music ever composed. Indescribably glorious as one’s soul is lifted to Heaven, just as Isolde’s soul joins Tristan’s in Heaven.
    One of those moments when music caresses our soul.

  • @willyj3321
    @willyj3321 Před rokem +33

    I love the very beginning of Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 4 when the piano states the main theme in G major and then the orchestra responds with the theme seemingly in B major before transitioning back to G.

    • @fob3476
      @fob3476 Před rokem +2

      I was expecting this one in the video

    • @enjoyclassicalmusic6006
      @enjoyclassicalmusic6006  Před rokem +3

      Good choice, it's such a pleasant surprise so early, and after the short piano introduction!

  • @ezekielbrockmann114
    @ezekielbrockmann114 Před rokem +33

    Sibelius' 5th Symphony, that moment. Dear God, ...
    Just Sublime!
    Also, mining the depths of Chopin's Nocturnes, the form of which are predominantly ABA' , just the way the contradictory melodies and rhythms stop their juxtaposition upon returning to the original key are literally breathtaking.

  • @sephyradance4648
    @sephyradance4648 Před rokem +7

    Thank you for this video!! I'm myself really interested in key changes - although I don't know anything technical about them - and I always think it produces a tremendous effect. I love how you explain them, it makes them even more enjoyable. And yes, definitely, the passage from the 3rd mov to the finale in Beethoven's 5th is my favourite transition of all time. But your putting Wagner as no 1 makes so much sense. Harmonically, the others are really good, but he's a miracle. I'm a Wagner fan, but I think I'm just being objective here!

  • @fionamacleod30
    @fionamacleod30 Před rokem +7

    Totally agree with your number 1. I always cry at this key change moment. It’s like the biggest release after so many hours of never ending never settling unrestful harmony. What a moment.‘!!! 🙏🏻💚

  • @VintageCarHistory
    @VintageCarHistory Před rokem +2

    Beethoven, Pastoral Symphony #6. First movement. Oh, that smooth change through the bird calls...

  • @masantonio8790
    @masantonio8790 Před rokem +26

    The second coming of the Andante theme halfway through Liszt’s Piano Sonata is golden. F-Sharp Major to G Minor - G Major and back to F-Sharp is too good.

    • @MattWeisherComposer
      @MattWeisherComposer Před rokem +3

      ABSOLUTELY. The first time I heard that moment, it found its way coming through my hands every time I would sit at my piano. So beautiful.

    • @dgmullin1
      @dgmullin1 Před rokem +1

      I was hoping for some Liszt. The Sonata, Les Préludes, Harmonies du Soir, Liebestraum #3, the list goes on. Liszt was a master of the dramatic key change

  • @peterb3181
    @peterb3181 Před rokem +16

    At the opening of Act 2 of La Traviata, Alfredo sings of how happy he is that Violetta has given everything up to be with him (Lunge da lei). He then sings, "Qui presso a lei io rinascer mi sento" [Here close to her I feel myself being born again.] The key change in the orchestra always takes my breath away, given the tragedy which later befalls them both.

    • @operaforlife6551
      @operaforlife6551 Před rokem +5

      I love that spot too, but the whole second act is magical really, Violetta just gets one unbelievably gorgeous melody after another...

  • @ErnestSDavis1
    @ErnestSDavis1 Před rokem +8

    Wonderful video, thanks for posting! My own vote is for the shift from D major to D minor in the transition from the 2nd to the 3rd section of the Bach Chaconne in D minor. You think you have attained a state of peace and contentment, and then in four bars it shifts back to a deeper tragedy than ever.

  • @kenmcguire5837
    @kenmcguire5837 Před rokem +13

    While I am admittedly not the biggest Bruckner fan out there, I do love how his third symphony uses the initial trumpet theme from the 1st movement to resolve the whole work into a glorious D Major at the end of the finale.

    • @JeanPaul-Hol65
      @JeanPaul-Hol65 Před rokem +4

      A big brucknerian fan here… 😅 I like your comment!

    • @Kumgll
      @Kumgll Před rokem

      I love the big seperate blocks of music in the 3rd.

    • @threethrushes
      @threethrushes Před rokem +1

      Bruckner has entered the chat.

  • @zappa_andre
    @zappa_andre Před rokem +9

    I specially love Mahler 4th adagio's key changes in the very end, opening the doors of the universe right after one of his least complex adagios... wonderful

    • @balok63a40
      @balok63a40 Před rokem

      The adagio ends on a D major chord, to lead into the G major opening of the finale, but the climax of the movement is in E major, which is why the symphony ends in the "wrong" key of E major.

  • @wangligong
    @wangligong Před rokem +7

    Thank you for the great video. Since you mention Schubert's D.960: one of my favorite moments is towards the end of the second movement of this same sonata, where C major seems to come in from nowhere. One day I finally realized (I'm not a musician) this was the exact opposite of what happened earlier in the movement: earlier it was from G#/Ab to E (relative major of the home key), a major third down; and here from G#/Ab to C, a major third up. Since then I loved this moment even more...

    • @pawdaw
      @pawdaw Před rokem +4

      I'm glad you mentioned this key change, it's truly extraordinary. The second movement of D960 is like a quiet, but impassioned prayer. In the return of the first section, Schubert shifts the key, with no preparation, from G# major to C major. The dynamic is so soft, and the texture so fragile, but this moment affects me profoundly. It's like a vision of heaven opening up. The shift to E major and then to C# major to finish the movement - these are also incredible. Since we're on Schubert, I might mention the middle of the slow movement of the String Quintet D956 - where the key dramatically shifts from E major to F minor, absolutely startling, every time you hear it.

    • @wangligong
      @wangligong Před rokem +2

      @@pawdaw Exactly. It’s like you see heaven, so beautiful, but you realize it is also so strange, unfamiliar, and far from home…

    • @pawdaw
      @pawdaw Před rokem +1

      @@wangligong yes, it's only an illusion...

    • @timweather3847
      @timweather3847 Před rokem +4

      Yes, to me that is the supreme key change in all music. I didn’t know the work when I bought the two volumes of Schubert’s sonatas many years ago, and when I played that movement for the first time that drop into C major was a shock almost like a lightning stroke. Has C major ever sounded so magical anywhere else? I still find it a breath-taking moment.

    • @pawdaw
      @pawdaw Před rokem +1

      @@timweather3847 you have the wrench up to E major at the end of Ravel's Bolero, and then you have this - both have the same impact. I was told that Igor Levit recently played this sonata in concert, and became so overcome during this passage that he was playing through tears. I get it.

  • @anman1352
    @anman1352 Před rokem +5

    One of my all-time favorites is the transition from F major to F-sharp minor in the finale of Beethoven's 8th symphony using the C sharp/D flat as the pivotal note. Every time I listen to it I marvel at just how seamless it flows.

  • @christopheravery83
    @christopheravery83 Před rokem +31

    I love the video, however it’s important to note that the Mozart passage does not involve any change of key. This is rather a startling series of *pre-dominant* chords that sound increasingly more exciting because of the increased tension they create before finally reaching the dominant chord and arriving back on the tonic. The succession of harmonies mentioned in the clip is more accurately described as: iv - Neapolitan (2nd inversion) - German 6th - I 6/4 - V - I. One of my absolute favorite moments in all of music, and all within the key of C!

  • @ironchancellorottovonbisma8573

    The scream of frustration that is the climax of Mahler 2 3rd movement should have been number 1! The key change hurts you its so powerful!

    • @carpenterhillstudios8327
      @carpenterhillstudios8327 Před rokem +1

      It makes what us choristers sing later a great context for our first entry. I thank God I'm a bass every time.

  • @jamesboswell9324
    @jamesboswell9324 Před 2 měsíci

    Wonderful. What a terrific selection.

  • @zorm_
    @zorm_ Před rokem +4

    One of my favorite is in Chopin's Etude op.25 n°7 "Cello". The piece is written in C# minor and oscillates between C#m and E in the beginning. At measure 21, Chopin introduces a first dissonance that goes through a progression of adjacent keys, keeping up the dissonance in a crescendo motion, until it is finally and unexpectedly resolved at the climax of the piece on a key change to E♭ at measure 27.
    I don't know if that can be qualified as a key change, but it definitely is a progression that ends up on an unexpected key
    The versions that capture this interesting progression that I've found to be the best are Pollini and Trifonov

  • @andy_pandy88
    @andy_pandy88 Před rokem +3

    I think one of the best key changes is in the finale of Mahler’s first symphony…. Heading back to the f minor home key, fixed on c major and all of a sudden a glorious D major chorale falls out of the sky. It’s perfect

    • @johnlueck9742
      @johnlueck9742 Před rokem +1

      I absolutely agree also in the first movement is a great key change

  • @alexanderzhao4448
    @alexanderzhao4448 Před rokem +1

    JS Bach’s Partita no 2 in D minor - Ciaccona from D minor to D major. Also Mozart’s Mass in C minor - Kyrie when the soprano comes in major

  • @enricochestri
    @enricochestri Před 5 měsíci

    All 5 are sublime excerpts of Musik at its highest heavenly levels....

  • @jeromus9996
    @jeromus9996 Před rokem +57

    I always love Schubert's modulations (for that it often brings the music up to an emotional height), but man that modulation in Sibelius' 5th Symphony is just something out of this world so outright stunning and majestic it almost reduces me to tears. Also, just for your correction the modulation in Schubert’s B flat major Sonata is not from D flat major to D major but rather from G flat major to A major and that the modulation in Sibelius’ 5th Symphony is from E flat (by D flat) to C major instead of from D flat to D.

    • @aisrmc
      @aisrmc Před rokem +1

      The Schubert is also not the second theme ;)
      But anyway, great selections.

    • @user-gj3co6dm4x
      @user-gj3co6dm4x Před rokem

      Of course! Everyone with ears and a proper musical hearing can hear that, but not this man obviously. I was just about to correct him but I saw your comment.

    • @ThePrimeMinisterOfTheBlock
      @ThePrimeMinisterOfTheBlock Před rokem

      @@user-gj3co6dm4x yeah it's so OBVIOUS whats wrong with this guy doesn't he have proper musical hearing?

    • @planetproofreading2234
      @planetproofreading2234 Před rokem +1

      I confess to not having listened to Schubert's piano compositions much (I will from now!), but I've always loved him as a chamber music genius and tragically underrated. He was only 31 when he died, only performed once publically, and yet look at his prolific composing including some of the most charming and happiest music ever made. What a shame1

    • @balok63a40
      @balok63a40 Před rokem +2

      Schubert was certainly the master of the Unexpected Modulation (he especially liked the trick of an augmented sixth in one key being the dominant seventh in the other), but the greatest key change in his music is the transition from E major to F minor in the slow movement of the C major quintet. No arguments will be accepted, as this is objectively true.

  • @gevenliu1931
    @gevenliu1931 Před rokem +1

    I’m so glad you included the Schubert D.960!! This is one of my absolutely favorite pieces (especially the later 2min in first movement development section, I think that’s the most tender two minutes in the entire Western musical literature). Schubert is so often overshadowed by the giants of grandiose sublimity propelled by the romantic historicity; to for me his tender vision is every bit as respectable as the hugeness in Wagner or Mahler. That said, I have to say, in the same sonata D.960, in the second movement recapitulation part, the very abrupt unmodulated key change from C# to C Major in bar 103 is absolutely magical and jaw-dropping, perhaps even more surprising than the first movement recap! Schubert simply has way too many interesting key change examples!

  • @OzSteve9801
    @OzSteve9801 Před rokem +11

    I would have included the key change in Beethoven's 5th piano concerto that link the last 2 movements. Simply two sustained notes which give the clarinetists time to change instruments.

  • @andrewketchum960
    @andrewketchum960 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Yes, I fully agree on Beethoven's 5th symphony, third to fourth movement. During the progression there are hints of the first movement as well. One of my favorites.

  • @reuben8531
    @reuben8531 Před rokem +4

    Dvoraks Humoresque has a really nice transition around half way through the piece from F# major to f# minor that just sounds amazing

  • @goflowjoe
    @goflowjoe Před rokem +9

    Brahms Piano Concerto 2 has two of my favourites:
    1. At the end of the 1st movement recapitulation, the music lands on A major before sliding so compellingly back towards B flat major. What a breathtaking moment it is!
    2. In the third movement, when the music modulates from B flat minor to F sharp major for the clarinet duet, and then comes out of it via an E7 - d minor - B flat major.

    • @Charonupthekuiper
      @Charonupthekuiper Před rokem

      Glad someone mentioned that one. Often it is thought not as good as his first, but I don't think there is much in it - they are both masterpieces.

  • @Berliozboy
    @Berliozboy Před rokem +5

    Schubert's D960 is unbelievable. Easily in my top handful of favorite works, and maybe my single favorite Piano Sonata. Although some think it too slow, the Richter recording never fails to floor me.

    • @BRNRDNCK
      @BRNRDNCK Před rokem

      Why is it so good? How do you understand it?

    • @Berliozboy
      @Berliozboy Před rokem +1

      @@BRNRDNCK I've never done an analysis of the piece so I don't think I'd be able to explain "why" it's so good. It's just a piece I return to again and again and it ALWAYS moves me, especially the first movement. I'm sitting here trying to come up with reasons and all that's coming to my mind is descriptions that are impossible to quantify, "serene", "contemplative," "intimate." It's a piece that strikes me like miracle, one that I experience more on an emotional/spiritual level than a mental/musical one. As you can see I'm flailing here :)
      Your question has inspired me dig into it on an analytical level, thanks!

    • @BRNRDNCK
      @BRNRDNCK Před rokem +2

      @@Berliozboy Thanks for the reply! I think very long pieces of music need to be cohesive, with some type of overarching structure, so that we can really call it _one_ piece. I've only listened a few times and don't quite have my head around it- I don't see how the movements relate, etc., and I think that would make it even more beautiful (it already is as you described!)

    • @Berliozboy
      @Berliozboy Před rokem

      @@BRNRDNCK Well said. An example of a long piece with cohesive movements for me is Schumann's Fantasie Op 17. I do see what you're saying about the Schubert D960, as the first movement really does tower above the other 3, and that movement is the main reason I love the piece.

    • @BRNRDNCK
      @BRNRDNCK Před rokem

      @@Berliozboy I will have to check out the Schumann, thanks!

  • @michaelv6304
    @michaelv6304 Před rokem +1

    Ending of the opening chorus of Bach's St Matthew passion, for sure.

  • @georgenorris2657
    @georgenorris2657 Před rokem +4

    Somebody below mentions the end of the adagio of Mahler's fourth. One of the most entrancing passages ever. And, of course, you mentioned the swan theme from the finale of Sibelius 5 which brings me close to tears just to think about it. Beethoven's ninth needs mentioning too though - especially the amazing key changes in the slow movement. It's in B flat but then that amazing D first version chord transforms everything. Later you get the Eflat forte section and the second time it comes the whole orchestra play the most resounding D flat chord. an overwhelming moment which seems to contain all of life's struggles within it.

  • @1258-Eckhart
    @1258-Eckhart Před rokem +1

    Listening to this, and adding my feeble "like", I feel such an incredible dork.

  • @inotmark
    @inotmark Před rokem +2

    Tristan doesn't modulate from F# to E. There is an A# included in the C# minor (not E major) Chord, clearly identifying the key as B. The resolution of C# to B is a continuation of the whole step appogiatura modulations throughout the Liebestod, and has its effect due to that relationship.

    • @balok63a40
      @balok63a40 Před rokem

      The Liebestod begins with an Ab 6/4 chord. The Prelude famously opens with the "Tristan chord" (when I was a kid, we learned to analyze it as an augmented sixth) that leads to a dominant 7th on E. But a dominant 7th on E can be respelled as an augmented 6th on Fb, which naturally progresses to. . . an Ab 6/4 chord. As far as I can tell, I am the only person in the world who thinks that this is not a coincidence.

    • @inotmark
      @inotmark Před rokem

      @@balok63a40 The so called Tristan chord is a ii7 chord in Eb minor. The opening phrases of prelude oscillate between Eb and A minors
      Eb minor: ii7
      A minor: V
      Eb minor: viio7
      A minor : V of III
      Eb minor viiø7
      A minor: V of V
      The failed modulation to Eb is the narrative of the prelude as a whole. The lovers attempt to break through to the "ocean of love's endless delights" (Wagner's words) and fail.
      The Tristan chord itself is made up of two thirds: F minor and B major. These two thirds represent the two lovers, Tristan is F and Isolde is B.
      The resolution of the Tristan chord to Ab via the augmented sixth relationship occurs in the second act with Tristan's "O König, das kann ich dir nicht sagen". Ab is of course the key of the first love duet and paean to night.
      Everything you were taught about the opera is likely wrong.

  • @WondrousPurple
    @WondrousPurple Před rokem

    Thank you for this wonderful video. As a novice to classical and operatic music, I found your commentary to be very enjoyable: technical language balanced with emotional responses.
    I look forward to more of your videos.

  • @mrz80
    @mrz80 Před rokem +2

    I incorporated that key change in Beethoven's 5th symphony in an Easter sermon a couple years ago. The dark, ominous tone that disappears into all those rumbling tympani sounded like Jesus' trial, crucifixion and burial, and that shift to that loud, bold major key 4th movement was the resurrection.

  • @josephciolino2865
    @josephciolino2865 Před rokem +6

    I do not hear a "Key" change at all in the Wagner excerpt. I hear what some would call a "deceptive" progression or cadence, a simple long sustained dominant 7tn chord resolving to the sub-dominant chord.

    • @keithparker1346
      @keithparker1346 Před 2 měsíci

      People caring about whether it's a chord progression or key change ...should really get out more to be frank. Just enjoy the music FFS don't dissect it too much

    • @josephciolino2865
      @josephciolino2865 Před 2 měsíci

      @@keithparker1346 It can make a difference.

    • @keithparker1346
      @keithparker1346 Před 2 měsíci

      @@josephciolino2865 how so?

  • @krzysztofq7420
    @krzysztofq7420 Před rokem +7

    I don't know if it qualifies as key change, but there is a moment in Mahler's 4th symphony in the slow third movement, a few bars before the fff outburst near the end of the movement - with horns playing ascending motive in pianissimo (pp) and then strings play glissando to non-expected key in ppp dynamic.

    • @enjoyclassicalmusic6006
      @enjoyclassicalmusic6006  Před rokem +5

      There's that amazing rise from a G major to a VERY pointily sharp E major, which is brilliant, such a beautiful symphony, haven't heard in ages, thanks!

  • @5610winston
    @5610winston Před rokem +1

    About four-and-a-half minutes into Beethoven's Emperor Concerto there is a little nine-note motif which is only indirectly related to my favorite key changes.
    Aleksandr Borodin took those nine notes and expanded them into the First theme of the Allegro for his Quartet No. 1 in A-major (The movement opens with an Andante not unlike Haydn's "Sunrise" Quartet.
    The Allegro theme is stated, restated, and developed quite energetically and even including lot of virtuosic work for the viola (Borodin himself was a 'cellist as well as being one of the most important chemists of the nineteenth century: look up the Borodin-Hunsdiecker reaction). The development becomes more and more exciting until it comes to an unexpected stop, brief _fermata_ pause, then the 'cello picks the theme up from the middle as the subject of a fugato, you'll think it's just more sunshine and frolicking in the flowers until the countersubject hits and takes us into a darker minor key and a furious minor "dogfight" style shouting match before working through a reconciliation and restatement of the "Suggested by a theme of Beethoven" theme.
    The second movement is, in my opinion, predictive of Shostakovich's Eighth String Quartet in some ways, the third movement Scherzo is a tribute to Mendelssohn's _Midsummer Night's Dream_ and Borodin's final movement is a rousing and challenging minor-key dance.
    Imagine Borodin and three of his pals in his faculty apartment with students passing through the parlor to get to the stairs to the dormitory rooms and his wife's relatives passed out on top of the piano and all the other chaos in his life....
    Anyhow, when you have about forty minutes to spend exploring Borodin's first quartet, you will find it's full of modulation "Easter Eggs", as well as some amazing metrical tricks.
    There are a couple of recordings on CZcams, but if you're hearing it for the first time I would recommend the one with the scrolling score.

  • @Snuggelbubs1
    @Snuggelbubs1 Před rokem +1

    I don't notice anyone mentioning the climax to the trio from Rosenkavalier!! My GOD, if you want a shocking key-change at a climactic moment, try moving super-fast from Ab major (as the dominant to Db, the key of the piece) to a quick few chord changes culminating in a shocking E-major chord over a B in the bass, while all three women are soaring up to high Bs or similar. Then a very quick turn-around to get us back to a solid Db major.

  • @tow1709
    @tow1709 Před rokem +7

    Could consider also the E-natural Horn entry in Brahms 1 movement IV just before the "big tune", another C minor to C major transition.

    • @TheAskald
      @TheAskald Před rokem

      Definitely my favorite "the sun comes out through the clouds" moment.

  • @kirill429
    @kirill429 Před rokem

    I’m so happy you included Sib. 5 mvt 3, when I started the video I was really hoping to see it here.

  • @iana2544
    @iana2544 Před rokem +2

    Thank you for this beautiful video 🌟

  • @m44p25
    @m44p25 Před rokem +1

    There is a moment in the third movement of Sergei Bortkiewicz's second piano sonata in which he transitions from D-flat Major into a 4 part chorale in E-major. It is one of the most peaceful and beautiful moments there is to me. Very underrated work!

  • @jeffwatkins352
    @jeffwatkins352 Před rokem +4

    Nice, especially the Sibelius which is one of those musical moments which utterly crushes me. But how could you cut away before the final resolution of Tristan???

  • @lawrencetaylor4101
    @lawrencetaylor4101 Před rokem +1

    Merci for this. I'm at the beginning of my ear training, so this helps.

  • @chrisperyagh
    @chrisperyagh Před rokem +4

    The key change in Tchaikovsky's Romeo and Juliet Fantasy Overture going into Db Major (where the cor anglais plays the love theme) is a landmark.

  • @CuratorOfRealities
    @CuratorOfRealities Před rokem +1

    This is basically in the same spirit as that Thomas the Tank Engine episode when they rescue the mud-bound band, and at the end they listen to the music the band plays, but they don't love the music itself being played, they just love that there is music. This video is the same. It's an enjoyment of the fact that there are key changes in these pieces at all. There are far more earth-shattering key changes around than any of these listed.

  • @lindildeev5721
    @lindildeev5721 Před rokem

    Two more changes of key
    1: the wonderful E major at the end of the adagio in Mahler's 4th symphony
    2: the 8th variation (in G major) in the Enigma Variations ending on a G for the transition with the famous 9th variation "Nimrod" which is in Eb major.

  • @ellenstanton2043
    @ellenstanton2043 Před rokem +1

    Schubert was the master of incredible key changes.

  • @cheemomugdoo799
    @cheemomugdoo799 Před rokem +1

    I am not musically inclined to know what happens key wise in most pieces, but I love how in Liszt's Hungarian Rhap. no 2, near the beginning it transitions with the dark chordal opening into the Dulce con grazia section with a beautiful little move up into what I assume is a different key, but if not it's still a masterful bit of composition. Also the transition between the 2nd and 3rd movement in Beethoven's Piano Concerto number 5 always struck me as a perfect move from the slow to fast without rest in the music.

  • @jgesselberty
    @jgesselberty Před rokem +17

    The closing moments of the Gloria from Beethoven's "Missa Solemnis" are mind blowing.

  • @danielh3668
    @danielh3668 Před rokem +1

    Beethoven's 8th, Finale. After a couple of times hitting the ff d flat he changes on the last time to c#, and instead of going back to the home key he stays with c# = V and starts a short passage almost tutti in f# minor (!!!). I say almost tutti because for obvious reasons the timpani and brass remain silent for a few measures until they decide to jump back in and put an end to that f# minor nonsense pounding their f naturals to bring the whole orchestra back.
    It's just a caprice, there's no modulatory process, just a block of measures in one key and suddenly another block in another key, basically via that switch of the instrumentation.

    • @jaakkomantyjarvi7515
      @jaakkomantyjarvi7515 Před rokem +1

      Beethoven's 8th finale, seconded. This is for me one of the most jarring harmonic shifts for its time, and even in the context of Beethoven's harmonic language. He has numerous unprepared shifts by a third, but going directly from F# minor to F major is just something else. This kind of minor to major shift with the third as the shared pitch became commonplace in 20th-century free-tonal harmony, though; Vaughan Williams comes to mind, and I've used the device a fair bit myself.

  • @BsktImp
    @BsktImp Před rokem +7

    The coda from Vaughan Williams' _Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis._ The transition into the brightest G major sunlight.

  • @matthiasheymann
    @matthiasheymann Před rokem +2

    One of my favorites is in the Finale of Schumann’s Symphonic Etudes, at the beginning of the last page, the Bb major chord. Throughout the entire Finale, Schumann trains us to expect a b minor here, and when he shocks us with the major version it literally lifts you up from your seat. I can still remember hearing it for the first time as a teenager and thinking, “whoooaaaa!”

  • @stevegandy4203
    @stevegandy4203 Před rokem +2

    What about the famous key change in the Verdi Requiem at the end of the first or second movement where the orchestra and choir have been playing and singing in a minor key. When they reach the word “Amen” they suddenly shift to a major key with a huge crescendo/diminuendo before reverting back to the previous minor key.

  • @dmitrysychyow1868
    @dmitrysychyow1868 Před rokem +9

    Those famous eight bars of E Major at the end of Bolero shouldn't be omitted too.

  • @BBB-hi4hc
    @BBB-hi4hc Před rokem +6

    That mozart more like a chord progression

  • @fltwwq
    @fltwwq Před rokem +1

    #1: the “F# major to E major key change” is really just a shift from steps V to IV (however streched out and exalted) in the same key of B major, which is omnipresent. Nothing to do with the keys of F# and E per se, IMO. As with several of your other examples (as pointed out), you confuse harmonic marches and patterns within the same key, with actual key changes. For a key change to occur, the first key must be firmly eatablished, and the second must also settle as such, which is clearly not the case here.

  • @tj-co9go
    @tj-co9go Před rokem +3

    Brahms second piano concerto second movement has a pretty amazing one
    5) That's my favorite one too!
    4) Not quite a key change. Just a chord progression.
    3) It's okay.
    2) Probably great. Haven't listened to this piece
    1) Great one

    • @crazychameleon123
      @crazychameleon123 Před rokem

      Go away and listen to it! Sibelius 5 is sublime.

    • @Kumgll
      @Kumgll Před rokem

      Yes, its other worldly. Screaming anguish.

  • @conforzo
    @conforzo Před rokem +1

    Mahler 4th Langsam in the end from Emajor to C major. Extremely exquisite.

  • @sergeisavitski7339
    @sergeisavitski7339 Před rokem +1

    I agree with comments about Mozart not being a modulation. But isn’t Wagner “Tristan und Isolde” also a pretty standard chord progression? I hear F#9 resolving to EM on B with E and G# pitches acting like a suspension to the resolution to BM that follows right after. So it’s really extended F#7 resolving to the home key of BM, just with the suspension at first, dominant moving to a tonic essentially.

  • @pos_itronium
    @pos_itronium Před rokem +1

    well, i have to claim that in fact the 3rd fragment shows a modulation from G flat to A. the subdominant of A is a major D chord and it passes by, but it's not the key, the new key is A major. and i can't even notice where the D flat is

  • @brossjackson
    @brossjackson Před rokem +1

    One series of key changes that never fails to get me: the home stretch of Schumann's Davidsbundler Dances. The whole piece has been a series of individual dances alternating between stormy D minor and yearning Db major. Near the end, the two finally directly clash within a single movement, with F major horn calls and a reprise of a key Db theme but now in a melancholy F minor. The whole thing whips into a frenzied, passionate Dm apparent ending. And then the last little waltz begins, in a poignant, wistful little C major that somehow resolves the battle that has waged for the entire piece until now.

  • @_rstcm
    @_rstcm Před rokem

    Quick correction for the Schubert sonata Progression.....the second theme is actually in Gb major. And the transition is from F# minor to D major....which are much closer in relation.
    Also....in Sibelius 5, it goes from Ab to Db.....not Bb to Db.

  • @littleschnitzel8226
    @littleschnitzel8226 Před rokem +3

    All the chords during the 3rd example are written wrong, with the exception of the final D, they are in fact: Gb, Cb, Gb, F#m (with a hint at C#7) and D.

  • @Szhenrik94
    @Szhenrik94 Před rokem +3

    This video is quite interesting. Liked it a lot, only one thing: in the Schubert sonata you wrote D flat, but in fact it is G flat, after it C flat (B) major, f sharp minor, then turns into A major. You were slipped by a fifth. And in the Sibelius at the beginning you wrote D major, instead of C major. Tiny mistakes, anyway it is awesome.

  • @ozielich
    @ozielich Před rokem +1

    Oh! You have been missing out! The best key change ever, is Bach's Crucifixus into the Et Resurrexit from the B minor Mass.

  • @アヤミ
    @アヤミ Před rokem +2

    Schönberg's Verklarte Nacht has some truly remarkable pivot note modulations.

    • @gv273
      @gv273 Před rokem +1

      It consist almost exclusively of those haha

  • @Gorboduc
    @Gorboduc Před rokem

    I don't know the exact chords, but the middle section of the last movement of Mahler 1, about 8 or 9 minutes in, when the brass makes a wholly unwarranted yet absolutely justified leap to D Major. You know the bit I mean!

  • @alantrowbridge4931
    @alantrowbridge4931 Před rokem

    Mahler’s 8th, first movement about 20 mins in, during instrumental passage before last choral section, prominent brass.

  • @lukeharrison8753
    @lukeharrison8753 Před rokem +2

    you have to love the G major to B major key change at the beginning of Beethoven PC number 4

  • @davidkimmins8781
    @davidkimmins8781 Před rokem +2

    Yes, I love the sudden change in Faure's Requiem from F to Ab to introduce the 'Lux aeterna' passage in 'Agnus Dei'.
    Going from the sublime to the ridiculous, was that Eric Morecambe playing the Schubert?

  • @leoblum0631
    @leoblum0631 Před rokem +1

    This is my personal favourite. There are a couple of key changes before the truly amazing one appearing at: "Ist dies etwa - der Tot..." Do listen to the entire performance, if you have the time, it's well worth it. But if you're only interested in another magic key change, tune in on around 4'50''. That is something to remember and cherish! Better than any of Wagner's modulations! czcams.com/video/8k5YJNQ1xZk/video.html

  • @aileencawlfield2940
    @aileencawlfield2940 Před rokem +1

    Lizst’s Hungarian Rhapsody 2, when it gets faster and changes from minor to major mode, gets me so hyped every time.

  • @Dan474834
    @Dan474834 Před rokem

    In the Mahler 3 adagio, in D minor, there is a deceptive progression towards the D-major chord over 25 minutes, and the key change finally comes during the final trumpet chorale, and once the D-major chord is hit at the end of the symphony it is extended for upwards of a minute by the whole orchestra. One of the most sublime movements in all music.

  • @youtubecommenter2
    @youtubecommenter2 Před rokem +2

    My favourite is the one between bar 5 and 6 of Chopin's nocturne op. 9 no. 1. It's so atmospheric and hard hitting.

  • @williamcookmiller6997
    @williamcookmiller6997 Před rokem +6

    My fave: the modulation from C minor to A Major in the 1st movement of Mahler 2 -- czcams.com/video/_SUqjGoifOA/video.html -- which feels like falling in love. Worth mentioning that The Beatles' "Something" also modulates beautifully from C to A in its middle eight.

    • @pjkorab
      @pjkorab Před rokem +1

      You mean C minor to E major (it just hangs on subdominant A major with natural D added near the end to add that pastoral flavor ^^, but this is preceded by a 6/4 dominant of E and afterwards resolves on a simple E major - 2 before [23], english horn solo, that's the "we're home" resolution in the new key:))
      I do agree it's one of Mahler's best though. And his music is full of great harmonic moments

  • @LisztyLiszt
    @LisztyLiszt Před rokem +1

    The change of key from Db major major to A major in Liszt's Un Sospiro is one of my favorites.

  • @yodorob
    @yodorob Před rokem

    G.F. Handel, in two of his oratorios, makes key changes from minor to major in the final chorus of Act II. In Judas Maccabaeus, it's from C minor to C major; in Joseph and His Brethren, it's from D minor to D major. In neither of these cases are we talking about especially happy choruses.

  • @chrisstradling2535
    @chrisstradling2535 Před rokem

    Excellent choices, and plenty of worthy additions in the comments. I would add the last movement of Cesar Franck's A major sonata.

  • @balok63a40
    @balok63a40 Před rokem

    My all time favorite modulation is the buildup to the recapitulation of the first movement of Bruckner's 6th symphony, when the music moves from Ab minor to A major.

  • @JohnDoe-rc9zi
    @JohnDoe-rc9zi Před rokem +1

    The one that comes to mind is the tutti of the first movement of Sibelius’ violin concerto, from Ab major to E major

  • @samh_06
    @samh_06 Před rokem

    the glazunov sax concerto key change to G major was otherworldly

  • @carpenterhillstudios8327

    Elsewhere in Mosart #41 there are those upward porogressions that feel minor. they are frightening to me every time.. (i'm not up on my musicology). Try also Britten- War Requiem at the transition from "I am the enemy you killed my friend...." to "lets us sleep now..." and on thise few unaccompanied notes the tonality shifts to what will eventually be that incredibly glorious F major chorus unaccompanied that no one wants ever to end.
    Poulenc Gloria all of those twisting themes and cadences.
    Bruckner #9 more chord progression than modulation- in the last bits that were written, those descending chords are one big sigh. The whole movement seems like a clock winding down.
    I love all of thise moments where things are slowly turning and all of a sudden what what felt inmevitable is suddenly out of the picture.

  • @ukdavepianoman
    @ukdavepianoman Před rokem

    For me a sensational key change is one that happens immediately, not via a progression. Sibelius and Wagner, I agree are magnificent. I would add Steve Reich Electric Counterpoint 3rd movement - E Minor to C Minor (there are 7ths added too). The first time it shifts is spine-tingling and joyous.

  • @jpiccone1
    @jpiccone1 Před rokem

    The Schubert f minor Fanatasy for 4-hands - the key change from fm to a-flat m around bar 62 is so eerie and perfect. It's a "horror movie" shift, but so dark and beautiful here.

  • @Kumgll
    @Kumgll Před rokem

    Great, I've always wondered why a get goose-pimbles when I hear those pieces of music. Listening to the Mozart 41 in Derby Cathedral last year, the audience could not contain itself at that point and burst into applause. I've always loved the change of key in the first movement of Mozart's "Simple" Piano Sonata (when the first theme is played for the third time - I'm no technician). I listen just to get it. Mmmmmm.

  • @chuckgviolin3538
    @chuckgviolin3538 Před rokem

    Mahler 1st symphony movement 4 - F minor to D major. Amazing stuff.

  • @IestynsViola
    @IestynsViola Před rokem

    I'm not surprised that Beethoven and Sibelius feature here - both composers used the grand gesture plenty. Three of my favourites: first is the D Major to B-flat Major for the 'Alla Marcia' section of Beethoven 9th, final movement. The interrupted cadence (choir 'vor Gott') which takes us there is one of my favourite moments in any music. And then, second, in Sibelius 2, the 'sun coming out' D minor to D Major after what always seems like hours of pedal-d build up is right up there. Finally, Shostakovitch does much the same at the end of the 5th symphony of course, and also D minor to D Major. As for the Wagner, well the whole blessed opera builds up to that resolution, so I'd not exactly call it a change of key - more a relief that the tease is finally over!!

  • @Nelya57
    @Nelya57 Před rokem

    I like that moment in Beethoven’s famous 17th Sonata lll movement, when, after many g-?-A-d goes d6/4- A-d and suddenly instead of A you hear Es- c-F-B-g-c-F-B-?-c-F-B!

  • @user-yd1sc1gl4e
    @user-yd1sc1gl4e Před rokem

    Honorable mention has to be the final in Dvořak's 9th symphony, chilling move from E Minor to Major

  • @dylanhughes5981
    @dylanhughes5981 Před rokem +1

    Great video. I could listen to Schubert’s piano sonata in B flat Major all day every day. I wish you would’ve picked a better opera singer without a wobble, such as Birgit Nillson. Maybe next time 😉

    • @Kumgll
      @Kumgll Před rokem

      Yes. Schubert.

  • @P0L0K0P
    @P0L0K0P Před rokem +4

    That key change in the Schubert sonata is absolutely astonishing. One of the most breathtaking moments in the history of music, period.

  • @fp2601
    @fp2601 Před rokem +1

    The opening chord modulations which lead into an expansive soaring theme in Martinů’s Symphony No 1

  • @georgespelvin631
    @georgespelvin631 Před rokem

    The world's most well-known common tone modulation is undoubtedly the one in the William Tell Overture.
    The last note of the English horn solo is G, because the pastorale section was in G major.
    At that movement, the trumpets begin their fanfare in E major.
    Their first note is B, which fits in the G major chord.

  • @justanotherbohemian3827

    A key change which is magical in my opinion is the one in "In Questa Reggia" from Puccini's "Turandot". There is a part where we kind of end in g# and expect a fall in c# minor. It comes, starts ascending and with the phrase "Principessa Lou-o-Ling" it gives us an e# and leads us straight to f# minor! It is beautiful and has so much colours, especially when sung with artistry...

  • @parsifal3142
    @parsifal3142 Před rokem

    Totally agree with number 3. A sudden flash of light.

  • @RobinLSL
    @RobinLSL Před rokem +1

    The Schubert bits you mention aren't in Db major and C# minor as you said, but in Gb major and F# minor! Though it does go into D major indeed.

    • @anthonysandle5055
      @anthonysandle5055 Před rokem +1

      It doesn't. It goes to A. The D major tonality is merely the subdominant of A.

    • @RobinLSL
      @RobinLSL Před rokem

      @@anthonysandle5055 yes, you're completely right!

  • @zaibalo
    @zaibalo Před rokem

    These are all great moments, but this way of looking into classical harmony is rather simplistic. If you’re into chord changes, just take a look at the second movement of Rachmaninoff’s Symphonic Dances.