MY FIRST TCHAIKOVSKY PIECE WAS LIFE CHANGING - REACTING TO SYMPHONY NO.6 "PATHETIQUE" - TCHAIKOVSKY

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  • čas přidán 30. 05. 2024
  • Reaction to Symphony No. 6 in B Minor, Op. 74 "Pathetique" - Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky.
    This is a reupload! Hope you all still enjoy the video. It's crazy how far we have come from a 100 Subs! So grateful for all the support CF!
    00:00 1st Mvt.
    24:37 2nd & 3rd Mvt.
    48:16 Final Mvt.
    Original Video: • Symphony No. 6 in B Mi...
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Komentáře • 82

  • @polinamarchenko1007
    @polinamarchenko1007 Před rokem +27

    I always have goosebumps at the moment from 15:15 to 16:40 - no matter how many times I listen - the first movement is a real dramatic masterpiece! Thank you for the reaction!

    • @AhrkFinTey
      @AhrkFinTey Před 8 měsíci +4

      It's such a shame that so many conductors rush this passage, one of the most devastating moments in all of music, possibly ever. This conductor did a good job giving it the proper gravitas

  • @PauGarriga42
    @PauGarriga42 Před rokem +36

    Tchaikovsky is probably one of the best composers ever. Some of their best works, if you want to react to some of them:
    - The Nutcracker (I'm 100% sure you know a lot of melodies from this ballet)
    - The Swan Lake (another fantastic ballet)
    - Overture 1812 (a fantastic piece about the war between Napoleon and the Russian army, the piece includes the sound of cannons😅)
    - Valse sentimentale (a short piece for violin and orchestra, very emotional)
    - Violin concerto (one of the best violin concertos of the history)
    - Piano concerto (also very good)
    - Symphonies 4, 5 and 6 (I think these are the best, you just reacted to the 6st)
    - Romeo and Juliet Overture (a piece that combines dramatic, quiet and emotional moments)

    • @polinamarchenko1007
      @polinamarchenko1007 Před rokem +2

      I entirely support the reaction for Overture 1812 - it's really fantastic (only should be with cannons and bells)
      (but reacting to it one should know that it contains extracts which were not composed by Tchaikovsky (just in case)) -they were masterfully and dramatically inserted into this creation, for example, the extracts from La Marseillaise and the Russian Empire Hymn and one Russian Orthodox church chant)
      And I muself suggest the reaction for 'the Seasons' by Tchaikovsky - very soothing melodies

    • @waltuh2.3bviews3secondsago3
      @waltuh2.3bviews3secondsago3 Před 19 dny

      I would say everything mentioned above as well as nocturne

  • @uxvellda1112
    @uxvellda1112 Před 8 měsíci +11

    This was actually the first symphony to end in a dramatically tragic way. The symphonies before this usually feels very triumphant and victorious. That's exactly what the third movement sounds like. So people mistakenly claps at the third movement and then suddenly hit by that tragic strings LOL

    • @ootamanabu
      @ootamanabu Před 5 měsíci +1

      3rd mov is desparate living march.
      Can't stop suiside way .
      Time to time, monster changed. So, final is giant march.

  • @leonpetrich5864
    @leonpetrich5864 Před rokem +20

    47:37 "I don´t think the 4th movement is gonna catch me". Famous last words before the 6ths 4th Movement. Though I think its a bit unfortunate you didn´t listen to it right after the 3rd. It just hits different after that triumphant 3rd movement. You think its over, everything is fine, it was a happy end and then it just hits you.

  • @notishow737
    @notishow737 Před rokem +17

    "it's ya boy - GIDI" this intro never gets old

    • @GIDIREACTS
      @GIDIREACTS  Před rokem

      Yessir

    • @davidevans3227
      @davidevans3227 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@GIDIREACTS hello..
      from the uk.. 🙂
      have you been to see/hear orchestra live?
      something like this symphony, in person, is awesome..
      a real journey
      or even rollercoaster lol

  • @brucefelger4015
    @brucefelger4015 Před rokem +21

    The change in dynamic at 11:45 is one of the greatest i've ever seen written into a score. ppppp-ffff in a single beat.

  • @Quotenwagnerianer
    @Quotenwagnerianer Před rokem +9

    That first movement is a formal masterpiece. The way he integrates the opening of the recapitulation completely into the development section so that when the breakdown of that section is over he can start with the recapitulation of the 2nd Theme right away and maintain the dramatic narrative of the structure without having to repeat the 1st Theme first is just a genius idea.
    And then the music itself. It is as if Tchaikovsky was saying:"I'm not holding anything back anything any longer. I'm done with this. This is me. My hopes, my desires, my agony, my joy, my despair, Listen to it. Hear me!"
    The story behind it? No one knows. Tchaikovsky did not live to tell, and even if he did, he was not the kind of person who would go into details of what his music meant.
    I think it speaks quite clearly for itself. And it seems like you understood what was going on alright.

  • @capefox8321
    @capefox8321 Před 9 měsíci +5

    This symphony is like a biography of Tchaikovsky.

  • @bryceburgess5981
    @bryceburgess5981 Před rokem +6

    Tchaikovskys violin concerto is also a must listen, it’s so beautiful

  • @mutedlion74
    @mutedlion74 Před rokem +11

    I HAVE A RECOMMENDATION!! Yes. Rachmaninoff Symphony 2, Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto 2, and finally Rachmaninoff Rhapsody on a theme of Paganini Op. 43 Thank you! Just had to recommend these, I guarantee these will be some of most beautiful pieces you've ever heard!

    • @anthonynestor4337
      @anthonynestor4337 Před rokem +3

      he’s already reacted to rachs second piano concerto, as well as his third. but i definitely agree with rach’s 2nd symphony and rhapsody on a theme of paganini!!

    • @mutedlion74
      @mutedlion74 Před rokem +3

      @@anthonynestor4337 Oh, I guess I missed the piano concerto one, but good to know cause now I’m watching it!!

  • @pjkorab
    @pjkorab Před rokem +14

    There are actually quite a few wild theories about a "hidden message" behind this symphony - definitely fueled by the fact that Tchaikovsky died suddenly and rather mysteriously merely a week after conducting its premiere.
    I myself would say that if there is a hidden meaning, it lies in the whole biography of the composer. He was, at the point of composing it, an accomplished, celebrated, yet a tired and troubled man, having struggled with depression and his own homosexuality (among other things) for his entire life. This isn't a "premonition of his own death", or a "suicide note in symphony form" (some of the more sentational theories ;] ) - it was just his way of expressing himself and what he's been through at that point of his life: all the struggles, drama, beauty, joys, longings, loss, tragedies and triumphs condensed into a single piece.
    I really encourage you by the way to look up his biography (there are at least a few quite good documentaries here on yt) - it certainly made me appreciate his music even more and get a better understanding of it :)

    • @Quotenwagnerianer
      @Quotenwagnerianer Před rokem

      There is nothing mysterious about his death. All the rumours that it was anything else but a case of drinking contiminatetd water on accident and then dying of cholera, are just that. Rumours.

    • @davidevans3227
      @davidevans3227 Před 8 měsíci +1

      the contaminated water thing while seeming like the best theory i think, still seems odd, when people who know more unpick it..

    • @davidevans3227
      @davidevans3227 Před 8 měsíci

      have you read David brown?

    • @alekpoko2655
      @alekpoko2655 Před 26 dny

      Он не был гомосексуален. Он буквально переписывался с сестрой о том, как влюблялся в разных девушек. Он буквально страдал(плакал) от того, что его отвергла одна дама, он буквально пытался пожениться на оной, но ничего не вышло. Он буквально пишет в дневнике, как ходит по домам шл*х. О его гомосексуализме может намекать только один единственный текст сомнительного происхождения, который, якобы, нашла какая-то женщина после смерти оного. Известно, что у него было много поклонниц, которые могли бы хотеть таким образом отомстить ему за отвержение. Он крайне тонкая натура, крайне сентиментальная, но никак не гомосексуальная. Что вообще за отвратительная идея, что его вершина творчества - эта ода собственной сексуальной ориентации. Вы совсем свихнулись? Вы вообще не понимаете русских людей. Если так интересно узнать что-то о 6 симфонии и ее смыслах, то вот отрывок из письма брата Чайковского Модеста Ильича чешскому музыковеду Рихарду Батке:
      "...Но если Вы всё-таки хотите, я сообщу Вам то немногое, что узнал от брата.- продолжает в письме Модест Ильич. - Первая часть представляет собой его жизнь, сочетание страданий, душевных мук, с непреодолимым томлением по Великому и Возвышенному, с одной стороны, борьбу со страхом смерти, с другой - божественную радость и преклонение перед Прекрасным, перед Истиной, Добром, всем, что сулит вечность и небесное милосердие. Так как брат большую часть своей жизни прожил ярко выраженным оптимистом, он закончил первую часть возвращением второй темы. Вторая часть, по моему мнению, представляет собой ту радость жизни, которая не может сравниться с преходящими мимолетными радостями нашей повседневной жизни, радость, музыкально выраженная необыкновенным пятидольным размером. Третья часть свидетельствует об истории его развития как музыканта. Это не что иное, как шалость, игра, развлечение в начале его жизни до двадцатилетнего возраста, но потом всё это делается серьезнее и кончается достижением мировой славы. Ее и выражает триумфальный марш в конце. Четвертая часть - состояние его души в последние годы жизни - горькие разочарования и глубокие страдания. Он приходит к мысли, что слава его как художника преходяща, что сам он не в силах побороть свой ужас перед вечным Ничто, тем Ничто, где всему, что он любил и что в течение всей жизни считал вечным, угрожает бренность..."

  • @kaypie3112
    @kaypie3112 Před 12 dny

    LMaO
    “I’m so relaxed right now. Thats how calm this piece is.”
    Standby:
    Cue 6 minutes of some of the most dramatic and chaotic music ever composed.

  • @cristianalef6042
    @cristianalef6042 Před rokem +8

    All six symphonies by Tchaikovsky are superb, the ultimate drama extracted for a symphonic work in the Romantic period. It ranges from the beautiful to the tragic in an delightful way. I recommend listening to the other five as well, and when you do, look for a performance by Gennady Rozhdestvensky, a prominent Russian conductor famous for his interpretations of Russian composers, he left us a few years ago. You will not regret! This interpretations is only available in audio (including on youtube), they were recorded in the 70's, but the quality is amazing, it looks like they were recorded yesterday.
    I strongly recommend the 5th, 4th and 2nd symphonies, and also his 1st and 3rd, they are all perfect!

  • @CarlosASainzCaccia
    @CarlosASainzCaccia Před rokem +2

    Life changing indeed. The rollercoaster this symphony is. It is a testament to this symphony that you immediately inferred there was a story behind this music. I don’t think any other symphony has ever captured defeat and despair like this one. The false finale with the triumphant third movement to transition to absolute death, and not a happy death. The fourth movement tries twice to win over the forces pulling it down but it just can’t do it. The most hopeless music ever written.

  • @arjunsom2392
    @arjunsom2392 Před rokem +4

    Listen to the full Nutcracker Ballet by Tchaikovsky (the flute part in your intro is from that piece) if you want something light and fun

  • @polinamarchenko1007
    @polinamarchenko1007 Před rokem +4

    If to listen to all of the movements in a row - the whole symphony sounds like LIFE - with all its happy, joyful, romantic, fussy, sad, tragic moments, which constantly change each other. And the final movement sounds like the end of life - the mixture of regrets and a great desire to go on living which, however, ends with the last breath. An extremely rich emotional piece of music.
    (P.S. And if to know the fact that Tchaikovsky died some days after he gave premiere to this symphony - the final movement sounds grave)
    Thank you, Gidi, for the reaction!

  • @ellilvato8230
    @ellilvato8230 Před rokem +1

    Looove youre reactions!! 😍😍😍

  • @grisurok
    @grisurok Před rokem +4

    Love the way you enjoy and pomote classical music. Bless!!

  • @sashakindel3600
    @sashakindel3600 Před rokem +3

    22:56 Such contrasts within a single stretch of music are one of the things that I haven't seen in other genres (in my admittedly limited exposure to them) anywhere near as much as in classical.

  • @starrynight1657
    @starrynight1657 Před rokem +5

    I actually moved ahead to the third movement to see what you thought of that. The scintillating orchestration gives a hint at what a great composer of ballet he was.
    He also did one of the greatest ever piano concertos, his 1st.
    His greatest rival at the time was Brahms, and this symphony and Brahms 4th symphony are two of the most acclaimed pieces of this period. Overall I prefer the Brahms piece. I'm sure you could compare the 3rd movements and slow movements. Both are in a minor key.

  • @rosshart9514
    @rosshart9514 Před rokem +10

    Thank you so much for reacting to the 6th. Total triumph in the 3rd movement, dying and death in the 4th movement. Was my favourite classical piece for many years... until I heard his 5th. The 5th makes my body shake, makes my eyes wet, constricts my throat and makes my mind universal. Listen to the 5th three times if necessary. Listen AS LOUD AS YOU CAN with top earphones/speakers. IMO Tchaikovsky's 5th is, although a totally different atmosphere, on par with Beethoven's 9th.
    I'd love to see your reaction for Prokofiev's 1st Symphony, aka "Symphonie classique".

    • @BlaBla-vm5yu
      @BlaBla-vm5yu Před rokem +1

      I agree you should definitely check out the 5th! When you do, please watch the recording with Herbert von Karajan and the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra

    • @stevenklimecky4918
      @stevenklimecky4918 Před rokem +1

      This reply really touched me, since Beethoven's 9th and Tchaikovsky's 5th are my 2 favorite symphonies!

    • @kaypie3112
      @kaypie3112 Před 12 dny

      Tchaikovsky 6 was my favorite also……
      Until I heard Mahler 2.
      As good as Tchaikovsky 6 is, and it is an amazing work of art…. Mahler 2 is on a whole other level.

    • @rosshart9514
      @rosshart9514 Před 12 dny

      @@kaypie3112 Thank you. Familiar only with Mahler's 4th (which I looove), 5th and 7th. Now I will turn to his 2nd...

    • @kaypie3112
      @kaypie3112 Před 11 dny

      @@rosshart9514
      Good morning Ross.
      You will not regret it. Start with the final movement and then move on to the rest of it. As a matter of fact, to break it down ever further, start with the final 17 minutes or so of the final movement. Then learn the final movement in it’s entirety, then the whole thing from the beginning.

  • @bluerev
    @bluerev Před 2 měsíci

    Great reaction. 👍What an absolute masterpiece.. that finale is just devastating.
    I love how this part 29:43 from the 2nd mvmt resurfaces at the end of the 4th... sounds like a memory from long ago coming back in one's last moments on earth. Or is it a fate motif foreshadowing what's to come? So beautifully heartbreaking.

  • @sirtom23
    @sirtom23 Před rokem +3

    One of my favorite symphonies of all time. Also you should react to Alpine Symphony by Strauss.

  • @philipadams5386
    @philipadams5386 Před rokem +4

    Music in the 19th century became increasingly dramatic. Prior to that time, movements of symphonies and concertos had more stable moods.

  • @thethikboy
    @thethikboy Před rokem +1

    The supreme Romantic symphony - The soul poured out in uncontrolled weeping.

  • @ICanPickLocks
    @ICanPickLocks Před rokem +3

    A piece you should react to a bit later in your classical journey is Stravinsky's Rite of Spring. It's maybe the first sort of "modern" piece you should listen to. Really eye opening.

  • @daniloapostolov-dacatv1536

    I like it.

  • @gabrielavalentim1742
    @gabrielavalentim1742 Před rokem

    This piece is life changing in many ways! Would be nice if you react to Tchaykovsky Violin Concerto performed by Janine Jansen, that performance is simply amazing :)

  • @adrianoargenziano3103

    Il primo movimento e' straordinario e anche il piu' conosciuto, ma il movimento finale... che pathos... che drammaticita'... il brano che ha cambiato la storia dei finali della sinfonia.

  • @AdamNisbett
    @AdamNisbett Před rokem +3

    So was the intro for your channel created sometime after watching this originally? Cause before I saw it was a reupload I found it amusingly ironic that it was titled “First Tchaikovsky Piece” when the intro song is also by Tchaikovsky.

    • @GIDIREACTS
      @GIDIREACTS  Před rokem +5

      Lol fun fact it took me a while to realize my intro was from Tchaikovsky… I was so ashamed when I found out

  • @jackelkin2356
    @jackelkin2356 Před rokem +5

    Hey Gidi, love the videos. Think you should react to Piano Sonata in B minor by Franz Liszt!

  • @aenyx_
    @aenyx_ Před rokem +1

    khatchaturians masquerade suite is a must!

  • @burgundy.v
    @burgundy.v Před rokem +3

    This was kind of a suicide note for Tchaikovsky. I mean, you can hear it in the last movement

  • @ClassicalMusic-ds9yt
    @ClassicalMusic-ds9yt Před rokem

    🔥🔥🔥

  • @ofc.kd6-3.78
    @ofc.kd6-3.78 Před rokem

    You have to react to tchaikovsky's the nutcracker!!!!

  • @davidevans3227
    @davidevans3227 Před 8 měsíci +1

    so..
    i believe a week to ten days after Tchaikovsky showed this to the world in a concert of his music,
    he was dead?
    he'd been composing for a little over twenty years ?
    writing some of the most famous music in the world..
    then
    gone ?

  • @idkk4125
    @idkk4125 Před rokem +5

    Can you put Tchaikovsky's violin concerto on your list? It's an amazing piece, would recommend the recording by itzhak perlman. btw concerto is pronounced con-sher-to

  • @jak.cr1ym
    @jak.cr1ym Před rokem +1

    Many people during concerts mistakenly clap after the end of the 3rd movement, not realizing that there was still the forth. Tchaikovsky was presumed to have been ordered to commit suicide by the Russian government because of his sexuality, and as a result, he composed the most tragic forth movement perhaps in all of music history. He died 9 days before the premiere.

    • @antger6268
      @antger6268 Před měsícem

      If he died before the premiere of the symphony, how did he conduct the orchestra at the premiere?

  • @tomiclamor
    @tomiclamor Před rokem +3

    first (:

  • @gabrieleponziani7529
    @gabrieleponziani7529 Před 8 měsíci

    Who is the director of rhis recording?

  • @detectivehome3318
    @detectivehome3318 Před rokem +1

    11:45

  • @davidevans3227
    @davidevans3227 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Tchaikovsky knows music
    wicked bass too..
    have you read up anything about this before listening?
    always seems a very sad piece to me
    and the end...!

  • @kentinatl
    @kentinatl Před rokem

    Meant to post this on Beethoven emperor..Bradley Cooper is now making a movie about Bernstein..love your channel

  • @kentinatl
    @kentinatl Před rokem

    Soar with the eagles in the rarified air on this one

  • @whocares_bear
    @whocares_bear Před 10 měsíci

    This symphony brings death. I think it's cursed and avoid it. Love Tchaikovsky though.

  • @SEkSkapela
    @SEkSkapela Před rokem +1

    you would understand more the music changes with knowing the (probably true) behind story :/

  • @RC2214
    @RC2214 Před rokem

    This piece is from the ballet Swan Lake

  • @pesjaner1
    @pesjaner1 Před rokem

    You want the story?
    Go to the Wikipedia.

  • @jkMontreal
    @jkMontreal Před rokem +4

    Tchaikovsky committed suicide a few days after the premiere of this symphony. Maybe it was his way of saying goodbye to this world. 😢😢

    • @Dylonely42
      @Dylonely42 Před rokem +3

      He didn’t commited suicide.

    • @derekdzinich4698
      @derekdzinich4698 Před rokem +1

      I don’t think he committed suicide. The accepted story is that he died of cholera after drinking a glass of contaminated water while out to lunch. Some have argued that he may have been poisoned by the secret services due to his homosexuality, but it’s not easy to prove. Hope this helps!

    • @composaboi
      @composaboi Před rokem +2

      He was actually very proud of this piece and talked about how he was excited to write more music. I don't think it was suicide.

    • @rosshart9514
      @rosshart9514 Před rokem

      There is a novel by Klaus Mann, brother of Nobel price winner Thomas Mann, titeled "Symphonie Pathétique", interpreting Tchaikovsky's biography to understand why this symphony is as it is. Not sure if there is an english translation.

    • @Quotenwagnerianer
      @Quotenwagnerianer Před rokem

      @@Ziad3195 There is no such evidence. It's about as credible as Mozart being killed by Salieri. It's a tall tale, that fits a certain narrative.

  • @brucefelger4015
    @brucefelger4015 Před rokem +2

    Tchaikovsky was NOT a happy man.

    • @Dylonely42
      @Dylonely42 Před rokem +2

      Unfortunately

    • @rosshart9514
      @rosshart9514 Před rokem +3

      No, he wasn't. I've read his biography. Sometimes euphoric, most times depressed. You can HEAR that in his 6th. OMG...