Ah, not really. I think it's mainly very popular in the US for that, because then they get to fire cannons. It's not what anyone here would think of as "typical firework music".
🤔Well, not bad at all definitively, you wont let me lie. I mean, this piece of music sounds quite brighter and more resonant in E Major than E♭ Major, from my point of view. Obviously I recognize that E♭ Major is the original key, and I use to listen it on its original key, however I like more the way it sounds, in this key just one half-step above the original one, I believe as I said it gives it much more brightness and freshness to the way it sounds, so I enjoy that, therefor I thank you Mr Zeppeli for uploading this, its apreciable. 🙏🙏🙏 🤔Bien, no suena nada mal definitivamente, no me dejarán mentir. Me refiero a que esta pieza musical suena mucho más brillante y resonante en Mi Mayor que en Mi ♭ Mayor, desde mi punto de vista. Obviamente estoy consciente de que Mi♭ Mayor es la tonalidad original, y suelo escucharla en la susodicha tonalidad original, sin embargo me gusta mucho más la forma en la que suena, en esta tonalidad tan solo un semitono por encima de la original, siento como ya dije que le da mucho más brillo y frescura a la manera en la que suena, así que lo disfruto, por lo tanto le agradezco Sr Zeppeli por tomarse el tiempo de subir esto, se aprecia. 🙏🙏🙏
Ouverture 1812 , vera innovazione dato l'epoca ,non tanto la composizione in sé ,quanto per la scelta di collocare i cannoni e le campane , audace .Alcuni direttori usano il coro e altri addirittura i fuochi d'artificio audace anche in questo caso , non so ' se questi ultimi sono la scelta del compositore ,in questo caso da bocciare ,se la scelta viene dal direttore d'orchestra nella tentata sorte di ricevere consensi ,sarebbe da tenere nello zaino un fucile ,il coro un meno meno stona , i fuochi d'artificio belli da vedere ,ma usati in questa ouverture col rischio di non essere a tempo con le campane ,aiuto .In sostanza questa ouverture e' bella così com'e senza ulteriori fronzoli .
Nel 1813 Beethoven pubblicò "Wellingtons Sieg oder die Schlacht bei Vittoria" (op. 91), contenente cannonate, nonché gl'inni inglese e francese; tale lavoro è senz'altro trash, specie se paragonato alla coeva VII sinfonia; ma all'epoca fu assai apprezzato, credo soprattutto per motivi nazionalistici, poiché vi si celebrava una sconfitta napoleonica. Beethoven era in anticipo di 50 anni.
"La Marseillaise" is The only Official National Anthem of France. The Year 1812, Solemn Overture, Op. 49, popularly known as the 1812 Overture, is a concert overture in E♭ major written in 1880 by Russian composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. The piece commemorates Russia's successful defense of the French invasion of the country by Napoleon in 1812. Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture includes Part of the French national anthem, "La Marseillaise," and a Russian anthem as well as cannon fire and church bells. So it does have some of the French National Anthem in it but it is not their actual song. "La Marseillaise" czcams.com/video/7MQ-SC9bmp4/video.htmlfeature=shared Modern Version czcams.com/video/PIQSEq6tEVs/video.htmlfeature=shared
@@radogoji7031 I said that he did in another post but that was only when he ruled and during his rule the French National Anthem was not the 1812 overture. During Napoleon's regin 1794-1815 it was "Chant du De'Part" was the French Official National Anthem. The Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture was never and has never been the Official French National Anthem.
@@Arandohistorian202 In 1812 the French National Anthem was "La Marseillaise" which part of is featured in the 1812 overture by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. "La Marseillaise" is the national anthem of France. The song was written in 1792 by Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle in Strasbourg after the declaration of war by France against Austria, and was originally titled "Chant de guerre pour l'Armée du Rhin" ("War Song for the Army of the Rhine"). "Le Chant du départ" is a revolutionary and war song written by Étienne Méhul and Marie-Joseph Chénier in 1794. It was the official anthem of the French Empire, and it is currently the unofficial regional anthem of French Guiana and the presidential anthem of France.
Not many people know, but Tchaikovsky was also a STAND USER. His stand: THE NUTCRACKER has the abillity to STOP TIME and make you go back to the 19th century, hear some of the best music ever, and GET YOU BACK INSTANTLY. QUITE FEARSOME.
"You like Classical Music. That must be relaxing."
My cat decided to go sleep on the floor. Suddenly sleeping next to the woofer on my desk wasn't so good.
Cannonfire doesn't quite compare to the woundings of a startled cat.
@@fnkjesnfkjn debatable
As someone with perfect pitch, this recording is screwing with my head!
If they have Beethoven, we have Tchaikovsky too.
Bah! Before I heard the audio I was like "aCtuAlLy it's in E-flat", and then I heard the first chord...
O 👑 do ballet, o mais importante compositor da Rússia. UM GÊNIO PRA ETERNIDADE.❤❤❤❤❤❤
Master piece from begining till the end!!
A favorite worldwide to accompany fireworks.
Ah, not really. I think it's mainly very popular in the US for that, because then they get to fire cannons. It's not what anyone here would think of as "typical firework music".
@@drsnova7313 even then it's only the last bit that's good for fireworks :D
🤔Well, not bad at all definitively, you wont let me lie. I mean, this piece of music sounds quite brighter and more resonant in E Major than E♭ Major, from my point of view. Obviously I recognize that E♭ Major is the original key, and I use to listen it on its original key, however I like more the way it sounds, in this key just one half-step above the original one, I believe as I said it gives it much more brightness and freshness to the way it sounds, so I enjoy that, therefor I thank you Mr Zeppeli for uploading this, its apreciable. 🙏🙏🙏
🤔Bien, no suena nada mal definitivamente, no me dejarán mentir. Me refiero a que esta pieza musical suena mucho más brillante y resonante en Mi Mayor que en Mi ♭ Mayor, desde mi punto de vista. Obviamente estoy consciente de que Mi♭ Mayor es la tonalidad original, y suelo escucharla en la susodicha tonalidad original, sin embargo me gusta mucho más la forma en la que suena, en esta tonalidad tan solo un semitono por encima de la original, siento como ya dije que le da mucho más brillo y frescura a la manera en la que suena, así que lo disfruto, por lo tanto le agradezco Sr Zeppeli por tomarse el tiempo de subir esto, se aprecia. 🙏🙏🙏
Wow the Band Of Brothers sounds so much like the first minute of this piece. It’s quite surprising.
@10:00 Exactly at this point and a many times, Indiana Jones has been VICTORIOUS IN HIS ADVENTURES!!!!!!!
Absolute bliss
Le seul morceau musical où l'on entend la Marseillaise, le son du canon qui tonne et le son des cloches d'une cathédrale...
СПАСИБО
Belíssimo poema sinfônico do genial Tchaikovsky.
thanks for sharing ...
Fantastico Tchaikovsky bravo
AMEN
Ouverture 1812 , vera innovazione dato l'epoca ,non tanto la composizione in sé ,quanto per la scelta di collocare i cannoni e le campane , audace .Alcuni direttori usano il coro e altri addirittura i fuochi d'artificio audace anche in questo caso , non so ' se questi ultimi sono la scelta del compositore ,in questo caso da bocciare ,se la scelta viene dal direttore d'orchestra nella tentata sorte di ricevere consensi ,sarebbe da tenere nello zaino un fucile ,il coro un meno meno stona , i fuochi d'artificio belli da vedere ,ma usati in questa ouverture col rischio di non essere a tempo con le campane ,aiuto .In sostanza questa ouverture e' bella così com'e senza ulteriori fronzoli .
Nel 1813 Beethoven pubblicò "Wellingtons Sieg oder die Schlacht bei Vittoria" (op. 91), contenente cannonate, nonché gl'inni inglese e francese; tale lavoro è senz'altro trash, specie se paragonato alla coeva VII sinfonia; ma all'epoca fu assai apprezzato, credo soprattutto per motivi nazionalistici, poiché vi si celebrava una sconfitta napoleonica. Beethoven era in anticipo di 50 anni.
"La Marseillaise" is The only Official National Anthem of France.
The Year 1812, Solemn Overture, Op. 49, popularly known as the 1812 Overture, is a concert overture in E♭ major written in 1880 by Russian composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. The piece commemorates Russia's successful defense of the French invasion of the country by Napoleon in 1812.
Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture includes Part of the French national anthem, "La Marseillaise," and a Russian anthem as well as cannon fire and church bells.
So it does have some of the French National Anthem in it but it is not their actual song.
"La Marseillaise"
czcams.com/video/7MQ-SC9bmp4/video.htmlfeature=shared
Modern Version
czcams.com/video/PIQSEq6tEVs/video.htmlfeature=shared
I think you're ignoring or forgetting the fact that Napoleon actually banned the Marseillaise. Yep, damn right!
@@radogoji7031
I said that he did in another post but that was only when he ruled and during his rule the French National Anthem was not the 1812 overture.
During Napoleon's regin 1794-1815 it was "Chant du De'Part" was the French Official National Anthem.
The Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture was never and has never been the Official French National Anthem.
I don’t think they were suggesting it was, 1812 overture is pro-Russian@@Zeaiclies
This arrangement sounds interesting lol
You could actually here the Russian Empire anthem more (I’m assuming it was originally in E Major)
hear
It sounds nice to me, and yes it is also incredibly interesting, and as I like E mayor a lot, I agree with you 😉😉😉
I have hallucinations to this
Wow!
Wohhh
The score was written in E flat major.
Yes, and if it were in E, my Eb baritone sax part would be in 7 sharps. Tchaikovsky wrote it in Eb for the band instruments he added at the finale.
Have you used a capo and use the fingering for D maj?
11:31
12:03
13:58!!!!
V❤
hehe potato fairy taco hehe
Tom and jerry vibes
I used to live Tom and Jerry. Thanks for reminding m3
French national anthem??
In parts of the piece. It was composed to commemorate Napoleon's defeat, So the piece is about Russia and Napoleon.
Took a minute, but yeah...
❤
"La Marseillaise" is the national anthem of France
@@Zeaicliesit wasn’t at the time of writing this piece I believe it was La Chant Du Depart at the time of writing this song
@@Arandohistorian202
In 1812 the French National Anthem was "La Marseillaise" which part of is featured in the 1812 overture by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky.
"La Marseillaise" is the national anthem of France. The song was written in 1792 by Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle in Strasbourg after the declaration of war by France against Austria, and was originally titled "Chant de guerre pour l'Armée du Rhin" ("War Song for the Army of the Rhine").
"Le Chant du départ" is a revolutionary and war song written by Étienne Méhul and Marie-Joseph Chénier in 1794. It was the official anthem of the French Empire, and it is currently the unofficial regional anthem of French Guiana and the presidential anthem of France.
Why in E? Written in Eb.
Please pray for protection from cult bullies..
jojo reference
degenerates like you belong on a cross.
we cant expect God to do all the work.
Not many people know, but Tchaikovsky was also a STAND USER. His stand: THE NUTCRACKER has the abillity to STOP TIME and make you go back to the 19th century, hear some of the best music ever, and GET YOU BACK INSTANTLY. QUITE FEARSOME.
hommage à la France....quelle délice...
No es cierto 😅
@@terrorplayero2099es verdad, no es cierto
Borodino revisited
мы русские! и мы победим!!
Yes thanks to your army for having defeated the disturb mind crazy selfish Napoleon who only took France into war across Europe....
Well-played violin solo at the beginning, BUT they left out the Russian Hymn! Two Thumbs down for that!
I just remember v for vendetta scene at the end
Same 👍
THEMEFROMGATESOFHEAVEN.