Confutatis K.626 - Scrolling Score

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  • čas přidán 25. 10. 2011
  • Performer & Album Info - 7:35
    Please donate to Gerubach's Scrolling Score Project by going to www.gerubach.com

Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @alexmccullough1961
    @alexmccullough1961 Před 5 lety +918

    Mozart: we ended in F major
    Salieri: yes
    Mozart: a minor
    Salieri : ...

    • @MaxBec786
      @MaxBec786 Před 4 lety +77

      F major == D minor, Mozart takes the next scale at the perfect fifth, what Salieri doesn't understand ?!

    • @ForestHillsDr
      @ForestHillsDr Před 4 lety +29

      Maxime Becerro isn’t A minor the fifth of D minor

    • @cosmicanbu
      @cosmicanbu Před 4 lety +19

      @@ForestHillsDr In Dm Melodic and Harmonic, the Dominant is Major.

    • @santimazo4037
      @santimazo4037 Před 4 lety +11

      What an underrated comment

    • @therealAZLN
      @therealAZLN Před 4 lety +4

      A minor is the fifth of F major, so the transition makes sense.

  • @lohphat
    @lohphat Před 8 lety +1759

    This is BRILLIANT.
    With the voiceover and the simple notation, you've captured the moment of creation.

    • @MrTheKingOfGame
      @MrTheKingOfGame Před 5 lety +26

      is the film amadeus

    • @EgyptologyLessons
      @EgyptologyLessons Před 4 lety +2

      lohphat amazingly done a work of passion, it can only be.

    • @EgyptologyLessons
      @EgyptologyLessons Před 4 lety +3

      Amazingly done! This can only be a work of passion...it shines through for all the world to see! 🙌🏼🙌🏼

    • @Hyperlink1337
      @Hyperlink1337 Před 4 lety +3

      ... you've never written music a damn day in your life have you?

    • @bmxultra2333
      @bmxultra2333 Před 3 lety +4

      Most astonishing is that he stopped before notating this brilliant segment... already finished in his head! It's absolutely humbling.

  • @JudgeFredd
    @JudgeFredd Před 10 lety +788

    I vote for it as the best YT video.

    • @freethrice
      @freethrice Před 4 lety +2

      Best under rated Composer. MOZART!

    • @MrPabgon
      @MrPabgon Před 4 lety +12

      @@freethrice He's not underrated at all

    • @roberacevedo8232
      @roberacevedo8232 Před 3 lety +12

      @@freethrice Mozart is underrated? Lol

    • @xyz.ijk.
      @xyz.ijk. Před 3 lety

      Yes, I agree. This gives life to the infinite.

    • @rogercline5377
      @rogercline5377 Před 3 lety +5

      He is incredibly highly rated, which might still be underrated.

  • @gerubach
    @gerubach  Před 11 lety +188

    It's a shame that Mozart departed us at such a young age. The Requiem, the Clarinet concerto & his late symphonies began to show a new direction in his composition style. One can only image what Mozart would have created along side Beethoven and Schubert! It would have been wonderful but humanity tends to reward geniuses not in their lifetime but after they are dead and buried for years.

    • @superchaserbr
      @superchaserbr Před 2 lety

      When Mozart went Romantic. czcams.com/video/1BkZ8ci8_k4/video.html

    • @bglidden1962
      @bglidden1962 Před 2 lety +6

      In watching Mozart's death scene in the movie, I wonder if he would have been treatable by today's medical technology. His cause of death is unknown, but there is lots of speculation. Who knows how much more incredible music he would have written had he lived longer!

    • @CptRomulus
      @CptRomulus Před 2 lety +4

      For some reason, I have this feeling that had Mozart lived another 20-30 years, his style would have maybe evolved into something along the lines of Schubert’s. I say this because Schubert’s style started in a late classical style, then moved into a more romantic style, while keeping elements of the classical style, similar in my opinion to Mozart’s. In fact, parts of the first movement of Schubert’s 9th remind me of the fourth movement of Mozart’s 41st symphony. What do you think?

    • @Mahlercougar
      @Mahlercougar Před 2 lety +1

      So true! I agree with you 100% no doubt there would be a style change, as Mozart would be influenced by other newer music that would have emerged. After all look at the great mass in C minor that he left incomplete. Musicologists have stated that the great mass would have been greater than the requiem..

    • @31deenero1
      @31deenero1 Před 2 lety

      Quite right!!!

  • @EcstasyJesus
    @EcstasyJesus Před 8 lety +749

    when im at the Restaurant:''you're going too fast! DO YOU HAVE IT!!?''

    • @dannyevans89
      @dannyevans89 Před 8 lety +87

      One moment please

    • @nigelfuentes5763
      @nigelfuentes5763 Před 7 lety +8

      +Daniel Evans there

    • @CH3LS3A
      @CH3LS3A Před 7 lety +32

      show me. The whole thing.

    • @altpudding4776
      @altpudding4776 Před 7 lety +108

      me: "the fries goes with the mayonaise"
      waiter: "no, no, i don't understand"
      me: "LISTEN to me, the fries goes with mayo, alright?"
      waiter: "yes, yes i see now"
      me: "good"

    • @tylsimys67
      @tylsimys67 Před 7 lety +7

      Killed me.

  • @1MTSRider
    @1MTSRider Před 4 lety +83

    This was from the scene in the movie Amadeus that changed me forever. I was a teenager watching this movie with my parents who rented the movie and brought it home on a rainy day. I had no interest in classical music or operas, in fact despised it, and didn't want to watch the movie. But what else to do on a rainy day? So I watched, and became interested in the movie somewhere around the halfway point. Then this scene came up, I was amazed by all the terms and how many parts there was to put this all together. It caught my attention, and I was blown away by how it could be put together in the mind, all the parts, and how it came together so beautifully. Listening to each part, the voices and the instruments as it was described, then put all together changed that rebellious teenager into a person who enjoys classical music and opera, and continues today still some 35 years later. I'm still amazed when I listen to this scene.
    I greatly appreciate the work you put into this video, showing the music and mixing the dialogue from the movie. This scene forever changed me, and it's so wonderful to see it now too. Thank you.

    • @georgewernerjr9362
      @georgewernerjr9362 Před rokem

      And with this confession, as a previously frustrated classical music devotee since youth (40 years), I no longer feel quite so alone.

    • @Tenchi707
      @Tenchi707 Před rokem

      dude how could not become interesting in the movie from the beginning that was the best part, the starting was the strongest part of the film, the was Salieri is narrating the events and describing it was amazing

  • @robbyburns5822
    @robbyburns5822 Před 5 lety +59

    I love how at 3:09 the timpani and trumpet line moves back and forth when they are arguing XD

  • @lorderik237
    @lorderik237 Před 7 lety +517

    This video made me pay attention to parts of the piece that I never even noticed, and now it sounds significantly different to me.

    • @justanotherbohemian3827
      @justanotherbohemian3827 Před 7 lety +23

      Airton Sbruzzi It is really incredible. So is the movie. This scene is one of the best scenes ever appeared in a film.

    • @corner559
      @corner559 Před 6 lety

      Can you explain in more detail?

    • @r0yce
      @r0yce Před 5 lety

      Ikr

    • @suep9445
      @suep9445 Před 4 lety +1

      That's the joy I experience when I'm rehearsing this music - I get to know it in such depth, noticing exquisite subtleties. Rehearsal or performance, I look forward to each moment!

  • @mathteacher1729
    @mathteacher1729 Před 8 lety +1079

    This is one of the greatest feats of editing I have ever seen, period. Absolutely masterful. Mozart's music is so dense and intricate that one can get lost in it - but you present it in a lucid and astonishingly clear manner. I thoroughly enjoyed this video and will be subscribing. Bravo!

    • @peterklein3354
      @peterklein3354 Před 6 lety +9

      I agree. A great bravo to the director who paved the way though.

    • @cookie_bunches
      @cookie_bunches Před 5 lety +1

      great way of wording this :')

    • @wanderlngdays
      @wanderlngdays Před 4 lety +11

      Joe DiNoto Mozart’s music is not dense. On the contrary, it’s usually cristal clear. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t think that’s bad, and I LOVE Mozart’s music

    • @KyleNally
      @KyleNally Před 4 lety +7

      @@wanderlngdays I wouldn't say "crystal clear"; musicologists have been analyzing it since forever. Not "dense", either.
      Perhaps "layered" is a better term. Idk.

    • @mathieulad897
      @mathieulad897 Před 3 lety +1

      @@KyleNally Mozart music has this feeling to me that it feels obvious (in a good way i love it)
      On the other hand Litzs music feel dense for exemple

  • @IBBIAZ
    @IBBIAZ Před 7 lety +400

    I died watching the staves coming in and out at 3:09

  • @baronvg
    @baronvg Před 8 lety +396

    OMFG this was absolutely awesome. If there was an entire movie that was just this, Mozart dictating, I would so watch it and be happy doing so. Too bad it was just this one scene at the ass end of the movie lol. Thank you for this upload and the work that went behind it.

  • @alexparadise91
    @alexparadise91 Před 4 lety +35

    Amadeus is my favorite "musical biopic". Even though Mozart and Salieri were never rivals, its such a powerful drama, and a unique character study. I love how Salieri is consumed with envy yet he is the only one who truly sees Mozart's genius. This scene is like Salieri is killing Mozart with the music that only Mozart could write. So much nuance and emotion.

  • @luisortega4991
    @luisortega4991 Před 9 lety +240

    Whoever did this should earn at least 10% of whatever Peter Shaffer, Milos Forman, F. Murray Abraham or Tom Hulce made out of this wonderful scene... Amazing, thank you.

    • @valentinalatte856
      @valentinalatte856 Před 8 lety

      4 t5g

    • @valentinalatte856
      @valentinalatte856 Před 8 lety +1

      tgt

    • @lesterdiamond5
      @lesterdiamond5 Před 8 lety +1

      +Luis Ortega Sánchez I agree! Amazing job! That was incredibly awesome! This youtube member brings a lot of value to YT users.

    • @georgeofhamilton
      @georgeofhamilton Před 5 lety

      How would you calculate how much a filmmaker makes out of a single scene?

  • @argylegrant4073
    @argylegrant4073 Před 8 lety +214

    This is insanely entertaining!!!

  • @captainkev10
    @captainkev10 Před 7 lety +423

    At 3:42, when Mozart says , "Now for the real fire" He's referring to the eternal flames of woe.

    • @vanmoody
      @vanmoody Před 6 lety +10

      Truthfully we preachers preach because we believe in those flames. It's why we have a passion to reach people with the message of redemption through the Gospel of Jesus Christ so that people can escape those eternal flames of woe. Like Richard Baxter said in his work, "The Reformed Pastor". "Preach about Hell, but only do so with tears."

    • @marekvodicka
      @marekvodicka Před 6 lety +74

      Or he's referring to how FIRE the next riff is gonna be

    • @camsun7326
      @camsun7326 Před 5 lety

      xD

    • @andream.464
      @andream.464 Před 5 lety

      @@marekvodicka in the original text of the play it refers to the eternal fire, if I recall well..

    • @jmitterii2
      @jmitterii2 Před 4 lety +6

      @@vanmoody As a pastor than you would know it's all contrived via ancient Greek and Roman pantheon belief about Tartarus for those who were especially mean spirited and absolutely wicked in life, and has no notion in any thing of the various gospels nor old testament Torah; purgatory nor hell is ever explained in any detail other than medieval and renaissance entertainment narratives like Dante's Inferno.
      Such morbidity is used to incite emotional fear to spark irrationality into joining whatever cult. There is no substantiation to it, and if there is any sort of divine punishment as if there is any afterlife whatsoever, pushing that garbage may just get you just a small taste of that empty fear mongering.
      If there are any gods or god worthy of worship, an infinite punishment for finite crimes would never be something in consideration unless such divinities or divinity itself is pure evil utterly unworthy of any thanks for anything, let alone worship.

  • @corporal1107
    @corporal1107 Před 4 lety +12

    As a composer I get so much out of this. The many voices all having their affect on time. Setting the tone and flow. The conversation, tension and response, tension and build, ascension and release. What he mastered was communication, perfect human conflict and resolve. It is the human art of understanding the music it’s voice, the ear it’s canvass and the heart it’s victim and victor. Pure genius.

  • @leonessapientia5645
    @leonessapientia5645 Před 5 lety +73

    “Help me in my final condition” he penned as he drew his last breath.
    Rest In Peace, Mozart; your genius is immortal as your soul is.

    • @MisterPathetique
      @MisterPathetique Před 3 lety +2

      Please stop with this kind of romanticized gibberish

    • @leonessapientia5645
      @leonessapientia5645 Před 3 lety +4

      Pathetique If Mozart is not worth romanticization then who or what is?
      If there is a god - or some nameless all powerful divine force - Mozart was one of the highest amongst men who come closest to him.

    • @JoseMartinez-ig4lx
      @JoseMartinez-ig4lx Před 2 lety

      @@leonessapientia5645 despite living entirely in his indulgences, I would agree

    • @christ-abel8774
      @christ-abel8774 Před 2 lety +1

      @@MisterPathetique you sir couldn't have chosen a more suitable name. Its just perfect with your comment. The music of that man is powerful, majestic and, yes, romantic in itself. Mozart was a forerunner of the romantic musical current. So it's actually accurate to speak of him using that word.

    • @christ-abel8774
      @christ-abel8774 Před 2 lety

      @@tinyrockyplanet8953 you got that right.

  • @rythianblacktheblackemporium

    Mozart "consigned to flames of woe.
    ...do you believe in it?"
    Saliari "what?"
    Mozart "A fire that never dies. Burning you forever..."
    Saliari "oh yes..."
    Mozart "it possible?"

    • @jasilcas
      @jasilcas Před 4 lety +9

      Oh yeah, Salieri knew what he was talking about!

    • @Arnoudbr
      @Arnoudbr Před 3 lety +3

      @@jasilcas The fact Salieri was a true believer is the main point of the story.

    • @wakkowarner4288
      @wakkowarner4288 Před 3 lety +5

      @@Arnoudbr Despite Amadeus being Wolfie's middle name, I'm convinced that in this movie title, the word Amadeus was referring to Salieri... his "Love of God" brought him to do some terrible things. Amadeus = Lover of God.

    • @bmxultra2333
      @bmxultra2333 Před 3 lety +1

      "That woe thing I just mentioned. Good Lord, no wonder your music is so terrible." -- Wolfgang

    • @alecfoster4413
      @alecfoster4413 Před 3 lety +1

      @@wakkowarner4288 A love of God does not lead folks to envy and theft.

  • @mvygantas
    @mvygantas Před 8 lety +94

    this is one of the most fascinating videos I have seen on youtube.

  • @TheJimboguitar
    @TheJimboguitar Před 5 lety +18

    122 people are consigned to flames of woe

  • @Quim141
    @Quim141 Před 8 lety +81

    This video is just one of the best things you can find in CZcams. Thank you so much, GeruBach.

  • @MartinHatchuel
    @MartinHatchuel Před 8 lety +156

    I read music only very poorly, but I love music greatly. Your video helped me to understand this amazing piece better than ever before. Bravo and thank you

    • @kevinwaag9976
      @kevinwaag9976 Před 6 lety

      same with me :) mostly the lyrics and how he jumps from instruments overlay

    • @jmitterii2
      @jmitterii2 Před 2 lety

      I think it's great for anybody as you get to appreciate and maybe make your own tunes up, on the various layering and effects that can be achieved.
      This was my favorite part of the entire movie.

  • @nicosuarez6962
    @nicosuarez6962 Před 4 lety +3

    5:16 When you finally see the result of all the process, you realize that Mozart's music is simply MAGICAL.

  • @mwelle1
    @mwelle1 Před 8 lety +61

    This is the best demonstration video I have ever seen on CZcams. Well done. I never realized how accurate the movie "Amadeus" was during this scene.

  • @Paracelsus72
    @Paracelsus72 Před 12 lety +3

    The passage starting "Oro supplex et acclinis" is perhaps the finest sequence in the entire work as the music descends semitone by semitone into the dark.

  • @jearmin
    @jearmin Před 6 lety +43

    I can´t hardly imagine the creativity and long work done for the elaboration of this video. Thanks for enlightening those of us who know very little about music notation but admire Moazrt's genius.

  • @nicholasjoost5111
    @nicholasjoost5111 Před 7 lety +95

    Salieri was willing to trade an eternity in hell if it meant he could write music that would be deemed blessed

    • @Jessicaunarex
      @Jessicaunarex Před 7 lety +19

      Which is ironic to faux artists today, who only seem to ever care about money and adulation. Mozart didn't have either, yet Salieri recognized his greatness (as according to this film). Unfortunately, in the real world, if you don't have the fame, no one cares.

    • @zaidshah4535
      @zaidshah4535 Před 4 lety +6

      The movie was based on a fictional play.

    • @christinemusselman5499
      @christinemusselman5499 Před 4 lety +2

      Well, you know it was a movie, right? It's a pity that the filmmakers couldn't convey the genius of Mozart without horribly maligning Salieri, who was by all accounts a gentleman who did not plot against Mozart. I agree he was a useful plot device but it would never have been done if he were alive to defend himself.

    • @christinemusselman5499
      @christinemusselman5499 Před 4 lety

      @@Jessicaunarex I would argue that Mozart did have fame. The Courts of Europe patronized him. The aristocracy did too. Unfortunately, in those days composers were treated as little more than artisans and treated like trades people. Beethoven, however, changed that forever.

    • @wakkowarner4288
      @wakkowarner4288 Před 3 lety

      @@christinemusselman5499 Beethoven was the first punk rocker. He shook his fist at the Aristocracy and yelled at the top of his lungs. The Choral Fantasy and the 9th Symphony are headbanger's delights. The Choral Fantasy is brutally violent in places.

  • @freerice9595
    @freerice9595 Před 9 lety +24

    Literally makes me cry this song is so beautiful

  • @michaelkarnerfors9545
    @michaelkarnerfors9545 Před 3 lety +12

    00:57 "A minor... A minor..." "Yes? Confutatis, A minor..."
    What happened here is that Tom Hulce's earpiece - where he was getting recorded directions from Sir Neville - failed, so he was waiting for the cue. But because of the excellent rapport that Hulce and Abraham had, they acted right though it, and that is what we see in film.
    Hulce et al confirms this in "The Making of..." video.

  • @EASYTIGER10
    @EASYTIGER10 Před 9 lety +56

    That was just fantastic.

  • @akanecortich8197
    @akanecortich8197 Před 4 lety +6

    Made me feel so sad. Mozart's last breaths of genius for our world. What could he have given us in another 20 years of writing, he was getting more and more amazing. Symphony 40 omg :(

  • @Antebios
    @Antebios Před 8 lety +7

    When you see it like that, only one word comes to mind: GENIUS.

  • @762girl
    @762girl Před 9 lety +23

    I am stunned. You not only have an artist's vision, you have the skill. Words cannot describe what your video gave to me. What I've learned reading about Mozart, his work and life, the film Amadeus magnificently crafted (albeit with poetic license), finding the script and discovering it so moving I wept. Then this I discovered immediately after. I'm not a musician so I don't have the gift of visualizing the structure, geometry and intertwined threads - this gave me a beautiful taste of it.
    p.s. Discovered my passion for Classical music at age three before I could read....by myself. Thank you. This is a gift.

  • @ArthurCSchaper
    @ArthurCSchaper Před 3 lety +3

    Nine years later, and I am still listening and WATCHING this great video. Great work, Gerubach!!!!!!!!

  • @XxElectricJesusXx
    @XxElectricJesusXx Před 7 lety +6

    The "listen to me!!" Part cracked me up for some reason. Amazing video

  • @stevenwatchorn9816
    @stevenwatchorn9816 Před 4 lety +8

    This great scene changed the way I listened to music (and perceived most art), and this great video changed the way I view this scene. Bravissimo!

  • @cesaracosta1950
    @cesaracosta1950 Před 5 lety +9

    MOZART: GENIUS
    SALLIERI: AMAZING TALENT
    EDITION: MAGNIFICIENT, CONGRATULATIONS!!!

  • @barnonekingston5719
    @barnonekingston5719 Před 4 lety +3

    This is unbelievable. Mozart’s music makes my heart melt. Watching it like this shows just how complicated, brilliant and perfectly thought out his music was before he put it to paper

  • @Dirkovic80
    @Dirkovic80 Před 11 lety +5

    the second voca me always almost crushes my head , so perfect
    the short chromatic passage in the violins come so heavenly and the rhythm
    thank you very much for your uploads, recognized them unfortunately just a few days ago
    great job

  • @tomhite3510
    @tomhite3510 Před 7 lety +17

    Just brilliant. A brilliant presentation. I'm going to show this to my daughter so she can see how music is written and understood and communicated.

    • @bikkies
      @bikkies Před 4 lety +3

      Yes. This is the sort of video that brings to life the clashes, conflicts, tension that each voice imparts on another. In total you hear the complete work, but as you break it down you begin to uncover a rich tapestry of harmony, dissonance, resolution. You can see the same if you analyse a Bach organ fugue or even his two part inventions. I originally wrote "simpler" inventions, but they are anything but simple. Even two voices can combine to be much greater than the sum of their parts. Bach and Mozart taught us that.

  • @LCPD9111
    @LCPD9111 Před 9 lety +48

    Genius work

  • @NelsonClick
    @NelsonClick Před 9 lety +145

    Music composition is not just difficult to do well but entirely awkward and always counter intuitive. It’s conceptual, abstract and tedious. There is nothing glamorous about it. It is/was that way for every composer. There is no way around it. The reason Mozart is admired by fellow composers is because this earliest primordial stage of composition; which is where all the real work and authentic innovation is done, came relatively effortless for Mozart. That’s why he, his work, this scene and this video is great.

    • @Ekvitarius
      @Ekvitarius Před 5 lety +4

      There is nothing more intuitive than music, I can assure you of that.

    • @Zimzamzoom95
      @Zimzamzoom95 Před 2 lety +4

      Music is the most intuitive art there is, this comment is absurd.

    • @tipdub
      @tipdub Před 2 lety

      I'm not a composer, so I'm certainly interested in hearing more from others. But I could see how there is a craft behind composition that is not so inspired and intuitive. In writing, you experience constant obstacles to finding your voice. It's important to have a process to fall back upon no matter how much passion that you have. Why shouldn't music composition be the same way?
      If you can't find the right chord that completes a progression, you may need to pull the notes out of each chord in the progression and see what else you can build with them. There's nothing particularly inspired or effortless about that. It seems like people are getting hung up over the word "intuitive" as if you're saying that composition doesn't require creativity, but I don't think that's what you mean, and there's actually truth behind your point.

  • @iagoink
    @iagoink Před 4 lety +1

    Wolfgang is faced with the end of his life and fear of suffering in hell, but still can't stop to write and feel music. Truly piece of art.

  • @taylarolympia2202
    @taylarolympia2202 Před 2 lety +2

    I really love this version because you can hear each part before hearing how magnificent it is together.

  • @MichaelMomohara
    @MichaelMomohara Před 2 lety +4

    This video is such a work of art! The amount of thought that went into editing this is incredible. It tells the story as effectively as the film itself! 😊

  • @Amusiclover1954
    @Amusiclover1954 Před 10 lety +50

    Mozart is the most incredible composer who ever lived. This Requiem was composed 222 years ago and it is still being played today. You don't have to know about classical music to love Mozart's music, you just have to hear it. The compositions are incredible and the breadth of Mozart's music is tremendous. No one like him came before and no one like him came after. I often wonder how incredible he would had been if he had lived past 35.

    • @mtv565
      @mtv565 Před 10 lety +7

      No, Bach is the most incredible composer.

    • @captainmorgan757
      @captainmorgan757 Před 9 lety +3

      mtv565 Gentlemen, go to your corners and come out fighting at the sound of the bell.

    • @mtv565
      @mtv565 Před 9 lety +3

      captainmorgan757 . There is no fight, in classical music circles, Bach is the supreme composer. Mozart is just 2nd best.

    • @MidoseitoAkage
      @MidoseitoAkage Před 9 lety +1

      In my opignion Mozart, Beethoven and Bach i love them all !

    • @jonweinraub
      @jonweinraub Před 9 lety +1

      The amazing thing is how this music creeps into our daily lives without even realising it. What Mozart, Beethoven, and Bach had done, I wish I can go back in time and witness this music being performed for their premiers. How awesome it must of had been to experience. Though not related to this portion of the Requiem, but it is sorta funny how they play Lacrimosa during the hotels.com adverts

  • @chipheotube
    @chipheotube Před 12 lety +2

    I don't know how many thousands of videos I've watched on youtube over the years, but this is the first one that ever moved me enough to comment. Stumbling upon this made my day. I've absolutely loved this scene in Amadeus for decades, since I first saw it. Thank you so much for all the work you put into this and your other videos as well.

  • @gerubach
    @gerubach  Před 11 lety +12

    Thanks kauczuqo, but I'm not a genius. I'm just the messenger. Mozart & Sir Neville Marriner & the performers of the St. Martin-in-the-Fields are the real geniuses!

  • @davidsong8751
    @davidsong8751 Před 10 lety +5

    I watched this video months ago, but since then once in a while I need to come back and watch it again. The song itself is no doubt spectacular, but I really do think it's the video that really catches how much of a genius Mozart was. This truly deserves more views.

  • @dengeondengeon
    @dengeondengeon Před 5 lety +3

    Tears in my eyes at "sotto voce". Every time. Pure perfection!

  • @georgeofhamilton
    @georgeofhamilton Před 5 lety +1

    Those horns by themselves are divine.

  • @jsaavedr1
    @jsaavedr1 Před 3 lety +1

    I can't even fathom how Mozart heard every single instrumentation and voices in his head and how he wanted every part to play a certain phrase. Remarkable!

  • @SeanThomasCross
    @SeanThomasCross Před 8 lety +23

    this was one of the most awesome things I've seen. I will now be marathoning all your videos.

  • @cookie_bunches
    @cookie_bunches Před 5 lety +7

    this video is probably the most perfectly edited video I've stumbled upon in a long time, this was AMAZING

  • @elanorallmann
    @elanorallmann Před 5 lety +1

    I am literally in tears, this shook me to core to see it written down like I was there. I just had to start to sing along the voices. It's incredible. I don't know how I am even able to write this right now, as I would not be able to actually say these words out loud, my mouth would not be able to move to form the words...

  • @mariogalileo
    @mariogalileo Před 10 lety +8

    This, THIS is the BEST Christmas present I have ever gotten for myself. I cannot tell you how absolutely wonderful, exciting, emotional, humbled, grateful, and happy this video made me. For the Musical Nerd that I am, I can only quote from the movie Farinelli, "Vous, Monsieur. Vous-etes, la raison de mon premier orgasme musicale". Perhaps, not my first... but anyone that truly appreciates ART and this talent will understand where I am coming from. THANK YOU!!!!! A million times Thank You for taking the time to take on such an endeavor!

  • @tonysimulinas2011
    @tonysimulinas2011 Před 8 lety +6

    I'm stunned at the very least! I cannot describe how this video effects me, I play several instruments, and read music , and have tried my feeble hand at writing it, but this just blows me away!

  • @cheowesley860
    @cheowesley860 Před 5 lety +5

    This is pure genius. The way he explains everything makes this even more amazing.

  • @floresffx4
    @floresffx4 Před 12 lety

    Left without words. One of my favorite scenes. Just incredible video. Incredible. Thank you.

  • @Valygarx
    @Valygarx Před 12 lety +1

    Fantastic! I've always loved this scene and your animation took it to a new level!

  • @velveetaslingshot
    @velveetaslingshot Před 7 lety +6

    Truly amazing. Thank you to whomever took the time to make this.

  • @terry3254
    @terry3254 Před 5 lety +4

    This is like seeing the children I've seen the unimaginable beauty of being explained to me. It is SO bloody awesome and helps to show a glimpse of genius, but my god, Mozart could very nearly paint heaven and hell using the very limited pallette of sound. I wish my mind was as able to comprehend half of what my heart does though.

  • @wilsonpereira1307
    @wilsonpereira1307 Před 4 lety

    Absolutely wonderful! BRAVO!

  • @jeaneltawil
    @jeaneltawil Před 5 lety

    I absolutely loved your video. It's an ingenious way to bring this fantastic scene from Amadeus to an even higher level. Really well done

  • @arindo
    @arindo Před 8 lety +8

    Thank you for this! This helps me understand the requiem even more. I deeply appreciate your effort!

  • @Alejoramos3696
    @Alejoramos3696 Před 8 lety +3

    This is the most wonderful thing I've ever seen. I saw the movie yesterday and loved this scene and now I found out this wonderful video.
    I loved every single thing of this video, you did even show Salieri hesitating when writing down!
    This is definitely one of the most underrated channels on CZcams, every single thing Gerubach does is amazing!
    Greeting from Colombia!

  • @HDougMatsuoka
    @HDougMatsuoka Před 9 lety

    Wow. Thanks so much for your time and effort in illuminating the process...

  • @sharonhesse8867
    @sharonhesse8867 Před 8 lety +1

    What an awesome depiction of the scene--great for music students!

  • @wolfgangkhkrieg7045
    @wolfgangkhkrieg7045 Před 6 lety +5

    I love this video, I could sing the bass part for the first time in my life. Thank you very much. Keep doing thise marvelous videos to teach grown ups and kids.
    May the gods bless you for this inspirated work.

  • @Cristian-rj6zw
    @Cristian-rj6zw Před 8 lety +4

    Impresionante, muy buen trabajo...

  •  Před 10 lety

    Absolutely amazing!! I really appreciate the effort you put doing this. This is one of my favourite movie scenes, and it helps you measure the amount of work and research they employed to make this short scene. Astonishing.

  • @skemsen
    @skemsen Před 3 lety +1

    My jaw just dropped to the floor! This was simply amazingly made! Thank you for making and uploading this

  • @068LAICEPS
    @068LAICEPS Před 4 lety +4

    Que emocionante de ver y escuchar. Gran trabajo de edición.

  • @sbeckle1
    @sbeckle1 Před 9 lety +8

    Wow. Having just watched the movie clip, this really reinforced that scene. Excellent job.

  • @irwinjimenez
    @irwinjimenez Před 4 lety

    Simply AMAZING! I've never seen how it all comes together so beautifully!

  • @Murtaskegg
    @Murtaskegg Před 4 lety +2

    The editing is so good that I had tears in my eyes. Wonderful.

  • @heathallen-homelandssrps1392

    This is brilliant! Thank you so much. I show Amadeus to my students every year and I will include this video when we get to the Confutatis scene!

  • @dambreaker
    @dambreaker Před 8 lety +11

    Wow... that is intense..

  • @xafinus
    @xafinus Před 12 lety +1

    I love it, what a great work you have done!, outstanding!

  • @somedude3766
    @somedude3766 Před 5 lety

    I am so happy I found this gem! THANK YOU for the hard work. This film stirs up so many emotions in me, and tht scene in particular. I listen to the Rquiem so often, I know it by heart now.

  • @risingbull84
    @risingbull84 Před 7 lety +5

    I just want to say that this video is pure genius! (Genius [W. A. Mozart] combined with more genius [Milos Foreman et. al. "Amadeus"] combined with yet more genius [gurubach]!). I've watched this quite a few times and it never fails to amaze. Not many things impress me...This DID! Great Job!PS: love your channel in general (few, if any musicians could live up to what J. S. Bach accomplished. The greatest of them!!)Take care, my friend...and thanks for all of your hard work!

  • @gerubach
    @gerubach  Před 12 lety +3

    "Pocchi, ma Buoni" indeed! I'm sure there will be more hits Ottavva. This video is still ripe hasn't had enough time to grow. Thank you for the positive comments and I'm glad you enjoyed the video!

  • @xyz.ijk.
    @xyz.ijk. Před 2 lety

    Every time I watch this I wonder why the movie didn't do this. Among the most fascinating videos on the web. I watch it over and over again. Each time it pounds the power of the piece, even with the interruptions.

  • @RedSoxKal
    @RedSoxKal Před 7 lety

    Amazing. Thanks for the the details and step by step recitation. What a wonderful video. We appreciate the time you've put your energy in.

  • @ottavva
    @ottavva Před 12 lety +3

    B R A V O
    It is much more of an art than I previously thought
    D I V I N E

  • @koyunbaba73
    @koyunbaba73 Před 9 lety +3

    What a clever didactic, yet wholly entertaining video you have put together here! I'm a classical musician and I learned something from this video, which has to do with the alto in the voca me section, but I think this is accessible to anyone who'd be interested. If you don't mind, I'd like to show this video to my choir which I direct. Excellent and valuable work, my friend.

  • @sebastianrer
    @sebastianrer Před 12 lety

    This video has been done with brilliance of thought as well. I am so impressed!!!

  • @abimaelmello493
    @abimaelmello493 Před 5 lety +1

    WOW, I'm speechless. Definitely this my favorite CZcams channel, by far!!

  • @TheReturnOfStephan1
    @TheReturnOfStephan1 Před 8 lety +3

    Wow!
    Thanks for posting!

  • @BlueAcidball
    @BlueAcidball Před 4 lety +3

    Ah, voices in their respective clefs, EXACTLY WHAT WE NEED

  • @danabogue1804
    @danabogue1804 Před rokem

    A masterpiece of utter GENIUS that Transcends time!!!!!! Truly spectacular!

  • @Hawk170122
    @Hawk170122 Před 6 lety +1

    This is one of the best CZcams clips I have seen in over 5 years!!!

  • @TrOllinM4sTEr
    @TrOllinM4sTEr Před 10 lety +68

    can I give this a thousand likes?

  • @gerubach
    @gerubach  Před 11 lety +14

    I used a font called "Dukeplus" for the latin. I think I downloaded for free online.

  • @ulysse321
    @ulysse321 Před 6 lety

    This is one of the must beautiful thing I have seen in a long while. The beauty of the music, the mastery of the editing that captures the moment of creation of a divine piece. Well done, sir. Well done.

  • @SeanHenderson
    @SeanHenderson Před 10 lety

    simple and devastatingly beautiful. bravo.

  • @Quim141
    @Quim141 Před 8 lety +7

    Just a little error: second "Voca" (F) isn't at the 3rd measure. It is at 2nd. The rest is all so good.

    • @kevinzhang3313
      @kevinzhang3313 Před 8 lety +1

      amadeus isnt accurate, take your beef with that movie not here which is well done

  • @DavideBonfantino
    @DavideBonfantino Před 5 lety +4

    at 4:47 when he says 2 voca he refers to second bar and not the third

  • @mike196104
    @mike196104 Před 11 lety

    Grazie di cuore, un lavoro meraviglioso che regala un'emozione grande.

  • @BMG423
    @BMG423 Před 3 lety

    Without question, one of the best videos I have EVER seen on YT. The editing is brilliant and you capture the moment perfectly. Seeing the 'scores' scroll past, watch each note/phrase as they enter and leave...
    Absolutely superb video. Thank you for posting.