Great Composers: Gabriel Fauré
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- čas přidán 21. 08. 2024
- A look at the man who reformed the Paris Conservatoire.
This was a viewer request from CZcamsr nick piano. If you've got a question or request for a future video, leave a comment, shoot me a message through CZcams, or use the email/Tumblr links below.
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Classical Nerd is a weekly video series covering music history, theoretical concepts, and techniques, hosted by composer, pianist, and music history aficionado Thomas Little.
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Music:
- Gabriel Fauré: Violin Sonata No. 1, Op. 13, performed by Corey Cerovsek and Jeremy Denk and available on IMSLP: tinyurl.com/y98...
- Thomas Little: Dance! #2 in E minor, Op. 1 No. 2, performed by Rachel Fellows, Michael King, and Bruce Tippette
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Contact Information:
Questions and comments can be directed to:
nerdofclassical [at] gmail.com
Tumblr:
classical-nerd.tumblr.com
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All images and audio in this video are for educational purposes only and are not intended as copyright infringement. If you have a copyright concern, please contact me using the above information.
Nice video. For me, Faure, is a hugely forgotten composer, who I hope one day will 'catch on' again. His music is very unique. He doesn't sound like anyone else. It is a haunting fantasy landscape, and that is special.
Rest assured, at any given time a choir is performing Fauré's Requiem and/or Cantique de Jean Racine is being performed somewhere in the world.🎵
@@annika_panicka Eso me hace sentir muy feliz. Gracias por recordar que no somos pocos los que apreciamos el invaluable genio de Fauré.
I really appreciate your brave attempts at pronouncing foreign words and names. Thanks.
the best thing about learning about composers is seeing how they all interacted and admired each other. thanks for this video i like knowing about the composer i am playing a piece from.
Fauré's a jolly good fellow!
Fauré's a jolly good
fellow!
Fauré's a jolly good
fe..el..ow!
And so say all of us
as the song may have said! It seems appropriate that the tune is of French origin or so I understand
Blessings and peace sir.
Faure is my favorite composer (I always wonder what rock got in Poulenc's shoe about him), but I think the greatest of works are his chamber music, some of which reflects such a sunny outlook when he is younger, and then his later works have this great autumnal quality that seems to be looking forward to death (the depiction of a peaceful death is explicitly his aim in his genius Requiem from his early-middle period).
His piano writing in his quartets and especially quintets have this wonderful shimmering filigreed color to them, which to me is maybe a confirmation that he had a full palette without ever getting into timbral considerations of orchestrations. It's this unvirtousic piano writing that I think is the most consistent throughline in his work. The emotion that I think of his music often expressing is a turbulent sadness hiding under a a kind of resigned, stoic demeanor (that's my take anyway, but I wonder if Poulenc's objection was one of his own particular emotional temperament rejecting this outward reserve).
His austere quartet (which I didn't get it at first) reflects some practices of his late compositions, where he used greater interval leaps than in his early melodic writing, which featured a lot more movement among very close intervals, but it's interesting that he actually took a theme that he composed much earlier in his career from an unfinished violin concerto (a reconstructed version of which you can hear on CZcams - It's a puzzling work, and the material seems to work much better in the context of the quartet) and used it in the quartet, so it's not extremely far from his earlier work. It seems like eschews really traditional organizing structures in his music, and uses his modulations to develop motives. To me, it has this wonderfully organic internal logic to it, but I could see it being offputting to some who might resonate more with the very formal organizing structures of say, Cesar Franck.
One of my preferred French composers of the Late Romantic period.
I have had a direct personal experience with his music, having had the chance to sing "Le Cantique de Jean Racine", a short sacred choral piece that's well known in the French repertoire. The melodic lines and contrapunctal harmonies are really too much, and at every performance, my eyes filled with the tears that only the purest beauty can conjure up. You can hear a version of that work on the English Wikipedia page for Gabriel Fauré (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabriel_Faur%C3%A9; under "Vocal") but better ones are available everywhere if you search a little
Llevo unos meses en proceso de descubrimiento de Fauré. No sabes la emoción que me haría tocar o escuchar en directo el gran Cantique de Jean Racine. Comprendo esa sensación incluso sin haberla experimentado.
An excellent little foray into the world of Faure. I've loved his music for a long time but knew nothing of his life, so, thanks. Time for a bit of Judas Priest now, man does not live on bread alone.
Thank you very much for this. I did like Faure's music but never had the time to look into more of his personal life, which I discovered to be quite colourful and interesting. I subscribed for this, keep up the good work.
Very interesting and sometimes humorous details about Faure's life. Merci beaucoups!
I heard Cicilienne in a movie soundtrack and searched it a year ago. It's just so touching. I know nothing to speak of of classical but Cicilienne seems intimate. There's a verity and purity in it that transcends words.
This lesson is much appreciated. I couldn't find another video like this. Yes, I could've Wikied but it's impersonal and I was really looking for some emoting.
Again, appreciated.
Il Divo
Awesome, thanks for making this
Great video, and video series! I'm glad you included the Frank Zappa one. I checked out the Trout Mask Replicas Album from that video and found it hilarious. My interpretation of it was almost making fun of several genres of music on a funny, not hostile way. While simultaneously breaking basically every "rule" of music. I've listened to the whole thing twice.
DAT BEARD. Great video!
hahaha dam, did not notice that at first, now I can’t take my eyes off it
Request: please PLEASE consider doing a video on a Cesar Franck!!!
Duly noted: lentovivace.com/classicalnerd.html
Classical Nerd thank you so much! And thanks for your work! Thankful for you! Organist/composer here, in the Rio Grande Valley in the southernmost tip of Texas.
Thank you!
Don't forget , Pyotr called him "adorable" :P
If Tchaikovsky of all people says that, you'd better worry.
@@maxalaintwo3578 why ? I don't get it .
@@lampphoto I guess it's alright in that case
@@authenticbaguette6673 he was into men lol
@@rainyday6430 I know. You don't often hear straight men calling other men "adorable" now, do you...
Request: Beverly Sills
Added.
Thanks, as always, for the great content. Is there a chance you could do a video about Martinů? Thanks
Eventually; the request queue is very long [ lentovivace.com/requestqueue.html ] and it'll be probably mid-March before I can get to it.
Thanks so much for the quick response : )
Nice video dude, subscribes
With regard to art song, I've always considered Faure the French Schubert.
😉
ojala tuviera subtitulos
What is this personal experience
Let's just say there are those out there who do not know how different the organ is from the piano and expect someone good at the latter to be equally good on the former. (One of these days I'll make a video about this in greater detail.)
0:59 Could you tell me who that composer is that you named? I couldn't figure it out.
Camille Saint-Saëns. :)
The difference with Schubert! Haha!
What a horrible way to go deaf