Exploring My Favorite Composer! | Rachmaninoff - Symphonic Dances | Classical Music Reaction

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  • čas přidán 20. 03. 2024
  • Reaction to Sergei Rachmaninoff - Symphonic Dances, Op. 45
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Komentáře • 42

  • @VeguldenZilverling
    @VeguldenZilverling Před 3 měsíci +10

    If you like this piece, then you might also like The Bells, a choral symphony which is forgotten even more often than this here brilliant work. I love it

    • @Queeen7q
      @Queeen7q Před 3 měsíci +3

      I like Kondrashin's performance.

  • @Draspber
    @Draspber Před 4 měsíci +31

    Honestly, I absolutely love the fact that this is the last piece Rachmaninoff ever wrote. It's probably wrong to simplify it like that, since it is a really profound work and, in many ways, seems to me that it was quite personal piece to Rachmaninoff...but you have to admit, how badass (in a good way) is it that your last piece is such a masterpiece, filled with amazing melodies and insane power...

    • @Quotenwagnerianer
      @Quotenwagnerianer Před 3 měsíci +4

      I have to agree.
      Also great that he quotes his 1st Symphony in the Coda of the first Movement, thinking that he had destroyed it and no one was ever going to hear anything from it again.
      That's also fitting for a composers last work, to revisit a brainchild of his that he thought was a failure because of the catastrophic first performance.
      But I have to repeat my sentiment about this performance that I posted on the original video 11 months ago:
      Ashkenazy ignoring Rachmaninov's "Non Allegro" for the 1st Movement simply doesn't sit right with me. It's "NOT fast" and he goes in very much fast. Therefore not the best performance of the movement. The others are very well done, but the first one misses the mark.

    • @Draspber
      @Draspber Před 3 měsíci

      @@QuotenwagnerianerI also used to hear this piece in a slower tempo but at the end of the day it is hard to guess what is right. I’ve read in Russian Wikipedia that in 1942 printing house made a mistake and original score was printed with Non-Alegro instead of Allegro and later this mistake was crossed by hand. Nevertheless, this error is now somehow “stuck”.
      However, how can we check it..)
      The moment from his first symphony is one of the most beautiful moments of the whole piece!

    • @Quotenwagnerianer
      @Quotenwagnerianer Před 3 měsíci

      If that is a printing mistake then why has the composers own 2 Piano Version the same play instruction?
      Also Rachmaninov was very much alive to instruct Eugeune Ormandy who did the first recording of the piece. And Ormandy also plays it "Non Allegro".@@Draspber

    • @Draspber
      @Draspber Před 3 měsíci

      @@Quotenwagnerianer my bad. It seems that mistake appeared not in the original score. However, I kinda believe that Rachmaninoff wanted this piece to be in allegro (knowing his style, how he played his own works, how this piece sounds). I put that text from wiki into translator so it might be a bit ugly:
      The premiere of "Symphonic Dances" took place under the direction of Yu. Ormandy (with the Philadelphia Orchestra) on January 3, 1941. During a performance with D. Mitropoulos (and the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra) in November 1942, Rachmaninov, who was present at the concert, noticed that in the score of the first movement, Non allegro was mistakenly printed instead of Allegro, and the word non was crossed out by hand[1]. The erroneous designation of the tempo of the first movement is found in many later reissues of the score and in almost all audio recordings of "Symphonic Dances" up to the present day. In 2018, the record company Marston Records published[2] an amateur audio recording made in December 1940 at Ormandy's house, where Rachmaninoff plays (on the piano) the entire suite (with explanations). The tempo that the composer takes at the beginning of the first movement is about a quarter = 116.

    • @robkeeleycomposer
      @robkeeleycomposer Před 3 měsíci

      @@Quotenwagnerianermaybe he was suffering from melanoma, and as I know from my own experience Isa horrible disease and until 10 years ago was always fatal. I was very lucky, thanks to the miracle immunotherapy drug I made it - just
      So have special affection for Sergei.

  • @giovannib27
    @giovannib27 Před 3 měsíci +24

    W reaction choice, another top tier fire rach piece is "isle of the dead"

    • @orangewedges
      @orangewedges Před 3 měsíci +3

      Excellent recommendation, fellow music listener. That is an amazing piece.

    • @SeaHercules
      @SeaHercules Před 3 měsíci +1

      I like Mikhail Pletnev's recording with the Russian national orchestra the most

    • @giovannib27
      @giovannib27 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@SeaHercules yeah that one is good, i always listen to that one or the Andrew Davis with the Stockholm Phil. (Just the picture of the painting on CZcams). I feel like Gidi should watch that one to immerse with the painting as well, because it was the inspiration for the piece.

  • @anthropocentrus
    @anthropocentrus Před 3 měsíci +15

    Ugh this work is a blinding brilliant diamond, I love it so much, it abounds with energy and knockout vigour. Absolutely top tier writing and orchestration, his top game in full display. In the end Rach chose to DANCE...from a STOMPING peasant rustic dance to a charged frenetic showdown...no time for tears!

  • @Ziad3195
    @Ziad3195 Před 3 měsíci +11

    The 4-minute melody in the first movement is one of the most beautiful and tear-jerking moments I know. Also, the final movement is filled with Dies Irae's, the medieval chant for the dead. The 2nd movement Is like a ghostly, creepy waltz. Love the piece.

    • @robkeeleycomposer
      @robkeeleycomposer Před 3 měsíci

      I’m just having the shivers just thinking of it. It’s full of ‘modernisms’ including a series of 12 different notes in the bass in movt 1
      He also made an effective version for 2 pianos

    • @Ziad3195
      @Ziad3195 Před 3 měsíci

      @@robkeeleycomposer Oh, where is the 12-note thing you are talking about?

    • @robkeeleycomposer
      @robkeeleycomposer Před 3 měsíci

      It’s really just a series of augmented triads at the start of the development section. It’s bit like the opening of Liszt’s Faust Symphony.
      It might be a kind of in-joke!

  • @bondenhenrik4555
    @bondenhenrik4555 Před 3 měsíci +7

    Yes finally! Probably my favourite Rachmaninoff piece. As many people have commented you should listen to the isle of the dead but also his symphonies 1 and 3.

  • @grandadrepsher1
    @grandadrepsher1 Před 3 měsíci +4

    It's always a pleasure to watch someone enjoy one of the great works for the first time.

  • @philip.stigaard
    @philip.stigaard Před 3 měsíci +11

    Please listen to isle of the dead you won't be dissapointed, best orchestral piece by rach

    • @giovannib27
      @giovannib27 Před 3 měsíci +3

      I wrote the same thing and he liked mine too, I think we gonna get it :))))

  • @alekpoko2655
    @alekpoko2655 Před 3 měsíci +12

    Это совершенно невероятное произведение. Вершина гармонического искусства, в любых пределах музыкальных теорий и стилей написания.
    Спасибо Вам за прослушивание и компанию.

    • @Queeen7q
      @Queeen7q Před 3 měsíci +1

      Любимое произведение у Светланова, кстати.

  • @azurbtkl3901
    @azurbtkl3901 Před 3 měsíci +3

    The slow part in the 1st dance is so damn beautiful, and in the piano version it's even more beautiful (suggested recording: argerich and rabinovitch)

  • @MennoTeekens42
    @MennoTeekens42 Před měsícem +1

    The last part is the battle between death and life, set to music. At the end the Dies Irae theme (which depicts death) is defeated by a theme from Rachmaninoff's The All Night Virgil. That theme symbolizes the resurrection of Christ.

  • @user-culkepta
    @user-culkepta Před 3 měsíci +3

    Can you do Ravel's Daphnis et Chloe - suite 2 next time? It's my favorite piece and I'd dare say that it's one of the lushest, creative and beautiful compositions in human history.

  • @danielcrayne5344
    @danielcrayne5344 Před 3 měsíci +4

    Great composition...it kind of sums up Rachmaninoff's career. Listen for the jazz influences - including saxophone!

  • @_de_reve
    @_de_reve Před 3 měsíci +2

    Love Rachmaninov too since he composes so dynamically and modern enough that i can access it. Also did you ever listen to his first composed piece? he wrote it when he was like 15 and still in the conservatory. it's epic to my ears as well. if i remember right it was a dance as well.

  • @salmonidae3667
    @salmonidae3667 Před 3 měsíci +5

    If there's one piece I'm waiting for this guy to react to, it's Alpine Symphony by Richard Strauss. It blew my mind the first time I listened to it and it stands firm in my opinion as one of the greatest orchestral compositions of all time.

  • @stevenklimecky4918
    @stevenklimecky4918 Před 3 měsíci +2

    That was a great recording of this piece.

  • @ThaSchwab
    @ThaSchwab Před 3 měsíci +3

    This piece contains quotes from other works by Rachmaninoff; for one example, at 10:52 this beautiful melody is an augmentation of the primary motif from his First Symphony (all four movements), an otherwise great work whose premiere was so disastrous that Rachmaninoff fell into an actual depression. You should totally listen to it, and the other two symphonies. Another example is at 35:41, this sort-of climactic moment is from a movement of the "All-Night Vigil", an acapella sacred work that is considered one of the best in the repertoire, and is also definitely worth a listen.

  • @Dan1099ilo
    @Dan1099ilo Před 3 měsíci +2

    you should react to rachmaninoff's symphonic poeme "the isle of dead"

  • @DonnaGisellaTranchel
    @DonnaGisellaTranchel Před 3 měsíci

    Yes! Amazing! 🦩✨💎🦩

  • @Queeen7q
    @Queeen7q Před 3 měsíci

    The 2nd mov. is a delirious waltz, like Mahler (5th symph., 3rd mov.) or Ravel wrote.

  • @robkeeleycomposer
    @robkeeleycomposer Před 3 měsíci

    Such a fine, loveable piece. Have you tried the choral Vespers, also known as the All Night Vigil?
    I can easily get though a whole packet of tosses. And yet Sergei wasn’t a believer,not that you’d guess!
    Incidentally he quotes a bit of it at the end of the SD.

  • @pleasedyes
    @pleasedyes Před 3 měsíci +1

    Oh nice CZcams recommended finding me cool stuff!
    As a harpist, I think it would be cool if you reacted to some prominent harp music such as Introduction et Allegro by Ravel or Debussy’s Danse Sacree et Profane
    Also if you haven’t already The Planets by Holst would be great to check out

    • @Ziad3195
      @Ziad3195 Před 3 měsíci

      What are your favourite harp pieces and Gidi did the planet already. I adore Debussy and Ravel.

  • @sean-kb4wr
    @sean-kb4wr Před 3 měsíci +1

    You should hear prince rostislav

  • @MisterPathetique
    @MisterPathetique Před 3 měsíci

    Too bad Ashkenazy doesn't let the tam-tam ring at the very end of the piece, like the score indicates. Not in any of his 3 recordings of this piece.