Lacrimosa, but it's even more beautiful

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  • čas přidán 11. 04. 2023
  • I don't know about you guys, but this sounds magnificent to me. I just added some reverb, slowed it down a tad, and added a few other things. I hope you guys enjoyed it!

Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @divrted
    @divrted  Před rokem +8935

    The painting is: The Deluge, by John Martin.

  • @gisellebarth2851
    @gisellebarth2851 Před rokem +30179

    The reason why this sounds so good, is because these type of songs (I believe) are made with the idea that they will be played in a Cathedral. In a Cathedral, the sound bounces of the walls of the space, creating the reverb which is which would be very similar to the one present in this version! I felt like I had just walked into a Cathedral or Opera house when listening to this! Great job!

    • @alex_inside
      @alex_inside Před rokem +676

      There will be a choir of this at St stephen's cathedral in vienna. Hopefully it will be as haunting as I imagine it to be.

    • @Peter-bj4dr
      @Peter-bj4dr Před rokem +491

      @@alex_inside I have sung this masterpiece in a bigger church some 20 years ago and still remember it to this day. Believe me when I say it will be awesome!

    • @robinrehlinghaus1944
      @robinrehlinghaus1944 Před rokem +14

      Ooooh

    • @Hot_Single_Pigeon_In_Your_Area
      @Hot_Single_Pigeon_In_Your_Area Před rokem +217

      let me add some sentences to that
      music have a frequency, frequency = vibration = frequency can affect humans mood, emotion, the way we thinking, etc.
      so you right. this song have a frequency that have dark but also calming vibes

    • @zisanegilmez458
      @zisanegilmez458 Před rokem +8

      Thats some good insight dude thanks!

  • @peterzelaya9948
    @peterzelaya9948 Před rokem +12516

    One thing all these lacrimosa variations have in common to the og is that they're literally perfection to the ears

    • @emilio1068
      @emilio1068 Před rokem +16

    • @Kometheus
      @Kometheus Před rokem +21

      Hard to top

    • @Lubin-md4ml
      @Lubin-md4ml Před 7 měsíci +5

      It's not "the ears", it's "our ears". ;)

    • @Thetruepianoman
      @Thetruepianoman Před 6 měsíci +13

      ​@@Lubin-md4mlyou can use to the ears, a delight to the mind for example

    • @falscakesrighteyebol1332
      @falscakesrighteyebol1332 Před 6 měsíci +9

      @@Lubin-md4ml “perfection to the ears” works, as a matter of fact it’s the correct phrase

  • @_Krazy47
    @_Krazy47 Před rokem +6369

    That art piece is heavenly (no pun intended)
    “The storm, the calm!”

    • @MeowTube_Daily
      @MeowTube_Daily Před 9 měsíci +4

      0

    • @Onion___Knight
      @Onion___Knight Před 8 měsíci +4

      Its ai generated, not a masterpiece.

    • @_Krazy47
      @_Krazy47 Před 8 měsíci

      @@Onion___Knight I am sure you are ASS-u-ming it…

    • @kingmihir
      @kingmihir Před 8 měsíci +3

      look closely.. You'll find stormblessed somewhere in there

    • @_Krazy47
      @_Krazy47 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@kingmihir is that a reference to “the way of kings”?…

  • @gbbarn
    @gbbarn Před rokem +2015

    Mozart left us pieces of heaven before he went himself.

    • @ablueraven
      @ablueraven Před 9 měsíci +45

      My music teacher always told me he wrote this requiem for himself...

    • @personagrata111
      @personagrata111 Před 9 měsíci +48

      @@ablueraven It evokes in me that this music is not just for us to hear but it's a lament of humankind or a message made for angels in heaven to hear or the God himself if he cares to listen, something far beyond us, that close to perfection that it tries to anything that has ears to listen to appreciate it if it can. If it does make any sense.

    • @ablueraven
      @ablueraven Před 9 měsíci +19

      @@personagrata111 Totally ! I can't help but link this requiem, to what you're saying, and to Mozart's situation by the time he gave birth to this masterpiece... He was sick and poor and forgotten by everyone, he, who had been the most famous musician, the most beloved of the entire Austrian Imperial Court...
      For me, this requiem is an expression of his despair, and his anger and his lack of understanding of why God had abandoned him and so many others... Maybe the answer for Mozart was blaming himself for his sins, like his father would have blamed him if he had still been alive...
      So, the " Lord have mercy" part is so sincere, it shakes the heavens and hell, and gets to our souls. And we, as humans, carry it as a scream for our Lord to graciously hear us, see us, consider us... Despite our insignificance. And there is pain that burns deeply, like a fire, as if the requiem was about being accepted by the Lord after having been rejected by Him...

    • @ablueraven
      @ablueraven Před 9 měsíci +34

      Mozart never heard this Requiem... He died before he could finish it ; he was very sick. His student, Franz Xaver Süßmayr was with him when, on his death bed, he was still composing it.
      Some think that Süßmayr actually was in charge of finishing that requiem... But ended up rescoring it, and signing it in the name of Mozart.
      Also, Historians are not 100% sure concerning the identity of the person who ordered this Requiem from Mozart ; Most think it was ordered by a man who wanted Mozart to compose, then sign the Requiem on his name, so he could say he composed it for his deceased wife... It was all a big canular... or a lie.

    • @Samu_Neko
      @Samu_Neko Před 8 měsíci +2

      best comment

  • @xerse29
    @xerse29 Před rokem +4357

    I knew that was a John Martin painting instantly. The piece is calle "The Deluge". Phenomenal artist highly recommended yall look at his work

    • @weirdreads
      @weirdreads Před rokem +84

      the depth of his horizon lines are INSANE

    • @chief_6228
      @chief_6228 Před rokem +22

      Looks amazing. Do you know the story behind this piece?

    • @SunburnCity
      @SunburnCity Před rokem +81

      @@chief_6228 alot of his work is based on biblical stories. I suspect this one relates to Noah's flood.

    • @Ana-mp6my
      @Ana-mp6my Před rokem +75

      @@chief_6228 He believed that at some point the sun, the moon and a comet collided, causing a great flood that swaped life from earth. This painting depicts that
      Source: Yale Center for British Art

    • @sahilrahman5066
      @sahilrahman5066 Před rokem +12

      @@Ana-mp6my that poor comet got the short end of that stick

  • @aamirgilani5295
    @aamirgilani5295 Před 10 měsíci +3172

    The song "Lacrimosa" is a part of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's renowned composition, the Requiem Mass in D minor, K. 626. Mozart started composing the Requiem in 1791 but tragically passed away before completing it. The inspiration behind "Lacrimosa" comes from the text of the Latin Requiem Mass, specifically from the sequence of the same name.
    The "Lacrimosa" sequence is a profound and mournful prayer, expressing sorrow and seeking mercy for the deceased. It is traditionally sung during the Mass for the Dead or funeral ceremonies. The word "Lacrimosa" translates to "weeping" or "tearful," setting the emotional tone of the sequence.
    While Mozart composed the opening eight measures and the bass voice continuo part for "Lacrimosa," he passed away before finishing the rest of the movement. Franz Xaver Süssmayr, a pupil and assistant of Mozart, was assigned the task of completing the Requiem based on Mozart's sketches and instructions. Süssmayr completed the "Lacrimosa" and the remainder of the Requiem, following the musical style and thematic material established by Mozart.
    "Lacrimosa" stands as one of the most poignant and emotionally charged sections of the Requiem, capturing the essence of sorrow, mourning, and the human longing for solace and redemption. Its profound melodies and harmonies evoke a sense of mourning and reflection, reflecting the deep emotional impact that Mozart's music continues to have on audiences to this day.

    • @calamitychaela1994
      @calamitychaela1994 Před 9 měsíci +33

      Did u copy and paste? Otherwise BECOME A WRITER!!!

    • @zzodysseuszz
      @zzodysseuszz Před 8 měsíci +85

      @@calamitychaela1994 no, what he said isn’t really that impressive from a literary point of view. I came here to type almost the same thing; however, I would correct some information of minor importance: the lacrimosa is indeed inspired by a funeral prayer, but there are details which had been neglected or forgotten.
      For example, the piece is based on the catholic peaceful repose for the dead which is intended in church to be a moment of grieving for the dead. The prayer would ask god to grant the dead a position in heaven, Mozarts iconic lacrimosa in particular sings of a guilty person who deserves judgment harsh be spared nonetheless as a show of the lords great mercy.
      To add information to the original comment: Mozart wrote lacrimosa shortly after his wife had died, almost as if to ask god to spare his wife but not him (seeing as the song represents a guilty man). Tragically, but bitterly befitting in an ironic sense, Mozart passed away the same year as his wife while writing the song. All in all, the song possesses a deep emotional resonance but also a tragic story alongside it.

    • @andermelon5899
      @andermelon5899 Před 8 měsíci +6

      @@zzodysseuszz constanze dies in 1842.

    • @JureGorucan
      @JureGorucan Před 8 měsíci +36

      chat gpt prompt AND IT IS NOT A SOOOOOONGGGGGGGGGG

    • @zzodysseuszz
      @zzodysseuszz Před 8 měsíci +24

      @@JureGorucan yes, it’s a piece, nobody cares for that pedantic detail. Or more accurately a requiem

  • @gesundheit1768
    @gesundheit1768 Před rokem +1575

    This piece gave me a strange new appreciation for chaotic and abstract things

    • @Endebenin
      @Endebenin Před 11 měsíci +48

      As the world becomes ever more nihilistic, sometimes it is best to look at the futility of man’s existence, and revolt in it’s presence. Some nice little advice for you from absurdism.

    • @vaskaventi6840
      @vaskaventi6840 Před 9 měsíci

      @@Endebenin or stand against the popular zeitgeist of nihilism and look at the objectively beautiful and meaningful aspects of human existence, and fight for their presence. Some counter-advice for the many non-absurdists among us.
      My starting point is the holocaust. It's as clear as my own ten fingers that it was wrong, and tragic, and despicable not simply because we label it so, but objectively and intrinsically the holocaust is evil, something which ought not happen even if every human somehow thought it was good. And if there exists such a true evil in the world, then by implication there exists true good, perhaps some things are objectively good and beautiful even if every human thought otherwise. Once you have values that go beyond mere arbitrary human labels, you have meaning and purpose, and you've already said goodbye to the bleak absurdist scenario.

    • @maaferreirahd
      @maaferreirahd Před 7 měsíci +5

      A storm, the death, the dark ❤

    • @jacobandrus2705
      @jacobandrus2705 Před 6 měsíci

      Read Dostoevsky@@Endebenin

    • @A-Broken-Greatsword
      @A-Broken-Greatsword Před 5 měsíci +6

      "Its a cruel and random world, but all the chaos is so beautiful" - Edward Elric

  • @veetirislakki5270
    @veetirislakki5270 Před 9 měsíci +434

    What I love about Lacrimosa is that despite it being so calm, it goes perfectly with any chaotic event, especially in slow motion.

    • @nicolelawless9942
      @nicolelawless9942 Před měsícem +2

      I hear it every time I do a war memorial ceremony because my love for the War is that powerful

  • @apersonwhomayormaynotbeent8859
    @apersonwhomayormaynotbeent8859 Před 10 měsíci +1032

    The first eight bars were Mozart's last. You can feel the anguish he was going through knowing he was about to die. This is not just a masterpiece, its one of the most beautiful pieces to ever be written. To me it describes the future and reminds me of my own mortality. Someday, all of us will be forgotten and no trace of our existence will be left. Someday, even this will be lost to time.

  • @xelbezares4474
    @xelbezares4474 Před rokem +2302

    I'm reading a murder book and this song was just perfect. I replayed it like 6 times

    • @alildaisy2180
      @alildaisy2180 Před rokem +17

      May I ask which one? Looking for good reccs!

    • @Biggest_Dissapointment
      @Biggest_Dissapointment Před rokem +18

      ​@@alildaisy2180Same here! I just started to get into reading and I want book recommendations from other readers right now.

    • @BluePhoenix3160
      @BluePhoenix3160 Před rokem +3

      I also want to know what book you're reading

    • @retardedautist
      @retardedautist Před rokem

      ayo?

    • @xelbezares4474
      @xelbezares4474 Před rokem +40

      @@alildaisy2180 I'm reading the mindf*ck series my S.T Abby. It's 5 books. It's murder but also romance and a little bit of spice. It has a TW tho, the MC got SA. But it's really really good.

  • @bee_doug
    @bee_doug Před 9 měsíci +245

    I had the privilege of getting to sing this piece as part of a 200 person choir, and let me tell you it was one of the most magical experiences of my life. The absolute power of so many voices singing together in the same space, of getting to _be_ one of those voices… it felt transcendent.
    Even seven years later I still know my part and all the words. What a beautiful piece of music.

    • @pinkyanimates3460
      @pinkyanimates3460 Před 3 měsíci +5

      So had I! Not 7 years ago, and likely the choir wasn't 200 people but I had recently sung this song with my choir and it was truly one of my favorite moments ever hearing everyone sing at once, it was all truly beautiful.

    • @astraluna6is9
      @astraluna6is9 Před měsícem +3

      Both of you are envied by me. I saw and heard this performed by about 20-30 vocalists and a small symphony in the Central United Methodist Church in Phoenix Az.
      It changed me.

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 Před měsícem +1

      I played it with orchestra. I'm a cellist. Wonderful experience. Great music lifts you up.

    • @HotMessJess2014
      @HotMessJess2014 Před 10 dny

      I learned my part and then never got to sing it. It's still one I desperately want to sing in my Cathedral with a choir.

  • @candlequeen3501
    @candlequeen3501 Před rokem +1192

    With the anakin pfp, it fits incredibly well, this is gorgeous

  • @ilsospetto4608
    @ilsospetto4608 Před 10 měsíci +476

    It's really beautiful. Lacrimosa is a very "dark" melody. I'm currently playing it with my orchestra (I'm 1st violin). Even without the choir it passes a very sentimental feeling that reminds me of our finite nature.

    • @JayJay-qu4nw
      @JayJay-qu4nw Před 10 měsíci +12

      Doesn't feel the same without the choir.

    • @thehighground3578
      @thehighground3578 Před 9 měsíci +13

      I mean it’s a requiem, which is probably the darkest feeling genre of classical music, as it’s written in mourning of the dead.

    • @avercado4132
      @avercado4132 Před 8 měsíci +5

      actually that is the point of the song. The lyrics are latin, and translated they are about how man is fallen, and how he will die and be judged, but at the end, the singers ask that Jesus spare them from his judgement (which he does)

    • @klikron4483
      @klikron4483 Před 4 měsíci

      Bit late, but congratulations on 1st violin role.

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 Před měsícem

      I wouldn't use the word sentimental. Emotional is better.

  • @AK-jb8hs
    @AK-jb8hs Před 11 měsíci +304

    It's probably one of the most hauntingly beautiful piece.

  • @elli5709
    @elli5709 Před 7 měsíci +120

    Noot noot 🐧

  • @MS-eb8cf
    @MS-eb8cf Před 5 měsíci +38

    We'll almost certainly never see a talent like this again. His death at age 35 was a profound loss to art and music, as well as unfathomably tragic for the young family he left behind.

    • @LovelyHorizons
      @LovelyHorizons Před 5 měsíci +9

      Gah yes if only he had lived longer. It's fascinating to see how his music was evolving as well. My favourite composer and a true genius with such a tragic end, but he lives on so strongly over 200 years later through incredibly talented music that never fades.

  • @thewonderofu6435
    @thewonderofu6435 Před rokem +70

    *ears ascending to heaven*

  • @DRAGNFLY
    @DRAGNFLY Před rokem +211

    During Good Friday Mass this past April, the choir at my church sang Lacrimosa. I was altar serving that day, and I was indescribably overjoyed when I heard those first notes. They performed it perfectly, and it couldn't have been a more beautiful Mass.

    • @Miatpi
      @Miatpi Před 9 měsíci +5

      Nice to hear!

    • @nicolelawless9942
      @nicolelawless9942 Před měsícem

      Me and Woody.EXE will be holding a service for Come and See’s 40th birthday in the largest Abbey in Wales; I hope the amazing choir will do Lacrimosa for this celebration and I’m literally imagining the main character Floyra being there before walking away from the service thinking “what the hell did Woody.EXE just do?!” I bet something like this is bound to happen

  • @starlightsonata
    @starlightsonata Před rokem +424

    It was already my theme song. Now it’s official.

  • @wonchoaiart
    @wonchoaiart Před 3 měsíci +20

    This piece of art reminds me how much suffering and pain my father went through as he's on his terminal stage of cancer. The pain I felt remembering the time really vibe with this.
    I miss the man so bad, and it's still painful to think of what he went through.
    FUCK CANCER!!!!

  • @aryangupta8093
    @aryangupta8093 Před rokem +173

    It's so hauntingly beautiful

  • @WillDa713
    @WillDa713 Před rokem +205

    I have attended many performances of this piece in operas, basilicas, etc, last one was about a month ago in a crypt; listening to this version leaning back with my eyes closed, i was taken through all these beautiful moments again. I saw the conductors and each of their quirks, the way they interacted with their players and singers, the sheer power of the human voice amplified by the finest stone work, the moments of calm and silence contrasting with those of intensity and emotion... Thank you for the upload, this was a fun ride

  • @user-lf6ci8tl5l
    @user-lf6ci8tl5l Před 3 měsíci +11

    imagine creating a masterpiece so good that it's still being played since 1792, literally 2 centuries later

  • @johnmobley9369
    @johnmobley9369 Před rokem +96

    Sounds like these are quite literally made to be played in song and cathedrals, or the music can bounce off the walls in reverberate and you can feel it all around you and in your bones. A truly atmospheric experience.

  • @JoviThe_Peen
    @JoviThe_Peen Před rokem +71

    Never…in my entire existence on this plain of land…
    Have I ever heard a more majestic melody…

    • @user-me2ij9gd3v
      @user-me2ij9gd3v Před 11 měsíci +7

      May I suggest you alsohear the Dies Irae (Mozart, Verdi and the Gregorian version)

    • @jeshitorenburei224
      @jeshitorenburei224 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@user-me2ij9gd3vWonderful suggestion!

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 Před měsícem

      @@user-me2ij9gd3v Also Berlioz. Berlioz's Requiem is also a great work. Not performed enough.

  • @thirsty7281
    @thirsty7281 Před rokem +260

    Crazy connection: I thought this artwork was familiar, from some book I read as a kid (there was some awesome artwork that left a profound effect on me). I googled this artwork, found the artist John Martin and looked at his other works. I then found the exact one I'd seen such a long time ago in that book and it is truly awe inspiring. It is the "Destruction of Pompeii and Herculaneum". Have a look and enjoy! (I'd never forgot it since only briefly seeing it as a kid!)

    • @umangsharma8794
      @umangsharma8794 Před 11 měsíci +4

      hey, mind if i ask which book ?

    • @thirsty7281
      @thirsty7281 Před 11 měsíci +7

      @@umangsharma8794 Oh I can't remember sorry, it was about volcanoes, and just featured that artwork randomly in it. If you really wanted I could try and dig it out?

    • @ryanlee9150
      @ryanlee9150 Před 10 měsíci +5

      Oh that's so cool!! So many memories I have of kid of certain songs or things but can't remember where they were from, so it's interesting to hear you found your childhood memory !!

    • @thirsty7281
      @thirsty7281 Před 10 měsíci +5

      @@ryanlee9150 Hahaha cheers! And same here, it's such a weird experience running into them again. I always had a memory of a building near the ocean from when I was very young, maybe 3 years old, and I had many dreams about it too (so I wasn't even sure if it was real or just made up in dreams) but I never saw it again... until one day we went to a restaurant and it was super close to that same building I hadn't seen all my life and it was such a weird feeling, like being in a dream again. The human mind is so strange but fascinating. I hope you rediscover many childhood memories in future! :)

    • @Audifan8595
      @Audifan8595 Před 8 měsíci +1

      god damn you're right i literally did a big exhale through puffed out cheeks when i saw the painting. thanks for sharing :)

  • @jkismygf
    @jkismygf Před rokem +167

    this sounds like heaven!

    • @divrted
      @divrted  Před rokem +19

      Took the words right out of my mouth

    • @Mara-Vladu
      @Mara-Vladu Před rokem +12

      Beautiful.. but.... but... it's sad.

    • @vvsr1043
      @vvsr1043 Před rokem +12

      don't get influenced by the devil , Make sure this is what u hear when u leave the world 🫡

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 Před měsícem

      You should listen to Thomas Tallis's Spem in Alium, the most heavenly music ever written. Music can take you to heaven.

    • @not-vivxi
      @not-vivxi Před 5 dny

      More like hell

  • @xiaoxus9909
    @xiaoxus9909 Před 10 měsíci +73

    the chills I get from this piece every time I hear it is unworldly, 110 degrees Fahrenheit and still managed to give me chills

  • @Tuna_2014
    @Tuna_2014 Před měsícem +7

    This music reminds me of a very dark time in my life.. this affect is partially achieved with the deep tone of the music, as well as the choir, giving a menacing feel, but somehow it sounds so beautiful that you still want to hear it. It's like a way for me to look back on the worst experience I've been through so far.. to experience a small sample of the constant pain and anxiety I felt, but to a safe degree where I can avoid going crazy again.

    • @nicolelawless9942
      @nicolelawless9942 Před měsícem

      After watching Come and See 2 months ago now, I constantly lashed out. At one point, Woody heard me pounding on my bedroom door to break out fearing it was that church during that disturbing scene but when Woody revealed I was sleep walking, I was terrified that I passed out. I literally felt Woody and my Come and See movie dragging me back up the bed and then a fight between Woody and Floyra broke out which caused Floyra to angrily push Woody off the bed before pulling Woody back up. I came round after their fight broke out and I could see that Floyra truly looks out for Woody when I’m traumatised and they both can help out together. It’s just sad watching them fighting

  • @madeinheaven453
    @madeinheaven453 Před rokem +511

    This is perfect! My heavenly choirs shall bless everyone in this new universe with this masterpiece! DIO would be proud of you, dear creator!

  • @ema8975
    @ema8975 Před rokem +103

    Lyrics:
    [Chorus]
    Lacrimosa dies illa
    Qua resurget ex favilla
    Judicandus homo reus
    Lacrimosa dies illa
    Qua resurget ex favilla
    Judicandus homo reus
    [Bridge]
    Huic ergo parce Deus
    Pie Jesu, Jesu Domine
    [Outro]
    Dona eis requiem
    Dona eis requiem
    Amen

  • @nybusi570
    @nybusi570 Před měsícem +6

    Mozart… gave us piece of heaven on earth.🥀

  • @catherinehelman845
    @catherinehelman845 Před 9 měsíci +42

    This song embodies a deep sorrow of the soul. A grief so profound it’s apart of you. 😢

  • @negritoojosclaros
    @negritoojosclaros Před 11 měsíci +23

    imagine being on sunday, middle age, going to church and listening voices from angels coming from everywhere, and notes that make vibrate the seats...

  • @KimWarhead
    @KimWarhead Před rokem +56

    This is the pinnacle, after listening to this composition, the desire to listen to something else disappears.

  • @iamairamusic
    @iamairamusic Před rokem +30

    im so happy i'm singing this with my choir, its such a beautiful piece of music

  • @brendanjulian5029
    @brendanjulian5029 Před 10 měsíci +13

    The depth in the song’s vocals makes it wonderfully unique

  • @Mayakran
    @Mayakran Před 5 měsíci +8

    It’s music like this that makes me miss being in a chamber choir. It’s amazing to listen to, but it’s a near sublime spiritual experience to perform with your own voice, your own body (especially as an alto where you’re singing the harmony and in the “middle” of the music).

  • @RoxanneYuki
    @RoxanneYuki Před 29 dny +1

    I don't know why but this piece just makes me feel like it's alive, and I'm not even high. It's like with every movement of your eye and taking your eyes off of it, you can see it cascading, moving with little waves.

  • @valentino2137
    @valentino2137 Před 9 měsíci +3

    What a beautiful song, the echo, the sound bounding from wall to wall makes this song so breathtaking.

  • @Shindori
    @Shindori Před rokem +40

    Ive never added to a playlist so goddamn fast

    • @divrted
      @divrted  Před rokem +7

      I'm glad you enjoy it as much as I do!

  • @DaveyXHatter
    @DaveyXHatter Před rokem +31

    I don't know how I feel about slowing a piece down in tempo (and possibly affecting the tonality of the composition altogether) but adding reverb does help provide the noise that modern stage and theaters have lost due to modern architecture. Most 'classical' performances were often in open flat spaces (public square, an official's court/home, garden) or in large pits, classic theaters and churches which were built tall and sturdy to provide a natural echo (amplification, noise, overtones from all the instruments and voices echoing/overlapping).

  • @FarhatAli-gx1zr
    @FarhatAli-gx1zr Před 2 měsíci +2

    The Angels delievered this piece of art from the heavens. These 3 Minutes of Heaven.

  • @AppleJuice-vx4te
    @AppleJuice-vx4te Před 2 měsíci +2

    i cant rlly explain it but the agony is so good i just so it feels idk but its beautiful

  • @whatdawhatgaming
    @whatdawhatgaming Před rokem +3

    You're right that does sound incredible. The range of sounds I hear now are epic. The low end is powerful

  • @aggelikii_
    @aggelikii_ Před 10 měsíci +18

    This is a banger. I wonder when my guy Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart will drop more fire beats 🔥

    • @alexandrerobert34110
      @alexandrerobert34110 Před 9 měsíci

      Where I hear this i imagine myself the world burning, the end of the world literally, the apocalypse. 2:30

  • @panickedshrieking5454
    @panickedshrieking5454 Před 4 měsíci +4

    I'm using this specific video as the audio of my Crypt Chanter Choir who is being conducted by a bard lich, It's so haunting and perfect for it.

  • @funnyman718
    @funnyman718 Před 5 měsíci +2

    that feeling when you remember god has seen and recorded everything that you’ve ever done, heard every thought you’ve suppressed, and knows you better than anyone, including yourself

  • @user-pv8iq1ih6k
    @user-pv8iq1ih6k Před 10 měsíci +88

    Сколько разных людей слушают эту мелодию по всему миру. У вкуса нет наций. Нет определенного языка. Мы все говорим на разных языках , но у всех у нас внутри , что-то переворачивается при прослушивании этой прекрасной композиции! Братья и сестры всего мира , будьте добры , честны и счастливы ❤️

    • @jmaaybraak
      @jmaaybraak Před 10 měsíci +3

      Ahh, Bravo! Good for you! I stand with you, upside down...

    • @diabloyadebil
      @diabloyadebil Před 10 měsíci +2

      Спасибо, тебе тоже всего самого наилучшего!

    • @j.m.a.menocal1065
      @j.m.a.menocal1065 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Pax Tecum my brother...

  • @aellyn2764
    @aellyn2764 Před 5 měsíci +4

    I played Lacrimosa for the very first time in October, it was in a massive church and sounded like that, such a powerful experience, especially when you’re part of it. (I’m a violin)

  • @GusTheAnus
    @GusTheAnus Před 6 měsíci +2

    regardless of edits, this piece truly is one of the most beautiful i have ever heard.

  • @adritabiswas2924
    @adritabiswas2924 Před 2 měsíci +2

    This hits hard when you are listening while its raining outside.
    Thankss for this!!!

  • @mrsraven9169
    @mrsraven9169 Před 11 měsíci +16

    I heard this music played in a church and I cried it was incredible

  • @Pokkobroski
    @Pokkobroski Před 11 měsíci +8

    Whenever I listened to this, it used to give me happy, exciting chills. But then heard this in come and see and now I can't think of anything else but that LAST SCENE

  • @nikalapunikova5586
    @nikalapunikova5586 Před 3 měsíci

    It´s unbelievably beautiful, I can listen to this nonstop, really. Thank you for this version ! ❤

  • @ktkthakre
    @ktkthakre Před 2 měsíci +1

    There's something so hauntingly beautiful in this!

  • @fredwood1490
    @fredwood1490 Před rokem +28

    Crossing the dark river of Styxx, or is it the Sea of Storms,
    passing through the Veil, beyond the Beyond,
    I know not.
    This is like no place I have ever seen, like nothing I have ever felt.
    What music is this? Is it from the Promise? Is it from the place left behind?
    It speaks of the grief I feel and for the hope I have.
    It gives be peace.
    What will come is decided, be it pain or rest or something else,
    I can only endure the Judgment.
    If I have earned Perdition, so be it, I am who I was and I deny nothing.
    And if I find Paradise, I will walk proudly through it,
    I am who I was and I deny nothing.
    And when I meet The Master,
    this music will I still hear, this passing I will remember,
    as I bathe in the pure light that holds back the shadow,
    as I bow to All That Is, or Ever Was, or Ever will Be.

    • @garethhughes2826
      @garethhughes2826 Před rokem +2

      This music is beautiful but it makes you realise we are pathetic little insignificant beings on an insignificant little planet in and insignificant universe and we have no control over anything. Which begs the question WHO DO WE THINK WE ARE

    • @fredwood1490
      @fredwood1490 Před rokem +8

      @@garethhughes2826 WE are the one and only creature, as far as we actually know, who understands just how small and pathetic we are and that makes us far from insignificant. We alone, here on our little smote of dust, know what stars are made of, that there is a Universe beyond our skies and that we will, someday, die. But, before we die, there is so much we can do that nothing else has ever done or even thought about.

    • @zoey-b
      @zoey-b Před rokem

      @@fredwood1490 is that not sad, that nothing will ever matter

    • @fredwood1490
      @fredwood1490 Před rokem +2

      @@zoey-b Actually, everything matters. Everything you do changes the Universe, changes the Earth, changes the way Humans think about you and what you did in your life. We are the grain of sand that knows what a star is and how far away it is. We are the dust mote that knows much about the past of the Universe itself as well as its future. Every breath you take, ever bug you crush, every bird you free, affects the Universe, if only a little bit. As far as we know, no planet can think, no star can sing, no moon can change its motion by itself or would want to, or want anything at all. Life is the great gift of the Universe, it matters.

    • @zoey-b
      @zoey-b Před rokem +1

      @@fredwood1490 But nothing outweighs the weight of time. When you die people will mourn you, then people will mourn the people who mourned, and then from there what? in time there is nothing. We pull out the oil but in 200 years? in 2,000? plastic, hate, climate change, water crisis, food, education, war, in the eye of time they are so small. so many died, yet so many more will as well. People on a planet did things once. Where are they now? well the planets old and dead

  • @juanmorfin1675
    @juanmorfin1675 Před rokem +14

    It's beautiful. Thank god we have tech to do things like this

  • @sameerachowdhury5748
    @sameerachowdhury5748 Před měsícem +1

    Today marks a year of this masterpiece releasing and also when I got into subliminals

  • @scooterz420
    @scooterz420 Před 2 měsíci +1

    singing this and all of mozart's requiem in a huge hall with over 100 strangers was truly a magical experience, can't wait to do it again with faure's reqiuem

  • @byyourself7537
    @byyourself7537 Před rokem +3

    This is the version I needed!

  • @baaat0519
    @baaat0519 Před 9 měsíci +5

    I shed a tear

  • @bimgus1
    @bimgus1 Před měsícem +1

    with headphones this is bliss

  • @matthewmorrison9700
    @matthewmorrison9700 Před 9 měsíci +2

    What of high class, symphonious to the ears. Like a sweet candy to the mouth, transcending the spiritual resonance.
    A Blessed day, a quite blessed time. May the feast be Bountiful.

  • @evelynarquette
    @evelynarquette Před rokem +7

    Please please please do more of these with other classical pieces! This was heavenly

  • @edelweiss-
    @edelweiss- Před 4 měsíci +3

    Now iam ready to fight Napoleon.

  • @Aanya_224
    @Aanya_224 Před 17 dny

    Oh my heart ❤ And the perfection of Romanticism's paintings, just epic

  • @wiNdoWsBuGgEd
    @wiNdoWsBuGgEd Před 26 dny +1

    I found about this beautiful side of CZcams just last year it's pleasure to be in this ....

  • @Ry_guy7
    @Ry_guy7 Před 11 měsíci +5

    No matter how you play Larcimosa, I’ll always love it. Not only because it’s beautiful but how it always sends a felling down my entire body that’s creepy.

    • @nicolelawless9942
      @nicolelawless9942 Před měsícem

      I always think about 1985’s classic war movie Come and See, it played in my Come and See nightmares recently. There was an alternate ending of me and Floyra rejoining the partisans together but it never happened in the original cut because I had died protecting Floyra from an ambush by the Nazis, the original plot twist was supposed to be Floyra dying but instead i taken the gunfire for him; I was dying in his arms for almost 2 hours and I never got my chance to admit to Floyra that i finally loved him because I had died before I could even say it. I honestly hate having to see Floyra being so heartbroken that he’ll probably get his revenge on the entire village eventually and he won’t feel any remorse because Floyra loved me this much to do it

  • @yagmur23909
    @yagmur23909 Před rokem +11

    this is art bro,really.Damn...

  • @dalphazilla1420
    @dalphazilla1420 Před 11 dny +1

    "Hey this song is pretty g-" *descends into heaven*

  • @alia-xd8xz
    @alia-xd8xz Před 2 měsíci +2

    The masculine urge to die in the battle

  • @MooNlight-ff2iy
    @MooNlight-ff2iy Před 11 měsíci +5

    i feel alive listening to this

  • @noneya11
    @noneya11 Před rokem +7

    Literal chills 🤍

  • @danielt8171
    @danielt8171 Před rokem +56

    Classical music truly hits the soul unlike any modern music does, The only music that I can genuinely feel is classical.

    • @bobobooii6915
      @bobobooii6915 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Look up Alex g

    • @sameerdodger
      @sameerdodger Před 6 měsíci +5

      If all you do is hear songs that are played on the radio I could understand why you would think this. However the truth is there's so much classical music that absolutely sucks and has no soul just like modern hits.

  • @robertbeier5521
    @robertbeier5521 Před 7 měsíci +6

    I'm so glad more people are listening to classical music! I'm 20 and in my highschool I was the only one who would ardently listen and explore the breadth of classical, it was like this great world that only I was able to enjoy, always wishing I could find a like mind who also saw all the beauty and subtleties of every piece.

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 Před měsícem

      I know what you mean. It's American education. Europe is better in this. That's why I live in Europe.

  • @e99909
    @e99909 Před měsícem +1

    Wow this music is really beautiful.

  • @oldfrend
    @oldfrend Před 5 měsíci +2

    maybe the greatest tragedy in the history of art thta mozart died before he could finished the requiem, and more specifically the lacrimosa. what genius that this only hinted at, and will never be found.

  • @libertyh8658
    @libertyh8658 Před rokem +4

    i cried for this masterpiece

  • @EthanJbleethan
    @EthanJbleethan Před rokem +275

    He legit just slowed down and added reverb and called it a day

    • @hkb8833
      @hkb8833 Před rokem +23

      Yeah, the fact it's slower makes it kinda garbage tbh

    • @garethhughes2826
      @garethhughes2826 Před rokem +128

      ​@@hkb8833 makes it more dramatic if you can't feel that you should be listening to something else

    • @sarahirwin1769
      @sarahirwin1769 Před rokem +17

      ​@Gareth Hughes it really doesn't.

    • @EthanJbleethan
      @EthanJbleethan Před rokem +34

      @@garethhughes2826 Naw, it makes it annoying. Too much is like too little, the original doesn't need reverb or to be slowed down to have a very dramatic effect. I also feel like your opinion might be skewed because in the video there's an image that might be making you feel differently about the piece than if you were to close your eyes.

    • @kilith
      @kilith Před rokem +20

      @@EthanJbleethan i feel like the reverb is fine since it's something you'd get in a real cathedral, but slowing it down completely ruins it

  • @bighotdog1268
    @bighotdog1268 Před rokem +7

    can't wait 'till this Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart guy releases some more bangers

  • @Domathedemon
    @Domathedemon Před měsícem +2

    I JUST LOVE CLASSICAL MUSIC

  • @overdrafter5647
    @overdrafter5647 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Lord as You know and as You will, have mercy.

  • @montynelson5033
    @montynelson5033 Před rokem +4

    it was perfect already. somehow this is more perfect

  • @klydon12345
    @klydon12345 Před 4 měsíci

    Absolutely beyond words.thank you.

  • @OneSilentGuy
    @OneSilentGuy Před 8 měsíci +2

    It's an amazing piece of art!

  • @Terlin1466
    @Terlin1466 Před rokem +15

    its good. The song was already a master piece and it feels like you took the song poured some cleaner on it and softly buffered it. so good job.

    • @sashacwitie488
      @sashacwitie488 Před rokem +2

      Piece*

    • @r_z_t_17
      @r_z_t_17 Před rokem +3

      @@sashacwitie488 they did spell it piece

    • @user-sw5pw3cs4w
      @user-sw5pw3cs4w Před rokem +1

      @@r_z_t_17 its a piece, not song

    • @r_z_t_17
      @r_z_t_17 Před rokem

      @@user-sw5pw3cs4w sure

    • @DaveyXHatter
      @DaveyXHatter Před rokem

      @@r_z_t_17 performers, classically trained musicians, are taught that "classical" music = pieces,
      you can call it a performance, interpretation, whatever but calling it a song is kind of sacrilegious to musicians.
      best to just not do so, (I dont mind that much if you're a casual or not classically inclined) but you could potentially get a lot of flak for doing so.
      A song is something that is sung, but a piece/work of music is composed.
      Dictionary Textbook examples:
      ---- Song (sôNG) noun
      (a short poem or other set of words set to music or meant to be sung): the tenor sings a beautiful song.
      ---- Piece (pēs) noun
      (an artistic, musical, or literary work or composition): the piece is written in four movements
      > not meant to be an attack on you, and not trying to be a dick, just providing some clarity and context.

  • @dollarstoreauthor
    @dollarstoreauthor Před rokem +4

    this is amazing

  • @BaronVonNapalm
    @BaronVonNapalm Před 4 měsíci

    One of my favorites to sing. The Tenor part is magnificent.

  • @blurryface616
    @blurryface616 Před 8 měsíci

    I don't know if I'm more mesmerized by the Lacrimosa variation or the painting.

  • @please12345ful
    @please12345ful Před 8 měsíci +4

    This music is not of this world. It's transcend ❤

  • @user-ff8xo6qr2o
    @user-ff8xo6qr2o Před 10 měsíci +4

    this sound so good to the point that even my $3 earphones cant keep up

  • @valentino2137
    @valentino2137 Před 9 měsíci

    I love how you "ENHANCED" this song, truly spectacular and inspiring. Do more songs if you haven't already, please and thank you.

  • @MIDE.
    @MIDE. Před dnem

    I LOVE the fact that this got recommended

  • @jules-6473
    @jules-6473 Před rokem +10

    This video will 100% blow up in the next weeks

  • @mister_john
    @mister_john Před rokem +6

    “Lacrimosa but I put a book in front of the speaker.”

  • @gxn_exe05
    @gxn_exe05 Před 5 měsíci

    brings tears to my eyes on occasion, sometimes, it just brings out the power.

  • @FarhatAli-gx1zr
    @FarhatAli-gx1zr Před 2 měsíci +1

    Truly Beautiful!

  • @sidneystardust
    @sidneystardust Před rokem +5

    i am an artist, someone who paints and has worked with music for years, music has never touched me, I rarely get goosebumps with songs, and rarely have any reaction. For the first time in 3 years, a piece of music made me cry

    • @IBBYITIS
      @IBBYITIS Před rokem

      Hi Pink Floyd

    • @aleksandrsbelijs344
      @aleksandrsbelijs344 Před rokem

      bro youre like 10

    • @sidneystardust
      @sidneystardust Před rokem

      @@aleksandrsbelijs344 pretty close (add on 3)

    • @windows8.1proforthewin
      @windows8.1proforthewin Před 11 měsíci +5

      ​@@sidneystardust 13? You worked with music since 10?

    • @SToXC_.
      @SToXC_. Před 10 měsíci +1

      this dude "an artist who worked with music for years" is 13 years old 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂🔥😂😂😂 jesus christ