No oscar even given for at least the magnificent music???? What the h... went wrong in Hollywood. Furthermore all in all this movie must be one of the best, no definately the best sci fi movie in its genre ever created............
The Oscars discredit themselves more every year, as does the Nobel Peace Prize. That's what allowing anti-white communists into controlling positions does to a society.
It's sad because it's written in a minor scale, its beutiful because it insists in the major chords of that scale. Phillip Glass got there first btw...
The Oscar doesn't deserve or afford Christopher Nolan, Hans Zimmer and their team. It will be just like rating something which in the first place cannot be explained. It will be like putting a full stop and treat an expression developed by an emotion as a simple sentence. What they produce together keeps us awestruck on godly proportions. When we watch a Christopher Nolan movie the concept amazes us to a degree where it takes time to fathom the enigma of it (in a good way). When we listen to a Hans Zimmer track it keeps us awake at night and makes us think about the sanity of our existence.
"There's something very human about it because it can only make a sound with air, and it needs to breathe. And on each note you hear the breath, you hear the exhale" "You feel a human presence in every sound... ...There's an intimacy as well as massive scale" Gives me chills. Not for nothing many great musicians, including Mozart, called the pipe organ: "The King of all instruments".
I had the privilege recently of having a - very modest - go on a cathedral organ (before I'd seen or read this thread) ...and I'd said to the Chief organist that I felt these organs were the closing instruments to a living being ..."it doesn't have a heart but it does have lungs, it doesn't have a pulse but it breathes.... "
We all need to start a petition for a video of Roger doing a complete play through of that whole song on that pipe organ. Absolutely amazing to watch and the tiny little clips you get amongst the talking are a tease!
This music is us. It’s about human beings in this vast universe. I can’t put it into words. You feel this at the deepest level in your soul. Legendary soundtrack.
I still remember the easter mass i went to church (for once) and they played the St Cecilia Mass by Gounod. I had tears in my eyes. Not only because of the music , but because of the instruments, and the organ which, at one point before US americans wanted the honour to themselves, it was the larges church organ of the world
From what I've researched pre-covid, this organ does /did get played on regularly every weekend by various artists taking turns, including this gentleman. Although not Interstellar soundtrack, but some classical / churchy music.
@@sannibird8695 The organ used and shown here is the organ of the Temple Church, London. It's used for church services and the organist used for the recording is Roger Sayer, who is also organist of the Temple Church. Here is Roger playing some Bach at the Temple Church: czcams.com/video/DtrKh79HMJc/video.html
This movie, and it's music means everything to me. Thank you Christopher Nolan, Hans Zimmer and Roger for creating this masterpiece. You've truly changed lives, and because of it, I've returned to school to learn about the cosmos.
Really hit hard as Nolan explained how these religiously affiliated instruments are meant to evoke the supernatural, metaphysical side of things. Really beautiful thought and perfect reasoning to include it in Interstellar
I used to sing in this church, Temple, as a chorister every day from age 7-14 (I'm 26 now). Can confirm the organ is extraordinary, it has an entire extra building to house it, and you can climb inside to be surrounded by the pipes. Never knew they recorded the soundtrack on it, but it makes beautiful sense.
Human presence and emotion in every sound indeed - there is nothing like a pipe organ that could deliver an experience like it did !! Brilliant choice & composition !!
It's been a while since I watched this, and I truly hope that on Interstellar's 10th Anniversary it's brought back to the theaters. I guess I'll check back here in November 2024 to see.
It's once in a lifetime kind of a composition. I can listen to it all my life and Church organ is such a divine instrument it transports you to another world . Brilliant work by entire team of Hans Zimmer.
I was able to visit this Temple Church, right in the middle of London. Just being able to watch this place, even walk inside those walls... SImply beautiful. I remember seeing the organ for the first time, put on my airpods and started listening to the whole soundtrack. It makes me cry every time I remember it.
Roger Sayer is a great organist , he has his own CZcams Channel , in which he posts maybe the best organ works . From J.S.Bach , Bossi, Ireland, to Hans Zimmer Interstellar soundtrack, watching this elegant man playng the organ and switching hundreds of stops , is like a journey into space . Hans Zimmer is , in my opinion, the soundtrack composer of the future . Just listen to Inception or Dune soundtrack , and of course Interstellar . Interstellar movie is epic, complex and well made . As Mr.Zimmer said , the organ is like a synthesizer, every pipe is a portion of sound . Changing combination of pipes, is like creating a brand new sound on the synth.
The Kontakt instrument Royal Albert Hall Organ will get anyone seeing this about as close as us mortals can get to the sound heard here. Was recorded and sampled in pretty much the same way as was done in the movie, albeit the one at the Royal Albert Hall and not Temple.
I am now actually seeing one of the greatest pieces of the entire film (and in film history I believe) ‘No time for caution’, being brought to life in front of my very eyes. It just sends shivers down your spine and I can’t believe it was actually made here in England and with such traditional instruments. Trust Hans Zimmer to make sure to incorporate traditional instruments as well as digital technology on a truly global scale to make some of the greatest cinematic music that has ever been.
I bought the album. We do not find the depth of the sounds that we hear in this part 2'39 - 2'50... Is there a way to get the original recording sounds from this organ ?
I believe this is a tracker organ? Most modern church organs are electric. They can still make that initial sound, called chiff, but press a key or release it and the pipe either plays on or off like a light switch. Older organs like this one may have electrically powered air supply and volume louvers on the pipe chambers, but their keys are remotely yet physically attached to the pipes. It’s hard to describe but it feels like touching the sound directly. The mechanism allows the performer far more expressiveness, much like the touch sensitive synth keyboards of today. It’s the humanness they were so surprised by and are speaking of here.
Absolutely can recommend. Roger used to do lunch time recitals before the pandemic hit (church is near my office so gave it a look). Can highly recommend it. Also his CZcams channel too.
Next time you look to the nights sky. Ponder this saying by Arthur C Clarke. “Two possibilities exist, either we are alone in the universe, or we are not. Both are equally terrifying.”
Since the MP3 player, a list of tracks on a device has been called 'songs' or 'a songlist'. In earlier times on shellac or vinyl records, each 'track' on a 'disc' as part of an 'album' was the standard. In between times, pieces of music have been called 'sounds', 'pieces' (for hundreds of years) but a 'song' is a sung by human (or bird's) voice: usually words, rather like a poem set to a time signature along with music, usually. Song can also be 'a capella' without music, or even without words, sometimes listed among the many musical instruments as 'vox humana' or 'human voice'. An example of this might be much of the sung music in the film '2001: A Space Odyssey'.
This is the perfect soundtrack for such a perfect movie. I'm obsessed. A masterpiece!
Damn right. The movie brings you into another dimension! Amazing.
Me as well
The movie was trash 😂
Obsessed..is a word that fits with this film and soundtrack
You guys are not alone
Perfect soundtrack but not perfect movie, I think they messed up changing directors in the middle of the movie
No oscar even given for at least the magnificent music???? What the h... went wrong in Hollywood. Furthermore all in all this movie must be one of the best, no definately the best sci fi movie in its genre ever created............
Not once did they mention Roger's last name, without him, these impossible pieces would not have been playable...
The Oscars discredit themselves more every year, as does the Nobel Peace Prize. That's what allowing anti-white communists into controlling positions does to a society.
@@maxnaz47 Roger Sayer en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_Sayer
That's what happens when you recreate a better recording of Phillip Glass's Music...
Roger Sayer deserves an award for his dramatic music that superbly enhances this movie.
Not much makes me cry, but this music did whilst watching the film, so, so beautiful and so, so sad.
I exactly know how you feel!
It's just being overrun by feelings. It's an intimidating beauty! Absolutely amazing!
It's sad because it's written in a minor scale, its beutiful because it insists in the major chords of that scale. Phillip Glass got there first btw...
I felt the same!
Me too!
This music unleashes so many emotions inside me. It makes me cry....Hans should have gotten an Oscar for composing this!
The Oscar doesn't deserve or afford Christopher Nolan, Hans Zimmer and their team. It will be just like rating something which in the first place cannot be explained. It will be like putting a full stop and treat an expression developed by an emotion as a simple sentence. What they produce together keeps us awestruck on godly proportions. When we watch a Christopher Nolan movie the concept amazes us to a degree where it takes time to fathom the enigma of it (in a good way). When we listen to a Hans Zimmer track it keeps us awake at night and makes us think about the sanity of our existence.
Golden words…
"There's something very human about it because it can only make a sound with air, and it needs to breathe. And on each note you hear the breath, you hear the exhale"
"You feel a human presence in every sound...
...There's an intimacy as well as massive scale"
Gives me chills. Not for nothing many great musicians, including Mozart, called the pipe organ: "The King of all instruments".
I had the privilege recently of having a - very modest - go on a cathedral organ (before I'd seen or read this thread) ...and I'd said to the Chief organist that I felt these organs were the closing instruments to a living being ..."it doesn't have a heart but it does have lungs, it doesn't have a pulse but it breathes.... "
whenever hans zimmer and christopher work together, you know the movie is about to be very FUCKING good.
Wait... so you're telling me this utter masterpiece is played by just one person and not a giant orchestra?!?!?
There is also an orchestra but for some parts of the soundtrack it's only this organ
I'm 60 now and last year I started learning the piano because of this music, it gave me the decisive push to start a new journey
inspiring
keep sprinting, don't ever stop.
We all need to start a petition for a video of Roger doing a complete play through of that whole song on that pipe organ. Absolutely amazing to watch and the tiny little clips you get amongst the talking are a tease!
He has a CZcams channel: “Roger Sayer Organist” where he plays through the songs in their entirety
The last time a soundtrack had this kind of profound impact on me was 50 years earlier watching Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey. Simply amazing.
Absolute Masterpiece. Should be up there with Mozart and them other dudes...
Believe me: Mozart (and his colleagues) are way out of Zimmer's league.
@@martinemorelle6520 No.
This music is us. It’s about human beings in this vast universe. I can’t put it into words. You feel this at the deepest level in your soul. Legendary soundtrack.
I hadn’t considered it like that until it was put to us here in this video. It truly does feel like it is music about ‘us’ in the vast universe.
Roger Sayer, the man of god like harmonic understanding. Credit to Hans too for composing such a piece.
There's 38 comments on this.. I'm 39. So. I know there's 38 people on the planet that's humble. Thanks for being 1. 1 of the 39
This soundtrack is just. I don’t have words. Everyone should hear it
It’s the most beautiful music. I never realised it was done at the Temple Church. Such moving music. It brings me to tears.
2:04 The most beautiful description of an instrument that I’ve ever heard
Roger, the unsung hero!!! Probably one of the most poingnant soundtrack ever made…
Hearing a big pipe organ in person is the only way to go. You can feel it!
I still remember the easter mass i went to church (for once) and they played the St Cecilia Mass by Gounod. I had tears in my eyes. Not only because of the music , but because of the instruments, and the organ which, at one point before US americans wanted the honour to themselves, it was the larges church organ of the world
Is there any chance for live concert on that organ? I would travel the world for this
ME TOO!!
From what I've researched pre-covid, this organ does /did get played on regularly every weekend by various artists taking turns, including this gentleman. Although not Interstellar soundtrack, but some classical / churchy music.
@@sannibird8695 czcams.com/users/RogerSayerOrganist
Ooooh same here.
@@sannibird8695 The organ used and shown here is the organ of the Temple Church, London. It's used for church services and the organist used for the recording is Roger Sayer, who is also organist of the Temple Church. Here is Roger playing some Bach at the Temple Church: czcams.com/video/DtrKh79HMJc/video.html
interstellar has the best theme ever made
This movie, and it's music means everything to me. Thank you Christopher Nolan, Hans Zimmer and Roger for creating this masterpiece. You've truly changed lives, and because of it, I've returned to school to learn about the cosmos.
I wish more people knew how freaking cool organs are.
Interstellar is completely one of the best movies i have ever seen.
My God!!! How more human can you be, a humble Man extract the Best sound from an organic instrumment and becoming a legend
Really hit hard as Nolan explained how these religiously affiliated instruments are meant to evoke the supernatural, metaphysical side of things. Really beautiful thought and perfect reasoning to include it in Interstellar
Till this day the best movie with the best music cover I hear ever seen/heard
Thank you Nolan and Zimmer but most of all thank you Roger! =)
amazing score
Brings me to tears every time
One word: Magnificent.
This soundtrack and the soundtrack for The Fountain are some of the most beautiful pieces of music ever.
Loved this explanation of the creation of this amazingly powerful score!
smiling coz i was able to not only listen but also able to see true art and appriciate it
This moves you another universe, such masterpiece 👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻
Having grown up with this kind of sound on Sundays, this music takes me back to places from my youth.
This reminds me! I need to watch Interstellar this month!
The idea behind this score literally gave me goosebumps!
My god, I’ve always got chills whilst listening this master peace, so get them now
Beautiful documentary of interstellar how the music was made very beautiful 🥰👍❤❤❤❤❤
I don’t think I could express how much I would love to hear this played live on an organ of that caliber
My GOD IS WONDERFUL THOSE SOUND!!!💙💙💙💙🥰😇
I used to sing in this church, Temple, as a chorister every day from age 7-14 (I'm 26 now). Can confirm the organ is extraordinary, it has an entire extra building to house it, and you can climb inside to be surrounded by the pipes. Never knew they recorded the soundtrack on it, but it makes beautiful sense.
Hits on a soul like level, amazing.
i pray one day people will appreciate The Prestige like it should be
Human presence and emotion in every sound indeed - there is nothing like a pipe organ that could deliver an experience like it did !! Brilliant choice & composition !!
It's been a while since I watched this, and I truly hope that on Interstellar's 10th Anniversary it's brought back to the theaters. I guess I'll check back here in November 2024 to see.
It's once in a lifetime kind of a composition. I can listen to it all my life and Church organ is such a divine instrument it transports you to another world . Brilliant work by entire team of Hans Zimmer.
I was able to visit this Temple Church, right in the middle of London. Just being able to watch this place, even walk inside those walls... SImply beautiful. I remember seeing the organ for the first time, put on my airpods and started listening to the whole soundtrack. It makes me cry every time I remember it.
Yes sowed the seeds in 1972 and again in 1978 as far as reintegrating the king of instruments into popular music.
Hans Zimmer...saving Christopher Nolan movies since 2007
Absolute brilliance. Some times we simply need to appreciate the gifts around us.
Hans is one of those gifts.
Roger Sayer is a great organist , he has his own CZcams Channel , in which he posts maybe the best organ works .
From J.S.Bach , Bossi, Ireland, to Hans Zimmer Interstellar soundtrack, watching this elegant man playng the organ and switching hundreds of stops , is like a journey into space .
Hans Zimmer is , in my opinion, the soundtrack composer of the future .
Just listen to Inception or Dune soundtrack , and of course Interstellar .
Interstellar movie is epic, complex and well made .
As Mr.Zimmer said , the organ is like a synthesizer, every pipe is a portion
of sound . Changing combination of pipes, is like creating a brand new sound on the synth.
I would love to see an extended version of this interview!
The Kontakt instrument Royal Albert Hall Organ will get anyone seeing this about as close as us mortals can get to the sound heard here. Was recorded and sampled in pretty much the same way as was done in the movie, albeit the one at the Royal Albert Hall and not Temple.
I am now actually seeing one of the greatest pieces of the entire film (and in film history I believe) ‘No time for caution’, being brought to life in front of my very eyes. It just sends shivers down your spine and I can’t believe it was actually made here in England and with such traditional instruments. Trust Hans Zimmer to make sure to incorporate traditional instruments as well as digital technology on a truly global scale to make some of the greatest cinematic music that has ever been.
Well done roger!
They really created a masterpiece
Roger. Is Amazing!!!
Interstellar and Tarzan scores to me are the absolute peak of soundtracks in film
This is AMAZING
the last 30 seconds of this on high quality speakers was awesome
Hans Zimmer my favorite
Maestro. Personified.
When legends of every field meet together then big bang happens.
Hope they paid Roger commensurate to his abilities...
To play this on the organ is stupid hard ...
What a lovely video. A master composer recognising a master player and both of them respecting a master instrument.
I would love to see a full length documentary on this collaboration.
You know where to find it?
EPIC!!!
Extraordinary
I love how much a synth nerd hans is
This music is awesome. Where could I find the score for ORGAN please? Laura =)
I wish this extraordinary music would be available in HiRes quality for download! All current samples are on CZcams only in average quality.
Does anyone know where I can find the image shown at 0:08 in hi-res ? I reeeeeealy want that as desktop wallpaper
Rally car drivers do the fastest footwork in the world on pedals.
2:43
Rally car drivers do the second fastest footwork in the world on pedals.
I bought the album. We do not find the depth of the sounds that we hear in this part 2'39 - 2'50... Is there a way to get the original recording sounds from this organ ?
I believe this is a tracker organ? Most modern church organs are electric. They can still make that initial sound, called chiff, but press a key or release it and the pipe either plays on or off like a light switch. Older organs like this one may have electrically powered air supply and volume louvers on the pipe chambers, but their keys are remotely yet physically attached to the pipes. It’s hard to describe but it feels like touching the sound directly. The mechanism allows the performer far more expressiveness, much like the touch sensitive synth keyboards of today. It’s the humanness they were so surprised by and are speaking of here.
That's Air Studios in London at the beginning. They tore their organ apart and threw it in a skip leaving only the facade. Never work with them.
I once heard that Hans Zimmer chose the organ because it has to breathe, just like humans
You heard it at 2:03 😄
Actually it was Nolan who did if you watch other documentary he said Organ seems to be something different and Zimmer at first wasn't sure
Hans zimmer is a genius.
Roger was destined to play this masterpiece
One of my dreams is to build a studio that has a building dedicated to an organ for recordings.
“And we got plenty of magic with Roger” it’s called genius!
Next time I’m in London I’m visiting that church
Absolutely can recommend. Roger used to do lunch time recitals before the pandemic hit (church is near my office so gave it a look). Can highly recommend it. Also his CZcams channel too.
thanks
The analogy of a human to church organ
I mean, it's pretty much an "organ" :D
Mistrz :)
The music on 2.04 where can I get it without the dialogue.
Genius
👏👏👏👏
💙💙💛💛
👏👏👏
21 countries, 36 American states. Seen it all. My old lady leaving me. Couldn't care if I tried.. turning a new Leaf
🙏
👍👍👍
Next time you look to the nights sky. Ponder this saying by Arthur C Clarke.
“Two possibilities exist, either we are alone in the universe, or we are not. Both are equally terrifying.”
What track is this in the background? Sounds similar to No Time For Caution but there are different parts, mhm.
It’s not a song jeeeeeeez it’s a track/score why are you calling it a song
@@leoholder7839 Thank you, changed it.
Since the MP3 player, a list of tracks on a device has been called 'songs' or 'a songlist'.
In earlier times on shellac or vinyl records, each 'track' on a 'disc' as part of an 'album' was the standard.
In between times, pieces of music have been called 'sounds', 'pieces' (for hundreds of years) but a 'song' is a sung by human (or bird's) voice: usually words, rather like a poem set to a time signature along with music, usually.
Song can also be 'a capella' without music, or even without words, sometimes listed among the many musical instruments as 'vox humana' or 'human voice'.
An example of this might be much of the sung music in the film '2001: A Space Odyssey'.
such a fabulous piece of music unlike startwars and superbman that sounded the same lol