MY EMOTIONS COULDN'T HANDLE IT - REACTING TO SYMPHONY NO.2 -MAHLER - FINAL MVT.

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  • čas přidán 13. 05. 2024
  • Reacting to Gustav Mahler Symphony No.2 Final Movement.
    This was a lot to take in...pause. Sorry for the lag in the Intro :(
    Thanks for watching Classical Family!
    00:00 Intro
    1:26 Final Movement
    40:49 My Impression
    Original Video: • Christoph Eschenbach |...
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Komentáře • 248

  • @mvjonsson
    @mvjonsson Před rokem +44

    "My time will come" - Gustav Mahler, who was more appreciated in his time as a conductor than a composer.

    • @timbredan3476
      @timbredan3476 Před rokem +9

      Just like Bernstein. No wonder Bernstein relates to Mahler!

  • @eduardovieira7001
    @eduardovieira7001 Před rokem +29

    Nobody is the same after hearing this symphony for the first time.

  • @nitetrane98
    @nitetrane98 Před rokem +111

    As I get older and more embittered by life I always listen to this to see if my eyes still water. They always do so I know I have some emotion left in me.

    • @krzysztofjaxaswist1434
      @krzysztofjaxaswist1434 Před rokem +5

      Try last movement of Mahler's third if you wish to check if you still feel something deeper as a human. If Mahler's second gets you then his third should make you weep. ❤

    • @1193joao
      @1193joao Před rokem

      That's exactly the same for me, my dear friend.

    • @masonb9788
      @masonb9788 Před 11 měsíci +5

      the older I get, the more tears come..

    • @Jannette-mw7fg
      @Jannette-mw7fg Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@krzysztofjaxaswist1434 The last movement of 3 is like a big consolation from God, the second is the love of my live, but when I am bitter and hate humanity and feel the world is so dark, I need the end of the third to know that there will be forgiveness!

    • @joshuawalker6811
      @joshuawalker6811 Před 6 měsíci +2

      The first time I listened to this piece was because I had heard a drum corps play the first movement. I had no idea what I was in for, I literally broke down sobbing at the end when the big hit happens. I had no idea I could be, and still can be touched by a piece of music.

  • @PauGarriga42
    @PauGarriga42 Před rokem +252

    The final chorus part is probably the best music ever composed...

    • @Dylonely42
      @Dylonely42 Před rokem +12

      Obviously

    • @HYP3RK1NECT
      @HYP3RK1NECT Před rokem +1

      ¿Y que hay de la octava?

    • @benjamindewinter2432
      @benjamindewinter2432 Před rokem +9

      Last part of Symphony 8 is on par.

    • @_CaptainCookie
      @_CaptainCookie Před rokem +13

      ​@@benjamindewinter2432 is it just me that thinks symphony number 8 is one of Mahler's weaker works? I feel as though its epicness comes from the size of the ensemble rather than the music itself.

    • @benjamindewinter2432
      @benjamindewinter2432 Před rokem +4

      @@_CaptainCookie I understand if you think so. For me I don't like listening to the whole symphony straight. But the last two parts are just too beautiful to me, especially when you try to listen to the text, which I don't completely understand without translation but since my native language is Dutch and I speak a little bit of German, it helps you to appreciate the splendour of Mahler's setting of the last of Faust. Alles vergängliche ist nur ein gleichnis. It's a very poetic piece of literature set concisely to heartwarming music.

  • @MREmusique
    @MREmusique Před 11 měsíci +26

    I attended a concert where they performed this a few weeks ago, and have to admit to crying uncontrollably multiple times during the performance.

  • @paulmorin4434
    @paulmorin4434 Před rokem +58

    So I just found your reaction and as a great fan of Mahler and as someone who has performed this, I can give you my "from the stage" reaction. I performed this with the San Francisco Symphony in 1996. I was a tenor in the chorus and I can tell you it was one of the greatest experiences I've ever had. When we sang the fortissimo "Auferstehen" (37:50 in this video) we HURLED the phrase into the audience. At the end of the concert, I no longer felt my feet and had the impression I had levitated off the stage! I will never forget that feeling! Explore ALL of Mahler's works -- they give and give and give!

    • @frankbruno8556
      @frankbruno8556 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Excellent. Thank you!

    • @giuseppeagresta1425
      @giuseppeagresta1425 Před 8 měsíci

      To a person who only know Mahler for his symphonies, what other pieces would you recommend?

    • @frankbruno8556
      @frankbruno8556 Před 8 měsíci

      @@giuseppeagresta1425 Songs Of A Wayfarer
      Recommend this performance with Bruno Walter/Mildred Miller Columbia S.O.
      Also, Kindertotenlieder Songs
      Also,
      Des Knaben Wunderhorn
      Three Ruckert Songs

    • @michaelpratt7815
      @michaelpratt7815 Před 3 měsíci

      Why can’ t we have the text?

    • @patriciarossman8653
      @patriciarossman8653 Před měsícem

      Hi! I'm right in front of you in the viola section. I love the sheer power of you guys right behind me. Add playing "inside" the music as one hears it in an orchestra, when it's all put together, it's better than you-know-what. 😊

  • @patricktulher
    @patricktulher Před rokem +77

    Gustav Mahler was a genius, maybe the greatest composer ever.
    I recommend his 8th symphony, it's VERY EPIC also. Just like this one.
    From another composer; another apotheotic symphony, the 7th by Shostakovich. It's just amazing!

  • @billgrimke-drayton2858
    @billgrimke-drayton2858 Před 10 měsíci +10

    My ex-wife and I went to a concert where this symphony was played. At the end you could have heard a pin drop. It was as though we all held in our breath. For 30 seconds total silence, and then the applause broke out and lasted for a good few minutes. It was an experience - I would say, a spiritual one. That's what music is supposed to do.

  • @miracle3105
    @miracle3105 Před rokem +20

    YOU ARE SO UNDERRATED

  • @dralexandresousa
    @dralexandresousa Před rokem +42

    The validation you give to classical music is a warm in our hearts. As a already retired classical musician and having a love story in my life full with classical music I must thank YOU for the visibility you give to the classical musicians. That was the dream of my passed away husband. People watching classical music everywhere in the world, having access to that!And you, and your channel give is to all of us! I'm a huge fan of you and your job! Thank you for not letting the love for classical music go away in our hearts!

  • @nerowolfe5175
    @nerowolfe5175 Před rokem +26

    The "interesting" piccolo solo just before the chorus' soft entry is supposed to represent a birdsong - the last sound from a fading Earth just before the glory of Heaven begins to wash in. P.S. - Do not EVER pause Mahler!

    • @nicholasfulford6753
      @nicholasfulford6753 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Mahler was so inspired by nature in what he wrote, and I also love how he brings the distant marching band - again something he heard in his youth - and then nature rising up in contradistinction to it, and with such emotive potency. Of course his use of brass - ah! It sounds like Gabriel is calling the dead to life, and if this music and its finale can't waken us into ecstasy then nothing can.

  • @kevinbyrne5265
    @kevinbyrne5265 Před 16 dny

    I've listened to this symphony over and over again from start to finish, in fact all Mahler's symphonies. In 1971 I heard the Adigietto from the fifth symphony and it changed my life, no exaggeration and the next day bought all his symphonies and been listening to them ever since. The second is astounding, it affirms life like all his works excepts Mahler put everything in the world into his symphonies, warts and all, death and life joy and sorrow and deep reflection in the slow movement of the sixth syymphony. Listen to his greatest, the ninth, the last movement will kill you for it ends so quietly but with the resignation and acceptance of his coming death at fifty years of age, there are no words to describe that movement, it's sheer beauty and dragging every sinew from your heart, listen to it I beg you. It's wonderful to see you listen to it for the first time, probably blew your head off, the second, for that's what it does, it's brilliant. Stick with Mahler, you'll never regret it. The first symphony is great fun and the ending will really get you going thinking anything is possible. Good man, you obviously have a good ear for music. And thank you for presenting this, great to watch your reactions especially at the end, it said "What was That!!!"

  • @EminAnimE1
    @EminAnimE1 Před rokem +8

    Greatest composer of all time.

  • @7ivorytickler
    @7ivorytickler Před rokem +9

    I watched this with my wife a day and a half before she died. I can’t find the words to tell you how the final text impacted us.

    • @waveflunktion
      @waveflunktion Před 11 měsíci

      Im terribly sorry for your loss. This piece absolutely destroyed me the first time I listened to it, but it was only once I read the translation of the lyrics that I felt completely connected to it. I want this piece to be the last thing I ever listen to.

  • @joshuawalker6811
    @joshuawalker6811 Před 7 měsíci +5

    If you haven’t hear Bernstein do this you haven’t heard the symphony at it’s best!!

  • @adriennewerring5540
    @adriennewerring5540 Před 11 měsíci +7

    Don’t pause and talk. Let the music speak! I just sang in the chorus of a performance of this Symphony last week and in my 73 years as a musician this was one of the highlights. Highly emotional for the performers and the audience.

  • @Quotenwagnerianer
    @Quotenwagnerianer Před rokem +8

    Mahler's 1901 program for the finale:
    We are again faced with all the terrible questions, - and the mood at the end of the 1st movement. - The voice of the caller is heard: The end of all living things has come, the last judgment announces itself, and the whole horror of the day of all days has broken in. - The earth trembles, the graves spring open, the dead rise and stride along in endless procession. The great and the small of this earth, the kings and the beggars, the righteous and the wicked - all want to go there; the call for mercy and grace sounds terribly at our ear. - It cries out more and more terribly - all senses pass us by, all consciousness fades away at the approach of the eternal judgment. The "Great Appeal" sounds, the trumpets of the Apocalypse call: - in the midst of the dreadful silence we believe to hear a distant, distant nightingale, like a last trembling echo of earthly life! Softly a chorus of the saints and celestials resounds: "Resurrect, yes resurrect!" There appears the glory of God! A wonderful, mild light pierces us to the heart - all is still and blissful! - And behold, there is no judgment - There is no sinner, no righteous, no great and no small - There is no punishment and no reward! An almighty feeling of love illuminates us with blessed knowledge and being!

    • @nicholasfulford6753
      @nicholasfulford6753 Před 9 měsíci +1

      The theme of resurrection has never been so powerfully expressed as by Mahler's 2nd. While I am an atheist, I would be lying if I did not say that I get the intensity and beauty of this mythic narrative and now nakedly potent it is in being expressed my Mahler. It descends into the grave and erupts like Vesuvius with great heavings by the brass in the lower registers and the choir giving it human voice yielding to picolo flutterings and delicate near silences, and the finale of fracturing minds that can no longer contain the power that revivifies them. It is a magnificent journey and total ecstasy at the end - which has been evoked in the listener in wave after building wave over the movement.

  • @dingy8764
    @dingy8764 Před rokem +57

    I think the Beethoven emperor is a must hear for anyone who is getting into concertos, it’s one of the greatest out there! Zimmermans interpretation of the best for me.

    • @todbanks2727
      @todbanks2727 Před rokem +2

      And Zimmermans version is the best!

    • @Dylonely42
      @Dylonely42 Před rokem +5

      Zimmerman and Bernstein !

    • @weeblife6993
      @weeblife6993 Před rokem

      based

    • @anthropocentrus
      @anthropocentrus Před rokem +1

      Yes good it’s also a good introduction to my man Bernstein

    • @abrahanaeoa733
      @abrahanaeoa733 Před rokem +2

      Also the Brahms piano concerto no. 2 of Bernstein and Zimerman. Amazing

  • @pcgamingftw5694
    @pcgamingftw5694 Před rokem +46

    You're doing fine with seperating the talking. Listen to the music as intended. As you've experienced in this movement, composers played a lot with the listeners expectations. Everything is crafted with intent, which also means slower, less powerful parts are there to prepare you for the bigger things. Interruptions can harm this effect. Keep it up and all the best to you!

    • @GreatCelestialTeapot
      @GreatCelestialTeapot Před rokem +6

      Absolutely agree, the buildup of emotions is a big part of a masterpiece like this and interruptions to that can somewhat spoil this effect.

    • @GIDIREACTS
      @GIDIREACTS  Před rokem +11

      Appreciate it, I’ll keep that in mind thanks!

    • @gljamil
      @gljamil Před rokem +1

      Very well approached, this is an amazing, natural and really artistic process!

    • @frankbruno8556
      @frankbruno8556 Před 10 měsíci

      It's his presentation on his channel, though

  • @jennyrook715
    @jennyrook715 Před rokem +29

    It's the only musical representation of the Resurrection that I can believe. Wonderful that you appreciate it so much. It's treasure. Don't pause it, just get through it, because you won't get the full effect otherwise. Think of the journey from the anger and despair in the first movement, the efforts to distract in the central movements, and then the recap, how hard life is for us all, and then the glorious beauty of the life eternal.

    • @kevinhateswriting
      @kevinhateswriting Před 11 měsíci +3

      And it was composed by a Jew, no less!

    • @nicholasfulford6753
      @nicholasfulford6753 Před 9 měsíci +2

      There were Jewish mystics who fully comprehended to the sinew of their bones what Mahler composed. Such sensitivities are not exclusive to any ethnicity, and one does find many different forms in which it is expressed across different cultures and times. The mystical Islamic (Sufi) poets also capture it, as do the transcendentalist poets of 19th century New England..
      "A strain of Romanticism that took root among writers in mid-19th-century New England. Ralph Waldo Emerson laid out its principles in his 1836 manifesto Nature, in which he asserted that the natural and material world exists to reveal universal meaning to the individual soul via one’s subjective experiences. He promoted the poet’s role as seer, a “transparent eyeball” that received insight intuitively through his or her perception of nature." - Trancendentalism (Poetry Foundation - Glossary of Poetic Terms)
      Mahler was a musical transcendentalist, and what he excelled at was taking his inspiration and putting it into a musical form that transforms the listener into an emotional instrument where waves build towards an ultimate collapse into unity. The 3rd symphony accomplishes the same end in a 6th movement that goes through wave after wave until an ultimate collapse of duality into silence at the centre of a singularity.

    • @voiceover2191
      @voiceover2191 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@kevinhateswriting He was a catholic by then, part career move conversion (to get the conductor post at the Vienna opera) but he had felt attracted to catholicism as well for a long time.

  • @MrArdytube
    @MrArdytube Před 9 měsíci +3

    I love the added enjoyment of another person deeply enjoying music ❤

  • @fabianp.primuspilus9701
    @fabianp.primuspilus9701 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Hey GIDI, greetings from Gustav Mahler Society in Vienna. We were very pleased and excited that you are enjoying the music by Gustav Mahler. Keep going and go for it! People, turn the music off and look at his face. Your face expressed all human emotions.

  • @tommaw3204
    @tommaw3204 Před rokem +14

    Of course the finale is something else, but the percussion crescendo earlier on in the movement is so exhilarating!

  • @robertofont6069
    @robertofont6069 Před 3 měsíci +2

    This always brings me close
    To tears. This is one of the most beautiful, dramatic pieces in classical music. I like that you allowed your audience to listen to this movement in its entirety and then you commented.

  • @jdhoffacker2020
    @jdhoffacker2020 Před 7 měsíci +2

    As someone who has gotten to sing this finale live with orchestra and full choir, I relate to all emotions involved in this video. I would cry every night singing because of how emotionally invigorating this piece really is.

  • @Leea25
    @Leea25 Před rokem +15

    You need to hear this live - it is EPIC!

    • @fickleflan
      @fickleflan Před 6 měsíci +2

      There's nothing like attending a concert by live orchestra.

  • @scheeny
    @scheeny Před 8 měsíci +4

    As a former music student, who made a career in IT, I nonetheless kept in touch with my musical interests. A high point (perhaps of my life) was as a chorister for a recorded performance of this piece with MTT and the San Francisco Symphony. Something to cherish.

    • @user-iy1lz6jo4d
      @user-iy1lz6jo4d Před 3 měsíci

      Michael Tilson Thomas’ version is probably my favorite recording of this great, apocalyptic symphony. Thank you for your contribution!

  • @acactus2190
    @acactus2190 Před rokem +8

    A recommendation for the next concerto: Beethoven concerto No 5, also called emperor. Pls lol

  • @benjamindewinter2432
    @benjamindewinter2432 Před rokem +5

    Try all his symphonies. You will appreciate it. The finale of the 1st, the slow but heartwrenching 3rd's finale (his longest symphony), the first movement of the 4th are all fantastic for me, personally. HOWEVER, the 9th's finale is perhaps my favorite movement in perhaps all of music. When you listen to this you might want to also watch a lecture by Bernstein (famous conductor pianist composer educator) which gives more context.

    • @jameswiglesworth5004
      @jameswiglesworth5004 Před rokem +1

      Agree if you could only listen to one movement from a Mahler symphony, or any
      symphony for that matter, then it's the finale of his 9th

  • @samuelharris2386
    @samuelharris2386 Před rokem +16

    . I happened upon this podcast by accident while I was grillng over Labor Day at my son's house. I discovered Mahler 2 when I was 22. I am now 74. It was such a treat to hear and watch your reaction to this glorious music.How lucky you are to have the rest of your life to look forward to listening to it. However I can guarantee you that a live performance by a great orchestra takes it to a different level. The Cleveland Orchestra, one of the best in the world will be performing it on September 28th and 29th in historic Severance Hall. You should try to attend.

    • @GIDIREACTS
      @GIDIREACTS  Před rokem +1

      Visiting a live orchestra is definitely on my list!

  • @user-gx7ib8ji9u
    @user-gx7ib8ji9u Před rokem +7

    I like the way you listen to the whole thing, then talk
    Recommendation: Sibelius violin concerto

  • @ICanPickLocks
    @ICanPickLocks Před rokem +6

    Ravel gaspard de la nuit👀, also sorry for begging, it's just such a good piece. Might be a bit though to understand, somewhere along the lines of jeux deau, but i think you'll likr it.

  • @Balfour.
    @Balfour. Před rokem +3

    Aside from being a genius composer (the greatest of all time imho), Mahler was the best conductor of his day, and knew no boundaries when it came to finding the absolute perfect balance of sound. Just for instance, at 3:13, 16:31 and 21:04 that's an ensemble of instruments playing in a room off stage.

  • @bigg2988
    @bigg2988 Před rokem +2

    Welcome to the End of Time, the Final Judgement, and the Eternal Joy! (Should be all capital letters. :))
    How happy are we to be on this journey - a journey of hope ultimately... Let it seep in...

  • @sheldonvogt5212
    @sheldonvogt5212 Před 4 měsíci

    KC Symphony, directed by Michael Stern, performs it June 14-16, 2024 at Helzberg Hall in Kansas City.

  • @evanding4732
    @evanding4732 Před rokem +10

    Recommendations: Chopin nocturne op 48 no 1, ravel: miriors, Beethoven concerto in E flat major, emperor.

  • @voiceover2191
    @voiceover2191 Před 6 měsíci +1

    This music is holy and I'm not even religious, I get shivers, I feel the need to cry, to rejoice. I once saw the symphony live and walked away crying, it such a profound spiritual experience.

    • @davidrobinson7684
      @davidrobinson7684 Před 4 měsíci

      Yes indeed. When I was a teenager I went with my parents to see a live performance of this at the Royal Festival Hall in London, conducted by Klaus Tennstedt. We came away in shocked silence, unable to find the words to express what had just happened to us. Later, my dad said "That wasn't a piece of music. It was a spiritual experience!"

  • @noahwhite-telles5570
    @noahwhite-telles5570 Před rokem +3

    I recommend watching this Bernstein version of the fourth movement. Bernstein studied Mahler intensely, to the point where he once stated he felt like he wrote the music himself. He introduced Mahler's music to America. You really feel the power of what Mahler is writing about in this recording. czcams.com/video/gQctkKJMgM0/video.html

  • @ftumschk
    @ftumschk Před rokem +30

    I'd vote for you listening to the whole thing, rather than pausing and breaking the flow. The overall effect of the music deserves to be experienced as the composer intended it, and the pay-off is more impactful for it.... as Mahler 2 clearly demonstrates :)
    That was a great reaction to a sublime piece of music, and the performance by Eschenbach, the orchestra and singers was one of the best you could have picked. I look forward to you revisiting this symphony with Bernstein!

  • @bryceburgess5981
    @bryceburgess5981 Před rokem +15

    I would recommend rimsky korsakovs scheherezade or Tchaikovskys violin concerto, but for more mahler, I would go for his 5th symphony.

    • @GIDIREACTS
      @GIDIREACTS  Před rokem +2

      Noted! 😌

    • @jackyliu7095
      @jackyliu7095 Před rokem +3

      He should just listen to all of them in chronological order lol it would be better

  • @leonpetrich5864
    @leonpetrich5864 Před rokem +15

    42:35 try Bernsteins recordings. It´s a lot faster in the beginning of the 5th movement and tempo in many passages is very different and I really prefer his interpretations of Mahler.

    • @anthropocentrus
      @anthropocentrus Před rokem +7

      Mos’ definitely! Mahler/Bernstein is a God send!

    • @abrahanaeoa733
      @abrahanaeoa733 Před rokem +4

      Bernstein with DG and Sony recordings are the BEST.

    • @timbredan3476
      @timbredan3476 Před rokem +1

      Bernstein was buried with a Mahler score. That’s how much he revered Mahler.

  • @bosmeck
    @bosmeck Před rokem +7

    being captured while listening to this symphony, well, welcome to the club. It plays with every emotion you can think of. Now that this symphony captured you Gidi, go see it live... if you thought this was good on headphones, wait till you hear it live... x10 and more. I tip my hat for dropping this brilliant symphony on your show. Moreover, some great suggestions below in the comments.

  • @randallstewart1224
    @randallstewart1224 Před 2 měsíci

    Mahler's Symphonies, No. 2 and No. 8, usually just the final movements, get the traction on these YT channels. That is probably just because they are the most dramatic and stand alone quite well. Mahler's other works are less dramatic, shorter, and in some ways, easier to cope with. Mahler's works were really not part of the common symphonic program performed prior to the 1960s. Bernstein almost single-handed drove a modern revival of Mahler as conductor of the NY Philharmonic in the early 1960s. I was just starting college in 1964 and was part of a group which was very much into "high-end" recorded music reproduction, which then meant records. I was introduced to Mahler by a fellow student who worked like a slave to afford his huge Klipshorns supported by some of the best equipment money could buy. He acquired one of the box sets of Mahler symphonies published by Columbia Records under their premium Masterworks label, by the NY Phil and Bernstein. That was a cold $100 in 1965 money, a princely sum for a college student. Although Bernstein was later criticized for putting his excessive stamp on Mahler's works, his was the definitive Mahler for several decades. For alternatives, try Sym No.1 and No, 4. If you like vocal works, try The Song of the Earth.

  • @Entertainer114
    @Entertainer114 Před rokem +4

    This is my first time to your channel, but I really respect your reaction to Mahler. If you have a taste for other "epic" music, particularly piano: you might really get big feels from Rachmaninoff's piano concertos (any of them honestly, but start with #2, as it's the most popular. #3 after that). You will not regret it! They are both long (30+ min) but packed full of emotion, melody, and piano fireworks! My favorite version of #2 is with Vladimir Ashkenazy performing, and my favorite version of #3 is with Yefim Bronfman performing. But honestly, you can't go wrong listening to any solid pianist and orchestra doing those. Enjoy!

  • @trevjr
    @trevjr Před rokem +6

    I recommend all of the symphonies of course. The Kindertotenlieder and Ruckert Lieder are also so great. I appreciate you not talking too much over the music. The story is that Mahler could not figure out an ending for this work and he went to a funeral and heard a funeral chorus and that is where he got the ending.

  • @themike97_58
    @themike97_58 Před rokem +2

    I think the thing that amazes me the most about mahler is how he can take a simple idea and make a ton of music with it that all feels fresh.

  • @UCrafter5000
    @UCrafter5000 Před 9 měsíci +1

    This is my favorite piece to listen to and perform, hands down. It has changed my life

  • @johnpcomposer
    @johnpcomposer Před rokem +1

    The word overwhelming comes to mind.

  • @cclmanbrett
    @cclmanbrett Před 7 měsíci

    I sang this with the Madison Symphony Orchestra and was the MOST AMAZING work I've sang.. I've never sang in any choruses since.. They will be playing this at my Celebration of Life.. Bernstein's conducting has English translations

  • @egapnala65
    @egapnala65 Před rokem +5

    And from the last judgement, Mahler 3 takes you back to the creation.

    • @wormswithteeth
      @wormswithteeth Před rokem +1

      The final movement of the 3 is everything. Always.

  • @RenamPablo
    @RenamPablo Před 7 měsíci

    "What os going on?" 😂😂😂 It's Mahler's way to say "it's done!".

  • @theodentherenewed4785
    @theodentherenewed4785 Před rokem +1

    This is one of the legendary finales in all symphonic music in the sense that everyone with an interest in symphony heard it. I had the pleasure to attend a concert, when this symphony was played and I would highly recommend it. The 5th movement features an off-stage band - it only sounds truly off-stage live, when the sound comes from another direction than the stage, that's not something fully captureable by recordings I think. Mahler 2 is a cornerstone of symphonic repertoire, it stretched out the boundaries of what a symphony could be.

  • @jgesselberty
    @jgesselberty Před 7 měsíci

    You make classical music a force to be reckoned with and show that it is approachable and for all lovers of music, any kind of music.

  • @masonb9788
    @masonb9788 Před 11 měsíci

    Mahler changed my life. I decided to go looking for Mahler reactions, and I'm glad I found yours!

  • @brianvanderspuy4514
    @brianvanderspuy4514 Před 19 dny

    Mahler was the sunset of the Romantic era. But what a sunset.

  • @srfgrn
    @srfgrn Před 7 měsíci

    Welcome to the show, dude! I think you get it. You need to check out "Das Lied Von Der Erde" by Mahler. If we just had No. 2 and Das Lied, it would be enough.

  • @frankbruno8556
    @frankbruno8556 Před 10 měsíci

    I hear you, Gidi! I hear you...thank you!!

  • @stephencasillasjr
    @stephencasillasjr Před rokem +2

    I’ve seen this Mahler symphony twice. Lockington conducted the Modesto Symphony in 2016 and
    Dudamel conducted the LA Phil Hollywood Bowl 2019. Both were great, but I’m no musician, it just tugs at my heart in ways I can’t explain. 😭🤷🏻‍♂️ looking forward to watching again when its possible.

    • @sheldonvogt5212
      @sheldonvogt5212 Před 7 měsíci

      Come to Kansas City in June 2024. We'll rock it with Michael Stern.

  • @detectivehome3318
    @detectivehome3318 Před rokem +3

    11:32 that was my reaction the first time I heard that 😎

  • @diegoguarnieri_
    @diegoguarnieri_ Před rokem +1

    This finale changed my life

  • @tilmanbenatzky3480
    @tilmanbenatzky3480 Před rokem +1

    Hi GIDI I am quite excited about your focused curiosity, emotional and intellectual readiness and dedication. I first heard Mahler (as a phenomenon) as a 12-year-old. Today I am 68 years old and I still can't get behind the ironic, almost schizophrenic mystery of his compositions.
    The tension does not let up!
    In gratitude that you present so-called "difficult, old-fashioned" music in this way and exemplify people to surrender to these treasures.
    I wish your channel much success!

  • @alanfoster6589
    @alanfoster6589 Před 11 měsíci

    Mahler is my favorite composer. But there's nothing like Havergal Brian's gothic symphony. Greatest concert of my life. I was privileged to attend the final rehearsal (the day before) and managed to shoot a little video. If nothing else, it shows the scale of the piece. czcams.com/video/D7NS6DOKf1s/video.html

  • @Dylonely42
    @Dylonely42 Před rokem +7

    Very long piece, but as you saw, it worth it.
    I hope you’ll react to Gershwin’s music soon, it worth it too.

  •  Před rokem +3

    Thanks for sharing your emotions so honestly with the world !

  • @OctopusContrapunctus
    @OctopusContrapunctus Před rokem +2

    If I may suggest anothe strong choir based masterpiece: poulenc Stabat mater.
    It's a mass written in the 20th century by a French composer. One of my favorite works ever

  • @anthropocentrus
    @anthropocentrus Před rokem +7

    Oh what gorgeous, blinding, LUMINOSITY. These colours, their touching ambiguity, it’s like the flow of consciousness painted in tones. But the end is really an EXPANSION, it just WANTS to grow into whatever space is left in my head, and then leave it. Transcendental Mahler, a genius among geniuses. And completely agree with you on the mezzo soprano, she was definitely one of the high points of this performance.
    About what you were asking. The flow is INTEGRAL. In music everything that messes with time ( be it a pause or too slow/fast performance( a little bit on the slowish side this performance)) can just break the thing apart. Music is really an artform through time. So I really don’t recommend you pausing, instead consider perhaps taking some quick notes of stuff that made an impression (good or bad) on you, to orient you in your appreciation in the end.

    • @timbredan3476
      @timbredan3476 Před rokem

      I kind of like the relaxed tempo. Depends on what mood I’m in I guess.

  • @culturalconfederacy
    @culturalconfederacy Před 9 měsíci

    Wait to you hear the finale to Bruckner's 5th with Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra. Then switch to Tchaikovsky's Fourth. The first movement is such an emotional rollercoaster. Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra is probably the best perfirmance out there. Loved your reaction. This coming from a guy who loves symphonic music, but not a fan of Mahler.

  • @TheRealMediaMan
    @TheRealMediaMan Před 2 měsíci

    All these reactors and not one reacting the heat version of all. The Bernstein performance

  • @myverypersonalstuff
    @myverypersonalstuff Před 5 měsíci

    Mahler's Second (Auferstehung) and I go back to my teenage years or perhaps even earlier. This needs some background. My late father came from a similar background as Gustav Mahler, from Northern Bohemia in the Austrian-Hungarian empire, today the Czech Republic. He was five years old when Mahler died and experienced in his life what Mahler gave a voice in his music - all the angst and premonitions of the awful twentieth century.
    My father was a young student in Prague when he started a lifelong obsession with Mahler's music and Mahler's life and times. Later, when in 1938 he fled for the Nazis to Amterdam in the Netherlands, he lived in the city where Mahler's music was regularly performed when in the rest of the world no one wanted to hear it. Mahler visited Amsterdam many times and conducted there his music himself. My parents married in 1945, two weeks after the liberation when he came out of hiding. Their marriage did not last and their divorce was acrimonious. I do not know why I share these biographical details - except perhaps because Mahler's music has been for me over the years a kind of lens through which I could sometimes see my own brokenness and the brokenness of the world in which I (we all) live.
    My own first confrontation with Mahler (I was 15 or 16 years and it was the crazy '60s) was this second symphony - in the Haitink recording on Philips. I fell in love with the 1st movement. For at least a year I never listened to the 4th and 5th movements on the B-side of the vinyl. I think I was afraid that nothing could beat those first three movements with their emotions. How wrong was I.
    Meanwhile I have discovered the Judaism that both Mahler and my own father were so alienated from. Due to my parents' divorce when I was a mere toddler I never knew my father as a father - although I visited him with my two older siblings and later on my own, he was a stranger to me.
    Finally, when he was in the last weeks of his long life of 92 years, I lived in London and he was in hospital in Amsterdam, in full control of his mind but with a body that was shutting down. During the weeks of his dying every Sunday I took the Eurostar train to Brussels, rented a car there and drove to Amterdam to be with him for an hour or so. For the first time in my life I had a father. I took a stack of CDs with me to play in the car from Brussels to Amterdam and again on the way back. All of them were Mahler recordings. I listened especially to Das Lied von der Erde and the Ninth Symphony.
    Every Mahler symphony is a world. Whilst Mahler's Second may open the door to faith for some, Mahler;s Nonth and the Lied help with dying - as we all one day will.

  • @brody56
    @brody56 Před rokem +3

    Loved your reaction, mahlers symphonies can be crazy sometimes but they are great compositions. A great piece to react to next would be Chopins piano concerto no. 1

  • @wormswithteeth
    @wormswithteeth Před rokem +1

    Firm recommendation for Messiaen: Turangalîa, Des canyon and St Francis are all must and would take few months to get out. At least!

  • @OctopusContrapunctus
    @OctopusContrapunctus Před rokem +2

    I watched all your mahler videos, gonna watch many more. I just love how you went contrary to belief and are enjoying some artistic craftsmanship of the past. I'm gonna have great time browsing your channel.

  • @astoriacub
    @astoriacub Před 6 měsíci

    Just listen and be in the moment.

  • @consolt0907
    @consolt0907 Před 2 měsíci

    This is such an awesome reaction vid

  • @frankbruno8556
    @frankbruno8556 Před 10 měsíci

    I say do it your way. I thoroughly enjoyed your company. Laughter and tears at the same time! Total cleansing.

  • @rickyyoder6261
    @rickyyoder6261 Před 5 měsíci

    Mahler is even better live, I highly recommend finding an orchestra near you that is performing his symphonies other than 1 and 4, which are good, but in a different way.

  • @mundomenguante
    @mundomenguante Před rokem

    what a beautiful reaction

  • @GreatCelestialTeapot
    @GreatCelestialTeapot Před rokem +1

    Absolutely epic! I think you did a great job with this. We can see your emotions in your face without pausing to talk and as someone else mentioned, the music is crafted to build emotions in the listener, so a sudden break from that can spoil the effect. I think the way you do your reactions is fine just the way it is.

  • @jbaldwin1970
    @jbaldwin1970 Před 7 měsíci

    Hopefully you get the chance to hear it live. The fifth, third, eighth, sixth and ninth are also emotionally draining in a good way.

  • @tom2tones223
    @tom2tones223 Před rokem +1

    I really enjoyed seeing your reactions to this incredible work. You picked a good recording also, the conductor Eschenbach is one of the greatest interpreters of Mahler in the world today. As a classical musician my job is to share this type of music, and it’s especially gratifying to perform for people who are new to the genre! Cheers

  • @avogrid296
    @avogrid296 Před 8 měsíci

    It's amazing the effect that a gorgeous full chorus brings to the table -- a whole other range of emotions, as you said. Love your reactions!

  • @uxvellda1112
    @uxvellda1112 Před 8 měsíci

    There's a Berstein version of this! I highly recommend his version to listen on your own 😭 This also hits different when there's an English subtitles of the lyrics.

  • @CheekyFest
    @CheekyFest Před rokem

    One of my all time fav pieces of music

  • @jarodvmusic
    @jarodvmusic Před 9 měsíci

    Also you should check out these if you are not familiar. Camille Saint-Saëns and Sarasate. Violin music that is not played that often because it is so difficult.
    And similarly J.S. Bach's Chaconne from Partita II.

  • @andrewhcit
    @andrewhcit Před rokem +1

    Glad you're enjoying this symphony so much. I'm playing it next spring, and really looking forward to it -- it'll be my first time playing Mahler.
    That said, a thought for future reaction videos: you've reacted to a lot of orchestral music and solo piano music. I'd love to see reactions to some chamber music, because it's a whole important genre in classical music. You get to see several musicians come together as equals and hear a fascinating balance between solo and collective expression.
    A selection of some of my favorite chamber works to start from, in no particular order:
    Dvorak, String Quartet No. 12 "American"
    Brahms, String Quintet No. 2 (there's a really stunning performance from the SpringLight Festival on CZcams)
    Brahms, Piano Trio No. 1
    Brahms, Piano Quartet No. 3
    Brahms, Horn Trio
    Borodin, String Quartet No. 2
    Schubert, String Quartet No. 14 ("Death and the Maiden")
    Schubert, String Quintet
    Beethoven, String Quartet No. 7
    Mendelssohn, String Quartet No. 2
    Mendelssohn, Octet
    Schumann, Piano Quartet
    Dohnanyi, Piano Quintet No. 1
    Mozart, Clarinet Quintet
    Haydn, String Quartet Op. 64 No. 5 ("Lark")

  • @timbredan3476
    @timbredan3476 Před rokem

    10:56 that’s one of my favorite parts when the trumpet hits that high (concert) c 🎺 . Marvelous!

  • @Paolo8772
    @Paolo8772 Před rokem +2

    Best music EVER. Now listen to the Simon Rattle version from 1998 Birmingham.

  • @kevinhateswriting
    @kevinhateswriting Před 11 měsíci

    THIS is how you react to classical music! But shutting the f up and listening to it!

  • @gustav7545
    @gustav7545 Před rokem

    Una delicia, y el coro mas ese final una maravilla.

  • @albiepalbie5040
    @albiepalbie5040 Před rokem

    Mahlers “Song of the Earth “ - Das Lied Von Der Erde - for the other side of the coin of this genius composer
    It will break your heart

  • @codynunez5246
    @codynunez5246 Před 6 měsíci

    It is always such a joy to not hear this piece for a few months and then listen to the finale and WITHOUT FAIL the hair on my neck stands up and I am filled with pure ecstacy. I am filled with the presence of God himself. Truly music that transcends this world.

  • @dxiques
    @dxiques Před rokem

    Yep, it's amazing.

  • @steinblitz1506
    @steinblitz1506 Před 6 měsíci

    I love how finely the humans have crafted the art of sound manipulation

  • @weeblife6993
    @weeblife6993 Před rokem +4

    epic reaction.... now u should take break from Mahler and liszt and listen to chopin and beethoven piano concertos specially the emperor concerto ..... sibelius violin concerto is also pretty amazing

  • @daveenyart
    @daveenyart Před 11 měsíci

    Truly, God was looking over Mahler's shoulder.

  • @mrcuteseal322
    @mrcuteseal322 Před rokem +9

    Mahlers concertos are just crazy lol,
    Also can you react to the Beethoven emperor concerto next? It’s really epic.

    • @Dylonely42
      @Dylonely42 Před rokem +3

      Indeed, he was even the best concerto composer.
      He composed concertos for each instruments, several piano concertos but he was unfortunately not a good symphony composer.

    • @composaboi
      @composaboi Před rokem +3

      @@Dylonely42 lol, that’s what I was thinking

    • @weeblife6993
      @weeblife6993 Před rokem +2

      yeah bro his traingle concertos are top notch

    • @Ziad3195
      @Ziad3195 Před rokem

      @@Dylonely42 what?

    • @seanforgor
      @seanforgor Před rokem

      Mahler has concerto's?!?!?

  • @lindorsibande
    @lindorsibande Před 11 měsíci

    Chills

  • @ernestomaceira6380
    @ernestomaceira6380 Před 7 měsíci

    Gran obra. Reacción lógica. Me encanta.

  • @1Peax
    @1Peax Před rokem +1

    If you like this one I would suggest Mahlers 8 "Symphony of a thousand" ,for me the ending of his 8th even surpasses this ending. I would suggest the recording of Guiseppe Sinopoli the ending is perfectly done imo. (It has some minor Audio issues at the some points but its not significant) czcams.com/video/CA8UN7JKBSc/video.html every day I listen to this is a good day

  • @carlosjara1950
    @carlosjara1950 Před rokem +4

    Mahler 8