Kevin
Kevin
  • Видео 30
  • Просмотров 139 541
NewJeans - How Sweet - OT5 Full Dance Mirror
For educational purposes ‼️🙏🙏
hey guys ur fav classical kpop stan is back with a vengeance 😈
hyein is still on hiatus so I did my best to splice together an ot5 mirrored dance video using the footage of her doing the choreo thats out there , hope u enjoy cause this took a while
also vote for choi jungeun on iland 2 the lord knows she needs our support rn
For educational purposes PLSSS don’t take this down youtube
also I’ve recently become obsessed with queen, so yeah
Просмотров: 19 152

Видео

Schumann Cello Concerto - Rostropovich and Bernstein
Просмотров 4,8 тыс.2 года назад
Piece: Cello Concerto in A minor, Op. 129 Composer: Robert Schumann Cellist: Mstislav Rostropovich Conductor: Leonard Bernstein Orchestra: Orchestre National de France Concert Hall: Théâtre des Champs-Élysées Performance Year: 1976 1:59 Nicht zu schnell 13:20 Langsam 18:03 Sehr Lebhaft
Bloch Schelomo - Rostropovich and Bernstein
Просмотров 6 тыс.2 года назад
Piece: Schelomo: Rhapsodie Hébraïque for Violoncello and Orchestra Composer: Ernest Bloch Cellist: Mstislav Rostropovich Conductor: Leonard Bernstein Orchestra: Orchestre National de France Concert Hall: Théâtre des Champs-Élysées Performance Year: 1976 00:00 Opening 01:34 Bloch Schelomo 23:25 Closing
TWICE - Perfect World - OT9 Full Dance Mirror
Просмотров 12 тыс.2 года назад
stan jeongyeon, also this took 2 days also vote for Choi Jungeun and Yoon Jiyoon in I-Land 2.
Elgar Enigma Variations - Bernstein
Просмотров 22 тыс.2 года назад
Piece: Variations on an Original Theme “Enigma”, Op. 36 Composer: Sir Edward Elgar Orchestra: BBC Symphony Orchestra Conductor: Leonard Bernstein Date of Performance: April 14, 1982
Berg Violin Concerto - Kremer
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.3 года назад
Piece: Violin Concerto(“To the Memory of an Angel”) Composer: Alban Berg Violinist: Gidon Kremer Orchestra: Baravian Radio Symphony Orchestra Conductor: Sir Colin Davis Year of Performance: 1984 1. Andante - Allegretto 1:23 2. Allegro - Adagio 13:39
Tchaikovsky Andante Cantabile - Rostropovich
Просмотров 16 тыс.3 года назад
Piece: Antante Cantabile (Transcription for Cello and Orchestra) Composer: Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky Soloist: Mstislav Rostropovich Orchestra: Berliner Philharmoniker Date of Performance: December 31, 1990
Debussy Nocturne et Scherzo - Rostropovich
Просмотров 963 года назад
Piece: Nocturne et Scherzo Composer: Claude Debussy Soloist: Mstislav Rostropovich Pianist: Bruno Rigutto Year of Performance: 1969
Tchaikovsky Pezzo Capriccioso - Rostropovich and Britten
Просмотров 1983 года назад
Piece: Pezzo Capriccioso in B minor, Op. 62 Composer: Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky Soloist: Mstislav Rostropovich Conductor: Benjamin Britten Orchestra: English Chamber Orchestra Date of Performance: June 16, 1968 Technically starts at 0:35
Tchaikovsky: Violin Concerto / Vengerov Temirkanov Saint Petersburg Philharmonic (1993 Movie Live)
Просмотров 3,1 тыс.3 года назад
Piece: Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 35 Composer: Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky Soloist: Maxim Vengerov Conductor: Yuri Temirkanov Orchestra: Saint Petersburg Philharmonic Date of Performance: June 30, 1993 I. Allegro Moderato 0:55 II. Andante 20:40 III. Allegro Vivacissimo 26:48
Dvorak Cello Concerto - Yo Yo Ma And Michiyoshi Inoue
Просмотров 7 тыс.3 года назад
Piece: Cello Concerto in B minor Soloist: Yo-Yo Ma Conductor: Michiyoshi Inoue Orchestra: Kyoto Symphony Orchestra Year of Performance: 1991 I. Allegro 0:34 II. Adagio ma non Troppo 15:54 III. Allegro Moderato 28:24
Dvořák: Cello Concerto + 1 / Rostropovich Ozawa NHK Symphony Orchestra (1995 Movie Live)
Просмотров 10 тыс.3 года назад
Piece: Cello Concerto in B minor Composer: Antonin Dvorak Soloist: Mstislav Rostropovich Conductor: Seiji Ozawa Orchestra: NHK Symphony Orchestra January 23, 1995 I. Allegro: 1:21 II. Adagio ma non troppo: 16:32 III. Allegro Moderato: 28:00 Piece: Cello Suite No. 2 in D minor Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach Soloist: Mstislav Rostropovich IV. Sarabande: 48:56
Isaac Stern - Wieniawski Polonaise No. 1 in D major(1955)
Просмотров 924 года назад
Isaac Stern along with Alexander Zakin play the Polonaise in D major by Wieniawski in 1955.
Jascha Heifetz - Portrait of an Artist - 1953(With English Subtitles)
Просмотров 1844 года назад
Jascha Heifetz answers questions from eager students at a music school.

Комментарии

  • @h7rh
    @h7rh Месяц назад

    7.10 a good point. Wonderful performance.

  • @kawasakizx41988
    @kawasakizx41988 3 месяца назад

    N響は言わずもがな、、、 小澤が台無しにしている。

  • @RobertoMiguelArevalo-yg6ys
    @RobertoMiguelArevalo-yg6ys 3 месяца назад

    Eu amo este concerto!❤❤🎉🎉

  • @666venus
    @666venus 3 месяца назад

    Thank you!!

  • @matthewspencer8023
    @matthewspencer8023 4 месяца назад

    rob dougan =)

  • @Psycho_q
    @Psycho_q 4 месяца назад

    can u do not mirrored

  • @reyn9667
    @reyn9667 4 месяца назад

    You definitely deserve an award for using ur time to make this

  • @linyrosiee
    @linyrosiee 4 месяца назад

    thanks for taking ur time doing this ^^

  • @iamsuchablink7075
    @iamsuchablink7075 5 месяцев назад

    nice video very helpful thank you for this!

  • @nafetsolev
    @nafetsolev 7 месяцев назад

    This document should have at least one Milliards Likes!!! More than all these stupid clips with these stars who have succes by superficial and cheep dirt! The world needs to live these moments of great music making to heal the frozen hearts of many many people on this world by this interpretation. Diese Aufnahme verdient mindestens 1 Milliarde Likes. Sie verdient mehr Likes als all die oberflächlichen, sentimentalen und sensationslüsternen Clips und Videos. Die Menschheit sollte diese beiden Giganten der klassischen Musik und der Musik überhaupt als unvergleichliche und unvergängliche Lehrstunde ansehen; ein Aufschrei in dieser Welt des tragischen Verlusts an wahren Werten.

  • @nomates3204
    @nomates3204 7 месяцев назад

    Orchestrated westminster chimes ? Genious genius genius genius genius

  • @m.w.wondracek1809
    @m.w.wondracek1809 8 месяцев назад

    Yo-Yo Ma enriqueceu a música sobremaneira. Belíssimas obras de Dvořák.

  • @elianedemers9199
    @elianedemers9199 8 месяцев назад

    Just wondeful

  • @Jahangeerkz
    @Jahangeerkz 9 месяцев назад

    Andante Cantabile moved Tolstoy to tear.

  • @ArtyFactual_Intelligence
    @ArtyFactual_Intelligence 10 месяцев назад

    A lot of people missed their trains home that night

  • @m.a.guedes5135
    @m.a.guedes5135 11 месяцев назад

    The way Bernstein interprets Elgar is the most sublime ever.

  • @DD-gh8vr
    @DD-gh8vr Год назад

    Well well well.

  • @RobsHypnosisRobHereAgain
    @RobsHypnosisRobHereAgain Год назад

    in rehearsal with the BBC symphony orchestra, after playing the opening theme to the enigma variations, the the whole orchestra said.... Bernstein does not understand Elgar. Seems strange now after so many years, who was right??? if you listen... the orchestra

    • @Twentythousandlps
      @Twentythousandlps Год назад

      How did "the whole orchestra say Bernstein does not understand Elgar"? Did they all sign a petition?

  • @cc-yr8gm
    @cc-yr8gm Год назад

    Amazing performance

  • @陳相蓉
    @陳相蓉 Год назад

    所以只有我一個人是因為光夜的陸沉被推到這的嗎🤣🤣

  • @eliorinaldi6302
    @eliorinaldi6302 Год назад

    Rostropovich is the best...but this one is not his best performance.....

  • @iwasglad122
    @iwasglad122 Год назад

    As a very proud Brit, I'm still ashamed, even after all these years, of the way the BBCSO treated Bernstein during his time with them. He was simply interpreting Elgar in his own way - just as every other conductor who had stood before them had done in every piece played by them. They behaved like a bunch of dyed-in-the-wool parochials. Had Boult, Barbirolli or Beecham conducted the Enigma in the same way, they would have said it was revelatory. But, no, what did an American Jew think he was doing, coming over here and interfering with music that was set in British stone??? Not one of our better days...

    • @karldelavigne8134
      @karldelavigne8134 7 месяцев назад

      Not really. The orchestra members were not unsophisticated yokels. They were looking at the score in front of them, knew the work's performance history, including the performances under Elgar himself, and couldn't reconcile themselves to Bernstein's narcissism. Nothing to be ashamed of when it's a question of putting artistic integrity above self-indulgence.

  • @faithyoun
    @faithyoun Год назад

    4:45 23:48

  • @danabrousseau6579
    @danabrousseau6579 Год назад

    I always recall the lines from Poe’s poem: “The glory that was Greece, the grandeur that was Rome”.

  • @mrshovelbottom7475
    @mrshovelbottom7475 Год назад

    28:27

  • @borisbrinkmann
    @borisbrinkmann Год назад

    The one piece, he conducted with beard... So-called "authentic" performance...

  • @borisbrinkmann
    @borisbrinkmann Год назад

    Lenny ist nicht zu toppen. Das Stück ist quasi für ihn geschrieben. Und ohne seine Technik im Grunde undirigierbar...

  • @Account-number-3587
    @Account-number-3587 2 года назад

    Wow, this is as grand as it could be. Amazing

  • @mojamuzika2409
    @mojamuzika2409 2 года назад

    Fantastic.

  • @MariaCristinaBittar
    @MariaCristinaBittar 2 года назад

    00:42 __ 01. Theme (Enigma: Andante) 02:33 __ 02. Variation I (L’istesso tempo) “C.A.E.” 04:46 __ 03. Variation II (Allegro) “H.D.S-P.” 05:32 __ 04. Variation III (Allegretto) “R.B.T.” 06:56 __ 05. Variation IV (Allegro di molto) “W.M.B.” 07:25 __ 06. Variation V (Moderato) “R.P.A.” 09:45 __ 07. Variation VI (Andantino) “Ysobel” 11:03 __ 08. Variation VII (Presto) “Troyte” 12:12 __ 09. Variation VIII (Allegretto) “W.N.” 14:22 __ 10. Variation IX (Adagio) “Nimrod” 20:08 __ 11. Variation X (Intermezzo: Allegretto) “Dorabella” 23:15 __ 12. Variation XI (Allegro di molto) “G.R.S.” 24:23 __ 13. Variation XII (Andante) “B.G.N.” 27:45 __ 14. Variation XIII (Romanza: Moderato) “***” 30:52 __ 15. Variation XIV (Finale: Allegro) “E.D.U.”

    • @MariaCristinaBittar
      @MariaCristinaBittar 2 года назад

      Obrigada !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! por ter postado esta maravilha !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1

    • @sarahjohnconductor
      @sarahjohnconductor 8 месяцев назад

      Thank you for indexing this.

  • @Asuperman1992
    @Asuperman1992 2 года назад

    When I listened to Yo-Yo Ma playing this piece, I thought it was very nice but not very moved. Maybe only Russians can understand this feeling. But when Rostopovich played it, I felt that the emotional expression of this music was very real and originated from this nation, rather than feelings that need to be "deliberately learned" to express

    • @meixuanshi1533
      @meixuanshi1533 Год назад

      Completely agree!

    • @Stichting_NoFa-p
      @Stichting_NoFa-p 28 дней назад

      You don't need to have Russian DNA to be able to be emotionally moved or play a piece by a Russian composer with emotion such that it is audible for listeners. I don't even want to entertain the idea but there are endless counter-examples of non-Russians playing Russian pieces with much passion radiating, while the same piece played by Russians with nothing special to notice. Just to go by your logic.

  • @marks1417
    @marks1417 2 года назад

    The infamously slow Enigma starts here ruclips.net/video/opCnRG4jbu0/видео.html

    • @froehlicherelter
      @froehlicherelter 11 месяцев назад

      Musical apreciation is a very personal opinion. When critizised, there has to be a complete rational musical reason to sustain it. If something like "infamous" conducting is placed upon a critic, it denotes a complete lack of musical knowledge and resembels great ignorance !!

    • @mangelwurzel476
      @mangelwurzel476 11 месяцев назад

      @@froehlicherelterIt’s clear that the critics of the time denounced it as being excessively slow, which rendered it to some extent infamous. That’s all there is to it - no specialist musical knowledge needed merely to report that it was poorly received.

  • @Stichting_NoFa-p
    @Stichting_NoFa-p 2 года назад

    Somehow I think this piece fits Rostropovich very much.

  • @robertmanno5749
    @robertmanno5749 2 года назад

    Bernstein was 6 months shy of his 64th birthday when this was recorded. The Nimrod Variation is the slowest on record and was much criticized at the time. However over the past 40 years it has gained in appreciation and other conductors have since slowed their interpretations of it. In all of his conducting Bernstein dared to dive as deep as humanely possible into the soul of music itself.

    • @karldelavigne8134
      @karldelavigne8134 Год назад

      No, it remains an example of infamous and narcissistic self-indulgence.

    • @robertmanno5749
      @robertmanno5749 Год назад

      ​@@karldelavigne8134 Bernstein takes 5:14. About 30 years after Bernstein, Colin Davis (age 85) did it here in 4:35, a difference of a mere 39 seconds. ruclips.net/video/Nz8p9mOLr8U/видео.html The fact that he didn't subdivide the beat (while Bernstein did) is noteworthy. Previously Davis had done Nimrod in 3:47 (at age 38), 4:20 (age 80), 4:03 (age 83).

    • @WilliamScharf
      @WilliamScharf Год назад

      @@karldelavigne8134 Maybe self-indulgence, but you have misused the term narcissistic. I have seen in-person push back by orchestral musicians and he was never too sensitive to hear another viewpoint. But I personally have found his interpretations as a musical exploration. Probably the most prominent and famous change is in tempo of the fourth movement of Shostakovich's 5th. And he dared to perform it in Moscow during the historic first trip by an American orchestra to perform there and in front of Shostakovich. To show his approval the composer walked to the stage and shook Bernstein's hand in approval. Music is not static. A piece is different every time it is performed. I think you should look at yourself in the mirror and ask yourself are you the same person this year that you were last year. If your answer is yes than you have missed out on the most important and everlasting thing in life, "change". How ironic we discuss the change in a set of changes.

    • @froehlicherelter
      @froehlicherelter 11 месяцев назад

      The greatest achievement of Bernstein´s slow Nimrod interpretation is the fact the orchestra does not fall into lethargy due of it, on the contrary : It gives the Theme the real and deepest expression of the character required in all its different ups and downs of the musical line ! No other conductor, in my opinion, achieved such overwhelming interpretation ! @@karldelavigne8134

  • @luckiequies8946
    @luckiequies8946 2 года назад

    Thank you sm for putting so much effort into editing this so it’s mostly a whole body shoot!

  • @Stichting_NoFa-p
    @Stichting_NoFa-p 2 года назад

    Such a shame that they couldn't hold their cough for a few seconds.

  • @manurosal844
    @manurosal844 2 года назад

    Pure magic

  • @closmartins
    @closmartins 2 года назад

    He plays better here than in his Deutsche Grammophon recording of this piece, at least the last (and most virtuoso) variation

  • @hoteltrivago2321
    @hoteltrivago2321 3 года назад

    STAN TWICE

  • @robintranter6462
    @robintranter6462 3 года назад

    One great composer conducting another great composer.

  • @robintranter6462
    @robintranter6462 3 года назад

    Britten was quite an energetic conductor. Thank you for the upload!

    • @kevinmelendez1460
      @kevinmelendez1460 3 года назад

      Yeah, I was honestly quite surprised when I found out that he was nearly 57 when conducting this, and was full of energy.

  • @kaleidoscopio5
    @kaleidoscopio5 3 года назад

    Really interesting

  • @whiterussian6712
    @whiterussian6712 3 года назад

    Genius!

  • @SynchroScore
    @SynchroScore 3 года назад

    Tchaikovsky never really wrote a cello concerto. He wrote this instead.

  • @ricsouza5011
    @ricsouza5011 3 года назад

    glorious vibrato

  • @Sekar12345
    @Sekar12345 3 года назад

    Historical recording of the maestro Slava.I am very lucky to meet him in Goa India year 1989.

  • @victorflores8249
    @victorflores8249 3 года назад

    Estos grandes Maestros son lo que llevaron adelante la música clásica iiii

  • @namsalmagaermerditrichter3057
    @namsalmagaermerditrichter3057 3 года назад

    Ich kann nicht aufhören zu weinen

  • @ronaldrabanda2907
    @ronaldrabanda2907 3 года назад

    Schweigen ,mein Herz gehört euch ♥️

  • @ronaldrabanda2907
    @ronaldrabanda2907 3 года назад

    So ist es 🎻🎻🎻🎼🎼🎼♥️