Most Iconic Classical Music Masterpieces Everyone Knows in One Single Video
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- Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024
- More than 3,5 hours of the most famous and recognizable classical music recordings.The best of classical music for studying, reading, relaxing and (most of all) enjoying!
Tracklist:
0:00 P.I. Tchaikovsky - Swan Lake, Act II: No.10 Scene (Moderato)
02:42 Edvard Grieg - Morning Mood
06:22 Ludwig van Beethoven - Für Elise (Bagatelle No.25 in A minor)
08:51 Frederic Chopin - Nocturne in C-sharp minor
12:56 Georges Bizet - Habanera ("L'amour est un oiseau rebelle")
14:58 W.A. Mozart - Rondo alla Turca ("Turkish March")
18:33 Ludwig van Beethoven - Moonlight Sonata (The Piano Sonata No. 14 in C♯ minor "Quasi una fantasia", Op. 27, No. 2)
23:47 Antonio Vivaldi - The Four Seasons “Summer” (III: Presto)
26:24 P.I. Tchaikovsky - Dance Of The Sugar Plum Fairy
28:10 Federic Chopin - Prelude Op.28, no.4
30:44 Gioachino Rossini - Overture to “The Barber of Seville”
36:29 Jahannes Brahms - Hungarian Dance no.5 in F-sharp minor (fragment)
37:06 W.A Mozart - Eine kleine Nachtmusik (Serenade No. 13 for strings in G major)
42:54 J.S.Bach - Air on the G string (from Orchestral Suite No.3, BWV 1068)
45:47 W.A. Mozart - Symphony No.40 in G minor (1. Molto allegro)
51:44 Erik Satie - Gymnopedie no.1
54:56 Johann Strauss II - “Frühlingsstimmen”, Op. 410 ("Voices of Spring")
1:01:31 Frederic Chopin - Nocturne in B-flat minor, Op. 9, no.1
1:07:07 P.I. Tchaikovsky - The Nutcracker: Act I, No.4 Russian Dance
1:08:08 J.S.Bach - Orchestral Suite no.2 in B minor (7.Badinerie)
1:09:07 Gioachino Rossini - William Tell Overture
1:14:55 Antonin Dvorak - Symphony no. 9 in E minor ("From the New world": IV. Allegro con fuoco)
1:26:39 P.I. Tchaikovsky - The Nutcracker: Act I, No. 8 Waltz of the Flowers
1:31:47 Richard Wagner - Ride of the Valkyries
1:37:08 Ludwig van Beethoven - Sonata No. 8 in C Minor Pathetique, Op. 13 (II. Adagio cantabile)
1:42:08 Johann Strauss II - "An der schönen blauen Donau" (The Blue Danube),Op.314
1:49:19 Erik Satie - Gnossienne No.1
1:52:42 Edvard Grieg - In the Hall of the Mountain King
1:54:58 Frederic Chopin - Nocturne in E-flat major, Op. 9, No. 2
1:59:30 Antonio Vivaldi - The Four Seasons “Autumn” (1. Allegro)
2:04:30 Franz Liszt - Liebestraume no. 3 in A flat major
2:09:00 W.A. Mozart - Piano Concerto no.21 in C major (II. Movement)
2:13:19 Ludwig van Beethoven - The Symphony No.5 in C minor (fragment)
2:20:10 Claude Debussy - Clair de lune (from "Suite bergamasque")
2:25:12 N.Rimsky-Korsakov - Flight of the Bumblebee (from “The Tale of Tsar Saltan)
2:26:28 P.I. Tchaikovsky - The Nutcracker: Act I, No. 2 (March)
2:28:25 Edvard Grieg - Notturno, Op.54, No.4
2:32:45 Felix Mendelssohn - Wedding March (from “A Midsumer Night’s Dream”)
2:37:46 Georges Bizet - Prelude to Act 1 for “Carmen”
2:40:02 Antonio Vivaldi - The Four Seasons “Spring” (1.Allegro)
2:43:36 Erik Satie - Gnossienne No.3
2:46:17 Johann Strauss II - Künstlerleben ("Artist's Life"), op.316
2:49:08 Frederic Chopin - “Revolutionary Etude” (Etude Op.10, No.12)
2:51:51 Luigi Boccherini - Minuet from String Quintet in E, Op. 11, No.5 (G 275)
2:54:00 Ludwig van Beethoven - Ode to Joy (from Symphony no. 9 in D minor)
2:57:53 Richard Strauss - Also sprach Zarathustra
2:59:14 Frederic Chopin - Waltz in D-flat major, Op 64, No 1 ("Minute Waltz")
3:01:00 Tomaso Albinoni - Adagio in G minor (attributed to Tomaso Albinoni, but actually proabably composed by Remo Giazotto).
3:04:29 Modest Mussorgsky - Night on Bald Mountain
3:11:49 Johann Strauss II - “Wiener Blut”, Op. 354
3:13:24 J.S.Bach - Toccata and Fugue in D minor, BWV 565
3:16:29 Jacques Offenbach - Overture to “Orpheus in the Underworld” (can-can section)
3:18:14 Leo Delibes - Pizzicato (from “Sylvia”)
3:20:09 Frederic Chopin - Funeral March (Piano Sonata No.2 in B flat minor Op 35: III. Marche Funebre)
3:29:33 W.A. Mozart - Requiem in D minor
3:33:01 J.S.Bach - Prelude in C major
Every composition from this video exists as a public domain or creative common content.
The fragment of Debussy's "Suite bergamasque" performed by Laurens Goedhart.
Liszt's "Liebesträume" performed by Martha Goldstein.
Grieg's Notturno performed by Mark Gasser.
Piano versions of Mozart's "Requiem in D minor" and Piano "Concerto no.21 in C major" performed by Markus Staab.
Satie's "Gnossiennes" performed by La Pianista.
Richard Wagner's "Also Sprach Zarathustra" performed by Kevin MacLeod.
The fragments of Vivaldi's "Spring", "Summer" and "Autumn" performed by John Harrison.
More public domain and creative commons music you can find on Musopen website.
To follow me and my playlists on Spotify enter: spotify:user:1190084485 into your searchbar! - Видеоклипы
Have a nice listening!
If you want to listen to even more relaxing classical music, check out my latest music selection for long winter evenings ;) ruclips.net/video/241e3xOtOlM/видео.html
Talking about winter, you forgot about that season in this compilation, so i have to ask: why leave out the best season of the 4?
I would like to listen to some disturbing classical music instead :)
Isiajno Thank you!
@netwitch56 I can think of Space Odyssey soundtrack. Believe some of those tracks are composed by György Ligeti.
Thank You very much !
I was in my early 20's when this came out. So many awesome memories! I'm 235 years old now. Thanks for sharing!!!
wait.
Woah. :0
waaattttttt
Awesome! LOL!
Dorian Grey ?
Let's just bless man for no ads on a 3.5-hour long video. Impressive 👏
Well done.
👏👏👏👏🌹!
i uploaded a video years ago that had Waltz of the flowers as a backing track, it was flagged for copyright by some idiots and youtube started asking questions.
I said "i wouldn't mind but this was a backing track that the youtube video editor had suggested and is in the public domain, so perhaps youtube should strike themselves?" lol
👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
@R S bruh, I'm unemployed, I'm only a minor.
Notice: This music does one of two things: Help you study, or give you a dumb smile because you can't help but be blown away by the wonderful melodies these classical artists created. This music did not help me study, but it definitely made me happy.
Anita Pea ancient? They are just a few centuries old...
um...it brings me ww2 flashbacks actually and I can only hear guns and artillery shells, tracks of tanks crushing rocks and tress underneath
Listening whilst taking an online law exam and they are brunch very helpful
No, it helped me sit there in silence staring at an empty doc which was supposed to be a 5 page essay :)
Anita Pea Do you think in 200 Years humanity will still be listening to the backstreet boys?
Chopin died at age 39 of Tuberculosis. Even with his short lifespan, he managed to fill 7 spots on this list. I encourage you all to listen to his works, they are masterful.
So true, Chopin's Nocturnes are one of those spinetingling timeless compositions. imo some of the best ever written.
Agree! My favourite composer 😌
Nocturne, you know, Frederic Fvucking Chopin.
Greatest Polish composer in history!
Mozart passed away at the tender age of 35. And what a bulk of composition he wrote in such a short span of time! It is one's work which makes one memorable, not how long one lives. All these compositions by the great artists are timeless and will remain until the very end of time.
Now I feel like a perfect gentleman. I'm gonna get myself a tea.
Request the Butler
HAHAH
wow I am glad I am not the only one listening to classical music in quarantine
Sehr gut!
😂 🤣
These pieces are sooo iconic that even a person who is not into classical music can recognise the tunes from somewhere!
Facts, isn't that wild
yep,
it used widely in game development or it just appeared on many youtube videos and some streams
Im from India And I recognize many if not all...beautifull.
@@anubhav1234misra oh really? I'm from India and when I started listening to western classical music in 2020, I couldn't recognize them but I liked the tunes very much and that's how I'm a western classical music geek
@@sarkarpianist5540 thats weird for me, there are cars going around selling eggs and gas playing this out loud where i live, unfortunately it doesn't sound that good because of quality but its interesting
I recently retired from my career as a professional violinist. Each of these pieces take my mind back to when I was a little girl listening to great music on LPs I borrowed from my grandfather. I would close my eyes and dream that I were in a great orchestra and able to play such magnificent music. Now, more than 60 years later, I have the incredible satisfaction of having fully realized my childhood dreams! "Many thanks" to the talented individual who assembled this marvelous collection.
yer so wise ty
i wanna meet you as a loving playing violin:)
So dreams CAN come true !
Well done on your journey so far! I wish you the same for all the rest of them too!
One of the most beautiful comments i've read so far on youtube. Thanks, made me smile :)
Brings back so many childhood memories of when I used to watch Tom and Jerry all day and all these legendary compositions used to play in the background. Amazing!
These memories are epic!
ohhh frr
Tom, Jerry, Beethoven and Dvorak. I should be so cultured.
I think Tom was a maestro in one those episodes , very talented cat wish mine was as talented
For me it was nap time in kindergarten. 😂🥹
It is crazy to think that people waited years and spent small fortunes on listening to certain pieces of classical music maybe two or three times in their entire lives, and that the lower classes probably never heard any at all. And yet here we are, able to listen to the entire repository of human composition with a few flicks of the finger whenever we please
Can't like this comment enough
Most of use probably didn't even look it up, they were recommended it by the algorithm(like me).
@@purevert i did
European* composition. Get it right.
Before radio, recordings, etc. this music was the popular music of the time in the opera and music houses of Europe; people not just the elites would go off to be entertained.
"OK I'm just gonna browse through these real quickly!"
*Three hours later...*
Lol :))
You'd go with the flow of the music
Ok at the first 1:49 1:50:24 to 1:50:42 I said ok thats ok but at 1:51:15 😱 please dont do that 🙏 im by my self studying alone, ...and the watch beep 😢
yep,at least,you are carried away by good music,not the poor excuse of so called "music" that we have today,specially where I'm from.
I can not thank you enough for this!!!
Let's just appreciate the fact that this video doesn't have a single ad in it .
Thanks 🖤🌼
ruclips.net/video/YpznTevNXJs/видео.html
no youtube vid ever contains an ad for me because I am using adblockers since 2008.. Life is too short to waste on commercial bullshit
@@Blackadder75 amen
@@Blackadder75 lol same but not since 2008
i started using them since the 2 ads+ they're just so jarring
Yes! Remember RUclips before Google bought it, advertising, and censorship? Me too. Good times.
0:00 P.I. Tchaikovsky - Swan Lake, Act II: No.10 Scene (Moderato)
02:42 Edvard Grieg - Morning Mood
06:22 Ludwig van Beethoven - Für Elise (Bagatelle No.25 in A minor)
08:51 Frederic Chopin - Nocturne in C-sharp minor
12:56 Georges Bizet - Habanera ("L'amour est un oiseau rebelle")
14:58 W.A. Mozart - Rondo alla Turca ("Turkish March")
18:33 Ludwig van Beethoven - Moonlight Sonata (The Piano Sonata No. 14 in C♯ minor "Quasi una fantasia", Op. 27, No. 2)
23:47 Antonio Vivaldi - The Four Seasons “Summer” (III: Presto)
26:24 P.I. Tchaikovsky - Dance Of The Sugar Plum Fairy
28:10 Federic Chopin - Prelude Op.28, no.4
30:44 Gioachino Rossini - Overture to “The Barber of Seville”
36:29 Jahannes Brahms - Hungarian Dance no.5 in F-sharp minor (fragment)
37:06 W.A Mozart - Eine kleine Nachtmusik (Serenade No. 13 for strings in G major)
42:54 J.S.Bach - Air on the G string (from Orchestral Suite No.3, BWV 1068)
45:47 W.A. Mozart - Symphony No.40 in G minor (1. Molto allegro)
51:44 Erik Satie - Gymnopedie no.1
54:56 Johann Strauss II - “Frühlingsstimmen”, Op. 410 ("Voices of Spring")
1:01:31 Frederic Chopin - Nocturne in B-flat minor, Op. 9, no.1
1:07:07 P.I. Tchaikovsky - The Nutcracker: Act I, No.4 Russian Dance
1:08:08 J.S.Bach - Orchestral Suite no.2 in B minor (7.Badinerie)
1:09:07 Gioachino Rossini - William Tell Overture
1:14:55 Antonin Dvorak - Symphony no. 9 in E minor ("From the New world": IV. Allegro con fuoco)
1:26:39 P.I. Tchaikovsky - The Nutcracker: Act I, No. 8 Waltz of the Flowers
1:31:47 Richard Wagner - Ride of the Valkyries
1:37:08 Ludwig van Beethoven - Sonata No. 8 in C Minor Pathetique, Op. 13 (II. Adagio cantabile)
1:42:08 Johann Strauss II - "An der schönen blauen Donau" (The Blue Danube),Op.314
1:49:19 Erik Satie - Gnossienne No.1
1:52:42 Edvard Grieg - In the Hall of the Mountain King
1:54:58 Frederic Chopin - Nocturne in E-flat major, Op. 9, No. 2
1:59:30 Antonio Vivaldi - The Four Seasons “Autumn” (1. Allegro)
2:04:30 Franz Liszt - Liebestraume no. 3 in A flat major
2:09:00 W.A. Mozart - Piano Concerto no.21 in C major (II. Movement)
2:13:19 Ludwig van Beethoven - The Symphony No.5 in C minor (fragment)
2:20:10 Claude Debussy - Clair de lune (from "Suite bergamasque")
2:25:12 N.Rimsky-Korsakov - Flight of the Bumblebee (from “The Tale of Tsar Saltan)
2:26:28 P.I. Tchaikovsky - The Nutcracker: Act I, No. 2 (March)
2:28:25 Edvard Grieg - Notturno, Op.54, No.4
2:32:45 Felix Mendelssohn - Wedding March (from “A Midsumer Night’s Dream”)
2:37:46 Georges Bizet - Prelude to Act 1 for “Carmen”
2:40:02 Antonio Vivaldi - The Four Seasons “Spring” (1.Allegro)
2:43:36 Erik Satie - Gnossienne No.3
2:46:17 Johann Strauss II - Künstlerleben ("Artist's Life"), op.316
2:49:08 Frederic Chopin - “Revolutionary Etude” (Etude Op.10, No.12)
2:51:51 Luigi Boccherini - Minuet from String Quintet in E, Op. 11, No.5 (G 275)
2:54:00 Ludwig van Beethoven - Ode to Joy (from Symphony no. 9 in D minor)
2:57:53 Richard Strauss - Also sprach Zarathustra
2:59:14 Frederic Chopin - Waltz in D-flat major, Op 64, No 1 ("Minute Waltz")
3:01:00 Tomaso Albinoni - Adagio in G minor (attributed to Tomaso Albinoni, but actually proabably composed by Remo Giazotto).
3:04:29 Modest Mussorgsky - Night on Bald Mountain
3:11:49 Johann Strauss II - “Wiener Blut”, Op. 354
3:13:24 J.S.Bach - Toccata and Fugue in D minor, BWV 565
3:16:29 Jacques Offenbach - Overture to “Orpheus in the Underworld” (can-can section)
3:18:14 Leo Delibes - Pizzicato (from “Sylvia”)
3:20:09 Frederic Chopin - Funeral March (Piano Sonata No.2 in B flat minor Op 35: III. Marche Funebre)
3:29:33 W.A. Mozart - Requiem in D minor
3:33:01 J.S.Bach - Prelude in C major
(i didn't make the list, just repost for your convenience)
It's literally the description what do you mean
@@murkorus7147 😂😂exactly
Thank you for all your hard work! I know this takes time and effort. Please know that despite the negative comments or ungrateful people, there are still those of us who appreciate acts of kindness and selflessness. May you have a wonderful life.
Thank you for this list . I know little of this so very glad for the information
Thanks Khoa, your good effort to bring us a summary of masterpieces is greatly appreciated. This makes me never stopping to listen and enjoy beauty of the classics.
You'd probably be surprised to find out how many of these pieces people first heard in Warner Bros. cartoons.
True, I remember loads from cartoons!
Buggs Bunny, where are you?
Fantasia, the origional.
Yes! I purchased a CD when I was in college circa 1990 called Opera at the Movies, and another Opera in Cartoons, or some such. Love the works no matter the venue.
#truestory
Anyone else spending quarantine listening to this? 2020 what a year!
it sure is
Yup. This great grandmother needed a change from the Moody Blues and the Eagles.
Me too I love classic while reading it’s amazing ❤️ it’s like you’re in a different place, even a different world only you and the music and the story you’re reading 💖
Me too. Listening while working.
4/9/2020 epic-
I discovered classical music just an hour ago, since then I haven't stopped playing. I feel like I have entered a rabbit hole of timeless musics with no sign of stopping anytime soon.
Dig deep. The rabbit hole is amazing. Don't stop till you get to Saint Martin In The Fields!
Don’t ever stop. Nothing is sexier than a woman that enjoys classical music.
Me too, same situation. It’s both exciting and relaxing at the same time and it’s like a journey through life
When voices are silent and there is only music, it truly is timeless.
To be fair, Mozart - "Leck mich im Arsch" is the pinnacle of classical music though.
Does anyone else have a feeling that each song is associated to a specific memory...? This music is so powerful in that I can’t remember where I first heard it from, but I remember the melody to perfection. And I can associate each piece to an incredible scenario that I am 100% convinced that I’ve lived before.
little einsteins
Fascinating hey, I think movies have done this to us🧐
Bruh. You watched looney toons as a kid probably.
I think a lot of National Lampoon movies have used snippets of classical music. That’s probably where most of my exposure has come from.😁
It simply happens in hippocampus.
I really like that every masterpiece is accompanied by a portrait of the composer. Very nice.
So we won't see Goofy? Ah! He's my favorite actor.
1:54:00 I don't remember Einstein composing "In the Hall of the Mountain King"
@@krenze1164 I guess you are being sarcastic but in case not, this is grieg in his later years. He kinda looks like Einstein though
Shoutout to the person who sneezed at 1:21:46
Hahaha
Easter egg?
There are sneezes throughout
Lmao
Shoutout to the person who sneezed at 1:21:46
"The best of classical music for studying, reading, relaxing"
"In the Hall of the Mountain King"
"Ride of the Valkyries"
"Summer"
"Funeral March"
“Revolutionary Etude”
"Toccata and Fugue in D minor"
"CanCan"
"1812 Overture"
😂😂😂 Yeah I was like that too
I dislike your comment but at least you're smart?
@@saucyyikers3877 Explain?
@@Chopinwannabe7556 I hate how you day the titles but at least you're smart I guess?
@@saucyyikers3877 Okay then... thanks.
its really strange how we don't know it, but we've been exposed to at least all of these songs at least once
You have Looney Toons and Bugs Bunny to thank for 90% of that exposure : D
heh
Because its stylish to use classic music in movies, cartoons and series, if violence is used
@@felixkrafft4084 More that it's cheap (free) to use songs that are in the public domain. Plus, these songs are timeless, so future generations will recognize them, unlike media containing popular music from its time.
All? most of the 6 billion plus are poor and don't have Internet access, so no
I can feel my brain re-solidifying.
Yes !
That’s actually bad, for it to turn better it should be soft and wet
Since there is such music, there must be a God!
Truly God inspired!
I wish people would blare this type of music from their speakers as they drive down the road.
Im gonna do that when im 20 or something like that
I do that
@@scoobylaboo4004 me too. Actually, William Tell Overture got me so excited I got a speeding ticket.
@@scoobylaboo4004 I do too, and give not a single f*ck at ppl looking at me oddly 😀👍🏼
The world would be a better place
When you listen to these pieces and you realize they were created more than 100 years ago you will know they are phenomena and genius using their imagination what a wonderful sensation.
Thank you so much
100?!! Vivaldi died in 1741 - that's over 270 years ago.
Ittai Klein “more than 100” does indeed cover “over 270”
Endercatgames - It certainly does. My comment was meant Not as a criticism, but rather to be informative, for those readers who might be interested in the chronology of classical composers. In no way was it intended to detract anything from you.
b.t.w.; had you have written "more than a dozen", that would have covered it as well. Just saying.
Of course the recordings are all much more recent, and each musician likes to put their own touch on their rendition.
Ittai Klein my bad then, I apologize.
"music is a universal language which needs no translation, since with it a soul speaks to another soul"
Stop
I somewhat disagree with that it's Universal. Different cultures have such diverse opinions on what sounds good and bad and thus what they consider music, its structure and the feeling it may portray, often differs greatly. One example I find fitting is listening to classical asian music, where because of the cultural difference totally different rules apply.
Agreed... but it's hard to order a cheeseburger using music.
@@torbammoyer3322 while I agree with both of your claims I must say that I beleive the feeling music provides for our species is universal, almost every culture if not all cultures have music involed somewhere at some time, so in that regard I beleive its a universal thing, and the way it makes us feel things or think things or want things, that is universal, now I am saying this as if I knew it, but I dont know it, I just like to believe it, if you want to research it I would love to hear about it.
@Bhavya Shukla me too ive been taught multiple time but it just dosnt stick with me
1:49:19 for some reason i love listening to this piece not because is good as some more famous ones, but is more natural. The noise of him breathing, the chair, the page flipping and the noise of the alarm. I can feel the guy playing the piano in front of me accompanied of all the things happening around him and the piece is also really beautiful, it gives me this feeling of loneliness
Help me. What's the name of this music?
ruclips.net/video/miSJ_wZTE3g/видео.html
I like your Limbo char... Great game it is.
I guess I'm not the only one that heard them. At first distracting, but then kind of cool.🙂
@@botbeo1091 i believe its the following movement to gymnopedieeric satie
"once upon a time in paris" eric satie
Barbie movies have taught me a lot about classical music.
For real
Woody Woodpecker either
Looney Toons for me ;-)
I first heard a lot of these on Disney movies. Videos. VHS. Yeah!
That's not a Barbie doll. It's the thing that the nice policeman was holding when he asked you where Governor Cuomo touched you.
@@donreed Oh my god
Imagine at minimum, 10,000 hours from each musician and that of the conductor to reach this level of proficiency. Brought to us on UTUBE for the cost of a moment of our time. How priceless is this moment? "Chopin"
I never saw RUclips spelled that way before. Haha. But you're right. This day in age we underestimate a lot of the work and time that goes into things.
10k hours? I could beat that in 2 hours
@@OncelerKidsAreCringe I bet that you cannot reach master proficiency in a completely new instrument in 2 hours.
@@enjoyer4594 I already did
"moonlight Sonata" will always be one of my favorites it's one of the most beautiful compositions I've ever heard in my entire life
You ever hear Mozart - requiem ( lacrimosa ) and other part forgot the name lol. It’s awesome
It's one of my favorites too. There are a total of three movements. The third one is really amazing.
I'm still looking for a more beautiful, completely enjoyable piece of music.
My favourites are Waldstein and Hammerklaiver
Edit: or should I say were, I've since heard Appasionata
Edit 2: listened to Backhaus' Hammerklaiver, no competition now it's by far my favorite
@@rezneba101 gymnopedia no 1 by Eric Satie
To whoever put this together, thank you.
Whats fascinating is I know 90% of the music here but I don't know their names.
saaaaaame
Yeah, it's sort of weird but then again it's not. Since there's no lyrics, you don't really remember they're names unless you specifically study them. For example, I remember most classical song names with singing, like "O Sole Mio", "La Donna E Mobile", "Nessun Dorma", and "O Mio Babbino Caro", even though I don't listen to then as much as something like here. "Ode to Joy" and "Habanera" too but they're just classics.
Tom and Jerry man. Tom and Jerry.
Me too but I just close my eyes lie back on the bed and enjoy
Probably because they're all called "German words number number into number something major/minor"
The reason I got into studying art and music history was because at a summer camp I went to, they took our phones and all we had were our radios and alarm clocks. Me and my roommate would turn the radio to the classical station and fall asleep listening to it (annoying the heck out of our suitemates in the process). Listening to it for fun fueled my love for the arts.
Amazing!
Damn bro . That is a strong impact it left on you
My father did me the favor of only playing classical music in the home so that's all I ever heard for the first eleven years of my life. (My mother finally "ruined" me with a Simon & Garfunkel album for Christmas.) I'm very grateful for that beginning for so many reasons and have been able to pass that appreciation along to my son, who eventually studied violin and piano. There's nothing that speaks like those great adagio movements.
Love you Kori
Me too
The older I get the more I appreciate and understand the magnificence of it.
That is the hell of it, the more we know, the more we wish we could have learned.
same here :)
@@nahtanjacobson3017 very true :(
I was 3 years old when my father introduced me to classic music. He was a hard core musicoholic. For different occasions, he played a special piece. For Christmas for example, we heard the Messiah in full blast! The whole thing! Every year until he passed away. Later in life I joined a chorus, and I was able to sing the Messiah with my voice and my heart. Classic music was a staple at home, and it was an everyday happening. My dad even got the neighbors to get interested in classical music. 73 years later I still enjoying these spiritual and heavenly sounds, but now, they fill every corner and wrinkle my house. Some pieces make me cry. Profusely and every time I heard them. Yes, this is my soft side, otherwise, I am firm as Titanium. Enjoy these heavenly notes.
Sounds greaat!
If You care so, we can carry it over
@@mickyvandevenglazer_442 Greetings, I am sorry, I am not that guy and I do not run into fences. I am 74 years old but not a fart! :) Have a great life. :)
Little fun fact - Bach’s Prelude in C major was composed on a harpsichord, not a piano because the piano wasn’t invented at that time. The original piece on the harpsichord sounds like it should be in Cb Major but it’s not.
Thought that’d be cool to share.
But bach’s Prelude in C major was written in 1722 and the first piano was invented in 1700
Bach simply didn't like how piano sounded, so he kept using harpsichord
Isn't Cb major just a B major?
Show off
Sorry, but Bach did play the piano which was invented in his lifetime and he specifically composed for it.
It's so cool to have a video that's practically 4 hours, and be able to click on any moment and hear a masterpiece!
Underrated Comment
The fact that you put Bach’s Prelude at the end shows that you know what you are doing and that your respect music. Upvoted.
What does this mean? Thank you if you answer!
Shouldn't the prelude go at the beginning🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@karenwood1364 I suspect Lucas D of some sarcasm here because a prelude is at the beginning of a musical piece and not at the end. Maybe Lucas means that Bach's Prelude isn't good composing and therefore is suitable for the end of this video OR maybe he means that its a suitable finale for an amazing selection.. Only Lucas will ever know🤣🤣
@@Holycurative9610 Yes
Why can't people just enjoy, be thankful they are alive, and well enough to enjoy man's greatest gift. Leave snide remarks and sarcasm in the dustbin
I just found out classical music helps my body and my brain energize and focus when I'm sleep deprived. I had no idea about that. It's amazing. It also puts me in a good mood, which is something so rare when you suffer from insomnia. Thank you Mozart, Chopin, Vivaldi and all music gods from the past!
same here
same
What would we do without great art in our lives ? Just exist i suppose !
Shoutout to the person who sneezed at 1:21:46
@@bryanterry3625 😂😂😂
The Moonlight Sonata - is the one of the greatest compositions EVER.
So sad, sorrowful and even calm.
Absolutely fantastic
Yeah, calm--especially the third movement.
@@perniciouspete4986 Let’s not be snarky. 😉
@@claudiafernandez-davila4322 You have issues
Calm or not. Its out of this world
We are spoilt at a click, we hear some of the greatest composers of all time. If we lived during those periods we would have never heard them period. Lucky PEOPLE YOU.
And you, unless you're a time traveller
@@ananyaupadhya1974 im traveling through time right now.
Thanks to internet bro ✌🏼
if you think about it, people in the times when these composers lived probably only got to hear their favourite song once or twice. a lot of people don't realise just how lucky we are to be living in the information age
@@thomascampbellthomascampbell most of the people dont realise how lucky they are to be born and cant appreciate the fact they can enjoy such thing as life
This is so calm and peaceful. We watch television programs, movies, listen to the radio and we get bombarded with commercials. Buy this, try this, use this. Thank you for making this beautiful sound video
For everyone whining in the comments: I copied someone else's comment for the timestamps to appear top comment for myself.
0:00 P.I. Tchaikovsky - Swan Lake, Act II: No.10 Scene (Moderato)
02:42 Edvard Grieg - Morning Mood
06:22 Ludwig van Beethoven - Für Elise (Bagatelle No.25 in A minor)
08:51 Frederic Chopin - Nocturne in C-sharp minor
12:56 Georges Bizet - Habanera ("L'amour est un oiseau rebelle")
14:58 W.A. Mozart - Rondo alla Turca ("Turkish March")
18:33 Ludwig van Beethoven - Moonlight Sonata (The Piano Sonata No. 14 in C♯ minor "Quasi una fantasia", Op. 27, No. 2)
23:47 Antonio Vivaldi - The Four Seasons “Summer” (III: Presto)
26:24 P.I. Tchaikovsky - Dance Of The Sugar Plum Fairy
28:10 Federic Chopin - Prelude Op.28, no.4
30:44 Gioachino Rossini - Overture to “The Barber of Seville”
36:29 Jahannes Brahms - Hungarian Dance no.5 in F-sharp minor (fragment)
37:06 W.A Mozart - Eine kleine Nachtmusik (Serenade No. 13 for strings in G major)
42:54 J.S.Bach - Air on the G string (from Orchestral Suite No.3, BWV 1068)
45:47 W.A. Mozart - Symphony No.40 in G minor (1. Molto allegro)
51:44 Erik Satie - Gymnopedie no.1
54:56 Johann Strauss II - “Frühlingsstimmen”, Op. 410 ("Voices of Spring")
1:01:31 Frederic Chopin - Nocturne in B-flat minor, Op. 9, no.1
1:07:07 P.I. Tchaikovsky - The Nutcracker: Act I, No.4 Russian Dance
1:08:08 J.S.Bach - Orchestral Suite no.2 in B minor (7.Badinerie)
1:09:07 Gioachino Rossini - William Tell Overture
1:14:55 Antonin Dvorak - Symphony no. 9 in E minor ("From the New world": IV. Allegro con fuoco)
1:26:39 P.I. Tchaikovsky - The Nutcracker: Act I, No. 8 Waltz of the Flowers
1:31:47 Richard Wagner - Ride of the Valkyries
1:37:08 Ludwig van Beethoven - Sonata No. 8 in C Minor Pathetique, Op. 13 (II. Adagio cantabile)
1:42:08 Johann Strauss II - "An der schönen blauen Donau" (The Blue Danube),Op.314
1:49:19 Erik Satie - Gnossienne No.1
1:52:42 Edvard Grieg - In the Hall of the Mountain King
1:54:58 Frederic Chopin - Nocturne in E-flat major, Op. 9, No. 2
1:59:30 Antonio Vivaldi - The Four Seasons “Autumn” (1. Allegro)
2:04:30 Franz Liszt - Liebestraume no. 3 in A flat major
2:09:00 W.A. Mozart - Piano Concerto no.21 in C major (II. Movement)
2:13:19 Ludwig van Beethoven - The Symphony No.5 in C minor (fragment)
2:20:10 Claude Debussy - Clair de lune (from "Suite bergamasque")
2:25:12 N.Rimsky-Korsakov - Flight of the Bumblebee (from “The Tale of Tsar Saltan)
2:26:28 P.I. Tchaikovsky - The Nutcracker: Act I, No. 2 (March)
2:28:25 Edvard Grieg - Notturno, Op.54, No.4
2:32:45 Felix Mendelssohn - Wedding March (from “A Midsumer Night’s Dream”)
2:37:46 Georges Bizet - Prelude to Act 1 for “Carmen”
2:40:02 Antonio Vivaldi - The Four Seasons “Spring” (1.Allegro)
2:43:36 Erik Satie - Gnossienne No.3
2:46:17 Johann Strauss II - Künstlerleben ("Artist's Life"), op.316
2:49:08 Frederic Chopin - “Revolutionary Etude” (Etude Op.10, No.12)
2:51:51 Luigi Boccherini - Minuet from String Quintet in E, Op. 11, No.5 (G 275)
2:54:00 Ludwig van Beethoven - Ode to Joy (from Symphony no. 9 in D minor)
2:57:53 Richard Strauss - Also sprach Zarathustra
2:59:14 Frederic Chopin - Waltz in D-flat major, Op 64, No 1 ("Minute Waltz")
3:01:00 Tomaso Albinoni - Adagio in G minor (attributed to Tomaso Albinoni, but actually proabably composed by Remo Giazotto).
3:04:29 Modest Mussorgsky - Night on Bald Mountain
3:11:49 Johann Strauss II - “Wiener Blut”, Op. 354
3:13:24 J.S.Bach - Toccata and Fugue in D minor, BWV 565
3:16:29 Jacques Offenbach - Overture to “Orpheus in the Underworld” (can-can section)
3:18:14 Leo Delibes - Pizzicato (from “Sylvia”)
3:20:09 Frederic Chopin - Funeral March (Piano Sonata No.2 in B flat minor Op 35: III. Marche Funebre)
3:29:33 W.A. Mozart - Requiem in D minor
3:33:01 J.S.Bach - Prelude in C major
Thank U so much😃👏🌱💛🎶
Highly appreciated. All the best from vienna@blue danube 😉
You da bomb! No clue if it's accurate, but even if its not A+ for effort!
@I_G6 I copy pasted it for myself lol, so that I didn't have to scroll down too far after clicking on a timestamp. It's literally just a comment, what's with the fuss.
Brilliant. Thank you so much.🌺
I swear you can be in any corner of the globe and anyone and everyone can recognize at least one of these. It’s timeless and part of human history
Yes, I'm sure that African Bushman, as he goes to collect the Monkey, he's just shot with a blow gun, is thinking of which masterpiece he will play during his evening meal.
I was gonna say something along those lines, but for the inhabitants of a isolated island in the middle of the Indian Ocean but you beat me to it
@@awfulorv whilst pondering how a globe can have corners...... yours, pedants anonymous
The most important thing I gained from learning to play the piano & violin and playing in my school's orchestra was appreciation for great music, great musicians and great music teachers. Listening to these renditions in this collection allows me to recapture those moments that were revealed to me and the world by those of the past.
Imagine being a composer of any kind of music and your work is listened to, represented and used in all kinds of media hundreds of years after the fact.
I enjoy classical music from time to time and I am endlessly fascinated by that fact, how timeless some pieces are, loved to this day and probably forever.
The transition from 36:29 to 37:06 was legendary
yesss hahahhaha
sublime
Help me. What's the name of this music?
ruclips.net/video/miSJ_wZTE3g/видео.html
Wasn't it just? Lol
Yesss
2:38:55
"oh heavens, the candle appears to have ran out of wax!"
frederick fitzgerald fazbearington III, walking through the foyer:
Lol 😂
I am 66 now and never listen to this type of music before and wow very little t .v. for me now huge thank you it's changing my life thank you so so much
I love how all of these are professional recordings, and then you have Erik Satie's Gnossienne No.1 at 1:49:19!
i'm not the only one to spot this then. i liked the pause whilst the pianist turned the sheet music pages, and where the alarm clock goes off near the end.
51:44 demencia is a sirius diseas., sorry about bad english language. And Eric Satie music is out off time, like other on playlist.
Hahaha. I just had to advance to listen to it and now having a good laugh.
made me lol
@@ianmcquade2790 Not to mention the heavy breathing throughout the piece, but perhaps that is part of his performance. Encore!
My man! Opening with Swan Lake. Excellent choice.
I know right, i was looking for it for a while but i always knew that someday ill find it. Then i clicked this video and the moment i heard the start i started to have tears, i have amazing memory with that very song.
And closing with Bach's fugue👍👏🏼🙌💕
@@painakatsuki2393 But Pain.... You can find many, many, many videos here of the choreographed version.
Vaylon Kenadell - This song is also throughout the original 1931 “Dracula” movie with Bela Lugosi.
A better starter than even Also Sprach Zarathustra?
Chopin Nocturne in C-Sharp has got to be one of my favourite pieces ever written on piano.
Not sure how lo
I’m not even a huge classical music fan but I recognize so many of these songs, and I love them. Thanks so much for this. I also appreciate how there are no ads.
“Has it ever struck you that life is all memory, except for the one present moment that goes by you so quick you hardly catch it going?”― Tennessee Williams
Who made all this? Other people? Who am I? Has it struck you, when you listen/view material that others produced, it goes through your own consciousness in your own present moment.
Absolutely not true, life is one comprehensive thread of the present. The past is there to reference for the present of the future.
Time is an allusion fools. Jk.
Nobody can say what life realy is, there is nothing to proof, without proof it´s pointless anyway (there is no Proof) , so why do we waste our energy on stuff we are never gonna get? IDK cause nothing is certain for sure. Is Reality even real? Am I? are you? are we? What is? Life is a mystery, we seek for something we are never going to find. Life could be an illusion or a game maybe, who knows? The only thing we can say for certain is that we feel every bit of it: Pain, Love, Hate, Joy etc. But what i think isnt really important here, cause what i am trying to tell you, is that we dont know wtf we even are, we can think about it and say:" Thats what i am now" but it wouldnt mean its true. Philosophie while hearing classic music is just the best, proof me wrong. (personal thoughts)
sorry if my grammar is bad or anything ( Ich bin nähmlich ein Deutscher)
*Tempus Fugit - Thanks 'sameoldfitup'. BTW Jean Sibelius Finlandia, Dmitri Shostakovich Valz No.2 MISSING! Greetings from Thailand (not Taiwan)* ruclips.net/video/29C-3yY43OU/видео.html
One of the reasons I like classical music is because you can take it any way you want, its so good it doesnt need words.
True. It is traditional music. Almost a lost art. Now all music professors focus on performing and competing. Before the 20th century, it was unthinkable for a music professor to not teach composition.
@@elias7748 it's not lost. It has changed. Movie soundtracks are very much modern day compositions.
Its incredible how i have heard and can recognise almost every one of these masterpieces. Im 18 years old and have no real interest in classical music but i can appreciate how amazing these are.
No wonder they used so much classical music in Tom and Jerry. This really touches a special part of the soul.
This is too much awesomeness for me to handle at once
@Daniel Robidoux same thought... i can't handel this anymore
This sort of music has inspiring millions through the years. I had a music memory class in the 3rd 4th and 5th grade. I will never regret it. I Have such a great appreciation for classical music. It does not even compare to anything else. This is heaven to my ears. I hope more younger kids start enjoying these classical's so they may inspire them the way they did for me.
If only they knew how popular their music would be in movies today, and listened to more than any other, geniuses, still living on, living strong
This was nostalgia in one video. Respect to the person who compiled the pieces for this video.
You're too young to have this as nostalgia
0:00 is me contemplating on if I should listen to the music and sleep, or listen to the music and scroll through the comments.
03:04:44 - Getting Sleep Deprivived.
03:17:00 - Starting my day without sleep.
My connection to my daddy in heaven. He gave me the love of the classics. I miss him every day x
❤️
Thank you for listing the titles and composers of the pieces,and for having no ads. You are awesome!
for sure a title like was grandiose, with no ads is some better for plaisur to eard, thanks
"Bringing back the nostalgia of my youth! 😊 I remember dancing around the living room to these timeless tunes. Music truly transcends time! 🎶❤"
I pity any kid today that isn’t exposed to these genius musicians. It’s been in the background playing for every test I’ve ever studied for, every report I’ve ever written, when I’m sitting at my desk working, when I’m feeling down, etc. The impact it’s had on my life is unbelievably powerful...❤️❤️❤️
it's great for fucking too
My life is constantly filled with these genius musicians.
vivian B i exposed my children to all styles of music and they absolutely love the classics and also the modern music (cough cough) which i despise but keep my mouth shut.
That version of the "Blue Danube" absolutely slaps. The bass, everything!
1:46:50
the first one, "morning mood" he lived about 1 hour from my city in norway and i am so found of the song. i remember being about 7 years old when i first fell in love with it. it is truelly very calming and beautiful. i can remember when i heard it as a child i felt so whole, like it gave me all of what i needed.
Little Einsteins and my 7 year old son brought me here. I have always respected and appreciated classical music. Thanks for sharing:)
POV: You are supposed to be studying, but instead you read the comments section :P
you can't make me go back to writing my memo
NO! I dont want to learn the hypothalamus
you can't make me. I don't wanna.
ah shit, here we go again
@@nelsonanadi3248 u cant make me rehearse french dude dont call me out like this
This music makes me a better person. Just by listening.
Try making somebody a gift whilst listning you might feel like an actual saint 😁
Whats fascinating is I know 90% of the music here but I don't know their names.
This old man ... My Grandfather used to love classical music ... whenever we stayed at their home he used to play records for meals. And if not this he used to play the piano in the hallway of the publicly used building they managed. He gave us four a great joy in music. And still at certain times my/our way leads to music like theese to relax ... thank you so much old man :)
" like " is hopelessly inadequate ! This is medicine for the savage soul.
How awesome is this, that most classic compositions were used as soundtracks for Tom & Jerry.
The intro to the full orchestra in Morning Mood is absolutely magical!
Also, seems like dude stole"?" the idea for that melody from the William Tell Overture. Lol.
whats the name of the meme in your profile pic?
@@masterjif9506 Mr Incredible becoming uncanny
@@Dr_Hax yes finally I’ve been looking for it forever thanks
@@masterjif9506 np
Man, I used to play some of these by connecting my old ipod to a speaker/alarm clock thingie and use that to fall asleep. Every night. I swear, these songs make me teary eyed every time I hear them again.
I just found the perfect music for reading and writing my thesis
Great music to relax to
good luck
Ok at the first 1:49 1:50:24 to 1:50:42 I said ok thats ok but at 1:51:15 😱 please dont do that 🙏 im by my self studying along, and the watch beep 😢
Writing the third in a series of books, classical music and/or Opera just helps the words to flow.
Francisca, it's well known fact that classical music aficionados have a much higher intelligence level than those who do not! "The Nutcracker" by Tchaikovsky is one of the all-time greatest pieces to relax and meditate!
Why I like this music. 1. It allows the listener to imagine so many stories for each one. You could create anything to match these song. 2. It has a sort of reassuring yet threatening vibe. Sometimes the songs make you relax and want to enjoy the beauty of life and nature, yet others remind you of war and the horrors some endure. 3. These songs are meant to stand the test of time. When you listen to it anyone can enjoy it. There's no single language or ideal or undertones of sinister and sex and hate. Classical music may have been written during a time where not everyone was equal, but I believe that it can be equally enjoyed by all; black or white. Gay or Straight. Male or Female. Young or old.
I think exactly the same, thank you for such an useful comment ;)
Look, these are nice comments to read. In other places I just see racists and communists. Why are you even discussing such things in a comment section of a youtube video of over three and a half hour of classical (-like) music
@@Isiajno Btw I liked :-)
@@chrisvanschothorst8075 you being against communism? Not that I'm a communist, but it's concepts have always seemed to be for the good of the people and life.
@T-rexdreamsofmars the leaders of communist nations have been the cause of those deaths, not communism.
Communism having of killed more than Nazism is not a big deal, as there have probably been a lot more communist nations than nazi ones.
This is absolutely phenomenal compilation, Thank You!✨👏❤️
You're welcome, I'm really glad you liked it ;)
Frederic Chopin - Nocturne in B-flat minor, Op. 9, no.1 is a master piece of piano work, amazing how it feels hes almost getting the piano to speak. my fav track of all these master pieces. ty for the upload.
Nice list. I would also add:
JS Bach - Jesu Joy of Man's Desiring
Samuel Barber - Adagio for Strings
Arcangelo Corelli - Adagio from Concerto Grosso
Edward Elgar - Pomp and Circumstnce No. 1
Gabriel Faure - Pavana
George Handel - Messiah - Hallelujah
George Handel - Water Music
Franz Liszt - Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2
Pietro Mascagni - Cavalleria Rusticana - Intermezzo
Carl Orff - O Fortuna
Sergei Rachmaninoff - Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini - Var 18
Gioachino Rossini - The Thieving Magpie
Camille Saint-Saens - Danse Macabre
Johann Strauss II - Tales from the Vienna Woods
Pyotr Il;yich Tchaikovsky - 1812 Overture
Guiseppe Verde - Anvil Chorus
Ralph Vaughan Williams - Fantasia on a Theme of Tom Tallis
I haven't heard most on your list but judging by the ones I have, _they can't just leave out these from the next collection_
Liszt/Paganini - La Campanella
Just a few more notable pieces:
G. Rossini - Largo al Factotum
A. Ponchielli - Dance of the Hours
R. Wagner - Bridal Chorus
F. Von Suppe - Light Cavalry Overture
F. Mendelssohn - Spring Song
G. Gershwin - Rhapsody in Blue
G. Verde - La Donne e Mobile
*and Jean Sibelius Finlandia, Dmitri Shostakovich Valz No.2 MISSING! Greetings from Thailand (not Taiwan)* ruclips.net/video/29C-3yY43OU/видео.html
@@MrGyronimo Of course
This was the first ever classical music video I watched like some two years ago and just fell in love with it, and now I have listened to so many pieces from different composers. Thank you for such a wonderful video.
Good comment. nice to know
Ketan, also do listen to Turkish classical music as well. Composers such as Itrî, Dede Efendi, Tanburî Cemil Bey.
Nice man! Who are your favs?
@@joha4574 I listed them right above yer comment.
This might be one of my favourite videos on RUclips. Whenever I forget the name of any composition, I come back here and check, and find it. This contains all the great classical pieces by all these great artists. A full package, to be precise.
Me taking a soft nap while listening when suddenly in 1:11:37 hahaha I jumped here
Sometimes I think about all of the hours of discipline, thought processes, and conversations these people had when creating these works of art
I've played at least half of these, thanks for bringing back the PTSD flashbacks
Ode to Joy just reminds me of Die Hard and Alan Rickman
you probably made pretty useful skills for life so be grateful that you learned these-even through ptsd..i have ptsd to some of these (ballet dancing as a kid):DDD
Magnificent, iconic never forgotten classical music for heart and soul. Thanks for bringing joy to my old days!!!
The most wonderful music of the world!!!
Grieg always has a certain feeling in every one of his compositions. It's so easy to tell that he's a romantic composer.
Except in in the hall of the mountain king
Very beautiful, and brings me back to my young days as a concert pianist and flutist, playing solo and with orchestras so long ago! I can still feel every note! I played many of these numbers; it was "a performance" then, now the music brings tears to my eyes!
YOU... yeah YOU. Listen, this right here is your badge of honor. No one listens to this ensemble of epicness in 2020 without being a special type of human. You're certified DOPE
Thanks.🥰
Thanks dude!
aww thankss dude!
thanks♥️✌️
Thanks brother, jus using our little time while we have it.....the world ended on 23 december 2012. But we stopped it and yet Time is unyielding it will happen again. On the day of 23 december 2012 we have updated the version if the code of time. The new version had the name "desmond"... the world ended and humanity went on without a single care in the world... we tought that would have been enough.... and it was... untill it wasnt... you see it is not enough to tell time, you must learn time and in so doing escape the unescapable... search youtube for ' origins segments ' a video of 30 minutes with a detailed explanation will be there in the form of a game... because if we speak to openly than time will undo it...
1:30:19 Tchaikovsky has a stroke
Seriously, though - I love this so much. A lot of other “classical” playlists I’ve listened to don’t actually have just classical music. I appreciate that this one is both ad-free and purely classical. K back to studying...
Now here is what I feel when I listen to music each one is like a movie in my mind you can always imagine whatever you want with these masterpieces may whatever created us bless these legends
You have no idea how satisfying it is to finally be able to put a name to all these songs I've been hearing basically all my life.
Thank you so much for taking the time to put together a wonderful playlist of timeless music!
No ads that’s absolutely amazing. To listen to this beautiful music with no interruptions. Thank you so much
We may speak different languages, but music is a language we all understand
Yep!
@Udruga Mladih UMNO notes)))))))))))))))))))))))
Chopin is so calming and at the same time...somehow stirring, kind of anxious...unsettling... can't even describe it...
Such a romantic power in Chopin's music. A truly great Pole.
yessss...its true...i would die for the death march.....
THIS IS AN EXCELLENT JOB! IT IS CLEARLY NOT POSSIBLE TO INCLUDE ALL MASTERPIECES BUT AN APPROACH HAS BEEN MADE. CONGRATULATIONS AND THANK YOU !!