Back in 2018, we had our marching band competition show based around love. It included music from both Tchaikovsky and Prokofiev's Romeo and Juliet suites, and it also included P!nk's Learn to Love Again. Such an awesome piece of music!
I always thought our school had a good music program (which I sadly totally ignored to go smoke pot with my friends), but there is no way out students would have been playing something this complicated. Unless I really missed something. We had a semi famous jazz musician as a teacher, I remember that much, everyone was very proud we had him.
You don't need to count it. Just hear it once (either by recording or playback software), and you should be able to replicate it. Practicing also obviously gets it drilled into your head so you don't mess up during performance.
Who is condacter? Its playd wery weard. To much timpanes and drums, all the wright tragedy goes like strings section straiting with get technically playd but all this intensity is lost.Strings play haotic and Is to late.
You don't know anything about music! If you would, you would know that there are some moments in music history where Strings are used to form a sound carpet, that is built upon by other instrument, in this case percussion. This does not mean its always like that, the percussion group is often usef to lay a carpet for other instruments, just not in this case. Keep in mind, that the strings arent always the main part or the melody!
@@monkeyfuture3212I'm sorry, but first of all, your atrocious spelling gives me a migraine. And second, you obviously don't know what you're talking about. A lot of classical pieces have percussion in them, so I don't see what the issue is here. I've never seen anyone complaining about the performance of a piece being played "weird" and how there's too many timpani in the orchestra. And I don't know what you mean by the strings playing chaotically and are too late. There are literally times when the musicians have to play melts at a fast speed that's written on the score. Again, what's the problem here? It's like you're complaining over nothing in particular. And just like MonkeyFuture said, The strings are used to form a sound carpet. But they always the main part of the melody all the time.
The cymbal part represents the sword strokes in the fight.
wow thats amazing
The tybalt fight, right?
This is epic ! The forbidden love…
😢
heheheha! heheheha! Tchaikovsky is the best! heheheha!
hi
@@bigbobo3572 😂
@@Medtszkowski hi
Chaikovsky - Great master of Orchestration.
Wonderful cymbals sound 👏👏👏
Back in 2018, we had our marching band competition show based around love. It included music from both Tchaikovsky and Prokofiev's Romeo and Juliet suites, and it also included P!nk's Learn to Love Again. Such an awesome piece of music!
I had that but instead of the last to Cuz I love u by Lizzo and I'l always loge you by Whitney Houston
Благодаря за тази красота!❤❤❤❤❤
Putting the percussion parts on screen while the strings are doing that finger-melting run is insane.
There's an excerpt from this in my high school allstate audition and omg it's hard💀💀💀
Beautiful! Thanks for these videos. They are very instructive and very useful for those approaching the composition and listening to classical music.
I got goosebumps watching this
One of my favorite pieces I got to perform in highschool
I always thought our school had a good music program (which I sadly totally ignored to go smoke pot with my friends), but there is no way out students would have been playing something this complicated. Unless I really missed something. We had a semi famous jazz musician as a teacher, I remember that much, everyone was very proud we had him.
@William Walker it was a high school regional orchestra that I had to audition for. RIP Dr. Stephen Gage
@@theclimbingcheffor a second I thought a school orchestra played that!
I was like there’s no shot a high school orchestra could play this lol
So good!
my marching band show had this and it was do cool playing it
Same
i played timpani on this piece last year, so fun
Be glad you're not a composer/conductor. This level of complexity seems like a reasonable reduction of many symphonic pieces of the period.
Très bonne qualité merci
Love tchaik for this... Totally not biased cause I played this piece
I love this piece so much
i’m playing this with my youth orchestra. thank god i play bassoon so if i accidentally play in between no one will hear hahahaha
Hyper super!!!!!!
A very difficult piece to perform!
It’s crazy
This is a 100% marks cymbal 🎉
A-choo! A-choo! A-choo!
Another of the more known masterpieces of Tschaikowsky , but this part isn't the most famous.
ed is such a nice fella
First two notes 😮
I've got to hand it to those musicians. How the hell do you count out those 16th notes on the repeated C with that wicked syncopation?
@R Stedler How? Very carefully! ;-)
Practice. Much practice. And a conductor I assume.
You don't need to count it. Just hear it once (either by recording or playback software), and you should be able to replicate it. Practicing also obviously gets it drilled into your head so you don't mess up during performance.
those are eighth notes?
That’s not a 16th note, it’s a simple 1 and 2 and, so on and so forth. I’ve played it in my orchestra, it’s not very difficult for trained musicians.
Wtf, is this Titanic? James Horner is a cheeky fellow.
악보를보고들으니
씹고 뜻고 맛보는것같아요
Wohoo! Second try!
Exelentes cortos!!?
I wanna see 2 people play cymbals who will get it right 😅😅😅😅
Вот отсюда и вышел Стравинский
✔
Yeah, probably would be nice we could hear the strings.
I don't think it's a studio recording.
I can hear them fine?
So many of these RUclips takes don't give any credit to the conductor.
Sorry! It’s our Principal Conductor Edward Gardner
Name of the piece?
@Wesrets omg thank you so much, I didnt realise the video had a title 🙃
It's Tchaikovsky
@gary100dm They asked for the name of the piece, not the composer.
This notation is incorrect.
シンバル万が一間違えたら目立つな
Who is condacter? Its playd wery weard. To much timpanes and drums, all the wright tragedy goes like strings section straiting with get technically playd but all this intensity is lost.Strings play haotic and Is to late.
You don't know anything about music! If you would, you would know that there are some moments in music history where Strings are used to form a sound carpet, that is built upon by other instrument, in this case percussion. This does not mean its always like that, the percussion group is often usef to lay a carpet for other instruments, just not in this case. Keep in mind, that the strings arent always the main part or the melody!
@@monkeyfuture3212I'm sorry, but first of all, your atrocious spelling gives me a migraine. And second, you obviously don't know what you're talking about. A lot of classical pieces have percussion in them, so I don't see what the issue is here. I've never seen anyone complaining about the performance of a piece being played "weird" and how there's too many timpani in the orchestra. And I don't know what you mean by the strings playing chaotically and are too late. There are literally times when the musicians have to play melts at a fast speed that's written on the score. Again, what's the problem here? It's like you're complaining over nothing in particular. And just like MonkeyFuture said, The strings are used to form a sound carpet. But they always the main part of the melody all the time.