Right. Schubert could express the whole wide world in a piano piece of 3 minutes: 'Hungarian Melody' (D. 817). The greatest genius in music after J.S. Bach.
It is unbelievable that a work like this remained isolated in someone's drawer for 40 years. It is unsettling to think that something so simple as a house fire could have removed a work of such other-worldly beauty from existence. It makes me wonder if there have been other works of art as magnificent as Schubert's 8th that were indeed removed from existence.
Wikipedia states that one of Shubert's last symphonies was posthumously discovered by Schumann. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Schumann#1835%E2%80%9339 Is syphilis a paper transmitted disease?
"This is the symphony, that Schubert wrote but never finished. Would he have finished it, it wouldn't only have two movements. But unfortunately it has."
maybe satan is the one who won't fucking buy the music but complains when the free version they find has ads in it, as if they have any right to be unhappy
My composition teacher once told me that sometimes if you can't come up with anything else to write after you finish writing something you really like, that it is usually a sign that you are supposed to stop at that point. Maybe that is what happened to Schubert. Either way, I love this symphony the way it is.
@@antoniogallegosmusic The theory is that he stopped before writing the scherzo because scherzi are meant to be written in 3, and he realised that he had written the rest of the symphony in 3. So he gave up finishing the symphony because he believed having a symphony almost entirely in 3 wouldn't be well received.
@@arcsolver Not the good reason : it wouldn't have been entirely in 3, because all Schubert's symphonies have 4 movements. The truth is many Schubert's works in these median years were unfinished : the wonderful Quartettsatz, etc.
How about Erich Kleiber? ruclips.net/video/jd3wNq6xeWM/видео.html or ruclips.net/video/NfsdpugcAes/видео.html (remastered). Sawallisch's one is excellent, of course!
Oh, my Lord! That first movement's probably one of the finest compositions by Schubert, much less, anybody else of his genre! It quite simply is so beyond beautiful of the most inexplicable nature that there's nothing left to do but give in and listen to the musical-paradise that it is of the utmost perfection; yes, perfection itself ---- that's neither sad nor happy, neither melodramatic nor neurotic, neither spooky nor depressing ---- but just one that draws ye in ever so graciously that ye don't even realise, ye hath forgotten about everything else and can't seem to let go; all paralysed by its sheer grace!
That's why he couldn't "finish" it within the traditional format of a 4 movement symphony. It's perfect as a two mvt symphony. The two extra mvts in the "finished" version are anti-climactic.
One of my favorite symphonies. I wonder if Schubert wrote this tragic work when he found out he had contracted the then fatal disease of syphilis. ( He was to live about five more years after his diagnosis during which time his musical output would be the most productive in his short life.) The whole mood and character of this novel work was a complete break from the other symphonies he had written up that point. There is such sadness and fear mixed with hope, resentment and memories of happier days. I can't understand why he would hide this work only to be discovered about 20 years later after his death . So sad. RIP Dear Franz.
It's part of a recent theory why the symphony is "unfinished," but it doesn't matter, since the work is finished as it is. It's perfect in two movements.
I believe this is correct. It opened up for him or forced him into a new realm of feeling, representing a huge, lifetime advance. The scherzo (sketch and one fully scored page) reverts to his previous outlook too much, and I think this is why he abandoned it. The abandonment of the superb piano sonata in C (Relique) is not so easy to explain. It was a titan, and within a whisker of completion. Paul Badura-Skoda completed it, and many other completable piano sonatas, revealing a corpus of work of astonishing range and quality.
@@gervaisfrykman266 I think he realized at this point that youth with a golden "halo" and a cheery naive outlook was gone. The new :adult" life with some ":miserable realities" were now dawning and reflected in his music.
He actually put the symphony aside when he was commissioned to write the "Wanderer Fantasie". The symphony was written for the Graz Music Society, who granted him honorary membership. It was passed to friends Joseph and then Anselm Huttenbrenner (of Graz). Anselm kept it for decades until it was passed to a Viennese conductor Johann von Herbeck who performed it in 1865.
There is just something magical about the oboe and clarinet melody at start where the E goes to an F natural. I guess that's the beauty of harmony and the sensitivity of Schubert.
8:41 - 9:21 Is this only mine favourite part or is it anyone else's? Gives me chills everytime. The greatest symphony ever written and the greatest musical climax I've ever listen to. It's so unfair he never got a chance to listen to any of his symphonies :(
The dramatic sections are breathtaking. The lyrical sections are exquisitely beautiful. Notwithstanding its shortened form, surely one of the greatest symphonic works ever written. One never grows tired of hearing it.
THANK YOU so much for making this public again!!! I missed it enormously while it was private, because this is my favourite rendition and I used to listen to it often. Please keep these jewels accessible to all music lovers.
+Gergana Petkova thank you :) There is no copyright issue with this video therefore I could torn on to public. All other stay in private status unfortunatelly, but on/after 22th December will come a big surprise (I hope).
Looking very much forward to Dec 22 then! Not sure what happens then... But you have no idea how long I searched for this video, even asked other people about it, because when it went private I had no idea who the owner was.
+Gergana Petkova After 180 days (25.June, my YT-strike) I will be able to turn to unlisted status my nearly all private-videos and I will give urls to these unlisted videos for you (maybe via my facebook account). If there will be no problems...
+tnsnamesoralong Do you think you might be willing to share your videos for Schubert's Ninth and the Bach Passions with me? Those were some of my very favorite videos on youtube and it would be quite nice to view them again.
in case you dont understand the story behind this piece, Schubert made the first and second movements and thought they were so good he could never finish so he literally just ended without doing a third or fourth movement.
8:52 never fails to send chills down my spine... love the mysterious and suspense effect this whole orchestra work has.. miss the times where I had to analyse this beautiful piece of work in detail, its lovely
Calvin Tan I know. After recently playing this piece in my regional orchestra I have really come to love that part. Cool to listen to, even better to play
My music teacher made us listen to symphonies one lesson before holidays, we had been talking about symphonies for some lessons. I remembered the name of this one so I could look it up on RUclips. We did watch a documentary about Schubert half a year later, I told her I recognised the Symphony, she didn't even know she showed it to her students. Now we learned about romantic componists and music and we again heard this symphony and I still love it so that's why I came back today. Thanks to my music teacher
That was, without a lie, one of the best 30 minutes of my young life. The melodies, the harmonies and the orchestration were just magical and perfect !!!!
Franz Schubert:8.h-moll ,,Befejezetlen" Szimfónia D.759 1.Allegro moderato 00:00 2.Andante con moto 14:51 Drezdai Állami Zenekar Vezényel:Wolfgang Sawallisch 1967
See, I was just wondering though some Minecraft role play animatics and stumbled upon this. I guess that’s the strangest way to be introduced to a masterpiece
This has to be one of the finest performances of this symphony. Surprisingly few have commented on that. Wish the ads are removed Bravo ....... Staatskapelle Dresden Wolfgang Sawallisch (conductor)
End of the first movement, as dramatic as anything ever written, the tension and emotion of Beethoven, intensity and high strings that Dvorak uses, but without any thrashing around. Schubert's gift for melody reminds me of Keats's gift for beautiful language, and even his most dramatic passages are sublimely gorgeous.
When I was a freshman in high school, my teacher took this from his files collection and made us practice this song. We never played it in concert, but literally every year until my graduation he took it out randomly and had us practice sections of the song. I've always loved it since I first heard what it should have sounded like.
I LOVE that you have the score there. Thank you! Such a gorgeous piece of music. When I was a kid, my parents used to play classical music every night after my bedtime. I remember this piece especially. I never told them how comforting this was for me. It created my love for classical music.
Surprisingly, the 2nd mvt got stuck to my brain pretty easily. Normally when I listen to slow movements like these, I forget them. Man, Schubert really was something else if he's able to get a melody into my brain in just one listen.
Schubert thank you. You always have been and will be the musical delight of my life. You are music's essence. Thirty-one is such a short life. But what rich and infinite treasures you created.
It is truly awful that any human being should have to suffer in the way this music depicts, yet Schubert has created from his pain something so unutterably beautiful that it can lift me from the most terrible depths to a place that truly touches the divine.
Just wanted to say how much I love this recording and the piece in general. It's a little odd that something which is by definition incomplete can seem so perfectly whole. To me, the two movements speak of a turbulent personality finally coming to some form of resolution. I sometimes forget how revolutionary this symphony was for its day and I'd assume that it hailed from the latter part of the 19th century if I didn't know it was composed by Schubert. Thanks for uploading.
The cello and bass parts are paramount to this symphony, introducing the main themes- both movements. I played the cello line decades ago. I'll never forget that performance.
Wow, recorded in the deepest, darkest days of the Cold War in Communist Germany! I have a "Freischuetz" that was recorded in Dresden under communism that is excellent as well!
+Jeffrey Morrissey That Freischütz is not only excellent, it's probably the best ever put on record. I have seen the Opera performed many times and it never came even close to what Kleiber accomplished. So my relationship to the work is kind of tainted. Because I never hear others to rise to that level again.
I, as a mere lover of classical music (with few exceptions), have felt and thought for decades that Schubert knew in all his faculties that it would be utterly pointless and even detrimental to add anything to these two sublime studies of life's tribulations and divine rescue into renewed bliss. Bespeaks of this...
Thank you so much for including the orchestral score.I played in the RAF Apprentices Brass band in 1950. The then bandmaster made us practice on a wide variety of music including classical. This by Schubert is one of my favourites .Many thanks.
"Why should the composer be more guilty than the poet who warms to fantasy by a strange flame, making an idea that inspires him the subject of his own very different treatment?" ~ Franz Schubert
We are so lucky this day we can listen to so many free music all composed by Schubert, Chopin, Mozart etc etc... Thank God for these music its free and so good.
Time codes: Part 1 / 1 часть 00:01 introduction, h moll / Вступление, си минор 00:18 main batch, h moll / Главная партия, си минор 01:20 side batch, G dur / Побочная партия, соль мажор 02:00 rupture, c moll / Перелом, до минор 02:54 final batch, G dur / Заключительная партия, соль мажор 06:58 development, 1st section, e moll / Разработка, 1 раздел, ми минор 08:41 development, 2nd section, e moll / Разработка, 2 раздел, ми минор 13:41 coda, h moll / Кода, си минор Part 2 / 2 часть 14:52 main batch, E dur / Главная партия, ми мажор 17:42 side batch, cis moll / Побочная партия, до диез минор P.S.:Sorry for my bad english
prvi put sam ovo ccula gledajuchi RAJANOVU KCHI Dejvida Lina.... Od tada je to postalo moje tajno utoccisste...nesvakidassnja lepota tog nedovrssenog dela opominje me da nismo uzalud na ovoj planeti...
This particular piece is so enchanting , it pictures to myself life with its hardships and struggles , peaceful and tranquil moments. Schubert had concealed this work , perhaps it was to personal .
Esto... simplemente, me hace amar cada vez más y más la música; y la oportunidad que tengo de poder interpretar esta pieza me resulta muy emocionante. Soy violín 2, pero de todos modos se tiene que tener bastante disciplina, constancia y de hecho amor a la música para interpretarla, cualquier persona que solo toca por tocar ve las partituras de reojo y piensa 'No, esto es demasiado complicado para mi, tengo flojera, no ni que fuera tan emocionante.' Amo el hecho de que me hayan dado la oportunidad de tocar esto y no me rendiré hasta que me salga lo mejor posible. Excelente pieza, muy hermosa y con sentimiento. A veces pienso ¿Que habrá pasado por la cabeza de los compositores para hacer semejante creación? Son personas realmente admirables, lástima que esta sea la Sinfonía Inconclusa. Repito, hermosa pieza.
So accept perfection, a fleeting sunrise. Elogiac melodies bounce between a emotional balance of peace and some kind pastoral landscape in Schuberts challenges. This was therapy for him
So sad to think that the author of this sublime work never had the satisfaction of hearing it played by a great orchestra, or basking in the adulation and worldly success that he deserved
I got introduced to classical mainly through symphonic metal, X Japan's Art of Life lead me to this one, since it's based off it. Some of the most beautiful melodies I've ever heard.
I heard Schubert's Unfinished for the first time in early 1970's on Australian Broadcast- ing Corporation's Asia Pacific broadcast and ever since I have been mesmerised by the subtle beauty of the piece. Schubert like Beethoven was a student of Haydn and in this piece the slow, soft and moving refrain has the beauty of Haydn and in the other vigorous sections shows the modern and strong Beethovenesque style. In a way, this piece represents the blending and inter-twining of two styles, one of the Romantic period with its emphasis on beauty and the other of the Modern period with emphasis on subjective expression of the vagaries and highs and lows of human emotions. This piece ends bringing a contentment of a great piece well-concluded without leaving any craving that a great "unfinished" piece should cause. A Schubertian all-time gem !
I'm a violist and I played this in my high school symphony orchestra. This is in my top three favorites along with Dvorak's New World Symphony and Phantom of the Opera (I never turned in any of the music after the concert)
Came here to listen this because someone rejected to goto the prom with me. This piece induce the realization of the insignificance of such an event as compared to great music.
I will always associate this music with those old "Smurfs" cartoons where it has been used as background music for dramatic scenes :) There's nothing better for kids to learn some classic music through watching cartoons ;) Disney did that a lot back then with their "Silly Symphonies" too.
There was a “Casper the friendly Ghost” cartoon where Shubert is in his apartment composing the Verse Melody...and keeps getting interrupted by jack hammers etc outside his apartment window. Funny, later that day after I saw this cartoon as a child...we had a Field Trip to see the Baltimore Symphony. They played the Unfinished! Happy accident?
I used to listen to this beautiful symphony while meditating on the fifteen mysteries of the most holy rosary of the blessed virgin Mary. The arrangement seems to fit in an exact order of those meditations from beginning to end. There is a thread of mutual love woven throughout the piece akin to the mutual love expressed in the mysteries. I feel the unfinished ending is appropriate for the mutual love itself is unfinished, without an end.
The Orchestra I'm in is playing this tomorrow.. I play 1st clarinet, here's hoping I do those lovely (super exposed!!) parts in the second movement justice! eeeeep....
Thank you for this. This produces goosebumps over my entire body...One day I will listen to it live, it is one of these things you have to do before you die! plus I love "dancing" to it when alone in the house.. it just inspires me so much. To me it symbolises "the eternal fight of the human spirit", it brings out the fire in my soul..
Good story, I learned that I can actually hum this whole entire song. Its amazing, because in math class, it really helps when you are taking the longest test ever!
i cannot describe my absolute adoration for the first movement of this work..... what other melodys make your heart soar? what other Harmonys make your soul sing?
I LOVE the development section of that first movement!! It's one of my all time favorites!! That first movement is very interesting in terms of form though. It's in sonata form, but the modulation in the exposition is to the submediant, which still works, but the development section doesn't keep the same tonic. The recap section modulates to the relative major instead of the parallel major for the second theme. Very interesting and unusual. Still one of my favorite works!! Thanks for the effort and work that went into this video!! I love following the score, because I'm working on getting a music composition degree myself!
Schubert was, in my opinion, the greatest composer of all time. Someone asked whether Schubert's music makes you happy or sad. The answer is both, and at the same time. No one else who ever lived had his power and beauty. If only he could have lived beyond age 31.
In this performance the second movement really drags. The tempo indication is "Andante Con Moto", but is being played more like 'Largo". Otherwise, a great performance.
Written in the same year as Beethoven's 9th symphony. Makes you pause and think. Schubert is always being presented as the one who came after Beethoven, but by the time Beethoven put out his opus 125, Schubert already was writing his opus 759. People often say of this and that composer that he was ahead of his time, but Schubert was the only one who really was ahead of his time. Not Bach, not Mozart, not even Schönberg, even if the latter liked to think this to be true of himself. Had Schubert lived for another 30 years, he would have singe-handedly made romanticism obsolete and have ushered in an entirely new era by the 1850s. There was so much untapped potential. To think that he only began to study counterpoint a few weeks before he died. Imagine what he would achieve if he were to combine his mastery of melody and harmony with his newly acquired contrapuntal skills.
Thank you for this - I love this symphony, and being able to follow the music as it is played is such a treat, instead of a static picture of the composer, or a landscape as with so many other music downloads. xxx
Dude, I gotta finish a symphony, see you tomorow
Last time online: *191 years ago*
Cue Sweden by c418
LOL that is pretty true
haha
ت
Genial
"An unfinished piece of music, yet more complete than most others."
Right. Schubert could express the whole wide world in a piano piece of 3 minutes: 'Hungarian Melody' (D. 817). The greatest genius in music after J.S. Bach.
Nanno Jonkers Now you're talking!
+Kratos safado Amen!
+Nanno Jonkers Spot on, and one day he will be widely recognised for this
R'amen
It is unbelievable that a work like this remained isolated in someone's drawer for 40 years. It is unsettling to think that something so simple as a house fire could have removed a work of such other-worldly beauty from existence. It makes me wonder if there have been other works of art as magnificent as Schubert's 8th that were indeed removed from existence.
Unfortunately yes. A good part of Bach's Works are lost too for example.
That's depressing man
@@jocobuswitte7637 YES! totally can relate just to imagine
How many artists never had the guts to show the world what they had to give. A very sad perspective.
Wikipedia states that one of Shubert's last symphonies was posthumously discovered by Schumann. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Schumann#1835%E2%80%9339
Is syphilis a paper transmitted disease?
The second motif (1:24) actually allows you to sing "this is, the simphony, that Schubert wrote but never finished"
illy sigelman this is an amazing comment
This is the most underrated comment in the history of classical music videos.
"This is the symphony, that Schubert wrote but never finished.
Would he have finished it, it wouldn't only have two movements.
But unfortunately it has."
@@PianoJFAudioSheet hahahha. It's a bless I'm reading your comment 5 hours after you posted it. You are sir, a genius!
HAHA I will never listen to this without singing ever again.
Her : Come to my house.
Schubert : I have to finish a symphony.
Her : My parents aren't home.
Schubert :
A little too late, friend.
Ah, I see you are a man of culture as well...~
Two set violin
*cough* comment awards
derp face yes why I came
I love when the happy melody stops unexpectedly and tragedy falls upon us, I wonder what Schubert had in mind when he wrote that.
Your orthography.
His Emo Phase
Elizabeth Schubert
Life
i think it has to do with the sickness he got and how he was slowly dying
00:01 Вступление
00:18 ГП
01:23 ПП
02:00 сдвиг
02:19 ПП после сдвига
06:58 1й раздел разработки
08:41 2й раздел разработки
13:41 кода
II часть
14:52 ГП
14:52 1я тема ГП
16:24 2я тема ГП
17:42 ПП
17:42 1я тема ПП
18:54 средний раздел ПП
25:48 Кода
(Tarakans family)
Матрона, ты лучшая ❤❤❤
❤❤❤
I love you too)
Son: "Dad, who is satan?"
Dad: "He is the one who put ads in this masterpiece, son."
Pay
RUclips Vanced
Adblocker.... There are lots of good ones out there (at least if you are on computer
maybe satan is the one who won't fucking buy the music but complains when the free version they find has ads in it, as if they have any right to be unhappy
Yeahh, i think the same, the ads are the worst thing ever created in the world
My composition teacher once told me that sometimes if you can't come up with anything else to write after you finish writing something you really like, that it is usually a sign that you are supposed to stop at that point. Maybe that is what happened to Schubert. Either way, I love this symphony the way it is.
Keith Pennington I think he died before he could finish
+Antonio Gallegos It couldn't have been since he wrote 2 more symphonies after this one.
Evan Bradley well he died so he never went back to complete it
@@antoniogallegosmusic The theory is that he stopped before writing the scherzo because scherzi are meant to be written in 3, and he realised that he had written the rest of the symphony in 3. So he gave up finishing the symphony because he believed having a symphony almost entirely in 3 wouldn't be well received.
@@arcsolver Not the good reason : it wouldn't have been entirely in 3, because all Schubert's symphonies have 4 movements.
The truth is many Schubert's works in these median years were unfinished : the wonderful Quartettsatz, etc.
One thing about RUclips is one can listen to different performances. THIS is the definitive performance of this superb composition.
Malcolm Abram Agree, but not all performances are here, in RUclips.
How about Erich Kleiber? ruclips.net/video/jd3wNq6xeWM/видео.html or ruclips.net/video/NfsdpugcAes/видео.html (remastered). Sawallisch's one is excellent, of course!
Oh, my Lord! That first movement's probably one of the finest compositions by Schubert, much less, anybody else of his genre! It quite simply is so beyond beautiful of the most inexplicable nature that there's nothing left to do but give in and listen to the musical-paradise that it is of the utmost perfection; yes, perfection itself ---- that's neither sad nor happy, neither melodramatic nor neurotic, neither spooky nor depressing ---- but just one that draws ye in ever so graciously that ye don't even realise, ye hath forgotten about everything else and can't seem to let go; all paralysed by its sheer grace!
That's why he couldn't "finish" it within the traditional format of a 4 movement symphony. It's perfect as a two mvt symphony. The two extra mvts in the "finished" version are anti-climactic.
The first movement is miles ahead of anyrhing else in this universe.
@@willtexas7720 Except Beethoven Symphonies.
The first theme of the second movement... so shy, so beautiful, so simple and deeply sweet to the point you cannot get tired of it.
Can you tell me where the development, recapitulation and coda are?
@@Profeex22 The second movement is not in sonata form. It doesn't really have a development section.
One of my favorite symphonies. I wonder if Schubert wrote this tragic work when he found out he had contracted the then fatal disease of syphilis. ( He was to live about five more years after his diagnosis during which time his musical output would be the most productive in his short life.) The whole mood and character of this novel work was a complete break from the other symphonies he had written up that point. There is such sadness and fear mixed with hope, resentment and memories of happier days. I can't understand why he would hide this work only to be discovered about 20 years later after his death . So sad. RIP Dear Franz.
It's part of a recent theory why the symphony is "unfinished," but it doesn't matter, since the work is finished as it is. It's perfect in two movements.
I believe this is correct. It opened up for him or forced him into a new realm of feeling, representing a huge, lifetime advance. The scherzo (sketch and one fully scored page) reverts to his previous outlook too much, and I think this is why he abandoned it. The abandonment of the superb piano sonata in C (Relique) is not so easy to explain. It was a titan, and within a whisker of completion. Paul Badura-Skoda completed it, and many other completable piano sonatas, revealing a corpus of work of astonishing range and quality.
@@gervaisfrykman266 I think he realized at this point that youth with a golden "halo" and a cheery naive outlook was gone. The new :adult" life with some ":miserable realities" were now dawning and reflected in his music.
He actually put the symphony aside when he was commissioned to write the "Wanderer Fantasie". The symphony was written for the Graz Music Society, who granted him honorary membership. It was passed to friends Joseph and then Anselm Huttenbrenner (of Graz). Anselm kept it for decades until it was passed to a Viennese conductor Johann von Herbeck who performed it in 1865.
There is just something magical about the oboe and clarinet melody at start where the E goes to an F natural. I guess that's the beauty of harmony and the sensitivity of Schubert.
8:41 - 9:21 Is this only mine favourite part or is it anyone else's?
Gives me chills everytime.
The greatest symphony ever written and the greatest musical climax I've ever listen to. It's so unfair he never got a chance to listen to any of his symphonies :(
Estevão Monteiro it’s mine too :)
You're not alone.
Neither are you.
:)
agree
He heard them in his head
The dramatic sections are breathtaking. The lyrical sections are exquisitely beautiful. Notwithstanding its shortened form, surely one of the greatest symphonic works ever written. One never grows tired of hearing it.
why does life have to be this hard?
This is the question he asks..
with a mooring lingering passion.
His love of beauty is evident.
So is his sadness.
THANK YOU so much for making this public again!!! I missed it enormously while it was private, because this is my favourite rendition and I used to listen to it often. Please keep these jewels accessible to all music lovers.
+Gergana Petkova thank you :) There is no copyright issue with this video therefore I could torn on to public. All other stay in private status unfortunatelly, but on/after 22th December will come a big surprise (I hope).
Looking very much forward to Dec 22 then! Not sure what happens then... But you have no idea how long I searched for this video, even asked other people about it, because when it went private I had no idea who the owner was.
+Gergana Petkova After 180 days (25.June, my YT-strike) I will be able to turn to unlisted status my nearly all private-videos and I will give urls to these unlisted videos for you (maybe via my facebook account). If there will be no problems...
+tnsnamesoralong Do you think you might be willing to share your videos for Schubert's Ninth and the Bach Passions with me? Those were some of my very favorite videos on youtube and it would be quite nice to view them again.
in case you dont understand the story behind this piece, Schubert made the first and second movements and thought they were so good he could never finish so he literally just ended without doing a third or fourth movement.
Actually the reason for the lack of completion of this Symphony is unknown, that's one of many theories.
If Schubert had simply fired half the string section, he would have had sufficient funds to pen a complete symphony!
8:52 never fails to send chills down my spine... love the mysterious and suspense effect this whole orchestra work has.. miss the times where I had to analyse this beautiful piece of work in detail, its lovely
Calvin Tan I know. After recently playing this piece in my regional orchestra I have really come to love that part. Cool to listen to, even better to play
My music teacher made us listen to symphonies one lesson before holidays, we had been talking about symphonies for some lessons.
I remembered the name of this one so I could look it up on RUclips.
We did watch a documentary about Schubert half a year later, I told her I recognised the Symphony, she didn't even know she showed it to her students.
Now we learned about romantic componists and music and we again heard this symphony and I still love it so that's why I came back today.
Thanks to my music teacher
That was, without a lie, one of the best 30 minutes of my young life. The melodies, the harmonies and the orchestration were just magical and perfect !!!!
Please listen to his String Quintet in C... I think you're in for a lovely treat! ❤
1 часть
0:18 ГП
1:23 ПП
2 часть
14:51 ГП
17:43 ПП
Спасибо 🙏🙏🙏
😂😂😂😂
Imagine being such a legend that something you didn’t even finish is revered by many as one of the greatest pieces they’ve ever heard
Franz Schubert:8.h-moll ,,Befejezetlen" Szimfónia D.759
1.Allegro moderato 00:00
2.Andante con moto 14:51
Drezdai Állami Zenekar
Vezényel:Wolfgang Sawallisch
1967
H minor? Schubert was op
@@christopherrakeman5715 H minor is B minor (in German Style)
Nagyszerű-nagyszerű!
See, I was just wondering though some Minecraft role play animatics and stumbled upon this. I guess that’s the strangest way to be introduced to a masterpiece
Got here from 'Minority Report'. which is now free on youtube.
"My unfinished symphony! Forever unfinished!"
Got here from VCCV English Utau Tutorial
i actually thought the minecraft roleplay thing is a reference to this piece, like it's being played in the background or something lol
Sorry, but this is the definitive performance. Passion, perfect intonation, and wonderful pace. Wonderful.
This has to be one of the finest performances of this symphony. Surprisingly few have commented on that.
Wish the ads are removed
Bravo ....... Staatskapelle Dresden
Wolfgang Sawallisch (conductor)
End of the first movement, as dramatic as anything ever written, the tension and emotion of Beethoven, intensity and high strings that Dvorak uses, but without any thrashing around. Schubert's gift for melody reminds me of Keats's gift for beautiful language, and even his most dramatic passages are sublimely gorgeous.
The beginning gives me goosebumps
far ema What the fuck?
how about no
'cringelord'! Oh gosh you kids are funny!! :) Brightens my day lol
Me too want to see those goosebumps
The basses and cellos kill it, I felt it too
By far the best and most profound interpretation of this work. Bravo Sawallisch & Dresden Staatskapelle Orchestra!
When I was a freshman in high school, my teacher took this from his files collection and made us practice this song. We never played it in concert, but literally every year until my graduation he took it out randomly and had us practice sections of the song. I've always loved it since I first heard what it should have sounded like.
I LOVE that you have the score there. Thank you! Such a gorgeous piece of music. When I was a kid, my parents used to play classical music every night after my bedtime. I remember this piece especially. I never told them how comforting this was for me. It created my love for classical music.
Surprisingly, the 2nd mvt got stuck to my brain pretty easily. Normally when I listen to slow movements like these, I forget them. Man, Schubert really was something else if he's able to get a melody into my brain in just one listen.
Schubert thank you. You always have been and will be the musical delight of my life. You are music's essence. Thirty-one is such a short life. But what rich and infinite treasures you created.
Yes, Schubert is indeed music's essence!
I'm a Bach guy, but I have to admit, Franz could write a good tune. lol
+PointyTailofSatan I like that one haha
fan de Bach ?
YEEES! exactly the same for me :D
Y
Yeeeeees
What a fantastic and gourgious piece of music. Defnitley on the same level as Mozart and Beethoven.
@Franz Liszt A part rien n est plus beau que Bach.
This symphony sounds so unusual.
It is truly awful that any human being should have to suffer in the way this music depicts, yet Schubert has created from his pain something so unutterably beautiful that it can lift me from the most terrible depths to a place that truly touches the divine.
+aliceschesya t
touch of genius. words can't describe music of this sort
Just wanted to say how much I love this recording and the piece in general. It's a little odd that something which is by definition incomplete can seem so perfectly whole. To me, the two movements speak of a turbulent personality finally coming to some form of resolution. I sometimes forget how revolutionary this symphony was for its day and I'd assume that it hailed from the latter part of the 19th century if I didn't know it was composed by Schubert. Thanks for uploading.
Great to follow this music on the partiture! Thirty years ago I played the cello part of this; Still remember every note :-)
@@DarkCartoon_music yo i am playing it sorry that i am 4 years to late
The cello and bass parts are paramount to this symphony, introducing the main themes- both movements. I played the cello line decades ago. I'll never forget that performance.
I never get tired of listening to this symphony. That is the magic of classical music.
A great performance from Dresden in 1967
18:54 the descend into ultimate sorrow and hopelessness
You were Haydn yourself from us all along, you DO listen to Schubert!
I knew it! Schubert is Xehanort!
The intensity of this work is gigantic. I cry imagining Schubert's life, his joys and agonies.
Wow, recorded in the deepest, darkest days of the Cold War in Communist Germany! I have a "Freischuetz" that was recorded in Dresden under communism that is excellent as well!
+Jeffrey Morrissey That Freischütz is not only excellent, it's probably the best ever put on record. I have seen the Opera performed many times and it never came even close to what Kleiber accomplished. So my relationship to the work is kind of tainted. Because I never hear others to rise to that level again.
@@Quotenwagnerianer Care to share the recording? Is it available somewhere?
when will he drop his next release?
waiting so long for a new tape by him
I think our boi Shubert's in vacation or somethin'.
He might be too lazy. After all, he ditched this piece two movements in :P
He didn't even finish this, I think he got married
He's been at his beach house on death island for too long. We have to bring him back onto the mainland!
how long hav you been waiting for....
I, as a mere lover of classical music (with few exceptions), have felt and thought for decades that Schubert knew in all his faculties that it would be utterly pointless and even detrimental to add anything to these two sublime studies of life's tribulations and divine rescue into renewed bliss. Bespeaks of this...
In form, unfinished, in every other aspect, complete. Franz, immortality is in your genius.
Great comments on why this symphony is called The Unfinished.
Interesting and informative.
The truth is out there.
there literally is no comment that says otherwise
@@ChrisM-qo1jc There are a whole crap ton of memes and actually theories at the top of the comments section m8
Thank you so much for including the orchestral score.I played in the RAF Apprentices Brass band in 1950. The then bandmaster made us practice on a wide variety of music including classical. This by Schubert is one of my favourites
.Many thanks.
"Why should the composer be more guilty than the poet who warms to fantasy by a strange flame, making an idea that inspires him the subject of his own very different treatment?" ~ Franz Schubert
We are so lucky this day we can listen to so many free music all composed by Schubert, Chopin, Mozart etc etc... Thank God for these music its free and so good.
Time codes:
Part 1 / 1 часть
00:01 introduction, h moll / Вступление, си минор
00:18 main batch, h moll / Главная партия, си минор
01:20 side batch, G dur / Побочная партия, соль мажор
02:00 rupture, c moll / Перелом, до минор
02:54 final batch, G dur / Заключительная партия, соль мажор
06:58 development, 1st section, e moll / Разработка, 1 раздел, ми минор
08:41 development, 2nd section, e moll / Разработка, 2 раздел, ми минор
13:41 coda, h moll / Кода, си минор
Part 2 / 2 часть
14:52 main batch, E dur / Главная партия, ми мажор
17:42 side batch, cis moll / Побочная партия, до диез минор
P.S.:Sorry for my bad english
Ты тоже русский?🗿
@@tl-taylor3492 Да
10:03 реприза
20:37 реприза экспозиции 2 части
17:54 13:20 26:36
03:52 14:57 00:01
27:15 19:56 11:41
06:30 04:54 10:15
09:43 02:43 03:34
01:13 06:58 12:54
08:45 08:43 04:56 07:48
00:34 10:32 09:56 03:53
07:38 13:45 10:00
prvi put sam ovo ccula gledajuchi RAJANOVU KCHI Dejvida Lina.... Od tada je to postalo moje tajno utoccisste...nesvakidassnja lepota tog nedovrssenog dela opominje me da nismo uzalud na ovoj planeti...
I cant stop listen it. Its like a drug.
you true
This particular piece is so enchanting , it pictures to myself life with its hardships and struggles , peaceful and tranquil moments. Schubert had concealed this work , perhaps it was to personal .
Esto... simplemente, me hace amar cada vez más y más la música; y la oportunidad que tengo de poder interpretar esta pieza me resulta muy emocionante. Soy violín 2, pero de todos modos se tiene que tener bastante disciplina, constancia y de hecho amor a la música para interpretarla, cualquier persona que solo toca por tocar ve las partituras de reojo y piensa 'No, esto es demasiado complicado para mi, tengo flojera, no ni que fuera tan emocionante.' Amo el hecho de que me hayan dado la oportunidad de tocar esto y no me rendiré hasta que me salga lo mejor posible. Excelente pieza, muy hermosa y con sentimiento. A veces pienso ¿Que habrá pasado por la cabeza de los compositores para hacer semejante creación? Son personas realmente admirables, lástima que esta sea la Sinfonía Inconclusa.
Repito, hermosa pieza.
So accept perfection, a fleeting sunrise. Elogiac melodies bounce between a emotional balance of peace and some kind pastoral landscape in Schuberts challenges. This was therapy for him
Ive played cello for this before... absolutely beautiful
So sad to think that the author of this sublime work never had the satisfaction of hearing it played by a great orchestra, or basking in the adulation and worldly success that he deserved
I got introduced to classical mainly through symphonic metal, X Japan's Art of Life lead me to this one, since it's based off it. Some of the most beautiful melodies I've ever heard.
Today is January 31, Schubert's birthday, so I have come again to this amazing work of pure genius.
My favorite piece of music ever written 14:52
I heard Schubert's Unfinished for the first time in early 1970's on Australian Broadcast- ing Corporation's Asia Pacific broadcast and ever since I have been mesmerised by the subtle beauty of the piece. Schubert like Beethoven was a student of Haydn and in this piece the slow, soft and moving refrain has the beauty of Haydn and in the other vigorous sections shows the modern and strong Beethovenesque style. In a way, this piece represents the blending and inter-twining of two styles, one of the Romantic period with its emphasis on beauty and the other of the Modern period with emphasis on subjective expression of the vagaries and highs and lows of human emotions. This piece ends bringing a contentment of a great piece well-concluded without leaving any craving that a great "unfinished" piece should cause. A Schubertian all-time gem !
Does it not feel like going through a snowy blizzard?
Miss playing the viola part of this piece
In My Life You may be the first viola player to like their part
I'm a violist and I played this in my high school symphony orchestra. This is in my top three favorites along with Dvorak's New World Symphony and Phantom of the Opera (I never turned in any of the music after the concert)
I'm a violist in it now. Yeah, we've got a pretty boring part, but there's some fun sections. And we get to be right next to the cellists
@@mintbrownieangelfish-6114 It's always nice to be next to the cellists. Real social and friendly people. Plus the instrument sounds great.
Came here to listen this because someone rejected to goto the prom with me. This piece induce the realization of the insignificance of such an event as compared to great music.
Magnifique, j'adore cette symphonie. Interprété ici avec brio
+Reinemichaud Indeed
+Reinemichaud J'adore cette symphonie aussi.
What an absolute masterpiece! Possibly the greatest symphony ever written.
I will always associate this music with those old "Smurfs" cartoons where it has been used as background music for dramatic scenes :) There's nothing better for kids to learn some classic music through watching cartoons ;) Disney did that a lot back then with their "Silly Symphonies" too.
You'll also find a lot of classical music in Tom & Jerry
Yes, when Smurfs cried «Gargamel!!!» ':)
I heard this piece dozens of times. Yet even now, after I blast it on 100% on my headphones, it makes such an impact. Incredible.
There was a “Casper the friendly Ghost” cartoon where Shubert is in his apartment composing the Verse Melody...and keeps getting interrupted by jack hammers etc outside his apartment window.
Funny, later that day after I saw this cartoon as a child...we had a Field Trip to see the Baltimore Symphony. They played the Unfinished!
Happy accident?
...or Divine Providence?
Maybe so!
I never heard Sawallisch perform with such passion and commitment. Clearly this music meant something special to him .
Great piece. Trying to think which film I have seen with this in and now I remember = Minority Report!
Minority report, and maybe even Smurfs :D Gargamel's theme :D
The first movement was part of the background music of a silent movie of the 1920s, but I can't remember the name of it!
Jacobin Girondiste The first "phantom of the opera" movie (1925): www.imdb.com/title/tt0016220/
@@JBrandeis1 phantom of the opera
None music genre will EVER beat the pieces of these geniuses.
I used to listen to this beautiful symphony while meditating on the fifteen mysteries of the most holy rosary of the blessed virgin Mary. The arrangement seems to fit in an exact order of those meditations from beginning to end. There is a thread of mutual love woven throughout the piece akin to the mutual love expressed in the mysteries.
I feel the unfinished ending is appropriate for the mutual love itself is unfinished, without an end.
+Easy Moss Nice name and nice comment
+Easy Moss that's a very interesting interpretation. thank you.
At the beginning I hearing that phase: “Kyrie eleison, eleison..”
I just realized how much Bruckner must have loved this piece.
The Orchestra I'm in is playing this tomorrow.. I play 1st clarinet, here's hoping I do those lovely (super exposed!!) parts in the second movement justice! eeeeep....
Bet you did just great.
Hope you did great!
The first movement is amazing. The second movement even better. Peak Schubert.
0:01 вступление
0:18 ГП 1 части
1:23 пп
14:51 ГП 2 части
17:43 пп
What
А есть св.п, з.п?
@@Cellistontheinternet Dude, we're teaching fucking music literature, don't get in the way)
спасибо человеческое спасибо
8:42 - 9:27 is my absolute favorite spot when we go over it during rehearsal, it just sounds so good
This is a fabulous interpretation.
Thank you for this. This produces goosebumps over my entire body...One day I will listen to it live, it is one of these things you have to do before you die! plus I love "dancing" to it when alone in the house.. it just inspires me so much. To me it symbolises "the eternal fight of the human spirit", it brings out the fire in my soul..
Good story, I learned that I can actually hum this whole entire song. Its amazing, because in math class, it really helps when you are taking the longest test ever!
i cannot describe my absolute adoration for the first movement of this work..... what other melodys make your heart soar? what other Harmonys make your soul sing?
Thank you for putting up the sheet music it is nice to read along
I LOVE the development section of that first movement!! It's one of my all time favorites!! That first movement is very interesting in terms of form though. It's in sonata form, but the modulation in the exposition is to the submediant, which still works, but the development section doesn't keep the same tonic. The recap section modulates to the relative major instead of the parallel major for the second theme. Very interesting and unusual. Still one of my favorite works!! Thanks for the effort and work that went into this video!! I love following the score, because I'm working on getting a music composition degree myself!
X Japan's "Art of Life" brought me here. Specifically to 8:54.
Спасибо тебе автор канала за то что даёшь слушать музыку вместе с нотами!!!
So wonderful!!! Great performance!! Thank you!!
I loved playing the first clarinet part for this back in high school. Such a beautiful piece
Schubert was, in my opinion, the greatest composer of all time. Someone asked whether Schubert's music makes you happy or sad. The answer is both, and at the same time. No one else who ever lived had his power and beauty. If only he could have lived beyond age 31.
GORGEOUS. I played this on tour with my youth orchestra and I miss it so much. Such an amazing cello part. Thank you Schubert
definitively a masterpiece!
In this performance the second movement really drags. The tempo indication is "Andante Con Moto", but is being played more like 'Largo". Otherwise, a great performance.
Written in the same year as Beethoven's 9th symphony. Makes you pause and think. Schubert is always being presented as the one who came after Beethoven, but by the time Beethoven put out his opus 125, Schubert already was writing his opus 759.
People often say of this and that composer that he was ahead of his time, but Schubert was the only one who really was ahead of his time. Not Bach, not Mozart, not even Schönberg, even if the latter liked to think this to be true of himself. Had Schubert lived for another 30 years, he would have singe-handedly made romanticism obsolete and have ushered in an entirely new era by the 1850s. There was so much untapped potential. To think that he only began to study counterpoint a few weeks before he died. Imagine what he would achieve if he were to combine his mastery of melody and harmony with his newly acquired contrapuntal skills.
99% wrong
It hurts to think of what he could've done...
This rendition is just marvellous. Thank you for making it public again, I was already getting desperate!!
Girl: Come over
Schubert: I Can't, i have to finish my 8th Symphony
Girl: My parent's aren't home
* The tittle*
Except Schubert was a probably a homosexual.
That's enough dank memes for today.
Assai96 he slept with a woman that was not his wife or girlfriend and got an STD. what does that make him?
not a homosexual i guess?
I barley saw the post
Thank you for this - I love this symphony, and being able to follow the music as it is played is such a treat, instead of a static picture of the composer, or a landscape as with so many other music downloads. xxx