“They probably think because I am so small and young, nothing of greatness and class can come out of me; but they shall soon find out.” ― Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Jokes on them. All those naysayers and haters are now forgotten in history and Mozart now basks in glory of his divine music to this day and for generations to come.
Just finished listening to your whole list of Mozart’s sacred music. Thank you SP score videos !!! I enjoyed every moment and didnt even know any of Mozarts sacred music except his famous Requiem, which i adore. I grew up with no classical music till i met a new friend in 8th grade : he had a grand piano at home and played the Moonlight Sonata while i stood by the piano and listened. I fell in love with classical music instantly and couldnt get enough. Even though i cant read music and cant speak Latin , classical sacred music speaks to my HEART. I now have a fairly large collection , but now can find thing’s impossible before due to your site on RUclips . Thank you from the bottom of my heart for doing this….and keep it up if possible.
It's in C major and A minor which are relative keys with the same key signature. The tempos are adagio, moderato, and allegro. The time signatures are 2/2, 3/4, and 4/4.
I sung this in my high school choir in my senior year. This song was tricky, but fun to sing. Because of how difficult the song was and time constraints, we used our music sheets to perform it, and it was still good nonetheless. This was 6 years ago, yet I still remember performing it like yesterday.
Je ne suis absolument pas musicologue (quoique titulaire de quelques diplômes d'épistémologie de la musique... de Mozart, mais c'est bien loin, très loin), mais en écoutant ce Te Deum j'ai l'impression d'entendre par très brefs instants le Requiem... Si quelqu'un a une réponse qualifiée ?
Se è per questo mancano anche negli altri movimenti. :D Probabilmente quest'edizione si basa su dei manoscritto, l'esecuzione su degli altri. All'epoca era abbastanza comune che le parti degli ottoni fossero opzionali.
actually the pronunciation of the latin language is wrong, English choir sings the "e" with [i] sound; e should be like /ε/ and not like [i], also the pronounciation of "ge" like "angeli", it should sound like /ɑŋˈgɛlɪ/
@@SPscorevideos it is not about that, they say "T[i] d[i]um" when it should be "te deum", also they say "angheli" and not "angeli", this is because english does not have the couple "ge" wich is not "ghe" i don't know how else to explain, in italian, and so latin, it should be "Te deum" and "angeli" without a hard G
@@SPscorevideos Also when they say "Cherubim" it is not the "ch" you use in english which sound like "ci", cherubim has a different pronunciation, with an hard c, you can use google translator voice to hear that in italian, search for cherubim and compare it with the choir
@@SPscorevideos I am not saying that you picked a bad recording at all, they actually sing beautifully, the only issue is the cultural and language wall
@@rietta4238 Sorry, but I really hear "Te Deum" and any other "e" pronounced correctly, and the same is for Cherubim. :/ About the Latin pronunciation of "g", there are two different ways: the ecclesiastical Latin has the "g" pronounced as you ask, the so called "restituta" pronunciation (theorethically closer to old Latin) has always the hard "g". Neither of these two methods is right or wrong: they're just two different systems of pronunciation. I suppose you're used to the ecclesiastical Latin, but after repeated listenings of recordings from all over the world you can get used also to the restituta. :)
I remember singing this when I was 15. It has always remained one of my favorite little masterworks.
“They probably think because I am so small and young, nothing of greatness and class can come out of me; but they shall soon find out.”
― Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Jokes on them. All those naysayers and haters are now forgotten in history and Mozart now basks in glory of his divine music to this day and for generations to come.
Iconic
Just finished listening to your whole list of Mozart’s sacred music. Thank you SP score videos !!! I enjoyed every moment and didnt even know any of Mozarts sacred music except his famous Requiem, which i adore. I grew up with no classical music till i met a new friend in 8th grade : he had a grand piano at home and played the Moonlight Sonata while i stood by the piano and listened. I fell in love with classical music instantly and couldnt get enough. Even though i cant read music and cant speak Latin , classical sacred music speaks to my HEART. I now have a fairly large collection , but now can find thing’s impossible before due to your site on RUclips . Thank you from the bottom of my heart for doing this….and keep it up if possible.
It's in C major and A minor which are relative keys with the same key signature. The tempos are adagio, moderato, and allegro. The time signatures are 2/2, 3/4, and 4/4.
I sung this in my high school choir in my senior year. This song was tricky, but fun to sing. Because of how difficult the song was and time constraints, we used our music sheets to perform it, and it was still good nonetheless. This was 6 years ago, yet I still remember performing it like yesterday.
One of my favorite pieces of all time!!
Magnificent, soaring, perfect!
Magistral Music !
Je ne suis absolument pas musicologue (quoique titulaire de quelques diplômes d'épistémologie de la musique... de Mozart, mais c'est bien loin, très loin), mais en écoutant ce Te Deum j'ai l'impression d'entendre par très brefs instants le Requiem... Si quelqu'un a une réponse qualifiée ?
Te Deum laudabo. Laudabo tibi Domine
Come mai in partitura mancano le trombe nell'Aeterna fac?
Se è per questo mancano anche negli altri movimenti. :D
Probabilmente quest'edizione si basa su dei manoscritto, l'esecuzione su degli altri. All'epoca era abbastanza comune che le parti degli ottoni fossero opzionali.
actually the pronunciation of the latin language is wrong, English choir sings the "e" with [i] sound; e should be like /ε/ and not like [i], also the pronounciation of "ge" like "angeli", it should sound like /ɑŋˈgɛlɪ/
I can't hear any "e" pronounced as [i], and they're pronouncing "angeli" exactly as you say...
@@SPscorevideos it is not about that, they say "T[i] d[i]um" when it should be "te deum", also they say "angheli" and not "angeli", this is because english does not have the couple "ge" wich is not "ghe" i don't know how else to explain, in italian, and so latin, it should be "Te deum" and "angeli" without a hard G
@@SPscorevideos Also when they say "Cherubim" it is not the "ch" you use in english which sound like "ci", cherubim has a different pronunciation, with an hard c, you can use google translator voice to hear that in italian, search for cherubim and compare it with the choir
@@SPscorevideos I am not saying that you picked a bad recording at all, they actually sing beautifully, the only issue is the cultural and language wall
@@rietta4238 Sorry, but I really hear "Te Deum" and any other "e" pronounced correctly, and the same is for Cherubim. :/
About the Latin pronunciation of "g", there are two different ways: the ecclesiastical Latin has the "g" pronounced as you ask, the so called "restituta" pronunciation (theorethically closer to old Latin) has always the hard "g".
Neither of these two methods is right or wrong: they're just two different systems of pronunciation.
I suppose you're used to the ecclesiastical Latin, but after repeated listenings of recordings from all over the world you can get used also to the restituta. :)