Nothing to add to the former comments. Let me say only that the video shows once again, and in a very special way, how different people from any origin can assemble together and produce a masterpiece.
My God, when the Tubas, Trombones and drums start in near the end, it's was such an awe-inducing moment for me. Such a formidable point that really stands out. You all did an unbelievably awesome job!
Too many play this one too fast but this was perfect speed. Excellent! Stokowski is the only one who got this one right, the others seems to be in a hurry or they're trying to chase away a fly on one of they keys.
I write software. At heart, there's really only 4 things that a function in a program does: calculate and store a value, a decision ("if" statement), go back and repeat something again ("loop"), and start another function (layer) that does these 4 things again. When it comes down to it, a computer program is just variations on these small building blocks that are layered, one on top of another on top of another. Bach's Little Fugue has always felt like that to me. Nearly endless variations on a simple theme, layered one on top of the other, until you get to this awesome place where all the layers comes together. I love hearing it on an organ, but it's even more fun hearing all of the different instrument voices. I really like this rendition! What a great idea for the Covid shutdown!
I'm studying this fugue right now and this performance really helped me isolate the themes. Thank you for the great performance! Interesting and effective ritard at the end. Nice arrangement. Bravo!
What would good ol' Johann think? Not just of the orchestration but the audio clarity and visual recording, then being told all of the musicians played at different places and times(?) . Something superb that came out of that absurd time.
Wonderful performance-I listen to this recording very often. I do have a question I hope you may answer: where may one find the score you used for this performance? Or could you share who arranged the version you performed?
I disagree: listen to this one: ruclips.net/video/E2p7I3zmcfc/видео.html. Or ruclips.net/user/results?search_query=bach+trumpet+balsom Poor Bach was just born to early to know the trumpet. Bach, organ and trumpet are a golden trio.
Nothing to add to the former comments. Let me say only that the video shows once again, and in a very special way, how different people from any origin can assemble together and produce a masterpiece.
Beethoven said about Bach “He should be called not a Brook, but rather a Sea.” - Bach is German for “brook” or “stream.”
T@1
@@westwind3557 T@1, eh? I've googled. And I tried Urban Dictionary. No luck. Care to tell me what you meant by T@1?
Excellent point. And believe it or not, they were quite a few Bachs in Thuringia the area of Germany, where Johan Sebastian lived.
Bach is not a sea he is all the oceans
My God, when the Tubas, Trombones and drums start in near the end, it's was such an awe-inducing moment for me. Such a formidable point that really stands out.
You all did an unbelievably awesome job!
Too many play this one too fast but this was perfect speed. Excellent!
Stokowski is the only one who got this one right, the others seems to be in a hurry or they're trying to chase away a fly on one of they keys.
Given that organs have rents that make you pay out the nose *_PER MINUTE_* of playtime...
This is one of the best interpretations I've heard.
I write software. At heart, there's really only 4 things that a function in a program does: calculate and store a value, a decision ("if" statement), go back and repeat something again ("loop"), and start another function (layer) that does these 4 things again. When it comes down to it, a computer program is just variations on these small building blocks that are layered, one on top of another on top of another.
Bach's Little Fugue has always felt like that to me. Nearly endless variations on a simple theme, layered one on top of the other, until you get to this awesome place where all the layers comes together. I love hearing it on an organ, but it's even more fun hearing all of the different instrument voices. I really like this rendition! What a great idea for the Covid shutdown!
3:17-3:45 made me cry, as a person who is rarely emotional, thank you guys.
Thank you!
Yikes
@@Whatismusic123 let people have their moments. you don't know who that is or what they're going through.
I'm studying this fugue right now and this performance really helped me isolate the themes. Thank you for the great performance! Interesting and effective ritard at the end. Nice arrangement. Bravo!
Thank you!
.......... BEAUTIFUL............. Bach himself would be proud!
Lyrical, pastoral and monumental! Bravo, and well done! That was heart-moving!!
So glad you enjoyed it!
I did an arrangement for a double woodwind quartet for this piece and seeing the beginning gave me a little chuckle
I would be glad to hear it :)
I think starting it with such simplicity is a genius decision.
I feel teleported back in time this was magicient.Congrats to Nathaniel&Kenzie and Symphony Orchestra.
Thank you for your support!!😁
@@Fancyoboe12345 your welcome bro 🙏🏿
Thanks you so much for watching!
Cleverly edited and presented visually, so bravo for that and for the performance!
What would good ol' Johann think? Not just of the orchestration but the audio clarity and visual recording, then being told all of the musicians played at different places and times(?) . Something superb that came out of that absurd time.
It's a refreshing experience to hear this fugue orchestrated but I must admit it doesn't feel the same seeing the conductor on a screen
¡¡¡ Los buenos somos más !!! 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽
Beautiful! I love this composition❤❤
Great rendition.
I immediately thought, online flash mob. Great job!
lovely performance, props to everybody involved
Bach is proud.
He would love it
Amazing "GREAT" fuga‼️👏👏👏👏💐
awesome performance, excelent !!!
Wonderful. Thank you for sharing this.
Congratulations, I loved your rendition.
4:15 I damn near stood from my office chair clapping!
This is very good orchestration
super ejecucion....felicidades.
Maravilloso. Un saludo desde Buenos Aires, Argentina.
So Good!
thank you all!
fantastic
Bravo~!
Well done. Loved it!
우와~정말 멋지네요!^^다양한악기의 멋진하모니 👍 👍 👍
Wonderful!!
Hermosisima!!!
¡Sublime!
This sounds magnificent! ❤️
Bravo!!
have a look at BWV 1063 concerto for three Harpsichords by BACH
Hi this is amazing may you please share the parts and score? I'd love to try the Oboe part!!!!
Stunning and Brave 😳🙀
This is just delicious.
Обалдеть можно 👍👍👍
Wonderful performance-I listen to this recording very often.
I do have a question I hope you may answer: where may one find the score you used for this performance? Or could you share who arranged the version you performed?
J'aime La Musique Classique
我也是
Bach was a genius.
Needs more cow bell...
I got a fever, and the only thing that can cure it is more cowbell!
I don't usually like Stokowski's transcriptions of Bach's organ works (I think organ music should be played on an organ) but this one is nice.
I disagree: listen to this one: ruclips.net/video/E2p7I3zmcfc/видео.html. Or ruclips.net/user/results?search_query=bach+trumpet+balsom
Poor Bach was just born to early to know the trumpet.
Bach, organ and trumpet are a golden trio.
Good Lord , how in the world did all those soles get put together. Was there a conductor somewhere?????
Tuning: 0c: A4 = 440Hz
1:18... wha....what's that?? a "double-flute"? a "bass-flute"?
It's an alto flute. Thanks for watching!
The Maestro would have approved.
gg wp
"Little" Fugue? More like BIG Fugue
Man and machine and nothing there in between
The flying circus and a man from Prussia
J’a
jet doit Musique Classique
A great effort of organization, but hated the weird outburst of volume and odd tempi at the end. Best stick to that which Bach wrote; he knew best.
Практически любая фуга предполагает мощную каденцию и нарастание звука на протяжении всего произведения