Gavin Bryars - The Sinking Of The Titanic (1975, Obscure)

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
  • Producer -- Brian Eno
    Written-By -- Gavin Bryars

Комментарии • 143

  • @bobgreen623
    @bobgreen623 11 лет назад +103

    I have read that it is a representation, maybe partly fantastical, of the band playing as the ship went down, and this is why at times the sound becomes progressively more muffled, as if heard underwater, almost as if somehow the band managed to play on until the ship came to rest on the ocean floor. But yes, it is brilliant, sad and beautiful.

    • @zacharypage6164
      @zacharypage6164 3 года назад +5

      Correct. It makes it hauntingly beautiful.

  • @jzocchio
    @jzocchio 3 года назад +123

    When the piece ended, the video was quickly and automatically followed by an ad that started with a guy uttering astonished: "Beautiful. So beautiful..." - he was frying a steak. It was vulgar, but I had to agree.

    • @svenlittlecross
      @svenlittlecross 3 года назад +4

      whats so vulgar about frying a steak

    • @jammaschan
      @jammaschan 3 года назад +7

      @@svenlittlecross when you can't eat it.

    • @Mateo-ko9kx
      @Mateo-ko9kx 2 года назад +2

      @@jammaschan right in the spot

  • @anatoly86
    @anatoly86 3 года назад +52

    This album changed my life forever. My father played it in 92 as I was a child and I could never shake the feeling it gave me. It molded my interests forever.

    • @zerolubin
      @zerolubin 6 месяцев назад

      What do you do for a living?

  • @lil.tim15
    @lil.tim15 11 лет назад +69

    I was so blessed to have witnessed this piece being played. It was a truly changing experience.

  • @sean..L
    @sean..L 2 года назад +23

    The feeling this evokes is more complicated than just sadness. I feel like I’m watching the end of something very old and beloved. The type of farewell that is full of honour and respect.

  • @dukeofkbs
    @dukeofkbs 12 лет назад +28

    I hear part of an Eve Hart interview in the background . She was a Titanic survivor and was just a child when about the ill fated voyage .

  • @sirjc1772
    @sirjc1772 6 лет назад +56

    The chills tho as the music seems to continue underwater...
    While the actual band wouldn’t have been able to carry the tune into the sea, the thought of them playing their final notes before deciding (or being forced) to let go of the instruments is haunting...

    • @thirien59
      @thirien59 5 лет назад

      They say they kept playing until they died

  • @johnheppenstall4904
    @johnheppenstall4904 5 лет назад +31

    The stuff that Eno collected for his Obscure series of albums - I suppose you'd say 'curated' these days - was light years beyond what most people thought was 'alternative' orchestral music. Bought Discreet Music, as an Eno fan, but then had to get this, just from his introduction to it. Then everything else Obscure. Talk about opening your mind/ears/head. We should always be open to new ways of enjoying, well, everything.

  • @annettemarshall4895
    @annettemarshall4895 6 лет назад +28

    Towards the end you can feel how the compression is affecting the metal of the ship and causing these distorted notes and odd gonging sounds - it settles so slowly, yet so inexorably. The pressure even forces tunes out of the piano. No wonder Brian Eno loves this piece...

    • @markgartside7497
      @markgartside7497 2 года назад +2

      Eno...yes. Bet he had a year in his .piano

  • @Books_Makeup
    @Books_Makeup 3 года назад +9

    This piece brings me back to 2013-16. I discovered this composer and Stars of the Lid during those years.

  • @elragman
    @elragman Год назад +6

    Just beautiful.

  • @OldGoolekid
    @OldGoolekid 11 лет назад +5

    Eva Hart was a relative of my mothers. Gavin Bryars is a Goole lad. We are, since 1945 on that side of the family,a Goole family..... both things greatly combined. Fantastic bit of music I discovered in my teenage library days in 1995. Love it.

  • @jin0j0nes56
    @jin0j0nes56 2 года назад +7

    Just huge. The sound is all encompassing. Truly beautiful.

  • @nmb803
    @nmb803 Год назад +4

    I can't turn it off. It makes me feel like I'm there with them.

  • @donnabrandmeyerrobertdavis2426
    @donnabrandmeyerrobertdavis2426 6 лет назад +13

    Bob here: Highly recommended ... most haunting composition I can remember having heard.

  • @joseantonioalonso9904
    @joseantonioalonso9904 4 года назад +6

    La versión corta de The Sinking ,tan disfrutable como la más larga de ellas.Una obra imprescindible

  • @joaquinmartinez8828
    @joaquinmartinez8828 8 лет назад +28

    One of my favorite pieces of music. I have shared it with my students and they have liked it, I gave a copy to a student a few years ago and she recently said she had listened to it and thanked me for exposing her to different genres of music.

  • @filmusikchannel7596
    @filmusikchannel7596 Год назад +3

    Everytime it makes me cry.....wonderful album

  • @poletooke4691
    @poletooke4691 6 лет назад +14

    That is so absolutely GORGEOUS sounding. Shatters your heart and emotions.

  • @josephstrausman4941
    @josephstrausman4941 8 лет назад +56

    You can see the big influence on Stars of the Lid, for sure

  • @KeithWhalen11
    @KeithWhalen11 3 года назад +6

    A devastating piece of music. It reminds me of Charles Ives' Unanswered Question, where the musical constant is challenged from the periphery. The same is true of his Central Park in the Dark (1906), a soundscape of undulating quietude, interrupted by fanfare and the life of the city. The reality of the growing silence here is so grim but like the Ives works, it is more about introspection and philosophy than turning a tune.

  • @CDtopographics
    @CDtopographics 12 лет назад +6

    I was just listenng to a podcast of Bryers on Desert Island Discs and he talks about this composition; his historical research, interviews and the way the sounds were made. I think he said it is based around a hymn called 'Autumn', as he was informed by several survivors and a crew member's log that this is what the band were playing.

  • @kristinalebedeva9371
    @kristinalebedeva9371 6 лет назад +11

    Absolutely mind-blowing. Thank you for making this dark, water diamond available for us.

  • @maxcowell3920
    @maxcowell3920 8 лет назад +12

    Bought the album in 1977 - never forgotten it - reverse side is a tramp singing "Jesus Blood Never Failed me yet" which Bryars recorded - the tramp was completely sober - and not on drugs and so Bryars made a tape loop and introduced a chamber orchestra so that the tramp was accompanied by the best musicians - another really moving piece.

    • @barrycoad2080
      @barrycoad2080 8 лет назад

      me too

    • @christopherterry8589
      @christopherterry8589 5 лет назад +4

      I remember that tramp. On the London Underground. He had perfect pitch. Extraordinary to hear him, as I did, more than once.

    • @tonymostromable
      @tonymostromable Год назад

      @@christopherterry8589 that's amazing.

  • @nilton61
    @nilton61 2 года назад +2

    This piece blew me away the first time i heard it. When i learned about the title i was struck again

  • @richarddouglas7810
    @richarddouglas7810 4 года назад +5

    It's the grand ballroom from the shining on water! Masterpiece!!!

    • @isaachaynes1832
      @isaachaynes1832 4 года назад +2

      I don't think there was a grand ballroom on the titanic, but let's pretend because it's prettier that way.

  • @atrueswedee
    @atrueswedee 12 лет назад +7

    I was in the Choir when Peyton McDonald rewrote the piece. It is truly a fabulous work.

  • @user-dg3re2gz5w
    @user-dg3re2gz5w 5 лет назад +6

    Simply haunting.

  • @46metube
    @46metube 10 лет назад +17

    what a top piece of music. nothing abstract about it. captures the moment beautifully.

  • @MegaCirse
    @MegaCirse Год назад +5

    Подобно первым лучам зари, эта музыка открывает вам глаза на новые обещания и на все чудеса природы. Вызывая невероятные силы, эти произведения трогают струны сердца, вызывают ностальгию и пробуждают любовь, ободранные жизни и оцепенение измученных стражников

  • @vicaldama9314
    @vicaldama9314 2 года назад +2

    Wow I always was so interested and amazed in learning the band kept playing!

  • @reverendbryan
    @reverendbryan Год назад +4

    Forever haunting

  • @Andrew_Bell209
    @Andrew_Bell209 11 месяцев назад +2

    Such a beautiful, original and oddly familiar piece of music which, would you believe, I used to own as a cassette tape.

  • @PierreRipplinger
    @PierreRipplinger 12 лет назад +10

    The song taht is commonly said to be the last played by the Titanic's orchestra is " Nearer My God To Thee". Bryar's version of this music sound like that song, but misheard among the screams of panic and grinding steel.

  • @annettemarshall4895
    @annettemarshall4895 2 года назад +5

    There's another version of this piece on RUclips recorded at a very large indoor swimming pool and the diferent accoustics are fascinating.... Lovely and even more "under watery" but different.

  • @casakoen
    @casakoen 12 лет назад +4

    Sublime piece of music

  • @bobgreen623
    @bobgreen623 11 лет назад +24

    Really, this piece could last for at least 2 hours 40, that is the time that elapsed between the Titanic hitting the iceberg and the sinking. Add to that the time it took to settle on the ocean floor and it could be, say, three hours. I'm not sure I could take the emotional impact of a piece like this for that long, but I feel like I should just for the experience, Maybe follow this with Pauline Oliveros' "The Beauty of Sorrow"...

    • @lougreen3850
      @lougreen3850 2 года назад +3

      Thank you Bob, Pauline Olivero's is a piece of art...

  • @orbitus9746
    @orbitus9746 5 лет назад +2

    Very beautiful music.

  • @bobgreen623
    @bobgreen623 11 лет назад +7

    Mesmerising, haunting, hypnotic, poignant, beautiful, tragic and utterly moving. The much longer Philip Jeck piece using this is just as good

  • @arblankenship54
    @arblankenship54 Год назад +1

    The Harold Budd nod of his album pavilion of dreams is just as haunting

  • @128433094
    @128433094 12 лет назад +4

    I first heard this music 1975, sure it was on the john peel program,he introduced it as a recording using a highly sensitive mic from the sinking brilliant

  • @colmanchester9
    @colmanchester9 Месяц назад

    We can all Judge but we will only ever be truly Judged by our piers regarding our music

  • @bobgreen623
    @bobgreen623 11 лет назад +9

    The first three chords of the piece, which are heard regularly throughout, also sound very like the opening of the 1812 Overture.

  • @Messines17
    @Messines17 9 лет назад +9

    Randomly found this to my delight!!

  • @PIOX1789
    @PIOX1789 5 лет назад +2

    Amazing Grace

  • @matildesusanafernandezalfa5299
    @matildesusanafernandezalfa5299 2 года назад +1

    Que belleza!!!!! Gracias Gavin Bryars!!!!

  • @mariamenezes6197
    @mariamenezes6197 10 лет назад +4

    Uma maravilha! A melodia transporta-me para o infinito.

  • @EyeLean5280
    @EyeLean5280 8 лет назад +7

    Gorgeous. Truly.

  • @lucseuge3804
    @lucseuge3804 3 года назад +5

    Only a few people knows that James Cameron had the idea to make his movie listening to this.

  • @nickburningham5143
    @nickburningham5143 10 лет назад +24

    I remember John Peel introducing this and explaining the underlying idea - sound fades but never entirely disappears. New technology has made it possible to capture and amplify sounds from the past and this technology has been used to record the band playing on the Titanic.

    • @nickburningham5143
      @nickburningham5143 8 лет назад +7

      Man, I heard it on the radio, John Peel's program - BBC when the album was released. If you want to pursue it with the BBC, go ahead. Whether you trust my memory or not is entirely up to you. I was not trying to open a debate, not trying to be clever, just offering my recollection.

    • @sidneybarrett8941
      @sidneybarrett8941 7 лет назад +21

      I believe Bryars said that he composed the piece after imagining the possibility that sound never disappears, and that the sounds of the Titanic were rolling through the sea forever. I don't think he meant it as a physical reality, only as a spiritual one.

    • @gatsbyfairbanks5977
      @gatsbyfairbanks5977 7 лет назад +7

      it's the concept behind the album which makes it all the more beautiful when you listen to it, that technology doesn't actually exist.

    • @annettemarshall4895
      @annettemarshall4895 6 лет назад +4

      It's such a beautiful concept and if one considers that we can still hear the background noise of the stars from the Big Bang via radio telescopes I don't think we should dismiss it as far fetched. Anyway, as a purely poetic notion it is perfect for this concept.

    • @annettemarshall4895
      @annettemarshall4895 6 лет назад +1

      And god bless John Peel - wish he were here.

  • @TheLightofAniu
    @TheLightofAniu 12 лет назад +6

    I think this would be a tune for the aftermath of the sinking. I have this on my iPod and I really enjoy it, but I would think this as a tune for the scenes on board the Carpathia rather than the Titanic, don't get me wrong, it's a brilliant, sad and beautiful piece.

  • @05EWalker1
    @05EWalker1 12 лет назад +4

    speechless

  • @knoxrembrandt
    @knoxrembrandt 2 месяца назад

    schöne musik und ein tolles cover...

  • @bobgreen623
    @bobgreen623 11 лет назад +8

    No he doesn't know. The piece was started in 1969 and released on Eno's label, Obscure, in the 70's coupled with 'Jesus Blood Never Failed Me Yet'. Also, as more historical facts about the Titanic are discovered, Bryars uses this to update the piece, so it is an ever-evolving piece of work.

  • @giovannibourgeois
    @giovannibourgeois 11 месяцев назад

    great composition .great compositor

  • @OdedFriedGaon
    @OdedFriedGaon 11 лет назад +12

    Extraordinary music endeavor!
    Perhaps a subtle interpretation of Amazing Grace.
    Either way, this is amazing music. not easy to listen to, and very haunting considering the tragedy and its consequences. as you hear it, you are almost there, a passenger upon that ship, a soul slowly being lowered to the bottom of the earth and sea, at the same time lifted and guided up to the heavens. you are resigned, and it is easier.

    • @danieloconnell3055
      @danieloconnell3055 Год назад +1

      That's what I heard too

    • @odedfried-gaon2880
      @odedfried-gaon2880 Год назад

      @@danieloconnell3055 Revisiting it now has an even stronger effect. chilling, and amazing.
      #OdedFriedGaon #OdedMusic #Audioded

  • @nmeau
    @nmeau 3 года назад +4

    Put Jonsi's falcetto on this, and it's like something straight out of Valtari. I can imagine that Jonsi is a huge fan of this.

  • @tk4623
    @tk4623 4 года назад +1

    Listen to this while also listening to UVB-76. You won't be disappointed.

  • @TheLightofAniu
    @TheLightofAniu 11 лет назад +4

    Indeed, that I can agree with. Since I have ancestors who were on board I can picture it quite perfectly. I have always thought about this tune and it is extremely beautiful, it made me cry the first time I heard it. And when I did, I wrote a long story about it and a novel. I have currently restarted those stories and may be published on Kindle soon. I love this piece. it is sad, it is moving and conveys what happened that night. You have made a very interesting point, thank you.

  • @RudyMoore
    @RudyMoore 11 лет назад +4

    This is correct, many mistake it for Amazing Grace or closer still, Nearer My God to Thee. The opening notes are very similar.

  • @Ehstes
    @Ehstes Год назад +8

    Here from that submersible getting stuck down there. Rip boys

  • @MedievalRichard
    @MedievalRichard 6 лет назад +1

    Splendid.

  • @fcon2123
    @fcon2123 Год назад

    Holy hell. Listen to this side by side with the AFX remix - the soundscape created is jaw dropping.

  • @enzogalli5506
    @enzogalli5506 Год назад

    Excellent!!!

  • @lindaalaureano
    @lindaalaureano 4 года назад +1

    This just played on KALW radio Sept . 11,2020

  • @seva809
    @seva809 2 года назад +2

    It's still hard for me to believe it's almost 50 years old.

  • @gasparucciox9706
    @gasparucciox9706 11 лет назад +3

    fantastic! brian eno discovered so many good musicians ..i didn't knew this! thanks for having posted this

  • @sianforsythe7172
    @sianforsythe7172 11 лет назад

    Always mesmerising

  • @katabolism99
    @katabolism99 11 лет назад

    Yes i remember hearing this all those years ago on poss JP program. My first play since then

  • @fittalk
    @fittalk 6 лет назад +1

    Love it ....

  • @wordscontrolminds
    @wordscontrolminds 9 лет назад +7

    Sound theory underwater!
    If anyone has read the original sleeve notes for this then you know what we mean.

  • @derekgusoff6768
    @derekgusoff6768 7 месяцев назад

    The last two chords of this piece, starting at around 23:50, are what's known as an "Amen Cadence". Give it a listen and you'll hear why. This whole piece is like a prayer.

  • @bilanovitch
    @bilanovitch 12 лет назад +1

    This is really good.

  • @TheLightofAniu
    @TheLightofAniu 11 лет назад +1

    Thank you very much. It was a story for children written from the perspective of the passengers' dogs. It needs a serious bout or rewriting, but I shall be more than happy to have it published when it is finished.

  • @grasshole128
    @grasshole128 8 лет назад +9

    THIS WAS PLAYED AT GROUND ZERO DURING THE DIGGING ON THE PILE AFTER 9/11.

  • @Rumblemach
    @Rumblemach 2 года назад +3

    I’m wondering if Godspeed You Black Emperor was influenced by this because it really sounds like it.

  • @ocpd23
    @ocpd23 11 лет назад +2

    They are recorded sections of interviews with the survivors.

  • @cheopys
    @cheopys 4 месяца назад

    I had all ten Obscure LPs. I don't know what happened to them

  • @Likes_Trains
    @Likes_Trains 4 года назад +1

    It's like being stuck in a capsule suspended in time

  • @lobosolitario6633
    @lobosolitario6633 11 лет назад +1

    es una pieza genial...recrea bastante bien y con sentimientos , tal catástrofe...

  • @mornaw
    @mornaw 11 лет назад +2

    That would be just like him to play this! Always found the most unusual stuff :-) I love this - also Bryars' "Jesus Never Failed Me Yet".

  • @emilianomartinez8406
    @emilianomartinez8406 Год назад +1

    Que bonita melodía,like si llegas asta acá del tiktok

  • @davidallison5571
    @davidallison5571 Год назад +1

    I loved this back in 1979ish. 44 years later and with much more listening experience - this evening Giancinto Scelsi, Elliot Carter and even Nick Drake - this (like the Jesus Blood piece) sounds mind-blowingly tedious.

  • @Vinsomer
    @Vinsomer 3 года назад +1

    I'm getting some strong stage 3 vibes from this

  • @FlyingPekinese
    @FlyingPekinese 11 лет назад +4

    Sounds really similar with one Macedonian Folk Song " Ajde slushaj, slushaj, Kalesh Bre Angjo"

  • @WayMorecowbell
    @WayMorecowbell 9 месяцев назад +1

    Aphex Twin brought me here!

  • @larseadman6217
    @larseadman6217 8 лет назад +4

    BRIAN ENO!

  • @vixx_vaporub
    @vixx_vaporub 3 года назад +10

    This heavily reminds me of Everywhere At The End Of Time

    • @vaeniller
      @vaeniller 3 года назад +10

      Oh god please don't

    • @zacharypage6164
      @zacharypage6164 3 года назад +1

      Yes

    • @Max16032
      @Max16032 3 года назад +5

      You're like that guy who thinks every oldie sounds like Fallout

  • @invernomuto00
    @invernomuto00 11 лет назад

    pretty good

  • @kengriffin70
    @kengriffin70 4 года назад +2

    Its beautiful, but clearly a variation of Danny Boy

  • @barrycoad2080
    @barrycoad2080 8 лет назад

    the full package

  • @johnniejukebox
    @johnniejukebox 5 лет назад

    Gain Friday got me here..

  • @archihi6957
    @archihi6957 3 года назад +1

    스피치레스!

  • @SimonBirchMusic1
    @SimonBirchMusic1 12 лет назад +2

    is that a quotation of Amazing Grace I can hear?

  • @PathosDistanz
    @PathosDistanz 12 лет назад +1

    No, we won't take it from you, because you don't know.

  • @bobgreen623
    @bobgreen623 11 лет назад +1

    I would be very interested to read your novel if kindle publish it, I will keep a lookout for it.

  • @Awak3ner
    @Awak3ner 11 лет назад +8

    What is the talking that starts up at around 2:30 ?

  • @richardsweb
    @richardsweb 8 лет назад +32

    Aphex Twin sent me here

  • @BrisbaneBruce
    @BrisbaneBruce 12 лет назад

    yes you could...in icy cold water lol

  • @virgilwilliams8082
    @virgilwilliams8082 7 лет назад +1

    I wonder what it would sound like backwards. Lol