Loved Bartok since aged 14 when I visited the Balkans and heard the folk music and the augmented 4th and the rhythm Then had to pretend to my friends I loved Elvis. I have survived and feel enriched.
you all probably dont give a damn but does someone know of a tool to log back into an Instagram account? I was dumb lost my account password. I appreciate any tips you can offer me
2:10 I feel sorry for poor Shostakovich every time I hear this. As if he didn’t have enough trouble from Stalin, here is Barber blowing a musical raspberry at him! And this piece gets played a lot more than the Leningrad symphony, to add even further insult. I wonder what Shostakovich thought about it?
Lots of pages have been written about the origin of this satiric phrase. Of course,many claim,that it derives from the famous "ostinato"- invasion theme from Shostakovitch's 7th sym. The truth is that B.Bartók "borrowed" the tune of Danilo's song from Franz Lehár's operette,"The merry widow",("O, Vaterland...da geh' ich zu Maxim").
@@kuglagerfeld Right! Both versions are interesting.Shostakovitch's 7th sym. was gaining momentum ,mainly, because it was dedicated to Leningrad which was under nazi siege for 3 years (1941-44). On the other hand,it is said that B.Bartók, astounded by the continuous popularity of the "The merry widow"(1905),for more than 35 years, uses this phrase, as a kind of satyric innuendo to the "fellow" hungarian composer F. Lehár.
An interesting fact about this 4th part is that, Bartók,within 4':30", not only used the "Merry widow" Danilo's song tune, but also another melody, which was a slightly altered popular song from an operetta; "Szép vagy, gyönyörű vagy, Magyarország". It appears after the introduction, at 1':02", played by the violas.
Loved Bartok since aged 14 when I visited the Balkans and heard the folk music and the augmented 4th and the rhythm
Then had to pretend to my friends I loved Elvis. I have survived and feel enriched.
my sister played piano and i heard bartok suite opus 14 played by her ; i fell i n lov with bartok music at in 20s
you all probably dont give a damn but does someone know of a tool to log back into an Instagram account?
I was dumb lost my account password. I appreciate any tips you can offer me
@Ezra Kamari instablaster ;)
This is a delightful piece! Thanks for sharing!
the accelerando was fabulous
Love that sneeze at 4:15
The Bartok trombone at 2:25 is killin it!
Truly masterpiece by both Bartok and Ozawa.
2:25 You're welcome. ;)
2:27 is my favorite part! You can definitely hear the clarinets!
Flute solo 3:42
Yes, very tasteful, perfect ad lib.
2:10 I feel sorry for poor Shostakovich every time I hear this. As if he didn’t have enough trouble from Stalin, here is Barber blowing a musical raspberry at him! And this piece gets played a lot more than the Leningrad symphony, to add even further insult. I wonder what Shostakovich thought about it?
Lots of pages have been written about the origin of this satiric phrase. Of course,many claim,that it derives from the famous "ostinato"- invasion theme from Shostakovitch's 7th sym. The truth is that B.Bartók "borrowed" the tune of Danilo's song from Franz Lehár's operette,"The merry widow",("O, Vaterland...da geh' ich zu Maxim").
Not Barber, (Samuel). You probably mean Bartók.
I gues Shostak thought "poor Bela, he didn't understand". ;-)
@@yp3424 ...but I would say this is Lehar, not Shostakovich, you are right.
@@kuglagerfeld Right! Both versions are interesting.Shostakovitch's 7th sym. was gaining momentum ,mainly, because it was dedicated to Leningrad which was under nazi siege for 3 years (1941-44).
On the other hand,it is said that B.Bartók, astounded by the continuous popularity of the "The merry widow"(1905),for more than 35 years, uses this phrase, as a kind of satyric innuendo to the "fellow" hungarian composer F. Lehár.
I think the record was made before 2015... When Seiji Ozawa conducted the Wiener Neujahrs Concert in 2002 he was so much older then here
TGHW
(The Great Harold Wright)
the glissando was spectacular
An interesting fact about this 4th part is that, Bartók,within 4':30", not only used the "Merry widow" Danilo's song tune, but also another melody, which was a slightly altered popular song from an operetta; "Szép vagy, gyönyörű vagy, Magyarország". It appears after the introduction, at 1':02", played by the violas.
4:14 bless you
Thanks for the info - I would retract my statement if I knew a way.
Oedipa brought me here.
i expected it to be drier and more disconsolate.
Who's the young, dark, hottie playing piccolo at 4:12? In what year was this performance? How do you find out the names of past members?
simp
Geralyn Coticone. 1991.
This cannot be the Boston Symphony.
Flute isn't Doriot Anthony Dwyer,
Oboe isn't Ralph Gomberg,
Bassoon isn't Sherman Walt,
and 2nd clarinet female?
You posted this on every movement here. It is the BSO in 1991. I'm not going to cut and paste my response. Go look up the personnel.
Timpani excerpt: 1:00
Just watching because of my module
Same here dude
Whats your answer. Cmon tell me xD
@@jen69420 idk it's seven months ago i forgot
Same
1:49 - 2:34
2:09
太多聽了
the rhythm can be a little better
I believe the piece is supposed to sound like that. It’s almost like an old Disney sounding cartoon!
Also, it may be because of the camera/ sound quality, and it looks like older people playing in that orchestra.
1:03
0:56
0:50
3:41
2:09
3:38