Hearing this at the age of 14, when it was brand new, and then imagining playing in the symphony orchestra double bass section, a dream that came true. Much study in high school and then university made it happen. Living the dream! Playing John Williams’s music in a professional symphony orchestra!
I recently passed a test to study and focus on a professional Orchestra, I'm excited and anxious. Really like you said, who could imagine one day realizing this dream?
i wanna achieve that on the clarinet! started playing in grade 3 of school. unfortunately i stopped playing when i was abt 15 years old so now i have a lot of catching up to do (no playing for 6 years lol)... But i don't know where can you study to become part of a professional orchestra??
No - its actually the lower parts of the orchestra dragging for which I do not know why - trumpets maintain the tempo set in the first couple lines so its a bit odd
@@jackalpaugh7426 nah i think it's the trumpets playing the first semibreve of the main theme for just a fraction too long. But i can't 100% tell. Either way this tiny section doesn't sound right
I think actually they were so early it made the trumpets sound way off but you can tell how everyone hits that last cadence so hard together that where they knew to get back on track. Actually listening to it again, its an individual trumpet that gets off in the section, still something off with the trombones though
5:29 As a Star Wars and music fan, this gets me every time, sometimes I even wanna cry. This might be one of my favorite recordings of this piece, the sound quality of the Vienna Philharmonic here is unmatchable, at least to me.
5:21 - Shostakovich, "Festive Overture" 5:47 - Bernstein, "The Ten Commandments: Finale." And everybody recognizes the Holst when it appears. I love that this was basically the first modern movie with a temp track.
those staccato chords are taken almost directly from the ending from Mars, The Bringer Of War, one of the songs in the suite by Gustav Holst. A lot of Star Wars' soundtrack are inspired by works from The Planets.
@@redfiretf2 In my opinion, that Holst moment in Mars also sounds really similar to Gustav Mahler’s 2nd Symphony, 16 mins and 22 seconds in: ruclips.net/video/sHsFIv8VA7w/видео.html All sound really similar.
@@emilalfaro2800 agreed, but it's not just that specific part of mars that Williams is inspired by in comparison to mahler. While mahler is so grandiose you definitely hear more stravinsky and holst in his music.
@@aliciadalbey1201 Yes, you are definitely right. Coming back to this reply I kinda don’t think it sounds that similar anymore, just a similar chord but lighter orchestration in a way that doesn’t really compare to the heavier Holst or Williams. I’d also add Ravel to that list, his treatment of brass sound like stuff out of Indiana Jones
Well, it was conducted by John Williams, a very fine conductor for sure, but not the greatest, and there's lots of rallentando, and perhaps even rubato, something which is tricky for any orchestra to handle, even the very best. We also don't know how long Williams had to rehearse with the orchestra, to get them all together in terms of interpretation. But frankly, in my opinion, the whole disc is just a bit over-wrought, John Williams is perhaps a bit self-indulgent here (he is conducting one of the world's greatest orchestras after all, so that might be understandable and worth forgiving) and the music/performance comes across as somewhat melodramatic/over-the-top when a more straightforward reading would have probably worked better. Here everything is drawn out, and the time stretched to the maximum, something which could be akin to "dragging" the music, and to me, that's the worst thing you can possibly do to a piece of music, drag it. Fortunately, it never comes apart, but the stretching does create numerous issues. As I said, the whole thing is just a bit overwrought, rather overdone in my opinion, but that's probably more on John Williams than on the orchestra. But... it is his music, and he is conducting one of the world's most preeminent orchestras, so I suppose he can do what he wants and the critics be damned, he's earned it.
Yes, something was off in relation to the motion picture's beginning. But as much as I love motion picture scores in the classical style, I am no trained musicologist. Please elaborate.
Totally agree. Particularly the first page, lol, which is just an insane couple of bars. I don't hate Hans though... he's capable of surprises, and I think he's always a very effective film scorer; but, on the whole, his writing is usually really elementary. He's a composer whose lack of education shows.
@@DavidRLentzHe means the level of orchestration, instrumental colors and textures, time signature changes, etc. Nothing against Zimmer, but Zimmer’s music pretty much bland compared to John Williams. Zimmer is more electro-acoustic soundscapes versus Williams classical orchestra setting. However, Zimmer’s music for Interstellar ranks higher than some Williams score. Check out Flight To Neverland by Williams. It’s a masterclass on orchestral writing.
@@nicholaswheeler8038 , thanks. Your musicological wherewithal far exceeds mine. I do have an extraordinarily wide vocal range that enables me to sing all eight registers of the classical chorus. A friend I had known whilst at university, a piano performance major of considerable ability, told me that I could sing from the fifth ledger line below the bass clef to the D above high C (and once an A)! Unfortunately, due to physical disabilities, I cannot work, so I lack the resources to train my talents into marketable skills that I could earn a worthy income from my own abilities.
Thanks to John Williams! He made this so good, that, if there wasn’t a film, this would have been a masterpiece in the classical world (which i really love)!
Hearing this at the age of 14, when it was brand new, and then imagining playing in the symphony orchestra double bass section, a dream that came true. Much study in high school and then university made it happen. Living the dream! Playing John Williams’s music in a professional symphony orchestra!
Congrats! I can only dream of going to a John Williams concert one day.
I recently passed a test to study and focus on a professional Orchestra, I'm excited and anxious. Really like you said, who could imagine one day realizing this dream?
i wanna achieve that on the clarinet! started playing in grade 3 of school. unfortunately i stopped playing when i was abt 15 years old so now i have a lot of catching up to do (no playing for 6 years lol)... But i don't know where can you study to become part of a professional orchestra??
Piccolo please quiet
0:19 the trumpets are a little off with the rest of the orchestra. Listen closely and you'll hear the timings a bit off.
Trumpets are always off, its trumpets
No - its actually the lower parts of the orchestra dragging for which I do not know why - trumpets maintain the tempo set in the first couple lines so its a bit odd
@@jackalpaugh7426 nah i think it's the trumpets playing the first semibreve of the main theme for just a fraction too long. But i can't 100% tell. Either way this tiny section doesn't sound right
nope it's the trombones dragging like hell
I think actually they were so early it made the trumpets sound way off but you can tell how everyone hits that last cadence so hard together that where they knew to get back on track.
Actually listening to it again, its an individual trumpet that gets off in the section, still something off with the trombones though
5:29 As a Star Wars and music fan, this gets me every time, sometimes I even wanna cry.
This might be one of my favorite recordings of this piece, the sound quality of the Vienna Philharmonic here is unmatchable, at least to me.
형언 할수 없는 감동이 온몸에 전해지는 것이 소름이 끼칠 정도의 음악이었다.
this page turner is kinda behind tempo...
1:55 - Gustav Holst : Mars ( The planets)
You could argue Holst took that exact same idea from Mahler’s 2nd Symphony (around 16min in).
john williams was also inspired by holst
The horn part is GOAT
I forgot how hard the drop was at 2:15. uuf i wept.
I got to see him conduct in person. Highlight of my life
How lucky, I envy you (in a good way).
Excellent, thanks! Where did you get the score?
Sheet Music Plus has a good selection of John Williams's scores.
@@mydogskips2 But these are *Concert* versions. Finding *Session* versions are very difficult.
@Diddy Biggy can u send me the link for trumpet
john williams made me fall in love with french horn. so happy i've been able to play these fun horn parts :)
Sometimes i wonder what would happen if the CLASSIC classical musicians ever heard Williams
Gustav Holst would be mad
@@DiegoRamirez-sv4pb as would Korngold. or maybe honoured, I wonder..
Sometimes I wonder when people would stop projecting.
When did you find that score? 🙂
The London Symphony Orchestra was used in the Star Wars movie I believe
5:21 - Shostakovich, "Festive Overture"
5:47 - Bernstein, "The Ten Commandments: Finale."
And everybody recognizes the Holst when it appears. I love that this was basically the first modern movie with a temp track.
holst appears at least a billion times here, I'm glad star wars used holst for temp track though
And Korngold in the beginning
@@yukinagato6319 yup you're right, king's row
Thanks! Useful info for my coursework :D
@@shadmium3471 Which itself is from Götterdämmerung.
is it possible to receive the score as a pdf? thanks in advance!
It is available on Google for free
01:55 is such a crazy moment in music history honestly
how so
those staccato chords are taken almost directly from the ending from Mars, The Bringer Of War, one of the songs in the suite by Gustav Holst. A lot of Star Wars' soundtrack are inspired by works from The Planets.
@@redfiretf2 In my opinion, that Holst moment in Mars also sounds really similar to Gustav Mahler’s 2nd Symphony, 16 mins and 22 seconds in: ruclips.net/video/sHsFIv8VA7w/видео.html
All sound really similar.
@@emilalfaro2800 agreed, but it's not just that specific part of mars that Williams is inspired by in comparison to mahler. While mahler is so grandiose you definitely hear more stravinsky and holst in his music.
@@aliciadalbey1201 Yes, you are definitely right. Coming back to this reply I kinda don’t think it sounds that similar anymore, just a similar chord but lighter orchestration in a way that doesn’t really compare to the heavier Holst or Williams. I’d also add Ravel to that list, his treatment of brass sound like stuff out of Indiana Jones
This is the Vienna Phil? Seriously? Sounds rather amateurishly out of time in many places.
Well, it was conducted by John Williams, a very fine conductor for sure, but not the greatest, and there's lots of rallentando, and perhaps even rubato, something which is tricky for any orchestra to handle, even the very best. We also don't know how long Williams had to rehearse with the orchestra, to get them all together in terms of interpretation. But frankly, in my opinion, the whole disc is just a bit over-wrought, John Williams is perhaps a bit self-indulgent here (he is conducting one of the world's greatest orchestras after all, so that might be understandable and worth forgiving) and the music/performance comes across as somewhat melodramatic/over-the-top when a more straightforward reading would have probably worked better. Here everything is drawn out, and the time stretched to the maximum, something which could be akin to "dragging" the music, and to me, that's the worst thing you can possibly do to a piece of music, drag it. Fortunately, it never comes apart, but the stretching does create numerous issues. As I said, the whole thing is just a bit overwrought, rather overdone in my opinion, but that's probably more on John Williams than on the orchestra. But... it is his music, and he is conducting one of the world's most preeminent orchestras, so I suppose he can do what he wants and the critics be damned, he's earned it.
The Vienna Phil concert wasn't live to picture
Brass and especially Horn sound is just awesome.
Yes, something was off in relation to the motion picture's beginning. But as much as I love motion picture scores in the classical style, I am no trained musicologist. Please elaborate.
can you give some times because I don't hear what your talking about
Donde consigo las partituras?
Sorry my dearly beloved Bach, Beethoven an so on but each time i hear this i feel something, something i haven't felt since...
Hans Zimmer would never compose even the first page of this 😂
What do you mean, please?
@David R. Lentz He's incapable of writing something so complex and contrapuntal, and so thickly orchestrated... That's what OP means.
Totally agree. Particularly the first page, lol, which is just an insane couple of bars.
I don't hate Hans though... he's capable of surprises, and I think he's always a very effective film scorer; but, on the whole, his writing is usually really elementary. He's a composer whose lack of education shows.
@@DavidRLentzHe means the level of orchestration, instrumental colors and textures, time signature changes, etc. Nothing against Zimmer, but Zimmer’s music pretty much bland compared to John Williams. Zimmer is more electro-acoustic soundscapes versus Williams classical orchestra setting. However, Zimmer’s music for Interstellar ranks higher than some Williams score. Check out Flight To Neverland by Williams. It’s a masterclass on orchestral writing.
@@nicholaswheeler8038 , thanks. Your musicological wherewithal far exceeds mine.
I do have an extraordinarily wide vocal range that enables me to sing all eight registers of the classical chorus. A friend I had known whilst at university, a piano performance major of considerable ability, told me that I could sing from the fifth ledger line below the bass clef to the D above high C (and once an A)! Unfortunately, due to physical disabilities, I cannot work, so I lack the resources to train my talents into marketable skills that I could earn a worthy income from my own abilities.
sodelicious
Am I the only person here to hear that the key on the sheet music and what is actually played are different???
Earth Wind & Fire
0:10
Parts Please
Thanks to John Williams! He made this so good, that, if there wasn’t a film, this would have been a masterpiece in the classical world (which i really love)!
Циммер нервно курит в сторонке
fabuloso !!
This song was inspired by holst's planet symphony.
Where'd you get the score? Doesn't look like the Hal Leonard one...
This is the Hal Leonard score, just the first movement, of course.
Should I Google him?
@@edwardweaver1467 Hal Leonard is the name of a publishing company. They have exclusive rights to John Williams' work.
This score is more complex than Ode to Joy, minus the twisted fugue.
ode to joy is just an excerpt, you mean the excerpt or the whole opus? Because beethoven looks quite more complex
Ode to Joy is a small and, yes, simple fragment of otherwise the single greatest and most influential piece of music ever written.
nice music, but in comparison to the great symphonists, it runs out of ideas too quickly. I also don't like the orchestral performance too much.
okay
nobody asked for or cares about your opinion
@@kgroveringer03 A little harsh... no?
@@elijahstewart3231 Was talking about OP, not you
Whose music do you mean here, please?