*And when you upload weekly at the same time, (say Saturday at 10 o’clock,) but you need suggestions of what to play, and someone suggest as song at like, 9-thirty, and you have to learn it in 30 minutes.* Some people may not get this but some people might.
I love after he gives direction to the first few sections of the orchestra, and then starts saying 'double bass, you know what to do", and 'drummers, you know what to do"....trusting that professional musicians will 'find their way' after being shown in what direction this musical vessel is heading. Trusting others to 'fill in the gaps', that's really what a true band/orchestra does for many band leaders.
the writer cant make the music have the push the player must make it themself so letting them go losse help them cretea a power and drive and the emotion
It helps that double basses basically get the same part in every four chord song ever, but yeah, rhythm section should be able to play with anything. A bit disappointed no solo trumpeter ventured out on his/her own!
@@thainbowman3788 - agreed, but we probably both Love our job in any ensemble & have a relatable plight. we’re the backbone & the lifeblood. the hot soloing players get the kudos, but the hips swing & the heads bob to our groove. that ain’t too bad
@@ItsAbrahamSamuel at 11:36 when he starts asking them to get louder, he starts by saying “Mezzo forte” which is a marking you would see on sheet music telling you to adjust your volume to moderately loud, he then says, “Forte” which means loud, and then says, “Fortissimo” which means very loud, and finally, “Fivetissimo” which was not a real term but everyone clearly understood the meaning of, “give it all you’ve got” sorta like the old “crank that amp up to 11!” When the volume knob only goes to 10.
@@ItsAbrahamSamuel The play-on-words is “forte” (strong) in Italian and the number “four” in English. As mentioned, he’s directing them to play “stronger” in increments… to go to the next level. Imagine “four”-tissimo, then “five”-tissimo then “six”-tissimo and so on. 😆👍🏼
bro what no way wtf fr fr?? nah bro u fucking with me, an orchestra is literally filled with astounding musicians?? no way bro no cap that's unbelievable man, I always thought orchestras was literally filled with below average hobbyist musicians and that's it but your discovery is crazy man, insane, I can't believe it. Next you're gonna tell me water is liquid or something
@@HEADSHOTPROLOL bro what no way wtf fr fr?? nah bro u fucking with me, water is literally a liquid?? no way bro no cap that's unbelievable man, I always thought water was literally a solid and that's it but your discovery is crazy man, insane, I can't believe it. Next you're gonna tell me penguins cant fly or something
@@joshsabin4431 Double Basses are almost always used to help everyone keep the tempo. So basically they would rarely play anything faster than anyone else so everyone would listen to them while playing so they know how fast they should be playing themselves.
@@joshsabin4431 The double basses are playing the tonic of every chord. In this case, it's Am F C Em, so the basses play A F C E. Firstly, they can hear the tonic immediately, or they wouldn't have taken up bass. Secondly, this sequence isn't the _most_ standard (that would be Am F C G) but it's pretty close, and they've played it a _lot._
@@raidone7413 Thank you. Can't think why I wrote Em, but you're clearly right. BTW, I would write E 7 b9 b13 not E maj 7 b9 b13, because - at least in jazz - E maj 7 means the 7 is major, i.e. D#. But of course you were just emphasizing the G#. Nice to pick up on those b9 b13. For anyone else reading this, that just means F and C rather than F# and C#. Edit: I claim a bonus point for saying it's F (#11), not F. :)
I think the coolest part of this is that this isn’t a one time thing - Ben does this with basically every orchestra show he does around the world. Every time. New song each time, it’s great.
I want to tell my MIDI, in Ableton, "You know what to do...". "...and Quantize, if you're feeling it, just a shuffle back. Yeah." "Sample Of Birds Chirping, can we get you, to just take the middle third, and crop that, and take it down three octaves? Good." "Now, we need 'Forrest Floor' reverb, and to make sure it doesn't get too choppy, bring in a compressor, and slide down to 6.28...just the right side." "DJ Tools, all the way Wet, just bring the high pass filter up to 70, and sweep back to 40, every half measure." "Drum Loop, do your thing 35 times, and fade out." "We're done."
@@allyson4483 You miss one note, and you are at risk of being scolded so hard. They can make almost as much as a league 3 or 2 football players. You have to be a respected musician it's a full-time job. Even for less famous orchestras in the States, the pay is astonishing: $81,892 (£47,500) for the St Louis Symphony, Detroit Symphony Orchestra's players take home an average salary of $82,880 (£48,000). As you can see from the video as well many orchestras make either audio or television recordings. The current AFM scale for a three-hour recording session (symphonic scale) is approximately $350.00 not including yearly residual royalty payments made to the individual musicians. The base scale pay for members of the top American orchestras (Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, New York, Philadelphia) is approximately $2000+/week (minimum guaranteed scale). These orchestras typically offer 10 weeks paid vacation, full medical and dental coverage, generous sick leave, a pension (after 30 years service or the "rule of 85" which provides a full pension to players whose age and years of service combined equal 85) of over $70,000/year, and many other excellent benefits. After passing an initial probationary period (of one to three years depending on the orchestra's policy), tenured members enjoy job protection and security as members of the American Federation of Musicians. Dismissal can only be made for the cause which must be proven to an arbitration panel, often made up of peer members of the orchestra. The work is demanding. Keeping in daily shape for performing in a major symphony orchestra is hard work. Personal warming up and practice time can occupy many hours a day. Even on vacation, musicians must continue to practice lest their musical skills diminish. When one is not at work, the need to continually keep in shape is always there.
I have a long history in music. Playing trumpet for over 20 years in both a classical and jazz ensembles. This is absolutely insane what he just did. It's not just a little improvised thing on a piano but to turn that into a composition is nuts. I had know idea Ben Folds was on that kind of level. That goes beyond talent. Thanks RUclips algorithm for randomly recommending this one!
Would you aplaude that loud when a plumber an a woodworker build a kitchen? This is called "live arrangement" and is a very common method of teaching Music patternbased to childrenorchestras. There is absolutely nothing challenging for a professional musician about that. It is as simple as it could be. Everyone being so amazed, just shows how little is known about musicianship these days. It is taken for granted and since the Public doesnt understand how it is done, it seems so mysterious and awesome. It is nice to See you all so happy. This is what music should create. And i wish there was more acceptance for the work, the effort and the techniqur behind our craft. There is no Mysterie. Everyone(!) can learn that.
@@lernesaxophon If they built a working kitchen in ten minutes, yes I would. At the very least I'd give them a large tip and recommend them to all my friends. I wasn't amazed by what he did (I studied music) but I am impressed by his ability to do it well and quickly under pressure. And, contrary to your opinion, music composition can be challenging even for a professional musician.
Haha, in Nashville last year he made up a song about respecting the process during his Paper Airplane tour--and now I often sing "respect the process" when a situation warrants. ;)
Yes, it's all those years in the past and present, studying and practicing in practice rooms and at home, consummate musicianship, at its best, that gave them the ability to be participants in this feat.
Ben wrote an entire orchestral part in 10 minutes. Back in my garage band days, it'd take us weeks to finish a song and it was nowhere near as complex as this. And people wanna say he didn't deserve a Grammy. Pfttttt.
@@alexandero9936 im shook and offended sir, how dare you Besmerch the name of the lovely Dumbarse I mean queen and her wonderful and awe inspiring songs about drugs and wet donkey kitties. I CHALLENGE THE TO A DUEL!
He writes sins, not tragedies Edit: I just realized that I have sunk to the level of making Panic at the Disco references and I'm sorry. I have written the true sin here.
I once read that his college friends used to watch him do this. That he would sit by the window of his dorm and write songs on the fly about people walking by. He's truly a musical genius, there is no doubt.
Mozart: “I’ll just compose it the night before it premiere” Ben: _”I’m gonna do what’s called a pro-gamer move”_ edit: yo guys, chill! It’s just a joke. Look, I’m not trying to compare anyone to anyone here.
As a musician with perfect pitch that comes to me incredibly easy, it amazes me that somebody as smart as you could say such a statement. Love your videos. I learn so much from you
You would have to I think. I was lucky to see him in the early days touring on his first album and then in the Reinhold Messner era. Last I checked his ticket prices (a show with the local symphony) they were so high I've blocked out the actual number from my memory. Can't really hold it against him though. He's had a great career.
They all have the skill to do this though. Sure most of the time they are reading their music. All of them however have been ear trained in school. They all know that Ben is in the key of a minor so all they need is relative pitch.
the speed of the Orchestra interpreting, digesting and playing back what Ben is telling them, almost instantly shows how insanely sharp their brains are. too bad most people can't see or appreciate the size of these brain muscles.
@@Rebella1337 not just anyone can make a song in just 10 minutes. It takes years of practice and kills to be able to write a complete song. You don’t have any notes. You don’t have any lyrics. You have nothing, so to be able to make this song from starting with nothing is mind blowing.
In other words, he's doing what hundreds of thousands of composers do every day! Every piece of music you've ever heard started from nothing at some point!
I love the fact that every skilled musician knows that the bass and percussions sections always know where to go once the idea is shaped. I remember when I started guitar in highschool the guys who told me "meh, start with basse, less strings, easier", or when I heared that "if you don't know how to play an instrument, just take drums, it's just hitting thing vaguely in rythm". Then I learnt that a good bassist and drummer knows and understands exactly what the piano is doing and where he's going, same with brass, etc. They're trully the backbone of any band or orchestra
I realized how important and difficult percussion was a while back when lots of the percussion section were sick and missed a rehearsal, and it was just one of them left and he didn’t rlly know how to do it or what he was doing and the entire piece was just 100 times more complicated and unbearable to listen too. Hearing him struggle made me realize how many things can actually go wrong in percussion
I don't think people actually realize how much effort, and brain power goes into this kind of thing. It takes so much knowledge of music theory from not only Ben, but EVERYONE else on stage. Truly magnificent!
Pretty basic chord sequence and standard string techniques. It is pretty hard for most viewers but it is fairly easy for professionals. It would be impressive to see this happen without a conductor though.
having the nerves to do this demanding exercise LIVE in front of an audience -- composing spontaneously, conducting, and performing with humor, all done smoothly at a fast pace with no panic -- is the most impressive part. many musicians can make a song off stage, but Ben's on-stage skills takes an incredible amount of experience!!
And fun!!! Don't forget about the fun. You felt the Joy and pride in every second. Loved it. THANK YOU! Coming to a point where all those hardly earned and mastered exercises through out the years brought every musician to a day like this must be one of the best Feelings ever!!! Well done!
For those without any musical background: Music theory is like learning a universal language and its the reason these performers can all play so well together with an impromptu piece.
As sound engineer this was amazing, and the clarity of instructions to the different parts of the orchestra was spot on. Took me years of doing broadway and local theater to get all the sections in order, but there a thing to be side with gifted people.
Robert M not that I disagree, but I think this says much about both composers and the symphony. Just watching Ben think about each note for each instrument is just as impressive as the the musicians being able to know each thing Ben was talking about and convert it to beautiful music
+Sam Hagene There's a _lot_ of palette smearing going on here. The woodwinds basically figure out their parts amongst themselves from a very simple basic description. I see harp, trumpets, horns and timpani who just get on with it without any assigned parts. The only real orchestration comes in the strings. I could shout a chord sequence at an orchestra and a similarly impressive result would happen. It doesn't stop it being impressive for people who can't do it themselves, but he composed five parts for a short looping string section, a tiny bit of woodwind, and that's it.
Fully agreed! He didn’t compose anything for flutes, oboes, bassoons, Horns but they were all playing and improvising TOGETHER. Again, not taking anything away from Ben as a composer, but those were simple harmonies. I was hoping he would do more of what he did with the first loop of cello Arco notes
@@turnercariker7578 Good enough for a four chord progression. It actually takes LESS time to do it with musicians than it takes to do it in the computer, for example.
What strikes me the most in this video is how powerful the piano is. The instrument allows you to easily come up with and play chords, harmonies, melodies, basslines, what have you. As far as writing music is concerned, nothing beats the piano as a composing tool.
Real gut buster bro. Total tear jerker there man. Falling out of my chair while almost spitting out my drink while saying it louder for those in the back because it's SO TRUE!!!
I, too, was interested to see if the trumpet player could improvise. In the Air Force band back in the sixties, we had a trumpet player that could sight-read anything, but when he tried to improvise in our dance quartet, Fred the bassist and I would sing three-part harmony with his improv attempts.
@@pedrosilvaproductions a scale is just a key played at a certain interval. So Fx diminished would have all the same notes as a G diminished scale written down a whole step with two sharps added. The Bb becomes an A#, the G is an Fx, etc. Then you take the accidentals and it becomes the key that you play in.
I never really had a good appreciation for how gifted all memebers of an orchestra are. It’s one thing to be able to memorize sheet music, but it’s an entirely different realm to be able to have perfect pitch and be able to riff with the rest of the orchestra with absolutely no mistakes. Quite astounding!!!
Its not perfect pitch that give these musicians the skill to hear his notes and replicate it with their instrument. As you gain experience with your instrument, it comes natural to find where the note is after hearing it. Its deciphering a note without an instrument that requires perfect pitch, although there are ways to do something similar to perfect by figuring out what chord the note is in.
I feel like the biggest credit here is that complete masters of their instruments were able to not only set aside their egos, but also lend their skills to this entire creation process.
The hardest part isn't even that he created a song within 10 minutes. The hardest part ist that he did it ON COMMAND I'm a musician myself and sometimes songs come together veeery quickly, but sometimes you'll need several sessions with weeks of pause in between to get the song done bc you're stuck at one point
Everyone on that stage is fantastic. Some crazy bearded guy is going, "ok, do 'da de da didada' and they just _know what he means_ and _all do the same thing_.
I expect professional musicians to be able to play by ear, especially when they're being given leading notes to start them off and they already know what key they're in.
Xamio I see. My experience as a semi-professional classical musician is different. Very few of my colleagues have the ability to play well by ear. We are wedded to the printed parts. We can easily play music by Tchaikovsky or Bach, but are put to the test if they have to play Happy Birthday!
My experience with classical musicians is very similar. They can read and play the most complicated, beautiful and emotive music from the page but you ask them to improvise a simple tune in C and they freeze. I have always found this fascinating, although a classical pianist I know once gave her excuse as her not being familiar with popular and jazz harmonies. I also knew a guitar teacher who was in charge of teaching improvisation at a top London conservatoire - basically teaching the greatest classical guitarists in the country (who by his own admission were far, far better players than he) to play things off the cuff. Crazy.
I think one of the reason this was really great is because all those musicians are very skilled as well. They're like high quality ingredients and Ben Folds is the chef that knows how to create an awesome dish from them.
At this current moment in time, I am the luckiest person in the world as I get the sheer privilege of hearing this for the first time...soon, someone else will randomly have this pleasure. How I envy you.
I’m blown away by the restraint of the 1st trumpet player who decided not to take the improv solo after being explicitly invited to do so. I’ve never witnessed that level of genius in a trumpet player before, lol.
As a rock band self instructed musician, this is a common way to compose with your partners in a band... jamming. But with formed classical musicians is very very hard because they always need the guidance or the specifications of what to play (key, tempo, mood), that make them play "by ear" or just improvise altogether is a real quest! My wife does play piano and there's no way I can make her join into a jamming xD So, a big round of applauses to Ben for being able to do this!
You had it right the first time. It's a bit of a party trick for people who don't understand music. For most average, well-rounded musicians who have experience in orchestra, this isn't very difficult. It's really fun, but not mind blowing.
It isn't a "trick" if you are a professional musician that composes. He is essentially just doing his job, which is in turn just a personal hobby for which he gets paid. Having written more than 3,000, I would wager money Dolly Parton could probably write a song on stage if you give her a topic. (It would also probably become a top 40 song, at least, when it made it into a video like this one.)
@@cloudoftime what is mind blowing however, is the fact that whole thing was completely improvised in ten minutes with no preparation while still sounding good.
@@ChristopherNelson42 Not mind blowing to the people who understand how all these parts and people function. But that's what makes magic tricks so cool too, when you don't know what's going on.
eli. My mind is blown bc when I was in band and orchestra(I was a trombone player) we could never get anything right and we had the music and seeing this is just beautiful
lmfao you have to be a complete normie to be impressed by this. this is literally the most unimpressive thing ive ever seen in my life. i could do this hungover
@@John-nk3ej sorry man, we’re not all as totally fucking incredible and godlike as you are at making music i guess! sorry please forgive me for enjoying this video and not being as good at music as you, maybe some day i’ll be able to make music like you and then someone will listen to me /:
Idk if you know but the letters he was spouting were the notes they should play. If you're a professional musician it's not hard to know. I'm not a professional musician but I was listening and when I was hearing it wasn't difficult to understand which notes were being played by the piano. Also, it's A minor. Not really difficult for them to know what they should play. Impressive nonetheless
The amount of timings and notes and melodies and plans Ben has to hold in his head at any given moment throughput the entirety of this is breaking my brain just to ponder...
The double basses, trumpet and drums (percussion) indeed knew what they must do. Great musicians that brought the piece together without being told what exactly they needed to do
Ben Folds & his piano was my first show. When I was 12 my family was pretty poor, so I wasn't going to be able to go but my friend begged his mom to buy us tickets because he knew I was such a big fan. it was April 21st, 2004. we saw Bright Eyes in Omaha around that same time. I've always aspired to be a better musician because of you, Ben Folds, thank you for all you have done - you're a damn legend.
This is what happens when you, not only have immense talent, but hard work, dedication combined with true passion and love for ones craft. Extremely impressive.
If you aren't familiar with Ben Folds, I strongly suggest visiting his musical anthology. His ability to create emotion through his compositions is timeless and spellbinding. He is a highly underappreciated songwriter, possibly because of his sarcastic/cynical lyrical tones. However, if the dystopian lyrical content doesn't make you leave, you will be rewarded with some amazing music. I never get tired of listening to his music. I'm not tired! I'm not tired!
I had the pleasure of meeting him in New Orleans many years ago. It was a dinner for listeners for our listeners of the radio station I was working for which was a rock radio station. There was a small amount of people that wanted to win this dinner with Ben. And I found that quite interesting because I've always found his music and songwriting to be so compelling. I met Ben but I ended up spending most of our dinner at the House of blues in New Orleans speaking to his mother. I don't know if she still with us but if she is I send her many great memories if she's not, Ben I feel where you are with her loss and I appreciate you as a creative mind that is necessary for humanity to survive.
I'm afraid it's not too impressive for someone at the level of a professional concert symphony to remember and recite 8 notes... But man, this was definitely impressive. Very cool to watch.
agree.... it's a just 8 notes.... and quite easy to improvise in between. But props more to ben for being able to just pop stuffs off his brain while everyone is watching, and still make it so entertaining!
In fairness, what the orchestra is doing is incredibly easy for any professional (or half-decent amateur) musician. The real talent is in what Folds is doing.
I love how a crazy looking guy with a big scruffy beard and curly hair sits there smacking his piano yelling random letters of the alphabet, and the people there are just like, "Oh, yeah, I can do that for you" and start perfectly playing awesome music in sync with a dozen other people he's yelled letters of the alphabet and smacked a piano to. That's really neat to see someone putting together something on the fly like that, and seeing the talented men and women there interpret it and put into practice in such a skillful way, all in sync, is frankly a bit mind boggling. I couldn't be happier with this recommendation from RUclips, though!
There's nothing mind boggling about matching letters of the alphabet to musical notes, you could learn them yourself easily if you bothered. So many people say they wish they could play x instrument but then never spend 10 seconds actually trying.
Ever notice how many super talented guys there are that have that look? Trey Anastasio comes to mind immediately. in fact on this Ben reminded me of Trey while singing like Mike.
its literally a 4 chord sequence lol if you're slightly acquainted with playing by ear this is something a beginner can do especially because they are given a rhythm and what note to play so its easy
Do you not know who that crazy looking guy with a scruffy beard is? That is BEN FOLDS. Jesus. Listen to his music sometime. It's great. He is one hell of a musician.
Saw this dude literally play piano w just his feet live in concert when I was in high-school.... one of the most amazing and brilliant performances I've ever seen!
"so, here are your notes for the next concert"
"but they're blank?"
"exactly"
Ahaha
That made me chuckle😂
I died
That was awesome performance .
"you're fired"
What this dude just did is the literal 'doing the homework while the teacher is collecting it'.
Underrated comment
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
😂😂😂
Actually while she's marking it
me in math class…
This is the musical equivalent of a speed run.
"Trombones, we're going to save six frames if you play that C with a lighter articulation."
@@UltraMaXAtAXX I rate this comment 10/10
*And when you upload weekly at the same time, (say Saturday at 10 o’clock,) but you need suggestions of what to play, and someone suggest as song at like, 9-thirty, and you have to learn it in 30 minutes.*
Some people may not get this but some people might.
Of a *blind* speedrun.
😂😂😂😂😂
I love after he gives direction to the first few sections of the orchestra, and then starts saying 'double bass, you know what to do", and 'drummers, you know what to do"....trusting that professional musicians will 'find their way' after being shown in what direction this musical vessel is heading. Trusting others to 'fill in the gaps', that's really what a true band/orchestra does for many band leaders.
the writer cant make the music have the push the player must make it themself so letting them go losse help them cretea a power and drive and the emotion
It helps that double basses basically get the same part in every four chord song ever, but yeah, rhythm section should be able to play with anything. A bit disappointed no solo trumpeter ventured out on his/her own!
@@xingli1337 there's a little bit at 11:58 i think
Yes! Truly acting in concert or harmony with one another. Also picturesque for utopia or Heaven.
@@CheeseLordAlmightytheOneGod i had a stroke reading this
"If there's any trumpets who want to do a solo"
Every single trumpet player in a 3-mile radius instinctively raised their hand
Some say the trumpet is still waiting for their queue to solo
…I get it !
Would’ve been icing on the cake if a trumpet player actually busted out a solo at the end!!
@@Finn-co4rb a legend to this day
@@neilsmith3249 I can’t believe we didn’t get s trumpet solo!
"Sorry, this takes a second to create a whole song." Absolutley golden.
Lol
..for you" absolutely golden legend
5:54
I didn't get that..?
@huxxxak thanks..
"Double basses, you know what you must do" followed by quarter notes is the most relatable thing I've ever heard.
As a bass player this brought me both relief and pain
True, but nice pfp Laynuel
9:02 for anyone
@@anirudhnavin4568 🙌🏻
@@thainbowman3788 - agreed, but we probably both Love our job in any ensemble & have a relatable plight. we’re the backbone & the lifeblood. the hot soloing players get the kudos, but the hips swing & the heads bob to our groove. that ain’t too bad
I never memorize lyrics, but i will always remember that these spaces were designed to be flexible.
Ye that line was beautifully done by him
best line in the song
Gotta make sure the spaces are new
"Drum set, you know what to do"
Drummer - *Sits this one out and grabs a beer*
Like, what on earth is he supposed to do? haha
The best percussionists are the ones who know when not to play!
@@Vitriosi The best percussionists are those who know to avoid orchestra
Drummers always know what to do ;)
@@theviniso drumming is a very fun job. You can very easily put a beat to any song if you know how to count!
The dude who wrote the pamphlet must have not expected THIS haha
Hardt Ma epic
Buddy still waiting for his royalties
or he did...(evil genius laugh)
"Trumpet player that wants to do a solo after I run out of ideas" seems like a legit music notation.
You wouldn't believe the indications I've seen in contemporary sheet music.
Gagasaurio My Friend goes to university in Toronto for classical trumpet, and the whack as notation he sends me is hilarious
@@gagasaurio12 what did you see
@@mememanfresh you should probably get rid of that profile pic
@@krysterio why?
"Fortissimo! FIVEtissimo!!" is an unbelievablely good line, god I love Ben Folds
I am disappointed that more people are not recognizing fivetissimo for the comedy gold that it was.
For real! The musical improv with that layer of comedic improv is being shamefully underappreciated in these comments.
I do not understand the music terminology. I'm sure it would have been funny. 🙃
@@ItsAbrahamSamuel at 11:36 when he starts asking them to get louder, he starts by saying “Mezzo forte” which is a marking you would see on sheet music telling you to adjust your volume to moderately loud, he then says, “Forte” which means loud, and then says, “Fortissimo” which means very loud, and finally, “Fivetissimo” which was not a real term but everyone clearly understood the meaning of, “give it all you’ve got” sorta like the old “crank that amp up to 11!” When the volume knob only goes to 10.
@@ItsAbrahamSamuel The play-on-words is “forte” (strong) in Italian and the number “four” in English. As mentioned, he’s directing them to play “stronger” in increments… to go to the next level. Imagine “four”-tissimo, then “five”-tissimo then “six”-tissimo and so on.
😆👍🏼
"if you can improvise slowly, you can improvise quickly"
He's doing the ling ling workout xD
Sacrilegious boy
A living Ling Ling
Interesting
when twoset community got lost here
Damn an orchestra is literally filled with astounding musicians.
no shit..
Nop ..thats beyond outstanding..
What did you think they did
bro what no way wtf fr fr?? nah bro u fucking with me, an orchestra is literally filled with astounding musicians?? no way bro no cap that's unbelievable man, I always thought orchestras was literally filled with below average hobbyist musicians and that's it but your discovery is crazy man, insane, I can't believe it. Next you're gonna tell me water is liquid or something
@@HEADSHOTPROLOL bro what no way wtf fr fr?? nah bro u fucking with me, water is literally a liquid?? no way bro no cap that's unbelievable man, I always thought water was literally a solid and that's it but your discovery is crazy man, insane, I can't believe it. Next you're gonna tell me penguins cant fly or something
"And now double basses, you know what you must do"
double basses: *aw shit, here we go again*
Ok, I got most of the things, but this was the one I didn't understand. Is it because they always have to play those notes?
@@joshsabin4431 Double Basses are almost always used to help everyone keep the tempo. So basically they would rarely play anything faster than anyone else so everyone would listen to them while playing so they know how fast they should be playing themselves.
@@joshsabin4431 The double basses are playing the tonic of every chord. In this case, it's Am F C Em, so the basses play A F C E. Firstly, they can hear the tonic immediately, or they wouldn't have taken up bass. Secondly, this sequence isn't the _most_ standard (that would be Am F C G) but it's pretty close, and they've played it a _lot._
@@ipudisciple ACTUALLY ITS Am F C E MAJ 7 b9 b13
@@raidone7413 Thank you. Can't think why I wrote Em, but you're clearly right. BTW, I would write E 7 b9 b13 not E maj 7 b9 b13, because - at least in jazz - E maj 7 means the 7 is major, i.e. D#. But of course you were just emphasizing the G#. Nice to pick up on those b9 b13. For anyone else reading this, that just means F and C rather than F# and C#.
Edit: I claim a bonus point for saying it's F (#11), not F. :)
I think the coolest part of this is that this isn’t a one time thing - Ben does this with basically every orchestra show he does around the world. Every time. New song each time, it’s great.
Oh, where can I find his other performance with different orchestra? I‘m totally blown away
@@ILinTsai321 look up “Rock this Bitch” ben folds.
@@leadcreekmusic lmao who ever wrote him that gets my respect
11 minutes before concert
Whole orchestra: wait, we need another song for the end
Ben Folds: hold my beer
THAT was great :)
Ha! for sure....
Pretty much aye xD lol
But Ben you have no beer I can hold?!
*Ben quickly improvises an aged stout*
What an original and funny comment
"So what DAW do you use?"
"The National Symphony Orchestra"
Underrated comment
😂😂😂😂😂😂😁😁😁
😂🤣👌
I want to tell my MIDI, in Ableton, "You know what to do...". "...and Quantize, if you're feeling it, just a shuffle back. Yeah." "Sample Of Birds Chirping, can we get you, to just take the middle third, and crop that, and take it down three octaves? Good." "Now, we need 'Forrest Floor' reverb, and to make sure it doesn't get too choppy, bring in a compressor, and slide down to 6.28...just the right side."
"DJ Tools, all the way Wet, just bring the high pass filter up to 70, and sweep back to 40, every half measure." "Drum Loop, do your thing 35 times, and fade out." "We're done."
Ahahahahahahhahahahahaja! I'm dead!!! LMAO!!!! As a starting producer i appreciate that joke!
I feel like the musicians don't get enough credit here those guys have great ears
I would've forgotten the melody he gave my section by the time his fingers left the piano.
agreed! everyone in this video has so much skill and talent
@@allyson4483 You miss one note, and you are at risk of being scolded so hard.
They can make almost as much as a league 3 or 2 football players. You have to be a respected musician it's a full-time job. Even for less famous orchestras in the States, the pay is astonishing: $81,892 (£47,500) for the St Louis Symphony, Detroit Symphony Orchestra's players take home an average salary of $82,880 (£48,000).
As you can see from the video as well many orchestras make either audio or television recordings. The current AFM scale for a three-hour recording session (symphonic scale) is approximately $350.00 not including yearly residual royalty payments made to the individual musicians.
The base scale pay for members of the top American orchestras (Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, New York, Philadelphia) is approximately $2000+/week (minimum guaranteed scale). These orchestras typically offer 10 weeks paid vacation, full medical and dental coverage, generous sick leave, a pension (after 30 years service or the "rule of 85" which provides a full pension to players whose age and years of service combined equal 85) of over $70,000/year, and many other excellent benefits. After passing an initial probationary period (of one to three years depending on the orchestra's policy), tenured members enjoy job protection and security as members of the American Federation of Musicians. Dismissal can only be made for the cause which must be proven to an arbitration panel, often made up of peer members of the orchestra.
The work is demanding. Keeping in daily shape for performing in a major symphony orchestra is hard work. Personal warming up and practice time can occupy many hours a day. Even on vacation, musicians must continue to practice lest their musical skills diminish. When one is not at work, the need to continually keep in shape is always there.
@@guillaumecerdan1429 Well you entirely missed their point.
For real, and they're able to immediately pick up on Folds' intentions without him needing to explain almost at all
I have a long history in music. Playing trumpet for over 20 years in both a classical and jazz ensembles. This is absolutely insane what he just did. It's not just a little improvised thing on a piano but to turn that into a composition is nuts. I had know idea Ben Folds was on that kind of level. That goes beyond talent.
Thanks RUclips algorithm for randomly recommending this one!
Ben is 💪🙌🏆
! ! ! Brilliant recommendation . .
Would you aplaude that loud when a plumber an a woodworker build a kitchen? This is called "live arrangement" and is a very common method of teaching Music patternbased to childrenorchestras. There is absolutely nothing challenging for a professional musician about that. It is as simple as it could be. Everyone being so amazed, just shows how little is known about musicianship these days. It is taken for granted and since the Public doesnt understand how it is done, it seems so mysterious and awesome.
It is nice to See you all so happy. This is what music should create.
And i wish there was more acceptance for the work, the effort and the techniqur behind our craft.
There is no Mysterie. Everyone(!) can learn that.
@@lernesaxophon If they built a working kitchen in ten minutes, yes I would. At the very least I'd give them a large tip and recommend them to all my friends. I wasn't amazed by what he did (I studied music) but I am impressed by his ability to do it well and quickly under pressure. And, contrary to your opinion, music composition can be challenging even for a professional musician.
@@lernesaxophon did douching up the vibe make you feel better?
This is my first Ben Folds experience. I've been living under a rock.
Same man
It was a "Brick", but close enough.
He'd been around, for a while, before I caught up, in the mid 90's.
Same here man
Same
"Fortissimo! Fivetissimo!"
That's my new favorite music joke ever. I'm literally dying. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
you should probably get out more
My thoughts are with your family I'm sorry for their loss
I had never heard this joke before. But still I recognized it as probably the oldest joke in conducting an orchestra
I caught that too. Using it
That was a hoot!!!
Two days after watching it, and I was humming to myself "these.. new.. spaces.. are all designed... To be flexibleeee"
Hahaha oops
same.
That's B.S. Lauren
Hahahahaha
Haha, in Nashville last year he made up a song about respecting the process during his Paper Airplane tour--and now I often sing "respect the process" when a situation warrants. ;)
Can we also talk about the fact that the orchestra is just as talented as Ben Folds here?
Yes i said inmy head he knows where he go.
That seems to be the main thing everybody is talking about actually
Just as talented is a stretch
Different kinds of talent working together.
Yes, it's all those years in the past and present, studying and practicing in practice rooms and at home, consummate musicianship, at its best, that gave them the ability to be participants in this feat.
Ben wrote an entire orchestral part in 10 minutes. Back in my garage band days, it'd take us weeks to finish a song and it was nowhere near as complex as this. And people wanna say he didn't deserve a Grammy. Pfttttt.
Who says that? And why?
I mean, they give out these things to people like Cardi B so they don’t really mean anything.
@@alexandero9936 im shook and offended sir, how dare you Besmerch the name of the lovely Dumbarse I mean queen and her wonderful and awe inspiring songs about drugs and wet donkey kitties.
I CHALLENGE THE TO A DUEL!
Why care about the grammys anyway
@@beanbean9990 And duel we shall, name the location and weapon.
Audience: “Give us an up-beat tune!” MC: “Ok, cool. In what key?” Audience: “A minor” Ben Folds: “..... guess we’re going to write a tragedy”
He writes sins, not tragedies
Edit: I just realized that I have sunk to the level of making Panic at the Disco references and I'm sorry. I have written the true sin here.
Stalemate Bread that PatD song, coincidentally, is in A minor haha
@@midknight1339 you SHOULD be sorry. Yikes.
@@midknight1339 why? I personally like PatD dunno bout you guys
@@justinpunongbayan5637 Eh I haven't been able to enjoy most of their songs. Though Dallon Weekes is amazing.
can we just appreciate how amazing this conductor is, he's always on the same page with ben and communicates so well with the orchestra
Is that you, conductor?
that's the beauty of music man.
They are paying more attention to him then Ben hahah
Almost as if they're a team
How come ray mark is not here?
I once read that his college friends used to watch him do this. That he would sit by the window of his dorm and write songs on the fly about people walking by. He's truly a musical genius, there is no doubt.
The new garage band update is looking really good
jkid1134 😂😂😂😂 I was thinkin the same
garage band vr IDEA
Bruh I’m ded
I don't get it
garageband is a music creation program on mac computers
Mozart: “I’ll just compose it the night before it premiere”
Ben: _”I’m gonna do what’s called a pro-gamer move”_
edit: yo guys, chill! It’s just a joke. Look, I’m not trying to compare anyone to anyone here.
LMAO
He would have loved ben😔
You didn’t just compare Mozart with this guy
@@nffs6148 He did and now I will compare this guy to Bach.
Bach is better. Always. Infinitely.
*perpetually more good*
Mozart could hear music in his head, all he had to do was just write it down.
As an engineer that doesn’t understand musical vernacular, this is amazing.
It’s a surprise to see you here, but a welcome one
And as a musician, I have no idea either
What's this guy doin here? lol
As a musician with perfect pitch that comes to me incredibly easy, it amazes me that somebody as smart as you could say such a statement. Love your videos. I learn so much from you
what u doin here lol, hi anyways
He is randomly composing in front of hundreds of audience! That is super talent right there! Good job Sir!
I would pay lots of money to see a show like this live.
He does what he calls "Paper Airplane" shows where he just plays whatever people send up to him. It's fun and creative.
Saw him do this live in Omaha a few years back. Was a steal at like $30 a ticket 👌🏼 👌🏼
Well not exactly classical but Marc Rebillet might interest you
You would have to I think. I was lucky to see him in the early days touring on his first album and then in the Reinhold Messner era. Last I checked his ticket prices (a show with the local symphony) they were so high I've blocked out the actual number from my memory. Can't really hold it against him though. He's had a great career.
All of my funds 😭
Still one of the coolest videos I've ever seen. Ben Folds is a legend.
Правду молвишь
Daniel Thrasher I love you denial
Ethan Salazar denial? xD
Oh, hey Daniel. Never expected you to be here
Does Ben Folds deserve to be on the talent show?
If I was a classically trained musician, this would be the wildest concert night of my life.
My girlfriend is a flutest and got to play in the orchestra with Ben and did just this! She said she was so nervous 😆 I can imagine!
They all have the skill to do this though. Sure most of the time they are reading their music. All of them however have been ear trained in school. They all know that Ben is in the key of a minor so all they need is relative pitch.
@@brianzane5748
Your girlfriend is a flautist. Show some respect.
@@shouldhavenotshouldof2031 😂
Why do you say that?
The finished product starts at 9:55 but I suggest watching it all the way through, as it is a masterpiece
I watched the thing the whole way through but I still appreciated the heads-up, so thank you 😊
What’s the name of the song?
@@datspookyleann275 "These new spaces are all designed to be flexible." - Ben Folds, ft. NSO, and a kind audience member.
@@rampadmanabhan4258 thank you!
the speed of the Orchestra interpreting, digesting and playing back what Ben is telling them, almost instantly shows how insanely sharp their brains are. too bad most people can't see or appreciate the size of these brain muscles.
@ben Folds lol, this is the worst fake I have ever seen
@ben Folds Ben Folds replies?
Believe it or not people who play an instrument have much better memory when they get older lesser chance of getting alzheimers.
@@fernandoprado9259 dats raxist
@@bruceli9094 ?
Ben really proved that “These new spaces are all designed to be flexible”👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽
And the guy who wrote the pamphlet is like omg wtf.
The architect who designed the spaces to be flexible must be having a field day tho.
The most incredible part is that the song is actually amazing. Could work as literally any outro to any show ever.
amazing? It's extremely basic. It sounds about what you can do in 10 minutes :P
@@Rebella1337 not just anyone can make a song in just 10 minutes. It takes years of practice and kills to be able to write a complete song. You don’t have any notes. You don’t have any lyrics. You have nothing, so to be able to make this song from starting with nothing is mind blowing.
@@Rebella1337 then do one. It's not only about the Complexity. Its about the feeling
In other words, he's doing what hundreds of thousands of composers do every day! Every piece of music you've ever heard started from nothing at some point!
it's cool and all but it's pretty basic like the other fella said.
I love the fact that every skilled musician knows that the bass and percussions sections always know where to go once the idea is shaped.
I remember when I started guitar in highschool the guys who told me "meh, start with basse, less strings, easier", or when I heared that "if you don't know how to play an instrument, just take drums, it's just hitting thing vaguely in rythm". Then I learnt that a good bassist and drummer knows and understands exactly what the piano is doing and where he's going, same with brass, etc. They're trully the backbone of any band or orchestra
I realized how important and difficult percussion was a while back when lots of the percussion section were sick and missed a rehearsal, and it was just one of them left and he didn’t rlly know how to do it or what he was doing and the entire piece was just 100 times more complicated and unbearable to listen too. Hearing him struggle made me realize how many things can actually go wrong in percussion
I don't think people actually realize how much effort, and brain power goes into this kind of thing. It takes so much knowledge of music theory from not only Ben, but EVERYONE else on stage. Truly magnificent!
This is beyond music theory:)
It’s One thing to create a piece in the chord. But to add on all these moving parts is wild. He really Made it work amazing
I'm studying music theory right now because I'm playing bass guitar. He has 100 times more knowledge on it than I could ever dream.
The best of the best
Pretty basic chord sequence and standard string techniques. It is pretty hard for most viewers but it is fairly easy for professionals. It would be impressive to see this happen without a conductor though.
having the nerves to do this demanding exercise LIVE in front of an audience -- composing spontaneously, conducting, and performing with humor, all done smoothly at a fast pace with no panic -- is the most impressive part. many musicians can make a song off stage, but Ben's on-stage skills takes an incredible amount of experience!!
And fun!!! Don't forget about the fun.
You felt the Joy and pride in every second. Loved it. THANK YOU!
Coming to a point where all those hardly earned and mastered exercises through out the years brought every musician to a day like this must be one of the best Feelings ever!!! Well done!
This is the one of most qualitative comment I have come across on RUclips
To be fair he'd been doing this for years. Probably has a library of templates. Look up 'Ben Folds rock this bitch'
@Sudipto Bhattacharyya that's a fake account my guy
Greatness.
For those without any musical background: Music theory is like learning a universal language and its the reason these performers can all play so well together with an impromptu piece.
Not completely universal. Could he play with an Indian or chinese traditional orchestra ?
@@cchamborant207 Actually probably yes. Music is universal
@@jaxonklaus838, no, he couldnt. That's a myth.
@@jaxonklaus838 it isnt,western music is,eastern culture has different ways of using music,the "universal" music is all western culture
@@draylexdoom9243 music theory isnt just for western music
Did he really just do a jam session with a classical orchestra? That is amazing!
This actually feels like a full on adventure with an audience that is laughing at every joke like a friends cast
but here every joke is actually funny
Clicked view replies because it's so goddamn predictable that it would be a criticism of friends. Really hot take, what a refined palette you have.
challenge: Make a song in 10 minutes
9:50 : Song starts
Absolute legend
Was searching for this only
Plus didn't start until around 1:30 mark ;)
Thank you for this
1. BEN FOLDS IS A LEGEND.
2. THIS WOULD BE THE MOST EPIC TV SERIES INTRO.
Reminds me of a BBC period drama
Would fit perfectly in a police or medical drama. Amazing!
@cDb if I see one more "jojo" in another comment section...I will lose it
@@schmeetsonbeetson7168 Wait till you go to king crimson comment sections
It already is lol ever seen Downton Abbey?
As sound engineer this was amazing, and the clarity of instructions to the different parts of the orchestra was spot on. Took me years of doing broadway and local theater to get all the sections in order, but there a thing to be side with gifted people.
This says more about trained symphony musicians than it does about composers, despite how coherent Ben's choices are.
Robert M not that I disagree, but I think this says much about both composers and the symphony. Just watching Ben think about each note for each instrument is just as impressive as the the musicians being able to know each thing Ben was talking about and convert it to beautiful music
+Sam Hagene There's a _lot_ of palette smearing going on here. The woodwinds basically figure out their parts amongst themselves from a very simple basic description. I see harp, trumpets, horns and timpani who just get on with it without any assigned parts. The only real orchestration comes in the strings. I could shout a chord sequence at an orchestra and a similarly impressive result would happen.
It doesn't stop it being impressive for people who can't do it themselves, but he composed five parts for a short looping string section, a tiny bit of woodwind, and that's it.
Fully agreed! He didn’t compose anything for flutes, oboes, bassoons, Horns but they were all playing and improvising TOGETHER.
Again, not taking anything away from Ben as a composer, but those were simple harmonies.
I was hoping he would do more of what he did with the first loop of cello Arco notes
@@jwtrio He had ten minutes!
@@turnercariker7578 Good enough for a four chord progression. It actually takes LESS time to do it with musicians than it takes to do it in the computer, for example.
Swear I could hear that poor trumpet player trynna lead into his solo ;(
hahahaha
They would have but Ben stole it away from them.
Trumpet player: Oh boy, it's my finally my time to shine!
Ben: *yoink*
The only time u can’t hear the trumpets blaring over some band or orchestra
WHY u say this now I heard it :/
What strikes me the most in this video is how powerful the piano is. The instrument allows you to easily come up with and play chords, harmonies, melodies, basslines, what have you. As far as writing music is concerned, nothing beats the piano as a composing tool.
This piano sounds great. It has a bright kinda sound. Is is Steinway or Bosendorfer?
@@meestuinier4486 Steinway
@@JJRicks yeah I see.
I already was thinking Steinway because of the sound but my resolution was low😅
I was thinking that too. The piano is a very ambidextrous instrument.
Exactly 💯
I loved watching the conductor play off of Ben's lead. Such an impressive feat by every musician on stage!
i’m still in tears over the “fortissimo! FIVEtissimo!”
*melody from heaven* ruclips.net/video/blaG4kgsHb8/видео.html
Real gut buster bro. Total tear jerker there man. Falling out of my chair while almost spitting out my drink while saying it louder for those in the back because it's SO TRUE!!!
Absolutely.
@@jojolove5973 kekd and ironypilled
do you guys know a key that ben can work in?
random guy in the back: *J*
i know they probably said G and then A but it sounded like they said j dont bully me
@@odei. Bruh i would probably be that one person to say a random letter xD
I think they had an accent and say G lol
@@Someone-ig7we it was someone saying g and another saying a
i heard it lmaoo some deep voice guy stood out with the J
I was promised a trumpet solo, but it was stolen by Ben for a fivetisimmo joke!
I, too, was interested to see if the trumpet player could improvise. In the Air Force band back in the sixties, we had a trumpet player that could sight-read anything, but when he tried to improvise in our dance quartet, Fred the bassist and I would sing three-part harmony with his improv attempts.
That was a fiVe 5tar joke though.
At least I cinq it was fün(f).
Would have been a sin(co) not to do it.
@@FirstnameLastname-kn5sw You're trying too hard, buddy.
@@anonymous-de3mn he's having fun with it. Why would you discourage that?
666 + 1 = 667
This sounds like an open world game soundtrack! And it sounds beautiful.
"Give me a key"
"F double sharp diminished"
@@TheErikMan ? 😵
That doesn't really work like that. The key is still F
@@pedrosilvaproductions F double sharp is not an F at all -- only in note value. It would be a G diminished scale, buddy.
@@pattmahiney are we talking about keys or scales? thats what im saying mate
@@pedrosilvaproductions a scale is just a key played at a certain interval. So Fx diminished would have all the same notes as a G diminished scale written down a whole step with two sharps added. The Bb becomes an A#, the G is an Fx, etc. Then you take the accidentals and it becomes the key that you play in.
LET"S MILK IT, MEZZO FORTE, FORTISSIMO, FIVETISSIMO! I'd wear that on a shirt haha
Do I hear a DIY t-shirt project coming? 😉
some victor borge stuff right there lol
he sound double forte
Me too
I never really had a good appreciation for how gifted all memebers of an orchestra are. It’s one thing to be able to memorize sheet music, but it’s an entirely different realm to be able to have perfect pitch and be able to riff with the rest of the orchestra with absolutely no mistakes. Quite astounding!!!
Its not perfect pitch that give these musicians the skill to hear his notes and replicate it with their instrument. As you gain experience with your instrument, it comes natural to find where the note is after hearing it. Its deciphering a note without an instrument that requires perfect pitch, although there are ways to do something similar to perfect by figuring out what chord the note is in.
Yeah, not quite perfect, but relative pitch. He also straight up told them the starting notes which generally helps
Quasi perfect pitch
Ben doesn’t have perfect pitch.
except for the clarinets at the beginning they were playing the wrong notes
I feel like the biggest credit here is that complete masters of their instruments were able to not only set aside their egos, but also lend their skills to this entire creation process.
Fun fact: This is the guy who composed the soundtrack for Over The Hedge.
the soundtrack made me cry once, ben is so good.
@@prodbymercury2 yup
I couldn't figure out why his name sounded so familiar!
Also sings for ben folds five "brick" is a tear jerking song and his voice is amazing
@@jeremiahnoar7504 Could also be that he's a talented, respected musician that has been producing music for 30 years
The hardest part isn't even that he created a song within 10 minutes. The hardest part ist that he did it ON COMMAND
I'm a musician myself and sometimes songs come together veeery quickly, but sometimes you'll need several sessions with weeks of pause in between to get the song done bc you're stuck at one point
He got the lyrics and a key, though 🤣 Much is already done at that point. 😛
@@asgeirsoe ahh yes choosing a key amd taking lyrics from a book carried his performance.
I can create songs on the spot... BUT making it to where I like it? Never lol
"Be productive right now", "You got it boss"
@@asgeirsoe and he got one the easiest and most commons keys by „hazard“ from the audience.
Let's do something upbeat, turns into the background music for a massacre on Game of Thrones.
That’s what they get for suggesting an A minor lmao
@@worrywirt True.
What could be more upbeat than that?
It reminded me more of the Gangs of New York ending theme than Game of Thrones.
If you play a minor key, expect a mysterious, thrill,suspense kind of music already.
'Sorry it just takes a second to create a whole song' 🤣
So awesome to watch
"Double basses, you know what you must do!"
The sad reality for bass players. :-D
Hey, let's be honest. You don't play a bass line expecting to be the limelight of a song. That's just the cold hard facts.
Bassist is the most powerfull player brah
@@AlexFarleyMusic Not exactly in a long of modern rock bassists hold it down and kill it with insane/catchy riffs
lot*
Everyone on that stage is fantastic. Some crazy bearded guy is going, "ok, do 'da de da didada' and they just _know what he means_ and _all do the same thing_.
But Ben told them the specific notes to play: A , E , F, etc. They remembered the patterns that he showed them.
You'd be surprised how easy it is to play anything by ear.
I expect professional musicians to be able to play by ear, especially when they're being given leading notes to start them off and they already know what key they're in.
Xamio I see. My experience as a semi-professional classical musician is different. Very few of my colleagues have the ability to play well by ear. We are wedded to the printed parts. We can easily play music by Tchaikovsky or Bach, but are put to the test if they have to play Happy Birthday!
My experience with classical musicians is very similar. They can read and play the most complicated, beautiful and emotive music from the page but you ask them to improvise a simple tune in C and they freeze. I have always found this fascinating, although a classical pianist I know once gave her excuse as her not being familiar with popular and jazz harmonies.
I also knew a guitar teacher who was in charge of teaching improvisation at a top London conservatoire - basically teaching the greatest classical guitarists in the country (who by his own admission were far, far better players than he) to play things off the cuff. Crazy.
A great deal of credit goes to the orchestra that can keep up with "you know what you have to do".
Seeing the conductor give slight finger instructions when they're trying to find the note brings me such joy for some reason
I think one of the reason this was really great is because all those musicians are very skilled as well. They're like high quality ingredients and Ben Folds is the chef that knows how to create an awesome dish from them.
I always wanted to eat a cellist
I always wanted to eat a cellos
violinists tastes delicious yum
i like the way you worded it because it definitely is the truth.
@@linjixo no IP
so much for the trumpet solo
He knew when to solo, and when to back off. Better let Ben show off.
🎺🎺🎺
😞
A trumpet starts playing at 10:54 Just not loud enough to be a prominent melody. Again just after "fivetissimo".
Really? That's what you came away from this with?
I heard that too. He was soloing in a way that blended with the ensemble!
At this current moment in time, I am the luckiest person in the world as I get the sheer privilege of hearing this for the first time...soon, someone else will randomly have this pleasure. How I envy you.
the moment is now. and i cannot stop smiling for a reason
This is seriously the most amazing musical thing I've seen in a while
That’s me today! Truly amazing!
my turn!
Sorry it took me so long, but really glad to be here now for my turn.
the euphoria I feel as a violinist and a composer, This is happiest I’ve been 😭
There’s one trumpet player who will forever be disappointed, all geared up and never had the chance! Haha
I would’ve been so pissed omg
If I'm not mistaken you can hear a trumpet player try to squeeze in around 11:12 lol poor guy
@@parkerthomsen4825 exactly there wasn't a solo but yes he got a full exposure at 11:58
I’m blown away by the restraint of the 1st trumpet player who decided not to take the improv solo after being explicitly invited to do so. I’ve never witnessed that level of genius in a trumpet player before, lol.
“Double basses, you know what you must do.” LMAOO
"yooo wtf???"
ol boring shiet we get
@@gamerboyss5310 Question mark?
Ayo is that a phantom regiment pfp?
@@evanblalock9744 you know it
11:13 the trumpet player actually wanted to go for a solo
poor guy never was just trying to do what he was told
I wanted him to go for a solo
I was disappointed that it petered out :(
hm? I know! I wanted to hear it, too! It would have been awesome 😭
@@ImBlueDaBaDeeDaBaDaa It started really good but he didn't get the chance, really sad.
As a rock band self instructed musician, this is a common way to compose with your partners in a band... jamming. But with formed classical musicians is very very hard because they always need the guidance or the specifications of what to play (key, tempo, mood), that make them play "by ear" or just improvise altogether is a real quest! My wife does play piano and there's no way I can make her join into a jamming xD
So, a big round of applauses to Ben for being able to do this!
Now THIS is what you call a party trick.
Seriously though, this is utter brilliance on the parts of all involved.
You had it right the first time. It's a bit of a party trick for people who don't understand music. For most average, well-rounded musicians who have experience in orchestra, this isn't very difficult. It's really fun, but not mind blowing.
not sure what party would have an entire orchestra but you’re not wrong 😂
It isn't a "trick" if you are a professional musician that composes. He is essentially just doing his job, which is in turn just a personal hobby for which he gets paid. Having written more than 3,000, I would wager money Dolly Parton could probably write a song on stage if you give her a topic. (It would also probably become a top 40 song, at least, when it made it into a video like this one.)
@@cloudoftime what is mind blowing however, is the fact that whole thing was completely improvised in ten minutes with no preparation while still sounding good.
@@ChristopherNelson42 Not mind blowing to the people who understand how all these parts and people function. But that's what makes magic tricks so cool too, when you don't know what's going on.
Me in my bathroom " These new spaacess are all designed, to be flexiblleee"
So you forgot the lyrics already?
I laughed
so insane. one of the coolest videos I've seen on RUclips
eli. My mind is blown bc when I was in band and orchestra(I was a trombone player) we could never get anything right and we had the music and seeing this is just beautiful
omg eli! i listen to your song crave like everyday! big fan
lmfao you have to be a complete normie to be impressed by this. this is literally the most unimpressive thing ive ever seen in my life. i could do this hungover
@@John-nk3ej sorry man, we’re not all as totally fucking incredible and godlike as you are at making music i guess! sorry please forgive me for enjoying this video and not being as good at music as you, maybe some day i’ll be able to make music like you and then someone will listen to me /:
@@imEliLucas ur cringe
i love that the orchestra have absolutely no problems in just going with the flow and being that awesome in doing so.
But did that guy ever get his pamphlet back?!
asking the right questions
I was thinking the same thing 😂
bwahahahahahaha
hahah I was thinking it and you commented it
Shellsea 🤣🤣🤣
Man, the orchestra has great ears.
Idk if you know but the letters he was spouting were the notes they should play. If you're a professional musician it's not hard to know. I'm not a professional musician but I was listening and when I was hearing it wasn't difficult to understand which notes were being played by the piano. Also, it's A minor. Not really difficult for them to know what they should play. Impressive nonetheless
No it’s normal
I guess so... It ain't that hard if you're experienced
It’s A Minor, if someone gave A flat major that would wreck havoc
i mean everything is like, super simple. you dont really need a great ear for this tbh lol
I know the lyrics were being read straight from the pamphlet but I swear Sufjan Stevens wrote them
Hahaha... I was thinking the same thing.
I think they were super deep and meaningful.
Haha!!
Hahaha! Thanks dude I lol'd
I almost choked with my food. ahahahaha
The amount of timings and notes and melodies and plans Ben has to hold in his head at any given moment throughput the entirety of this is breaking my brain just to ponder...
The trumpet player trying to play his solo that he was promised but keeps getting cut off by Ben cracks me up xD
He's brilliant and self-depreciating at the same time. "If there's a trumpet player here, go ahead and take a solo when I run out of ideas."
When he says “let’s do a one size fits all sorts thing”...I immediately shouted “that’s designed to be flexible!!!”
my brain is unable to process how impressive this was.
The double basses, trumpet and drums (percussion) indeed knew what they must do. Great musicians that brought the piece together without being told what exactly they needed to do
That's incredible
Ben Folds & his piano was my first show. When I was 12 my family was pretty poor, so I wasn't going to be able to go but my friend begged his mom to buy us tickets because he knew I was such a big fan. it was April 21st, 2004. we saw Bright Eyes in Omaha around that same time. I've always aspired to be a better musician because of you, Ben Folds, thank you for all you have done - you're a damn legend.
+
what a great friend
Happy to hear your family WAS very poor .
@@cheemsdoge977 it was at that point and probably still is
@Hunter u good
"Sorry, this takes a second to create a whole song for you"
This man roasted every musician today with just that sentence alone
I don’t think that was his point.
not every, grandpa
@@andybaldman also, he said "this takes MORE than a second". absolutely wasn't his point.
... how does this have 1000 votes
Thats not what he meant. it was sarcasm
@@user-tz9jh6pv2j It has 1000+ votes because most people are stupid, and don't see beneath the surface of things. Nuance is hard for a lot of people.
This is what happens when you, not only have immense talent, but hard work, dedication combined with true passion and love for ones craft. Extremely impressive.
If you aren't familiar with Ben Folds, I strongly suggest visiting his musical anthology. His ability to create emotion through his compositions is timeless and spellbinding. He is a highly underappreciated songwriter, possibly because of his sarcastic/cynical lyrical tones. However, if the dystopian lyrical content doesn't make you leave, you will be rewarded with some amazing music. I never get tired of listening to his music. I'm not tired! I'm not tired!
"She's a brick and I'm drowning slowly"
I had the pleasure of meeting him in New Orleans many years ago. It was a dinner for listeners for our listeners of the radio station I was working for which was a rock radio station. There was a small amount of people that wanted to win this dinner with Ben. And I found that quite interesting because I've always found his music and songwriting to be so compelling. I met Ben but I ended up spending most of our dinner at the House of blues in New Orleans speaking to his mother. I don't know if she still with us but if she is I send her many great memories if she's not, Ben I feel where you are with her loss and I appreciate you as a creative mind that is necessary for humanity to survive.
Well I thought about the Army, dad said "son youre fuckin high"...
The singing was off pitch at times I must say...
@@eiypo The Jellyfish Triple J is one of the greatest things I've listened to in my life.
Real props to the players in the orchestra. It's very impressive for them to remember all those instructions on the spot!
I'm afraid it's not too impressive for someone at the level of a professional concert symphony to remember and recite 8 notes...
But man, this was definitely impressive. Very cool to watch.
Mike Price That was my impression too . Very cool to watch .
agree.... it's a just 8 notes.... and quite easy to improvise in between. But props more to ben for being able to just pop stuffs off his brain while everyone is watching, and still make it so entertaining!
Ian Jones lol u don't really do music do you
In fairness, what the orchestra is doing is incredibly easy for any professional (or half-decent amateur) musician. The real talent is in what Folds is doing.
Ironically, he thought he was over 10 minutes but he was actually perfectly on time.. his skills are almost spooky
I find it impressive when 1 person does something like this on a daw but when it's this many individual people working together it's incredible
I love how a crazy looking guy with a big scruffy beard and curly hair sits there smacking his piano yelling random letters of the alphabet, and the people there are just like, "Oh, yeah, I can do that for you" and start perfectly playing awesome music in sync with a dozen other people he's yelled letters of the alphabet and smacked a piano to. That's really neat to see someone putting together something on the fly like that, and seeing the talented men and women there interpret it and put into practice in such a skillful way, all in sync, is frankly a bit mind boggling. I couldn't be happier with this recommendation from RUclips, though!
There's nothing mind boggling about matching letters of the alphabet to musical notes, you could learn them yourself easily if you bothered.
So many people say they wish they could play x instrument but then never spend 10 seconds actually trying.
Ever notice how many super talented guys there are that have that look? Trey Anastasio comes to mind immediately. in fact on this Ben reminded me of Trey while singing like Mike.
I love this comment! He's yelling random letters and smacking a piano!
its literally a 4 chord sequence lol if you're slightly acquainted with playing by ear this is something a beginner can do especially because they are given a rhythm and what note to play so its easy
Do you not know who that crazy looking guy with a scruffy beard is? That is BEN FOLDS. Jesus. Listen to his music sometime. It's great. He is one hell of a musician.
This demonstrates Bens skills, but also the increble skills of all the musicians who are just using their ears to follow his tinkles....Great fun...
"And then double basses, you know what you must do."
I love this guy!
I didn't understand why people laughed at that bit
Because it is very common for the bass to play only one note- the root of the chord.
Nosy Egg - It's a long running joke that they never get anything 'interesting' to play.
@@otterspocket2826 The double bassists got pissed off on Beethoven while practicing the 9th symphony, because how hard their sections were xD
haha pachelbel's canon for cellos and basses
Saw this dude literally play piano w just his feet live in concert when I was in high-school.... one of the most amazing and brilliant performances I've ever seen!