This Classical Piece blew my mind - Stravinsky The Rite of Spring | Reaction

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024
  • Reaction to Stravinsky The Rite of Spring - London Symphony Orchestra
    I loveee thiss!
    Original Video: • Stravinsky The Rite of...
    🆘Subscribe for more content (It's free lol): / gidireacts
    👑Want to jump the request waitlist? (Become a member and enjoy the perks): / @gidireacts
    🥼Support my Merch here! Appreciate the love: classical-piec...
    ▶️It would make my day if you could also follow me on:
    🌈Instagram: / kgidi_
    💎Discord: / discord
    🐥Twitter: / kgidiii
    💜Twitch: / kgidi
    #classicalmusic #stravinsky #gidireacts

Комментарии • 191

  • @gunibee2771
    @gunibee2771 Год назад +185

    This is one of the most influential pieces of classical music. This piece is one of the biggest reasons for why modern audiences are a lot more used to dissonance in music. A lot of popular film music like Star Wars, Jaws etc. was massively influenced by this.

    • @Dylonely42
      @Dylonely42 Год назад +16

      Especially music in horror movies

    • @nanthilrodriguez
      @nanthilrodriguez 11 месяцев назад +1

      "influential"
      "classical"
      "SURE"

    • @herrickinman9303
      @herrickinman9303 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@nanthilrodriguez Don't forget "a lot of" and "massively."

    • @jg2977
      @jg2977 7 месяцев назад

      I certainly hear a lot of Star Wars in this.

    • @origamiyim
      @origamiyim 5 месяцев назад

      @@jg2977 Indeed, Stravinsky himself was a strong fan of Star Wars

  • @Eden1907
    @Eden1907 29 дней назад +3

    This is probably the single most important piece of classical music of the 20th century.

  • @Nk-yu1rp
    @Nk-yu1rp Год назад +67

    The premier was actually pretty funny:
    The tumult began not long after the ballet's opening notes - a meandering and eerily high-pitched bassoon solo that elicited laughter and derision from many in the audience. The jeers became louder as the orchestra progressed into more cacophonous territory, with its pounding percussion and jarring rhythms escalating in tandem with the tensions inside the recently opened Théâtre des Champs-Élysées.
    Things reached a near-fever pitch by the time the dancers took the stage, under the direction of famed choreographer Vaslav Nijinsky of the Ballets Russes. Dressed in whimsical costumes, the dancers performed bizarre and violent moves, eschewing grace and fluidity for convulsive jerks that mirrored the work’s strange narrative of pagan sacrifice. Onstage in Paris, the crowd's catcalls became so loud that the ballerinas could no longer hear the orchestra, forcing Nijinsky to shout out commands from backstage.
    A scuffle eventually broke out between two factions in the audience, and the orchestra soon found itself under siege, as angry Parisians hurled vegetables and other objects toward the stage. It's not clear whether the police were ever dispatched to the theater, though 40 people were reportedly ejected. Remarkably, the performance continued to completion, though the fallout was swift and brutal.
    -from theverge

    • @GIDIREACTS
      @GIDIREACTS  Год назад +15

      Damn…

    • @johannsobieski1780
      @johannsobieski1780 Год назад +9

      @@GIDIREACTS At the performance of Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring you were reminded of the war
      the phrase described the dance of the pagans around the fire. Shostakovich describes war in all its cruelty with the 7th symphony. I can't wish you any pleasure listening, only strong nerves.
      The 7th Symphony in C major, Op. 60 by Dmitri Dmitrievich Shostakovich, usually called the Leningrad Symphony, is a symphony in four movements. The dedication was for the resistance and later military victory in the German blockade of Leningrad in World War II. During 871 days from September 8, 1941 to January 27, 1944, an estimated one million civilians starved to death there.
      "I dedicate my Seventh Symphony to our struggle against fascism, our inevitable victory over the enemy, and Leningrad, my hometown..."
      Shostakovich on March 29, 1942 in Pravda.
      You hear the troop march of the National Socialist Army, ( go to 13: 20) if you close your eyes you see the deployment of the armed forces, the cruelty of war. I've only heard the 7th symphony twice because it's so harrowing.
      4th movement Allegro non troppo
      The last movement was intended to represent the literal finale of a war symphony, i.e. victory
      (The 7th symphony is composed for two orchestras, the walls shake.) ruclips.net/video/SHhc5ntAo28/видео.html&ab_channel=%D0%A1%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%B5%D1%82%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%BE%D0%B5%D1%82%D0%B5%D0%BB%D0%B5%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BD%D0%B8%D0%B5.%D0%93%D0%9E%D0%A1%D0%A2%D0%95%D0%9B%D0%95%D0%A0%D0%90%D0%94%D0%98%D0%9E%D0%A4%D0%9E%D0%9D%D0%94
      Greetings from Berlin

  • @smroggen
    @smroggen Год назад +36

    first time this was performed it caused a riot in the concert hall

  • @sarahd1731
    @sarahd1731 Год назад +68

    “A sound I have never heard before “ - beautifully spoken. And it is. It is war, passion, emotion, depth. Thank you for listening and creating such videos

    • @AKoribut
      @AKoribut Год назад +5

      Actually I don’t hear WAR here. This piece is barbaric in some way but it depicts wild nature as it is. Nature is cruel sometimes.
      Lots of composers use dissonant chords to get extremely dark sound but “Rite” is different. Stravinsky’s harmonies are like fresh fruits you want to taste them endlessly

  • @BBB-hi4hc
    @BBB-hi4hc Год назад +48

    Perfect for Christmas

  • @ftumschk
    @ftumschk Год назад +33

    14:58 He's playing a washboard, which was once used in the laundry to scrub clothes clean. Stravinsky actually wrote the part for a "guiro" (a wooden South American instrument which makes a scraping sound), but I guess a washboard makes a similar, and probably louder, noise!

  • @musicalaviator
    @musicalaviator Год назад +11

    Just got an email asking me to be another Trumpet for a local Symphony Orchestra's performance of Rite of Spring in November. I believe I'm going to be on the Piccolo trumpet.

  • @ICanPickLocks
    @ICanPickLocks Год назад +66

    Yessiiirr! You in for a wild ride with this one! This will open your eyes to a whole new world of classical music!
    Edit: this famously caused a riot on the first night it was played😉
    Edit 2: The piece is supposed to represent prehistoric russia and the second part a sacrifice for the spring gods where a virgin dances herself to death. The piece was also originally shown with a ballet, and the ballet is 100% reccommended to watch after listening to this, because it adds like double the impact to the music!

  • @mikewhiskey5455
    @mikewhiskey5455 Год назад +14

    I never paid attention to Stravinsky's work but his "Firebird" played in the background of a segment of a computer game. I became obsessed with trying to understand it. It's complex, abstract, fascinating, shocking, revelatory, disturbing and more. He had something very important to say about humans that absolutely could not be put into words. I find it unsettling but love it despite.

  • @ymatsuda6406
    @ymatsuda6406 Год назад +19

    The Rite of Spring is written for ballet for the 1913 Paris, so it would be helpful to understand this piece more with background story behind this. Below is the excerpt of the explanation of this piece.
    “This is among the most controversial ballets ever written, causing spectators to call out during its first showing in Paris.
    The story itself is concerned with a prehistoric society in pagan Russia, which every year must sacrifice a virgin to ensure that the gods will be pleased in order to continue the group's survival. Ultimately, one such girl is chosen, and as the other performers visually align themselves with the earth, she is forced by the elders of the tribe to dance herself to death.
    Critics at the time of the ballet's debut were utterly shocked, with a near-riot during opening night. Simply put, the music and the dance were both nothing short of revolutionary. The ballet proved that modern dance could have a place in classical performances, and just as importantly, that ballet was far from a 'safe' form of expression.
    Additionally, the abject sexuality of the piece deserves some mention. While themes of sexuality had long been common on stage and in literature, this was one of the first times that such issues were pursued by contemporary artists. “
    For your reference, I put a link of ballet performance conducted by Sergei Diaghilev
    ruclips.net/video/YOZmlYgYzG4/видео.html
    Also, here is Twosetviolin’s hilarious video “When the Rite of Spring takes over you”, they pranked people in public by “performing ” the dance. I died with laughter.
    ruclips.net/video/eiDqiZhM7Tc/видео.html

  • @SPQRatae
    @SPQRatae Год назад +13

    "It sounds like: 'We're about to fuck some shit up'." Possibly the best description I've ever heard of The Rite of Spring!

  • @patriciarossman8653
    @patriciarossman8653 6 месяцев назад +5

    And yes, it is challenging to perform. Constant meter and key changes, with string sections split into four parts at times. An extremely intricate and rich sound results. Pure genius from Mr. Stravinsky.

  • @vivacantando
    @vivacantando 9 месяцев назад +4

    Your reaction is pretty much the same as many of the people in the audience at its premiere in 1913 in Paris. Nobody had ever heard anything like it. The dissonant harmony, the atonal and bitonal moments, the incredible rhythmic complexity and brutality, and the insanely difficult and unconventional orchestration...all of it. Some hated it and walked out, some were totally bewildered, some loved it. It's one of the most influential watershed moments in all of music.

  • @heliotropezzz333
    @heliotropezzz333 7 месяцев назад +4

    Igor Stravinsky = genius

  • @marcusanthonyPOV
    @marcusanthonyPOV Год назад +16

    If you think this blew YOUR mind, go check out what happened at the premiere.

  • @frankjuggaloheathen1035
    @frankjuggaloheathen1035 Год назад +6

    That "jingle" you heard at 7:04 was a combination of a triangle and two sets of antique cymbals. It's a shame the camera didn't get a shot of them so you could see what they look like.

    • @frankjuggaloheathen1035
      @frankjuggaloheathen1035 Год назад +1

      At 15:03 that is a washboard. The score actually calls for a guiro to play that part; it's an instrument made from a hollowed gourd with washboard-like ridges cut into one side, and played by running a stick against the ridges. I'm assuming either the orchestra couldn't get hold of a guiro for this performance, or the conductor somehow favored the sound of a washboard over a guiro.

  • @Alex_LionComposer
    @Alex_LionComposer Год назад +25

    Oh also, as crazy as the Rite sounds it still builds off of Russian folk tunes, using bits and pieces of these ancient tunes to evoke this pagan landscape, like many other works Stravinsky wrote in the 1910s (The Firebird, Petrushka, Renard, Les Noces)
    It's a style I really love and this review made me so happy, seeing your reaction and excitement was amazing!

  • @sashakindel3600
    @sashakindel3600 Год назад +27

    18:13 Not only the instruments that are usually in orchestras, but also rarer additions like alto flute and a small size of trumpet.

    • @HereticBra55
      @HereticBra55 Год назад

      That's is called a Piccolo Trumpet! It's originally written for Trumpet in D, but most musicians tend to just use a Bb Piccolo, which is one octave above the regular Trumpet!

  • @Alex_LionComposer
    @Alex_LionComposer Год назад +37

    I love this piece so much!!! I used to be (still am) a huge Stravinsky fanboy.
    The Rite is indeed a rite of passage (pun intended) for musicians and classical listeners alike, it really changed the game on classical music. Can't wait for you to discover more of his pieces!

  • @godbluffvdgg
    @godbluffvdgg Год назад +17

    The Planets, Op. 32, by the English composer Gustav Holst, is another masterpiece of monumental proportions.

  • @oosallytomatooo1321
    @oosallytomatooo1321 Месяц назад +1

    From 7:04, that "jingle" you hear is the sound of some rarely used "antique cymbals" (also called crotales, here in A-flat and B-flat), which look like very small cymbals.

  • @xyloplax
    @xyloplax Год назад +7

    Best thing ever written. Full stop. My favorite commentary on the insane complexity of this work was a violinist in the London Symphony who said "If you all end the piece at the same time, you have accomplished something"

  • @adamcook2910
    @adamcook2910 Год назад +5

    4:11 this is a piccolo trumpet, which sounds an octave higher than a normal one. The player is using a mute which gives it the buzzing sound

  • @johnwaynewesterns739
    @johnwaynewesterns739 Год назад +4

    The Rite of Spring is probably the most famous ballet premiered by the historic Ballet Russes, which also commissioned and premiered multiple different ballet works during its tenure. The sort of "new" style that the Ballet Russes wanted led to the composition of multiple ballet works from different composers that helped push and experiment on the dance form, in particular, harmony and rhythm.
    Other ballet works that are really good are Stravinsky's earlier ballets, "The Firebird" and "Petrushka" and Ravel's first ballet (and arguably one of the best ballet works), "Daphnis and Chloe"

  • @animalistiktiero3835
    @animalistiktiero3835 Год назад +9

    Ah rite of spring one of my favourite pieces by Igor Stravinsky.
    I've didn't commented on your videos for a while but i'll try to comment more again.
    Greetings from Bavaria :)

  • @anthropocentrus
    @anthropocentrus Год назад +11

    So this is TRIBAL spring. Spring is all about sex and war (or rivalry) in the primitive human world as it is in the rest of the animal kingdom, it’s life on HEAT. “the struggle of life” I think would be a fitting way of describing the Rite. You can hear that DRIVE, war, sacrifice, pain, suffering and death very clearly….But you can also hear (and that perhaps more in part 2 but also in part 1) that SILENCE and those primitive simple, and touching, melodies that really embody that pure, untouched, natural world, in these moments you really sense the communion within the community/tribe and with nature..and sound as if they really go back Thousands and thousands of years ago….can’t help but be moved by this providential, otherworldly, genius..

  • @mackjay1777
    @mackjay1777 8 месяцев назад +3

    So great to see someone discovering this masterpiece for the first time....glad you enjoy it!

  • @simonlewislillemhlum7984
    @simonlewislillemhlum7984 Год назад +15

    I'd recomed you listening to Prokofievs first symphony, it is a short piece(only 22mins!), both lighthearted, fastpaced and dramatic. I think you'll love it! I love seeing your reactions btw, realy motivates me, a classical violinist, to continue practicing ;)) I played The Rite of Spring last summer, and it was a blast! Enjoyed seing that we shared the same emotions whisle listening/playing the piece. Would highly recomend you going to a concerthall and listening to it live... Oh man, if you thought the recording was good, you're in for a treat!

  • @n8sterling727
    @n8sterling727 9 дней назад

    Truly EPIC composition. I was first introduced to this as a kid in the form of fighting dinosaurs in Disneys Fantasia, cherish that movie till this day.

  • @alvarocambon6444
    @alvarocambon6444 Год назад +13

    You're opening your taste to a new world with this. Notice that each version of this piece have its own flavour. My favorite thing about this piece is how string instruments are used in a way that it's more like if they were the percussion. And with that amalgam of odd time signatures, for moments it sounds like modern mathcore or djent xD. Sure Stravinsky was ahead of his time. Game changing piece (one of the most influential) , nice version (maybe the rounds a little bit rushed for me), great reaction!

  • @johnroberts1708
    @johnroberts1708 Год назад +3

    I first saw/heard this live in London in the 70s. I was on the edge of my seat. I have listened to it at least once a year ever since......and I still find new things within it. It's truly a masterpiece

  • @marygifford9379
    @marygifford9379 Год назад +4

    This piece is a ballet which depicts various pagan rituals of spring including the sacrafice of a virgin. Stavinsky found and incorporated ancient Ruusian tunes. Its first performance caused a riot.

  • @rainbowdude6485
    @rainbowdude6485 Год назад +13

    You should check out "Waltz of the Flowers" by Tchaikovsky as well as anything from his "Nutcracker Suite". There will be quite a few recognizable melodies.

  • @dyerob
    @dyerob 9 месяцев назад +1

    Loved your reaction! It reminded me of my reaction as a teen 50 years ago: "WTF is this thing I am hearing?!?!" Like you, it blew my mind and opened up an entirely new world of music to me. To see it happening to you, too, kinda made me tear up a little, and I was feeling all those goosebumps. So cool. As so many of the other comments have said, this reaction was typical of the people who heard it back in 1911, and continues to blow peoples' mind today. Igor S is definitely legendary!! This piece is the gateway drug to modern classical music. Love your sincerity! Keep on enjoying music!

  • @soozb15
    @soozb15 Год назад +3

    I think Gidi is ready for and would love Bartok! Please check out Bartok's Concerto for Orchestra, with the Hungarian National Philharmonic under Zoltán Kocsis (superb interpreter of Bartok's music).

  • @fractuss
    @fractuss Год назад +1

    It is goose-bumpy.

  • @chrislubs1341
    @chrislubs1341 10 месяцев назад +1

    Stravinsky's inventiveness palpably surfaces following a performance reading the score.

  • @annaolson4828
    @annaolson4828 Год назад +2

    "Whoa, where did that come from?" That's a very common reaction post-intro to the Rite of Spring.

  • @AnnekeGermers-in6pb
    @AnnekeGermers-in6pb 9 месяцев назад +1

    I like your spontaneous response. You feel it like I feel it. And I have listened to it many, many times. It's the explosion of spring, life bursting into being. Very powerful stuff.

  • @kierancarter5639
    @kierancarter5639 9 месяцев назад +1

    Love this, such an amazing performance. I nearly cried just now during “games of rival tribes” - such exhilarating scenes watching probably 100 people do such virtuosic things - and that’s exactly why I love my job as an orchestral cellist. I’ve played this a few times - I find it such terrifying music. It’s scaaaaary. Apparently the idea for the ballet about a girl dancing herself to death came to him in a nightmare.
    I loved watching you react - and I got goosebumps with you! Xx

  • @idkk4125
    @idkk4125 Год назад +6

    FINALLY

  • @andresimard6161
    @andresimard6161 Год назад +4

    In my mind, this piece is so major that it splits musical history in 2: before and after it was composed. It changed everything. BTW, it describes a human sacrifice in some tribes; it’s interesting how you felt that without knowing.

  • @luxmajor7151
    @luxmajor7151 Год назад +2

    Dear Gidi, I just got the goosebumps too- must be the exquisite music- the sounds of nature 😊🩵🩵🩵🩵🩵💙💚❗️

  • @garykuovideos
    @garykuovideos Год назад +3

    Thank you for your engaging and thoughtful reaction! As a violinist who’s performed this work, I’m always delighted to see new listeners explore and discover another corner of our vast musical world. Liked and subscribed!

  • @sightablestudiosofficial
    @sightablestudiosofficial 4 месяца назад

    This is part of an actual ballet that you can find on you tube. Totally worth watching.

    • @klausg.355
      @klausg.355 3 месяца назад

      Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch ... 😀
      That ballet is amazing.

  • @roberto8650
    @roberto8650 6 месяцев назад +2

    I love your reaction at 04:46.

  • @cellevangiel5973
    @cellevangiel5973 Год назад +4

    You don't hear the war, but spring. The nature coming alive, birds singing, beautiful.

    • @zanakil
      @zanakil 11 месяцев назад +2

      nope, it's the wrath of the gods that this very ritual is supposed to appease by the sacrifice of a human victim ... he was not that far.

    • @phantom213
      @phantom213 2 месяца назад

      Also it evokes the dangerous, brutal side of nature. The primordial fear. It' is very dark.

  • @anteb.k.8396
    @anteb.k.8396 Год назад +4

    Great piece for a reaction, I enjoyed this!! Please listen to the second half too. Stravinsky is very interesting, Firebird and Petrushka are also awesome

    • @roigrose5045
      @roigrose5045 Год назад

      The Firebird! Pls react with the ballet video too. Most pleasurable!

  • @TheTralfaz
    @TheTralfaz Год назад +1

    seeing as this has been up for 8 months, you are now probably up to speed with the whole story behind this masterpiece. This and The Firebird Suite .....Ive heard both in concert....mind blown.

  • @martinbynion1589
    @martinbynion1589 Год назад +1

    Bravo! This music was regarded when it first appeared 100 years ago as tuneless noise by most and provoked riots in theatres. It is now seen as the true beginning of modern music and your instant appreciatiion of its qualties is fantastic. Also try to find a performance of another Stravinsky piece - Petrushka. These were both written as ballet music for the Ballet Russe in Paris.

  • @hoolala35
    @hoolala35 4 месяца назад

    Just checked in
    And please react to part 2 as well. The final sacrifice is savage!

  • @fatovamingus
    @fatovamingus 11 месяцев назад

    I can't urge you enough to watch the joffrey ballet performance to Le Sacre du Printemps as it was called when it was debuted in Paris. That ballet was scrapped after nine performances because it was epic. It was choreographed by Vaslav Nijinsky, it's on my channel and has been for over 15 years and music students pretty much say the same thing. They thought the music was scary but now they can't sleep with the lights out have to seeing the ballet

  • @Joey7Z7Horror
    @Joey7Z7Horror Год назад +3

    WHAT THE FUCK THERE’S A REACTION!? I GOTTA FUCKING CHECK OUT THE DANCE OF THE EARTH PART BRO

    • @Joey7Z7Horror
      @Joey7Z7Horror Год назад

      Dance of the Earth is my fucking favorite

  • @myrondyal6117
    @myrondyal6117 3 месяца назад

    THIS IS ONE OF MY BEST AND INFLUENTIAL WORKS EVER!! IT IS POLY RHYMIC, POLY TONAL.ETC LOVE IT!!!

  • @thethikboy
    @thethikboy Год назад +1

    Nature's life forms' struggle for existence and dominance

  • @c0ntemporist
    @c0ntemporist Год назад +1

    yay riot piece🎉🎉

  • @residentzero
    @residentzero 11 месяцев назад

    It touches my soul this music

  • @ladybug591
    @ladybug591 Год назад

    Music for the ballet - Love it - all these musical conversations intertwining - exciting and interesting. Thanks GIDI for the fun with this one. Regards to all.

  • @mooseyrambling5838
    @mooseyrambling5838 Год назад

    Dude, love the engagement and the appreciation, and your constraint surprise with classical music. It is a joy to watch,
    Very best regards
    Moose

  • @ra6788
    @ra6788 Год назад +1

    Even tho it might not be true, the story about this piece being played for the first time and causing riots within the crowd always made this piece feel more primal and fascinating to me. An absolute unit.

  • @jgesselberty
    @jgesselberty Год назад

    Watching your reactions is like I, too, am hearing the piece for the first time.

  • @znotch87
    @znotch87 Год назад +2

    I also recommend The Firebird. Also more accessible and more spectacular imho.

    • @ftumschk
      @ftumschk Год назад +1

      Great idea. It's fascinating to listen to The Firebird back-to-back with The Rite of Spring, which was only written 2-3 years later, which only underlines what a radical work it was. The Firebird is magnificent in its own right, but arguably more redolent of Rimsky-Korsakov's style than Stravinsky... who was, of course, Rimsky's star pupil.

  • @Nooticus
    @Nooticus Год назад

    This was the best reaction video i think ive ever seen on youtube. ever!!!!!! you're incredible for documenting this experience of listening to this masterpiece for the very first time! honestly, huge props to you man :) what a youtube video!

  • @voiceover2191
    @voiceover2191 11 месяцев назад

    You just listened to the most revolutionary piece of music ever created. In the year Gustav Mahler died, Stravinsky created this ballet in 1911. Can you imagine, more than a hundred years ago and it still sounds modern and revolutionary.
    Why it is seen as revolutionary deserves a long answer, but just pay attention to the fact that rythm becomes the over dominating force of the music, not the harmony or melody, rythm drives it and shakes and stirs everything and that's what caused such a huge impact.
    Of course all the colouring and at times shrill dissonants also send shockwaves to early audiences.
    It's premiere was one of the most notorious classical music scandals of all time. People were so shocked by this music fist fights in the audience broke out between people pro and con against this piece.
    The world of classical music would never be the same after this piece saw the light of day.
    I consider it the greatest and most significant orchestral piece of the 20th century.
    I'm a fan of Sir Simon Rattle, but the performance still is not crisp or raw enough, especially the copper is way too timid. Unfortunately, could be my head phones, the sound is quite muffled and specifically percussion sounds very muffled and too much bass, but again, could be my equipment.
    The best performance by far, unparallelled in my opinion, recorded that is, is the one conducted by Pierre Boulez and the Cleveland Orchestra. It's so precise, so crisp, you hear every detail and still contains the rawness and sheer unsoftened brutal impact that this wonderful work should have.
    If you like to get to know other unique orchestral pieces of the 20th century:
    - Edgar Varèse: L'Amerique
    - Olivier Messiaen: Turangalila Symphony
    - Gyorgy Ligeti: Requiem
    The first two are still quite easy to take, though indeed very exciting. The latter is more challenging but totally unique.

  • @patriciarossman8653
    @patriciarossman8653 6 месяцев назад

    The Bassoon solo at the beginning has lyrics: "I'm not an English Horn, I'm not an English Horn." This is a long-standing joke in professional orchestras. The register is high for the bassoon, more in the English Horn range. 😉 Just a bit of inside trivia...

  • @vrixphillips
    @vrixphillips Год назад +1

    the end of Part 1, from Procession of the Sage to the Dance of the Earth is one of my favorite parts :3 but JUST WAIT TIL PART 2 omg. You'll really feel the primal passions of prehistoric Russia.
    Gotta hear Les Noces at some point, it's very different, but the sound-world is so different... extremely percussive (huge percussion section + 4 pianos and chorus) it's wild. And then Firebird is even MORe different and much less dissonant, but it's SO GORGEOUS. But yeah, Stravinsky is OG.

  • @klausg.355
    @klausg.355 3 месяца назад

    The ballet Stravinsky Rite of Spring
    - le sacre du printemps - by
    Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch
    AMAZING !!! 😎😎😎
    you tube 36,31 minutes !
    Would love to see the reaction to this touching ballet ...

  • @mlconlanmeister
    @mlconlanmeister Год назад

    That leaden interpretation by Sir Simon compelled me to look for an exciting performance, and, lo and behold, Leonard Bernstein conducted the same orchestra, the London Symphony, in the sixties, and it is on RUclips.
    The performance was so singular an experience to ALL in attendance, that at the end, the LSO musicians refused to stand to take a bow and instead enthusiastically applauded Maestro Bernstein. (No, they were not just being polite, I know what that looks like, and this was different).
    It is in black-and-white, but the sound is perfectly good and very well balanced. I urge you, GIDI, to look it up.

  • @billgrimke-drayton2858
    @billgrimke-drayton2858 Год назад +1

    There was a riot at the first performance. The orchestra couldn't hear itself. The audience was outraged by what they heard. That was in 1913. I think it was put on as a ballet at that performance. It was to do with the sacrifice of a maiden to the gods. A pagan ritual.

  • @nanthilrodriguez
    @nanthilrodriguez 11 месяцев назад

    This was originally produced as a ballet. The story is a grim and violent one, about human sacrifice. Worth checking out a ballet production to see how you would dance to such complex music.

  • @Leea25
    @Leea25 Год назад +1

    This was written as a ballet, based loosely in ancient pagan Russia, in which a virgin girl from the village is selected to dance herself to death as a sacrifice to the gods. Here is a recreation of the original (sadly lost) choreography. It took the couple responsible for the recreation decades of research: ruclips.net/video/jo4sf2wT0wU/видео.html

  • @IvorPresents
    @IvorPresents 6 месяцев назад

    A time of revolution in the Classic music world, in the early nineteen hundreds audience members ran from the concert hall. Music had made an evolutionary jump into the twentieth century leaving romanticism behind.

  • @MichaelYoder1961
    @MichaelYoder1961 9 месяцев назад +2

    It was controversial in its day, because it's so different from what they'd heard back then - people walked out of the performance. You'd like Pulcinella - his Baroque period

  • @TheAboriginal1
    @TheAboriginal1 Год назад

    4:15 LMAO !!!! Perfect reaction

  • @shijoejoseph2011
    @shijoejoseph2011 Год назад

    The first time you hear how the second movement begins, you can't help but bow down to the power of strings (violin, violas, cellos, double basses) in an orchestra! When Angels have had enough and hail down unto us His wrath, that piece is what they would play!

  • @JamesJones-zt2yx
    @JamesJones-zt2yx 5 месяцев назад

    Listen to the part from around 9:00 to just before 12:00, and then go listen to Vanilla Fudge's cover of "Some Velvet Morning". You don't often hear a mashup of Stravinsky with Lee Hazelwood and Nancy Sinatra!

  • @damitw1969
    @damitw1969 Год назад

    So, if you haven't done so yet, I recommend watching the ballet performance of this work. And keep in mind, it's a celebration of Spring: Earth wakes up, kids play silly games, old sage kisses Earth, unlucky-but-highly-honored virgin dances herself to death in tribute to Earth

  • @minapolina6661
    @minapolina6661 Год назад

    Love the first half of Rite of Spring because it has my favorite movement with the ostinatos at 4:46. It's so beautiful and chaotic for me.

  • @stephen7916
    @stephen7916 Год назад +1

    Let's Gooooooooo!❤‍🔥❤‍🔥❤‍🔥

  • @Paolo8772
    @Paolo8772 7 месяцев назад +1

    You're lucky to see this version; Conductor Simon Rattle makes the music easier to understand.

  • @spessivtseva
    @spessivtseva 3 месяца назад

    the only correct way to react to the rite of spring

  • @patticrichton1135
    @patticrichton1135 9 месяцев назад +1

    It is one of the most DIFFICULT piece for the symphony to play as well, ESPECIALLY for the STRINGS!!! You should see the sheet music for the violins, viola, cello and double bass. It's unbelievable (my Dad played violin, and also sax, clarinet and flute)

  • @karidrgn
    @karidrgn Год назад +1

    Disney Fantasia included this piece did animation. Turning it into the story of the creation of earth as understood by science at the time. The ompahs were turned into mud pots and volcanoes. There's a fight between a trex and segasaurous and ending with the death of the dinosaurs due to climate change

  • @patriciarossman8653
    @patriciarossman8653 6 месяцев назад

    At around 15:00 you're watching a percussion instrument that looks like an old fashioned washboard being played, and you're asking, 'what is it?' Yes, it's called a washboard. 😊

  • @philipadams5386
    @philipadams5386 Год назад +1

    I was wondering when you were going to get around to this. Heheh.

  • @johannesbowman2194
    @johannesbowman2194 Год назад

    7:11 the jingle are the crotales -- little brass cymbals

  • @mike04tm53
    @mike04tm53 Год назад +1

    I recommend you to watch petruska ballet

  • @johankaewberg9512
    @johankaewberg9512 Год назад

    Oh god, this is a good one.

  • @dc8955
    @dc8955 Год назад

    You should go see that ballet.

  • @Rabs1
    @Rabs1 Год назад

    There’s a contingent of people who consider this the Grandfather of all metal music. And I can see why.

  • @jamiesharp152
    @jamiesharp152 Год назад

    Incredible to think the listening intelligencia derided this approach to logic

  • @markdettra1794
    @markdettra1794 Год назад

    That dark , war-like force you heard , i believe corresponds to the part in the play where an innocent virgin is being sacrificed - slaughtered , to the "gods" in the ballet play this music was written for . Stravinsky wasn't a cruel monster , just a skilled craftman of feelings. PS. He composed this in year 1913 !

  • @rapidmushroom571
    @rapidmushroom571 Год назад +7

    Day 22 (same day just multiple) of asking Gidi to react to Sarasate- Introduction and Tarantella played by Nathan Milstein

  • @dallasleech5374
    @dallasleech5374 Год назад

    This video does not surprise me, I was a Rolling Stones, Beatles fan and at the age of 19 I bought my first classical album and now I am 76 and I have hundreds of classical discs which I listen to one everyday and never fail to be enjoy. Gidi you have started on a long journey just enjoy.

  • @kentinatl
    @kentinatl Год назад

    be sure to listen to Tomita's electronic version of Stravinsky's "the Firebird"

  • @RC2214
    @RC2214 Год назад

    This is very theatrical, either in expressive dance or cinematic, like a suspense or a black and white horror, thriller like Alfred Hitchcock or Jaws

  • @davidmdyer838
    @davidmdyer838 6 месяцев назад

    Really, nothing IS close to this piece. I've played it over a dozen times, and if you think it's a wild ride to listen to it, imagine playing it. It never gets less intense, if anything it gets more because you know what's coming, like a story where you look forward to hearing your favorite parts over and over and you get to act them. Hands down my favorite piece of music. Som people can't take it, they have to leave the concert hall, it's too intense a live experience. The jingly sound you heard are called crotales, like a very intense glockenspiel, they are round discs.

  • @jefflpanther
    @jefflpanther Год назад +2

    It was so much fun seeing you hear "Le Sacre" for the first time! Can't wait for part two. You might like "La Noche de los mayas" by the great Mexican composer Silvestre Revueltas: ruclips.net/video/uenaA6djuzQ/видео.html

  • @minapolina6661
    @minapolina6661 Год назад

    Also, listen to the last movement of The Firebird Suite if you really wanna hear something fire. Literally.