I am 86...so have heard..listened to this piece many times by various orchestras/conductors..and never thought much about it..ok..nice [ interesting] etc...but now this version..wow..!!!..grabs you by the insides..not just the gorgeous sound..great master Ben...how he can get a bunch [ big ]...of young people to play like this...???
I'm with you on that. The children love what they're doing and I'd say most of it has to be the conductor. He's amazing just watching him in conversation. Benjamin Zander is one of my favorite people of all time.
As one of the front line physicians and healthcare leaders facing this public health crisis, I can tell you we are all afraid, uncertain, anxious... about our patients, the system, ourselves, our families. But this... this gives me faith that the world is in good hands. BRAVO! I will use this often in the coming days. Thank you for this absolutely tremendous gift. Stay safe and thank you for the many gifts you've given my family and friends over the last number of years...
While we no longer live in the Boston area, I still try to follow the Boston Phil, which we attended for many years. I have always been grateful to Maestro Zander for both his splendid performances and especially his educational pre-concert talks. Chazzak, chazzak - may you go from strength to strength. That said, I do have a bone to pick about the Nimrod RUclips recording I listened to three times today. The performance was elegant and stately, but - to my non-UK sensibility - it lacked the heart-breaking quality I have always treasured in Nimrod. It felt too “vertical” and lacking forward motion. I imagine the idea was to use the magic of “suspensions” to convey the emotion, but to me it felt a bit over-controlled. Perhaps I would have understood, and therefore liked, the interpretation more, had I been able to hear a pre-concert talk. In any case, I would not want to miss even a performance I “disagree” with from Maestro Zander! Thank you for making it available to those of us who live far away. ❤
❤🌻🇻🇦✝️🇻🇦🌻DIEU ACCUEILLEZ DÉSORMAIS DANS VOTRE PARADIS🌿🪢🇻🇦✝️🇻🇦🪢🌿 L'ÂME IMMENSÉMENT CATHOLIQUE🇻🇦⛑🇻🇦 de Sir EDWARD ELGAR❤🌻🇻🇦✝️🇻🇦🌻❤🌼💐🌿💛✒💒📃🪅📚😇🍋⛑🦁🥰🇲🇬💮🧸🌸🎶🌻🌿🙋♂️ !!!
I enjoyed this very much, well done to all and of course to Maestro Zander. And may I say to the young man in the first violins, 3rd row back: your enthusiasm caught my eye (2:34; 2:52) and you made my day, thank you so much!
I don´t like "Nimrod" when it was played as a dirge or grandiloquent music, is not a sad piece, is a portrait of one of his friends and is a piece that sound better when you set sentimentalism aside and play it directly with that british humble dignity. My favorite performance are Toscanini, Rozhdestvensky y Temirkanov, for some reason, russians do it very well on that variation.
It is not a portrait of friend Jäger to whom the title alludes, but the treatment of a major event in Elgar's life where Elgar was at the bottom of his musical existence and Jäger pulled him out of that. I would not assume the British humble dignity to be guiding direction for interpretation in general, as the country has its fair share of pomp and circumstance, changing of guards and high drama. If Shakespeare has to be read with British humble dignity - imagine, you would fall asleep before you could throw your rotten tomatoes. Cultural differences are so incredibly difficult. In my culture I can tell you, you hit my car and we have to fill forms for our insurances to sort things out - no drama; try that around the Mediterranean and responses there would be called "theatrical personality disorders in the sense of psychiatry" in my country. Ravel walked out on a performance of his Bolero. He had written a "piece without music for a mechanical conductor." Another composer felt, after it is out there, published, I have no control over it. As to the Russians, Rachmaninoff played all works of other composers in the Rachmaninoff way - some loved it, some hated it. I have been to piano recitals where a Russian pianist played flawlessly, banged the crap out (pardon this younger old man for adolescent language, it makes the point extremely clear) of a Steinway D to play Romantic music and showed no emotion at that. Russian literature is full of humor but in translation nobody understands it and with their poker faces I would not "get it" when they told it to me. From my limited cultural perspective. Still, let's agree to disagree, you are entitled to your opinion, as long as you understand an appreciate that others, I, disagree in humble dignity. I'm not British, by the way - not partial to anything or anybody. Maybe the almost total absence of drama in my personal life in my culture of humble dignity calls for a bit more drama in these kinds of performances.
@@jpdj2715 I understand you, but, you now, I love historical recordings, so I have the 3 Naxos Cds devoted to Elgar conducting Elgar and the impression I get is that he conducted "Nimrod" as it wasn´t something special, the same with Richard Strauss and "Till Eulenspiegel", he simply stands in front of the Vienna Philharmonic and keep the tempo. Also Rachmaninov, I love his recording of his piano works, specially the 3rd, that almost any pianist start at very low and melodramatic tempo. No, he played very well articulated and with a fastest tempi. I believe that the latest romantic generation, wasn´t so romantic as we usually think. Also I'm 47, I'm uruguayan and we are described as grey and boring people, that's no true, we like colours, but we don´t like stridency, too much bright colours are not welcome, the same with food, our food is tasty but don´t expect to find highly spicy food.
@@pablov1973 Well as far as historical recordings go - the ones with Elgar are not accurate. Elgar played them faster because the pieces were being recorded on devices that had a _very_ limited amount of recording space.
I am English, and, everytime I hear Nimrod it's like getting a big warm hug from Britannia herself. ❤
there's a real beauty in young musicians playing . Marvellous
Beautiful beautiful beautiful.. Wonderful job young folks......God bless
One of the most beautiful musical compositions I have ever heard.
The most...
I am 86...so have heard..listened to this piece many times by various orchestras/conductors..and never thought much about it..ok..nice [ interesting] etc...but now this version..wow..!!!..grabs you by the insides..not just the gorgeous sound..great master Ben...how he can get a bunch [ big ]...of young people to play like this...???
I'm with you on that. The children love what they're doing and I'd say most of it has to be the conductor. He's amazing just watching him in conversation. Benjamin Zander is one of my favorite people of all time.
What a memory it must be for a young orchestra to play such a piece !
As one of the front line physicians and healthcare leaders facing this public health crisis, I can tell you we are all afraid, uncertain, anxious... about our patients, the system, ourselves, our families. But this... this gives me faith that the world is in good hands. BRAVO! I will use this often in the coming days. Thank you for this absolutely tremendous gift. Stay safe and thank you for the many gifts you've given my family and friends over the last number of years...
Andrew Healey how did you comment 2 months ago if the video just came out. I’m so confused. 😂
I had this in my ear in Afghanistan,they also played it in the immediate memorial service for the Titanic.
It's very dear to me this piece.
An absolutely masterpiece of music, and a master conductor, can bring me back, time and time again to say thank you!!!
While we no longer live in the Boston area, I still try to follow the Boston Phil, which we attended for many years. I have always been grateful to Maestro Zander for both his splendid performances and especially his educational pre-concert talks. Chazzak, chazzak - may you go from strength to strength.
That said, I do have a bone to pick about the Nimrod RUclips recording I listened to three times today. The performance was elegant and stately, but - to my non-UK sensibility - it lacked the heart-breaking quality I have always treasured in Nimrod. It felt too “vertical” and lacking forward motion. I imagine the idea was to use the magic of “suspensions” to convey the emotion, but to me it felt a bit over-controlled.
Perhaps I would have understood, and therefore liked, the interpretation more, had I been able to hear a pre-concert talk. In any case, I would not want to miss even a performance I “disagree” with from Maestro Zander! Thank you for making it available to those of us who live far away. ❤
One of God's greatest gifts to humanity is music. Another gift was this.. Wow!
I love this piece!
An empty Hall? And yet I am thrilled an ocean away.
This was the last concert performed in Symphony Hall before quarantine started...the concert was closed to a live audience!
Sublime.... Maestro you touch my soul deeply... Thank you always !
Shivers down my spine
❤🌻🇻🇦✝️🇻🇦🌻DIEU ACCUEILLEZ DÉSORMAIS DANS VOTRE PARADIS🌿🪢🇻🇦✝️🇻🇦🪢🌿 L'ÂME IMMENSÉMENT CATHOLIQUE🇻🇦⛑🇻🇦 de Sir EDWARD ELGAR❤🌻🇻🇦✝️🇻🇦🌻❤🌼💐🌿💛✒💒📃🪅📚😇🍋⛑🦁🥰🇲🇬💮🧸🌸🎶🌻🌿🙋♂️ !!!
This man is another deal! Master Conductor! Physiognomy never fails to reveal us the stuff of a great man: Maestro!
❤🍋💐💛🌻🌼🇻🇦✝️🇻🇦🌼🌻💛💐🍋❤🌿😇💮🪢💛🇲🇬🦁🇲🇬🎶🌸🥰🌿🌻💮🧸🪅🌼💒📃✒📚🌸🇻🇦✝️🇻🇦🌸🪢💛💐❤😊🌼🪢🎶🌻🌿🙋♂️
I love your love of beautiful music
I enjoyed this very much, well done to all and of course to Maestro Zander. And may I say to the young man in the first violins, 3rd row back: your enthusiasm caught my eye (2:34; 2:52) and you made my day, thank you so much!
Sensazionale.....❤
awesome great job to you all
Ben. Perfection! Bravissimo.
Stunning rendition. Thank you for posting. x
Pick one that resonates with you: nailed it; wow; bravissimo.
The guy with the magic wand did a great job of making all those people play their instruments like that. Wonder if he trained at Hogwarts?
Wonderful everyone. I wonder what was taught during learning this piece, and what the reasoning was for the flicky, punctuated style of conducting.
You can hear all the colours
Its beautiful
Absolutely stunning thank you so much from Giuseppe in Cape Town South Africa 🇿🇦. A most superb rendition 🌹🌹🌹
Not sure I ever heard the timpani so clearly, I have to say...
2:38
Ikr
name of piece?
Enigma Varriations - Nimrod
I don´t like "Nimrod" when it was played as a dirge or grandiloquent music, is not a sad piece, is a portrait of one of his friends and is a piece that sound better when you set sentimentalism aside and play it directly with that british humble dignity. My favorite performance are Toscanini, Rozhdestvensky y Temirkanov, for some reason, russians do it very well on that variation.
It is not a portrait of friend Jäger to whom the title alludes, but the treatment of a major event in Elgar's life where Elgar was at the bottom of his musical existence and Jäger pulled him out of that.
I would not assume the British humble dignity to be guiding direction for interpretation in general, as the country has its fair share of pomp and circumstance, changing of guards and high drama. If Shakespeare has to be read with British humble dignity - imagine, you would fall asleep before you could throw your rotten tomatoes.
Cultural differences are so incredibly difficult. In my culture I can tell you, you hit my car and we have to fill forms for our insurances to sort things out - no drama; try that around the Mediterranean and responses there would be called "theatrical personality disorders in the sense of psychiatry" in my country.
Ravel walked out on a performance of his Bolero. He had written a "piece without music for a mechanical conductor." Another composer felt, after it is out there, published, I have no control over it.
As to the Russians, Rachmaninoff played all works of other composers in the Rachmaninoff way - some loved it, some hated it. I have been to piano recitals where a Russian pianist played flawlessly, banged the crap out (pardon this younger old man for adolescent language, it makes the point extremely clear) of a Steinway D to play Romantic music and showed no emotion at that. Russian literature is full of humor but in translation nobody understands it and with their poker faces I would not "get it" when they told it to me. From my limited cultural perspective.
Still, let's agree to disagree, you are entitled to your opinion, as long as you understand an appreciate that others, I, disagree in humble dignity. I'm not British, by the way - not partial to anything or anybody. Maybe the almost total absence of drama in my personal life in my culture of humble dignity calls for a bit more drama in these kinds of performances.
@@jpdj2715 I understand you, but, you now, I love historical recordings, so I have the 3 Naxos Cds devoted to Elgar conducting Elgar and the impression I get is that he conducted "Nimrod" as it wasn´t something special, the same with Richard Strauss and "Till Eulenspiegel", he simply stands in front of the Vienna Philharmonic and keep the tempo. Also Rachmaninov, I love his recording of his piano works, specially the 3rd, that almost any pianist start at very low and melodramatic tempo. No, he played very well articulated and with a fastest tempi. I believe that the latest romantic generation, wasn´t so romantic as we usually think. Also I'm 47, I'm uruguayan and we are described as grey and boring people, that's no true, we like colours, but we don´t like stridency, too much bright colours are not welcome, the same with food, our food is tasty but don´t expect to find highly spicy food.
@@pablov1973 Well as far as historical recordings go - the ones with Elgar are not accurate. Elgar played them faster because the pieces were being recorded on devices that had a _very_ limited amount of recording space.
❤🌸💮💛🍋💐🌼🇻🇦✝️🇻🇦🌼💛💐🪢🌿💮🌸📚📃🪅💒✒💮🪢🌻🎶🦁🍋🇲🇬🪢💮🌿🧸🌸💛💐🌼🍋🌸💛💐🌼🍋🎶❤😊🌻🇻🇦✝️🇻🇦⛑🙋♂️