XAVER VARNUS PLAYS BACH'S TOCCATA & FUGUE IN THE BERLINER DOM

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Комментарии • 15 тыс.

  • @DerClouder
    @DerClouder 8 месяцев назад +114

    Church organ is a fatanstic instrument i've had the pleasure to try out once in my life. Such an instrument the size of a house controlled by one human is a marvellous invention. When you sit there and control it, it feels like you can control the entire universe with the soundwaves the massive pipes emits. I am not a man of god, but i attend church occasionally just to hear the organist play.

    • @BeforeTheFIt_Vlogs
      @BeforeTheFIt_Vlogs 2 месяца назад +5

      There is absolutely nothing like a church organ. I got to play one for a brief period of time. I miss it so much.

    • @PaulTippit-kn1fj
      @PaulTippit-kn1fj 2 месяца назад +5

      God made those composers, the inventors and craftsmen who made the intruments the trees and minerals the instruments are made of the generations who paid for the building and intrments and supported the whole cosmic dance so we can sit with the ears He gave us in grateful awe and occasionally a tear in the eye at the shear beauty of it all. God loves us.

    • @nolenm3819
      @nolenm3819 Месяц назад +1

      the same for me. i'm not religious at all but i do go to church for the organ. i wish i could play. the sound of an organ is divine and soul touching wether it's in a church or a stadium. i do not think my love for the organ will ever die

    • @GuidoBatt
      @GuidoBatt Месяц назад +1

      @@nolenm3819 When you say you're not religious at all, and in the same sentence you say this music is divine and soul touching, you slip a truth that we all are religiuos, one way or another. It's just wired into our brains.

    • @sidecarbod1441
      @sidecarbod1441 4 дня назад

      @@PaulTippit-kn1fj He also made the fly that lays its eggs in the eyes of other animals, the maggot then proceeds to eat the eye. Oh what a wonderful god he/she is!

  • @Ladco77
    @Ladco77 2 года назад +7056

    It's nice to see an organist who understands they are not only playing the organ, but the entire building. His timing as the sound decays across the auditorium is impeccable.

    • @verumpraevaleat8177
      @verumpraevaleat8177 2 года назад

      oh how true. thats what these buildings were built for...resonance and frequency control. The church stole these buildings and repurposed them.

    • @mobuildsstuff
      @mobuildsstuff 2 года назад +328

      underrated observation. kudos for noticing

    • @gerardomoreno6704
      @gerardomoreno6704 2 года назад +148

      His timing is perfect.

    • @moriscoley5328
      @moriscoley5328 2 года назад +100

      Which adds amazing value to the piece of music and volumes to the audience listening 🎶 in TOTAL, ahh!!! Thank you,

    • @aldito7586
      @aldito7586 2 года назад +41

      Very well stated !

  • @muppit666
    @muppit666 11 месяцев назад +1096

    We were working in Rochester Cathedral during the renovation of their organ, and on completion of the renovation, I asked the head organist to play me a request. We don’t play roll over Beethoven in the cathedral he said. But when I said wanted Bachs Toccata and Fugue in D minor he looked a bit shocked. (I’m a 6’3” long haired biker). The following day we were up on the scaffold working away when that very distinct intro started and I quickly told the lads to stop what they were doing and listen. It was definitely a hair on the back of the neck and arms raising moment. Sounded brilliant and even the lads working with me had to agree that it was pretty good. A wonderful memory of what is one of my favourite tunes of all time.

    • @alicekuhnigk373
      @alicekuhnigk373 8 месяцев назад +30

      Was eine tolle Geschichte

    • @rogerwalter7097
      @rogerwalter7097 8 месяцев назад +11

      Great Job. Thx

    • @miguelcastaneda7257
      @miguelcastaneda7257 8 месяцев назад +19

      Very lucky you and them are one of lucky few to hear...feel and even the air of this being played and likewise scooter tramp and enjoyed playing rock but as child I learned classical music I wish I could have mastered this

    • @judyjohnson9610
      @judyjohnson9610 8 месяцев назад

      There's an interesting version done by a group on electric guitar. ruclips.net/video/wqgQ7IYhvRg/видео.html

    • @oj3888
      @oj3888 7 месяцев назад +24

      I was lucky enough to go to The King's School in Gloucester as a boy, and lucky enough to hear this played on the organ in Gloucester cathedral. I swear you can't hear the low notes, only feel them.

  • @BirkinIdk
    @BirkinIdk 8 месяцев назад +98

    MAN I wish I could've been there. How amazing that must've sounded in person.

  • @mongo6043
    @mongo6043 4 года назад +3724

    Can't imagine how wonderful it must have been to sit in that Cathedral and literally "FEEL" the music wash over you!

    • @lena-mariaglouis-charles7036
      @lena-mariaglouis-charles7036 4 года назад +104

      It doesn't only "wash over You", it pulsates right THROUGH You, too... and THAT is a most amazing and incredible experience...
      💙💛🌹💜🍎🇺🇸

    • @ReaperChild79
      @ReaperChild79 4 года назад +52

      That's the reason I sit by speakers at concerts. If my pulse isn't the song, it's too quiet.

    • @lena-mariaglouis-charles7036
      @lena-mariaglouis-charles7036 4 года назад +22

      @@ReaperChild79
      💕
      Yet, I dare say that sitting/standing next to the speakers (while at a concert at an outdoor venue...) is the next, best thing...
      Being up close to the stage (at an indoor concert...) or sitting/standing at ANY PLACE in a cathedral, brings You the ULTIMATE ear and body experience... The people that built the European cathedrals (and organs...) all those centuries ago, certainly knew their craft...
      (...and I feel truly Blessed to have had the ultimate experience on so many occasions...)
      💙💛🌹💜🍎🇺🇸

    • @janiv3987
      @janiv3987 4 года назад +5

      You should try wearable bass like Subpack M2

    • @unorthodox5171
      @unorthodox5171 4 года назад +12

      You will be converted.

  • @ImpendingJoker
    @ImpendingJoker 4 года назад +10672

    Let us take a moment to recognize that this beast of an organist not only played the whole thing flawlessly but he did so, without sheet music in front of him. Press 'X' to pay respects.

  • @knutholt3486
    @knutholt3486 5 лет назад +2335

    The organist plays in a way that fully utilizes the resonance in the room. This includes the long pauses which still are filled with sound.

    • @akritithegreat
      @akritithegreat 5 лет назад +79

      Exactly. I loved that too! This shows his understanding of the instrument and the sound it's capable of producing.

    • @VauxhallViva1975
      @VauxhallViva1975 4 года назад +13

      Now do Inna Gadda Da Vida....... ;)
      Joking aside, this performance is excellent. :)

    • @glared
      @glared 4 года назад +6

      Underrated comment. Absolutely overlooked.

    • @SimonCoates
      @SimonCoates 4 года назад +32

      So true. The organ and chamber is the whole instrument.

    • @dede4004
      @dede4004 4 года назад +18

      Absolutely! I love the pauses. The ressonance is so beautiful, and you can hear every note.

  • @MuhanuziMpesha
    @MuhanuziMpesha 8 месяцев назад +175

    He knows the music intimately. It is in his blood. Brilliant performance. Flawless.

    • @philhand5830
      @philhand5830 4 месяца назад +1

      On the order of Virgil Fox!!!

  • @douglasernst9477
    @douglasernst9477 2 года назад +1640

    For the second time in my life. Finally I have found a precise, beautiful and ( to my ear ) technically correct playing of Bach’s Toccata and Fugue in D Minor. Outstanding presentation. The hours of learning and practice he must have gone through are staggering. To play such an intricate piece by memory is awe inspiring as there was no sheet music in sight. A performance worthy of Bach himself.

    • @charlesroberts3650
      @charlesroberts3650 2 года назад +52

      I also noticed the no sheet music and marveled.

    • @QuantumRift
      @QuantumRift 2 года назад +17

      Then you must be talking about E. Power Biggs
      Plays Bach in the Thomaskirche, Columbia Masterworks M30648 (1971)

    • @merdasmerdas80
      @merdasmerdas80 2 года назад +19

      @dejuren yes, this. never understood "basic" instrument pieces that people stare the entire time at the sheet... after practicing a song 50, 100 , 200 times, even if its something very hard or very fast with a lot of in between notes, the first 50 times you need the sheet or tab, after that you just know what comes next, what the hands should do next without thinking it...

    • @andrew_ray
      @andrew_ray 2 года назад +12

      If it's too hard to sightread (and most complex keyboard music is for most musicians), the music won't do you much good anyways. Imagine reading out loud while speaking faster than you can read.

    • @robertalan2427
      @robertalan2427 Год назад +12

      How did this marvelous building survive the War?

  • @TheScoobyMix1
    @TheScoobyMix1 4 года назад +3948

    300 year old Heavy Metal. Bach was way ahead of the time.

    • @ciderman1950
      @ciderman1950 4 года назад +88

      Prog rock at it's best.

    • @trevorjameson3213
      @trevorjameson3213 4 года назад +184

      Oh yeah, Bach was centuries ahead of his time. In this piece alone, you can hear elements of just about every style of modern music composed and played today, including hard rock and metal. But that is because nearly all modern music takes elements from Bach’s compositions, especially this one.

    • @pigpotty
      @pigpotty 4 года назад +93

      Trevor Jameson yea when I hear mumble rap I’m like “ooh he borrowed from Toccata & Fugue right there”

    • @matthewgloberman3682
      @matthewgloberman3682 4 года назад +90

      WorstPianist , you would be incredibly surprised by how classically melodic some metal really is.

    • @matthewgloberman3682
      @matthewgloberman3682 4 года назад +18

      @@worstpianist3985 , check out Fleshgod Apocalypse's album Agony.

  • @macDaddy1118
    @macDaddy1118 Год назад +1701

    You dont even clap after hearing something like this in person. You just sit and thank god that your alive to hear and feel something so grand and majestic

    • @pnotuner1
      @pnotuner1 Год назад +70

      Well J.S. Bach dedicated every song he wrote to the glory of God.

    • @johnbaggus9966
      @johnbaggus9966 Год назад +16

      Superb comment 👋

    • @CORYJOHNM
      @CORYJOHNM Год назад +28

      I'm a little more cultured now from that comment.
      I would have stood up and applauded and yelled YEAHH WHOOO!
      But now that I've read this little thread an feel humble.

    • @mariasbarcea4465
      @mariasbarcea4465 Год назад +5

      Ce frumos!

    • @andreasadelheidwijgmans728
      @andreasadelheidwijgmans728 Год назад +6

      Amazing the performence with hand and feet and a lot more

  • @McCaileanMcNaughty
    @McCaileanMcNaughty 4 месяца назад +418

    You know a piece is played so good when:
    - Goosebumps
    - Wet eyes
    - Big smile

    • @CitizenAyellowblue
      @CitizenAyellowblue 3 месяца назад +11

      Well said! My reactions exactly.

    • @timeno1763
      @timeno1763 3 месяца назад +9

      And the foundations of the Earth resonate to the core.
      🎼🎵🎶🎹🔊🔊🔊🌐

    • @michaeltrower741
      @michaeltrower741 2 месяца назад +8

      ​​@@timeno1763and maybe even the planet stops rotating for a few minutes to catch its breath and pay its respect.

    • @redhedkev1
      @redhedkev1 2 месяца назад +4

      ...and silence...

    • @iangarbutt7451
      @iangarbutt7451 Месяц назад +1

      Seconded with Interest!! 🎶✨️🎵

  • @PVNICVTTVCK
    @PVNICVTTVCK Год назад +1083

    This is probably the most fascinating musical instrument of all time. The amount of keys, buttons, pipes… The sounds that come from it are beautiful, and the reverb from it in the buildings the organs are in… Absolutely brilliant invention. Lovely.

    • @Brasileiro222
      @Brasileiro222 Год назад +5

      Just today I had this thought. You wrote what I thought 👍

    • @mustangdude86
      @mustangdude86 Год назад +8

      Now try building them 😄

    • @dgphi
      @dgphi Год назад +21

      At one time they were the most complex machines in existence.

    • @j800r_aswell
      @j800r_aswell Год назад

      The buildings are part of the Organ. There are literally pipes everywhere.

    • @danko8983
      @danko8983 Год назад +9

      @@dgphi yep, until the Space Shuttle and LHC came into place

  • @mwh7022
    @mwh7022 3 года назад +589

    The first organist i have heard that listens to the acoustic delay of the hall in order to continue keys... well done Xaver

    • @jamsauce420
      @jamsauce420 3 года назад +4

      Fascinating! Didn't notice, so cool

    • @graham2631
      @graham2631 3 года назад +13

      I agree there are too many key pounders that don't grasp the concept that the entire building is the instrument. When one does the true potential of the instrument is realised.

    • @MALANGAENHANCED
      @MALANGAENHANCED 3 года назад +5

      Reverb

    • @mwh7022
      @mwh7022 3 года назад +3

      @@MALANGAENHANCED I refer to DELAY as merely the distinguishing perceptible return of the combination of a multitude of reflections from a single source to a point of listening (PRE-DELAY) resulting in what we overall call reverberation when it is a combination of many attributes. The acoustic sound perceived would possibly appear to differ within a few metres of a particular standing location. Either way, the phenomenon attributed to the sound source and the acoustics in question works pretty well, would you not agree? Also the performance is pretty good too.... :-). Good call to the sound engineer (s).

  • @ringding1000
    @ringding1000 5 лет назад +1476

    The silence of his pauses are made as important as each note. Truly a masterful rendition

    • @reggielongoria1848
      @reggielongoria1848 5 лет назад +6

      Indeed sir.

    • @milztempelrowski9281
      @milztempelrowski9281 5 лет назад +21

      silence is in this case awesome dome-reverb, so yeah definitely

    • @jal5240
      @jal5240 5 лет назад +8

      Indeed Sir, you are right. Perfect tempo and pauses !

    • @sethneumeyer1167
      @sethneumeyer1167 5 лет назад +1

      -Chopin

    • @RedOrm68
      @RedOrm68 5 лет назад +15

      @Aeryn Sun also, the notes before and after transitions would have gotten muddled, if he hadn't. This organist obviously knows the acoustics of the cathedral of Berlin well.

  • @samworlock1987
    @samworlock1987 Месяц назад +32

    The silence between notes is so much more important than people think and this guy nailed that

  • @RandomDuude
    @RandomDuude 4 года назад +6965

    "I play a guitar"
    "I PLAY A BUILDING"

    • @trkk7047
      @trkk7047 4 года назад +100

      i play your mother

    • @edmardisla8492
      @edmardisla8492 4 года назад +231

      @@trkk7047 you played yourself.

    • @richardclay
      @richardclay 4 года назад +93

      That is easily the funniest comment I've ever seen on this thing! Thanks for the laugh.

    • @tampawoodworks280
      @tampawoodworks280 4 года назад +17

      🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @poblanomanu2b
      @poblanomanu2b 4 года назад +20

      ... biggest LOL this month ... !

  • @jimlaguardia8185
    @jimlaguardia8185 5 лет назад +435

    Bach would have been so happy that we, 400 years later, appreciate his magnificent creations. Thank you, Herr Bach.

    • @FoxyBoxery
      @FoxyBoxery 4 года назад +10

      Dude deserves it tho

    • @JOECANDELA22
      @JOECANDELA22 4 года назад +11

      The scary thing is most people don't even know its Bach. They probably think some Hollywood composer created it for the movies. Haunting and powerful.

    • @z3my4l
      @z3my4l 4 года назад +10

      Yes, exactly. And what about the future, after 400 years into the future, around year 2400, shall they listen to this or ”Oops, I did it again”?

    • @lolmanboss
      @lolmanboss 4 года назад +10

      Many great musicians came from Austria and germany. and bach is one that will be in history books for as long as humanity exists

    • @richardclay
      @richardclay 4 года назад +6

      How much of 21st-century music will be around in 400-years? "0."

  • @steak7654321
    @steak7654321 5 лет назад +920

    I was in that church during midnight mass on Christmas eve. That organ hits you right in the chest. What an experience

    • @grenpier
      @grenpier 5 лет назад +7

      Adam Smith awesome !!

    • @harryareola3656
      @harryareola3656 5 лет назад +58

      That's why it's called an organ, it's healing your organs.

    • @antoniorios8284
      @antoniorios8284 5 лет назад +11

      16hz of organ power!!!!!!!

    • @LargeMuscularTitties
      @LargeMuscularTitties 5 лет назад +4

      This really doesnt give off a very churchy Christmas vibe if I'm honest

    • @simonbertsch2571
      @simonbertsch2571 5 лет назад +12

      @@LargeMuscularTitties he really meant he was in his hilltop castle on halloween and he got a wooden stake in the chest

  • @tomtalker2000
    @tomtalker2000 7 месяцев назад +18

    The reverb is absolutely SUPERB...!!! My mom and my favorite instrument. Nothing like a large pipe organ opened up fully like this. We sung in many chamber choirs together in various cathedrals. And it just gives you goosebumps folks.

  • @stormybear4986
    @stormybear4986 4 года назад +643

    As a classical pianist I have the greatest admiration for someone who can play 4-part counterpoint a la JS Bach with both hands and both feet simultaneously.

    • @randombeats8452
      @randombeats8452 4 года назад +20

      And no music sheet apparently

    • @looseele
      @looseele 4 года назад +28

      As a drummer, we call that “limb independence”. When you fall into an independent syncopation it makes it sound like you have eight arms.

    • @Shaden0040
      @Shaden0040 4 года назад +4

      Also note he is playing it without SHEET MUSIC!

    • @stormybear4986
      @stormybear4986 4 года назад +9

      @Andy MacKay Clearly Xaver has a great natural talent, but I'm sure he would agree that greater still was the phenomenal mind that composed this masterwork.

    • @nerysghemor5781
      @nerysghemor5781 4 года назад +12

      What is even more amazing to me about Bach’s music is how it’s not just a melody on top of some chords: I can see two or more melodies running independently and weaving in and out of each other yet complementing each other so well! It’s like the chords just *happen* out of those concurrent melodies.
      I can almost always tell new Bach music I have never heard before, by seeing all those independent melodies working together. I never see it to THAT degree with Handel or other composers of his time.
      I have synesthesia, which makes it VERY difficult for me to master sheet music. Is what I am seeing the counterpoint I always hear so much about with Bach?

  • @sfpeter
    @sfpeter Год назад +690

    The natural echo in this cathedral is insane, and masterfully played.

    • @pepsisinalco
      @pepsisinalco Год назад +1

      natural?

    • @ВераЗахарова-ы1й
      @ВераЗахарова-ы1й 11 месяцев назад +9

      Музыка мира и добра и счастья.Пусть закончится война Пусть люди приходят на чужую землю только с подарками.а не с оружием и на танках.Мир в вашей душе

    • @littletweeter1327
      @littletweeter1327 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@pepsisinalco yes, natural. this cathedral in berlin is massive.

    • @germanCrowbar
      @germanCrowbar 9 месяцев назад +3

      @littletweeter1327
      I don't think he understood what was really meant by that.

    • @SzakacsCsabaLevente18
      @SzakacsCsabaLevente18 6 месяцев назад

      @@pepsisinalcoEcho can be altered as per se, though this eco only basses off of the walls in the Cathedral which is the default.

  • @danad4930
    @danad4930 3 года назад +1997

    Best performance of this Bach piece I’ve heard in my long life. What pushes it over the top is Xavier’s awareness of the acoustical environment of the church and allowing the reverberations to play out before continuing. Totally brilliant!

    • @MrStevemyname
      @MrStevemyname 3 года назад +42

      I 100 percent agree.... I couldn't work out why it sounded so good! Totally brilliant!

    • @Jc-m1a1
      @Jc-m1a1 3 года назад +39

      spot on he reads the room literally

    • @torqueperformancemot
      @torqueperformancemot 3 года назад +14

      Sounds absolutely brilliant

    • @amigodaverdade4448
      @amigodaverdade4448 3 года назад +17

      Right! But his name is XAVER, not 'Xavier'.

    • @mauriziosorelli9566
      @mauriziosorelli9566 3 года назад +1

      And this work is not by Bach. See Wikipedia

  • @Swecan76
    @Swecan76 3 месяца назад +181

    There is no greater instrument ever conceived and built than the pipe organ. Hundreds of pipes, some over 60 feet in length, it's an entire orchestra in one instrument. There is also no greater music than classical music. The complexities and sheer magnificence.

    • @Just_A_Dude
      @Just_A_Dude 3 месяца назад +11

      Also brought us the phrase "pull out all the stops."
      There truly is no more glorious experience than a proper organ going full tutti.

    • @patbullard9276
      @patbullard9276 2 месяца назад +2

      But do you know Boogie Woogie?

    • @janjohnson9746
      @janjohnson9746 2 месяца назад

      The mighty pneumatic synthesizer. First record I ever bought. E.Power Biggs.

    • @marciaspiegel5280
      @marciaspiegel5280 Месяц назад

      Agreed.

    • @amzarnacht6710
      @amzarnacht6710 Месяц назад +1

      They should do the same thing... with clarion bells. The BIG ones. Combine a few dozen of those with japanese drums and a pipe organ to play an entire *city*.

  • @samuelcrandall1180
    @samuelcrandall1180 4 года назад +881

    Can we just take a minute to appreciate how cool the name "Xaver Varnus" sounds.

    • @Diana-gv1lb
      @Diana-gv1lb 4 года назад

      Gigout toccata
      ruclips.net/video/EFsNwRIt5cg/видео.html

    • @ZurSacheBitte
      @ZurSacheBitte 4 года назад +27

      Prof. X. Xaver Varnus... alias Dr. Octavus.

    • @Benginator1
      @Benginator1 4 года назад +7

      Lol yeah, and the music couldn’t be a better fit. It’s almost too perfect

    • @karengraeme6273
      @karengraeme6273 3 года назад +14

      He looks like Boris John'son

    • @kevinw.8240
      @kevinw.8240 3 года назад +3

      Very star warsy name

  • @Vugen18
    @Vugen18 2 года назад +385

    Truly a master who understands that sound comes from the silence between notes.

    • @boldisorstefan9020
      @boldisorstefan9020 Год назад +5

      Not the sound, but the music!

    • @smashdiz
      @smashdiz Год назад +6

      This exactly I’m down a rabbit hole wanting to listen to this song but all others play it to fast, it’s the stuff in between, it’s the drama,it’s the feeling.

    • @josephwood499
      @josephwood499 Год назад +2

      I heard once a musician saying that silence is also part of music. So true

  • @TheMrFarkle
    @TheMrFarkle 4 года назад +2409

    Unusually clean and intelligible performance, not the usual "see how rapidly I can play".

    • @nendo4344
      @nendo4344 4 года назад +188

      TheMrFarkle the difference between showing off and caring about the beauty of the music

    • @herseem
      @herseem 4 года назад +132

      I completely agree. Slow and majestically gothic, laden with foreboding, works best for this piece, especially with the long revert times.

    • @lorenzoboyd6889
      @lorenzoboyd6889 4 года назад +50

      Yes! I really appreciate the calm, deliberate phrasing.
      As God intended.

    • @skay9443
      @skay9443 4 года назад +53

      Very true, but worth considering the performance and the type of instrument. I learnt to play this on a one hundred and fifty-odd year old organ that originally had hand bellows. As my teacher put it, your bellows boys would have rioted had you tried to play that fast and with that many stops out at once. Slow down and enjoy the music and nuance. Seeing as you could hear the mechanical/electrical bellows working hard if you tried to go flat out, I can only imagine how impossible it would have been to keep up with. I still believe you should let the majesty of the music and the organ tell the story, not your technical skill ;)

    • @JanBinnendijk
      @JanBinnendijk 4 года назад +11

      I Agree, most "versions" are just over 10 minutes..

  • @eyhussain
    @eyhussain 7 месяцев назад +50

    This performance undoes the damage that pop culture has inflicted upon this piece. This work is pure poetry and this organist speaks Bach's poetry like a master poet. This is how the piece is supposed to sound. I've been listening to this over and over again. It's so well played.

  • @ParaFoxxen
    @ParaFoxxen Год назад +535

    This man knows and has the smoothness and the understanding of how an organ works - that it’s not just the sound from the pipes but the whole reverberation, reflection of the church itself needs to be respected!

    • @MichaelKingsfordGray
      @MichaelKingsfordGray 11 месяцев назад

      James Bond knew how an organ worked.

    • @tjguzik
      @tjguzik 10 месяцев назад +3

      he is a craftsman, not an artist
      has instructions and follows these instructions, without going beyond what was written
      his expression does not show any feelings - he knows his profession and does it
      the only thing he is good at is acting - but there is no spark in him...
      I have seen and heard many toccata and fugue performances - this one is correct according to the notation, the sound is good - but it lacks one, most important thing - the feeling...
      organs are very sensitive to feelings, if you don't show them to them - they will only be a tool, not an instrument

    • @ncard00
      @ncard00 9 месяцев назад +1

      I really don't like this piece not staying in minor the whole way through, or at least a minor sound, and I really don't like this piece in general, it's all over the place, and doesn't have a reocurring melody that you can remember and sing afterwards.

    • @Ale55andr082
      @Ale55andr082 8 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@tjguzik it lacks one, most important thing - the feeling...
      speak on your behalf, thanks.

    • @tjguzik
      @tjguzik 8 месяцев назад

      @@Ale55andr082 Did I hurt someone's feelings?
      and since when do feelings become corporeal and bleed?
      If your feelings are bleeding, see a psychiatrist because you have serious mental problems
      I said what I thought - and I don't give a damn about your political correctness - I'm telling the truth as it is - not sweet words: ""how beautiful it is, what a great game""
      he doesn't play great, he's an asshole and not a musician, my 15-year-old son can do better
      and now take me to court - but your political correctness doesn't work in my country...

  • @sonopro1
    @sonopro1 3 года назад +693

    Let it breathe, let it breathe. This organist respects the instrument in its acoustic environment, which has always been an integral part of the instrument, as it is supposed to be.
    And most importantly, let the Master J.S. Bach breathe. Wonderful ! Wonderful !

    • @mariaasunciongrandes1940
      @mariaasunciongrandes1940 3 года назад +8

      Excelente interpretacion...
      Imponente templo.

    • @mogwai2884
      @mogwai2884 3 года назад +4

      I have no understanding of pipe music, but some how understand that you have to let tubes breathe. i.e escaspe of air and new input of air. Amazing.

    • @EwicoCylinder
      @EwicoCylinder 3 года назад +4

      @@mogwai2884 An Organ Pipe does take to speak much longer than a piano string and also as it bigger it get's with the base pipes (up to 9 Meters), the longer they will take to speak. So for that an organ should be always played with much slower tempi than a piano and a great Organ Master (like Varnus) takes use of it and also respects it acustically.

    • @ИвановИван-р5у6г
      @ИвановИван-р5у6г 3 года назад +1

      Создать такой инструмент!!!!и создать такую музыку!!!!!!

    • @maj-lenaskagerlund3118
      @maj-lenaskagerlund3118 3 года назад +3

      Well said. As a professional organist I agree with every word.
      You have to work w i t h the acoustics -, not a g a i n s t it !

  • @DarthBane22
    @DarthBane22 Год назад +580

    Thank you for taking your time to let the organ breath. So many artists just rush through this piece.

    • @trainliker100
      @trainliker100 Год назад +25

      A little bit into the piece I was thinking he did some things too slow and had excessive pauses. And then I started to figure out what he was doing considering the acoustics he was dealing with.

    • @sibtainhaider2411
      @sibtainhaider2411 Год назад +34

      ​@@trainliker100The pause seem longer in recording. But when you are in that hall, the continuous flow is Mind Blowing.

    • @trainliker100
      @trainliker100 Год назад +14

      @@sibtainhaider2411 Yes. That's what I figured out at some point. I have been in a large venue with a pipe organ and have never heard a recording really capture the experience. Combine that with tiny tinny little speakers in a computer monitor and the sound is worse yet. Somehow, I think our brains make up for some of the shortcomings of the actual sound from crummy speakers because we know what things are supposed to sound like from experience. And our brain improves upon the limitations of a very limited "sound" system.

    • @carmenlegorretag.9997
      @carmenlegorretag.9997 10 месяцев назад +1

      I like it.

    • @robertosusa672
      @robertosusa672 10 месяцев назад +2

      Super performance

  • @CribNotes
    @CribNotes 2 месяца назад +27

    Best rendition of this masterpiece I've heard. He's not just playing the pipe organ. He's playing the sound the of the entire building!

    • @janjohnson9746
      @janjohnson9746 Месяц назад

      Cathedral acoustics play a big part. It wouldn't be the same outside.

  • @Rockgi59
    @Rockgi59 4 года назад +511

    The pipe organ is the best music instrument ever made.
    Listen to it live is an amazing experience, music surrounds you from everywhere.
    The bass frequencies make your stomach vibrating.
    Awesome.

    • @hugebartlett1884
      @hugebartlett1884 4 года назад +28

      The pipe organ produces a sound like the very centre of the earth in motion. The galaxies form to this sound,and the human psyche responds beyond understanding to the resonating vibration of creation.

    • @jeanmariezeyen111
      @jeanmariezeyen111 4 года назад +9

      stomach vibrating is the word ! but i have that feeling also, when i hear a hammond B3 with leslie :-) (i mean, the real beast, not its digital opponents)

    • @chrisshotwell4442
      @chrisshotwell4442 4 года назад +8

      Agreed! I had the pleasure of hearing this played in a church in Florence years ago and I still think about that experience!

    • @richardclay
      @richardclay 4 года назад +10

      If you want to be an entire symphony orchestra, the pipe organ lets you be that orchestra.

    • @cc-ic7rj
      @cc-ic7rj 4 года назад +3

      That's actually what got me into this in the first place visiting as a tourest Winchester cathedral one day .....it just happens to have a guy playing I dont think it was really a recital but he played Widors docata in Dm and it just blew me away there sheer majesty and resonance of those notes going through my body was out of this world experience! !!

  • @zneufeld
    @zneufeld 5 лет назад +3364

    I am an organist, and this is the only performance of this piece that made me cry. He plays the music as it asks, without any personal ego or flashiness. Amazing.

    • @1988josip
      @1988josip 5 лет назад +11

      You have 1 more version of 19 year old prodigy...which was imho even better

    • @660reliant
      @660reliant 5 лет назад +1

      Have you ever heard disc? ruclips.net/video/fmZMR97cIPY/видео.html

    • @ghostwreckeriii6074
      @ghostwreckeriii6074 5 лет назад +40

      He played it like a masterpiece should be... In Strenght

    • @демкен
      @демкен 5 лет назад +52

      agree 1000x1000 ... it's a gift to bach (and to us) and not to himself

    • @SheepdogSmokey
      @SheepdogSmokey 5 лет назад +24

      As the piece needs, just music for the beauty of it.

  • @jasonjmarchi
    @jasonjmarchi 4 года назад +512

    This is the most perfect tempo for this piece. Superior pauses and sustained chords to drive the emotion to its fullest. Bravo! Bravo! Bravo! Mr. Varnus!

    • @petersilie3431
      @petersilie3431 4 года назад +15

      I thought the same. Many others don't have the feeling for the right pauses. Never listened to a better interpretation that this of Varnus.

    • @kangarookicker6995
      @kangarookicker6995 4 года назад +4

      @Emily Evans it’s insane how big the Berliner dom is.

    • @mqbitsko25
      @mqbitsko25 3 года назад +9

      The long pauses are to let the echoes die down, but I agree it works for this piece.

    • @timtarzier
      @timtarzier 3 года назад +11

      Its all about the sound decay and his pauses take into account the decay. Best interpretation I've heard

    • @fmphotooffice5513
      @fmphotooffice5513 3 года назад +7

      Yes yes yes!!! So many contemporary performances and recordings are rushed for no good reason.

  • @diras2010
    @diras2010 4 месяца назад +194

    This masterpiece is meant to be played like that, taking in account the reverberation and acoustics of the place, every pause meant to make the notes be "felt" by the audience, rather than only listening to it, the tempo was superb, and indeed as someone else said, a masterpiece of this caliber, you just don't applaud like a fool at the end, you let the music fill you, shake you to the core, you experience it, and be be glad to the God Almighty who put Bach in this terrenal place to giving us a glimpse of the greatness that humanity can achieve

    • @Patracat
      @Patracat 4 месяца назад +14

      Beautiful post, you said it all. Thank you❤

    • @davescott93
      @davescott93 3 месяца назад +9

      Excellently put

    • @vampyros1
      @vampyros1 2 месяца назад +1

      A horrid, boring piece of cacophony by Bach... played well, but so what.

  • @SternDrive
    @SternDrive 5 лет назад +164

    This was by far the slowest Toccata and Fugue in D that I have ever heard. Just the way it is supposed to be in a huge hall like this. Bravo.

    • @EdnaVoyles
      @EdnaVoyles Месяц назад +1

      Have to listen everyday to bach will never be another genius as great as him

  • @mfiorito5550
    @mfiorito5550 2 года назад +941

    He lets the notes play out before beginning again. I love this, while many others play this way too fast.

    • @jamesglass5402
      @jamesglass5402 2 года назад +23

      Yes, it is played far too quickly by so many.

    • @lanceortega1
      @lanceortega1 Год назад +26

      Yes. That way he presents the dignity of this music and therefore, in result, he deserves our respect and our appreciation.

    • @GentleMelodies
      @GentleMelodies Год назад +8

      Да,вы правы! Я посмотрела до этого несколько исполнителей и по первым тактам понимала,это не моё! Как печатная машинка! Звук обрывается сразу же без продолжения! А здесь ноты ЗВУЧАТ и уходят в бесконечность! BRAVO , MAESTRO!!!

    • @Nepafarius
      @Nepafarius Год назад +8

      The melody around 1:40 always sounded off to me in other renditions.
      To hear it slowed down has further made me appreciate the rest of the piece as it was intended

    • @noravanwyk5460
      @noravanwyk5460 Год назад +2

      Perfectly agree.

  • @gregmartin1615
    @gregmartin1615 5 лет назад +510

    so wonderful to hear someone playing this extraordinary music without hurrying through it

    • @marcodaz1173
      @marcodaz1173 5 лет назад +5

      Yeah, but maybe a bit too slow ...

    • @devox3291
      @devox3291 5 лет назад +14

      THANK YOU,! For finally stating the obvious. I'm amazed that thru the years, everyone rushes this incredible piece of music and there's no outcry but only from a few. I feel like this performance IS the way it's meant to be played

    • @paulkocyla1343
      @paulkocyla1343 5 лет назад

      I hope that´s just subtle irony. Fuga means "escape" :-D

    • @LikaLaruku
      @LikaLaruku 5 лет назад

      I know! I really hate it when people play it fast like a speed run. 9 minutes is short, 11 is perfect, 7 is not even worth listening to.

    • @bckm54
      @bckm54 5 лет назад

      @@marcodaz1173 I like how you said "maybe"... :)

  • @bwmcelya
    @bwmcelya 3 месяца назад +66

    The “Fugue” is the greatest piece of organ music ever written. Varnus plays it exceptionally well. Thanks to whomever recorded this.

  • @jamesmarch9570
    @jamesmarch9570 2 года назад +889

    I love the way he makes the notes finish in the pipes before moving on to another part. A LOT of pipe organists don't do this. When so, it sounds so garbled up. Lower notes take longer to go through pipes than higher notes do. Notice when he went through the high notes, he breezed right through them. But the lower notes, he recognized he had to slow down, and Bach knew this, as this was meant for a pipe organ back in the 1600's, and still make the illusion that this was still an adagio fugue

    • @AndrewBlucher
      @AndrewBlucher 2 года назад +46

      Hi James. I think you are referring to the Decay Rate of the room the organ is in. The decay rate of cathedrals is why music written for them is so slow. Not only does the organ sound great, the voices sound amplified by the reverberation.
      Enjoy.
      This is my favourite Bach piece.

    • @jamesmarch9570
      @jamesmarch9570 2 года назад +13

      @@AndrewBlucher Hey, thank you! I couldn't remember the name of the process!

    • @moriscoley5328
      @moriscoley5328 2 года назад +27

      Because he's a master of his instrument and has been doing it and doing it for years. I am sure that Bach is smiling from the Heavens in the way that this man plays His majestic tune ✨️ ❤️. 🙏

    • @rickkoehnlein4629
      @rickkoehnlein4629 2 года назад +5

      Great

    • @aldito7586
      @aldito7586 2 года назад +5

      You speak something very true. The lower notes should always be spoken a little more slowly and just a little more softly to make the song sound a little better.

  • @wam44
    @wam44 2 года назад +364

    The way he pauses and lets the decay of the sound resonate through the space is sublime. I could listen to this all night...

    • @cjmartinez8318
      @cjmartinez8318 2 года назад +2

      It gives a powerful flow, thats why I liked this guy.

    • @wam44
      @wam44 2 года назад +3

      @@cjmartinez8318 Yes, an amazing performance and unequaled in my limited experience...

    • @theRealDavidn
      @theRealDavidn 8 месяцев назад +2

      He is exceptional. The pauses are almost playful. They fully let the listener savour each stanza. An absolutely masterful rendition of a great piece. The composer and the organ builder would be deeply pleased with the way he has brought both to life

  • @rockysmusicandart1250
    @rockysmusicandart1250 4 года назад +654

    I like his phrasing - he allows for the reverb to die away - the piece seems to breathe.

    • @TranceEmotion
      @TranceEmotion 4 года назад +42

      Aye playing this song in such a large space with such a large organ you need to pause to allow the sound to bleed out. Most people play the song far to fast and sounds overlap each other. This is probably the best rendition of this song ive heard.

    • @Ktulu789
      @Ktulu789 4 года назад +9

      Maybe you need to pause also to allow for the pressure to rebuild.
      Anyway, I agree that this rendition is awesome, nevertheless.

    • @drsteele4749
      @drsteele4749 4 года назад +6

      I think he phrased it this way because the building has reverb. He is a very great talent. Check out this other vid, a crisper performance: ruclips.net/video/Nnuq9PXbywA/видео.html

    • @CockySoupNazi
      @CockySoupNazi 4 года назад +4

      I noticed that too, he let the reverberation ring out and fade, beautiful.

    • @MrShortygeorge
      @MrShortygeorge 4 года назад +3

      Yes. Brilliant young man with God's gift.

  • @erwansilvain2761
    @erwansilvain2761 9 месяцев назад +44

    he manages to not only remember toccata but the entire fugue which is very long for a memory only play

  • @fmg5301
    @fmg5301 3 года назад +370

    In case nobody else mentions it, I'd like to commend the outstanding work of the recording crew.

    • @abelpickersgill3884
      @abelpickersgill3884 2 года назад +18

      Yes! Im really curious what mics and what placements they used. It really captures the low end well. I love that you can hear the building too! You get a bit of an idea about how it sounds, from the echoes and reverb and whatnot! I find lots of youtube clips dont give you that

    • @xochitlxochipa4965
      @xochitlxochipa4965 2 года назад +13

      The whole editing of the vídeo is remarkably well done !

    • @seekingfinding6204
      @seekingfinding6204 2 года назад +1

      Thanks, it really does sound great, and pipe organs are hard to do right.

  • @pas5294
    @pas5294 5 лет назад +13909

    I wanna buy a castle in the middle of nowhere and play this tune while its thundering outside

    • @ambarghosh7433
      @ambarghosh7433 5 лет назад +474

      Full on Addams family vibes bro.

    • @desertfox2403
      @desertfox2403 5 лет назад +454

      I always imagined doing that but building a castle in some remote part of Alaska. Play it during a snow storm with the windows open. FILL THE STORM WITH THE MUSIC!

    • @eringray1176
      @eringray1176 5 лет назад +67

      Straight up

    • @roberthaney4106
      @roberthaney4106 5 лет назад +61

      Amen

    • @LXIXXX
      @LXIXXX 5 лет назад +575

      While laughing maniacally.

  • @majestic-ui7qe
    @majestic-ui7qe 4 года назад +82

    And this is why my dear dad loved the organ. I hope there's a Bach pipe organ wherever you are Dad. I miss you...

    • @Bananaguy7
      @Bananaguy7 4 года назад +7

      Who knows, he may even be listening to Bach himself play...

    • @majestic-ui7qe
      @majestic-ui7qe 4 года назад +5

      @@Bananaguy7 I really hope he is.

    • @uGuguTshabalala
      @uGuguTshabalala 4 года назад +4

      ❤️💐

    • @AgeofReason
      @AgeofReason 4 года назад +1

      @@majestic-ui7qe The hardest part of missing dad is being Dad.

    • @catherinesinclair7727
      @catherinesinclair7727 4 года назад +1

      @@AgeofReason ❤

  • @lauralake7430
    @lauralake7430 3 месяца назад +34

    We are all blessed that this magnificent instrument survived two wars. It is a beautiful thing. May it always play in peace.

    • @greg-warsaw4708
      @greg-warsaw4708 2 месяца назад

      I don't think Berlin suffered badly during WW1.

    • @redhedkev1
      @redhedkev1 2 месяца назад

      I thought about that too.

  • @keithshayle123
    @keithshayle123 3 года назад +451

    Bach's masterpiece, performed by an absolute master of his craft, on a beautiful instrument in an equally beautiful building! For a change an all too rare example of how humanity is capable of absolute brilliance.

    • @owo5869
      @owo5869 3 года назад +3

      Without sheets !!!

    • @steveortega6105
      @steveortega6105 3 года назад +3

      He is a musical genius in my humblest opinion.

    • @Classic_Electrics
      @Classic_Electrics 3 года назад +2

      Both Bach and Varnus, for me!

    • @lamegame420
      @lamegame420 3 года назад +2

      The building is the instrument, just like the body of a guitar.

    • @chloeadams8703
      @chloeadams8703 3 года назад +4

      God's creation.

  • @johnnyfin8603
    @johnnyfin8603 4 года назад +2119

    What instrument do you play?
    - A church

    • @reymichaelsungazornosa4040
      @reymichaelsungazornosa4040 4 года назад +12

      the pope probably

    • @BillAnt
      @BillAnt 4 года назад +21

      At 11:25 he's playing a Sig Sauer. ;) They also make high quality guns.

    • @Auberge79
      @Auberge79 4 года назад +41

      Actually, yes. The way he plays is considering all the echoes and acoustics of the church itself.
      Great performance! Simply amazing.

    • @alexpearson8481
      @alexpearson8481 4 года назад +7

      Ok. That’s funny. Where do you guys dream up these funny comments?

    • @Auberge79
      @Auberge79 4 года назад +5

      @@alexpearson8481 just out of mind :-)

  • @littletweeter1327
    @littletweeter1327 2 года назад +458

    hearing this organ echoing in berlin was life changing. you can hear it from outside and you feel the sound throughout your body when youre inside.

    • @randompeople4559
      @randompeople4559 Год назад +8

      Blue Lobster

    • @jimnichols1066
      @jimnichols1066 Год назад +3

      Just remember what the Russians did to this place in 1945.

    • @777hathor
      @777hathor Год назад +1

      Love to experience this ❤ 🇦🇺

    • @johnrhodes3350
      @johnrhodes3350 Год назад

      ​@@jimnichols1066 Soviets!
      Even a whole nation of people can transcend a satanically inspired mass psychosis. The russian soul is fundamentally and in diametric opposition to your limited impression.

    • @johnrhodes3350
      @johnrhodes3350 Год назад +3

      ​@@jimnichols1066 take a look at how the Post Postmodern Russia has rebuilt, amongst many others - The Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, Moscow.

  • @TheMrFarkle
    @TheMrFarkle 9 месяцев назад +27

    From what I've read, this performance may well be as Bach intended it be played, with clarity of every note. Bach was a master performer.

  • @TheHeartlessAlchemist
    @TheHeartlessAlchemist Год назад +379

    Bach has died 273 years ago, but he was such an amazing genius that the music he composed is still remembered and revered to this day. And Xaver is such an incredible organ player. His interpretation of Toccata & Fugue is absolutely beautiful and awe inspiring. I love classic music!

    • @TheTrueAdept
      @TheTrueAdept Год назад +16

      Funnily enough, the only reason that J.S. Bach is even known is because of one of his fans who went around Europe, finding every Bach piece he could find...
      ... and he still didn't find all of them.

    • @ClarenceCochran-ne7du
      @ClarenceCochran-ne7du 10 месяцев назад +11

      If it hadn't of been for Felix Mendelssohn, Bach's masterpieces would likely have languished ina dusty conservatory cabinet. He single handedly started the Bach Revival in 1829 with a masterful performance of Bach's Passion According To St. Matthew. It received such critical claim, that it started a movement which has continued to this day.
      Thank you Lord for Maestro's Bach and Mendelssohn.

    • @spmoran4703
      @spmoran4703 10 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@ClarenceCochran-ne7duLet's face it , they are both genius

    • @DjMicr0dot
      @DjMicr0dot 8 месяцев назад +1

      i thought tocatta de fugue Dm was older than bach tho?

    • @brandonechols
      @brandonechols 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@DjMicr0dot Nope! It's actually one of Bach's most famous pieces.

  • @alanf.9490
    @alanf.9490 2 года назад +61

    Thank Heaven for the organ builder and those who have preserved it over the centuries for us today!

  • @charlesrussell1764
    @charlesrussell1764 4 года назад +228

    Probably the greatest piece of music ever written ......and for the greatest musical instrument ever created.

    • @gregersnielsen2797
      @gregersnielsen2797 3 года назад +6

      And the greatest organist in the world.

    • @charlesrussell1764
      @charlesrussell1764 3 года назад +8

      @@gregersnielsen2797 Can you imagine what it must feel like to play this incredible instrument? The amount of dedication is staggering.

    • @philgray1023
      @philgray1023 3 года назад +5

      Well I can assure you that it sounds shit on a Kazoo.

    • @charlesrussell1764
      @charlesrussell1764 3 года назад +2

      @@philgray1023 I don't think I would like to try, the comb and paper presented an insurmountable problem, I couldn't get a comb tuned to G.

    • @povertyspec9651
      @povertyspec9651 3 года назад +2

      Beethoven's 9th is #1

  • @АлександрВалиев-м2щ
    @АлександрВалиев-м2щ 10 месяцев назад +50

    This is not just a performance of the greatest work by the greatest composer. These sounds convey a true understanding of Bach's music with all its meanings. Indeed, it is true that this performance is one of the most authentic and correct in meaning. BRAVO, Maestro!

    • @jorgeedesiothaiss9650
      @jorgeedesiothaiss9650 10 месяцев назад +2

      Por mais que possam aparecer instrumentos com tecnologia moderna, esta harmonia de acordes é algo *insuperável* . MÚSICA, é DEUS falando através de *dedos* obedientes ao seu comando. MÚSICA, é uma verdadeira *VIAGEM* a um *MUNDO ANGELICAL*. Quem duvidar, feche os olhos e se deixe conduzir pelos *ANJOS DE DEUS* a esse *PLANO SUPERIOR*.

    • @konst1887
      @konst1887 10 месяцев назад

      What does this even mean? It’s not truly authentic to play a baroque piece on an organ that is build in the in the early 20th century. Neither the intonation of the pipes nor the temperament is anything that Bach had in his time. Even the video description says that it’s edited by Mendelssohn.

  • @juliomunoz6468
    @juliomunoz6468 5 лет назад +3328

    "He had no notes to read, I have no words to say." (No, I don't mean I'm impressed that he had no sheets, I'm just expressing my awe of his performance!)

    • @TroisLuma
      @TroisLuma 5 лет назад +33

      I was in awe also...

    • @Hoosirdaddy
      @Hoosirdaddy 5 лет назад +8

      Thats right

    • @Masterfighterx
      @Masterfighterx 5 лет назад +62

      Memory..

    • @Maxumized
      @Maxumized 5 лет назад +8

      Zyx I’d like to spill an open box of matches on the ground next to him

    • @hollohullu9448
      @hollohullu9448 5 лет назад +47

      I mean i wouldn't say it's the amazing that he knows a piece of music by heart

  • @bobkonradi1027
    @bobkonradi1027 2 года назад +1116

    All serious pipe organists should be required to watch this video several, many times. There are "mechanics" and there are "artists" sitting at the keyboards, and 99% of them play this piece as though they are "mechanics." They follow the notes, but they just play one note after the other. Xaver Varnus is a Grade A artist. He interjects pauses at strategic intervals. He allows the venue's acoustics to participate in the presentation. He individualizes Bach as I've never heard anyone do it before.

    • @luisdonayrespillpe777
      @luisdonayrespillpe777 2 года назад +4

      De acuerdo,ese sonido entre celestial y tenebroso

    • @Crogon
      @Crogon 2 года назад +21

      I believe that that's called adding character to the piece. Actually, I recall that there's another orchestral term for it, but I can't quite recall it.

    • @amarissimus29
      @amarissimus29 2 года назад +18

      @@Crogon Voicing.

    • @lisbethbird8268
      @lisbethbird8268 2 года назад +17

      Phrasing is everything

    • @delihusnu278
      @delihusnu278 2 года назад

      Valley of the Wolves ruclips.net/video/hQ6Xneni4nk/видео.html

  • @bozosplayhouse
    @bozosplayhouse 2 года назад +326

    I remember this score being played in the Koln cathedral in the early 70's.. as a young man, I was truly taken by the sound and the physical experience of these large pipe organs. I imagine how the early worshipers could have easily been overwhelmed as well, the sound emitting from this huge gothic structure, almost a religious experience in itself!

    • @hamiltonian42
      @hamiltonian42 2 года назад +16

      I remember the first time visiting Koln... and marvelling at the how the cathedral dominated the surrounding space.... one of the most evocative physical spaces I've visited. Would love to hear the organ there, or in Berlin. Those religious architects knew how to build!

    • @fiscalcpiano
      @fiscalcpiano Год назад +1

      Especially with none of the electronic equipment we now have

  • @paulcannell7188
    @paulcannell7188 6 месяцев назад +43

    i marvel at the brain that composed this and the brain that memorised it to play with such beautiful texture. humanity is capable of divinity.

  • @dasroteeichhornchen411
    @dasroteeichhornchen411 Год назад +75

    Die beste Interpretation der Bachschen Toccata. Niemand spielt sie so gut. PERFEKT!!!

  • @Musique3579
    @Musique3579 4 года назад +496

    How absolutely wonderful. This Organist knew enough "not" to throw away the ending of the piece and not go too fast. Bravo Maestro!

    • @williammitchell1864
      @williammitchell1864 4 года назад +12

      Musique3579, This is how Bach intended for his song to be played.

    • @theaffiliate4208
      @theaffiliate4208 4 года назад +20

      In a great Cathedral and a powerful organ as this, the sound comes alive and fills and resonates the air and a great artist like him respectfully and beautifully gave the sound it's space.

    • @stammelblindarcher4477
      @stammelblindarcher4477 4 года назад +12

      I appreciate his phrasing.

    • @williammitchell1864
      @williammitchell1864 4 года назад +13

      @@stammelblindarcher4477 that is Bach's original phrasing

    • @spikespa5208
      @spikespa5208 4 года назад +17

      To folks who say "too slow!", I say if it was an acoustically dead venue, fine. But I wanna hear that echo!

  • @metorphoric
    @metorphoric Год назад +187

    Every now and then, I come back to this video to just marvel at its beauty. This song is nothing without the proper organist playing it. Absolutely marvelous. I cannot say enough good things about this performance. It was transformative.

    • @何漢民
      @何漢民 Год назад +1

      but 🙇🙇‍♀️🙇‍♂️alien has each hand with 20 fingers🤣

  • @Heyzeusization
    @Heyzeusization 28 дней назад +5

    I love this kind of performance and there is no way anyone can understand what it is like without actually being there for the live performance! The entire building is the body of the instrument! You become part of the art as you are part of the structure.

  • @iamcarbonandotherbits.8039
    @iamcarbonandotherbits.8039 5 лет назад +732

    Bach must be saying"At last someone playing the piece as I intended it to be performed. Update treated myself to expensive headphones oriented to classical music, went to musical nirvana having heard notes not picked up by my old phones. So glad I saved for these new cans. This piece sounds so sharp and fresh I felt like one of the audience.

    • @Pushingbuuttons
      @Pushingbuuttons 5 лет назад +41

      I don't think Bach ever had any intention of his piece being performed this well.

    • @paullewis2413
      @paullewis2413 5 лет назад +42

      Of course Bach had no idea how the organ would be developed in the future but if he could hear this I'm certain he would be overwhelmed by his own work!

    • @iamcarbonandotherbits.8039
      @iamcarbonandotherbits.8039 5 лет назад +17

      @@paullewis2413 . I'm just glad he wrote it it fills me with awe that for all our human failings we can produce music like this.

    • @NathanaelDuke
      @NathanaelDuke 5 лет назад +39

      Without exception the best rendition of this piece I have ever had the pleasure of hearing. Finally, a player unafraid to linger and let the beauty of the flourishes wash over the hall like an autumn breeze.

    • @iamcarbonandotherbits.8039
      @iamcarbonandotherbits.8039 5 лет назад +5

      @@NathanaelDuke Totally agree with your sentiments.

  • @akt67
    @akt67 6 лет назад +612

    Apart from skills required to play that thing Im fascinated by the engineering that went into building it, fitting it and tuning it!

    • @jaikee9477
      @jaikee9477 5 лет назад +26

      Me too! The organ was the most advanced piece of engineering in existence, a technological marvel.

    • @tanyaaglitskaya870
      @tanyaaglitskaya870 5 лет назад

      Ю́юб

    • @keepingitreel...8037
      @keepingitreel...8037 5 лет назад +12

      That machine is a beast. Must come with an awesome price tag. Lol
      I'm satisfied just being able to listen to it. . .

    • @bemzen5240
      @bemzen5240 5 лет назад +13

      It's so mind blowing to think the sound is just air going through a metal pipe.

    • @wesgrendo
      @wesgrendo 5 лет назад +3

      I've often wondered if the wood used to produce such a marvel has an influence on the sound in some small way, just like with a guitar for example.

  • @k4xtt
    @k4xtt 3 года назад +265

    This may be the best played version EVER, post BACH. He allows the space to play with the sound before moving on. Perfection.....

    • @humbertomonteiro6742
      @humbertomonteiro6742 3 года назад +1

      ruclips.net/video/PEHGxpRoZQM/видео.html

    • @LauraS1
      @LauraS1 3 года назад +13

      I agree. This piece is often played way too fast without allowing the notes to fade naturally. This gives the piece some real gravitas without being too slow (because it's possible to play it too slowly, too). This is one of the few performances I've heard where there is space between the notes just enough to actually hear each note from each pipe.

  • @tysonmendel495
    @tysonmendel495 3 месяца назад +11

    A Masterpiece being played by a Master! Wow unbelievable! And let's not forget the Master builders of the organ and building! Beautiful!

  • @killer408cid
    @killer408cid 3 года назад +1559

    Even in our age of technology, we are awed by this instrument and the sounds that come from it. Now imagine that it is the early 1700's. You are a poor, illiterate subject of an Austrian monarch. You attend a mass at a cathedral that has an organ capable of doing this piece justice. You leave, believing you have literally just witnessed the sounds of God.

    • @juliafehervari4854
      @juliafehervari4854 3 года назад +73

      What comes close is Gregorian Chants.

    • @johnwiechelman4630
      @johnwiechelman4630 3 года назад +21

      Better times

    • @talentlesscommenter1329
      @talentlesscommenter1329 3 года назад +31

      @@johnwiechelman4630 are you aware of how the organ was powered back then?

    • @margaretharypkema9290
      @margaretharypkema9290 3 года назад +20

      just sit back somewhere, alone... close your eyes.. and the world is a better place..

    • @stepanium
      @stepanium 3 года назад +31

      I cried a little when I imagined myself as that peasant)

  • @markschleupner9548
    @markschleupner9548 3 года назад +385

    Can we just take a minute here and recognize the fact that he is playing this from memory!! There is no sheet music in front if him!! What an amazing genius!!

    • @geertjalink
      @geertjalink 3 года назад +33

      It's not possible to play this from sheet music unless it is learned in memory. It's to fast for reading notes, must really be practiced hundred times or so.

    • @farmerboy916
      @farmerboy916 3 года назад +11

      @@geertjalink To be fair, that's most particularly technical music. Especially of something of this nature on this sort of instrument.

    • @geertjalink
      @geertjalink 3 года назад +2

      @@farmerboy916 is Bach technical too? Sometimes I think it is.

    • @jeannebouwman1970
      @jeannebouwman1970 3 года назад +1

      @@geertjalink well his fugues are filled with technical passages

    • @geertjalink
      @geertjalink 3 года назад +1

      @@jeannebouwman1970 also I think it's some mathematics patterns in several Bach's songs.

  • @fcooett
    @fcooett 2 года назад +320

    Varnus is a master. He's been playing for 300 years, hidding in the shadows, feeding on virgins blood.

    • @austonsmith536
      @austonsmith536 2 года назад +21

      Thank you!!! I thought I was the only one that noticed this!!! Good eye!

    • @CarlosOrdonez-hz1lt
      @CarlosOrdonez-hz1lt 2 года назад +9

      Outstanding comment.

    • @gabaghoul23
      @gabaghoul23 2 года назад +3

      in new orleans of coarse, because we all know the REALL vamps are in the bourbon street area, which is why you DONT go down those corridors between bars in the quarter

    • @lynettegill14
      @lynettegill14 2 года назад +3

      I get an Edward Scissorhands vibe! Joking apart his playing is stunning. Just beautiful. 💗

    • @timmym9149
      @timmym9149 2 года назад +3

      Probably tutored by The Master himself….🤓

  • @BillyBoland
    @BillyBoland 2 месяца назад +5

    The pauses and patience in this mans rendition are absolutely stunning and praise worthy. This is quite possibly the best version I've ever heard. My hats off to this fine musician.

  • @jll182msstate
    @jll182msstate 4 года назад +258

    This is simply the best version I have heard. The room, the organ, and organist!

    • @rod928s4
      @rod928s4 4 года назад +2

      I agree Luke, its an excellent version but also have a listen to the version from the 1975 movie "Rollerball" with James Caan! I think its even a bit better.

    • @joeallen2286
      @joeallen2286 4 года назад +1

      And the audio crew it took to correctly capture the sound.

    • @Dragineez774
      @Dragineez774 4 года назад

      Virgil Fox could have given him a run for his money. In fact, his interpretation of this piece is probably Virgil's.

    • @MarkLewis...
      @MarkLewis... 4 года назад

      IDK about that... The orchestral version in the "Fantasia" soundtrack ( ruclips.net/video/Q6u-2NDsEgA/видео.html ) and the obvious original "Rollerball" soundtrack ( ruclips.net/video/_wFTkYm0i6g/видео.html ) are both amazing and (IMO) at least as equally as good. Adagio (not Bach) in "Rollerball" is also nice but my favorite version is on the "Gallipoli" soundtrack and this one ( ruclips.net/video/PEzuXJ0rOJM/видео.html )
      Enjoy

  • @twasbrillig33
    @twasbrillig33 5 лет назад +848

    the engineers who designed fashioned wired and constructed this instrument deserve as much credit as this amazing musician.

    • @bigunone
      @bigunone 4 года назад +27

      Since it is a pipe organ I'm not sure how much wiring would be involved

    • @woofpuppy
      @woofpuppy 4 года назад +19

      @@bigunone its been "fully resored" according to wikipedia. It may well be completely digitized except for the actual wind.

    • @Dave5843-d9m
      @Dave5843-d9m 4 года назад +14

      The thread notes say it’s a pneumatic action organ.

    • @kevbravo1
      @kevbravo1 4 года назад +19

      You are right. Yeah the driver won the race, but he did it with the crew who built him a car to do so.

    • @prblakeslee
      @prblakeslee 4 года назад +37

      @@bigunone Every single key is a SPST switch which is WIRED to a coil of WIRE which pulls a light steel reed valve, which opens allowing air to flow into a small bellows, which pulls a much larger valve mechanism that allows pressurized are to flow into a specific pipe. The wiring harnesses are huge just for a single pike rank. This organ had two-dozen+?

  • @DarkMoonDroid
    @DarkMoonDroid 5 лет назад +425

    Thank the gods someone understands the importance of slowing down this piece. It should extend beyond the length of the human voice to sing it. That gives it an otherworldly feeling. Huge. Terrifying. Awesome!

    • @tmarks
      @tmarks 4 года назад +6

      Good observation

    • @JamesFrank32185
      @JamesFrank32185 4 года назад +6

      It's also so much different on an organ on a piano (or keyboard where j often see it does up) the note doesn't last and fill the room. With the organ every not fills the room completely and stays in the air for a moment, giving a reason to mind the pauses in the playing to let the sound really resonate.

    • @JamesFrank32185
      @JamesFrank32185 4 года назад +6

      @regalia I will thank all the gods I pray to and respect Bachs choice in higher power

    • @annexton3795
      @annexton3795 4 года назад +4

      @regalia Absolutely! 'Soli Deo gloria' was Bach's motto at the end of all his music.

    • @AntithesisDCLXVI
      @AntithesisDCLXVI 4 года назад +4

      @@annexton3795 it's not his fault everyone was brainwashed and under the thumb of the church back then, as a species we were still very childlike. Now we're in an era of adolescence, because we have learned much, but we act like we think we know everything, and our greatest existential threat right now is that we'll destroy ourselves either accidentally or on purpose. So it'd be pretty silly for us to still believe in fairy tales, especially ones thay encourage us to shirk off all responsibility for this mess we've made because some magic sky grandpa santa claus for adults is gonna come clean it up for us.
      It's so deranged and twisted how so many people actually want WWIII to happen because they think everyone that disagrees with them will be MURDERED by their jerk of a deity.

  • @vicrecords
    @vicrecords 2 месяца назад +14

    This is the north Western European culture we should treasure, Bach, Berliner dom, all in all perfection in beautiness❤

  • @lindatesluk2479
    @lindatesluk2479 3 года назад +290

    Oh how I wish I was in the audience to hear this incredible performance from a master organist on such a magnificent organ. WOW!!

    • @ИвановИван-р5у6г
      @ИвановИван-р5у6г 3 года назад

      5555!!!!

    • @bogusz_mrfox
      @bogusz_mrfox 3 года назад +1

      I love it...

    • @paulmcclain920
      @paulmcclain920 3 года назад +9

      I imagine that an organ of this size that you would feel the music as well. I too would love to be there.

    • @MarcassCarcass
      @MarcassCarcass 2 года назад +1

      i loved how nobody applauded at the end and the organ could just fade out

    • @spikespa5208
      @spikespa5208 2 года назад +1

      @@MarcassCarcass Disciplined audience. Even if asked to remain quiet after, I'm not sure my emotions, hearing this piece played like this, would cooperate.

  • @jankiwi
    @jankiwi 5 лет назад +464

    "12 minutes? Oh, I might just listen a bit in the beginning, and then move on."
    *listens to the entire thing and getting goosebumps*

  • @Shaden0040
    @Shaden0040 4 года назад +1003

    NOTE: No sheet music this guy is playing this from memory. Impressive.

    • @stormybear4986
      @stormybear4986 4 года назад +26

      Agreed! The mark of a true professional.

    • @user-dk5kj5dv9x
      @user-dk5kj5dv9x 4 года назад +81

      its muscle memory lol, once you play it alot and you feel a lot of interest in playing it, you will instantly play it even without looking at the notes.

    • @jmh1189
      @jmh1189 4 года назад +75

      most musicians play from memory.

    • @theokleynhans5969
      @theokleynhans5969 4 года назад +18

      @@user-dk5kj5dv9x True, but there is much more than muscle memory...

    • @user-dk5kj5dv9x
      @user-dk5kj5dv9x 4 года назад +3

      @@theokleynhans5969 i agree.

  • @emziilouuu
    @emziilouuu 10 месяцев назад +20

    Not only did he have perfect, entire control of this amazing instrument, he controlled the entire room. From perfect timing to allow it to echo at full effect around the room, to taking his time instead of rushing it. Extremely jealous of every person who got to witness this performance live!!

  • @charlottevictoria.hubbard7472
    @charlottevictoria.hubbard7472 3 года назад +186

    I remember a few years ago I was visiting Peterborough Cathedral and as I walked down the centre isle I heard a whirring noise then this tune started it was loud as hell and I literally froze on the spot and all my hairs stood on end and I had goosebumps on goosebumps. That I will never forget.

    • @janeproctor5542
      @janeproctor5542 3 года назад +1

      Yes. I think the music is meant to be very disturbing or to pick up that current of life.

    • @r1273m
      @r1273m 3 года назад +2

      The first I heard this was on a school trip to Lincoln Cathedral, early 1960's. Awesome.

    • @humanbeing1675
      @humanbeing1675 3 года назад +6

      The organ is the divine instrument. Thats why its played in churches.

    • @psychopompous3207
      @psychopompous3207 3 года назад +4

      *aisle

    • @elizabethsmith1803
      @elizabethsmith1803 3 года назад +3

      I can recall feeling the vibration outside of Lichfield Cathedral, both in the air and through my feet. If you stand barefoot close by on a stone floor..wood just doesn’t cut it.

  • @Ladypavs
    @Ladypavs 4 года назад +152

    The reason why ears and goosebumps were invented

    • @Jchathe
      @Jchathe 3 года назад +1

      Beautifully put! 👏💖

    • @technofeeling2462
      @technofeeling2462 6 месяцев назад +1

      try breath in slowly to icnrease goosebumps and euphoria

  • @edferd100
    @edferd100 5 лет назад +117

    That organ is a work of art, a masterpiece. I pray they treat it as such.

    • @williamhughmurraycissp8405
      @williamhughmurraycissp8405 4 года назад +10

      Great organs, like the buildings that house them, require continuous maintenance.

    • @Kragatar
      @Kragatar 4 года назад +7

      This guy sure does.

  • @Badgersj
    @Badgersj 4 месяца назад +9

    Hundreds of years ago when I had forced piano lessons I struggled, futilely, to play with both hands. This man is playing with his FEET as well! I'm glad I gave up, I'm happy to listen.

  • @cindys9491
    @cindys9491 3 года назад +301

    That last high sustained D, waiting for the crushing D minor chord to enter below and put an end to the composition, always gives me the shivers. Bach died 271 yrs ago and his music still communicates. Bravo to him and the virtuoso performer.

    • @TKing-ph7bq
      @TKing-ph7bq 3 года назад +14

      I'm not an accomplished musician but if you are talking about at the very end where it sort of sounds like it will end on an upbeat happy chord and then the minor chord comes in I totally agree. Gives me chills. Perfection.

    • @kevinbuja4373
      @kevinbuja4373 2 года назад +2

      And the Baroque Era.

    • @kengerkey4072
      @kengerkey4072 2 года назад

      @@TKing-ph7bq o

    • @Froge4291
      @Froge4291 2 года назад +5

      @@TKing-ph7bq yeah it is a wonderfull way to end the coda, sadly very few do it and even fewer hold the note for so long like Xaver

    • @xrfa7422
      @xrfa7422 2 года назад +2

      It's brilliant. It's sounds like doom!

  • @JCAH1
    @JCAH1 5 лет назад +42

    The surpassing intelligence of those who designed and built this building, combined with the amazing skills and depth of knowledge of those who designed and built the organ, combined with the nearly super human musical abilities of Bach, who created this masterpiece from a blank sheet of paper, combined with the incredible talents of Mr. Varnus - exhilarating and almost unbelievable!

  • @rickhunter1075
    @rickhunter1075 4 года назад +91

    The pure brilliance of this performance can not be understated. This is one of those rare performances that comes together in such perfect harmony, from the musician himself, to the building acoustics, to all of those who maintain this brilliant instrument, etc. Such a performance will never be repeated again.

  • @guidodebie8580
    @guidodebie8580 9 месяцев назад +9

    Even on this simple tablet device, absolutely the best version I heared so far,. Thanks

  • @charleslayton9463
    @charleslayton9463 2 года назад +267

    I'm fascinated by the organ. As the notes above say: Today, the organ in the Cathedral of Berlin is the largest late-Romantic pneumatic action organ in the world that has survived in its original condition.
    For those who aren't familiar with the mechanics of pipe organs, let me just say that statement is astonishing. Pneumatic action is probably the most complex kind of organ action. So much can get out of adjustment, or be damaged, and at its best, it is a fairly slow way to get the organist's intentions from the keys to the pipes. For that reason, I was fascinated with Varnus' playing. Not only does he masterfully use the room's reverberation time, he also plays with even more than his normal clarity to minimize the sluggish action. I'm sure that this organ is very well cared for and regulated, and so its action is probably absolutely as good as a pneumatic action can be, but even so, it won't have the crispness of a good tracker action or the speed of an electro-pneumatic action. To those few people who complain that he played too slowly, I'd suggest that if he had played the fast passages much faster, they would have turned to mush between the room acoustics and the pneumatic delay.

  • @timhyatt9185
    @timhyatt9185 6 лет назад +512

    so nice to have an organist who understands and USES the natural resonances and harmonics of his performance space.....so many ruin this piece but rushing it...there are SUPPOSED to be quiet instances, where the sound fades naturally away and far too many rush through that decaying echo..... Bravo! Bravo, Sir!!

    • @semperreg
      @semperreg 6 лет назад

      he understands nothing, neither harmonics, neither music! Work can't do everything!

    • @echo3325
      @echo3325 5 лет назад +4

      YES! Indeed! Most renditions seem rushed and overlapping compared to this!

    • @saundrawells2603
      @saundrawells2603 5 лет назад

      THANKS..!!!

    • @TakersMissy
      @TakersMissy 5 лет назад +4

      Tim Hyatt - I couldn't agree more; maybe the BEST rendition of this masterpiece I've ever heard! :-)

    • @baruchben-david4196
      @baruchben-david4196 5 лет назад

      @@semperreg What's up with that? Do you play better? Make a video and show us how it's supposed to be done.

  • @lajoswinkler
    @lajoswinkler 4 года назад +1223

    Finally a performance that's appropriately measured in its tempo. Almost all of them on RUclips are so fast. This can't be played fast, it has to echo itself down. Breathe.

    • @stanleystudios5186
      @stanleystudios5186 4 года назад +50

      I agree that most recordings are way too fast but I do think this one is ever so slightly slow. Impressive nevertheless.

    • @blatherskite9601
      @blatherskite9601 4 года назад +110

      You can hear that Xaver waits until the echo has exactly stopped, before continuing. That would mean the piece will be played at different speeds depending on the building it's played in.

    • @omashaushalt
      @omashaushalt 4 года назад +38

      @@blatherskite9601 I thought exactly the same thing!
      He is waiting for the echo to fade away.

    • @danielinnocenciodasilva1840
      @danielinnocenciodasilva1840 4 года назад +6

      i was thinking that something was odd

    • @BlackSeranna
      @BlackSeranna 4 года назад +10

      I have wondered at this - because doesn't Bach specify the tempo, and if so, why aren't the pros following it? I can understand why *I* don't follow the tempo - it's because I can't play super fast and flawlessly at the same time. Also, I am not a pro, just a fan who can play.

  • @volkergluth3428
    @volkergluth3428 8 месяцев назад +7

    A big BRAVO! from Germany! Wonderful performance!!!

  • @stergiol.7206
    @stergiol.7206 4 года назад +132

    housebound due to corona virus, in a snowing spring (!) morning , drinking hot coffee listening to this ,i cannot describe my feelings it gives me strength and hope ! suddenly i'm not feeling so alone!

    • @cliffcotton1701
      @cliffcotton1701 4 года назад

      CV bound also.

    • @johnlorenzen4633
      @johnlorenzen4633 4 года назад

      Amen! Me too

    • @MrShortygeorge
      @MrShortygeorge 4 года назад +1

      I do know your feelings about listening to this music straight from heaven. Keep on, keeping on praying and reading your bible and listening for God's answers. He is waiting.

    • @andrewward683
      @andrewward683 4 года назад +2

      The power of music

    • @lena-mariaglouis-charles7036
      @lena-mariaglouis-charles7036 4 года назад

      Right back at You!
      💙💛🌹💜🍎🇺🇸

  • @Txepsiyu
    @Txepsiyu 5 лет назад +459

    A pop organist this man isn't. The notes came when they were ready, not in a flashy rush. Brilliantly played.

    • @edmardisla8492
      @edmardisla8492 4 года назад +8

      Ok, Yoda.

    • @ChevronQ
      @ChevronQ 4 года назад +4

      I haven't heard it said that beautifully before! "The notes came when they were ready" . You just made me smile 😌

    • @guscox9651
      @guscox9651 4 года назад +1

      @@edmardisla8492 LOL Imma yoink that joke

    • @guscox9651
      @guscox9651 4 года назад +1

      I don't think his touch was great but his timing and patience was really good

    • @bigredmatt1011
      @bigredmatt1011 4 года назад +5

      He’s not doing this for himself. He’s honoring the instrument, the room, and the composer.

  • @Claudio10656
    @Claudio10656 3 года назад +131

    The best performance I've ever heard
    All the notes were played in an understandable way
    A wonderful performance by a wonderful musician

  • @timk.2381
    @timk.2381 5 месяцев назад +14

    What a beautiful peace of music. What a sound of this organ. i have goosebumps and i have tears in my eyes. Great organplayer aswell the organ, wow, wow.

  • @stephenkirby1514
    @stephenkirby1514 2 года назад +43

    Bach would indeed be proud to have heard this! Well done!

  • @ЕленаСтадник-т5л
    @ЕленаСтадник-т5л Год назад +28

    Дякую вам і за Божественну музику, і за чудового музиканта, і за гарне відео.🙏

  • @brucewayne2184
    @brucewayne2184 5 лет назад +1932

    Some say after he finished playing his masterpiece in the grand hall, he burst into a swarm of bats and vanished, never to be seen again.

    • @anthonym612
      @anthonym612 5 лет назад +56

      Bruce Wayne username checks out.

    • @joenobody571
      @joenobody571 5 лет назад +4

      😂

    • @alexiachimciuc3199
      @alexiachimciuc3199 5 лет назад +2

      😛

    • @tangledshoelace4726
      @tangledshoelace4726 5 лет назад +3

      🦇🦇😁

    • @thomasarussellsr
      @thomasarussellsr 5 лет назад +20

      I'm not saying you're Batman, but I've never seen the two of you in the same room together.
      I guess you needed this organist more than his audience needed another song?

  • @KellieReed-ee2hd
    @KellieReed-ee2hd 8 месяцев назад +6

    I'm at a loss for words to describe how perfect this is. There aren't any words to describe it. Blown away again.