Borodin: Second Symphony - Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra - Concert HD

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  • Опубликовано: 30 янв 2025

Комментарии • 412

  • @paullewis2413
    @paullewis2413 Год назад +31

    The 3rd movement has to be one of the glories of the Romantic Movement in music.

  • @handznet
    @handznet Год назад +24

    One of the most beautiful and easy to listen symphonies. Very ahead of its time - because as amateur Borodin wasn’t as tied with conventions. It is like concentrate of the best from the music of his peers into one awesome medley. No long developments, no time wasting, stright to the point. And I bet that the last movement inspired Hollywood western music a lot.

  • @ferdinangenius
    @ferdinangenius 11 лет назад +123

    It makes me remember how much I liked this when I was 15 years old.
    Now at 64 I still enjoy it very much.
    It is so powerful, beautiful, majestic...

    • @janvanc7190
      @janvanc7190 5 лет назад +2

      Hey Fernando, you're not alone to say that! This remained one of my favourites throughout the years too!

    • @jirafachina
      @jirafachina 5 лет назад

      Qué divertido encontrarse con un comentario tuyo en este video.
      Saludos, Fernando.

    • @elizabethschaeffer9543
      @elizabethschaeffer9543 5 лет назад +1

      @@janvanc7190 Jan, you speak the truth. This beautiful and enchanting piece of music is as fresh and touching as when I first heard it over 70 years ago.

    • @elizabethschaeffer9543
      @elizabethschaeffer9543 5 лет назад +2

      @@janvanc7190 "Powerful, beautiful, majestic." Jan you are so right.
      This lovely music still has the power to move me that it had 70 years ago.

    • @ferdinangenius
      @ferdinangenius 4 года назад +1

      @@jirafachina Por ahí lei, Gonzalo, que ademas de su genio Borodin era tipo encantadoramente hospitalario y tolerante. Su mesa, los domingos, era de no menos de 30 personas y gatos y perros se paseaban por doquier.

  • @MaxwellKaye
    @MaxwellKaye 5 лет назад +143

    I. Allegro moderato 0:03
    II. Scherzo. Molto vivo 7:19
    III. Andante 12:30
    IV. Finale. Allegro 21:54

    • @takashimasuda382
      @takashimasuda382 3 года назад +7

      A we finally have somebody who is helpful 🙏 Thank you😊

    • @MaxwellKaye
      @MaxwellKaye 3 года назад +2

      @@takashimasuda382 no problem! 👍

    • @lisamuse574
      @lisamuse574 2 года назад +1

      thank you so much!

    • @はるな-w4b5b
      @はるな-w4b5b 2 года назад +1

      Thanks

    • @WillWFU
      @WillWFU 4 месяца назад

      You are the light of my life

  • @marcusdolby1
    @marcusdolby1 10 лет назад +242

    Amazing this guy was a "Sunday composer". Composing took a back seat to his career. He wasn't very prolific either, but his compositions were of such high quality that one can only imagine what else he could have wrote if he did this full time, amazing just amazing !!

    • @organman52
      @organman52 7 лет назад +9

      SO TRUE, marcusdolby ! !

    • @EmilianoManna
      @EmilianoManna 7 лет назад +26

      And, most amazingly, was at the same level in his first activity, chemistry!

    • @paulbeard4218
      @paulbeard4218 6 лет назад +4

      So very true!

    • @nuttywatty
      @nuttywatty 6 лет назад +11

      He was a great chemist too The discoverer of the gas Boron which is named after him

    • @5610winston
      @5610winston 5 лет назад +28

      Hate to bring it up, but boron was discovered 25 years before he was born, and it is a metal.
      He did, however, research the benzene fluorides in depth and his paper on the subject is still the definitive word on that group of compounds. He discovered many useful reactions, including a method of synthesizing nitrogen-based agricultural fertilizers.
      He was also an early champion of training women to be Medical Doctors.

  • @williamgarza1535
    @williamgarza1535 2 года назад +9

    Go Borodin go!!An underperformed composer

    • @ОльгаГофман-о8у
      @ОльгаГофман-о8у 2 года назад

      First of all, Borodin was a first-class chemist and doctor, and in fact his contribution to organic chemistry was so fruitful that his syntheses (esp. the aldol reaction) are still widely known. application in chemical engineering and pharmaceuticals.

  • @thearcticlord3920
    @thearcticlord3920 3 года назад +7

    I bought a record player in a carry case when I was 14. This record came with it. I played it endlessly until I got a second record. I started a life long love of Russian folk, religious and art music.

  • @billsullivan3920
    @billsullivan3920 9 лет назад +185

    Borodin, Balakirev, Cui, Mussorgsky, and Rimsky-Korsakov were members a Russian group some called the"Mighty Five." Their intention was to bring Russian themes into classical music. They opposed the Western musical themes that Russian graduates of the mainly German conservatories had used in their compositions. Borodin was busy teaching, scientific research, family, and music was a pastime. Therefore, much of his compositions were finished by other people. Rimsky-Kosakov finished the great opera Prince Igor. He was a close friend of Liszt. Liszt premiered some of the Borodin works. These five were the creators of some the first "Russian Sound" in classical music. However, many of these themes came from the" People". This is a fine video, played by one of the great orchestras, in a hall that makes the whole thing shine.

    • @sunghuh2542
      @sunghuh2542 7 лет назад

      Bill Sullivan n

    • @zw4110
      @zw4110 6 лет назад +4

      As I remembered, only Kosakov was the full-time professional musician among the Mighty Five. :)

    • @humbertochacon9263
      @humbertochacon9263 6 лет назад +1

      Capricho español
      Ñ

    • @phillipvietri8786
      @phillipvietri8786 6 лет назад +6

      Remember that Borodin has a fascination with Central Asia; as witnessed to by In the Steppes of Central Asia and his opera Prince Igor, amongst others. One should not seek pictorial explanations for music as a rule, but it is impossible to avoid the image of Tatar horsemen charging across the steppes in the first movement.

    • @phillipvietri8786
      @phillipvietri8786 6 лет назад +3

      @PolishViking, it is quite an opera. Very long. Borodin took so long over it that one night, Rimsky and (I think) Balakirev sat and orchestrated it while he treated the completed pages with a chemical solution of his own invention! I do not know if it is the case today, but for many years the only monument to him in Russia/the USSR was as a scientist. You probably know the Polovtsian dances; they are available on RUclips in an operatic performance. Igor is also the only opera I know of to feature a musical setting of a solar eclipse.

  • @badarchive
    @badarchive 4 года назад +19

    I can't believe I've played this and lived to tell the tale

    • @Tehv_
      @Tehv_ 4 года назад +2

      hahaha

    • @5610winston
      @5610winston 4 года назад +2

      I was in an elementary school concert band, fifth, sixth, and seventh graders (a composite of musicians from eleven schools in north Atlanta) in the late 1960s, an we played the first movement of this piece, transcribed to C-minor and arranged for band.
      We competed in regionals and got a 'SUPERIOR' rating.
      We also traveled to Pittsburg, PA for a festival at Duquesne University.
      Happy memories.
      I still love this piece, Borodin is still my favorite composer.

    • @jbut1208
      @jbut1208 3 года назад

      We are all pleased! We would not want you to suffer too much! Travel through Siberia! Then you might understand???

    • @AnyahEMB
      @AnyahEMB 7 месяцев назад

      I agree! 🎻

  • @jonathanbell5478
    @jonathanbell5478 5 месяцев назад +4

    What a thrill it must be if you are a gifted musician and part of an orchestra, to be able to play such joyous music as this..the final movement is so uplifting, full of spirit and brio...A pity that his love of chemistry limited his composing ...this is thirty minutes of musical pure joy . Bravo .

  • @ludwigvanbachmaninoff1981
    @ludwigvanbachmaninoff1981 6 лет назад +53

    When symphony goes into the 3rd movement, it sounds like a mist image of late autumn forest in Russia. That’s such a magnificent and gorgeous composition of Russian folk classical music !

    • @wsc1955
      @wsc1955 2 года назад +3

      Wow. I've never listened. To Borodin. This sounds very modern. Its kinda like a film score!

  • @kelvynchin1968
    @kelvynchin1968 9 лет назад +40

    What a great symphony this is.

  • @TheVaughan5
    @TheVaughan5 13 лет назад +14

    The more I listen, the more I like this very romantic symphony and the more I appreciate the simply marvellous Concertgebouw Orchestra and that world beating acoustic of the legendary hall.

  • @igori.1478
    @igori.1478 10 лет назад +31

    What a talent !!!! What a masterpiece !!!!!!

  • @lucienr7931
    @lucienr7931 5 лет назад +11

    12:22 the 3rd movement is really an one of a kind, great to see this piece peformed in het concertgebouw

  • @DamnVillarreal
    @DamnVillarreal 11 лет назад +20

    One of the few symphonies I'm able to hear from start to end

  • @rileeyparker
    @rileeyparker 8 лет назад +39

    We're playing the first movement in the symphony orchestra at my high school. I love this piece so much! A few months back we played In the Steppes of Central Asia, and I love that piece even more. Borodin was an incredible composer on top of being a chemist. That man had unmatched talent.

    • @bcing75
      @bcing75 7 лет назад +5

      Riley Parker Yes he did indeed. A true marvel of the left and right brain.

    • @GaryBricaultLive
      @GaryBricaultLive 8 месяцев назад

      He was an organic chemist.

  • @ihadaralf
    @ihadaralf 10 лет назад +13

    One of the most succinct symphonies ever, Borodin knitted a work of pure genius. Half an hour and never a hint of wasteful music.

  • @alsenwulf
    @alsenwulf 3 года назад +9

    Never heard Borodin before. Very interesting music and harmonic sentences.

  • @geraldlee3109
    @geraldlee3109 5 лет назад +15

    What a genius Borodin was. Heavenly music performed by a wonder orchestra. Nothing could be better.

    • @GaryBricaultLive
      @GaryBricaultLive 8 месяцев назад

      And an important organic chemist too. He published many papers on the subject in his time that are still relevant today.

  • @Ilovemusic83
    @Ilovemusic83 9 лет назад +30

    I love this symphony, it contains beautiful melodic lines and a strong national character. Even though its first performance in St Petersburg was a failure, it was one of the first major works in Russian music to have found success in Western Europe.

    • @paulbeard4218
      @paulbeard4218 6 лет назад +8

      "Superb" is the the closest I can come to describe this work .

  • @albrechthuber1084
    @albrechthuber1084 2 месяца назад +1

    Oh wie wunderbar ist dieser 3. Satz! ... die ganze Symphonie!!!

  • @gerardbegni2806
    @gerardbegni2806 7 лет назад +40

    I love this symphony. It is absolutely awesome. How could a man who worked as a dilettante write a so perfect music? The themes, the construction, the orchestration, all is perfect in that symphony.

    • @mousikopaigmonas23
      @mousikopaigmonas23 2 года назад +2

      I love Borodin's music, but I think you're being a bit too kind...Don't forget Tchaikovsky regarded him as a not-so-good composer, although he said his fantastic piece ''in the steppes of central Asia'' is almost great.

    • @gerardbegni2806
      @gerardbegni2806 2 года назад +6

      @@mousikopaigmonas23 Don't remember too that Ravel loved his music very much wrete a "pasticcio" for piano, and rhat his gtoup of friends "les apaches" whistled a theme of a Borodin quartet as a signal to meet together.

    • @mousikopaigmonas23
      @mousikopaigmonas23 2 года назад +2

      @@gerardbegni2806 That's pretty awesome. And I love his quartet No.2.

    • @stynway59
      @stynway59 Год назад +2

      Russian and Asiatic music were huge influences on turn-of-the -last- century European composers. One of Ravel's compositions for the Academie was rejected as being "overworked Rimski-Korsakov". But that didn't stop him, thank goodness

    • @gerardbegni2806
      @gerardbegni2806 Год назад

      @@stynway59 I fully agree with you.

  • @evandrob.santanna8008
    @evandrob.santanna8008 5 лет назад +16

    When I was a young metalhead my mother had this Borodin's 2nd Symphony LP... when I put the record on the pick up it blows my head! Awesome composition!

  • @Dylonely_9274
    @Dylonely_9274 2 года назад +8

    Thank you for performing this underrated symphony, we are lucky enough to be able to listen to it whenever we want !

  • @brit1066
    @brit1066 8 лет назад +23

    Glorious Symphony from the pen of a Master and beautifully played.

  • @robertbond9358
    @robertbond9358 5 лет назад +21

    That glorious final movement always prompts in me a terrific euphoria.
    If only Alexander Porfireovich had written more. His musical genius was remarkable.

    • @jamesharrington4752
      @jamesharrington4752 3 года назад +3

      i agree.

    • @murrayaronson3753
      @murrayaronson3753 Год назад +1

      Borodin died at 50. He was dancing with his wife when he suffered a heart attack. Borodin was generous and hospitable to
      many. Borodin also supported women going into medicine. He was one of the greatest of Russians.

  • @jchenergy
    @jchenergy 11 лет назад +21

    So many years trying to find a version of the Borodin second that could me bring back to those glorios 1960's years, when a fantastic eruption of music, orchestras, conductors, soloists etc..filled all our lives. This symphony marked my teens years and will remain in my soul forever...
    This version of Karel M. Chichon is just what I was looking for..a definitive version.
    Thanks also to Concertgebouw orchestra and of course Alexander B...and the poster..

    • @TheVaughan5
      @TheVaughan5 10 лет назад

      I agree, too many whiz-kid conductors now who are more interested in themselves than the music, but based on this performance Karel M Chichon knows quite a lot about intelligent interpretation - helped it might be said, by the magnificent C.O. A. and of course the incomparable acoustics of the hall..

    • @paulbeard4218
      @paulbeard4218 6 лет назад

      You are indeed fortunate .

    • @johnjepsen4243
      @johnjepsen4243 2 года назад

      @@TheVaughan5 thanks einstein for the info.

  • @davidpretorius4821
    @davidpretorius4821 3 года назад +15

    Borodin was a Professor of chemistry, I think, I may be mistaken . The principal horn player of this orchestra is world class, an absolute joy to listen to.

    • @suzyserling277
      @suzyserling277 3 года назад +6

      Hi David; you are right and he was very successful in the scientific field. I can only imagine becoming friends with Rimsky-Korsakov and Mussorgsky and being part of “The Five”!!. What a group!. I agree with you, an absolute joy to listen to the principal horn, the rest of the members as well.
      Excellent video, thanks.

  • @DanielRodrigues-yu7kj
    @DanielRodrigues-yu7kj 11 лет назад +163

    2nd mov: 7:00
    3rd mov: 12:21
    4th mov 21:54

  • @jbut1208
    @jbut1208 4 года назад +5

    In 2007 I travelled through Mongolia and Siberia to Moscow! That trip made this music make sense! It reflects the country and its people! It is so appropriate!!!!! The orchestra is just about the best in the world!

  • @AndrewRudin
    @AndrewRudin Год назад +2

    At Univ. of Texas in Austin , back in the late 50's, I was a cellist in the Univ. Symphony, and our conductor was Alexander von Kreisler, a man trained in Russia. Through him, I came to know this Symphony, as well as Overture to Russlan & Ludmilla, Cappricio Espagnole, Scenes from Boris Goudonov, "Adieu les Forest" from Joan of Arc, Tschaikowsky's Roccoco Variations, AND, we played Tchaikowsky's Romeo and Juliet Fantasy,... to precede a performance of the 1st Piano Concerto... with Van Cliburn as soloist.

  • @garyfrandsen8229
    @garyfrandsen8229 4 года назад +10

    Look, this is my favorite symphony in the entire repertoire..period..can there be a greater example of contrast? It covers the spectrum..the slow movement is my favourite..capturing the Russian melancholy...superb..

  • @tomclarkson2826
    @tomclarkson2826 4 года назад +35

    Borodin is probably the only person to have composed great music and discovered a new chemical reaction which is named after him.

    • @Rombik97
      @Rombik97 3 года назад +6

      Hold my beer

    • @adriendecroy7254
      @adriendecroy7254 3 года назад +5

      And founded a school for women to train in medicine. Absolute legend.

  • @mercurypoizund404
    @mercurypoizund404 8 лет назад +11

    Thank you Borodin and Musicians.

  • @GaryBricaultLive
    @GaryBricaultLive 8 месяцев назад +1

    I performed a wind orchestra transcription of the 1st movement in an honors band when I was in high school. The impress it left in my mind and heart never faded.

  • @agapanthus1953
    @agapanthus1953 5 лет назад +11

    Wonderful! As for his string quartets, there may be greater ones...but there are none more beautiful!

    • @elizabethschaeffer9543
      @elizabethschaeffer9543 4 года назад +1

      I agree. This is the first time I have ever responded to a flower. Love it!

    • @johnjepsen4243
      @johnjepsen4243 2 года назад

      @@elizabethschaeffer9543 thanks einstein.

  • @juliorobles2073
    @juliorobles2073 6 лет назад +14

    Borodin, Бородин, un científico universal y un compositor entre los mejores

    • @johnjepsen4243
      @johnjepsen4243 2 года назад +2

      And...a fine pocket pool player...I'm told.

  • @davidbloss9134
    @davidbloss9134 9 лет назад +37

    In preparation for performing this piece in the next 3 weeks, I've been listening to all versions on youtube by different orchestras. Marvelous music. I learned about Borodin as a chemist long before I heard his music, and I've been enthralled by all his works since.
    Did anyone else hear a little of John Williams' "The Cowboys" in the 4th movement? I can't explain the similarities I think I heard, but I'm sure they're there.

    • @tianapitesr8553
      @tianapitesr8553 9 лет назад

      +David Bloss so he didn't produce much symphonies?

    • @Iloerk
      @Iloerk 9 лет назад +7

      +David Bloss I certainly thought the 4th movement sounded very "american" somehow

    • @marcosviniciosribeirocompo1137
      @marcosviniciosribeirocompo1137 8 лет назад +2

      +Tiana Pi Tesr 3 !! Master pieces !!!

    • @denpl
      @denpl 7 лет назад +2

      Listen to GOLOVANOV! He uncovers all the beauties of this score!

    • @Mormon_underwear
      @Mormon_underwear 5 лет назад

      I thought I heard to gun shot. But I thought it was just my imagination running away with me.

  • @dmntuba
    @dmntuba 4 года назад +7

    I discovered this music in college and fell in love with it. Never had the chance to perform it, but it has a special place in my musical heart.

  • @paulbeard4218
    @paulbeard4218 6 лет назад +4

    The pensive horn passage at 15:00 is so wonderfully arresting --- great symphony .

  • @wadehouse4892
    @wadehouse4892 5 лет назад +3

    That horn in the second movement is so gorgeous

  • @RomanKru
    @RomanKru 5 лет назад +7

    sometimes western interpretation of russian music is a bit "alternative", but not in this case. so exact reading of the compositor's idea is really charming. you did it with big love. thank you very much!

  • @llcamus249
    @llcamus249 6 лет назад +3

    My favorite of Borodin...what a composer

  • @MikeSullivanNature
    @MikeSullivanNature 12 лет назад +3

    Simply Awesome music Alexander Borodin is a master and what a brilliant orchestra they played it so sympathetically too.

  • @zzp1
    @zzp1 11 лет назад +3

    Magistrale uitvoering! Geweldige sound. Geweldig orkest!

  • @stpd1957
    @stpd1957 3 года назад +2

    This is great music beautifully played

  • @allendish
    @allendish 6 лет назад +5

    Bravo! The trumpet in the 3rd movement at 19:35 is particularly moving

  • @12apaul
    @12apaul 11 лет назад +5

    perfection from the podium to the orchestra........wonderful string section

  • @simonkawasaki4229
    @simonkawasaki4229 2 года назад +2

    REALLY amazing finale. The summation of all Russian romantic orchestral color.

  • @chrisleigh57
    @chrisleigh57 10 лет назад +3

    before I came across this symphony I had never even heard of Boridin now Im a fan I want to hear more of this man and to think that for him music was just a hobby if this is how good his hobby gets he must have been a brilliant chemist

    • @murrayaronson3753
      @murrayaronson3753 9 лет назад +3

      chris foster I gather he was a brilliant chemist and physician. Borodin was also a kind, generous, and hospitable man plus a devoted husband. I don't know if he had any children. Borodin was a feminist and supported women's higher education, especially their going into medicine as physicians. He died of a heart attack at age 50 while dancing with his wife at some kind of an event.

  • @sanfordson2551
    @sanfordson2551 4 года назад +3

    I had the LP with In the Steppes of Central Asia. Love them both.

  • @TheVaughan5
    @TheVaughan5 13 лет назад +8

    Thanks for this upload. Good to hear a symphony by a composer rarely played these days apart of course from the usual Prince Igor dances!

  • @frankmacdulligan1153
    @frankmacdulligan1153 11 лет назад +15

    La obra sinfónica mas importante de Borodin, es esta 2ª sinfonía, compuesta durante siete años, ya que su verdadero oficio era la de químico de la facultad de San Petersburgo, compaginó su trabajo con su vocación musical. Además por compromisos adquiridos, también compuso al mismo tiempo que esta sinfonía, la música para ópera El príncipe Igor.

  • @noriemeha
    @noriemeha 5 лет назад +4

    Good performance of this wonderful work which influenced other symphonic composers such as the young Sibelius whose 1st symphony owes more than a little to this work.

  • @MARCELLOGRADUATO
    @MARCELLOGRADUATO 13 лет назад +4

    Ogni singola nota è messa al suo posto, ho i brividi ogni volta che la sento.

  • @kohlemeyer7751
    @kohlemeyer7751 9 лет назад +4

    I like this sound. Beautiful!

  • @Amelia4144
    @Amelia4144 10 лет назад +5

    En muchas décadas de oir la mejor música, ésta es sin duda la gran versión de esta magnífica sinfonía, que adoro, en una orquesta superior. Gracias por compartir el placer de este video. Desde la Argentina.

  • @malcolmosman6111
    @malcolmosman6111 8 лет назад +3

    Magnificent! One of my favourite all time symphonies!

  • @PiscaCPT
    @PiscaCPT 14 лет назад +4

    Bravo! Cheers from Brazil

  • @carbonheliumnitrogen7369
    @carbonheliumnitrogen7369 9 лет назад +8

    18:54 Beautiful line right there.

  • @millll_2
    @millll_2 5 лет назад +26

    1:46 пп
    7:20
    8:40 трио
    12:30
    14:36 т2
    21:54
    22:53 пп

  • @paulbeard4218
    @paulbeard4218 6 лет назад +2

    All the variety and exuberance of Dvorak, yet "Russian"in it's foundation----quality!

  • @alwatsonpianist
    @alwatsonpianist 10 лет назад +2

    A masterpiece of gorgeous sound and textures!!!!

  • @vangel1443
    @vangel1443 11 лет назад +15

    What a magnificent symphony! Time just makes it better. Thank you for uploading it, Tim!

    • @5610winston
      @5610winston 5 лет назад +2

      You can hear Borodin's influence in Hollywood film scores by the Eastern European refugee composers a generation or three later, especially in the western genre.

    • @stynway59
      @stynway59 Год назад +1

      Yep

  • @keithm1812
    @keithm1812 11 лет назад +2

    A Masterpiece. Simply.

  • @notaire2
    @notaire2 6 лет назад +6

    Flawless rendition of this challenging symphony with perfect synchronization of all instruments, in appropriate tempo and without superfluous rubato. The conductor should be estimated much higher.

  • @TheVaughan5
    @TheVaughan5 10 лет назад +13

    Thanks for posting this great recording. Too bad we get pathetic small minded people on this site that have to turn comments into a spat with their over inflated egos instead of just posting something intelligent.

    • @vladislovkyzinski3430
      @vladislovkyzinski3430 10 лет назад +7

      Indeed. Ain't nothing perfect. Even the sun has spots.

    • @darrylschultz9311
      @darrylschultz9311 6 лет назад

      Vladislov Kyzinski There is one perfect thing I have found-"Eugen Cicero-Exercise".A 3-and-a-half minute piece that has everything I want in a piece-variety,beauty thrills when it suddenly switches unexpectedly from classical to hard-swinging jazz without losing the beauty,and building to a great climax before returning to the original classical theme.

  • @elisabethmissaoui8619
    @elisabethmissaoui8619 9 лет назад +2

    Oeuvre magnifique dans une interprétation magnifique. Bravo !

  • @johnruggeri843
    @johnruggeri843 11 лет назад +4

    Thank you for posting this wonderfully beautiful work and
    outstanding performance.
    Regards-John

  • @riccardoemanuelegrassi2069
    @riccardoemanuelegrassi2069 8 лет назад +18

    Borodin = poeta!!!

  • @summerishere5146
    @summerishere5146 5 лет назад +21

    2nd mov: 7:00
    3rd mov: 12:21
    4th mov 21:54
    Mission Impossible: 26:34

    • @jakobwetekam6874
      @jakobwetekam6874 4 года назад

      Ahahah😂😂

    • @PuddintameXYZ
      @PuddintameXYZ 4 года назад

      Sounds more like that theme from Ep. 1 of Star Wars

    • @stynway59
      @stynway59 Год назад

      If you enjoy the echos of classical composition in John William's scores, you must have heard it in Holst's suite, The Planets!

  • @finnthewitch
    @finnthewitch 6 лет назад +18

    This goes to prove that classical was just metal before electricity was involved! Love this heavy piece, had to resist the urge to head bang while playing it in orchestra.

    • @nostradumbass4984
      @nostradumbass4984 5 лет назад +6

      I agree!! I am a 53 year old life long metal fan. But for the last 2 years, I listen almost exclusively to classical music.
      This one ROCKS!

    • @IsaacW.
      @IsaacW. 3 года назад +2

      I hate it when people compare classical to metal. Metal has no meaning, it is just loud musical-noise.

    • @finnthewitch
      @finnthewitch 3 года назад +3

      @@IsaacW. believe it or not, metal and classical are similar, music theory wise. depends on the subgenre though, I suppose. many classical pieces can make some pretty killer riffs. to each their own, though.

    • @IsaacW.
      @IsaacW. 3 года назад +2

      @@finnthewitch while classical music can be bastardized into metal, original metal cannot be used in classical. Have you noticed that?

    • @finnthewitch
      @finnthewitch 3 года назад

      @@IsaacW. i dunno, i’d beg to differ ruclips.net/video/kL09wRp9pwg/видео.html

  • @TheJamesalden
    @TheJamesalden 11 лет назад +3

    It seems that some of the best uploads are those of avroklassic; what the production and all that, plus the fact that the RCO is a first-rate orchestra...Thank You!...

  • @Loseurillusions
    @Loseurillusions 9 лет назад +3

    I met Borodin by Bukowski's poetry. Couldn't be more happy.

    • @filiperassi
      @filiperassi 8 лет назад +1

      +Loseurillusions me too lol

  • @IHeartNoise
    @IHeartNoise 11 лет назад +17

    A proof that epic metal was made way before guitars were invented...

  • @neiltheblaze
    @neiltheblaze 6 лет назад +8

    I've never understood why this piece isn't performed more often than it is.

    • @craigkowald3055
      @craigkowald3055 5 лет назад +2

      No doubt. I think I have heard it maybe once live. I do get to perform it myself next Spring along with Rachmaninoff 2d Concerto.

    • @donaldfschiff1229
      @donaldfschiff1229 4 года назад

      @@craigkowald3055 You lucky dog!

  • @5610winston
    @5610winston 5 лет назад +1

    Many years ago I was in an elementary school symphonic band, and we played the first movement of this piece (transcribed into C-minor). My first introduction to Borodin's music, and he has been my favorite composer ever since.

    • @noseoil4267
      @noseoil4267 5 лет назад +1

      In high school we did the 1st movement in full orchestra. Cant imagine doing it in elementary school....

  • @marcosviniciosribeirocompo1137
    @marcosviniciosribeirocompo1137 9 лет назад +2

    A Master Piece !!

  • @123must
    @123must 12 лет назад +3

    Excellent rendition !
    Thanks a lot

  • @Tuck213
    @Tuck213 13 лет назад +3

    A great composition.

  • @richardsmith1799
    @richardsmith1799 4 месяца назад

    By far the best symphony ever written by an adjunct professor of chemistry. The andante, I thought, too slow.

  • @oOAngeloAmorimOo
    @oOAngeloAmorimOo 10 лет назад +2

    i didnt know this until i saw this live yesterday, i just have to watch it again

  • @markrubin9449
    @markrubin9449 4 года назад +1

    Borodin. Great music every time.

  • @charlottewhyte9804
    @charlottewhyte9804 9 лет назад +3

    very expressive conductor

  • @fecheni
    @fecheni 3 года назад +3

    Es una de las sinfonías más bellas....

  • @edythorvenpuerta1425
    @edythorvenpuerta1425 2 года назад +5

    Emoción hasta las lágrimas. Qué grandes músicos. Gracias mil por subir esta joya. ❤️

  • @서강석-s1t
    @서강석-s1t 4 года назад +1

    Many Thanks!!!

  • @tubanoyoutube2802
    @tubanoyoutube2802 6 лет назад +3

    Beautiful music.

  • @jodywhitt1871
    @jodywhitt1871 4 года назад +2

    Love the third movement

  • @guillermojesusguerrabravo5261
    @guillermojesusguerrabravo5261 4 года назад +4

    Con todo el resplandor de la musica rusa la interpretacion de esta sinfonía tiene gran brillo.

  • @Likes_Trains
    @Likes_Trains 6 лет назад +2

    I love the dramatic zoom out at 5:00

  • @TheJamesalden
    @TheJamesalden 11 лет назад +1

    Like some others, this, too, for me...is the best version of this wonderful symphony...and yes...to imagine that this was just a mere hobby. And this was my first introduction to his music, and then those two fantastic string quartets...Wonderful upload...Thank You!...

  • @서강석-s1t
    @서강석-s1t 4 года назад +1

    many thanks!!!

  • @Novorus01
    @Novorus01 12 лет назад +4

    It is great! Best wishes from Russia!

  • @prototropo
    @prototropo 5 лет назад +8

    Oh, my academic chemist of world regard, my Slavic folk history patriot, my orphaned aldehyde submediant prince-I’ll love you til the steppes roll in like the tides and Peter’s great horses plow the Baltic. If only you left us one more great symphony (The “Siberian!”), or an essential Eastern European Clarinet/English Horn/French Horn triple concerto, or, perhaps best of all, an Orthodox Easter Mass, to bookend Brahms’ German Requiem. Only you could make Russia so proud.

    • @5610winston
      @5610winston 5 лет назад +1

      I have heard a recording of his first symphony in which an English horn substituted for the 'cello section in the statement of the main theme of the slow movement. I have also herd one where that theme is stated by a solo 'cello.
      A Siberian symphony? The opening movement of the third symphony certainly might have been headed that way. One of the visitors who heard Borodin play the slow movement of the third through in an impromptu recital described a set of variations, remarkable in that each variation was crescendo throughout, and that the theme was quite unlike anything Borodin had ever written before.
      One of his piano works was used as a basis for a section of a requiem.
      I have always considered Borodin's A-major Quartet to be essentially a symphony scored for string quartet. Too much music there to be heard clearly if it had been scored for full orchestra, rather like the Scherzo in D-major for string quartet which was the only portion of Borodin's third symphony that he got completed on paper (the first movement was recreated by Glazounov from memory, from one of the in-home recitals), and Glazounov orchestrated the scherzo based, in part, on Borodin's notes in the margin of the quartet score.

    • @elizabethschaeffer9543
      @elizabethschaeffer9543 4 года назад

      I love your comment! And I share your love for Borodin. Many thanks!

  • @wainbender
    @wainbender 11 лет назад +6

    Это поистине чудесная музыка!!!

  • @mirrors1
    @mirrors1 11 лет назад +2

    Una bellissima e coinvolgente pagina sinfonica

  • @theslurpman
    @theslurpman 3 месяца назад

    Nothing beats counting in 1 at 300-400 bpm then in 4 at 70 bmp + the hearing loss from rehearsing this peice.
    Update: cried during the third movement

  • @matthewthedude
    @matthewthedude 10 лет назад +7

    alexander borodin was a true genius. if only he had focused on his music more and not his work.

    • @FuegoAzul.MusicProd
      @FuegoAzul.MusicProd 6 лет назад +2

      maybe the result it would not have been majestic.... WORK IS BORING

    • @PentameronSV
      @PentameronSV 6 лет назад +6

      On the bright side, he contributed much to chemistry. Also, quality over quantity!

    • @garyfrandsen8229
      @garyfrandsen8229 4 года назад

      @@FuegoAzul.MusicProd Dumb fuck...