Partita for Violin No. 2, Chaconne (J.S. Bach) - Chris Thile | Live from Here
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- Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
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Chris Thile performs an excerpt from Johann Sebastian Bach's Partita in D minor for solo violin after our September 7, 2019 show.
It's not just his perfect execution of the notes, it's the feeling he puts into it... the difference between playing music and being a true musician.
Wow! Never imagined the chaconne can be so joyous, gentle, and soothing. Like a bedtime story + lullaby for a preschooler. Chris really lets the instrument’s character shine through, and makes this music a mandolin piece. Each note was so well attended to and meaningful.
Perfect way to the start the morning. Thile does Bach.
This has always been my favorite passage in the Chaconne. It's as if the minor key is tension and the major section is the release from all that tension.
Well. I know what video I’m going to have on loop for the rest of the week....
Stunning. I just listened to Avi Avital and Alon Sariel playing this to compare the interpretation. This is the one that brought me to tears. So loving and sensual yet technically perfect. So much feeling apart from the brilliant technique. So impressed.
Hopefully this means another Bach album is on the way! 🤞
It would have been a tall order to do them Bach to Bach
It's Bach, not Tool, so yeah, I'm sure there will be another one.
Wow! Y'all added this very fine finale that radio listeners missed.
Now Cha-cronies everywhere will be in listening heaven. I was so lucky to know of & watch the LFH streaming, (& 1 day grace period extension!), for watching the whole stream: pre-radio, APM radio show, & post-radio show with this conclusion of the Chaconne was the cherry right on top of a great, great! season opener. Thank you Chris & LFH.
I'm transported ❤️ 🎼🎵🎶🎶🎼🎵🎶Love listening but watching him makes Bach perfect!
bravo!! bravo!!
wish to hear full performance.
Bravo Chris!
Bach would be overjoyed for the seeds that fell outside the concert hall, to grow into mighty trees. Watch Michael Lawrence's film "Bach and Friends"!
For your work. The essence of truth is stillness. Weeping
This deserves well over a million likes.. im sorry I can only give it one.
Oh, now that's a wonderful interpretation and superbly executed! I just love this.
a beautiful and inspiring performance. I do wish the entire Ciaconne was given< though. I want to know how Chris deals with some of the earlier variations...
If we just wait long enough Chris will do all the movements for vol2 of the Sonatas and Partitas. Maybe by like 2041?
But seriously, if you do happen to see this chris, record it when/if you’re ready. Love your work.
I struggle with Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring. This is awesome.
He used to play the whole D minor partita as part of his shows when he was touring Europe one or two years ago. With a few mistakes like here… I remembered thinking he must be preparing for the recording of the second Bach album, but that still didn't happen…
Why he always plays so pianissimo??? You rock, motherfer!!!
thank you, Chris! thank you!
As a violist, I love this.
Beautiful!
How WONDERFUL!
Que MARAVILLA!!!
Lovely counterpoint and balance.
would be nice to hear the whole piece played at once. in an environment where he can fully focus. such an amazing piece
I couldn't agree more, I was like" what about the rest!?" :)
This is a dream come true! Please post the whole thing sometime?
Bring us home chris
The Chaconne on the mandolin....WOW!!!
Wonderful
BRAVO!!!
The best mandolin player !
Yes! Can you do please Sonata #1 in G Minor, BWV 1001, IV. Presto - Bach | Chris Thile at the Grand Prairie, Texas On May 21, 2022.
Wow
I kinda like what he did with the major arpeggio section, with three hits on the lower two strings per one on the upper two
Just realized that he accidentally jumped one variation or four (easy) bars from bar 161 to 164. Kind of comforting that even Chris Thile is still a human being... Still a wonderful interpretation of the second part of the Chaconne.
Очень нежный , очень!😢❤🙏
This isn't the entire chaconne, however. Any chance we can get the whole thing?
There's a bounty in heaven
I love Chris Thile, but I am a little disappointed about the fact that I cannot find a video out there where he plays the entire piece.
Wait--the Chaconne is over 13 minutes long (depending who's playing it). Is there a recording of Chris playing the entire Partita--or at least, the entire Chaconne?
He pared it down, leaving out big chunks of the sixty four different variations to come up with his final rendition. The beginning is there and the end is there but a whole lot in the middle is missing. Still, it's hard to even notice if you don't know the piece. Utterly enjoyable. Masterful expression on his part.
@@pauljones8370 Hi Paul it's seems he forgot something from 1.20 and 1.30 are you agree? (3 or 4 bars)
I felt i lacked intensity in some parts.. but that harmonic was very stylish
Yes, I agree. Beautiful, but for a piece that's supposed to express the entire range of human emotion, I feel like he's a bit scared to go into territory that might make the instrument sound raw or harsh or loud, and so only taps a subset of emotions. Maybe it's okay to sound raw or harsh or loud in those parts that are anguished or tormented, or even those sections expressing extreme elation.
@@npchong love your comment!
i feel classical players are afraid of harsh sounds, and popular players are not used to a lot of dinamic changes in one piece.
Chris Thile is a fantastic player, but Bach is the thing most similar to God, if God existed. God does not exist. Bach exists.
How saddened and disappointed Bach and others like him would be if you teleported them to modern-day and they heard what has become of music. I would think they would have assumed their very existence would propel the human race into more complex realms of musical expression. I Wanna Hold Your Hand, Cant Buy me Love.............nope lol
I always hesitate to take on this question because it's just conjecture. But I think you should at least be more optimistic. I think Bach, confined to tiny little Leipzig his whole career and not renowned during his time, "would have assumed" nothing of the sort, and be firstly world-shatteringly thrilled to discover the fact that you and I (and his 7 MILLION monthly spotify listeners) can instantly watch or listen to a performance of his piece. Moreover, considering he pioneered theory rules and harmonic progressions used in popular music for the next 300 years, he'd certainly be able to appreciate the musical qualities of any song. I can agree that he probably wouldn't love the shift away from religious music.
Also, those two are certainly simple Beatles songs (written by 20-year-olds mind you) but you'll have no trouble finding your "complex realm of expression" among their 200+ other hits. Definitely not the best choice to try to claim non-complex musical expression.
@@coleseagroves Harrison had some depth, John and Paul were airheads and complete losers. John got what he deserved and Paul acknowledged it with his reaction hours after John's death. I grew up listening and playing Doc Watson's stuff and Doc and his entire circle made the beatles look like children and its about as simple as that lol
You are the air head. The glib clueless snobbery speaks for itself. You laughable dolt you.
@@K131399 ok edgelord
@@K131399 you’re really comparing Bach to pop music? Lmfao