@@maxh3832 Mozart loved and idolized Bach. Bach would famously end his pieces with a Major chord, symbolizing his hope and faith in God. Mozart would have known this, and decided to end his Kyrie with a chord which has no middle note, (the middle note, the 3rd, determines whether it's Major or Minor). He's saying there is no Heaven (Major chord) and there is no Hell (Minor chord). He also wrote this on his deathbed, so he likely wasn't very optimistic at the time.
This cannot be played with two hands. Some intervals are just wider than an octave. Not to forget that even though within an octave, some of the fast notes are way to difficult to play with the second voice in the same hand.
Bach is an anchor for many classical romantic composers after him. Sometimes they embraced him, sometimes they wanted to get away from his shores to new oceans but they always came back to him never could get too far away
my favorite masterpiece of mozart
After lacrimosa?
@@jotarokujo379 lacrimosa overrated
Counterpoint and technical beauty is stronger in this one. Of course lacrimosa is genial too
Requiem is my favorite too
Mine too
Bach would be proud!
Mozart: le what
Kyyyriee eleee xriste eleeeeeee eeeeeeee eee eee e e e e e e e
KYRIE ELEE XRISTE ELEEE EE...
A great fugue style from Mozart !
Genius. Absolute genius.
Best version! I SUBSCRIBE
0:35 eeehm
WOW ! Good Job ! Liked and Subscribed!
This reminds me of a Bach fugue
Yeah pretty much, the way it's written makes it sound like somewhat of a 4 voice fugue.
Listen to Bachs fugue n.10 of the second book i think it was
@@symphoniaenjoyer I will check it out, thx
thanks
Song of end? 2:19
Prelude 6 in D minor from WTC 1 - Bach
So Epic
Ky-Rie elei(LeeEEeEeEEeEeEEAEEeEe)son
Excelente
The original title of Mozart's requiem was "I heard Beethoven had some difficulty with fugue az a composer".
Gott mit uns
Mozart's open 5th at the end would argue that. Leaving out the 3rd is his way of saying there is no God.
@@aarondimoff5180 can u explain what u mean with that?Im curious but too dumb to get it.
@@maxh3832 Mozart loved and idolized Bach. Bach would famously end his pieces with a Major chord, symbolizing his hope and faith in God. Mozart would have known this, and decided to end his Kyrie with a chord which has no middle note, (the middle note, the 3rd, determines whether it's Major or Minor). He's saying there is no Heaven (Major chord) and there is no Hell (Minor chord). He also wrote this on his deathbed, so he likely wasn't very optimistic at the time.
@@aarondimoff5180 thx
Bach did you possesed mozart
This cannot be played with two hands. Some intervals are just wider than an octave. Not to forget that even though within an octave, some of the fast notes are way to difficult to play with the second voice in the same hand.
Of course you can, it's just practical
You can take the orange parts for your piano friend and you just play the purple parts with two hands easy.
Hallo from Spandau! I wish People make the würld go rond!andy d-
Bach
I didn't have 4 hands lol
bruh this variation could use more notes in my opinon
you got 10 fingers
The begining sounds like Bach lmao
Hmm maybe, just like a liitle fugue haha.
Because Bach is known for his contrapuntal technique and style in music.
@@akemi5082 Yes
Bach is an anchor for many classical romantic composers after him. Sometimes they embraced him, sometimes they wanted to get away from his shores to new oceans but they always came back to him never could get too far away
This is a fugue. Question is, can this be played? Anyone tried? It sounds dead hardcore
a fugue!