Why YOUR favorite composer sucks!

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  • Опубликовано: 30 июл 2022
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Комментарии • 1,7 тыс.

  • @emilycaballero6052
    @emilycaballero6052 Год назад +1244

    "a nightmare for performers and conductors" I feel like Stravinsky would have been half flattered by that

    • @Carl-FriedrichWelker
      @Carl-FriedrichWelker  Год назад +70

      Yeah😂

    • @Amadea27
      @Amadea27 Год назад +50

      And a nightmare for dancers as well... I faint just by thinking of the choreography.

    • @nobumiau6472
      @nobumiau6472 Год назад +6

      And for some listeners xd

    • @DW_25
      @DW_25 Год назад +4

      Just conduct in 1 5head. What do you mean you can't subdivide into 7

    • @davidozab2753
      @davidozab2753 Год назад +4

      Life goals!

  • @ssb201
    @ssb201 2 года назад +1011

    "One Spontaneous Key Change doesn't make your music epic"
    I feel personally attacked.

  • @kartakarta6229
    @kartakarta6229 2 года назад +2610

    We can all agree that Carl's favourite composer is Tchaikovsky

    • @mohammadgolkar2789
      @mohammadgolkar2789 2 года назад +372

      The statement made about tchaikovsky changes a lot when you keep in mind that he was gay

    • @Carl-FriedrichWelker
      @Carl-FriedrichWelker  2 года назад +181

      Oh god, know I get it😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @Carl-FriedrichWelker
      @Carl-FriedrichWelker  2 года назад +149

      He's definitely in the top 5 yes🙌🏻😂

    • @ZicraVEVO
      @ZicraVEVO 2 года назад +31

      As it should

    • @Tizohip
      @Tizohip 2 года назад +15

      @@Carl-FriedrichWelker Tchaikovsky have much mistakes in his orchestral works.

  • @eliot8394
    @eliot8394 2 года назад +871

    chopin didn’t need orchestra, chopin had piano.

  • @theKobus
    @theKobus 2 года назад +586

    Apparently we all missed out; we remember Verdi as a composer, but his wife said his true gift was his risotto alla milanese

    • @Carl-FriedrichWelker
      @Carl-FriedrichWelker  2 года назад +51

      😂

    • @tkengathegrateful4844
      @tkengathegrateful4844 2 года назад +14

      Just told that one to the missus - it got a good laugh from her. 👍

    • @MaxStirner123
      @MaxStirner123 2 года назад +6

      Admittedly, that's why we printed it on the banknotes

    • @TheHutchy01
      @TheHutchy01 Год назад +3

      Either that man made a really good risotto or y'know ouch.

    • @johnnie543
      @johnnie543 Год назад +3

      Giuseppina Strepponi needs more credit than she is rewarded for this

  • @damienheemskerk
    @damienheemskerk 2 года назад +1099

    The fact that the only complaint about Chopin is his orchestration just says how incredible he is.
    The Grieg slander just hurt as well😂

    • @ryanjeffers679
      @ryanjeffers679 2 года назад +17

      Griegs string quartet. A must listen.

    • @Aleksandr_Skrjabin
      @Aleksandr_Skrjabin Год назад +49

      Chopin is just the best and most romantic of all time. When a woman judges Chopin, the woman says: 😍

    • @escuchachopin2856
      @escuchachopin2856 Год назад +18

      Hahahahaha exactly, Chopin is the best, we all love him... but, he's cello works are beautiful...

    • @al4381
      @al4381 Год назад +12

      Chopin is the equivalent of a romanticist hippie

    • @user-fu7zf4ck9z
      @user-fu7zf4ck9z Год назад +9

      Chopin is a bad composer. There's a lot of compositions of his that are lovely, but outside of the Ballades, his music is written very lazily

  • @mazeppa1231
    @mazeppa1231 Год назад +700

    As a proud Liszt fan, I loved the burn "where do I even start", because in reality, he never stuck to conventional norms of composition and always did things different. Liszt always experimented new things with his music, so it kind of rings true, lol. 😂

  • @heisenbong6691
    @heisenbong6691 2 года назад +535

    The Brahms one is entirely counterfactual; in reality, she was expecting him to marry her after Robert died, as they were both in love with each other. However, he chose to remain espoused to his music over marrying her. Conclusion: he was the exact opposite of a simp.

    • @Carl-FriedrichWelker
      @Carl-FriedrichWelker  2 года назад +200

      Should I change the Thumbnail to Brahms = Chad😂

    • @heisenbong6691
      @heisenbong6691 2 года назад +45

      @@Carl-FriedrichWelker Yes, sir 😂

    • @mouf725
      @mouf725 Год назад +8

      Oh right, I always thought it was a case of unrequited love, interesting. In that case, do you know what his reason for not marrying her was, like why did he want to remain espoused to his music?

    • @richh9450
      @richh9450 Год назад

      Not only did he try, there are rumours that there was a child.

    • @Cbawls
      @Cbawls Год назад +28

      @@mouf725 Robert Schumann was his mentor and great friend. I assume even though the two had an affair, he had too much respect for Robert and felt too guilty.

  • @RachaelLongLastName
    @RachaelLongLastName Год назад +517

    As a Vivaldi fan, I don’t feel like that was even a really good burn. He wrote over 400 concertos and because one of them happens to be beloved by a random suckass talent show, that’s all he’s remembered for. He _invented_ the modern concerto and all he is remembered for is Summer.

    • @dieweltverschworunggatescl1206
      @dieweltverschworunggatescl1206 Год назад +43

      Yes. Vivaldi is more than the four Seasons.

    • @rodrigoodonsalcedocisneros9266
      @rodrigoodonsalcedocisneros9266 Год назад +65

      A good burn then would be: "Once you hear one piece, you've heard them all" xD

    • @RachaelLongLastName
      @RachaelLongLastName Год назад +16

      @@rodrigoodonsalcedocisneros9266 Lmao, I guess that would be true for someone who just listens to the four seasons. But it is certainly a better "burn" than the one in the video. Maybe I'm just a stingy fan tho.

    • @RachaelLongLastName
      @RachaelLongLastName Год назад +16

      He didn't even write all the concertos for violin; there are concertos for cello, oboe, flute, bassoon, recorder, lute, mandolin, horn, viola d'amore, (etc) and then he also has a couple of concerto grossos that are really great too.

    • @rodrigoodonsalcedocisneros9266
      @rodrigoodonsalcedocisneros9266 Год назад +2

      @@RachaelLongLastName Yeah, I get what you are saying, but it is a funny burn since so many of Vivaldi pieces sound similar to 4 S.

  • @marazali2557
    @marazali2557 Год назад +140

    Congrats dude you actually managed to piss me of with every single one of them 🤣

  • @ninjaaninjaaaa
    @ninjaaninjaaaa 9 месяцев назад +36

    In case u want to jump to ur fav composer
    0:00 - Bach: B minor mass, Gloria in excelsis Deo
    0:03 - Beethoven: 5th symphony
    0:08 - Mozart: 40th symphony
    0:16 - Mahler: 3rd symphony
    0:28 - Bruckner: 7th symphony
    0:43 - Brahms: 4th symphony
    0:53 - Schubert: "Unfinished" symphony
    1:05 - Schumann: 3rd symphony, mov.IV
    1:20 - Rachmaninoff: Symphonic Dances
    1:30 - Ravel: Daphnis et Chloe, Lever du jour
    1:42 - Stravinsky: Rite of Spring, The Augurs of Spring
    1:51 - Liszt: Spanish Rhapsody
    2:04 - Strauss: Vier letzte Lieder
    2:14 - Chopin: Ballade no. 1
    2:25 - Tchaikovsky: Nutcracker ♡
    2:33 - Wagner: Tristan und Isolde
    2:45 - Verdi: Nabucco
    3:00 - Puccini: La Boheme, Musetta's Waltz
    3:14 - Haydn: 87th symphony
    3:23 - Händel: Music for the Royal Fireworks
    3:35 - Debussy: La Mer
    3:48 - Mendelssohn: 4th symphony
    4:02 - Shostakovich: 5th symphony
    4:16 - Schönberg: 2nd chamber symphony LOL
    4:23 - Sibelius: 5th symphony
    4:36 - Dvorak: 9th symphony
    4:50 - Bartok: The Miraculous Mandarin
    5:02 - Prokofiev: 6th piano sonata
    5:14 - C. Schumann: 3 romances
    5:24 - Berlioz: Symphonie Fantastique
    5:34 - Vivaldi: "Summer" violin concerto, mov.III
    5:42 - Saint-Säens: Allegro Appassionato op.70
    5:48 - Hindemith: Symphonic Metamorphosis, mov.IV
    5:59 - Korsakov: Scheherazade
    6:08 - Grieg: Peer Gynt suite no. 1
    6:18 - outro - Ravel: string quartet in F, mov.II
    (little help to @BlueMeeple 's comment)

  • @insight827
    @insight827 2 года назад +626

    Liszt is quite misunderstood, but his music and legacy is incredibly important

  • @BlueMeeple
    @BlueMeeple 2 года назад +326

    List of excerpts (mostly 1st movements or preludes etc.)
    Bach: B minor mass, Gloria in excelsis Deo
    Beethoven: 5th symphony
    Mozart: 40th symphony
    Mahler: 3rd symphony
    Bruckner: 7th symphony
    Brahms: 4th symphony
    Schubert: "Unfinished" symphony
    Schumann: 3rd symphony, mov.IV
    Rachmaninoff: Symphonic Dances
    Ravel: Daphnis et Chloe, Lever du jour
    Stravinsky: Rite of Spring, The Augurs of Spring
    Liszt: Spanish Rhapsody
    Strauss: Vier letzte Lieder
    Chopin: Ballade no. 1
    Tchaikovsky: Nutcracker
    Wagner: Tristan und Isolde
    Verdi: Nabucco
    Puccini: La Boheme, Musetta's Waltz
    Haydn: 87th symphony
    Händel: Music for the Royal Fireworks
    Debussy: La Mer
    Mendelssohn: 4th symphony
    Shostakovich: 5th symphony
    Schönberg: 2nd chamber symphony
    Sibelius: 5th symphony
    Dvorak: 9th symphony
    Bartok: The Miraculous Mandarin
    Prokofiev: 6th piano sonata
    C.Schumann: 3 romances
    Berlioz: Symphonie Fantastique
    Vivaldi: "Summer" violin concerto, mov.III
    Saint-Säens: Allegro Appassionato op.70
    Hindemith: Symphonic Metamorphosis, mov.IV
    Korsakov: Scheherazade
    Grieg: Peer Gynt suite no. 1
    (outro - Ravel: string quartet, mov.II)

  • @user-ez4or8ly4c
    @user-ez4or8ly4c 2 года назад +136

    5:14 During Rob's lifetime it was exactly the opposite. She was a Europe-renowned piano virtuoso and he was barely known outside Germany. When they came to Russia someone asked "Who is that guy near you? Ah, your husband? Does he even compose or what?"

    • @Carl-FriedrichWelker
      @Carl-FriedrichWelker  2 года назад +23

      I didn't knew that thanks🙌🏻

    • @dan-us6nk
      @dan-us6nk 2 года назад +5

      source please
      I'd wish to read more

    • @user-ez4or8ly4c
      @user-ez4or8ly4c 2 года назад +11

      @@dan-us6nk I'm not sure if I can give you any sources in English since I've watched some documentaries and read some articles in Russian. You can fing something about Clara and Robert's trip to St. Petersburg and Moscow in 1844.
      Although, here are some translations from Olga Loseva's article "About Clara and Robert Schumann's Russian trip" from 2002:
      "Whatever Russian criticists wrote during Clara Schumann's concerts about the popularity of Robert Schumann's pieces "among all of the amateurs, not even saying about the connoisseurs", the facts, unfortunately, claim the opposite. Even among the connoisseurs his music *and even his name* was seldom heard before 1844, and really a few of Eastern European composers of his generation were in such a deep obscurity there. It would be wrong to say that such a situation was specific for Russia and was different for any country outside Germany".
      Although, in 10 years the situation changed dramatically and Schumann has become one of the most playable composers there. And that had suprpisingly no connection to Clara's recitals.

    • @Quotenwagnerianer
      @Quotenwagnerianer Год назад +7

      Which is also the reason why her father was so fundamentally opposed to them marrying and they had to get a court order to be allowed to.
      He had groomed her to be a concert pianist being able to maintain not only herself but also provide for her father as well. And when Robert showed up, an unknown musician, a law school drop out, a man that was not made, father Wieck was up in arms against the idea of her daughter marrying him.

    • @user-nk1to4in8m
      @user-nk1to4in8m Год назад +7

      Without Clara you would not know Robert.

  • @user-kb6yy8uk5n
    @user-kb6yy8uk5n 2 года назад +760

    Tchaikovsky is a great melodist, but when it comes to orchestration, no one is better than Ravel.

    • @Carl-FriedrichWelker
      @Carl-FriedrichWelker  2 года назад +201

      I think that Tchaikovsky is way more than just a great melodist. But Ravel is a genius orchestrator, and so is Tchaikovsky, just because Ravel uses more different Instrument combinations does not mean he is a better orchestrator, even if I love Ravel. Not saying Ravel isn't better. But there is a difference between how many different sound colors are used and the actual genius of orchestration.🙌🏻

    • @iks.7048
      @iks.7048 2 года назад +78

      @@Carl-FriedrichWelker It's like comparing Bach to Stravinsky.

    • @arielorthmann4061
      @arielorthmann4061 2 года назад +11

      Messiaen's orchestrations are also something

    • @worldmusictheory
      @worldmusictheory 2 года назад

      cliché comment ngl

    • @gon9684
      @gon9684 2 года назад +28

      @@arielorthmann4061 Messiaen is Ravel's sucessor in a way, his orchestration is great, the only difference is that the way he writes doesn't lend so well to what really made Ravel the best. Btw, saying Tchaikovsky is better at orchestration than Ravel is ridiculous, Tchaikovsky was a good orchestrator, but not even a master, so let's not compare to perhaps the biggest master of them all. Stravinsky, Messiaen, Schoenberg, they were all so much better and clearly more knowledgeable, not that there is any issue with Tchaikovsky's music

  • @bdragon1445
    @bdragon1445 Год назад +111

    Handel is indeed seriously underrated, but I don't think that was his fault.

    • @LobsngDmchoi
      @LobsngDmchoi Год назад +6

      Not underrated by Beethoven. But he was by Schoenberg -- at least Beethoven had a copy of Handels (almost) complete oeuvre.

    • @SimoneBattaglia94
      @SimoneBattaglia94 Год назад +7

      We have to blame 19th century musicology for that I think.

    • @rogerwilliams6058
      @rogerwilliams6058 Год назад +1

      @@SimoneBattaglia94 Sounds about right.

    • @indiegrab360
      @indiegrab360 Год назад +3

      I only studied Baroque and Romanticism but if I had to answer "Who's the best composer?" I'd just go with Bach Mozart Handel... Schumann or Schubert... always get them confused. One of those.

    • @rogerwilliams6058
      @rogerwilliams6058 Год назад +2

      @@indiegrab360 Questions like that are completely useless.

  • @henrywolfecarradine
    @henrywolfecarradine 2 года назад +96

    Once heard the joke that you can count everything Stravinsky wrote in single beats. One, one, one, accented one, soft one, one rest, one, one, slightly longer one, one…. Etc.

    • @emanuelebabici
      @emanuelebabici 2 года назад +24

      Dancers are masters of counting music, because that the way we can set reference points and dance together with the music... I've danced in Stravinsky and you can't imagine how complex it is musically, we had to memorize a sequence of phrases, each of different length, and count it at different speeds depending on what we needed to do... Everything with absolutely no pattern, and counting everything in 1 wouldn't help us😂 it was fun tho, I give him that

    • @Carl-FriedrichWelker
      @Carl-FriedrichWelker  2 года назад +8

      Sounds horrible😂

  • @Quotenwagnerianer
    @Quotenwagnerianer Год назад +81

    The Mahler one made me burst out laughing.
    Especially since I read the letters Alma wrote about him and in one of the early ones she describes how he cried in her arms, apologizing for coming too early the first time they ever had sex. ;)

    • @Carl-FriedrichWelker
      @Carl-FriedrichWelker  Год назад +21

      Ok I didn't know that😂

    • @WolfgangXP65-67
      @WolfgangXP65-67 Год назад +17

      I NEED TO READ THAT 😭

    • @azpizzazz3442
      @azpizzazz3442 Год назад +14

      w h a t

    • @Paolo8772
      @Paolo8772 9 месяцев назад

      I didn't know that, but coming too quickly has nothing to do with the size of one's dick!

    • @meruem6995ujjoooo
      @meruem6995ujjoooo 5 месяцев назад +1

      Do you see the likes, some things are perfect just the way they are.

  • @lucapop3571
    @lucapop3571 Год назад +182

    Although Stravinsky represents at first a considerable challenge for conductors because of his unique bar system and internal elements in the music... it's the most addictive drug once you get used to it and internalise his "game". As a student, I think Histoire du Soldat it's an impassable step in a conductor's education!

    • @Carl-FriedrichWelker
      @Carl-FriedrichWelker  Год назад +6

      Wise words😂👍🏻

    • @wsc1955
      @wsc1955 8 месяцев назад

      One of my faves but I'm guessing it would be hard to play.

    • @brianthomas2434
      @brianthomas2434 5 месяцев назад

      The hysterical thing is the "Stravinsky conducts Stravinsky " series on Columbia demonstrates how difficult his work is to conduct. Old Igor was a below average conductor.

  • @plentyofmagoes1143
    @plentyofmagoes1143 2 года назад +130

    Beethoven’s harmonies are simple at times, but many of these instances stand to hold an important meaning within the overall structure of the piece.
    An example I’ve seen people sight is an instance in the 4th movement of his 5th symphony where he stays on the I C major chord for several measures to pound in the cadence on the first section. I believe this over the top emphasis is there as a means to contrast the much more somber returning theme from the 3rd movement.
    I would argue his harmonies are not necessarily boring, but more overtly simplistic at times.

    • @dan-us6nk
      @dan-us6nk 2 года назад +9

      He's just the earliest romantic symphonist so everything seems more simple to us.
      I personally am addicted to Mahler, so genuinly listening to Beethoven's music sounds a bit simple for me.

    • @BenjaminAnderson21
      @BenjaminAnderson21 Год назад +4

      @@dan-us6nk It's that classical simplicity that makes it such a joy to listen to, though. Beethoven's music may be quasi-romantic and large in scale but it never loses that Mozartian charm.

    • @mattbalfe2983
      @mattbalfe2983 9 месяцев назад

      Beethoven is much more about motific development ( easy example being the 5th symphony.)

  • @KingRenYen
    @KingRenYen 9 месяцев назад +30

    As a Shostakovich Fan, I can confirm that we all like him because his music was inspired by war and oppression.

    • @hortleberrycircusbround9678
      @hortleberrycircusbround9678 8 месяцев назад +1

      And this is why Prokofiev, who embodies way more fantasy is a trillion times better

    • @philv2529
      @philv2529 3 месяца назад

      Is Shastakovich pronounced, "Shastakovich" or, "Shastakovich?"

  • @anoldretiredelephant
    @anoldretiredelephant 11 месяцев назад +33

    I think the thing about Bach that can make his music a little difficult to listen to is that you are never given a break, seldom much contrast in a single movement, and in his pieces start very suddenly and drammatically, which are not bad things but can get overwhelming very quickly, especially with his fugues. Bach in my mind will always be my favourite composer because I can never get bored of him but once in awhile I need a break from his intense and rigorous counterpoint for something lighter, which often ironically involves a bigger orchestra.

  • @Balfour.
    @Balfour. 2 года назад +52

    About Mahler, it's worth saying that at some point he sought Freud's services to "solve stuff" so yeah, there's that. Although on the other hand, he was almost 40 years old when he met his wife who was barely 18 at the time, and all his and Alma Schindler biographers account that whatever happened between them was wild and instantaneous, so yeah.

  • @Eclectobit
    @Eclectobit Год назад +40

    Ravel is pinnacle of orchestration and Prokofiev is well-known for many recognizable works, piano sonatas (dunno if you are just a violinist or anything), Romeo and Juliet, piano concertos, etc etc.

    • @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633
      @elizabethcsicsery-ronay1633 9 месяцев назад

      Sorry, Berlioz was a greater and very innovative orchestrator. He influenced the Russians, esp. Rimsky.

    • @wsc1955
      @wsc1955 8 месяцев назад

      Love them both since I was 17.

  • @anti64
    @anti64 2 года назад +88

    love how the first time Saint-Saëns is acknowledged on your channel is for the "Why your favorite composer sucks!" video, that's fair I guess lmao

  • @zevburrows1871
    @zevburrows1871 2 года назад +138

    Tchaikovsky a better orchestrator than Ravel? Them’s fightin’ words.

    • @emanuelebabici
      @emanuelebabici 2 года назад +24

      Tchaikovsky's orchestration is widely considered among the best... Ravel has a beautiful use of colour and rythme but Tchaikovsky's orchestration is pure genius... It should be recognised instead that Wagner's orchestration is at God level too and Tchaikovsky has been influenced by it (although he publicly disliked him)

    • @oritdrimer4354
      @oritdrimer4354 2 года назад +9

      But overall Ravel wins because Le Tombeau de Couperin.

    • @iks.7048
      @iks.7048 2 года назад +14

      @@oritdrimer4354 Overall, Ravel wins because he is Ravel. One mustn't forget, he has other orchestral works.

    • @oritdrimer4354
      @oritdrimer4354 2 года назад +3

      @@iks.7048 Ravel is Great, He is in my top 5 already.

    • @lanaritchie
      @lanaritchie 2 года назад +5

      Daphnis et Chloe is just out of this world

  • @WillWright77
    @WillWright77 Год назад +22

    I was watching this in aggressive anticipation to see what you had to say about Tchaikovsky. Left surprisingly satisfied.

  • @dariomosbo4270
    @dariomosbo4270 2 года назад +94

    I wish there was more representation with composers such as Albéniz, de Falla, Gottschalk, Granados, etc. Their music is so great and deserves to be known more!

    • @Carl-FriedrichWelker
      @Carl-FriedrichWelker  2 года назад +22

      Sadly I don't know much about them so I can't make any jokes😂

    • @jesustovar2549
      @jesustovar2549 2 года назад +20

      Spanish composers are seriously underrated, especially the ones from late 19th century and early 20th century, even most spanish people don't have idea of who they are!

    • @emanuelebabici
      @emanuelebabici 2 года назад +5

      Gottschalk! I'm so attached to his music since I danced the main character in a fairytale with his music. Very exciting and exotic, yet virtuosity doesn't take away from expressiveness

    • @kristijanpavlovic
      @kristijanpavlovic 2 года назад

      True, I only found out about them because I play classical guitar, fantastic composers, sadly not very well represented outside the guitar niche.

    • @bossshrek1241
      @bossshrek1241 2 года назад +1

      bet no one knows edouard wolff

  • @robertallan8035
    @robertallan8035 2 года назад +30

    as a Tchaikovsky/Debussy fan, I got off easy and the most fucking striking thing is that I've been told I look a lot like Dicaprio by entirely different random people a great number of times

    • @NibblesTheNibbler
      @NibblesTheNibbler Год назад +1

      I think Debussy looks more like John C. Riley than DiCaprio.

  • @emanuelebabici
    @emanuelebabici 2 года назад +290

    Tchaikovsky for ever✌🏻
    The only composer who wrote 2 hours long ballets and you can listen to the whole thing of every single one of them finding every moment beautiful end exciting, not to mention his other full length works
    I do not understand why he hates Rachmaninoff that much lol😂

    • @Carl-FriedrichWelker
      @Carl-FriedrichWelker  2 года назад +43

      Me, I don't hate Rachmaninoff, I think he is genius😂

    • @oritdrimer4354
      @oritdrimer4354 2 года назад

      I wouldn't call him my favourite, But I like to play his music tho.

    • @tkengathegrateful4844
      @tkengathegrateful4844 2 года назад +1

      Ugh, ballet. I'd rather be condemned to Dante's Bolgia of Mozart Divertimenti.

    • @Luca-yg5qx
      @Luca-yg5qx 2 года назад +4

      Ever heard of Prokofiev?

    • @emanuelebabici
      @emanuelebabici 2 года назад +5

      @@Luca-yg5qx Prokofiev is amazing too, one of my favourites... I honestly wouldn't do any ranking with composerz but it was a way to say that Tchaikovsky has a special place in my heart. Also, although Prokofiev's ballets are incredible, it's still hard to stand against Tchaikovsky's three masterpieces, which are enjoyable with and without ballet

  • @alexanderfo3886
    @alexanderfo3886 Год назад +20

    0:56 Schubert was great at writing melodies. It is a quality in itself. I can live with that.

  • @ligetisspaghetti5763
    @ligetisspaghetti5763 2 года назад +19

    4:07 WOW I have a lot to say about this: Lady Macbeth, the Nose, cello sonata, Symphony 1, Symphony 15, Piano Trio 2, Piano Concerto 2, Jazz Suites are all counter arguments.

  • @indiegrab360
    @indiegrab360 Год назад +18

    In college we all wrote a term paper on a Haydn piece. It required listening to it over and over... Doing lengthy analysis of the score. The Monday it was due we're all handing in the papers I go, "I'm sorry, but that was pretty boring. I'm not a fan." Everyone in the room laughed, including the professor.

  • @Samuel-kc1pg
    @Samuel-kc1pg 2 года назад +13

    Prokofiev is so flawless you had to lie in order to find a defect ☠️

  • @bigjojo2832
    @bigjojo2832 2 года назад +38

    all in favor of changing his name to CHADkovsky, say I

  • @weavileoff0461
    @weavileoff0461 2 года назад +71

    I am a proud Wagnerian. He wrote very complex and long works, and you have to be really into there to feel all of the greatness. And when you've reached it, it is simply the best for you. And you also get the superpower not to get tired while listening to his operas))

    • @ianng9915
      @ianng9915 2 года назад +4

      Ppl say they don't like Tristan act 2 because of Brangene warnings and marke's disappointment. I absolutely disagree as personally the whole act was just the most musically fascinating piece, the plot is slow but the pace is perfectly shaped by Wagner

    • @weavileoff0461
      @weavileoff0461 2 года назад +4

      @@ianng9915 I advise them just to be more patient so they can fully enjoy the music

    • @ianng9915
      @ianng9915 2 года назад +4

      @@weavileoff0461 being patient is one thing. When I first listened to Tristan I was patiently listening to act 1 while my attention kinda flew away until they drank the potion. But act 2 and 3 is something that I don't know how people can think it's boring, cuz it simply isn't.

    • @ianng9915
      @ianng9915 2 года назад +1

      @@weavileoff0461 actually act 1 can be very good too depending on the performance. The Bohm performance left me cold but the Karajan 52 is the best act 1 I've heard because of many reasons that I'm not going to list out here. Anyways Wagner left us long gifts that are not boring.

    • @kodalycat906
      @kodalycat906 Год назад +1

      Ach, you proud, true believers. Those 20+ (?) minutes of stasis in Parsifal (Farcifal, mejor dicho) were the death of me. Pity I didn't have Glazunov's wherewithal to keep trying (he didn't "get" Wagner, either, on attempts 1,2 or 3) until finally... I will definitely give ol' Richard his due, however, as the greatest "bleeding chunks" composer ever!

  • @elizatoponce9375
    @elizatoponce9375 Год назад +6

    NONO the fact that there isn’t a melody with Debussy is WHY ITS SO GOOD

  • @philipkarmanov6318
    @philipkarmanov6318 9 месяцев назад +16

    Tchaikovsky: does not suck at all
    His boyfriend: ._.

  • @Cbawls
    @Cbawls Год назад +7

    “Tchaikovsky: does not suck at all”
    Oh the irony…

  • @skeletoor501
    @skeletoor501 Год назад +34

    This channel represents another fundamental step in recognizing that nobody actually gives a shit about Satie, which is interesting, considering that neither did his contemporaries

    • @ernstjung6234
      @ernstjung6234 Год назад +1

      Quite false since he was worshipped in France by Les Six. His music was loved back then in France and he kind of was an icon of French Classical music.

    • @rogerwilliams6058
      @rogerwilliams6058 Год назад

      He made music jokes on the piano so that may be why.

    • @ernstjung6234
      @ernstjung6234 Год назад

      @@rogerwilliams6058 That"s pretty much you being ignorant of the character of the guy.

    • @rogerwilliams6058
      @rogerwilliams6058 Год назад +1

      @@ernstjung6234 I mean now. His repetoire has a niche scope. Classical music treats most composers that are not Mozart or Bethoveen horribly for no good reason.

    • @rogerwilliams6058
      @rogerwilliams6058 Год назад

      Contempories of more famous composers after spending their whole life creating music and gaining reputation only to be instantly forgotten by an ungrateful public. 💀

  • @user-ez4or8ly4c
    @user-ez4or8ly4c 2 года назад +20

    Alkan: "Who the hell are you? And stop beating the piano, aren't 20 minutes enough?"
    Sorabji: "If you write 5-hour-long piano pieces with 4 staves it doesn't make your music automatically epic"
    La Monte Young: "Tune your piano m8"
    Delibes, Minkus: "I'm not a ballet dancer so your music doesn't make sense to me"
    C. P. E. Bach: "Stop modulating between movements"

  • @butter5014
    @butter5014 2 года назад +146

    What a low blow for Chopin!
    He may not have orchestrated most of his pieces, but there is orchestral quality counterpoint in his pieces!
    Can you tell that Chopin is my favourite composer?

    • @emanuelebabici
      @emanuelebabici 2 года назад +19

      The lack of orchestration in his works is what keeps Chopin in my least listened composers... I do find his music beautiful, but piano alone doesn't meet my taste so often... I also didn't love his orchestrated works, sadly, but I won't to make clear it's just about personal taste, he's a great composer

    • @Carl-FriedrichWelker
      @Carl-FriedrichWelker  2 года назад +8

      Yes kinda😂

    • @theKobus
      @theKobus 2 года назад +40

      I think if you asked Chopin about his orchestration he would say "oh god please leave me alone will you leave me alone if I write you a mazurka"

    • @Froge4291
      @Froge4291 2 года назад +20

      @@theKobus im a chopin fan so id be very pleased to have a mazurka written for me xD

    • @dan-us6nk
      @dan-us6nk 2 года назад +6

      stop tapping at tables in public

  • @danavioloncello
    @danavioloncello Год назад +5

    4:36 Sibelius violin concerto : why am I still here? Just to suffer

  • @Scrungge
    @Scrungge 8 месяцев назад +2

    I actually love when the piano in an orchestra gets sole attention for a while. Everyone's at the edge of their seat in those moments

  • @usgusdus1215
    @usgusdus1215 9 месяцев назад +4

    I have spent 10 years of my life listening Bach's fugues almost non-stop. Never gets old

  • @HMPGENERAL
    @HMPGENERAL Год назад +5

    can't have the one hit wonder conversation without my boy pachelbel

  • @anniefillmore8594
    @anniefillmore8594 Год назад +11

    When I was in school our Music History Prof said that Tchaikovsky wrote "meretricious " music and for that reason, we would not be studying him during her course. We were pissed...especially after we went to the Library and found out what meretricious meant.

    • @schokoladenritter7969
      @schokoladenritter7969 Год назад +5

      You know, I would just drop that course immediately after hearing that. Tchaikovsky is basically my spirit animal, and I would feel personally attacked by that professor's statement. I feel like a lot of musicologists just like the stuff Mendelssohn liked out of respect for tradition, and the stuff that they can write a thesis and essays about, which shows a lack of enjoying music as music. Just because Tchaikovsky was good at making people like his music doesn't mean that it's bad. His orchestration skills and melodic talent are god-tier. Plus, he's good at keeping people engaged in the music most of the time, which cannot be said for a lot of late romantic era composers. Music is meant to be enjoyed... shocking, I know.

  • @organvideos2597
    @organvideos2597 Год назад +21

    I’ll have to assume since there was no mention of Percy Grainger or Scriabin, that my favorite composers are so indubitably excellent it wasn’t worth taking the time to include them in such a trivial list.

    • @rogerwilliams6058
      @rogerwilliams6058 Год назад +2

      I agree with such a interpretation.

    • @chrismcdonald9120
      @chrismcdonald9120 Год назад

      We sight read a granger piece in school last week and it was hell to play

    • @tjenadonn6158
      @tjenadonn6158 Год назад +1

      No me mention of Steve Reich or Iannis Xenakis as well. Clearly the way to this person's heart is to write for percussion.

    • @kasajizo8963
      @kasajizo8963 Год назад

      Here I'll roast your favourite composers
      Percy Grainger: compensates for his small dick by being a hardcore white supremacist
      Scriabin: bro fully descended into madness

    • @tj-co9go
      @tj-co9go 9 месяцев назад +1

      Scriabin: you want to play Liszt but find his music too difficult

  • @wolframsteindl2712
    @wolframsteindl2712 2 года назад +18

    What's with the hate towards Händel?
    Aside from Mozart and Prokofiev, he's the composer that got me into classical music.
    And I still like to listen to his works every now and then.

    • @TempleofSolomon
      @TempleofSolomon 2 года назад +3

      Handels music from Solomon is beautiful!

    • @emanuelebabici
      @emanuelebabici 2 года назад +2

      @@Robert_1685 funnily enough, he was the mainstream composer in his time😂

    • @rogerwilliams6058
      @rogerwilliams6058 Год назад

      Honestly in classical music everyone is underated.

  • @nightwhenjar
    @nightwhenjar 2 года назад +15

    Bruh tchaikovsky was an alright orchestrater Ravel was a literal god

  • @mormelgil5017
    @mormelgil5017 2 года назад +18

    proud Mozartian. love his Operas, Piano Concertos, late Symphonys and Choir Music

  • @juancarlosleiva1411
    @juancarlosleiva1411 8 месяцев назад +4

    Now we all know Carl is a total nutcracker nerd

  • @user-ez4or8ly4c
    @user-ez4or8ly4c 2 года назад +14

    Not only Bruckner wrote 9 (11 with no. 0 and 00) symphonies, but he kept re-writing them, sometimes composing entire new movements. People still mess up with the editions.

  • @Monkechnology
    @Monkechnology Год назад +4

    4:02 "All warfare is based" - Sun Tzu

  • @insight827
    @insight827 2 года назад +6

    "every piece is war inspired"
    Piano concerto no. 2
    waltz for jazz orchestra
    9th symphony
    8th string quartet
    9th piano trio
    I could go on...

  • @fredericfrancoischopin6280
    @fredericfrancoischopin6280 Год назад +7

    2:17 the piano is already an orchestra

  • @LoGStein
    @LoGStein Год назад +8

    2:30 Well from what we know, he certainly sucked...

  • @felicity1877
    @felicity1877 2 года назад +11

    So happy how you are thinking about Tchaikovsky, my favorite composer, but he wouldn't be pleased that his bestie Grieg is called awful (;
    still, there's so much light and so much darkness close together. The Nutcracker overture may be sweet, but you will feel completely different with the one from Swan Lake - or ever tried The storm or The Oprichnik (;
    But forget all other composers, if you can have the Waltz of Flowers, the Final Scene of Swan Lake or whatever else (;

  • @llamaking1071
    @llamaking1071 Год назад +6

    4:48 because he's Bartok, and that's what Bartok does, and I love it!

  • @odeonmelancholy3711
    @odeonmelancholy3711 2 года назад +4

    As a poet, the one about Puccini really hit close to home...

  • @alexp5552
    @alexp5552 2 года назад +9

    0:29 That's what one calls a dedication

  • @mirk-oh9549
    @mirk-oh9549 Год назад +6

    This made me laugh hysterically. and I thank you for it.

  • @adamek82
    @adamek82 9 месяцев назад

    Man, this is amazing! It made me laugh so much! Great sense of humor! :)

  • @Gretchaninov
    @Gretchaninov Год назад +6

    Grieg's music is gorgeous, especially the Lyric Pieces but also the Piano Concerto and various other works.
    Ironically, all these samples drew my attention - they all wrote at least some good music.

  • @iks.7048
    @iks.7048 2 года назад +29

    Ravel is still superior, you'll understand one day. Also, Haydn wrote over 107 symphonies, 104 was just his last.

    • @jura3443
      @jura3443 Год назад

      What was the piece they played for him?

    • @iks.7048
      @iks.7048 Год назад

      @@jura3443 Daphnis et Chloé, Suite No.2

    • @iks.7048
      @iks.7048 Год назад

      And for Haydn, I'm not sure. I've heard every symphony, but I don't *know* them all.

    • @aidandavis7657
      @aidandavis7657 Год назад

      Not superior to rachmaninoff that’s for sure, especially with his piano concerto

    • @Arjun-py4ym
      @Arjun-py4ym 9 месяцев назад

      thank god, someone understands. For me ravel is the peak of music and he can never be compared with bitch-ass Tchaikovshy.

  • @vibratoqueen450
    @vibratoqueen450 2 года назад +16

    Me, a butthurt Bruckner fanatic:
    "Seriously, where did we get the 'same symphony 9 times' thing??? Ugh. No one UNDERSTANDS Bruckner, which is why I am so special for worshipping him against his will!!!"

    • @Carl-FriedrichWelker
      @Carl-FriedrichWelker  2 года назад +4

      Bruckner is in my top 5 so I agree with you😂Was hard to find something bad about him so I went with that😂

    • @tkengathegrateful4844
      @tkengathegrateful4844 2 года назад

      I was certain that the joke was that it wasn't a joke. 🙂

  • @gigogrom216
    @gigogrom216 2 года назад +5

    Brahms is not a simp, he just paying respect to his friends Robert and Clara

  • @hollycarpenter9828
    @hollycarpenter9828 Год назад +23

    I always thought that I wasn’t a classical music person. I’ve realized that the only classical I’ve been exposed to is Beethoven. And I don’t like Beethoven. So I’m going to take video and choose some cool seeming composers. Thanks for making this! I’m going to start with Ravel because I liked that excerpt you put In here and Shostakovich because I like war music.

    • @KKIcons
      @KKIcons Год назад

      See if you like Glenn Gould. Iearned to love classical through listening to him and studying his lectures. Heres some Ravel. m.ruclips.net/video/KR2ECgtxYVw/видео.html

    • @KKIcons
      @KKIcons Год назад

      Glenn Gould is most known for his Bach. ruclips.net/video/s_num0eZIQ8/видео.html

    • @KKIcons
      @KKIcons Год назад

      Here is a lecture on Beethoven. With the Tempest Sonata no. 17. ruclips.net/video/RPDBcdDGrnE/видео.html

    • @KKIcons
      @KKIcons Год назад +2

      It seems to me that shows shostakovich influenced a lot of the great OSTs.

    • @Boccaccio1811
      @Boccaccio1811 9 месяцев назад +1

      Classical music is very diverse so it’s really impossible to judge it based on just one or a few composers… personally I like Beethoven, but there’s a lot of classical music I love that other classical fans will scoff at and vice versa

  • @dan-us6nk
    @dan-us6nk 2 года назад +5

    0:17
    it's monday evening
    I've been studying calculus for hours
    and you hit me with that
    I lost it officially.
    thanks.
    that was hilarious
    I'm still having waves of chuckles
    I am in danger.
    you couldn't even insult his music
    you could give a joke about his height too
    but you chose the D minor
    you just love the drama.

  • @Kchkchkch8415
    @Kchkchkch8415 Год назад +8

    Poor Grieg

  • @xxxchild_predatorxxx107
    @xxxchild_predatorxxx107 2 года назад +2

    Can someone tell me all the pieces used please?

  • @behnamzarandi8031
    @behnamzarandi8031 Год назад

    The accuracy of your descriptions 👏👏

  • @KlimatorUzurpator91
    @KlimatorUzurpator91 2 года назад +26

    Misconception with Bach... love his works for solo violin and also fugues. His music is divine.

  • @sirbowman3158
    @sirbowman3158 2 года назад +20

    Me anytime someone says something bad about Wagner's character: Yeah, he was a real douchebag
    Me anytime anyone says a single negative thing about his music:
    Listen here you little schieße...

    • @treystephens6166
      @treystephens6166 Год назад +1

      Kapitol S.

    • @IR4TE
      @IR4TE Год назад +2

      *Scheiße but in this case you might want to use 'Scheißer'

    • @treystephens6166
      @treystephens6166 Год назад

      @@IR4TE masculine not feminine ❓

    • @IR4TE
      @IR4TE Год назад

      @@treystephens6166 Scheiße is just the noun for shit/poop, Scheißer is the word for the person who's a little shit/bugger. You could use the feminine form which would be 'Scheißerin' if you talk about a female, but usually for everyone the masculine form gets used.

    • @vincentsmit1935
      @vincentsmit1935 Год назад +3

      If you can listen to Götterdämmerung without vibing, maybe life just isn't for you idk

  • @the.galant.cadential.formula
    @the.galant.cadential.formula 9 месяцев назад +1

    This was hysterically funny !!!
    One thing I think you have in reverse about the Schumanns:
    We would almost certainly not know Robbie had it not been for Clara.

  • @kartakarta6229
    @kartakarta6229 2 года назад +4

    Why did you choose ravel's string quartet as an ending piece?

    • @Carl-FriedrichWelker
      @Carl-FriedrichWelker  2 года назад +1

      It was one of the only classical music pieces on the music license platform I use.🙌🏻

  • @donbaniore1163
    @donbaniore1163 2 года назад +3

    what are the pieces by Brahms and Shumann called

  • @ligetisspaghetti5763
    @ligetisspaghetti5763 2 года назад +13

    I actually love Bach’s fugues especially on the organ :/

    • @Carl-FriedrichWelker
      @Carl-FriedrichWelker  2 года назад

      😬Playing is even less fun, no that's wrong it's more fun but very difficult😂

    • @ligetisspaghetti5763
      @ligetisspaghetti5763 2 года назад

      @@Carl-FriedrichWelker well, I play cello, so no fugues for me 😁

    • @frenchimp
      @frenchimp Год назад

      @@ligetisspaghetti5763 There is a fugue in the prelude of one of the six Cello suites. I forget which one. A very beautiful fugue.

  • @ogorangeduck
    @ogorangeduck Год назад +1

    Bach's fugues to one person may be boring, but to me there are so many fun things to discover! I love fugues.

  • @Larch3
    @Larch3 Год назад +2

    Me when it got to Shostakovich:
    "That's not entirely tru- oh wait a second"

  • @shmarbs.909
    @shmarbs.909 2 года назад +20

    I don't recall Brahms ever making a move on Clara, it even came to the point that he left Clara's place at some point to avoid some unwanted tendencies. But oh well, he's still a great composer nonetheless.

  • @ZicraVEVO
    @ZicraVEVO 2 года назад +4

    My god… Tchaikovsky… I’ve never been so glad a stranger had been born

  • @fireb0xes938
    @fireb0xes938 2 года назад +1

    What are the names of all the pieces in the video?

  • @7BI0Vx4
    @7BI0Vx4 Год назад +2

    Please list each piece of music with the composer in future videos.
    A few are recognizable but not all. Thanks.

  • @Zivilin
    @Zivilin Год назад +6

    3:25 That is not true. I like Handel. 😔

  • @ricucci-hillmusic
    @ricucci-hillmusic 2 года назад +48

    I'd actually also add Verdi's orchestration is more like a marching band with strings added to it. Something about it always makes me feel like it leans a bit tin-y

    • @Carl-FriedrichWelker
      @Carl-FriedrichWelker  2 года назад +2

      #Roast😂

    • @ricucci-hillmusic
      @ricucci-hillmusic 2 года назад

      @@Carl-FriedrichWelker Got more where that came from. Haha

    • @garcar2814
      @garcar2814 2 года назад

      As a DCI fan, college marching band member, and former BOA competitor, I approve of marching band orchestration lol. Like I think that Tchaikovsky invented drum corps/marching band orchestration with the finale to 1812 overture by calling for all available brass musicians

    • @ricucci-hillmusic
      @ricucci-hillmusic 2 года назад +3

      @@garcar2814 haha don't get me wrong, marching band orchestration is great, just not really what I want to hear in my Italian opera lol

    • @cliffgaither
      @cliffgaither 2 года назад +2

      @@ricucci-hillmusic :: You really short-changed Verdi ! The Triumphant Scene is masterly ! His melodramatic music is over-the-top, which suites melodrama. The chamber-atmosphere of La Traviata is relaxingly-calming & dramatic.
      Cut him some slack ! 😁

  • @nicholasschroeder3678
    @nicholasschroeder3678 10 месяцев назад

    All I got from this, and why I kept listening, is that I knew what every clip was and love them all. It's critics, the ones who don't have the talent and are all forgotten, except for their most spectacular gaffes, that suck.

  • @alberloss
    @alberloss 9 месяцев назад

    This is like letting out our deepest intrusive thoughts about each composer

  • @lukassorowka2672
    @lukassorowka2672 Год назад +3

    1:12 does anybody know the name of this piece. Its just so incredibly beautiful

    • @Amadea27
      @Amadea27 Год назад +2

      It's one of my favourite pieces. Schumann Symphony no3 Rheinische IV Movement. If you like this piece you might want to listen to all 4 symphonies. Lots of great material to enjoy!

    • @lukassorowka2672
      @lukassorowka2672 Год назад +1

      @@Amadea27 thank you 🥰

  • @user-ph5zn8ev4d
    @user-ph5zn8ev4d Год назад +4

    As Korean, Sad for Psy in 5:32

  • @thibomeurkens2296
    @thibomeurkens2296 Год назад

    Do you have a list of all the pieces? I’m ashamed to admit I only recognize a couple of them 😅

  • @rutcimmusic
    @rutcimmusic Год назад

    pls can someone either make a list or tell me where the list is for the pieces in this 😭

  • @sergei-prokofiev
    @sergei-prokofiev 2 года назад +16

    Welll the Prokofiev one is definitely not true for Prokofiev lovers but probably true for the rest of the world, but that 6th war sonata you put in its simpely amazing!!!

    • @emanuelebabici
      @emanuelebabici 2 года назад +6

      I personally love Prokofiev, and at least his Romeo and Juliet had been choreographed several times and became so famous... More than Peter and the Wolf for sure

    • @sergei-prokofiev
      @sergei-prokofiev 2 года назад +3

      @@emanuelebabici yeas true but all not so great pieces in comparison to his 2nd piano concerto

    • @bernabefernandeztouceda7315
      @bernabefernandeztouceda7315 2 года назад +3

      @@sergei-prokofiev that concerto is especially good, u right, one of prokofiev best works, intense and ominous

    • @oritdrimer4354
      @oritdrimer4354 2 года назад +2

      I love his First sonata and his Second Piano Concerto.

    • @emanuelebabici
      @emanuelebabici 2 года назад

      @@sergei-prokofiev I love his 2nd Piano Concerto, what are you talking about 😂 I was just saying Peter and the Wolf isn't even his most famous work, because Romeo and Juliet is known and played worldwide, and I am personally very attached to it because I love the ballet

  • @seriouslysupersonic
    @seriouslysupersonic Год назад +24

    One simply does not mess with Chopin and Rachmaninoff. Period. Other than that, pretty accurate.

  • @chelseachen265
    @chelseachen265 Год назад

    Can anyone tell me what the Ravel piece is in this video please? Thanks :)

  • @martinscheuermann4339
    @martinscheuermann4339 2 года назад +2

    Which excerpts did you use for Ravel, Bartók and Saint-Saëns?

    • @limepour3004
      @limepour3004 Год назад

      Ravel: from
      Bartók: opening of
      I don't know well about Saint-Saëns, but I can tell that the music at the very end of the video is also Ravel's, the 2nd movement of his string quartet.

    • @martinscheuermann4339
      @martinscheuermann4339 Год назад

      @@limepour3004
      Thanks a lot!

    • @niklas-2464
      @niklas-2464 Год назад

      @@limepour3004 do you also know which Wagner piece that is 2:38

    • @limepour3004
      @limepour3004 Год назад

      @@niklas-2464 Tristan und Isolde, but I don't know exactly which part of the piece it is.

  • @lanaritchie
    @lanaritchie 2 года назад +4

    Never realised Debussy looked like Leonardo DiCaprio until you did the honours and pointed it out, cheers

  • @emmanelson5363
    @emmanelson5363 Год назад +3

    Fellow Tchaikovsky-enthusiast here. Your video did not disappoint. XD

  • @yay8475
    @yay8475 9 месяцев назад

    You're on my hitlist times eight.

  • @samuelealtomare3400
    @samuelealtomare3400 10 месяцев назад

    I'm sorry for the ignorance, but which work is Shostakovich's piece? I used shazam but he didn't work