@@stale.baguette This is the Charlier's arrangement. Leopold Charlier made many edits including rearranging the variations and removing others and adding more embellishments to the violin part to make it more a showpiece. While there are other arrangements out there, Charlier's version is the most popular and most commonly performed now days. I am quite sure you can find a recording of the original Chaconne in G minor by vitali if you're vigilant enough. A quick google search can give you more information on the piece and its history if you're curious.
@Dano Zakerios I'm also searching for more music like this lol. Some pieces that I really liked and are a bit "romantic" in some way are: Paganini - La Campanella (Kreisler's arrangement for piano and violin) ruclips.net/video/LJNWB-jMhB4/видео.html Schubert - Der Erlkönig (Ernst's arrangement for violin solo) ruclips.net/video/fgWHrYC4LEs/видео.html (Starts at 4:00) TwoSetViolin - Prelude ruclips.net/video/wsfIACi9Mrk/видео.html Beethoven - Violin Sonata no. 9 (Kreutzer's arrangement for violin and piano) ruclips.net/video/5YKmb7_y3E8/видео.html (It has more than 30min haha. But the first 5min are "enough" and really worth listening to) ---------- Here is a compilation of Johann Sebastian Bach's violin Concertos ruclips.net/video/_ioc6sdgugo/видео.html They're not that much "romantic", but I liked the beggining of the video haha. Maybe you can like them. --------- And here Paganini's violin Concertos ruclips.net/video/im9MvIc8W5k/видео.html Maybe you can like these. -------- I hope you enjoy the pieces I recommended and I really would like to get some recommendations from you if you know some :) ps: I've only recommended violin pieces, but if you like the piano I can recommend you some piano pieces that I like.
@Dano Zakerios Thank you so much. I really aprecciate it. I'll take some of my time to listen to every single one of those. And here are 2 famous one of Mendelssohn which you've probably alteady listened to, but... I really like them: Mendelssohn String Octet in E flat major op. 20 ruclips.net/video/KrITNrgQHuE/видео.html (It's in a faster tempo than the "usual", but I like it) Mendelssohn violin Concerto in E minor op. 64 ruclips.net/video/I03Hs6dwj7E/видео.html Have a great one you too! :)
One of possibly only two pieces which truly make me feel emotional. The other being the Bach chaconne. This is truly a masterpiece of emotional turmoil.
We have similar taste! The Bach Chaconne and the Vitali one, particularly this arrangement, is awesome to me. I like other pieces too but these stand out to me.
That would be because this is the Charlier arrangement. Charlier arranged it in the Romantic period, so even though Vitali was a Baroque composer, you can quite clearly hear Romantic influence throughout.
When I heard this music, I told my music teacher I wanted to play it for my next exam. She was okay even if it was a little out of my league but I made it with the maximal grade. It was so good when I repeated with the piano, and I continue to play it sometimes because it's so beatiful... The end is so pleasurable to play, each times I feel my body exalted
@@jackbourdeaux5800 No and it's way out of my ligue I think, but I'll play an arrangement of the Albinoni's Adagio for my exam and I'll be soloist for the Schindler's theme in my music school's senior harmony
What a dramatic piece! I think this melody line works the most with violin! I am curious what kind of other pieces Vitali composed. By the way he lived over 80 years. At that time he's quite long aged.
I asked myself the same. But I read somewhere that it was written by Ferdinand David, the violinist who played Mendelssohn's violin concerto in e minor the first time. David argued to have discovered the manuscript of the solo part, and that he wrote an accompaniament. Just as in the Kreisler fashion.
You could listen to tomaso vitali's trio sonata no. 4. I think its available on youtube. Its hard to find his other pieces here on this site really maybe because his not that popular as a composer 😅.
i wanna play it but its too hard Update: this actually isn't hard anymore I think I put this comment in my 1st year of playing this is my 3rd year 2nd update: 4th year of playing success lol 3rd update: I saw someone wanting an update so I guess I shall grant. So I think this is my 7th year of playing. Looking back at this comment I feel embarrassed because that may have been little me with a vision and that they finally were able to play it lol. Anyways I’m thinking in performing this for my insta since I’m missing a concert in my orchestra. I’m planning in doing it as a last piece with Mozart no.5 Mvt. III as a first choice and Tchaikovsky concerto Mvt.2 as a second piece. There are some places I’m out of practice again so I might have to retouch and polish a bit more now that my violin skills have improved. I’m busy with college and learning piano so hopefully this will come out well.
I want to arrange it for cello since I don't play violin but oh my god those octaves are going to be hell to practise. Edit: even if I put it an octave and a fifth down, in cello range.
as someone who plays both cello and violin, my opinion is that this piece would lose a lot of its character on the cello. for example, the sections played on the E string sound delicate while sections played on high A string sound dark. On the cello, everything will just sound nasally. you should still arrange it for the cello.
The reason I believe this piece sounds romantic, is that the player plays it with such gravitas, and emotion, therefore giving it a romantic feeling, even thought the original mood vitali wanted to put across was baroque
Romantic and Baroque are time periods not moods. When someone calls this piece romantic what they mean is that it has the characteristics of the music from the romantic period
Tomaso Antonio Vitali 1663 - 1745 the eldest son of Giovanni Battista Vitali ...] He is known mainly for a chaconne in G minor for violin and continuo ...] That work's wide-ranging modulations into distant keys have raised speculation that it could not be a genuine baroque work. ... (WIKI)
In the first time i heard it I felt like story its look like some parts like talking about some beautiful days but in sad way then i feel like the story ended and his emotional after it appeared in it ( sad parts and some angry parts too) umm i feel like he is talking or thinking with himself something like that
I mean like we are alone and remember something then we talk the memories to our self in the way we feel about them Then we stop thinking and just feeling the pain or any feeling else
this isn't a good recording of it the tempo changes in this one don't really make sense. jascha heifetz and richard Ellsasser played it the best in my opinion
@@alessandropaolillo2075 Is this really an opinion? Not only is the cadenza much harder, but the intonation in the third movement in general is much harder than anything in this piece. That being said, I like listening to this piece more.
@@kevinlai7524 Yeah, the Kreisler cadenza. It's more than just hard to read, it's perhaps only medium difficult to play, but almost impossible to truly master all of the intonation and to keep all the trills separate and precise. Really one of the only versions I've heard that manages to do that is Perlman's. People underestimate the difficulty of the cadenza quite a lot.
I've only been playing for a year, I love this piece and I will be back to edit this within the next 2 years when I can play this Edit: 4 months later- I can play the beginning and a little further but having trouble with the fast triplets
sorry but this is a little early for you, it gets much more difficult with octaves, double stops and trills. Maybe try a piece more suited to your current abilities because you will make much more progress than if you struggled against a difficult piece out of your range
Prototype Inheritance I know I’m a little far from this piece, I haven’t touched it since. I’m just gonna work on accolay and Haydn g major but I bet I’ll be back in like 5-6 months I progress Very fast
@@Jay-S04 it's awesome that you progress fast, with any good teacher that is possible. This used to be my districts audition piece until they changed it today to the Haydn g major concerto, any tips?
Evan It’s a long concerto so strap in. For me it was the first piece that was longer than 5 mins so I learned really quick to break it up into different sections to practice. The intro and doublestops on the first page, the triplets after, the slow section, the 16th note arpeggios and mordents section on the third page, the intro again but different, the dreaded triplets(ugh), slow section again but in A Major. Different 16th note section(this one is mostly slurred), the doublestops at the end. Yeah so work on those main sections separately at first and then learn the measures between that connect them. Also this is my first romantic style piece so vibrato, pay attention to the dynamics, learn to end the phrases properly. That’s the main things, what parts are you struggling on?
I was listening to this thinking it's some kind of contemporary minimalist work, maybe by Phillip Glass or something. Imagine my surprise when I learned it's 300 years old. Weird.
@@andrewohler3198 it’s uncharacteristic because of its harmony , it very reminiscent to more modern composers , this piece reminded me of Shostakovich or Elgar. Most people in the baroque era made music that was reminiscent of their time , like Bach , Beethoven and other composer , but vitali in this piece is more romantic than Boroque, there some composers that also did have very diffrent harmony and music , but I do not know their names
@@andrewohler3198 The whole origin of this piece is pretty mysterious, and it's not 100% clear that the original composer was Tomaso Antonio Vitali. The Dresden manuscript that may have been transcribed in the early 18th century is the earliest known version, but it was not published until 1867 when Ferdinand David arranged it for violin and piano. The origin of its composition has been debated, with some musicologists hypothesizing that the work is a musical hoax composed by David rather than Vitali. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaconne_in_G_minor But I think one reason why it does not sound or feel baroque is that whatever the original version, it was then later heavily edited by Léopold Charlier to get the much more modern/romantic sound you hear in this performance. Charlier's edition came out in 1911. The romanticists of the 19th/early 20th century liked to do that with Baroque music, such as Kreisler's Praeludium and Allegro ascribed to Pugnani, or Respighi's Ancient Airs and Dances, or Halvorsen's variations on a theme by Handel for violin and viola duet, etc... I think their fascination with the exotic extended beyond geographic (all the Hungarian/Slavonic/Norwegian etc... dances to Rimsky Korsakoff's romaniticized fascination with the courts of the east such as with Scheherazade) to a romantic fascination with other time periods as well. A lot of the old medieval tales of Robin Hood, King Arthur, or the ancient Norse mythologies, etc... were revived with strong romanticist overtones in the 19th century. I think this piece falls into that category.
Listen to rare Roland Dyens CDs here youtube.com/@lucafaraci6301
For those who are confused, this was written in the Baroque Period, yes, but the arrangement played was arranged itself during the romantic period.
wow! cool!
I was thinking that this doesn't sound baroque! I was thinking Vitali was a time traveler or something!
What’s the difference between the baroque and romantic version? does the original exist still?
@@stale.baguette This is the Charlier's arrangement. Leopold Charlier made many edits including rearranging the variations and removing others and adding more embellishments to the violin part to make it more a showpiece. While there are other arrangements out there, Charlier's version is the most popular and most commonly performed now days. I am quite sure you can find a recording of the original Chaconne in G minor by vitali if you're vigilant enough. A quick google search can give you more information on the piece and its history if you're curious.
Edgard Valcarcel
This is truly one of the most beautiful violin masterpieces ever composed.
It has more the resemblance of a soundtrack for a movie then a classical piece
@Dano Zakerios I'm also searching for more music like this lol.
Some pieces that I really liked and are a bit "romantic" in some way are:
Paganini - La Campanella (Kreisler's arrangement for piano and violin)
ruclips.net/video/LJNWB-jMhB4/видео.html
Schubert - Der Erlkönig (Ernst's arrangement for violin solo)
ruclips.net/video/fgWHrYC4LEs/видео.html
(Starts at 4:00)
TwoSetViolin - Prelude
ruclips.net/video/wsfIACi9Mrk/видео.html
Beethoven - Violin Sonata no. 9 (Kreutzer's arrangement for violin and piano)
ruclips.net/video/5YKmb7_y3E8/видео.html
(It has more than 30min haha. But the first 5min are "enough" and really worth listening to)
----------
Here is a compilation of Johann Sebastian Bach's violin Concertos
ruclips.net/video/_ioc6sdgugo/видео.html
They're not that much "romantic", but I liked the beggining of the video haha. Maybe you can like them.
---------
And here Paganini's violin Concertos
ruclips.net/video/im9MvIc8W5k/видео.html
Maybe you can like these.
--------
I hope you enjoy the pieces I recommended and I really would like to get some recommendations from you if you know some :)
ps: I've only recommended violin pieces, but if you like the piano I can recommend you some piano pieces that I like.
@Dano Zakerios Thank you so much. I really aprecciate it. I'll take some of my time to listen to every single one of those.
And here are 2 famous one of Mendelssohn which you've probably alteady listened to, but... I really like them:
Mendelssohn String Octet in E flat major op. 20
ruclips.net/video/KrITNrgQHuE/видео.html
(It's in a faster tempo than the "usual", but I like it)
Mendelssohn violin Concerto in E minor op. 64
ruclips.net/video/I03Hs6dwj7E/видео.html
Have a great one you too! :)
true!
The chords progresstion in this piece is also very common in music today
This isn't just a masterpiece, it's the meaning of life.
Well said!
One of possibly only two pieces which truly make me feel emotional. The other being the Bach chaconne. This is truly a masterpiece of emotional turmoil.
So you like chaconnes!
We have similar taste! The Bach Chaconne and the Vitali one, particularly this arrangement, is awesome to me. I like other pieces too but these stand out to me.
1:30
1:52
2:40
3:25
3:52
4:31
4:55
5:30
6:00
6:10
6:51
7:22
7:48
8:23
8:44
In case any of you decide to learn it from this video.
That was a nice idea, but the only properly difficult section is 7:22
James Wilson bruh
@@jameswilson807 it's about different pages, not difficulty.
Thanks
@@calebhu6383 If you need to find the music, just go on imslp or something
What a beautiful piece very uncharacteristic of the time period it was written in. Thank you Vitali!
plot twist: Kreisler pulled a trick on yo ass
That would be because this is the Charlier arrangement. Charlier arranged it in the Romantic period, so even though Vitali was a Baroque composer, you can quite clearly hear Romantic influence throughout.
this piece feels ahead of its time
Cause it is
The best 10 minutes of the month.
When I heard this music, I told my music teacher I wanted to play it for my next exam. She was okay even if it was a little out of my league but I made it with the maximal grade. It was so good when I repeated with the piano, and I continue to play it sometimes because it's so beatiful... The end is so pleasurable to play, each times I feel my body exalted
In what grade did you learn this piece? How many hours of practice did it take you to learn it?
@@iakovoskin659 I was in 10th grade and it took me about 6 month to practice this piece
@@thomasgauthier-labadie5489 Have you by any chance played Kreisler's Praeludium and Allegro? Talk about an ending lmao
@@jackbourdeaux5800 No and it's way out of my ligue I think, but I'll play an arrangement of the Albinoni's Adagio for my exam and I'll be soloist for the Schindler's theme in my music school's senior harmony
@@jackbourdeaux5800 also this year I practiced a Bach's sonata (BWV 1015) but there were no exam because of the coronavirus
Grazie Maestro. Anche se non ci sei più hai lasciato la meraviglia all' umanità.
What a dramatic piece! I think this melody line works the most with violin! I am curious what kind of other pieces Vitali composed. By the way he lived over 80 years. At that time he's quite long aged.
It's unsure who wrote this. Also the piece has been altered over the years...
I asked myself the same. But I read somewhere that it was written by Ferdinand David, the violinist who played Mendelssohn's violin concerto in e minor the first time. David argued to have discovered the manuscript of the solo part, and that he wrote an accompaniament. Just as in the Kreisler fashion.
tantakomarukoshi doesn’t it say Charlier’s arrangement in the title..?
@@alleygh0st I hate that they did that… it’s like changing something that’s already perfectly fine
You could listen to tomaso vitali's trio sonata no. 4. I think its available on youtube. Its hard to find his other pieces here on this site really maybe because his not that popular as a composer 😅.
I am learning this master piece and always thinking that how is amazing it because Vitali lived 300 years ago.So rich his emotion inner.
i actually cried. from my heart...
That's not healthy, you should go to the doctor just to check.
If your heart's crying emotion, I thoroughly agree with you- this music gives me chills. If your heart's crying blood, I suggest you go to a doctor.
i wanna play it but its too hard
Update: this actually isn't hard anymore I think I put this comment in my 1st year of playing this is my 3rd year
2nd update: 4th year of playing success lol
3rd update: I saw someone wanting an update so I guess I shall grant. So I think this is my 7th year of playing. Looking back at this comment I feel embarrassed because that may have been little me with a vision and that they finally were able to play it lol. Anyways I’m thinking in performing this for my insta since I’m missing a concert in my orchestra. I’m planning in doing it as a last piece with Mozart no.5 Mvt. III as a first choice and Tchaikovsky concerto Mvt.2 as a second piece. There are some places I’m out of practice again so I might have to retouch and polish a bit more now that my violin skills have improved. I’m busy with college and learning piano so hopefully this will come out well.
I want to arrange it for cello since I don't play violin but oh my god those octaves are going to be hell to practise.
Edit: even if I put it an octave and a fifth down, in cello range.
as someone who plays both cello and violin, my opinion is that this piece would lose a lot of its character on the cello. for example, the sections played on the E string sound delicate while sections played on high A string sound dark. On the cello, everything will just sound nasally.
you should still arrange it for the cello.
That's a good point, I didn't consider it, but I'll still try if I have time :P thanks for the input
Kevin Lai yes cello and violin power 😉 (cello is the bomb)
***** I've tried 😥
The reason I believe this piece sounds romantic, is that the player plays it with such gravitas, and emotion, therefore giving it a romantic feeling, even thought the original mood vitali wanted to put across was baroque
Romantic and Baroque are time periods not moods. When someone calls this piece romantic what they mean is that it has the characteristics of the music from the romantic period
or maybe it’s because this is an arrangement that is meant to lean more on the romantic side
Still in love with this piece. Best interpretation by zino francescatti!
So glad my classmate played this for graduation. It's so beautiful!
The most strange music I've got for a long time. Without the Bach's harmonies, but with a lighty eternity blowing everywhere.
Tomaso Antonio Vitali 1663 - 1745 the eldest son of Giovanni Battista Vitali ...] He is known mainly for a chaconne in G minor for violin and continuo ...] That work's wide-ranging modulations into distant keys have raised speculation that it could not be a genuine baroque work. ... (WIKI)
This arrangement was arranged during the Romantic Period, hence the obvious 19th century influences.
after I'm listening to the Chaconne, I've noticed it's a lot different than the way I've been playing, still having sooooo much to improve
Great music! I appreciate it very much and very much enjoy it. I play this beautiful piece during my studies in College.
ЧАРУЮЩАЯ ЗАПРЕДЕЛЬНО ОДУХОТВОЯЮЩАЯ СИМФОНИЯ ДУШИ🌼🌼🌼
Olá! Hello!
I believe that this would also sound awesome when played on a cello.
Make it a bit slower, and it gives the feeling of telling a really painful story
To me the version of this piece for cello already kind of exists in the Elgar Concerto. I always relate the two
@Evan Schubert ruclips.net/video/lNVe_1Eb5dw/видео.html
In the first time i heard it
I felt like story its look like some parts like talking about some beautiful days but in sad way then i feel like the story ended and his emotional after it appeared in it ( sad parts and some angry parts too) umm i feel like he is talking or thinking with himself something like that
I mean like we are alone and remember something then we talk the memories to our self in the way we feel about them
Then we stop thinking and just feeling the pain or any feeling else
This deserves one million views.
Now it has 1 mill!
That was so beautiful. My GF showed me it and I was moved by its power. Amazing
@Anna Waller thank you very much and Im pretty sure you seem familiar. Do you have the key to a heart I have?
@@combatcaller343 Awwww ♥ I am pretty sure I have the key! But you stole my heart so we are even :)
my violin teacher was one of Francescatti's students and it's as if I heard her playing because they have the same vibrato...it's impressive
omg this piece is so beautiful, im tearing up
Extraordinary! Equal parts lush and powerful. Enjoyed it.
so beautiful... too much sad but feel like have some angry also its really dark
For me i love dark piece
"too much sad"
this isn't a good recording of it the tempo changes in this one don't really make sense. jascha heifetz and richard Ellsasser played it the best in my opinion
Я в восторге, эта музыка переполняет мои чувства
Francescatti's beautiful sound
I like Zenomorph francszcatti
My absolute all time favorite.😍😍😍😍😍😍😍
Love this piece
Beautifully played!
Oh, such love and romanticism in the baroque era 😍😍
7:50 sounds like Mendelssohn violin concerto lol
Victor Ma yesss I’m not the only person that thinks that😂
Il contrario !
Wow en verdad me llevo a otro mundo está pieza. Que hermosa pieza
une pièce de plus que je veux jouer dans ma vie 😍😍😍😍
this piece is timeless
One of my favourite pieces!
Absolutely beautiful!
OKAY I WAS NOT READY FOR THAT
Ready for what?
Jeffrey Mao
Lol idk
@@Nikita.___.Gladko_562 prob 7:17
Rare Pepe
Meh. Perhaps
Thanks to two set i find this piece
Evolution of music!!!
Lmaoo you can always count on finding a Ling Ling Wannabe under a classical RUclips video.
the build up around @2:00 literally made me shout out " what is this melody????" it's so beautiful
I am learning the Violin elementary level. Someday I will play the Vitali Chaconne.
absolutely breathtaking
Es una linda melodía que te transporta a otro sitio, te hace sentir bien, simplemente hermosa.
Божественно!!!
What an outstanding piece! Composed (maybe) by Tomaso Antonio Vitali.
It sounds like heaven! Listening in repeat mode.
Devil's Trill Jr.
No my dear, this is more difficult than Tartini.
Alessandro Paolillo Hellz no. That cadenza is goddamned impossible.
@@alessandropaolillo2075 Is this really an opinion? Not only is the cadenza much harder, but the intonation in the third movement in general is much harder than anything in this piece. That being said, I like listening to this piece more.
@@semiotikos1576 well which cadenza are we talking about? the kreisler cadenza? it's mostly just hard to read.
@@kevinlai7524 Yeah, the Kreisler cadenza. It's more than just hard to read, it's perhaps only medium difficult to play, but almost impossible to truly master all of the intonation and to keep all the trills separate and precise. Really one of the only versions I've heard that manages to do that is Perlman's. People underestimate the difficulty of the cadenza quite a lot.
Wow. That was mind-blowing.
So beautiful
si originariamente è per violino e continuo ma l'orchestrazione è meravigliosa. quasi quasi preferisco questa interpretazione all'originale 😉
gabri ìzz Di chi e?
Bravo grandiose genial music super fantastic
this piece sounds surprisingly romantic, even though it was a Baroque piece
Naturally. It was arranged by a romantic period violinist
Goosebumps
Это - шедевр !!👍👍👍
Really beautiful!!!
songs like Shakespeare's tragic plays to me, love it!
What an epic piece!
My teacher gave me this piece today. I've started working on the ending which isn't as hard as it seems but man it's intense
What a masterpiece 😍 7:16
2:22
I've only been playing for a year, I love this piece and I will be back to edit this within the next 2 years when I can play this
Edit: 4 months later- I can play the beginning and a little further but having trouble with the fast triplets
sorry but this is a little early for you, it gets much more difficult with octaves, double stops and trills. Maybe try a piece more suited to your current abilities because you will make much more progress than if you struggled against a difficult piece out of your range
Prototype Inheritance I know I’m a little far from this piece, I haven’t touched it since. I’m just gonna work on accolay and Haydn g major but I bet I’ll be back in like 5-6 months
I progress Very fast
@@Jay-S04 it's awesome that you progress fast, with any good teacher that is possible. This used to be my districts audition piece until they changed it today to the Haydn g major concerto, any tips?
Evan It’s a long concerto so strap in. For me it was the first piece that was longer than 5 mins so I learned really quick to break it up into different sections to practice. The intro and doublestops on the first page, the triplets after, the slow section, the 16th note arpeggios and mordents section on the third page, the intro again but different, the dreaded triplets(ugh), slow section again but in A Major. Different 16th note section(this one is mostly slurred), the doublestops at the end.
Yeah so work on those main sections separately at first and then learn the measures between that connect them. Also this is my first romantic style piece so vibrato, pay attention to the dynamics, learn to end the phrases properly.
That’s the main things, what parts are you struggling on?
Wonderful.
Like! Hundreds and thousands times Yes!
Listening to this after breaking up with my girlfriend... painful..
sick!!! loved it
정말 쉬운 악보, 하지만 그 감정을 전달하기 위해서는 수천번 수만번의 연습이 필요한 곡..
악보도 어렵....
Gracious what a piece 🤯🤯🤯
BRAVO!
I started to cry at 7:17
Лучше этого исполнения в мире нет. Это правда.
Ingenious!!!!!!!!!
Would love to try to play this on the trumpet. It would be very difficult.
Your lungs would explode. *pop!*
so beautiful...
I see where Madoka magica got their ost from now lol
Grande!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I love seeing pencil markings on these
Magnificent
7:17 breaks my soul every time.
Same here
hermosa pieza de arte
나 이곡 하고 있는데... 정말잘하네요^^♥
i love it
Amazing piece and unbelievable performance. The ultimate development of the Set of Variations.
one day, somewhere in the future, i´ll be playing this...
(btw it´s my 2nd year of violin)
this piece is like 5 years
Colso V so i have more 3-4 years ahead
Challenge accepted...
Remember to update us when u start and progress!:) im curious man
@@celycely219 Don't worry, I will :)
Wow! That was amazing!!
That first bar at 1:52 ish always reminds me of Love Theme from Romeo and Juliet
I'm playing it transposed for the viola!
Good luck making it sound good
@@grandmasshittybasementhd7525 viola jokes are unfunny. nice try tho
the first 8 notes are just so chilling
THOROLD CONCERT BAND...This would be cool to try!!!!!!
2:22 fav
I am just crying 😭
08:24
06:11
wow!!!!! ❤️❤️❤️🎻🎻🎻🎻🎵🎵🎵🎶🎶🎶
maravilloso
Adorable
8:24 crazy!
C'est trop ce que je t'aime âme sœur 웃ღ웃
I was listening to this thinking it's some kind of contemporary minimalist work, maybe by Phillip Glass or something. Imagine my surprise when I learned it's 300 years old. Weird.
I’m guessing you’re joking lol
@@andrewohler3198 well this piece it’s pretty Uncharacteristic of it’s time
@@nathanrock9269 How is this uncharacteristic?
@@andrewohler3198 it’s uncharacteristic because of its harmony , it very reminiscent to more modern composers , this piece reminded me of Shostakovich or Elgar. Most people in the baroque era made music that was reminiscent of their time , like Bach , Beethoven and other composer , but vitali in this piece is more romantic than Boroque, there some composers that also did have very diffrent harmony and music , but I do not know their names
@@andrewohler3198 The whole origin of this piece is pretty mysterious, and it's not 100% clear that the original composer was Tomaso Antonio Vitali. The Dresden manuscript that may have been transcribed in the early 18th century is the earliest known version, but it was not published until 1867 when Ferdinand David arranged it for violin and piano. The origin of its composition has been debated, with some musicologists hypothesizing that the work is a musical hoax composed by David rather than Vitali.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaconne_in_G_minor
But I think one reason why it does not sound or feel baroque is that whatever the original version, it was then later heavily edited by Léopold Charlier to get the much more modern/romantic sound you hear in this performance. Charlier's edition came out in 1911. The romanticists of the 19th/early 20th century liked to do that with Baroque music, such as Kreisler's Praeludium and Allegro ascribed to Pugnani, or Respighi's Ancient Airs and Dances, or Halvorsen's variations on a theme by Handel for violin and viola duet, etc... I think their fascination with the exotic extended beyond geographic (all the Hungarian/Slavonic/Norwegian etc... dances to Rimsky Korsakoff's romaniticized fascination with the courts of the east such as with Scheherazade) to a romantic fascination with other time periods as well. A lot of the old medieval tales of Robin Hood, King Arthur, or the ancient Norse mythologies, etc... were revived with strong romanticist overtones in the 19th century. I think this piece falls into that category.
My favorite chacoone is which Sarha Chang played.