These descriptions are just for entertainment purposes. Feel free to share what your favorite composers mean to you! Comment here who is your favorite composer.
Tchaikovsky Description: You’re organized and certainly smart Tchaikovsky Himself: But what if…we used CANNONS as an instrument!!! Just fired them into the audience!!!!! NO I WILL NOT CALM DOWN I’M USING CANNONS!!!!!!
You realise Tchaikovsky did that BECAUSE he hated the loudness right? Literally demonstrating that and mocking how people prefer loud noises and flashy style over substance, even suggesting that just adding cannons would get people more excited over your music than actually making good music.
Mahler fan here. I don't need your description. I'll make my own description, in my own head. It will be so much more than just a simple description. It will be a whole world. It will be all that I need.
The hammer. It's the hammer. Trust me, I like Mahler too. It's the Mahler hammer. And the Second Mahler Hammer. And the forbidden fruit, the Third Mahler Hammer.
I like how most of them is a positive description of a fans character rather than just a stereotype, like the other composer videos I’ve seen. Also I will check out Royer because of this video, I never even heard his name before.
It's a beautiful motto, methinks. It's not at all what would have come to my mind if I were to think about Bruckner and his music. But I love Bruckner and that characterization is flattering, so it's good.
My lifelong love affair with what is loosely called "classical music" began with performing Bruckner's Mass No 2 in E Minor. He was an absolute master of polyphony. If you've not heard what he's written for trombones, I urge you to give a listen to several pieces called Aequale, and also the motet "Locus Iste."
Satie never fails to make me sob and I've listened to Carnaval des Animaux idk how many times. Still, nothing matches the range of emotions Claire De Lune stirs within me.
Sibelius, Strauss and Tchaikovsky are all spot on, it would have been cool to have Gershwin on here too! He’s so underrated… perfect for a fan of both classical and jazz.
Me: I hope Saint-Saëns and Satie are here Saint-Saëns and Satie are back to back Saint-Saëns: "youre refined and admire beauty in all its forms" Me: awww thats nice 🥰 Satie: "refelctive and depressive" Me: ok that hit right in the feels 😭 Maybe I find beauty in all its forms because I tend to mentally reflect on what makes them beautiful. Also I am a sad person.
Welp, you got me with Holst, Rimsky-Kosokov, and ESPECIALLY Dvorak. I do love a good adventure, i like being clear rather than complex in my art, and i do indeed get lost in my favorite movies, in a good way of course! All this to say; you got me good there.
Along with Shostakovich and Sibelius, the descriptions are pretty bang on for me. Though i would say 'Epic, but obsessed with death' for Mahler, as well as the loner tag
I'm absolutely and thoroughly convinced that Bach is the greatest composer of all, his music is the closest we have to feeling God's presence on this earth
I also feel that way. The reason for this, in my opinion, is that he embodied the pinnacle of Christian-European culture! Unfortunately, it seems to me that extreme secularism is gradually eroding what you have called "God's presence" in mankind's artistic beauty. What a shame...
@@eileenhetherington3704 It’s true that it’s my opinion! Diversity of opinions is a wonderful thing, isn’t it? It sheds light on things maybe you’ve never heard or thought of before.
Schubert: "You are sensitive and thoughtful" Me: *Begins to tear up instantly upon hearing Serenade* Sounds about right lol, and the poetry part too I love making poetry even if it in my head
What a great joy this was! I suppose I got Wagner. I love the music--but I highly doubt I could have stomached the man. A wonderful video, even if it was just for entertainment. Thanks!
Entertaining indeed. Fun stuff! ...yet some were off...like I always Loved Sibelius from the start, no long time needed to realize his genius. :) Thanks to all these brilliant souls for enriching the lives of millions!
My favorite teeters between Prokofiev and Tchaikovsky because I'm a ballet dancer. The listed qualities match, except for the extremely organized. I do have a system, but even I don't know what it is.
6:02 I'm like Shostakovich if you take tiny elements from all the other composers and glued them to him, emphasising different parts of the complexity at different points in time, creating me.
Actually many people got into Mussorgsky through early experimental metal, such as Mekong Delta and there were more and "bigger" bands who covered his pieces.
I don't think Mozart's Requiem portrays the entirety of his work (and general vibe) very well. There's definitely a side of Mozart missing there, could've chosen something more stereotypical. Otherwise I love this video, very complete and well thought out.
I wished Rossini, Gershwin and Smetana were on the list though :( But thank you so much letting me know about the existence of Royer, Respighi and Scriabin, now I know what enriching rabbit hole I'll be entering this week :)
I've recently started to get into Khachaturian, thanks to the inclusion of his "Adagio of Spartacus And Phrygia" in the movie, _IF,_ that just came out. I don't know if it was just the wonderful scene or if the piece was just that good, but I'm definitely hungry for more. Any recommendations?
For those of us who ARE perfectionists, we noticed that with the first composer mentioned, Joh. Sebastian Bach, you misspelled "perfeccionist." What's not to like about Barber? Bartók is frightening. Bizet's Carmen! Brahms, I loved Ein deutsches requiem, but cannot understand why the Germans don't capitalize those words. Bruckner was an absolute master of polyphony, others might equal him, but none excelled him. Never did appreciate Chopin. My granduncle played music with Antonin Dvořák in Iowa, here in The New World. Edward Elgar is, well, just TOO British for me as an Irishman. Fauré's Pavane is a meditation. Khachaturian, an Armenian born in Georgia who wasn't Russian enough to prevent the Soviets from denouncing him, poor man. Georg Friedrich Händel, as the German in my knows him, seems to me he was born the same month as Mr Bach and within 50 miles of him. Although he worked for an German king of the English, perhaps the work he's best known for, The Messiah, was first performed in DUBLIN, and while modern people associate it with Christmas, its proper setting is EASTER. Now we have good old Planetary Holst; how does a composer born in England get a name like Gustavus Theodore von Holst? It is nice that Liszt made it on the List, but he never did anything special for me, shame on me. Wagner, there is the matter of Adolf, how can a person love a composer who was so beloved by Adolf Hitler? Maybe it is a defect in me. Felix Mendelssohn is just too felicitous for me. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, there's my favorite, and you're playing the Lacrimosa movement from his incomplete Requiem, and not enough for me to know which version. Genius, absolute genius, and taken so young from a world that should have appreciated him more. Damned Catholic church. Modest Mussorgsky, your Night on Bald Mountain was featured in that fantastic film, FANTASIA! Jacques Offenbach and his Can Can, how many are blissfully unaware that that dance piece was composed by an internationally famous composer? Puccini - I sang the minor role of Gherardo in Gianni Schicchi, not O mio Babbino Caro. My mother's cousin, Emma Endres Kountz, had a concert pianist, had a piano built for her by Sergei Rachmaninoff.
Love the Bruckner one. Not my all time favourite composer, but in my top 10. The Elgar one is a bit generalised. Yes, his most famous works are associated with British identity, but he had a broad range of styles.
This is very spot on. Generally i do find myself to be Chopin and Shostakovich fan, but i definitely agree Khachaturian is underrated lol. Also, Offenbach did make me laugh so. Guess its a perfect description 😂 And yes, we need to hear more Fauré
6:14 That's who that music writing software was named after. Currently using finale, though that service will no longer function on our Mac PC's after I finish my 4th semester. Musecore Studio will have to do, I guess.
I find that I am a lot of these on occasion, depending on circumstances. Love Bach when I listen to St Matthew Passion, then revel in the joy of life listening to ode to joy, then find myself deep in thought listening to Brahms 1st symphony, then remember I play piano and play the ballade no. 1 and go listen to Dvorak 9, and find myself to be a British nationalist even though I am from Russia. Then listening to Grieg piano concerto I remember that Liszt Liebestraum, and go back to the piano. After that I am reminded of the adagietto in Mahlers 5th, and go to Mozarts mass in C minor in consequence ziti my mood after the 4th movement. Then remember the true love that I have for La Bohème, and am reminded of Piano concerto no. 2 by rach and then Daphnis and Chloe by ravel. Then the favorite Richard Strauss with his Der Rosenkavalier suite, Also Sprach, and Till Eulenspiegel (you see I’m more of a straussian guy myself). Unfinished symphony after that, then dichterliebe, then 10th symphony (the death of Stalin), then violin concerto by Sibelius. It’s a never ending journey. Then performing a rite in spring, after listening to Tchaikovsky intro to sleeping beauty I remember Verdi’s Requiem and go on to Tristan und Isolde. So I feel as if it is all in me (besides Royer). I love classical music, it fills my life with never ending strive towards the divine through the beauty and complexity of the patterns it draws to keep me in contact with God in a nonsuperficial manner. The way you can only be actually honestly closer to the divine, by reveling in the deep meaning derived from classical music.
I was intent on criticizing most of your choices on the pieces of music, when at the very end I came across the most beautiful melody that Wagner has ever written: that of Rienzi... so I forgive you! 🤭
Thank you very much, very nice idea! Richard Wagner - you have too much time Aram Khachaturian - you were born in the USSR Engelbert Humperdinck - you spent your childhood in Germany Gaetano Donizetti - you are an opera nerd Johann Pachelbel - you write pop-music Scott Joplin - you love silent movies Jean-Michel Jarre - you study electrical engineering Clara Schumann - you are an unorthodox thinker Fanny Mendelssohn - you know everything about everything Sofia Gubaidulina - ..... aaaaaaahhhhhhhh ..... ?????
My favorite composers: Bach and Shostakovich, that makes me a complex and introspective problem-solving perfectionist, however silly these descriptions are, this actually makes sense, as far as I can judge myself...
As a perfectionist couch sitter regularly feeling a deep sense of satisfaction once I lean back after having ordered cushions and blanket properly, I guess I'll be Bach then.
I never listened to any classical before and been wanting to dip my toes in... thankfully YT recommended this video! I like all of 'em and got it narrowed down to a top 10 but Idk who to start with... I'm thinking: Bartok, Liszt, or Schubert.🤔(Also, how many pieces do these guys typically have?)
I would recommend Schubert's Death and the Maiden String Quartet, which is my favourite piece of chamber music ever. If you prefer singing, Winterreise.
@@Sarah-oj7bh thanks for the recommendation Sarah. I just added it to my playlist... I have a feeling I'm going to be diving into the whole lot in time. lol
I would say it's the opposite, in fact they are so famous that you don't need to have any culture in cinema to know their works. I would say hardcore cinephile probably likes Bernard Herrmann or some older composers.
My favorite composers are Liszt and Amadeus. Are you capable of reading people's minds and souls? Quite an accurate description, though I do prefer being in the background. It's more fun to be holding the melody of a piece together than to play the flashy parts.
I feel like a good definition for Tchaikovsky (my all-time favorite) would be: You want to be stoic but can't stop yourself from losing it at times. (Which, I feel, fits me. LOL.)
i takes Beethovveni symphony no 4, but out of this list there is many very impressive also like these ; jean sibelius-Finlandia Erkki melartin-Wedding march fanny mendelssohn-string quartet in E flat major Clara Schumann-Prelude and fugue in F sharp minor
Thanks for your comment! I believe it’s important to appreciate Wagner’s music within its own context, without bringing in unnecessary associations like that one. Classical music, like all art, needs to be enjoyed for its artistic value.
@@cytisumm Yes, you are absolutely right about this. In general, I’m extremely surprised that I, being Russian (I use a Google translate), got so many likes, including from you. Very thanks)))
I'm pretty sure Wagner was Jewish too so the fact that a lot of people associate him with the third Reich is just messed up and ruins his reputation. Great musician.
@@milesdockendorff I doubt that, it's pretty well known that Wagner was antisemitic. He even wrote how about "Jewishness in Music" and not in a good way. But I don't deny it's a great musician.
Medtner : you're a melancholic person who likes to fantasize but you aren't a mainstream personality Rossini : You are an Italian nationalist Messiean : You're either a sucker for complex harmonies, a christian, or you obsessively love birds Bernstein/Purcell : YOU R GAE
The Bizet & Scriabin ones made me giggle-snort. Also, completely agree on Faure. And I would be here all day if I listed all the other ones I enjoyed for one reason or another.
These descriptions are just for entertainment purposes. Feel free to share what your favorite composers mean to you! Comment here who is your favorite composer.
Is Bruckner your favorite composer?
Maybe Holst?
@@leseux Yep😅. You’re right, my favorite composers are Bruckner and Shostakovich.
And...... Litvinovsky??!!!
Where????!!
I love them all except Berlioz who makes me scared.I missed Ligeti.
Tchaikovsky Description: You’re organized and certainly smart
Tchaikovsky Himself: But what if…we used CANNONS as an instrument!!! Just fired them into the audience!!!!! NO I WILL NOT CALM DOWN I’M USING CANNONS!!!!!!
😂😂😂😂😂😂 yeah!!!!
Chaotically smart
You realise Tchaikovsky did that BECAUSE he hated the loudness right? Literally demonstrating that and mocking how people prefer loud noises and flashy style over substance, even suggesting that just adding cannons would get people more excited over your music than actually making good music.
@ Unfortunately for him, even without the cannons, the song was still amazing, so he couldn’t really prove his point XD
legend for time stamping the music
Only British nationalists like Elgar? There is more to Elgar than that. Cop the violin concerto.
Vivaldi would have loved modern guitar shredding
And that's why I love him
Royer would have loved death metal, apparently.
“Laid-back/peaceful” while Lacrimosa plays in the background
The problem is that I went through like 8 favorite composers while watching this video. So many good songs in here
Mahler fan here. I don't need your description. I'll make my own description, in my own head. It will be so much more than just a simple description. It will be a whole world. It will be all that I need.
The hammer. It's the hammer. Trust me, I like Mahler too. It's the Mahler hammer. And the Second Mahler Hammer. And the forbidden fruit, the Third Mahler Hammer.
I like how most of them is a positive description of a fans character rather than just a stereotype, like the other composer videos I’ve seen. Also I will check out Royer because of this video, I never even heard his name before.
he’s got the best pieces de clavecin imo
I am a metal head, and I too had never heard of Royer! Thanks for this fun RUclips video, cytisum!
same here. not much about him on Wiki
same! He sounds incredibly experimental for the time.
I know him bc of a little part in a free program that was performed by russian dancing pair at the Salt Lake City Olympics in 2002😅
>Complete edition
>doesn't have my favorite composer
guess I'll just sit in the corner and cry
well, who is your fav?
@@hfkazi1194Charles-Valentin Alkan, I'm certainly a member of the piano gang.
To be fair I'm also a fan of Prokofiev and Stravinsky so I can't complain too too much.
@@inuush «someone who does everything harder then it is»
Where's lily Boulanger 😢
Offenbach really looks like a troll in every picture
meme music from 19th century
4:42 What the...!! So metal existed long before the electric guitar was born!!!
[Unexpected blastbeats]
Yep, the closest genre to metal is actually classical.
Ok, I'm quite impressed by the exactness of Bruckner's
It's a beautiful motto, methinks. It's not at all what would have come to my mind if I were to think about Bruckner and his music. But I love Bruckner and that characterization is flattering, so it's good.
I agree, I thought most of the descriptions were just for a laugh but this one seems pretty accurate.
My lifelong love affair with what is loosely called "classical music" began with performing Bruckner's Mass No 2 in E Minor. He was an absolute master of polyphony. If you've not heard what he's written for trombones, I urge you to give a listen to several pieces called Aequale, and also the motet "Locus Iste."
Was that back in the early 70s? Milwaukee? I was part of that.@@wisconsinatIon
I feel called out. Saint-Saëns and Satie are two of my favorites and I hate how accurate that was
Yeah, I felt that too!
Satie never fails to make me sob and I've listened to Carnaval des Animaux idk how many times. Still, nothing matches the range of emotions Claire De Lune stirs within me.
It pains me that i will never have the stare of Shostakovich, it could split a hair
Sibelius, Strauss and Tchaikovsky are all spot on, it would have been cool to have Gershwin on here too! He’s so underrated… perfect for a fan of both classical and jazz.
Or Bernstein.
4:07 Ravel's music always gives me this warm fuzzy feeling... Description is very accurate as well!
the transition from ravel to respighi is gorgeous
I didn't anticipate a RUclips video reading my soul, thanks.
WHY ISN’T FAURÉ FAMOUS?!?
Happens to be my overall favorite. Of his nocturnes Horowitz said, "at home I play them all, but they don't sell tickets".
not that many good compositions? though france in 2030 could make him popular
Especially since he was a member of Earth Wind And Fire?!
He is
Me: I hope Saint-Saëns and Satie are here
Saint-Saëns and Satie are back to back
Saint-Saëns: "youre refined and admire beauty in all its forms"
Me: awww thats nice 🥰
Satie: "refelctive and depressive"
Me: ok that hit right in the feels 😭
Maybe I find beauty in all its forms because I tend to mentally reflect on what makes them beautiful. Also I am a sad person.
So true for a lot of them. The composers that already have a personality associated with them tend to lean into those preconceptions a bit
Welp, you got me with Holst, Rimsky-Kosokov, and ESPECIALLY Dvorak. I do love a good adventure, i like being clear rather than complex in my art, and i do indeed get lost in my favorite movies, in a good way of course! All this to say; you got me good there.
As someone, whose favourite composer is scriabin, yes i am indeed a pianist
are you mystical or philosophical or both?
@@andreoliveira685 i just find his music very interesting to listen to
OMG HE IS SO UNDERATED
Mahler and Bruckner are my favourites, and dare I say quite spot on.
Along with Shostakovich and Sibelius, the descriptions are pretty bang on for me. Though i would say 'Epic, but obsessed with death' for Mahler, as well as the loner tag
Mahler is the hammer!
I'm absolutely and thoroughly convinced that Bach is the greatest composer of all, his music is the closest we have to feeling God's presence on this earth
I always say that when I enter heaven in addition to angels' singing, there will be the music of JS Bach.
Debussy is my favorite for my time on Earth, but Bach is my favorite for the eternities.
I also feel that way. The reason for this, in my opinion, is that he embodied the pinnacle of Christian-European culture! Unfortunately, it seems to me that extreme secularism is gradually eroding what you have called "God's presence" in mankind's artistic beauty. What a shame...
That's your opinion.
@@eileenhetherington3704 It’s true that it’s my opinion! Diversity of opinions is a wonderful thing, isn’t it? It sheds light on things maybe you’ve never heard or thought of before.
Schubert: "You are sensitive and thoughtful"
Me: *Begins to tear up instantly upon hearing Serenade*
Sounds about right lol, and the poetry part too I love making poetry even if it in my head
Bach is my favorite. the complex counterpoint is so comforting in a world that is too often chaotic.
What a great joy this was! I suppose I got Wagner. I love the music--but I highly doubt I could have stomached the man. A wonderful video, even if it was just for entertainment. Thanks!
The best video of this sort I've seen so far.
Entertaining indeed. Fun stuff! ...yet some were off...like I always Loved Sibelius from the start, no long time needed to realize his genius. :) Thanks to all these brilliant souls for enriching the lives of millions!
The description of Strauss II is so me in a nutshell. I am waltzing my way through life.
No Lully, Purcell and Garaev, few others missing too :(
Bach and Beethoven from availaible.
royer discovered by me from metal moments in classical music
Liked so I can come back and check which composers I still have to give a listen. Thank you for the video!
😂 FACTS….because Fauré is my favorite composer and I don’t understand why he isn’t famous
HELP IM BEING TRACKED BY HOW ACCURATE THE SIBELIUS ONE IS
It was insane
Finally, a video that does not slander Handel!
Hallelujah
@@jamesclarkmaxwell-v2n I can't handle Handel...there's some slander for ya.
@@pexxos1 neither can night clubs
Sarabande
My favorite teeters between Prokofiev and Tchaikovsky because I'm a ballet dancer. The listed qualities match, except for the extremely organized. I do have a system, but even I don't know what it is.
Sibelius was the opposite for me, heard his 3rd symphony as a teen and have adored his music since
Really nice video! Thanks for sharing it!
Thank you very much!
Based on this list I should listen to more Rimsky-Korsakov and Schumann. . . Dvorak and Rachmaninoff were spot on. :)
As someone that loves chopin and his favorite instrument is the piano you got me
Same
Damn, didn't expect the Wagner one to be that accurate lol
Wonderful video and it peaked my interest in these other composers
6:02 I'm like Shostakovich if you take tiny elements from all the other composers and glued them to him, emphasising different parts of the complexity at different points in time, creating me.
Mussorgsky: you have severe alcoholism
Liszt/Hanson: you attended arts camp as a kid
Actually many people got into Mussorgsky through early experimental metal, such as Mekong Delta and there were more and "bigger" bands who covered his pieces.
Former voice student/choir singer here. I'm definitely Schubert and a little bit of Barber.
Also yes about Haydn.
Brilliant commentary. I especially like: "epic :)" for R. Strauss.
My heart is broken that you forgot Donizetti. Lol
Hilarious video, though! 😂
Thank you for not saying something snide about The Four Seasons for Vivaldi.
6:44 or you just love someone who put like 16 cannons shot into a music
Man three in a row: Strauss II, Stravinsky, and good ole PIT, as well as Rimsky-K... I feel called out lmao
I don't think Mozart's Requiem portrays the entirety of his work (and general vibe) very well. There's definitely a side of Mozart missing there, could've chosen something more stereotypical. Otherwise I love this video, very complete and well thought out.
I wished Rossini, Gershwin and Smetana were on the list though :( But thank you so much letting me know about the existence of Royer, Respighi and Scriabin, now I know what enriching rabbit hole I'll be entering this week :)
The Tchaikovsky one needs revision
Yeah im a disorganized persone at all and he is one of my favourites
😂
@@Mrrapamusic Same!! (;
I do agree. rather a highly emotional and sensitive and romantic person. Not focus on rationality, definitely.
Sense. not sensibility (;
The irony of misspelling “perfectionist.”
Ralph Vaughn Williams: "Make no little plans - your spirit is benevolent."
I've recently started to get into Khachaturian, thanks to the inclusion of his "Adagio of Spartacus And Phrygia" in the movie, _IF,_ that just came out. I don't know if it was just the wonderful scene or if the piece was just that good, but I'm definitely hungry for more. Any recommendations?
Wow, if composers wrote fortune cookies...
For those of us who ARE perfectionists, we noticed that with the first composer mentioned, Joh. Sebastian Bach, you misspelled "perfeccionist." What's not to like about Barber? Bartók is frightening. Bizet's Carmen! Brahms, I loved Ein deutsches requiem, but cannot understand why the Germans don't capitalize those words. Bruckner was an absolute master of polyphony, others might equal him, but none excelled him. Never did appreciate Chopin. My granduncle played music with Antonin Dvořák in Iowa, here in The New World. Edward Elgar is, well, just TOO British for me as an Irishman. Fauré's Pavane is a meditation. Khachaturian, an Armenian born in Georgia who wasn't Russian enough to prevent the Soviets from denouncing him, poor man. Georg Friedrich Händel, as the German in my knows him, seems to me he was born the same month as Mr Bach and within 50 miles of him. Although he worked for an German king of the English, perhaps the work he's best known for, The Messiah, was first performed in DUBLIN, and while modern people associate it with Christmas, its proper setting is EASTER. Now we have good old Planetary Holst; how does a composer born in England get a name like Gustavus Theodore von Holst? It is nice that Liszt made it on the List, but he never did anything special for me, shame on me. Wagner, there is the matter of Adolf, how can a person love a composer who was so beloved by Adolf Hitler? Maybe it is a defect in me. Felix Mendelssohn is just too felicitous for me. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, there's my favorite, and you're playing the Lacrimosa movement from his incomplete Requiem, and not enough for me to know which version. Genius, absolute genius, and taken so young from a world that should have appreciated him more. Damned Catholic church. Modest Mussorgsky, your Night on Bald Mountain was featured in that fantastic film, FANTASIA! Jacques Offenbach and his Can Can, how many are blissfully unaware that that dance piece was composed by an internationally famous composer? Puccini - I sang the minor role of Gherardo in Gianni Schicchi, not O mio Babbino Caro. My mother's cousin, Emma Endres Kountz, had a concert pianist, had a piano built for her by Sergei Rachmaninoff.
Khachaturian thrived in the ussr, he was very respected
Rachmaninoff, so accurate !
Love the Bruckner one. Not my all time favourite composer, but in my top 10. The Elgar one is a bit generalised. Yes, his most famous works are associated with British identity, but he had a broad range of styles.
Maravilhoso!!❤❤
Dvorak ❤ Symphony no. 9 holds such a special place in my heart, I loved playing it
This is very spot on. Generally i do find myself to be Chopin and Shostakovich fan, but i definitely agree Khachaturian is underrated lol. Also, Offenbach did make me laugh so. Guess its a perfect description 😂
And yes, we need to hear more Fauré
5:31 As a convinced Schubertian, I can live with that. Thank you for this entertaining video.
6:14 That's who that music writing software was named after. Currently using finale, though that service will no longer function on our Mac PC's after I finish my 4th semester. Musecore Studio will have to do, I guess.
I find that I am a lot of these on occasion, depending on circumstances. Love Bach when I listen to St Matthew Passion, then revel in the joy of life listening to ode to joy, then find myself deep in thought listening to Brahms 1st symphony, then remember I play piano and play the ballade no. 1 and go listen to Dvorak 9, and find myself to be a British nationalist even though I am from Russia. Then listening to Grieg piano concerto I remember that Liszt Liebestraum, and go back to the piano. After that I am reminded of the adagietto in Mahlers 5th, and go to Mozarts mass in C minor in consequence ziti my mood after the 4th movement. Then remember the true love that I have for La Bohème, and am reminded of Piano concerto no. 2 by rach and then Daphnis and Chloe by ravel. Then the favorite Richard Strauss with his Der Rosenkavalier suite, Also Sprach, and Till Eulenspiegel (you see I’m more of a straussian guy myself). Unfinished symphony after that, then dichterliebe, then 10th symphony (the death of Stalin), then violin concerto by Sibelius. It’s a never ending journey. Then performing a rite in spring, after listening to Tchaikovsky intro to sleeping beauty I remember Verdi’s Requiem and go on to Tristan und Isolde. So I feel as if it is all in me (besides Royer). I love classical music, it fills my life with never ending strive towards the divine through the beauty and complexity of the patterns it draws to keep me in contact with God in a nonsuperficial manner. The way you can only be actually honestly closer to the divine, by reveling in the deep meaning derived from classical music.
1:10 which movement is this from
It's from the 1st movement:) ruclips.net/video/aIaoAuUSiYM/видео.htmlsi=BvRNs1A3mpvtgYP0&t=187
1st Movement of Bruckner's 7th Symphony, conducted by Christoph Eschenbach. You can find it on the hrSinfonieOrchester channel.
I love Shostakovich, and it fitts like a glove!!!
Copland, Emerson, and Händel
2:12 loved it, Khachaturian is one of the most underrated composers ever
(Along with Arthur Sullivan, but maybe you are not ready for this)
I was intent on criticizing most of your choices on the pieces of music, when at the very end I came across the most beautiful melody that Wagner has ever written: that of Rienzi... so I forgive you! 🤭
A bela música enobrece a alma!🥰😍
Thank you very much, very nice idea!
Richard Wagner - you have too much time
Aram Khachaturian - you were born in the USSR
Engelbert Humperdinck - you spent your childhood in Germany
Gaetano Donizetti - you are an opera nerd
Johann Pachelbel - you write pop-music
Scott Joplin - you love silent movies
Jean-Michel Jarre - you study electrical engineering
Clara Schumann - you are an unorthodox thinker
Fanny Mendelssohn - you know everything about everything
Sofia Gubaidulina - ..... aaaaaaahhhhhhhh ..... ?????
It's difficult for me to choose, i love like half of them. But Bach and Wagner i love a bit more...
My two favorite composers too! If I want to be relaxed and focus, I'll go for Bach. But if I have the energy and want to cry my eyes out, Wagner:)
@@TheGuitarSauce They're perfect
My favorite composers: Bach and Shostakovich, that makes me a complex and introspective problem-solving perfectionist, however silly these descriptions are, this actually makes sense, as far as I can judge myself...
Any Bach-worshipping perfectionist is troubled and disturbed by the spelling mistake in the first card.
Muito bom, gostei do Bizet!
I know this is just another Barnum effect, but it is dead on with my favorite being Debussy
Mozart é um clássico!
Favorite composers are Rachmaninoff, Chopin, Liszt, Ravel, and Scriabin...u can probably guess what instrument I play
pianissimo
Kazoo
good taste
that's probably flute
You're literally a pianist fr
jk u prob play didgeridoo or smt
Moszkowski- you’ve listened to all mainstream romantic works and you crave for more lol
I am a staunch fan and passionate player of Rachmaninoff's music, and his description fits really well to me.
"Perfectionist" is misspelled.
Love this so accurate ❤❤❤❤
Thanks, now I don't know who my favourite composer is: so many of them are resonating with me. And what about Rossini?
I absolutely love Holst, The Planets. But at the end of the day, I’m all about that Baroque sound. Bach and Handel are my all-time favs.
As a perfectionist couch sitter regularly feeling a deep sense of satisfaction once I lean back after having ordered cushions and blanket properly,
I guess I'll be Bach then.
I never listened to any classical before and been wanting to dip my toes in... thankfully YT recommended this video! I like all of 'em and got it narrowed down to a top 10 but Idk who to start with... I'm thinking: Bartok, Liszt, or Schubert.🤔(Also, how many pieces do these guys typically have?)
I would recommend Schubert's Death and the Maiden String Quartet, which is my favourite piece of chamber music ever. If you prefer singing, Winterreise.
@@Sarah-oj7bh thanks for the recommendation Sarah. I just added it to my playlist... I have a feeling I'm going to be diving into the whole lot in time. lol
John Williams / Hans Zimmer / Ennio Morricone: You're a hardcore cinephile
I would say it's the opposite, in fact they are so famous that you don't need to have any culture in cinema to know their works.
I would say hardcore cinephile probably likes Bernard Herrmann or some older composers.
Don't forget Jerry Goldsmith in that mix!
My favorite composers are Liszt and Amadeus. Are you capable of reading people's minds and souls? Quite an accurate description, though I do prefer being in the background. It's more fun to be holding the melody of a piece together than to play the flashy parts.
I feel like a good definition for Tchaikovsky (my all-time favorite) would be: You want to be stoic but can't stop yourself from losing it at times. (Which, I feel, fits me. LOL.)
It's true, I do love to break the rules. Whenever possible, I like to break them in double time. 😊
Love Bach and yep, “perfeccionist” is the spelling describing someone who made his “expresso” at Cafe Zimmermann. 😎
i takes Beethovveni symphony no 4, but out of this list there is many very impressive also like these ;
jean sibelius-Finlandia
Erkki melartin-Wedding march
fanny mendelssohn-string quartet in E flat major
Clara Schumann-Prelude and fugue in F sharp minor
I can't decide whether my favourite is Schumann, Beethoven, Vivaldi or greig, but I love all of their music
Finally, Wagner is not being compared to the German Nazis.
Thanks for your comment! I believe it’s important to appreciate Wagner’s music within its own context, without bringing in unnecessary associations like that one. Classical music, like all art, needs to be enjoyed for its artistic value.
@@cytisumm Yes, you are absolutely right about this. In general, I’m extremely surprised that I, being Russian (I use a Google translate), got so many likes, including from you. Very thanks)))
indeed german and austrian history is very less 1933-45 and so much music
I'm pretty sure Wagner was Jewish too so the fact that a lot of people associate him with the third Reich is just messed up and ruins his reputation. Great musician.
@@milesdockendorff I doubt that, it's pretty well known that Wagner was antisemitic. He even wrote how about "Jewishness in Music" and not in a good way. But I don't deny it's a great musician.
Debussy, couldn't agree more✨🌕✨
Medtner : you're a melancholic person who likes to fantasize but you aren't a mainstream personality
Rossini : You are an Italian nationalist
Messiean : You're either a sucker for complex harmonies, a christian, or you obsessively love birds
Bernstein/Purcell :
YOU R GAE
Same for Tchaikovsky, though. The last, anyway. Ask any Russian, absolutely any Russian, they will tell you.
You think Holst is simple? You should try conducting Mercury.
The Bizet & Scriabin ones made me giggle-snort. Also, completely agree on Faure. And I would be here all day if I listed all the other ones I enjoyed for one reason or another.