To me, the mood of this piece isn’t pure joy and celebration; but also has a suspenseful/warning undertone in it. It seems like it is heralding a time/event that was long anticipated and everyone is optimistic, yet it later turns out to be a disappointment or disaster. It would have been an appropriate piece to play at dawn on New Year’s Day 2020.
@@rebecca8525 Interesting comment considering this piece is based on a work by Friedrich Nietzsche. Also, if you are not aware, the full piece is actually over 30 minutes long, you should listen to it sometime if you haven't, it has everything you mention in it, but does not end in disaster. Also, the introduction you are hearing here depicts a sunrise, the low rumble of the opening measures is clearly the darkness before the dawn.
I was a trumpetist for ten years when I broke my arm. To still be part of the orchestra, I joined the percussion for the next concert to do some simple things. I can tell you, waiting two minutes to smash a gong or symbal was the most stress I ever had during a concert.
nah-uuh, Mahler's Brass Choral. It builds throughout the entire symphony, but the Brass Choral itself (at 5th movement of the 2nd Symphony) is like 3 minutes.
Except that this is just the opening section, and the whole piece lasts a good 30 minutes! This part is the only section most people know, thanks to 2001.
@@dan-us6nk Thanks for tipping me off to this piece, I wasn't familiar with it before. I've tried getting into Mahler before but it's never really reached me. This Brass Chorale reminds me a bit of Pines of Rome/Appian Way by Respighi.
1:33 It may seem to many people that the participation of the cymbal guy is something simple and easy but I say that their participation is of extreme importance and it takes a lot of sensitivity and precision to beat the cymbal at the right time. The perfect cincronism of cymbal explosion with metals is that it puts all emotion in the end. If the beat is anticipated or delayed, it puts everything to waste. It was cold and accurate, like a sniper.
Yes! I've seen another performance of this piece, and they don't seem to focus on - or emphasize - the cymbals as much. I love how the spotlight is on the cymbalist as well as the very deserving timpanist. 😊❤
The percussionist was in a band from the age of 5, youth orchestras all through primary and secondary school, a performance major as an undergraduate, then a PhD in music theory. So yes, he was prepared for that moment.
One of the most awe-inspiring openings to a work of music ever written. Kubrick always made impeccable choices in his soundtracks and this one for 2001 is indelible.
I've listened to dozens of versions of Also Sprach Zarathustra, and this one is by far the best. The timing is perfect, the timpani spot on and the enthusiasm of the cymbalist is incredible.
1:26 The way Dudamel pitter-patters a bit and his face that says "Now lets fuck this up!" ... Beyond that amazing performance. What a crystal clear sound. Amazeballs.
...This is the kind of performance that every human being has to hear live at least once in his lifetime. Thank you M. Kubrik to let me know this masterpiece when i was 8 years old.
Ich leide an schweren Depressionen aber das ist so geil einfach, dass ich bei dem ganzen Stück Gänsehaut und Tränen hatte!!! Danke Richard Strauss, Danke Orchester!!
Imagine how much better weddings would be if people walked down the aisle to this. Graduations, weddings, every instance where we typically play classical music would be so much better.
Wow. Gänsehaut pur - und es geht richtig unter die Haut. So viel besser als Nietzsches Textvorlage. Toller Dirigent, tolles Orchester. 7 Sterne von mir!
The percussionist really has to nail it with his final cymbal splash. He is up against a 75 piece orchestra and organ pulling out all the stops, pun intended. A masterful direction, from pianissimo to fortissimo with the diminuendo and crescendo on the final chord. I wonder what Strauss would think seeing his music under the movie's opening. ( Gotta feel for the trumpeters in front of the cymbals! )
My Father was a huge fan of 2001 ASO and when he wasn't on duty at the base or working in a hardware store.....on Saturday mornings he'd sneak out to the living room and BLAST that piece of music to wake everyone up!
This have also been one of my favorite pieces of music. Also brings tears to my eyes. I always have random points in my life where i feel the need to search snd listen to this so I can rejuvenate myself
The conductor is on fire, the composition is flawless. Herd this for the first time on an elementary school field trip to the symphony in '79. Later when seeing the opening of 2001 a space oddessy.
You really don't appreciate how well recorded this is until you're right infront of a capable sound system with a flat response and the right power amplifiers behind it to give the "oomph". It gives you goosebumps. Can't even imagine how this sounds performed live.
@@totolias2010 well…i am a Chrsitian and I don’t think so (dispite the fact that i do not agree with Nietsche; He has not all the truth about God; it’s only an atheist man thought)
Yes, we are born at the right generation for us to listen this powerful, and iconic orchestra. And no other songs and musics can outmatch this classical masterpiece!
That organ in the end, lasting solo when percussion cease... by that bit you can clearly see Zimmer searched deep into this piece when working on Interstellar. And with good reason, the whole thing payed a giant hommage to 2001.
Impecable performance, exquisite synchronization and yet delicate execution. One cannot help to relate this masterpiece to the greatest wrestler to ever lace them boots up, The Nature Boy Ric Flair. ❤ woooooooo
It's a breathtaking performance full of immersive feeling that Zarathustra is likely to appear in front of me From Tokyo of the Land of the Rising Sun 🎌🇯🇵
@@shin-i-chikozima I really recomend, but i doesn't know how much you would conect to this because it's a response to XIX century western: culture, religion, values, ideals etc... Maybe you could find some use to it, goodbye.
@@arpisakarya9953 Thank you so much to your wonderful comment . In Tokyo the autumn is across the corner Someday please come to Japan You will be astounded at all of Tokyo Tokyo waits for you Good luck Go for it
@@IndubitablyIndeedi We once played the Carmina Burana by Carl Orff, and the conductor told us to try to break the timpanis' head, and I think that's a perfect illustration of how to play
When Zarathustra was thirty years old, he left his home and the lake of his home, and went into the mountains. There he enjoyed his spirit and his solitude, and for ten years did not weary of it. But at last his heart changed,-and rising one morning with the rosy dawn, he went before the sun, and spake thus unto it: Thou great star! What would be thy happiness if thou hadst not those for whom thou shinest! For ten years hast thou climbed hither unto my cave: thou wouldst have wearied of thy light and of the journey, had it not been for me, mine eagle, and my serpent. But we awaited thee every morning, took from thee thine overflow, and blessed thee for it. Lo! I am weary of my wisdom, like the bee that hath gathered too much honey; I need hands outstretched to take it. I would fain bestow and distribute, until the wise have once more become joyous in their folly, and the poor happy in their riches. Therefore must I descend into the deep: as thou doest in the evening, when thou goest behind the sea, and givest light also to the nether-world, thou exuberant star! Like thee must I go down, as men say, to whom I shall descend. Bless me, then, thou tranquil eye, that canst behold even the greatest happiness without envy! Bless the cup that is about to overflow, that the water may flow golden out of it, and carry everywhere the reflection of thy bliss! Lo! This cup is again going to empty itself, and Zarathustra is again going to be a man. Thus began Zarathustra's down-going.
Thanks much for informing people that it is Nietzsche's words that inspired this piece....and this Zarathustra is very different from the actual Zarathustra of 800 B.C.
1:33 if you were actually looking or listening, you'd notice he played the cymbals several times. Do you not see the precision skill with which the cymbalist angles his instruments to diffuse the sound properly into the air after making such precise contact? He's more skilled at the cymbals then you'll ever be at anything in your life. He's PAID to play the cymbals, and he's worth the extravagant cost. I'm kind of serious.
I first heard this at the Michigan Theatre in Ann Arbor in 1969 at the age of twelve watching "2001: A Space Odyssey", and I've heard it so many times since, yet it still give me chills when I listen to it.
so lucky to having heard this for the first time during a serious/masterpiece context... I myself heard it first time in the 90s during a cheap TV commercial! it was airing every night for years! it nearly destroyed it for me!
I'm listening to this on Monday here in Dallas during our total solar eclipse. We'll get four minutes of totality. I think it's going to be incredible.
This is one of those pieces of music that just makes you proud to be a human being!
And introduction of 2001 space odyssy.
why?
whatswrongwith u
At least until you see people holding trumpets sideways! ;)
It's about an Iranian prophet called zoroaster who's legacy is unbelievable.
This song should be played every morning when the sun comes up. It's a great start to a new day
To me, the mood of this piece isn’t pure joy and celebration; but also has a suspenseful/warning undertone in it. It seems like it is heralding a time/event that was long anticipated and everyone is optimistic, yet it later turns out to be a disappointment or disaster. It would have been an appropriate piece to play at dawn on New Year’s Day 2020.
Me who still wants to sleep: *Wilhelm Scream intensities*
@@rebecca8525 Interesting comment considering this piece is based on a work by Friedrich Nietzsche. Also, if you are not aware, the full piece is actually over 30 minutes long, you should listen to it sometime if you haven't, it has everything you mention in it, but does not end in disaster.
Also, the introduction you are hearing here depicts a sunrise, the low rumble of the opening measures is clearly the darkness before the dawn.
Its a piece or also called a composition
*pieeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeece
I was a trumpetist for ten years when I broke my arm. To still be part of the orchestra, I joined the percussion for the next concert to do some simple things.
I can tell you, waiting two minutes to smash a gong or symbal was the most stress I ever had during a concert.
*trumpeter.
@@markfox1545 Trumpetologist, thanks very much.....
SURE!!!
para mí es el momento más álgido,yo los toco 😅en el aire cuando la escucho
I was thinking you were a Trumpist and healed by that sound. Unfortunately a Trumpist usually can not bei healed.
The most majestic music ever! The very definition of majesty!
Got no argument here!
How does this not send chills up your spine? Magnificent.
Arguably the greatest short piece of music ever written.
nah-uuh, Mahler's Brass Choral. It builds throughout the entire symphony, but the Brass Choral itself (at 5th movement of the 2nd Symphony) is like 3 minutes.
Except that this is just the opening section, and the whole piece lasts a good 30 minutes! This part is the only section most people know, thanks to 2001.
And in fact, I'm going to be seeing the Philadelphia Orchestra play the full thing four days from now...
@@dan-us6nk Thanks for tipping me off to this piece, I wasn't familiar with it before. I've tried getting into Mahler before but it's never really reached me. This Brass Chorale reminds me a bit of Pines of Rome/Appian Way by Respighi.
Absolutely!!!!
1:33 It may seem to many people that the participation of the cymbal guy is something simple and easy but I say that their participation is of extreme importance and it takes a lot of sensitivity and precision to beat the cymbal at the right time. The perfect cincronism of cymbal explosion with metals is that it puts all emotion in the end. If the beat is anticipated or delayed, it puts everything to waste. It was cold and accurate, like a sniper.
exactly what I was thinking .... half a sec delay, and the whole piece is ruined ....
No Wonder they train for a years to get it right and only the best are part of them.
@@nazgulwraith2281 Half a second? That's a lot... A humen can usually hear 30ms easily, some even down to 1-2 ms!
@@jojajoja420 the half sec wasn't for what you can hear ... it was a half sec delay in moving his hands or picking the right timing.
From 01:28 to 01:33
Spaceman: *Aight, time to engage lightspeed*
Maestro Dudamel, the Timpanist and the Cymbalist, are the stars of the evening.
That was epic.
Don't foprget Maestro Dudamel's hair.
Yes, naturally! :)
Timpanists! Unless I'm mistaken
Yes! I've seen another performance of this piece, and they don't seem to focus on - or emphasize - the cymbals as much. I love how the spotlight is on the cymbalist as well as the very deserving timpanist. 😊❤
@@billace90there's only one timpanist isn't there?
1:31 "my time to shine!"
what i thought is: Dudamel made him do this
he almost fell over lol
+who8mahbacon kkkkkkk
The fright
"I AM HELPING!"
who8mahbacon he looks so embarrased😂
The percussionist was in a band from the age of 5, youth orchestras all through primary and secondary school, a performance major as an undergraduate, then a PhD in music theory. So yes, he was prepared for that moment.
references please?
LOL
All that for one perfect second.
That's the minimum qualifications for a cymbal player in Berlin.
STILL RUNS CHILLS DOWN MY SPINE... simply unbelievably amazing for such a short piece.
the guy with the cymbals at the end, lol you know he went home with some fine ladies from the audience
He did deserve them and many more: superb rendition!
Anonimo hay niños viendo esto, borre su comentario.
Thank goodness they weren’t wearing wigs! lol
And what a fine set. Worthy of any damsels admiration. Great rendition all round.
He deserved anyone of them. He could have fucked up every part of this, just by being one 1/10 second too late.
1:33 He poured his heart and soul into that one. The percussionist is a God.
))))))))))))))))))))))))))
he's an internet legend, or should be. The enthusiasm, the aplomb!
That guy is so underrated
the percussionist to the gods.
How is this guy not a meme.
What a fucking legend.
One of the most awe-inspiring openings to a work of music ever written. Kubrick always made impeccable choices in his soundtracks and this one for 2001 is indelible.
I've listened to dozens of versions of Also Sprach Zarathustra, and this one is by far the best. The timing is perfect, the timpani spot on and the enthusiasm of the cymbalist is incredible.
I agree 💯%
My God, what an honor it is to conduct this orchestra with this piece. It always brings me to tears.
Is THAT what's in my eyes?
The morning after the lockdown, I'll play this.
Your comment has aged very well
@@ragnarbluechip8795 Exactly 20 years from 2001
instead ended up banging on utensils. 😂😂
ditto
Yes, please.
One word to describe this performance "outstanding". A demonstration of all the wonders that humanity is capable of!
The percussionist at 1:33 deserves an award, that was a powerful crash.
ywnbaw
@@InterrogatingTheCat says the yogscast watching manchild
@@hello-rq8kf Reported for bigotry. Take that, chud.
@@hello-rq8kfcope
Fr, without the crash, it wouldn't make sense
less than 2 minutes and an absolute banger
The chills you get going down your spine as you watch those opening scenes of "2001: A Space Odyssey". Amazing!
This song should be played every day upon exiting the shower and walking into your room!
Yeeah, watch the openning in cinema OMG
This composition stands on its own! Chills occur listening to this music...
.
film not needed
heheheh it actually is the opening of barbie now also, just came from the cinema
I love to see the cymbal guy jumping of nowhere with such dedication. Great job.
The HAIR is the real conductor.
1:26 The way Dudamel pitter-patters a bit and his face that says "Now lets fuck this up!" ... Beyond that amazing performance. What a crystal clear sound. Amazeballs.
1:33 is a split crash of lightening; the piece ending with a subdued echo of rolling thunder. Thus he spoke. Masterful.
Hallo Lenny
Everyone else: what a great piece of music, an excellent composition.
Me : WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
Thank you for making me belly laugh at 2 in the morning. You made my day.
WOOOOOOOOOOO!!!
WOOOOOOOOOOO!
WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!
WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!
...This is the kind of performance that every human being has to hear live at least once in his lifetime.
Thank you M. Kubrik to let me know this masterpiece when i was 8 years old.
that guy at 1:33 is a legend
looool
Out of nowhere: BAM!!!
the big bang boy :-)
😂😂
Nailed it!I think Strauss would feel STOLZ.
dear God. this is so emotional. i cry every single time
Incredible! Every nuance perfectly matched. BRAVO!!!!!!
This is beyond magnificent. The finest of all the works I have listened to.
Some reason the ending makes me move to tears. Not sure what’s going on here, but! Amazing!!
It's that feeling of "We humans have fucked up SOOOO damn much throughout history, but LOOK AT WHAT WE CAN DO!!!!"
it's hard to put into words the feeling this song evokes
Goose bumps?
Emily try listening at: BURZUM PLAYING PINK FLOYD thanks
I like how they all seem to enjoy themselves while playing this, so intense, you can feel it too, just watching. The power of great music.
I just happened to catch the beginning on satellite radio as I witnessed an extraordinary sunrise. Truly a powerful moment.
Life without classical music would be a mistake....so appreciate it.
OH MY FREAKING GOD! I have goosebumps all around my body just thru watching it online, I can't imagine how emotional I'd be if I was there!
Wow! That was perfect! The horns, the drums, the violins, the cymbals, the organ and the basses at the end!
I love the conductor's excitement around the 1:27 mark.
Hi Troy
"To be the man, you got to beat THE MAN"
May your legacy and your iconic music live forever, Ric Flair.
WOOOOOOOOOO!!!
Totally outstanding. Many performances out there, but this one nails it..
This is absoluty the best Version!! not to fast and not to slow
for me it is too fast - but then, it was even slower than the tempo Strauß had in mind ruclips.net/video/E9PztWHu9FQ/видео.html
Not the best version.
imo MTT w/ the LSO was best ever.
Nope, this one is ruclips.net/video/UtBjgYeykFc/видео.html
@@eduardoalcala7628 I'm telling about music, not about video
Ich leide an schweren Depressionen aber das ist so geil einfach, dass ich bei dem ganzen Stück Gänsehaut und Tränen hatte!!! Danke Richard Strauss, Danke Orchester!!
Best movie ever, 64 now, saw first at 12, still amazed, the visuals and music on a big screen are fantastic.
Absolutely epic. The power the percussionists have and with which they play give this piece so much passion.
Imagine how much better weddings would be if people walked down the aisle to this. Graduations, weddings, every instance where we typically play classical music would be so much better.
I play lots of weddings and these days classical music is used at maybe 25% them.
Way better than Pomp and Circumstance. But wait, isn’t this classical music?
Or...... as your coffin rolls away behind those curtains at the crematorium. WHAT an exit!
@@Torahboy1 Genius idea.
How did this become Elvis theme song and opening # it's truly spectacular
This is one of the most dynamic/dramatic pieces of music ever written or played.
Goosebumps every time! Strauss is a genus!
Mate that guy on the symbol was waiting for that moment his whole life!! The energy In that last blast! 🤣
What a guy!
Wow. Gänsehaut pur - und es geht richtig unter die Haut. So viel besser als Nietzsches Textvorlage. Toller Dirigent, tolles Orchester. 7 Sterne von mir!
The percussionist really has to nail it with his final cymbal splash. He is up against a 75 piece orchestra and organ pulling out all the stops, pun intended. A masterful direction, from pianissimo to fortissimo with the diminuendo and crescendo on the final chord. I wonder what Strauss would think seeing his music under the movie's opening. ( Gotta feel for the trumpeters in front of the cymbals! )
so beautiful at 1:20, can totally see the conductor is happy!
Kudos to the tympanist, too. He gets it just right, ending each roll with a genuine bang.
Just spectacular. Am i the only one who could cry at the camera editor for switching to the brass before that final belt on the timoany both times?
My Father was a huge fan of 2001 ASO and when he wasn't on duty at the base or working in a hardware store.....on Saturday mornings he'd sneak out to the living room and BLAST that piece of music to wake everyone up!
Тут можно получать удовольствие не только от музыки, но и от наблюдения за дирижером :)
Ага.Такой милейший ))
paaaom paaaaaaaaa pooooooo
paam paaaaaam
tom tom tom tom tom tom
paaaaaaaom pooooooom paaaaaaam
pa paaaaaaaa
Perfect.
mprz052 pfffffffff he forgot an "a"
Stallacktit thx for the lyrics I needs it for karaoke machine
Stallacktit : Out of my depth. I wish I could read music.
Far better than the original score.
Bravo! Oh, my god. Masterpiece among us. Good song crossing the time. The good songwriter never die.
This have also been one of my favorite pieces of music. Also brings tears to my eyes. I always have random points in my life where i feel the need to search snd listen to this so I can rejuvenate myself
The conductor is on fire, the composition is flawless. Herd this for the first time on an elementary school field trip to the symphony in '79. Later when seeing the opening of 2001 a space oddessy.
Bravo! This is the way Also sprach Zarathustra should be performed. Almost every other performance I have heard hurries through it.
You really don't appreciate how well recorded this is until you're right infront of a capable sound system with a flat response and the right power amplifiers behind it to give the "oomph". It gives you goosebumps. Can't even imagine how this sounds performed live.
The piece is nine parts, and it's about a half hour long. This part, sunrise, is the most exciting part of the whole thing.
The guy playing the cymbals should receive the Noble Peace Prize.
The entire piece is more than an hour long. This is just the prelude. Wonderful piece in it's entirety.
Hello
I do not understand how can those 265 put a "dislike" in a concert like this. It's unbelievable that someone could not like this oberture. Incredible.
The conductor puts them off!
@@RamonInNZ
If master Dudamel puts them off then they are pure morons.
The only reason they disliked because they were diehard Christians hating on Nietzsche for writing "god is dead"
@@totolias2010 well…i am a Chrsitian and I don’t think so (dispite the fact that i do not agree with Nietsche; He has not all the truth about God; it’s only an atheist man thought)
Fantastic, one day, I have no doubt, Dudamel will be the conductor of the Berliner Philharmoniker!
I hope so!
@@october65-h6e Me too ... love this conductor and the way he started ...
I wish this would play out loud every day I came home from work to the family. 😊
me: this is one of the most epic, awe Inspiring, and metal pieces of classical music ever written.
also me: WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
So happy i was born at the right moment to be able to listen to this materpiece
Yes, we are born at the right generation for us to listen this powerful, and iconic orchestra. And no other songs and musics can outmatch this classical masterpiece!
1896?
What is it about the Berliner Philharmoniker that just is just so much better? Amazing!
leftcoaster67 EVERYTHING.
Strings
1:32 "take this bitches!"
Try to image if he had stumbled ... Utmost cringe
Hahahhahaha
That organ in the end, lasting solo when percussion cease... by that bit you can clearly see Zimmer searched deep into this piece when working on Interstellar.
And with good reason, the whole thing payed a giant hommage to 2001.
I'm proud of being a Persian Zoroastrian!
Thank you so much for such a fantastic piece of music!❤
Timpani and Cymbal guys: "All my life has been but preparation for this, single... moment..."
And, wow, they make the most of it! Epiiiiiiicc!
this is the best version i have listened!这是我听过的最好的版本!
lol! The old lady at 1:33 please ='D
Hahahahahaha
Nietzsche chavão
Which, where? You kids these days, be more specific.
at the back too xD
Left side, she is nearly completly behind the left cymbal (is this the right term for "Becken" in English?)
One of the most profound and iconic pieces of music ever created.
1:32 "IT'S THE MOMENT I CAN DO SOMETHING IN MY LIFE, LOOK MOM"
Lmao
He got his share of tail that night, trust me.
And he nailed it!
If I was to meet an alien and only had 2 minutes to show an example of humanity's musical genius.......
Cymbal Guy?
Impecable performance, exquisite synchronization and yet delicate execution. One cannot help to relate this masterpiece to the greatest wrestler to ever lace them boots up, The Nature Boy Ric Flair. ❤ woooooooo
The guy with the cymbals awaits his big moment and scares the crap out of everybody haha
Specially the trumpets section right in front of him….
I bet he mans the cannon for 1812 overture
1:31 when there's a giant mosquito in the room
😂😂😂
That would be,uh,have been one large bloodsucker.
@@peteroca4369 this is such an underrated comment
😂😂😂
LMAO
There is no music that talks about the universe more than this masterpiece.
This masterpiece is a conversation between God and the universe
Finally. Three years later, I found the song. This has taken forever but I'm glad I did it
I literally got chills and goosebumps. What an eternally amazing piece!
1:33 cymbal guy scared the hell out of grandma in the top left lol
Near the end you can see on Dudamels Face that he really enjoys it. "Damn, I love that part". :) Really great, watched the whole thing a while ago.
It's a breathtaking performance full of immersive feeling that Zarathustra is likely to appear in front of me
From Tokyo of the Land of the Rising Sun 🎌🇯🇵
Nietzsche reader?
@@diemenschen8339
Unfortunately
I didn't read his book ,
@@shin-i-chikozima I really recomend, but i doesn't know how much you would conect to this because it's a response to XIX century western: culture, religion, values, ideals etc... Maybe you could find some use to it, goodbye.
To Tokyo 🇯🇵 with love ♥️
@@arpisakarya9953
Thank you so much to your wonderful comment .
In Tokyo
the autumn is across the corner
Someday please
come to Japan
You will be astounded at all of Tokyo
Tokyo waits for you
Good luck
Go for it
Especially love the organ’s last half note chord! Amen to Strauss and his ultimate and most solid CRESCENDO 💪🏼
Así habló Zarathustra, y así dirigió Dudamel, con energia, con emoción y hasta con "rabia" y esta obra sinfónica quedó espectacular ! !
How the hell the cymbal guy get the exact time at the end at 1 millisecond exactly or I would say less, he jumps us and his precision is astounding.
0:55 That timpanist seems like he's having fun
What timpanist wouldn’t be having fun playing this? :)
I'm sure the conductor told him to hit it as hard as possible without breaking something and nothing is more fun to percussion
@@IndubitablyIndeedi We once played the Carmina Burana by Carl Orff, and the conductor told us to try to break the timpanis' head, and I think that's a perfect illustration of how to play
@@petitaubin3775 That's a lot of damage
When Zarathustra was thirty years old, he left his home and the lake of his home, and went into the mountains. There he enjoyed his spirit and his solitude, and for ten years did not weary of it. But at last his heart changed,-and rising one morning with the rosy dawn, he went before the sun, and spake thus unto it:
Thou great star! What would be thy happiness if thou hadst not those for whom thou shinest!
For ten years hast thou climbed hither unto my cave: thou wouldst have wearied of thy light and of the journey, had it not been for me, mine eagle, and my serpent.
But we awaited thee every morning, took from thee thine overflow, and blessed thee for it.
Lo! I am weary of my wisdom, like the bee that hath gathered too much honey; I need hands outstretched to take it.
I would fain bestow and distribute, until the wise have once more become joyous in their folly, and the poor happy in their riches.
Therefore must I descend into the deep: as thou doest in the evening, when thou goest behind the sea, and givest light also to the nether-world, thou exuberant star!
Like thee must I go down, as men say, to whom I shall descend.
Bless me, then, thou tranquil eye, that canst behold even the greatest happiness without envy!
Bless the cup that is about to overflow, that the water may flow golden out of it, and carry everywhere the reflection of thy bliss!
Lo! This cup is again going to empty itself, and Zarathustra is again going to be a man.
Thus began Zarathustra's down-going.
the first part of the book?
Thanks much for informing people that it is Nietzsche's words that inspired this piece....and this Zarathustra is very different from the actual Zarathustra of 800 B.C.
1:33 if you were actually looking or listening, you'd notice he played the cymbals several times. Do you not see the precision skill with which the cymbalist angles his instruments to diffuse the sound properly into the air after making such precise contact? He's more skilled at the cymbals then you'll ever be at anything in your life. He's PAID to play the cymbals, and he's worth the extravagant cost.
I'm kind of serious.
'than you'll ever be in your life' How dare you make such rude assumptions!
This has to be such a joy to perform. So sweet and so short.
I was in the Philharmonie that evening. It was so amazing!!!!
WOOOOOOOOOOO!
If you wanna be the man, you gotta beat the man
MEAN WOOOO BY GOD GENE
ric flair
Limousine-ridin'- WOOOO!!! Jet-flyin', kiss-stealin', wheelin'-and-dealin' son of a gun!
From charlotte north carolina, weighing 200 lbs, Ric Flair. Aheheh 😂😂😂
I first heard this at the Michigan Theatre in Ann Arbor in 1969 at the age of twelve watching "2001: A Space Odyssey", and I've heard it so many times since, yet it still give me chills when I listen to it.
so lucky to having heard this for the first time during a serious/masterpiece context... I myself heard it first time in the 90s during a cheap TV commercial! it was airing every night for years! it nearly destroyed it for me!
Thank You so much for this post. Very much appreciated.
I'm listening to this on Monday here in Dallas during our total solar eclipse. We'll get four minutes of totality. I think it's going to be incredible.