Francis Poulenc: Concert champêtre (with score)

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  • Опубликовано: 17 дек 2024

Комментарии • 55

  • @owengette8089
    @owengette8089 3 года назад +21

    0:00
    11:15
    17:05

  • @ChrisWrenLA
    @ChrisWrenLA Месяц назад +4

    This is orchestral alchemy. Nostalgia, tonality, whimsy, full on majesty in the cadences…. but then profound sadness and loneliness at the end. The wars must have done a number on these musical giants, as they would us all.

  • @Nooticus
    @Nooticus Год назад +21

    One of the greatest Concerti ever for me. No other piece has a sound similar to this. So much fire, energy, nostalgia, fun, seriousness. This piece has EVERYTHING you could want

  • @OctopusContrapunctus
    @OctopusContrapunctus Год назад +17

    I just love poulenc so much

  • @remomazzetti8757
    @remomazzetti8757 2 года назад +24

    No matter how light and brilliant so much of Poulenc's is, he actually has something deeper and more devastating to communicate, like the sudden and serious end to this extraordinary Concerto.

    • @dimkollias44
      @dimkollias44 Год назад +2

      This has to be one of my favourite (and disturbing) endings ever! All of this bombastic buildup for nothing. There is only loneliness and sadness.

    • @ChrisWrenLA
      @ChrisWrenLA Месяц назад

      There is a massive abyss at the end of this thing. He gives us some moments within the work, but then the ending is staring down a chasm. After all of the ornamented dazzle of this piece, the last 5 bars are just raw and naked. How can one not weep?

  • @jacquesgeorges1041
    @jacquesgeorges1041 Год назад +13

    Je suis fasciné par la puissance du cerveau capable de créer ça avec comme supports une feuille de papier et un crayon. La création musicale relève de la magie. 🤨😇

  • @tomherman2144
    @tomherman2144 8 месяцев назад +1

    What a happy piece, a life-affirming piece. Hooray.

    • @rogerknox9147
      @rogerknox9147 2 месяца назад

      Not always. More bittersweet I would say, but that's expected with Poulenc.

  • @barbaramariawilli6572
    @barbaramariawilli6572 2 года назад +14

    I enjoyed this interpretation full of energy, poetry and youthfulness.

  • @docbailey3265
    @docbailey3265 Год назад +5

    A unique combination of je me sais pas and magnifique mais c’est de la follie.

  • @Nooticus
    @Nooticus 3 месяца назад

    Still the best recording of this ever!

  • @andreagriseri7656
    @andreagriseri7656 Год назад +10

    Using the harpsicord as a modern instrument: why the smart intuition of the genius Poulenc hasn't been followed by other composers? This is true experimental music!

    • @CiaranParker
      @CiaranParker Год назад +4

      Well it was. There are fine harpsichord concerti by Manuel de Falla and others, written for the same artist Wanda Landowska.

    • @terryhalco1021
      @terryhalco1021 7 месяцев назад +2

      Check out "Four Fragments from the Canterbury Tales," a delightful piece for soprano, harpsichord, flute, and clarinet by the American composer Lester Trimble. The text is of course from Chaucer; the soprano sings in Middle English. There are several performances on RUclips.

    • @andreagriseri7656
      @andreagriseri7656 7 месяцев назад

      Thanks!

  • @MuseDuCafe
    @MuseDuCafe 2 года назад +2

    Very grateful for Poulenc's lovely and singular piece With a Score. Thanks much!

  • @Nooticus
    @Nooticus 11 месяцев назад +1

    I'm definitely not a middle/slow movement fan, but for me, I think this is the best slow-movement ever. It is so incredibly evocative and almost magical. The whole concreto is extraordinary too though.

  • @remomazzetti8757
    @remomazzetti8757 2 года назад +6

    There's an excellent live performance with Poulenc himself playing the Concerto on piano, with Dimitri Mitropolous and the New York Philharmonic, November 14, 1948.

    • @vincentbos6798
      @vincentbos6798 Год назад

      Damn it! I missed it

    • @terryhalco1021
      @terryhalco1021 7 месяцев назад +1

      Interesting -- Nov. 14, 1948 is the day King Charles III was born!

  • @victormendes583
    @victormendes583 2 года назад +6

    Eine Kleine Nachtmusik (Mozart) in 3:33

  • @steveegallo3384
    @steveegallo3384 Год назад +1

    Great....BRAVI TUTTI from Acapulco! "In 1967, financial difficulties, along with irregular work for the players and poor pay led to a decision by the French government to form a new orchestra. Following auditions chaired by Charles Munch, 108 musicians were chosen (of whom 50 were from the Paris Conservatoire Orchestra) for the newly created Orchestre de Paris, which gave its first concert on 14 November 1967 at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées...."

  • @Nooticus
    @Nooticus 3 года назад +3

    The re-upload of the removed video!! 😍👏

  • @undisclosedmusic4969
    @undisclosedmusic4969 Год назад +2

    I love the fact that the first movement is entitled Allegro Molto and marked Adagio 😂

  • @CODDE117
    @CODDE117 3 года назад +9

    Our boy is just smacking that harpsicord sometimes!

    • @entertainer9076
      @entertainer9076 2 года назад +1

      lmao

    • @Nooticus
      @Nooticus Месяц назад

      And its amazing! (bear in mind, its a very very different type of harpsichord to the baroque harpsichord!)

  • @chriswynn1582
    @chriswynn1582 3 года назад +15

    Much as I like a lot of his music, Poulenc definitely wrote quite a bit of weird stuff too!

  • @SergioLOSOWICH
    @SergioLOSOWICH 3 года назад +1

    Sounds fantastic 😉

  • @micheleviada3917
    @micheleviada3917 2 года назад

    Bravoooooo!!!

  • @hansgjerstad8895
    @hansgjerstad8895 Год назад

    He looked very much like Gustav Mahler on that picture!

  • @ryancharlesramer_composer
    @ryancharlesramer_composer 9 месяцев назад

    Always sounds Christmas-like to me

  • @jochanaan58
    @jochanaan58 2 года назад +6

    Aimée van der Wiele studied with Wanda Landowska, for whom Poulenc wrote this concerto. 😎
    Is there a video with full orchestral score?

    • @gustavsoler1812
      @gustavsoler1812  2 года назад +1

      no, there is not a video with full orchestral score

  • @lillyallseits
    @lillyallseits 3 года назад +6

    pro gsmer

  • @legendschant1194
    @legendschant1194 8 месяцев назад

    Notes for myself:
    0:25 hapsichord

  • @jeanmarcblanc2903
    @jeanmarcblanc2903 2 года назад +1

    Quelle année ?

  • @speed2040
    @speed2040 11 месяцев назад +1

    Je n'aime pas beaucoup le clavecin à la normale, mais la cela est mis d'une manière si moderne que la j'accroche immédiatement.

  • @渡邊博樹-r1j
    @渡邊博樹-r1j Год назад

    la musique française a F.Couperin influence, très bien !

  • @sagardia8891
    @sagardia8891 Год назад +2

    What a strange music....

    • @gustavsoler1812
      @gustavsoler1812  Год назад +1

      the harpsichord really seems out of place in this music

    • @Nooticus
      @Nooticus Год назад +4

      @@gustavsoler1812 ? no it doesnt lol

    • @Nooticus
      @Nooticus Год назад +6

      @@gustavsoler1812 saying the harpsichord seems out of place in a piece that was specifically composed for harpsichord, with it being a parody of baroque music including tons of trills, ornamentation, scalic passages, broken triads...

    • @rogerknox9147
      @rogerknox9147 2 месяца назад

      It has lots of variety, at times there seems to be an unstated meaning but I can't say what. Poulenc jumps from one thing to another unpredictably, but what in the 20th century was predictable?