Ravel - Le Tombeau de Couperin, orchestration complète

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  • Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 918

  • @ignaciohmon
    @ignaciohmon 5 лет назад +663

    The Prelude is probably one of the most magical pieces in music history.

    • @qwj68boots
      @qwj68boots 4 года назад +24

      It was a dynamic discovery! My favorite composer.

    • @recipoldinasty
      @recipoldinasty 4 года назад +12

      Ignacio Hernández it is indeed it is, i feel like flating in the sea and flying at the same time

    • @victorl3969
      @victorl3969 4 года назад +6

      In my opinion, that would be the symphony renditions of 'prelude to afternoon on a faun' or 'reverie', both by Claude Debussy.

    • @agustinpastorino5988
      @agustinpastorino5988 4 года назад +3

      La verdad que si

    • @AsrielKujo
      @AsrielKujo 4 года назад +7

      The toccata also!!

  • @jamesfarrell7465
    @jamesfarrell7465 7 лет назад +1174

    In August 1984 I was living and working at Grand Canyon National Park. During the Perseid meteor shower I worked until midnight and walked home to my little apartment. It was a warm evening and a cloudless night. The sky was clear and the moon was nothing more than a thin crescent. There were so many meteors that when I got home I pulled my living room sofa into the yard, put my Sennheiser headphones on, and watched as hundreds of meteors each hour streaked through the sky. And all while playing Ravel and Debussy. A magical night I will remember with joy until I draw my last breath.

    • @newhope1233
      @newhope1233  7 лет назад +81

      Thank you so much, James Farrell, for this very fine and striking evocation!

    • @stevebard2257
      @stevebard2257 6 лет назад +47

      It's good to share such memories ... many, many years ago I was a kid playing hooky, went to main library in Brooklyn, over to turntables, put on earphones and, somehow, played a recording of this piece ... changing my life forever, so help me ...

    • @sokratisfrantzis5763
      @sokratisfrantzis5763 6 лет назад +11

      gotta go with the sennheisers!

    • @ardillavoladora5459
      @ardillavoladora5459 6 лет назад +7

      Lucky you 😊🍀

    • @CosmoConstant
      @CosmoConstant 6 лет назад +29

      This is what makes music is all about; this kind of universality. Music allows us to experience what you did that night better than any shared words could.

  • @stevecorley3625
    @stevecorley3625 3 года назад +54

    Ravel should be taught in every public school. Seriously.

    • @chrispiazza9544
      @chrispiazza9544 3 года назад +6

      I so agree. World peace = Ravel.

    • @dijonstreak
      @dijonstreak 3 года назад +2

      Fully agree !!

    • @christophedesbiens4490
      @christophedesbiens4490 3 года назад +4

      Ravel is just used at school to get children running away far from music.

    • @cminor3016
      @cminor3016 5 месяцев назад +3

      DEI should so be replaced with Ravel

    • @cminor3016
      @cminor3016 3 месяца назад

      @@chrispiazza9544 yes thank you

  • @MichaelHopcroft
    @MichaelHopcroft 5 лет назад +265

    When asked why his piece wasn't as somber as much of the memorial music produced in the aftermath of the Great War, Ravel is reported to have said: "The dead have sorrow enough". Ravel was mourning the deaths of his friends, but also grateful that they had lived at all. Which may be why this music is so sprightly and optimistic.

    • @TomCL-vb6xc
      @TomCL-vb6xc 5 лет назад +28

      Michael Hopcroft Ravel never wrote a sad piece of music in his life. Sombre and reflective works perhaps, but everything Ravel wrote always contained a Ravelian sense of life and spirit.

    • @neilthomas8156
      @neilthomas8156 2 года назад +10

      That is incredibly profound,I’m grateful for you sharing that.Ravel goes even higher in my estimation

    • @qwj68boots
      @qwj68boots 2 года назад +3

      Yes, thank you for the shared Ravelian sensibility. A great trait to possess, by the way.

    • @Nasfelia
      @Nasfelia 2 года назад +5

      @@TomCL-vb6xc There is one thing. In 1917, shortly after coming back from the Battle of Verdun, and shortly after his mother died. He made Frontispice. It's a terrifying composition.

    • @tommyvercetti1827
      @tommyvercetti1827 2 года назад +4

      @@TomCL-vb6xc pavane for a dead princess is kinda sad

  • @didierboudet88
    @didierboudet88 3 года назад +24

    on en pleure de joie et de fierté qu'un être humain ai pu atteindre ce degré de perfection.

    • @jfpary7336
      @jfpary7336 3 года назад

      Oh que vous avez raison....

  • @annemarieclaudia
    @annemarieclaudia 6 лет назад +52

    écouter la musique de Ravel c'est comme entrer dans un monde féerique rempli de magie. On ne s'en lasse pas.

    • @conradsabatier5223
      @conradsabatier5223 5 лет назад +4

      Claire: magnifiquement dit!

    • @rvnsef9174
      @rvnsef9174 Год назад +1

      C'est exactement ça !

    • @wendyscott8425
      @wendyscott8425 Год назад

      Si vrai.

    • @ufochannel2845
      @ufochannel2845 Год назад

      @@conradsabatier5223 Conrad à raison, il y a chez Ravel cette (grosse) part de féerie ... indispensable à moi-même ...:)

  • @MegaCirse
    @MegaCirse 5 месяцев назад +28

    Plutôt que de pleurer, Ravel a choisi de célébrer ses compatriotes et amis morts pendant la Première Guerre mondiale ! Pour surmonter le chagrin, nous devons remplir notre esprit de la joie que nous avons vécue naguère avec nos proches disparus 💖

    • @franciscobustioscastro3964
      @franciscobustioscastro3964 Месяц назад

      Totalmente de acuerdo. La ternura que pone Ravel en cada una de estas pequeñas joyas es la misma con la que uno recuerda a los propios amigos muertos, con el imborrable contenido afectivo de la verdadera amistad, que permanece a salvo del tiempo.

    • @PhilippeFafiotte
      @PhilippeFafiotte Месяц назад +3

      En effet, il a été vivement conspué par des critiques qui n'avaient rien compris et qui prétendaient qu'il était irrespectueux de composer une musique joyeuse à la mémoire de soldats tombés pour la France.
      Le surréalisme est né du besoin impérieux de sublimer et de guérir tout ce que les horreurs de la guerre, pour celles et ceux qui les avaient connues,
      pouvaient laisser comme blessures et comme stigmates.
      C'est le Cri de Munch.
      Et c'est le Tombeau de Couperin, un bain de lumière et un prodigieux flamboiement d'harmonie qui nous transporte, nous élève, nous fait voler au-dessus des espaces et à travers le temps, dans un miroitement de couleurs et un foisonnement d'impressions pour tous nos sens.
      Le génie d'un patriote ayant voulu aller sur le front et capable de transcender les souffrances vécues pour composer un hymne réparateur et un éloge à la mémoire de ses amis qui à travers sa musique comme dans la profondeur des mystères de la vie,
      restent présents.
      Rien ne meurt.
      Tout est vivant.

    • @autumngirl951
      @autumngirl951 23 часа назад +1

      Probably cried, TOO.

  • @joluijten6313
    @joluijten6313 6 месяцев назад +23

    The prelude makes me feel like a butterfly

  • @LegitFUry
    @LegitFUry 5 лет назад +182

    This piece works so well with the orchestral texture, that I find it hard to believe that it was ever written for just the piano.

    • @Eorzat
      @Eorzat 4 года назад +25

      Captain Stingray That’s because Ravel was a masterful orchestrator. The original piano version is pretty bare-bones in comparison, but Ravel really brought out the colors to fit the orchestra.

    • @crusherjoe8519
      @crusherjoe8519 4 года назад +17

      Ravel didn't compose many original works for orchestra: La valse; Daphnis et Chloé, a ballet score for chorus and orchestra; Shéhérazade Ouverture for orchestra; Shéhérazade song cycle for mezzo-soprano (or tenor) and orchestra; Rapsodie espagnole for orchestra; a ballet score, Boléro; Piano Concerto in G; Piano Concerto for the Left Hand; etc. Ravel orchestrated many of his and other composers' piano pieces: Ma mère l'Oye; Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition; Pavane pour une infante défunte; Une Barque sur l'océan; Menuet antique; Valses nobles et sentimentales; etc.

    • @dark_donnie2176
      @dark_donnie2176 4 года назад +13

      I prefer it on piano because normaly ravels music is very discrete and with full orchestra there is yes more colors but in piano, it's very discrete and light, sometimes a bit cold, but like ravels music.

    • @emanuel_soundtrack
      @emanuel_soundtrack 3 года назад +1

      very hard to separate after u master both

    • @ogthekingofbashan333
      @ogthekingofbashan333 3 года назад +7

      Personally, I think the piano and orchestra pieces are totally different. The piano piece has a quality to it that's very specific to the piano, and is completely lost in the orchestra version. This is in contrast to something like the Pavane, which is rather similar in both versions.

  • @dabedwards
    @dabedwards 6 лет назад +98

    Elegant, witty, beautiful....yet somehow elusive --- music that never quite gives up all its secrets.

  • @majorpayne8373
    @majorpayne8373 5 лет назад +166

    When George Gershwin was in Europe he took lessons from Ravel. Ravel asked Gershwin how much money he made. After Gershwin told him Ravel said, "Perhaps I should be taking lessons from you."

    • @asym52
      @asym52 5 лет назад +62

      Apparently Gershwin went around asking everyone for lessons. Ravel turned him down, supposedly saying "Why be a second-rate Ravel when you can be a first-rate Gershwin?"
      It's Stravinsky who was supposed to have made the "taking lessons from you," quip, but according to The Atlantic (citing Gershwin biographer, Charles Schwartz), all of these stories were probably made up by Gershwin.

    • @mirandac8712
      @mirandac8712 4 года назад

      @@asym52 There's a similar quip attributed to Billy Wilder and Godard: "You have something I greatly envy, Monsieur Godard: artistic freedom." / "And you have something I envy: money." (I believe it's Wilder / Godard)

    • @FleuveAlphee
      @FleuveAlphee 4 года назад +13

      This is most likely made up, as many such quips are. I couldn't find confirmation in reliable sources. In any case Gershwin, regardless of his talent (and flair) is not in the same league as Ravel. He was a poor orchestrator and left most of the "arrangements" (sic) to people like Grofe.

    • @ruperttmls7985
      @ruperttmls7985 4 года назад +9

      Ravel > Gershwin

    • @MeatBunFul
      @MeatBunFul 4 года назад +1

      @@ruperttmls7985 always

  • @thierrychango7268
    @thierrychango7268 11 месяцев назад +5

    La meilleure orchestration écoutée à ce jour...une pure merveille

  • @Chrispy1976
    @Chrispy1976 4 года назад +90

    I recorded part of this to a cassette tape as it was playing on the radio back in the early 1990's and couldn't for the life of me figure out what it was called, who it was by.. then by chance i recently discovered my old cassette tapes! and the only word I could make out from the half taped over description was *"tombeau!"* .. 2 hours later.. found it! ..and love it as I did all those years ago, a beautiful piece of music.

    • @noradosmith
      @noradosmith 3 года назад +8

      I love this story. Something about cassette tapes feels already like relics from a forgotten world.

  • @birgitbofarull4410
    @birgitbofarull4410 4 года назад +26

    To write such joy on the face of loss and destruction is only a sign of an absolute genius.

  • @troud8888
    @troud8888 2 года назад +17

    Ravel is the peak of music.

  • @simonprecheurllarena
    @simonprecheurllarena 4 года назад +36

    Some of the most refined and beautiful music ever written.

  • @pierreguinot9238
    @pierreguinot9238 3 года назад +52

    Merveille d'entendre orchestrées la fugue et la toccata en plus des autres pièces ! Ravel est si magique, si parfait et a relativement peu écrit, exigeant comme il était.

  • @johannesbluemink4581
    @johannesbluemink4581 5 лет назад +13

    Some years ago I was walking in the hall of a Railway station and a pianist was playing. I recognized 'Le Tombeau' immediately. The orchestration is beautiful and exquisite.

  • @remixuereb
    @remixuereb 9 лет назад +53

    Maurice Ravel nous a donné dans " Le Tombeau de Couperin" une oeuvre d'art d'une véritable élévation qui n'échappe pas à une dimension spirituelle . Il y a une douce et joyeuse présence qui habite ces danses de l'âme qui nous transportent délicatement avec infiniment de respect . Mélancolie non systématique qui n'est pas affectée mais elle témoigne d'une douleur présente qui a absorbé le deuil , en porte les traces , mais il y a en profondeur comme une résolution virile et vivifiante d'un accord avec les veines de ce qui palpite en positif dans la Vie . Ravel , le musicien des profondeurs nous réenchante, non de spectres illusoires mais nous prend doucement par la main , nous suggère , comme si l'on nous racontait de belles histoires qui éveillent de nobles sentiments et ces musiques propres à confronter avec l' univers de la nature ,sont comme une prescription de bonheur pour un coeur que l'on invite à s'emplir de simple beauté non tonitruante mais en teintes aquarellées qui soulagent l'âme et le regard parfois superficiel que l'on porte sur les choses de l'existence .

    • @classic4ever780
      @classic4ever780 8 лет назад +7

      +remi xuereb vous avez bien résumé le propos de Ravel il me semble. Je dirai (ma modeste contribution au débat...) : une musique sans pathos et tellement "française"....

    • @Jomtek
      @Jomtek 7 лет назад +8

      Maurice Ravel était extrêmement différent des autres artistes compositeurs, on sent dans ses musiques qu'il débordait d'imagination, Le Tombeau de Couperin est une musique où l'on constate la saveur de l'imagination de Ravel. On sent aussi qu'il avait tellement d'imagination qu'il fallait réussir à tout incarner dans une musique sans qu'elle soit trop longue, alors il a pris ce qu'il lui semblait le plus beau, le plus délicat possible et c'est ce qui fait de cette musique une musique riche sans l'être forcément. Ravel restera l'un des plus délicat compositeur français que j'ai personnellement écouté, Debussy avait un goût tout aussi délicat, ils partageaient le même avis et le même ressenti sur La Musique. En tous cas, grosses appréciations et félicitations à Maurice Ravel pour cette magnifique oeuvre libre d'imagination.

    • @wendyscott8425
      @wendyscott8425 Год назад +1

      Une magnifique explication! Merci beaucoup!

    • @remixuereb
      @remixuereb Год назад +1

      @@wendyscott8425 Merci à vous avec le retour heureux de votre avis encourageant !

  • @arielluva
    @arielluva Год назад +4

    this piece was my companion when i sat alone at lunch in 9th grade. lunch was just long enough to almost listen to this twice, and by the time the toccata started playing for the 2nd time i knew lunch would be over soon
    love this piece to death and especially the fugue its just. so good

  • @verdew8181
    @verdew8181 9 лет назад +439

    This music feels as if I am stepping into an enchanted place.

    • @wosslert
      @wosslert 9 лет назад +11

      Well put , Dorothy. It's magical music.

    • @ClovisBzh
      @ClovisBzh 8 лет назад +16

      +Dorothyellen w French composers power ! ^^

    • @acla9000
      @acla9000 8 лет назад +4

      +Dorothyellen w I feel the same too...

    • @NoahJohnson1810
      @NoahJohnson1810 8 лет назад +19

      We aren't in Kansas any more, are we Dorothy?

    • @davesmith6815
      @davesmith6815 7 лет назад +5

      You stepped into RUclips, where all dreams come true.

  • @myn1959
    @myn1959 3 года назад +2

    a long time ago I had to vacate my house all my life to sell it, I remember having been all the time with my dog ​​accompanying me and listening to "le tambeau de Couperin"

  • @StephanieHughesDesign
    @StephanieHughesDesign Год назад +4

    Le orchestration est plus que beau et comme si chaque mouvement ! Chapeau a Ravel que est un grande maestro ! Mon favori pour Ravel.

  • @zigosepalum5641
    @zigosepalum5641 5 лет назад +11

    Cette œuvre magnifique transcende l'horreur de la Guerre 14-18. L'art triomphe de la barbarie.

  • @charlesflett2818
    @charlesflett2818 Год назад +4

    Menuet. Such beauty. Leaves me breathless at its closure.

  • @j-mv.3602
    @j-mv.3602 5 лет назад +1

    Hommage à vous,Maurice. Vous avez souffert à quelques kilomètres de mon lieu de vie, 35 ans avant ma naissance. Dieue sur Meuse.30.06.1953. JM

  • @MRCharlesNCharge
    @MRCharlesNCharge 6 лет назад +17

    I have this on CD. Some weekend mornings, if the light is right in my living room, I'll listen to it while browsing a large volume of impressionist paintings which I own. It is one of the chief delights in my life.

    • @concars1234
      @concars1234 4 года назад +4

      You sound like someone who gets roasted in a modernist novella

  • @miguelfontesmeira
    @miguelfontesmeira 3 года назад +44

    Wow! Kocsis did a great job. I think he captured really well the soul of Ravel's orchestration.

  • @birgitbofarull4410
    @birgitbofarull4410 4 года назад +12

    The joy versus the memory of death is only conceived in genius. This has been my perfection since I first heard it 43 years ago.

  • @laurennelson4983
    @laurennelson4983 5 лет назад +4

    Many thanks to Ravel for giving oboists a piece of their own. What a pleasure and privilege to play.

  • @hugofernandes2930
    @hugofernandes2930 9 лет назад +76

    Both this and daphne et chloe are completely stunning

    • @antinorest
      @antinorest 5 лет назад +9

      The Pavane and Ma mere l´ oye are also great musical works

    • @박준형-w2g
      @박준형-w2g 4 года назад +1

      Totally agree

    • @davidsheriff9274
      @davidsheriff9274 5 месяцев назад

      Sonatine. The second movement of The Piano Concerto in G Major and The String Quartet in F Major. All three are brilliant.

  • @villageguy13
    @villageguy13 11 лет назад +97

    Ravel was a true genius.

    • @chrispiazza9544
      @chrispiazza9544 3 года назад +6

      one of my gods

    • @jfpary7336
      @jfpary7336 3 года назад +3

      Far more than a genius....

    • @spactick
      @spactick 2 года назад +1

      how so?

    • @ravelesque34
      @ravelesque34 Год назад +1

      ​@@spactickbecause of his understanding of music theory, he didn't need piano in front of him to compose he had an entire orchestra fit inside his head. The greatest musical genius mankind can ever witness and still he is overshadowed by Debussy

    • @danielromo3040
      @danielromo3040 3 месяца назад

      @@chrispiazza9544 x2

  • @Likes_Trains
    @Likes_Trains 3 года назад +7

    I forgot how cheeky the forlane is
    I can't hear the prelude without crying. This really is the pinnacle of orchestration

  • @quanhoangclarinettist6225
    @quanhoangclarinettist6225 3 года назад +23

    Damn, that final climax from 23:48 though, goosebumps every time. What incredible orchestration from Zoltán Kocsis.

  • @conradsabatier5223
    @conradsabatier5223 5 лет назад +12

    The Menuet is the most perfect wake-up music. Just sublime! Ease you gently into the day. 😊

  • @Marsday7
    @Marsday7 3 года назад +11

    2:22 that final crescendo is so magical, you feel like you are about to fly!!

  • @Josep489
    @Josep489 2 года назад +4

    What a incredible job Kocsis did with Toccata, just amazing.

  • @johnlunnun9769
    @johnlunnun9769 2 месяца назад +2

    One of the most beautiful pieces of music ever written ! ❤❤❤❤

  • @friday3829
    @friday3829 3 года назад +9

    this makes me feel like i'm in a magical fairy tale... i feel very inspired to draw something like that listening to this

  • @slaimramirezmejia4872
    @slaimramirezmejia4872 Год назад +7

    Me alegra ver que esta obra de Ravel es más apreciada hoy en día. Ravel era mucho más que solo el Bolero. Personalmente esta obra ha sido una de mis favoritas desde la primera vez que la escuché por accidente en la radio.

  • @charlessiewerdt2832
    @charlessiewerdt2832 3 года назад +23

    This peace of Ravel is one of the saddest and most profound music pieces ever written, and nevertheless comforting and life assuring.

  • @juliancochran
    @juliancochran 5 месяцев назад +3

    I played it many years ago but had not heard the fugue (orch.) before (not orchestrated by Ravel) and the orchestration is so effective and touching with woodwind and harp. The coda is magical.

  • @LaPrezDeLot
    @LaPrezDeLot 5 месяцев назад +3

    Amazing suite! The rigaudon is very uplifting and has an 'instructing' vibe, which I love. Thanks for sharing this majestic pieces with us all and I wish a fantastic time to anyone reading this!

  • @Lonigo77
    @Lonigo77 Год назад +3

    Menuet is almost unbearably beautiful. Thank you so very much! Ravel is like an old friend.

  • @guscairns1
    @guscairns1 4 года назад +16

    I love both the piano and the orchestral version. The prelude feels to me like a walk on the hills on a windy day...

  • @verdew8181
    @verdew8181 11 лет назад +175

    This music should be prescribed listening for depression.

    • @alexplenka1260
      @alexplenka1260 5 лет назад +2

      Dorothyellen w best comment ever!

    • @mirandac8712
      @mirandac8712 4 года назад +11

      Music should be prescribed for depression.

    • @andrewlankford9634
      @andrewlankford9634 4 года назад +17

      The music has an ethereal (escapist?) giddyness about it, yet it's easy to tell just from the music alone that the subtext is profound sorrow and loss. It was written in wartime, in part to memorialize the war dead (perhaps to play for them as the name suggests), but there's no hint of "rally round the flag" or "we're all in this together" . It seems like the feeling Ravel wanted to convey was a desperate wish to be happy, to remember some idealized past or imagine a life affirming future, in spite of the very real present.

    • @MeatBunFul
      @MeatBunFul 4 года назад +4

      I've been listening to this for too long now. It's just too good.

    • @maydaaf9379
      @maydaaf9379 3 года назад +1

      Lol listening to this is my way to self medicate.

  • @MrFouloas
    @MrFouloas 10 лет назад +15

    ses amis morts au cours de la guerre peuvent reposer en paix , avec cet hommage musical si tendre.

    • @ferdinangenius
      @ferdinangenius 6 лет назад +1

      domage que ils ne peuvent pas ecouter

  • @areirving
    @areirving 10 лет назад +40

    This music brings me joy, not unlike seeing something wonderful in nature.

    • @montelatte
      @montelatte 6 лет назад +1

      ron genauer f

    • @contactkeithstack
      @contactkeithstack 6 лет назад +4

      Agreed, I always felt music grew like plants. Perfect expressions of the world around and before them. This one is so exotic and spell binding. Reminds me of the ghost orchid from Adaptation.

  • @mohhingman
    @mohhingman Год назад +3

    Lump in my throat every time. Beyond incredible. Ravel is the master

  • @michaeldonovan504
    @michaeldonovan504 5 лет назад +32

    Composed between 1914 and 1917, given in first hearing in April 1919 by Marguerite Long, the suite for piano The Tomb of Couperin comprises six pieces, Prelude, Fugue, Forlane, Rigaudon, Menuet and Toccata, dedicated to the memory of friends fallen during the First World War. Ravel later orchestrated four of these pieces, heard for the first time in this form in February 1920 and played in the following order: Prelude, Forlane, Menuet and Rigaudon.
    Almost 80 years later, Hungarian pianist and conductor Zoltán Kocsis set about orchestrating the two remaining pieces, Fugue and Toccata. It is this complete orchestral version that can be heard here, performed by the Hungarian National Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Zoltán Kocsis (the image on the video is a partial view of a drawing by Ravel on the original score).
    Follow one another as follows:
    [00:00] Prelude ("in memory of Lieutenant Jacques Charlot");
    [03:08] Fugue ("In memory of Second Lieutenant Jean Cruppi");
    [06:20] Forlane ("in memory of Lieutenant Gabriel Deluc");
    [12:23] Rigaudon ("in memory of Pierre and Pascal Gaudin");
    [15:24] Menuet ("in memory of Jean Dreyfus");
    [20:32] Toccata ("in memory of Captain Joseph de Marliave")

    • @wendyscott8425
      @wendyscott8425 Год назад

      Thanks! I wondered about those two pieces Kocsis had orchestrated. Beautiful!

    • @jeanattali4005
      @jeanattali4005 Год назад

      Merci ! Thank you also for mentioning the names of those for whom the pieces were dedicated.
      Listening to this music three days before Remembrance Day is particularly moving.

  • @aryehfinklestein9041
    @aryehfinklestein9041 6 лет назад +112

    I can honestly say of no composer other then the sublime Ravel that he wrote not a single note of which I disapprove. His entire oeuvre a wondrous gift.

    • @dabedwards
      @dabedwards 6 лет назад +5

      Yes agreed, I am always aware that his music has an self-assurance borne of near perfection.

    • @RationalThinker1859
      @RationalThinker1859 6 лет назад +7

      You like his eggs?

    • @Jomtek
      @Jomtek 6 лет назад +2

      Have you heard about Rachmaninov's Piano Concerto 3 ?

    • @feinburger5404
      @feinburger5404 6 лет назад +5

      Bach?

    • @feloria1862
      @feloria1862 6 лет назад +8

      Bach and Mozart have always sounded kinda boring to me i think its because of the limited Orchestra they had to work with.

  • @ilovenycsomuch
    @ilovenycsomuch 5 лет назад +10

    Why is the piece/composer not more famous? I've never heard of him & yet I've stumbled upon a most beautiful masterpiece like no other

    • @Barde_Jaune
      @Barde_Jaune 5 лет назад +9

      Ravel is quite famous actually, but I guess you meant not as famous as Beethoven or Mozart.

    • @TomCL-vb6xc
      @TomCL-vb6xc 5 лет назад +5

      Angela Wilson Most composers born after the mid 1800s are pretty unknown in general. There are a few exceptions of course but for the most part, “classical composers” are generally seen to consist of composers from the baroque, classical and romantic periods.

    • @williamsheppard3219
      @williamsheppard3219 4 года назад +2

      Ravel's Bolero is one of thd most recognized pieces of music. But his other compositions are not as well known.

    • @Hailey_Paige_1937
      @Hailey_Paige_1937 Год назад +1

      Please, absolutely give more of Ravel’s music a listen if you haven’t already! Some pieces to try:
      Daphnis et Chloé (The “Sunrise” Movement is STUNNING)
      La Valse
      Miroirs
      Gaspard de la Nuit
      Ma Mére l’Oye
      His two Piano Concertos
      Introduction et Allegro
      String Quartet in F Major
      Piano Trio In A Minor

    • @ravelesque34
      @ravelesque34 Год назад +2

      You are right, people are stuck in Beethoven, Mozart and Chopin while the greatest musical genius Ravel is unknown. They were kids in front of him whether in terms of technique Or in knowledge of harmony. The man was an entire orchestra

  • @MegaCirse
    @MegaCirse 5 лет назад +3

    Quand le monde fléchit autour de soi, quand les structures d’une civilisation vacillent, il est bon de revenir à ce qui, dans l’histoire, ne fléchit pas, mais au contraire redresse le courage, rassemble les séparés, pacifie sans meurtrir. Il est bon de rappeler que le génie de la création est lui aussi, à l’œuvre dans une histoire vouée à la destruction 💥

  • @MyChannelsNameIs
    @MyChannelsNameIs 8 лет назад +201

    Where has this piece been all my life? I've been sitting at my computer, bored out of my mind, looking up music for a listening class. And then this came on and I actually started laughing to myself because of how cool it was.

    • @BenjaminGessel
      @BenjaminGessel 8 лет назад +22

      +MyChannelsNameIs Maurice Ravel is one of a kind. Often admired, emulated, adored, etc. But few composers really are of his stature and imaginative genius... His music is SO unique and unmistakable.

    • @phyllispetras3821
      @phyllispetras3821 8 лет назад +17

      and he ADORED Siamese cats!!! His house is filled with toys....oh blessed man...

    • @davesmith6815
      @davesmith6815 7 лет назад +20

      +MyChannelsNamels - You appear young so, you have many experiences just like that awaiting you if you keep exploring. I'm 58 and I still have those amazing moments! Keep it up.

    • @nakedmambo
      @nakedmambo 7 лет назад +2

      What the hell is a 'listening class'?

    • @nakedmambo
      @nakedmambo 6 лет назад +4

      A silent class? What are they listening to then? Is this a John Cage concept?

  • @NeilRaouf
    @NeilRaouf 5 лет назад +9

    A pure joy to listen to this magnificent piece of art. I very much adore Maurice‘s work. His music does good things to my body and soul.

  • @renatomelllo
    @renatomelllo 5 лет назад +6

    Ravel extracted everything from the Orchestra on this fine piece of Music.
    Came here today to listen it after a lonh while...
    What a beauty Le Tombeau encloses...

  • @GentleGiantAudio
    @GentleGiantAudio Год назад +3

    Incredible arrangement. I am sure Ravel would deeply approve!

  • @jokiro7777
    @jokiro7777 8 лет назад +151

    R.I.P Zoltán Kocsis who orchestrated the Fugue and the Toccata in this suite.

    • @KenKen3593
      @KenKen3593 7 лет назад +13

      Are these the movements that were initially left out of the orchestral version?

    • @click.advance
      @click.advance 7 лет назад +8

      KenKen3593 Yes

    • @LandOnBolts
      @LandOnBolts 5 лет назад +2

      Why was it left out? Maybe it was either too hard to orchestrate or he just didn’t get around to doing it

    • @eschiss1
      @eschiss1 5 лет назад +1

      @@KenKen3593 Only the Fugue and Toccata were left out. The first two movements are really one, considered as a Prélude and Fugue of a Baroque suite :)... The remaining four are in the orchestral version- in a different order (the minuet and rigaudon are switched. The difference between Prelude and Fugue in e - Forlane in e - Rigaudon in C - Menuet in G - Toccata in e , and Prélude - Forlane - Menuet - Rigaudon is pretty substantial in _effect_, though (when the menuet is as ethereal and the Rigaudon as robust as these are.)

    • @eschiss1
      @eschiss1 5 лет назад

      @@LandOnBolts I don't know. It can't have been just that. After all, he switched two of the movements in the orchestration, and that after leaving out the finale (which means the orchestral version ends in C whereas the piano version ends in the tonic - e/E - which matters, it does. Practicality? Don't know.)

  • @bringoawfuttery2525
    @bringoawfuttery2525 4 года назад +12

    That prelude is absolutely magical... I haven't even finished the whole piece yet, but I have a feeling it's gonna feel magical 😂💖

  • @kaelonroache8240
    @kaelonroache8240 4 года назад +14

    Ravel is amazing. From 20:09-20:28, just this outro of the Menuet is so beautiful it managed to publicly put me in tears, the way the melody just trickles down and rests, then to come up again in resolution, gives me serious goose bumps, and all in just 19 seconds, damn.
    Try listening at x75 speed, it transforms the music

  • @joaomarcelo3539
    @joaomarcelo3539 2 года назад +5

    This fugue is so beautiful in piano and it got even more beautiful ❤️

  • @zoltankelemen4999
    @zoltankelemen4999 3 года назад +2

    The middle part of the Rigaudon is my life. Thank you

  • @patrickabois
    @patrickabois 5 лет назад +12

    I first discovered this gift about 10 years ago. At the time, I was fairly bipolar with regards to my mental state, and had been listening to classical for a few years to try to offset it, among other things like drugs and god knows what else. I was at a pretty low point, and I had just seen The Tree of Life, by Terrence Mallick. That film blew me away because that troubled, middle-child in the film, played by Sean Penn, that was me: the black sheep. But I loved the music, and one piece that had me in tears was Les barricades mysterieuses by Francois Couperin. I don't know why, but, it touched me to the core of my soul. I had just returned from China from teaching in a big city where I was pretty much the only white person in a sea of millions of strangers. I had no direction whatsoever in life after returning from China, even with a master's degree in something socially and culturally inapplicable like the humanities. At any rate, there was this day where I'm moving into a new apartment because I had just gotten kicked out of my folks' place. I was at a dangerous low with this bipolar mind of mine, and while I was painting, I turned on the radio, and Julie Nezrallah on CBC radio 2 (Tempo) started talking about this work. I listened to it in its entirety and just bawled my eyes out. It was so beautiful. I couldn't believe how beautiful it was, and how at some points, I noticed how it was tinged with this sweet melancholy that not everyone is privy to. I then learned of the title and smiled from ear to ear, since tombeau means tombstone. For years now, since I learned about classical music in a faraway humanities class (god bless you, Richard Teleky), whenever darkness is made visible, whenever the black dogs come barking, whenever the noonday demon feels like dining with me, I play something like this, like The Four Last Songs by Strauss. No one can remain in a bad mood with this piece by Ravel. Pure soul panacea, pure genius! No one does music like this anymore. Blessings to you all for noticing and appreciating it, you're such a lovely crowd because your souls have all been touched by it... this is such a beautiful rendition.

    • @kevinskiles2033
      @kevinskiles2033 5 лет назад +1

      Patrick,
      As a fellow sufferer, I agree with you about the benefits of great music. It reminds us of the beauty in the world, and guides us back to it out of the darkness. All the best to you!

    • @patrickabois
      @patrickabois 5 лет назад +2

      @DeGrate1896 I've come out completely of my suffering, actually. All gone! Hallelujah. Thanks for your beautiful wishes. May we all walk the straight and narrow path of love and light.

    • @patrickabois
      @patrickabois 5 лет назад +1

      @@kevinskiles2033 Thank you, brother! Best to you too, and Happy Easter!

    • @marshanovita9263
      @marshanovita9263 4 года назад

      Music is the best gift to a person lost in darkness. I forget where I saw this but it stuck in my mind because music is also the thing in my life that saved me. I am so glad you are doing ok now. I could really identify with what you wrote about depression as I suffered with it growing up.

  • @johnnybombz8262
    @johnnybombz8262 9 лет назад +53

    I've been listening to this recording for years; still pulls on my heartstrings. Timeless masterpiece!

  • @edwindizer1495
    @edwindizer1495 5 лет назад +12

    I didn't know about Zoltán Kocsis' additional 2 arrangements for this suite. But he has done a fantastic job - it stands up with Ravel's own sublime orchestration!

  • @eugenesheshenin2060
    @eugenesheshenin2060 6 лет назад +56

    Ravel's music is a marvel and delight, rigor and depth - all at once. What is buffling - this undying idiotic notion present in academic assessment of his oevre that it lacks in feeling. What he does is hard to pinpoint and categorize. Habitually he is lumped with Debussy, but he is not impressionist per se - there is a lot of structure in his writing. He is fluid, unpredictable and unexpected - annoying qualities for academic handling. That is exactly what I love about him! Ravel is atypical in everything - he was a dandy, a worldly sophisticated if remote man, he was discreet and exceedingly polite, though opinionated and professionally he was a thoughtful perfectionist insisting on compositional and sonic polish of his every piece. That is an image that induces envy in clumsy bohemian types and uptight academics. The utmost elegance of expression in his writing is so compelling and moving. I agree, he was ahead of his time and remains so relevant in my opinion due to the brilliance of compositional structure and innovative approach to harmonics. Bach was after the same things. That's a very good company.

    • @jtdumee
      @jtdumee 6 лет назад +5

      What a beautiful understanding and writing about Ravel Eugene. I could not have written it better!! Bravo!

    • @conradsabatier5223
      @conradsabatier5223 5 лет назад +3

      @@jtdumee Yes, a great appreciation of one of the greatest composers ever! It's such a shame that he's not more well-known and appreciated.

    • @matthewsonnenberg303
      @matthewsonnenberg303 4 года назад +1

      A thorough, well-researched assessment.

    • @mohhingman
      @mohhingman 3 года назад

      we need more comments like this in youtube.

    • @chrispiazza9544
      @chrispiazza9544 3 года назад

      There is no category for him. How sad it drives the categorizers crazy. Oh well.

  • @phyllispetras3821
    @phyllispetras3821 8 лет назад +53

    LOVE all these comments......I learned so much.....

    • @georgenussbaum4486
      @georgenussbaum4486 5 лет назад

      This piece plays much better as a piano solo, rather than orchestral. G Nussbaum, Casselberry, Fl

    • @chrispiazza9544
      @chrispiazza9544 3 года назад

      Me too

  • @pasqualepellicano5929
    @pasqualepellicano5929 Год назад +2

    non conoscevo questa composizione, straordinaria!!

  • @moop.3549
    @moop.3549 6 лет назад +6

    *my mind cannot even begin to comprehend the genius of ravel.*

    • @conradsabatier5223
      @conradsabatier5223 5 лет назад +1

      Few, if any, can! He was definitely in a league of his own.

  • @lexevan9619
    @lexevan9619 6 месяцев назад +2

    It's such a beautiful composition from a brilliant composer. Forlane will always be my favourite movement, the woodwinds are simply hauntingly pretty.

  • @fcamiola
    @fcamiola 6 лет назад +12

    Never heard the orchestrated Fugue and Toccata before! I wonder why Ravel didn't do those himself? Menuet is one of my favorite pieces EVER by anybody. It embodies the French countryside itself, even though it had different intentions.

  • @andrewterrien9818
    @andrewterrien9818 Год назад +3

    This will always be my favorite orchestral piece. Simply divine

  • @lucianedamestois
    @lucianedamestois Год назад +3

    A stupendous piece of music. It should please everyone that hears it.

  • @brandonmacey964
    @brandonmacey964 3 года назад +3

    This is one of the most amazing recordings I have ever heard

  • @SuperJacob1989
    @SuperJacob1989 6 лет назад +3

    This takes me back to my GCSE studies... I found an old box of LPs and turn table in our garage, there was a La Valse LP that I listened to for dayyyys, so I went out and got a full works CD box set from the dusty classical section of HMV, the guy at the till was so intrigued and exited I picked it out to buy, the 5 section reminded me of my awakening to Ravel. The composer's of early 20th century films would of struggled without these great harmonious expressions and melodic themes... I can hear scores from bible epics, musicals and film hours echoing through all of Ravels work... Love this peice.

  • @DianaPhoenix
    @DianaPhoenix 9 лет назад +21

    Part of this sounds mischievous to me, & I've enjoyed it since I was a child.Bravo, Mr. Ravel! You are among my favorite composers.

    • @frenchieseverine4514
      @frenchieseverine4514 9 лет назад +3

      Me too ..i've enjoyed Ravel since i was a teenager but i discovered this piece of music later..Pure poetry.I have gooseflesh each time i listen to this music and i can imagine a bird which flies happily and then struggles to go on living and becomes a bird from heaven singing gloriously . .The clarinet is awesome!

    • @DianaPhoenix
      @DianaPhoenix 9 лет назад +1

      Merci, Frenchie. Very exciting music. I love it!

  • @ImagineJenny20
    @ImagineJenny20 8 лет назад +222

    the oboe solo gives me life.

    • @Ichikue
      @Ichikue 8 лет назад +87

      Not when you've got to learn it though

    • @robrohr
      @robrohr 7 лет назад +4

      :D love it

    • @BenjaminGessel
      @BenjaminGessel 6 лет назад +5

      I could see that going either direction... The music "gives" life, but the oboist quite literally may be "expending" life, dependant on getting rid of that stale air buildup... :-D

    • @sleepylagoon1310
      @sleepylagoon1310 6 лет назад +1

      I comprehend that, Ms. Gao. ~ So mellow that it stirs the depths of one's soul. Heaven on earth! ~

    • @camilorojas1744
      @camilorojas1744 6 лет назад

      Jenny Gao. So, you play the oboe...

  • @cminor3016
    @cminor3016 5 месяцев назад +2

    Rather than mourn, Ravel choose to celebrate his compatriots and friends who died in WW1! To move past grief, we must fill our minds with the joy that we experienced with our loved ones who passed on❤

  • @jorgsattelmacher2676
    @jorgsattelmacher2676 3 года назад +4

    Ich hatte diese Musik bei einer Reise an die Nordsee um 1990 im Ohr, weil ich sie davor oft gehört habe. Wenn ich mir das Stück heute anhöre kommen mir immer noch die Bilder von der Reise damals in den Sinn. Die Klangfarben und das wechselhafte Nordseewetter passen wohl perfekt zusammen.

    • @lynnetopping9608
      @lynnetopping9608 3 года назад

      Ja, genau.
      Ich habe oft an die Nordsee gereist, und immer geht die Musik mit.

  • @virtuousvibes2852
    @virtuousvibes2852 3 года назад +2

    this piece makes me feel like taking a hike up on a beautiful forest trail in autumn

  • @opalfirefly88
    @opalfirefly88 8 лет назад +54

    Sounds like a fast-moving stream. Very lively! This has always been my favorite recording of this piece.

    • @jimstokes6742
      @jimstokes6742 6 лет назад +1

      Yes!

    • @PM-rp4bl
      @PM-rp4bl 5 лет назад

      This and The Moldau are my favorite pieces, maybe because they have that certain flow, I dunno...

  • @chillhouse8327
    @chillhouse8327 9 лет назад +54

    I just found out about this a month ago and I still haven't gotten it out of my head since.

    • @stynway59
      @stynway59 6 лет назад +1

      Do listen, if you haven't, in its original form, for the solo piano

    • @ulysseargoud3276
      @ulysseargoud3276 4 года назад +2

      But you will still have this piece in 10 years

  • @ilprofessore10012
    @ilprofessore10012 9 лет назад +44

    The two piano pieces that Ravel chose not to orchestrate--the fugue and toccata--have been arranged previously for small woodwind quintet and saxophone ensembles, but Kocsis' orchestral additions, although not quite as brilliant as the composer's, do seem to fit. As this is one of the most gorgeous pieces in the repertoire, famed for its oboe solos, let's hope more conductors add Kocsis to their performances. Twenty four and half minutes of enchantment!

    • @GentleGiantAudio
      @GentleGiantAudio 3 года назад +1

      Kocsis did a spectacular job.

    • @Lockmeupforthatbanger
      @Lockmeupforthatbanger 2 года назад +2

      Nobody will ever be able to have the same touch that Ravel seemed to have for orchestration in my opinion, but I do agree Kocsis still did a great job

  • @shin-i-chikozima
    @shin-i-chikozima 6 лет назад +2

    Comfort and gracefulness and Wonderfulness of Ravel’s music is off the charts
    Emotion is in my heart , and

  • @zeppy13131
    @zeppy13131 10 лет назад +15

    A wonderful performance of a matchless work... Thank you!
    Un merveilleux spectacle d'une œuvre incomparable ... Merci!

    • @frenchieseverine4514
      @frenchieseverine4514 9 лет назад +1

      A masterpiece! Un chef d'oeuvre tout simplement pour qui aime la musique classique et la poésie..

  • @herasfolly
    @herasfolly 6 лет назад +1

    Absolutely beautiful. I never tire of Monsieur Ravel. Never.

  • @MrPiano1994
    @MrPiano1994 9 лет назад +112

    I had an outer body experience listening to the end of this. I was stoned.

    • @davesmith6815
      @davesmith6815 7 лет назад +10

      +Taner Kemirtlek - The term is out-of-body. Just thought you might like to know.

    • @conradsabatier5223
      @conradsabatier5223 6 лет назад +2

      Dave Smith: Yes, quite right. Also sometimes abbreviated (or "acronymized") as an "OBE".
      Yes, this music, while not overtly declaring itself as such, is indeed "transcendental". Just amazing, nearly indescribable, in fact. An extraordinary work by a most unique composer. None of the usual appellations really fit, do they? "Impressionist" (which he is often referred to as), "Post-Romantic", etc., etc. -- none of these seem quite suitable. Ravel simply defies categorization; he is his own genre, all unto himself. A truly remarkable composer who doesn't get anywhere near the recognition he deserves, nor the number of performances, either. In the annals of musical history, he stands alone as a peerless original, a truly unique voice. There's simply no one else like him. One of the all-time greats. Brilliant!

    • @kateshadow155
      @kateshadow155 6 лет назад +7

      I purchased a laptop online recently which, when it arrived in the post, would not boot. Round and round I went, trying to choose my language and add my microsoft account to get it started, all to no avail. After a day spent trying to sort it out with a bot on the Microsoft online chat support, I sent the laptop back to the vendor, who wrote on my file that the laptop was returned owing to a 'faulty OBE'. Knowing this only as either (a) an honour bestowed by the Sovereign, or (b) an experience one has when listening to RVW when stoned (Cf, this thread), I was happy to learn the third definition relating to products, both working and (more usually) kaput: (c) out-of-the-box. Now I know.

    • @conradsabatier5223
      @conradsabatier5223 6 лет назад +4

      Pebbledash Wales: Thanks for sharing your "out-of-the-box experience". That was really funny! 😁

    • @areirving
      @areirving 4 года назад

      @@davesmith6815 actually I think Tanner May have had an outer body experience.

  • @kwabzycomposer
    @kwabzycomposer 5 лет назад +11

    Woodwinds are my love.

  • @photoxlo
    @photoxlo 4 года назад +5

    Such a delicate quality to this piece. Paints vibrant, imaginative pictures.

    • @Sun22070
      @Sun22070 4 года назад

      Simply Ravel :)

  • @craxanshards3139
    @craxanshards3139 9 лет назад +16

    great to hear the fugue and the toccata!

  • @russellhepplewhite3156
    @russellhepplewhite3156 9 лет назад +52

    Totally exquisite orchestration!

  • @ChannelCez
    @ChannelCez 6 месяцев назад +2

    So glad I found this work of art!!

  • @dylanl.3366
    @dylanl.3366 2 года назад +3

    What really caught my attention is the fugue (although all of them are fantastic), I haven't ever really been into Bach fugues and I thought those were the only ones of the genre. It's been a real eye-opener to me.

  • @Mezzotenor
    @Mezzotenor 12 лет назад +6

    What I love particularly in the Toccata movement (20:32) is that Kocsis resists making it a note-for-note transcription -- which Ravel avoided in orchestrating his own works -- and finds tantalizingly brief moments of delicious tone color -- which Ravel gave us with shocking prodigality. I hope this recording will get re-licensed by a new company if Hungaraton doesn't care to re-release it. THANKS for posting!

  • @KingRagink
    @KingRagink 6 лет назад +13

    Forlane sounds like a dungeon from Dragon quest. Love the whole piece.

    • @GentleGiantAudio
      @GentleGiantAudio 3 года назад +2

      I hear Ravel in a great many of Sugiyama's orchestral works. It's the cadences, the orchestration and the tone. Lots of touch points there.

  • @franciscocamara233
    @franciscocamara233 4 года назад +4

    what a briliant musician !! How well he used a vast pallete of beautifull new sounds

  • @tashaschneider1419
    @tashaschneider1419 7 лет назад +14

    So wonderful to hear these beautiful pieces orchestrated! Love the harps! In his piano compositions, Ravel was capable of making pianos nearly sound like harps.

  • @myn1959
    @myn1959 6 лет назад +8

    Algo tiene esta obra que llena de encanto. No lo sé que es . Es simplemente maravillosa.
    La he escuchado 1 millón de veces.

  • @TakatoEndou
    @TakatoEndou 7 лет назад +4

    That last movement Toccata gives me goosebumps. Overally beautiful and colorful music, a true masterpiece rom Ravel.

  • @lareeciscomusic2741
    @lareeciscomusic2741 3 года назад +2

    Been listening to classical in the car on the way to work lately. Had to look this one up.