Dmitri Shostakovich - Tahiti Trot (Tea for Two)
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- Опубликовано: 18 июн 2015
- Tahiti Trot, Op. 16, is Dmitri Shostakovich's 1927 orchestration of an arrangement of "Tea for Two" from the musical No, No, Nanette by Vincent Youmans.
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In 1927, the 21-year-old Russian composer, Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975) and a friend of his, the conductor Nicolai Malko (1883-1961) were sitting around listening to music. One of the songs they heard was a recording of the Vincent Youmans tune, "Tea for Two." Malko bet Shostakovich 100 roubles that he couldn't write an arrangement of the song, from memory, in less than an hour. Shostakovich went into the next room and - 45 minutes later - emerged with the arrangement you're now hearing. Needless to say, he collected his 100 roubles from Malko. An interesting early novelty item from one of the 20th century's greatest composers.
That anecdote has just enhanced my enjoyment of this charming little ditty no end
You are Great!
_Tea for Two_ was my father's favorite song. I would have loved to have played this for him, but I only just found out about it, and he's gone. ::sigh::
Dimitri was clearly a Mad Lad 😂
I never thought I'd ever call a classical piece "cute," and a Shostakovich piece, no less, but here we are! (Adorable in the best way, of course)
Yess!!!!
I love Shostakovich so much
Me too...
Yes, he was a fountain of inspiration and depth in so many genres
I feel the same way.
Like a bee and its stripes
My Papa' s favorite song. The orchestration is beautiful and so very feeling. How I miss him so. My Papa, my best friend.
Im very sorry for your loss
@@fastandbulbous6282 Thank you for your kindness.
Sorry late to this video ( Beautifully done...I might add. ) sorry for your loss.
This is a whole movie in itself. Masterful.
Nothing more relaxing and comforting for this time and for the historical moment that we are living now
This reminds me to
1:34 absolutely SLAPS
Crazy, you would never expect such a lighthearted piece from Shostakovich!
That's because it's a cover version of a classic composed by Vincent Youmans. But I heard Shostakovich created this arrangement in less than hour, which is very impressive by itself
@@mi-roka-sai6155 yep I know about the original Tea for Two, and also the story behind this arrangement. It's really funny. One day this man writes about a war crime and the next day it's Tea for Two.
Vincent Youmans, a brilliant Broadway Composer, wrote the original song in the 1920s for the show, "No, No, Nanette."
An underrated version of “Tea for Two” is from the complete Duke Ellington 1956 Live at Newport. Yeah, THAT concert.
What a genius !
This song is so sweet!
Sounds great!
+Not Broihon EleGiggle
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He finally doesn't look pissed off!
Yeah because he looks disappointed. "I am not angry, just disappointed."
wonderfull !
There are the unfamiliar composers, but there also has tunes which we do not know the name of the composer. This is the case of this arrangement for orchestra of Tea for two (song from the musical No No Nanette) composed by Shostakovich in 45 minutes ... Not bad, right? unfamiliar
Thanks Jelte Brink
Thanks Vaibhav Gupta
Thanks Mr.Moose
By my count, the basic theme of this work was repeated 12 times, with first cycle at 0:00, then repeating at 0:29, 0:44, 0:56, 1:22, 1:35, 1:48, 2:12, 2:19, 2:25, 2:36, 2:49, and the coda repeat at 3:01 lasting 25 seconds more to the finale. Prokofiev's and Shostakovich's life spans overlapped, I think Shostakovich was the greater of the two, and Tea for Two helps make the case.
Michael Hamill - music isn’t a boxing match. Who cares who you think is “greater”? You shouldn’t waste your time deciding who is “down for the count” and who is “champ”.
but music was a competition. Only the best could emerge on top. It wouldn't be surprising if Prokofiev and Shostakovich had a rivalry
Shostakovich didn't invent Tea for Two, though. He wrote an orchestration for it. It's nice and sweet, but he didn't come up with the themes and it's not his magnum opus either haha
@@tahiragibson6407 Only Beethoven can make Beethoven's music.
I love Dmitri.
♥
Me gusta!
Cultura FM de São Paulo.
+TheWickedNorth who is conducting this?
"Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Riccardo Chailly"
From the decription below.
What's the instrument that begins at 0:18 ?
Oboe in the high register
Jacques Tati Style :)
Mind you, this is the same guy who wrote that morbidly obsessed, dread-inducing 15th string quartet. What can I say; human psychology is complicated ʅ(◞‿◟)ʃ
Beutifull piace sang by Doris Day.
Well I love Shostakovich, and this is amusing, but if you want to hear really creative "arrangements" of Tea for Two, I recommend listening to some of Art Tatum's versions. And he didn't need 45 minutes to orchestrate an arrangement, he improvised at the piano.
Uh...
I don't really know if improvising at a piano is the same as making up an entire orchestral arrangement in your head in 45 minutes. Also, wouldn't Shostakovich be improvising like... every instrument, at that point?
@@Burntshmallow That's true; the skills of mentally arranging and notating amusing orchestral variations are different from the skills of improvising and playing a unique virtuoso harmonically complex piece that pretty much nobody else in the world could even play let alone conceive of... This is a mere novelty number, while Tatum did one masterpiece after another on this tune. (for example: ruclips.net/video/9kMEPYU1Xwg/видео.html) But I also fault myself for making a competitive comparison -- the Shostakovich is quite enjoyable on its own terms.
@@jsbrules I feel still that, looking at Shostakovitch's berth of work, it's a bit uncharitable to dismiss his own respective genius. They just aren't comparable. Art Tatum never composed a symphony mocking the USSR under the watchful eye of Stalin and never had any of his family members disappear in the night. Shostakovich did. But that doesn't make him better than Tatum. And Tatum's virtuosic improvisations don't make him any "better" than Shostakovich -- who I might add was *also* a virtuosic pianist. You can hear his playing on youtube.
One played Jazz, the other played Classical. Both made up their own music. Now, I will say I think that Shostakovich probably had a greater mind for harmonic complexity. Look at his ability to write this: ruclips.net/video/3lydTIHUvTk/видео.html
He still came up with melodies on the spot, he just wrote them down instead of playing them. And his understanding of music was quite pronounced, enough to write advanced counterpoint in a fugue form. I still like Tatum (Though I think Oscar Peterson was more rounded). But they're not related artists. So it isn't very useful to compare them.
Now, if you want to compare Tatum and Fats, or Tatum and Costa, then you have something to say. Or Shostakovich and Steven Hough: ruclips.net/video/pih_W62LOVc/видео.html
Even then, though, it's still wildly different.
@@Burntshmallow I was not dismissing Shostakovich's genius! I wasn't comparing Shostakovich to Tatum as artists overall, I am just saying that Tatum's Teas for Two are better than this light party-trick-on-a-dare! I absolutely love Shostakovich!
@@jsbrules Fair enough; apologies for the assumption.
Noii
One of few to ever reach Mozart.
What?
First of all, chopin and scriabin both reached mozart. Noone else did.
Second, to compare this incompetent fool to the genius mozart is the greatest insult I have ever seen, what utter disrespect!
@@Whatismusic123 You would not have visited this video if you thought so.
@@acev337 ??? I was going to ask what kind of brain damage would be required to come to such a ridiculous conclusion, then I remembered that you believe that not only shostakovich is close in skill to mozart, but close enough to match him.
@@Whatismusic123 how did you arrive at this video, if not to enjoy music?
he's so fucking hotttt
Too bad he got to Guarma instead
Ingmar Elfsborg I was looking for RDR2 comments 😂😂😂
Is this channel death ?
All of the composers are well versed in death if you wish to spin it that way.
I think he's just asking "is this channel dead?"
No
Unimportant arrangement from Shostakovich, not even too talanted. Stop considering everything by him a masterpiece.
i think the backstory of the arrangement is what makes it so popular, being made in under an hour by memory. i mean aside from that the orchestration is pretty great, obviously not a madterpiece though