"The whole audience acclaimed him through standing ovations five times; there were handkerchiefs in the air, hats, raised hands, so that Beethoven, who could not hear the applause, could at least see the ovation gestures." - Wikipedia
@LaMortEtLamour Britain still has a monarchy. Would you regard them as feudal? I have two degrees in history, I am confident in my response. Monarchy does not equal feudalism.
@LaMortEtLamour What is wrong with you? Spitting out so many insults...they merely stated the fact that Germany was not feudal at this time anymore. An emperor has nothing to do with that. Feudalism ended, as they said, centuries before this. You can't just make up your own definition of feudalism.
3 года назад+34
"[Michael Umlauf, the theatre's Kapellmeister and director of this performance] had watched as the composer's attempt to conduct a dress rehearsal of his opera Fidelio ended in disaster. So this time, he instructed the singers and musicians to ignore the almost completely deaf Beethoven. /.../ Based on the testimony of the participants, there are suggestions that it was under-rehearsed (there were only two full rehearsals) and rather scrappy in execution." "Beethoven himself conducted, that is, he stood in front of a conductor's stand and threw himself back and forth like a madman. At one moment he stretched to his full height, at the next he crouched down to the floor, he flailed about with his hands and feet as though he wanted to play all the instruments and sing all the chorus parts. -The actual direction was in Duport's hands; we musicians followed his baton only." --Joseph Böhm, violinist "When the audience applauded /.../ Beethoven was several bars off and still conducting. Because of that, the contralto Caroline Unger walked over and turned Beethoven around to accept the audience's cheers and applause."
If a Time Machine is ever invented I would pay any costs and go back in time to see and hear the first performance of this masterpiece with him in concert.
@@abcdefgh6121 beethoven had perfect pitch! So in his head he could hear the right notes all the time. But it was far from easy. Beethoven suffered but turned his weakness into a strength
100 years from now, when all the Britneys and Biebers and Kanyes of the world are long forgotten, this piece of music will remain, and ring out above them all.
Ed Harris played this role the right way, he couldn’t hear much with prosthetic ears, he was almost in silence throughout the filming of this movie. He wanted to be authentic about Beethoven. It was brilliantly portrayed. Bravo Beethoven!!!!!
Harris didn't write or direct this scene, so he had no say about whether it was "authentic," which it isn't. Beethoven did not conduct the Vienna premiere of the 9th Synphony. He could not have. He was deaf. Michael Umlauf conducted the performance. At the beginning of each section of the symphony, Beethoven, who sat by the stage, gave the tempos, the function this movie gives to a young woman (in the choir?), who somehow knows the score of a complex and groundbreaking work, which she cannot possibly have ever heard, well enough to direct Beethoven himself in leading it. Pure Hollywood. No grounding in reality. Beethoven being a 20th-century-style conductor despite his deafness is an invention by the screenwriter. The part about Beethoven being turned around to see the applause he couldn't hear is the only part that's supported by contemporary accounts.
@@gailwebb9619 I've heard of historical fiction, which is what this apparently is. Maybe it works; I wouldn't know, not having seen anything but this scene. I was simply replying to a remark about "authenticity." Feel free to enjoy the movie.
@@1tbo Thank you for correcting the “record”, Hollywood-style. As a piece of film making, it is lovely! But can you imagine the film maker and writers who could have brought to life the real tensions of the actual performance? As it stands, it is a pantomime laid over an extraordinary composition that no audience can hear unmoved.
Think about it, we get to hear Beethoven while they never got to hear Bohemian Rhapsody, clap in theaters to Avengers Endgame, or experience a lot of the other cultural landmarks to grace our 20th and 21st century, in hindsight people will think these were real privileges as well.
There are giants, there are even Titans... but above all stand Bach, Mozart and Beethoven. I could never state for certain who was the best... but I do know that the 9th Symphony is the greatest masterpiece ever conceived by our species. It is just by definition, perfect.
Yea I completely understand, I can't make up my mind on whether I'd rather listen to Dies Irae all day or this 9th symphony. So I just listen to both hehe
you clearly don't know much about this music, symphone n09 was great, but it's not the greatest master piece of beethoven, in my case i prefer toccata and fuge from bach, paino concerto n°2 from rachmaninov, symphone n°6 from tchaikovsky, and ofcourse symphone n°5 and n°7 from beethoven.
calavera Step 1: Volta para a escola Step 2: Ouve 500 sinfonias Step 3: Já que estas na escola aprende a escrever Step 4: Aproveita o ambiente de ensino para chegares a conclusão que classificar musica é mais complicado do que escrever ao nivel da terceira classe.
I don't mean to be haughty, but oh what a privilege it is to be a native German speaker and be able to sing with the chorus and understand every note of it, until the end!
And this man was totally deaf when he composed the 9th Symphony! This certainly doesn't rank among the best movies ever made about Beethoven, but I think the actor playing him certainly showed the depth of his almost maniacal passion for the music! I don't know why he needed someone to help him conduct. The music was playing in his head!
Because he was playing it at the pace his head went, and orchestras can get thrown off from the mind's metronome, which is why the conductor is needed at all.
Historicly he messed up so bad when he has no help at all. The symphony was a mess because he cann't hear. That's why he accepted help. I cann't remember all of it accurately so take this with a grain of salt.
This is my miracle… how he could see this music, just perfection. This music in the movie is top notch, in the pieces original debut his timing was too fast
well, although there wasn't a precise moment when music was invented, i would argue that the development of musicality by different men at the dawn of mankind would be the greatest 'moment' in the history of music
As a young man, Beethoven had an audience before Mozart. He performed a piece Mozart had given him. After, Mozart said, "This man will make great sound heard by all the world."
The whole movie is constructed around this scene. The build-up to the Ode of Joy (the faces of anticipation in the choir members at 06:20, the acting of Harris and Kruger) is perfect. The whole scene is expertly directed. A beauty to watch. The face of the redhead singer at 06:50 giving it all and enjoying every second of it is fantastic!
The greatest applause ever. The Austrian police had to step in because Beethoven's 9th received more of it than for the imperial couple. There are thousands of princes, but there is just one BEETHOVEN!
No, this did not happen. It doesn't even make sense. How would the "Austrian police" even estimate the relative applause for the 9th and for the "Imperial couple?" Why would they have thought it their duty to regulate applause? How would they have "stepped in"? Jumped on stage and demanded that everyone stop applauding? In any event, none of the accounts of that night say that any such thing occurred.
I know very well that this is fiction, but this condensed version of the 9th is so overwhelmingly amazing that it leaves me shivering and with a feeling of exhilaration that I can't contain.
Very well said. I recently attended a performance of the 9th in London for the first time and belive I was the first to come to my feet in the audience with applause as so happy to hear it in person.
Symphony No. 9 is the most brilliant artistic creation I have ever experienced. It brings tears to my aging face no matter how many times I hear it. Simply amazing, awe inspiring and will never be eclipsed in all of human history.
I've always asked people if they could go back to any concert by anybody who would it be. My one was Elvis early 70s, but now I've heard this, I'm not sure. Can you imagine being in the audience for the first playing of this.
Few days ago I saw this scene in my art class.. Professor gave us chance to watch this movie clip at the beginning of the class...Though it was a short clip, I was really moved....almost crying during the class... How can we say that Beethoven was deaf....?? He could not hear Human's sound but i think he probably could hear the God's sound... I'm 22 yrs old and people around my age usually do not like classic music.. but I think there should be huge difference between people who only listen pop music (I don't know who are popular in western countries) and people who can enjoy Beethoven...Anyway I'm so thankful that I can hear this wonderful, touching music ... Thank you for uploading!
At this point in his life everyone viewed Beethovan as a washed up has been, whose glory days were behind him, and yet he proved them all wrong, and with one symphony showed everyone that he still had the gift that made him a legend
not entirely true there was about a 12 year period were he produced verry little music, but he wrote his opera, the hammerklavier(although it wasn't too popular), and the missa solemnis before wiritng this
Thousands attended Beethoven's funeral, while Mozart was buried in a commoner's grave. Although the times were different, it also goes to show the universal reach and impact of Beethoven
I am watching this again on 8/17/2024 and what an incredible composition. I saw this in a live performance in Visalia California at the old Fox Theater. It was very emotional as many in the audience were visibly shedding tears. Afterwards we had at least a 5 minute standing ovation and it probably was long. People were just moved by this fantastic performance. It brings back fond memories of my wife. I lost her during COVID and look forward to seeing her during the resurrection of Acts 24:15.
So sorry to hear about your wife 😢😢😢 I live in Fresno CA. and got evicted during the middle of COVID and have been homeless ever since 😢 Keep listening to music you and your wife used to listen to together 💝🎼🎶🎶
Happy 200 anniversary of the time humanity peaked, no artist has ever duplicated a piece of this significance and frankly I think it's very difficult for it to happen again
Hearing is just the beginning. This music absorbs you into its soft warmth, melts you down into its smooth depth, stands you erect with its thrashing power, and explodes with you across the stars.
God this scene is so powerful. It really gives insight to just how amazing and life changing Beethoven's music was to people at the time and even now. Simply speechless.
No me deja de sorprender y emocionar el pensar que cuando Beethoven comenzó a escribir esta obra ya estaba sordo y nunca pudo oirla, nisiquiera pudo escuchar los aplausos de la gente cuando la estrenó en público, todo lo que nosotros escuchamos y disfrutamos él lo hizo en su mente, con cada una de las notas. Un genio!
En un rincón de Mendoza, Argentina un corazón de 71 años se estruja de emoción. Gracias a quién rescató ese sentimiento. Ojalá alguno de mis nietos lo puedan sentir❤
Beethoven's 9th symphony stands the test of time and for good reason. I know the chills this piece of music always gives me but I love seeing how all the people react to hearing it for the first time in this powerful scene. They are simply in awe, and at times heart broken. Practically all the emotions we feel summed up in one piece of music.
hannah sauceda Listen to the first movement at about 10th minute in most performances, when the Gates open and everything breaks loose. Unparalleled. Its like a fine summer day when something goes wrong and hell breaks loose.
he wasn't really deaf until the last decade of his life, he started learning conducting at the age of 22 or 21 (not sure), and after losing his hearing ability he gave up preforming in front of an audience but still conducting some somphonys.
Para mi la novena sinfonia de Beethoven es la mejor jamas creada, y el mayor canto a la libertad del ser humano. Como el dijo al principio de la escena "ahora la musica cambiara para siempre"....y cambio. Nadie habia incorporado musica coral en una sinfonia del modo en que el lo hizo. En la ultima parte, el tempo, el frenesi al dirigir....la camara tiembla, como si aquella musica fuese capaz de hacer temblar la tierra...es un toque sencillamente genial. Bach fue el padre de la musica tal y como la conocemos, Mozart uno de los mas grandes compositores, y Beethoven el que rompio las reglas establecidas y que dio un giro radical a la musica. Para mi hay claramente un antes y un despues de Beethoven...
I know that this movie wasn't well received, and I admit it wasn't great. That being said, this particular scene is EXTREMELY well done, it's moving and furthermore it's grounded in what actually happened at the 9th premier. He actually did have someone help conduct (although it was a man, named Michael Umlauf), and someone did have to turn him around to see the crowd applauding, it was one of the female choir singers who gave screamed at Beethoven during rehearsals (not saying he didn't deserve it, Beethoven was very difficult to work along side of).Also, I appreciated the camera shaking during the unbelievably hectic prestissimo finale, it was a nice appropriate touch.
This scene wasn't actually grounded in what actually happened. He was not conducting at all. Most of the plot of this movie including this scene were complete fallacies.
@@brendank5413 I don't care about that....this scene was beautifully done with the two main actors "conducting" an orchestra....they had to learn how to actually conduct for the movie...and yes, no one sat in the orchestra pit to help him but one of the sopranos did go up and turn him around towards the audience so he could see them cheering and clapping!
He did not conduct as he obviously could not. Either at various points or only at the finale (not clear from the accounts) he came onto stage and "helped" the conductor, Michael Umlauf, to indicate expression or tempo to the orchestra. His role was more like what the fictional Anna Holz character does here. The orchestra had been told to ignore him. He was on stage when the piece finished and the alto Caroline Unger, turned him to the audience so he could see their applause.
Fun fact: The CDs last 74 minutes and 33 seconds because that is the length of Beethoven's Ninth. Sony president wanted the entire Beethoven Ninth to fit on a single disc without any cuts.
I am always moved to tears about this scene. Before I watched the film, I was hoping they would get this right (at least right as we've heard by tradition) and see the Master turn around to see the audience in sheer delight. For it's told even the great Ludwig van B was concerned that this piece would be too much for people to digest, but he was magnificently wrong! Even though he was nearly 100% deaf, surely he could have felt the vibration in the room, but most likely was caught up in the moment. I wish I would have been here then! It's so spiritual.
“Now music changes for ever”.. And yet there were those who thought He lost his mind adding a choir to a symphony.. Reminds me of a line in The Imitation Game.. "Sometimes it is the people no one imagines anything of, who do the things no one can imagine”..
it's especially difficult to imagine that, given the fact that us humans of the 21st century can hear this song, and any other, over and over again thanks to technology. But at the time, once you heard it that was it, unless you booked a seat in another performance, or were extremely rich, and able to afford an orchestra for your pleasure
I can't even imagine it could get any better. From the movie scenes to the sound and acting, this is a masterpiece.
12 лет назад+32
como ejercicio cinematográfico es MAGISTRAL. Si se pudiese filmar la emoción de todos los asistentes al estreno de la 9ª, sería así. Los planos, la ejecución, la mirada del público. Como Beethoven le ha trasmitido a ella su obra, para que ella se la trasmita a él para poder dirigir pese a su sordera. Y ese final donde Beethoven no sabe si su obra ha gustado o no, por estar de espaldas y ser sordo. Esto es cine, saber manejar tus emociones. Recomiendo a todos ver esta película
This to me is such a beautiful piece that embodies the spirit of a true musician. Beethoven, who for most of his life was dedicated to making music, struck with an affliction that prevented him from ever enjoying his own work. Most people would understandably fall into despair, but not him. He made an Ode to Joy as his final creation. Beautiful.
This is without a shadow of a doubt one of the if not the most uplifting, sensual, beautiful haunting, sad and triumphant scenes I’ve seen in film. While it barely treads water against the powerhouse of Oldmans performance, for me this defines everything that cinema should be. The voice to the human soul and a reflection of all that is humanity in its naked glory.
This is actually a hymn and there's only one way a deaf man could have composed such an complex, ethereal symphony like this. Looks like an awesome movie.
I am furious. Why wasn’t this film recognised for the great work that it is?! My wife and I have just finished watching it, completely drained and exhilarated all at the same time. Bravo!!
Many reasons. For example, it was inaccurate. I don't know if you understand some of actually conducting, but this scene is completely ridiculous. Lots of mistakes that in actually music doesn't happen
How Ed Harris conducts SO F GOOD? Never seen anything even close from any other actor. It seems to me he REALLY conducts the orchestra here. He plays the piano and the violin also very naturally in the film. These skills require many years close to music, may be 10+?! Surprised me so much.
This is the most moving composition ever. It reminds me of the near future in the paradise earth when a Great Crowd from every tribe, nation, people and tongue are united in praise of our Creator.
I was living in Great Falls, MT in the early 90s as a young man and we had a very ambitious community choir and orchestra. This was the first time I ever performed a non-English song from memory, carefully learned by rote with an excellent native German vocal coach. I have heard this song many times over the intervening years, yet this scene brought back the rush of feelings I had that first time we performed this song to an equally appreciative audience. This was glorious and moving, and my eyes seem to be leaking. I'm so glad I stumbled on this clip today.
Ed Harris is.....what word is enough to express the depth and breadth of his art, his talent?? The uncertainty he expresses in his face after dropping his arms, the utter joy in his eyes as he turns and gestures for the orchestra to stand....truly remarkable, true genius!
He was a Super-Human. Beethoven just understood how music should affect the human experience, and for me, respectfully, his genius stands above Bach and Mozart.
It is not just perfect. This amazing masterpiece makes you feel that everything is possible. Euphoria without nostalgia or sadness. But that's the point EUPHORIA.
Arturo, not that you far from a major point about the pinnacle of achievement in music, but please do listen to Handel's Messiah, final movement: Worthy is the Lamb. I am a composer. I've studied both the 9th and the Messiah for all their intricacies. Both are equals, no question about that. Please turn up your speakers (or, better yet, put on headphones), turn out the lights, lay back in bed, and let the end of the Messiah - Worthy is the Lamb - transport you. You will see that you end up in the very same heavenly spot as you do with the 9th. Peace, brother.
Bravo, maestro. My friends always laugh at me because every single moment i hear this piece I cry like a baby, i cant avoid it, its so beautiful and sublim everything, has every emotions that anyone would like to have, but like Kurt used to say "they laugh at me because Im different, I laugh at them cause they're all equal" I love Beethoven and I would never regret the tattoo of his sign in my arm.
Amazing amazing amazing ❤❤❤ I cried the whole time 😭😭 Thank you God for sending these gifted shining lights to this world🙏 Thanks for uploading this video 🙏
Supongo que tiene la potencia de disparar cosas en el subconsciente que el consciente no puede contener. Quizás sean traumas, quizás sólo sea belleza. Lo cierto es que es incómodo en ciertas ocasiones el no poder evitarlo.
Es lo que provoca el arte, esas emociones inexplicables que sólo lo bello mueve dentro del ser humano... Soy pintora y esto es lo que debe causar las bellas artes, la música, la pintura, el ballet ¿alguna vez has visto la puesta del el lago de los cisnes en la isleta de Chapultepec? Te mueve las fibras más internas, escuchar la música y danza juntas es bellísimo. En general el buen arte debe causar lo que dices eso y más!
De alguna forma, estos compositors (Mozart, Handle, Beethoven, Bach...) tenian una coneccion directa con Dios y recibian disctado de El, pero desafortunadamente, esta coneccion fue suspendida por Dios. Ahora, solo tenemos basura de musica.
Der Text von Friedrich Schiller, einem der bedeutendsten deutschen Dichtern, musikalisch vertont von Beethoven, einem der bedeutendsten Musikern seiner Zeit stehen als eine universelle Botschaft für ein friedliches Zusammenleben aller Kulturen. Nicht umsonst ist dieses Stück die Hymne für Europa. „Alle Menschen werden Brüder“ Musikalisch hat Beethoven in diesem letzten Satz der 9. Symphonie herausgeholt was nur geht. Epische Einleitung, göttliche Chöre (hier hat sich auch Michael Jackson bedient), dann ein Engelsgesang Mann und Frau, dann ein Marsch und zuletzt ein furioses Finale. Ein Meisterwerk.
yes, that the thing most astonishing, create it and the playing in your mind!! The final scene shows it perfectly, the power of the music was sounded in his head, making his world mind trambles of its power!
13:13 Kurt Cobain travelled back in time and, after hearing this, he wasn't able to live knowing he never would make such wonderful music like Beethoven did.
Beethoven would have said, "look dude, I lived to 56 and made great music the last decade of my life, put down that damn shotgun and see what you can do."
Beethoven. El primer rockero .Rompedor de reglas. El rebelde por excelencia. Porque todo caos si quiere ser válido debe llevar ante todo elegancia. Porque hay caos también en el amor. Una mente libre. Fiel a su corazón. Genio indiscutible. Alma embriagada de dones. Pilar de la humanidad. En pocas palabras fuego único e irrepetible. Uf .
Beethoven did not need help to direct his music. doesn't matter that he was deaf. and he wasn't completely deaf, he could hear some of the music. and he was one of the greatest genius in human history. he would have directed the music if he was blind as well.
+William .Thorén if you only hear music in your head without external acoustics, you speed up.. this also accounts for the dubious or even impossible metronome indications in some of his later works..
That's not true. This event did happen. He had help here just like the movie showed but it was a man. And he was completely deaf Edit: i meant he was completely deaf here
Supposedly, when the Compact Disc was being developed, the chairman of the Sony Corporation demanded that the CD have the capacity to include Beethoven’s 9th in its entirety. Just a side note.
For those who want to see/ hear the entire 9th symphony in total find BBC Proms from 2006 with The East/West Orchestra led by Daniel Barenboim. It’s beyond amazing.
With different musical pieces I can go along one onto the next. Beethoven's Choral Symphony is so overwhelming, it commands me a prolonged deep silence afterwards.
Ed Harris is not a professional conductor and yet, he did an acceptable job here. The Orchestra also did an excellent job, this movie should have had more exposure.
@@gailwebb9619 That's no excuse. There have been plenty of movies with dead accurate plot points and details that are amazing. And with a character as complex and interesting as Beethoven, it's definitely not an excuse. If a writer feels the need to take creative liberties regarding Beethoven, they're either not trying or just not a good writer. And you'd be surprised at the number of people who believe a lot of stuff they see in the movies. Especially when it's written in a historical context.
"The whole audience acclaimed him through standing ovations five times; there were handkerchiefs in the air, hats, raised hands, so that Beethoven, who could not hear the applause, could at least see the ovation gestures." - Wikipedia
@LaMortEtLamour Germany had moved past feudalism centuries before Beethoven.
@LaMortEtLamour Britain still has a monarchy. Would you regard them as feudal?
I have two degrees in history, I am confident in my response. Monarchy does not equal feudalism.
@LaMortEtLamour What is wrong with you? Spitting out so many insults...they merely stated the fact that Germany was not feudal at this time anymore. An emperor has nothing to do with that. Feudalism ended, as they said, centuries before this. You can't just make up your own definition of feudalism.
"[Michael Umlauf, the theatre's Kapellmeister and director of this performance] had watched as the composer's attempt to conduct a dress rehearsal of his opera Fidelio ended in disaster. So this time, he instructed the singers and musicians to ignore the almost completely deaf Beethoven. /.../ Based on the testimony of the participants, there are suggestions that it was under-rehearsed (there were only two full rehearsals) and rather scrappy in execution."
"Beethoven himself conducted, that is, he stood in front of a conductor's stand and threw himself back and forth like a madman. At one moment he stretched to his full height, at the next he crouched down to the floor, he flailed about with his hands and feet as though he wanted to play all the instruments and sing all the chorus parts. -The actual direction was in Duport's hands; we musicians followed his baton only." --Joseph Böhm, violinist
"When the audience applauded /.../ Beethoven was several bars off and still conducting. Because of that, the contralto Caroline Unger walked over and turned Beethoven around to accept the audience's cheers and applause."
@ thx
“To play a wrong note is insignificant; to play without passion is inexcusable.”
― Ludwig van Beethoven
Wow
Well said young man.
I LOVE that!!
To play a wrong note is insignificant because we can call it Jazz
plya withyour soul
If a Time Machine is ever invented I would pay any costs and go back in time to see and hear the first performance of this masterpiece with him in concert.
I often think the same as you.. ❤️
Why did he follow the girl's actions?
Why didn't he see the book by himself?
@@abcdefgh6121 beethoven was completely deaf at this time. In reality there was another conductor next to Beethoven leading the orchestra.
@@florisheijdra6086 If he was completely deaf, how did he created the symphony as he couldn't have been able to listen to it while composing it?
@@abcdefgh6121 beethoven had perfect pitch! So in his head he could hear the right notes all the time. But it was far from easy. Beethoven suffered but turned his weakness into a strength
100 years from now, when all the Britneys and Biebers and Kanyes of the world are long forgotten, this piece of music will remain, and ring out above them all.
Wow so true, and the best reason is the history itself,
Yes
👏👏👏
It's always the classics that survive. Nobody remembers all the countless imitations that came after.
Arguably the greatest pience of music ever written in human history!!! If man can creat something like this, maybe there is hope for humanity.
Ed Harris played this role the right way, he couldn’t hear much with prosthetic ears, he was almost in silence throughout the filming of this movie. He wanted to be authentic about Beethoven. It was brilliantly portrayed. Bravo Beethoven!!!!!
Harris didn't write or direct this scene, so he had no say about whether it was "authentic," which it isn't.
Beethoven did not conduct the Vienna premiere of the 9th Synphony. He could not have. He was deaf. Michael Umlauf conducted the performance. At the beginning of each section of the symphony, Beethoven, who sat by the stage, gave the tempos, the function this movie gives to a young woman (in the choir?), who somehow knows the score of a complex and groundbreaking work, which she cannot possibly have ever heard, well enough to direct Beethoven himself in leading it. Pure Hollywood. No grounding in reality.
Beethoven being a 20th-century-style conductor despite his deafness is an invention by the screenwriter.
The part about Beethoven being turned around to see the applause he couldn't hear is the only part that's supported by contemporary accounts.
@@1tboEver hear of an adaptation? If you want complete accuracy watch a documentary. This was done for dramatic effect and it works.
@@gailwebb9619 I've heard of historical fiction, which is what this apparently is. Maybe it works; I wouldn't know, not having seen anything but this scene. I was simply replying to a remark about "authenticity." Feel free to enjoy the movie.
@@1tbo Thank you for correcting the “record”, Hollywood-style. As a piece of film making, it is lovely! But can you imagine the film maker and writers who could have brought to life the real tensions of the actual performance? As it stands, it is a pantomime laid over an extraordinary composition that no audience can hear unmoved.
I never liked Ed Harris performance that much in other movies. But this one is outstanding.
I sometimes wonder if people who were present at these premières knew how (in hindsight) "historically privileged" they were.....
Think about it, we get to hear Beethoven while they never got to hear Bohemian Rhapsody, clap in theaters to Avengers Endgame, or experience a lot of the other cultural landmarks to grace our 20th and 21st century, in hindsight people will think these were real privileges as well.
@@carlogambino1979 what does black people have anything to do with this? You racist lowlife
@@carlogambino1979 literally braindead, the american system was designed to keep the bottom at bottom. Even if the population dont intend it
@@kanna-chan9455 Comparing Beethovens 9. Symphony with these things is...god.
carlo gambino he literally wasn’t talking about race and then you had to bring it up! Wtf is wrong with you!
There are giants, there are even Titans... but above all stand Bach, Mozart and Beethoven. I could never state for certain who was the best... but I do know that the 9th Symphony is the greatest masterpiece ever conceived by our species. It is just by definition, perfect.
xXjakeNbakeXx I really do hope that was a joke :P
Yea I completely understand, I can't make up my mind on whether I'd rather listen to Dies Irae all day or this 9th symphony. So I just listen to both hehe
you clearly don't know much about this music, symphone n09 was great, but it's not the greatest master piece of beethoven, in my case i prefer toccata and fuge from bach, paino concerto n°2 from rachmaninov, symphone n°6 from tchaikovsky, and ofcourse symphone n°5 and n°7 from beethoven.
Javier Munoz
and beethoven' 4th. So beautiful SO DAMN COOL!
calavera Step 1: Volta para a escola
Step 2: Ouve 500 sinfonias
Step 3: Já que estas na escola aprende a escrever
Step 4: Aproveita o ambiente de ensino para chegares a conclusão que classificar musica é mais complicado do que escrever ao nivel da terceira classe.
I don't mean to be haughty, but oh what a privilege it is to be a native German speaker and be able to sing with the chorus and understand every note of it, until the end!
That wasn't haughty. :-)
Im jealous, stop.
this is a good reason to learn German
I know only a little German, but I know enough to know Silent Night in the original.
Ja, die Ode an die Freude ist einfach wunderbar.
And this man was totally deaf when he composed the 9th Symphony! This certainly doesn't rank among the best movies ever made about Beethoven, but I think the actor playing him certainly showed the depth of his almost maniacal passion for the music! I don't know why he needed someone to help him conduct. The music was playing in his head!
Because he was playing it at the pace his head went, and orchestras can get thrown off from the mind's metronome, which is why the conductor is needed at all.
Historicly he messed up so bad when he has no help at all. The symphony was a mess because he cann't hear. That's why he accepted help. I cann't remember all of it accurately so take this with a grain of salt.
Beethoven never became totally deaf. He could hear occasional loud sounds or when people shouted into his ears.
@@eblackadder3 that would actually make conducting worse...your ears playing tricks on you
This is my miracle… how he could see this music, just perfection. This music in the movie is top notch, in the pieces original debut his timing was too fast
Perhaps the greatest musical event in the history of humans.
well, although there wasn't a precise moment when music was invented, i would argue that the development of musicality by different men at the dawn of mankind would be the greatest 'moment' in the history of music
@@tarielkaroldan5903 music existed before man did composers are discovering it not creating it
Chris Benna no
@@chrisbenna506 That's good.
@@chrisbenna506 we can't say they are discovering music.
Masterpiece!
Ludwig van Beethoven Beethoven approves
Ludwig van Beethoven who do you think you are being dead? :( come back and take justin bieber, ariana grande, katy perry and all those
Dude i love you glad you still with us |o|
aren't you TIRED???
Teacher, rewrite something incredible, re-revolutionize music
As a young man, Beethoven had an audience before Mozart. He performed a piece Mozart had given him. After, Mozart said, "This man will make great sound heard by all the world."
Ode to joy resembles them.
mozart died when he was 9
There's no historical evidence that the two ever met, only assumptions.
Same Soul spirit different bodies
Alexei Stukov He died when he was NINE? Dude!!! He was 35 when he died and already had a child with a woman.
The whole movie is constructed around this scene. The build-up to the Ode of Joy (the faces of anticipation in the choir members at 06:20, the acting of Harris and Kruger) is perfect. The whole scene is expertly directed. A beauty to watch. The face of the redhead singer at 06:50 giving it all and enjoying every second of it is fantastic!
Yes! That electrifying feeling when you know you are going to make magnificent sound and can hear it before you actually start doing it.
Thank you for the time track!
If this isn't played at my funeral, I'm not showing up for it...
How about the Miserere or Dies Irae?
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂❤
how's a week on tuesday?
The greatest applause ever. The Austrian police had to step in because Beethoven's 9th received more of it than for the imperial couple. There are thousands of princes, but there is just one BEETHOVEN!
And That's The Proud Moment To Atleast Listen To Beethoven Too Too Young Fans Of This Generation ❤️❤️❤️😍
Metternich was at the concert so why did he need to send police
He probably didn't even know the audience liked it because he couldn't hear them clapping.
@@kittydaddy2023 8 standing ovations with everyone screaming
pretty sure he would know even tho he was deaf
No, this did not happen. It doesn't even make sense. How would the "Austrian police" even estimate the relative applause for the 9th and for the "Imperial couple?" Why would they have thought it their duty to regulate applause? How would they have "stepped in"? Jumped on stage and demanded that everyone stop applauding?
In any event, none of the accounts of that night say that any such thing occurred.
As a Japanese and a country where people play and listen to this music on every new year's eve, I can't enter the new year without this.
Interesting
7:01 how i feel everytime i hear ode to joy
or like the people in the last seconds of the video, everybody crying and rejoiced!
13:14 is more accurate
I know very well that this is fiction, but this condensed version of the 9th is so overwhelmingly amazing that it leaves me shivering and with a feeling of exhilaration that I can't contain.
me too!
Me to, it’s just sooo good :)
Very well said. I recently attended a performance of the 9th in London for the first time and belive I was the first to come to my feet in the audience with applause as so happy to hear it in person.
@@JohnYoga source?
@@bait5257 it came to me in a dream
Symphony No. 9 is the most brilliant artistic creation I have ever experienced.
It brings tears to my aging face no matter how many times I hear it. Simply amazing,
awe inspiring and will never be eclipsed in all of human history.
I love that
I've always asked people if they could go back to any concert by anybody who would it be. My one was Elvis early 70s, but now I've heard this, I'm not sure. Can you imagine being in the audience for the first playing of this.
Few days ago I saw this scene in my art class.. Professor gave us chance to watch this movie clip at the beginning of the class...Though it was a short clip, I was really moved....almost crying during the class... How can we say that Beethoven was deaf....?? He could not hear Human's sound but i think he probably could hear the God's sound...
I'm 22 yrs old and people around my age usually do not like classic music.. but I think there should be huge difference between people who only listen pop music (I don't know who are popular in western countries) and people who can enjoy Beethoven...Anyway I'm so thankful that I can hear this wonderful, touching music ... Thank you for uploading!
There is ample documentary evidence to support the idea that Beethoven became deaf. What sound does god (which one) make?
Now 29 years old damn
PEOPLE WHO CANT APPRECIATE CLASSICAL MUSIC, ARENT INNATELY HUMAN.
Why did he follow the girl's actions?
Why didn't he see the book by himself?
@@abcdefgh6121conducting without listening is like painting without seeing
At this point in his life everyone viewed Beethovan as a washed up has been, whose glory days were behind him, and yet he proved them all wrong, and with one symphony showed everyone that he still had the gift that made him a legend
not entirely true there was about a 12 year period were he produced verry little music, but he wrote his opera, the hammerklavier(although it wasn't too popular), and the missa solemnis before wiritng this
Good old Beethovan, always proving people wrong
He spent the last years of his life working on music he knew he would never hear. He wrote it for US! He is the greatest man who ever lived.
Thousands attended Beethoven's funeral, while Mozart was buried in a commoner's grave. Although the times were different, it also goes to show the universal reach and impact of Beethoven
Agree. This is my favorite Beethoven symphony.....and he could not hear this music except in his head! Pure genius!
I am watching this again on 8/17/2024 and what an incredible composition. I saw this in a live performance in Visalia California at the old Fox Theater. It was very emotional as many in the audience were visibly shedding tears. Afterwards we had at least a 5 minute standing ovation and it probably was long. People were just moved by this fantastic performance. It brings back fond memories of my wife. I lost her during COVID and look forward to seeing her during the resurrection of Acts 24:15.
You are blessed and loved, indeed. ❤
So sorry to hear about your wife 😢😢😢 I live in Fresno CA. and got evicted during the middle of COVID and have been homeless ever since 😢 Keep listening to music you and your wife used to listen to together 💝🎼🎶🎶
@kermitefrog64 - Greetings Brother.
It's 9am and I'm crying uncontrollably. That was incredible.
8.32am here and so am I! Seeing this at the Royal Albert Hall in September and I'm beyond excited!!
@@fraudebs8786Happened to stumble back upon this comment... Turns out we were both at the same concert at the RAH 😃
You're not talking about this collection of clips, I hope - for your sake !
Just happened to me. Beautiful!
And you have nothing else to do in life?
Happy 200 anniversary of the time humanity peaked, no artist has ever duplicated a piece of this significance and frankly I think it's very difficult for it to happen again
Hearing is just the beginning. This music absorbs you into its soft warmth, melts you down into its smooth depth, stands you erect with its thrashing power, and explodes with you across the stars.
Carl Rachel THAT was intense
Yes!!!
Precisely
that was very poetic
Carl Rachel holy fuck. I never read a comment on RUclips so intense before. Splendid!!!
God this scene is so powerful. It really gives insight to just how amazing and life changing Beethoven's music was to people at the time and even now. Simply speechless.
💞
"You look like a woman" Ha!
Greatest compliment ever!
ikr lol
Not if you are a man. Today's women look like men and I don't mean that as a compliment, either.
@@retiredmusiceducator3612 eh, what's wrong with that?
@@retiredmusiceducator3612 and today’s men look like Woman... Imao.
@@lukathurinn7906 many things
No me deja de sorprender y emocionar el pensar que cuando Beethoven comenzó a escribir esta obra ya estaba sordo y nunca pudo oirla, nisiquiera pudo escuchar los aplausos de la gente cuando la estrenó en público, todo lo que nosotros escuchamos y disfrutamos él lo hizo en su mente, con cada una de las notas. Un genio!
Al nivel compositivo al que estaba Beethoven cuando compuso esto no necesitaba su oído para nada. Lo escuchaba todo de sobra en su cabeza
En un rincón de Mendoza, Argentina un corazón de 71 años se estruja de emoción. Gracias a quién rescató ese sentimiento. Ojalá alguno de mis nietos lo puedan sentir❤
Beethoven's 9th symphony stands the test of time and for good reason. I know the chills this piece of music always gives me but I love seeing how all the people react to hearing it for the first time in this powerful scene. They are simply in awe, and at times heart broken. Practically all the emotions we feel summed up in one piece of music.
hannah saucedaIt's the vocals at the best part in this piece that give me the chills.
Oh I so agree.
hannah sauceda Listen to the first movement at about 10th minute in most performances, when the Gates open and everything breaks loose. Unparalleled. Its like a fine summer day when something goes wrong and hell breaks loose.
That is a perfect way to describe that.
Practically all the emotions you feel?
A most dramatic and sensual bonding between two people in the midst of a magnificent piece of music.
Its not fucking real. Disrespectful, idiotic scene and movie
And the guy was full deaf...amazing
he wasn't really deaf until the last decade of his life, he started learning conducting at the age of 22 or 21 (not sure), and after losing his hearing ability he gave up preforming in front of an audience but still conducting some somphonys.
Symphony ***
bader turab No one quite knows for real but my story books say he was completely deaf since he was 12 years old
+HittokiriBattousai17 you should Google it then 😄
+HittokiriBattousai17 yep no one can really knows
Para mi la novena sinfonia de Beethoven es la mejor jamas creada, y el mayor canto a la libertad del ser humano. Como el dijo al principio de la escena "ahora la musica cambiara para siempre"....y cambio. Nadie habia incorporado musica coral en una sinfonia del modo en que el lo hizo. En la ultima parte, el tempo, el frenesi al dirigir....la camara tiembla, como si aquella musica fuese capaz de hacer temblar la tierra...es un toque sencillamente genial. Bach fue el padre de la musica tal y como la conocemos, Mozart uno de los mas grandes compositores, y Beethoven el que rompio las reglas establecidas y que dio un giro radical a la musica. Para mi hay claramente un antes y un despues de Beethoven...
11:45 forever and always will give me the chills. Beethoven tapped into something primeval and fundamental with this symphony. A true genius.
I know that this movie wasn't well received, and I admit it wasn't great. That being said, this particular scene is EXTREMELY well done, it's moving and furthermore it's grounded in what actually happened at the 9th premier. He actually did have someone help conduct (although it was a man, named Michael Umlauf), and someone did have to turn him around to see the crowd applauding, it was one of the female choir singers who gave screamed at Beethoven during rehearsals (not saying he didn't deserve it, Beethoven was very difficult to work along side of).Also, I appreciated the camera shaking during the unbelievably hectic prestissimo finale, it was a nice appropriate touch.
This scene wasn't actually grounded in what actually happened. He was not conducting at all. Most of the plot of this movie including this scene were complete fallacies.
@@brendank5413 I don't care about that....this scene was beautifully done with the two main actors "conducting" an orchestra....they had to learn how to actually conduct for the movie...and yes, no one sat in the orchestra pit to help him but one of the sopranos did go up and turn him around towards the audience so he could see them cheering and clapping!
He did not conduct as he obviously could not. Either at various points or only at the finale (not clear from the accounts) he came onto stage and "helped" the conductor, Michael Umlauf, to indicate expression or tempo to the orchestra. His role was more like what the fictional Anna Holz character does here. The orchestra had been told to ignore him. He was on stage when the piece finished and the alto Caroline Unger, turned him to the audience so he could see their applause.
no te entiendo :/
Well said Sir.
I love Beethoven so much, my favorite composer.
a aww sacan pelis de todas las bandas viejas!!
Mine, too.
Dang when they start singing...even a deaf would feel goose bumps
He deserved an Oscar!!! what a scene!!!
Fun fact: The CDs last 74 minutes and 33 seconds because that is the length of Beethoven's Ninth. Sony president wanted the entire Beethoven Ninth to fit on a single disc without any cuts.
Conducted by Karajan
I am always moved to tears about this scene. Before I watched the film, I was hoping they would get this right (at least right as we've heard by tradition) and see the Master turn around to see the audience in sheer delight. For it's told even the great Ludwig van B was concerned that this piece would be too much for people to digest, but he was magnificently wrong! Even though he was nearly 100% deaf, surely he could have felt the vibration in the room, but most likely was caught up in the moment. I wish I would have been here then! It's so spiritual.
“Now music changes for ever”..
And yet there were those who thought He lost his mind adding a choir to a symphony..
Reminds me of a line in The Imitation Game..
"Sometimes it is the people no one imagines anything of, who do the things no one can imagine”..
I thought it was Eroica that was said to have changed music for ever.
@@clairecopple4369 It did. However, I would argue the Ninth was even greater.
@@clairecopple4369 you see, Beethoven changed music forever several times during his life
just imagine what it must have been like, to hear this at the first performance.
Probably had a bunch of critics... and I am sure the room smelled from batheless people - and no McDonald's to go to after the concert!
it's especially difficult to imagine that, given the fact that us humans of the 21st century can hear this song, and any other, over and over again thanks to technology. But at the time, once you heard it that was it, unless you booked a seat in another performance, or were extremely rich, and able to afford an orchestra for your pleasure
@@tarielkaroldan5903 Was it just one time?
Wow! After centuries... it still is like now. Still is the greatest! Beethoven forever!
I can't even imagine it could get any better. From the movie scenes to the sound and acting, this is a masterpiece.
como ejercicio cinematográfico es MAGISTRAL. Si se pudiese filmar la emoción de todos los asistentes al estreno de la 9ª, sería así.
Los planos, la ejecución, la mirada del público.
Como Beethoven le ha trasmitido a ella su obra, para que ella se la trasmita a él para poder dirigir pese a su sordera.
Y ese final donde Beethoven no sabe si su obra ha gustado o no, por estar de espaldas y ser sordo.
Esto es cine, saber manejar tus emociones. Recomiendo a todos ver esta película
Name movie?Please
So beautiful and so beautifly filmed. A masterpiece. The casting is to cry for.
Imagine hearing Ode to Joy for the first time in Beethoven's time, it would've been like some kind of God made it.
Same as now ;) just more of an impact back then
A god did make it.
This to me is such a beautiful piece that embodies the spirit of a true musician. Beethoven, who for most of his life was dedicated to making music, struck with an affliction that prevented him from ever enjoying his own work. Most people would understandably fall into despair, but not him. He made an Ode to Joy as his final creation. Beautiful.
This is without a shadow of a doubt one of the if not the most uplifting, sensual, beautiful haunting, sad and triumphant scenes I’ve seen in film. While it barely treads water against the powerhouse of Oldmans performance, for me this defines everything that cinema should be. The voice to the human soul and a reflection of all that is humanity in its naked glory.
end of the 2018 .. Saturday morning - max volume - close my eyes - feel the beat . thanks god for creating Beethoven
This is actually a hymn and there's only one way a deaf man could have composed such an complex, ethereal symphony like this. Looks like an awesome movie.
"Music is a greater revelation than all wisdom and philosophy."
Ludwig van Beethoven
I am furious. Why wasn’t this film recognised for the great work that it is?! My wife and I have just finished watching it, completely drained and exhilarated all at the same time. Bravo!!
I as well thought this was a really excellent film, and Ed Harris was incredible as Beethoven.
Many reasons. For example, it was inaccurate. I don't know if you understand some of actually conducting, but this scene is completely ridiculous. Lots of mistakes that in actually music doesn't happen
@@aledbarretoit doesn't have to be accurate u dolt. Just look at Amadeus and repeat it again
He deserved an award for his performance!
Goes through my head every time I finish an exam....
I have heard this live and it is incredible. Music did change forever. His timing and pause are incredible.
Beethoven , a genius fighting the devils of this world ...........what a guy !
How Ed Harris conducts SO F GOOD? Never seen anything even close from any other actor. It seems to me he REALLY conducts the orchestra here.
He plays the piano and the violin also very naturally in the film. These skills require many years close to music, may be 10+?! Surprised me so much.
agreee
I didn't even realize it was Ed Harris! Wow what an actor.
He and Diane Krueger had lessons in conducting this symphony....they both did a fabulous job in this movie!
I didn't know it was that hard !!! I saw Tom n Jerry do it like nothing I mimic them as a kid lol love this song
From John Glenne to Beethoven, I watched about a third of the movie until I figured that Ed Harris was playing the part of Beethoven an inspiring film
This is the most moving composition ever. It reminds me of the near future in the paradise earth when a Great Crowd from every tribe, nation, people and tongue are united in praise of our Creator.
Jw? x)
@@ShawDAMAN Rev. 4:11
She is SO beautiful, the music is SO powerful and the whole thing is SO passionate...
Cinematic and musically multiple ORGASMS!
May 7, 1824… a historic day for all music.
You are Correct!
Brahms and Tchaikovsky future birthday
I love this movie. The acting is great, the cinematography is gorgeous and aesthetically pleasing, and the music is phenomenal!
I was living in Great Falls, MT in the early 90s as a young man and we had a very ambitious community choir and orchestra. This was the first time I ever performed a non-English song from memory, carefully learned by rote with an excellent native German vocal coach. I have heard this song many times over the intervening years, yet this scene brought back the rush of feelings I had that first time we performed this song to an equally appreciative audience. This was glorious and moving, and my eyes seem to be leaking. I'm so glad I stumbled on this clip today.
Ed Harris is.....what word is enough to express the depth and breadth of his art, his talent?? The uncertainty he expresses in his face after dropping his arms, the utter joy in his eyes as he turns and gestures for the orchestra to stand....truly remarkable, true genius!
He was a Super-Human. Beethoven just understood how music should affect the human experience, and for me, respectfully, his genius stands above Bach and Mozart.
What a blessing it is to be graced by this piece of art, and to be able to hear and enjoy it
5:35 just mute your device and look how awkward it was for sir beethoven, how he felt! surely he was THE GREATEST OF ALL TIME
Yup. And he was really deaf here.
It is not just perfect. This amazing masterpiece makes you feel that everything is possible. Euphoria without nostalgia or sadness. But that's the point EUPHORIA.
No hay nada humano, absolutamente nada que supere esta Maravilla.
This is the maximum work that a humain being has done....something heavenly
Arturo, not that you far from a major point about the pinnacle of achievement in music, but please do listen to Handel's Messiah, final movement: Worthy is the Lamb. I am a composer. I've studied both the 9th and the Messiah for all their intricacies. Both are equals, no question about that. Please turn up your speakers (or, better yet, put on headphones), turn out the lights, lay back in bed, and let the end of the Messiah - Worthy is the Lamb - transport you. You will see that you end up in the very same heavenly spot as you do with the 9th. Peace, brother.
there is another coincidence between the 2 biggest human masterpieces Messias and 9th. both were composed by german genius
And he was deaf
@@Nabilagreen64 aye and others still armed with their hearin
@@carlorachel I didn't liked at all!! For me there's no comparison!!!!
Bravo, maestro. My friends always laugh at me because every single moment i hear this piece I cry like a baby, i cant avoid it, its so beautiful and sublim everything, has every emotions that anyone would like to have, but like Kurt used to say "they laugh at me because Im different, I laugh at them cause they're all equal" I love Beethoven and I would never regret the tattoo of his sign in my arm.
Amazing amazing amazing ❤❤❤
I cried the whole time 😭😭
Thank you God for sending these gifted shining lights to this world🙏
Thanks for uploading this video 🙏
The best 13.5 minutes on RUclips ever.
Agree!!!!
I can't stop crying whenever watch this
6:08 that women haunt me in my nightmares
Big Pun 😀
XD
Haha, legend has it she still stands there with that expression...
Me to lol
😨😨
Yo no sé qué carajos me pasa que cada vez que escucho ese movimiento me suelto a llorar.
Me pasa igual.
Supongo que tiene la potencia de disparar cosas en el subconsciente que el consciente no puede contener. Quizás sean traumas, quizás sólo sea belleza. Lo cierto es que es incómodo en ciertas ocasiones el no poder evitarlo.
Es lo que provoca el arte, esas emociones inexplicables que sólo lo bello mueve dentro del ser humano... Soy pintora y esto es lo que debe causar las bellas artes, la música, la pintura, el ballet ¿alguna vez has visto la puesta del el lago de los cisnes en la isleta de Chapultepec? Te mueve las fibras más internas, escuchar la música y danza juntas es bellísimo. En general el buen arte debe causar lo que dices eso y más!
No puede ser la musica que creaban en esa epoca , impresionante
De alguna forma, estos compositors (Mozart, Handle, Beethoven, Bach...) tenian una coneccion directa con Dios y recibian disctado de El, pero desafortunadamente, esta coneccion fue suspendida por Dios. Ahora, solo tenemos basura de musica.
The sheer power of this music is stunning.
Dianne Kruger, one of the most beautiful women ever, coupled with the greatest piece of music ever. What's not to love!
She’s magnificent
The phony girlpower story?
She's only in it because she's a woman and she's beautiful. I love Beethoven's music but hate contrived things like that.
Can you imagine being in the audience that night? Never the same indeed.
Der Text von Friedrich Schiller, einem der bedeutendsten deutschen Dichtern, musikalisch vertont von Beethoven, einem der bedeutendsten Musikern seiner Zeit stehen als eine universelle Botschaft für ein friedliches Zusammenleben aller Kulturen. Nicht umsonst ist dieses Stück die Hymne für Europa. „Alle Menschen werden Brüder“
Musikalisch hat Beethoven in diesem letzten Satz der 9. Symphonie herausgeholt was nur geht. Epische Einleitung, göttliche Chöre (hier hat sich auch Michael Jackson bedient), dann ein Engelsgesang Mann und Frau, dann ein Marsch und zuletzt ein furioses Finale. Ein Meisterwerk.
He heard the entire thing in his head.
yes, that the thing most astonishing, create it and the playing in your mind!! The final scene shows it perfectly, the power of the music was sounded in his head, making his world mind trambles of its power!
Tears coming down...weeping like a baby. This is called synergy on the highest level.
I have been listening to Beethoven for over 50 years, and in particular, the 9th. It had the same effect on me just now as it did then
I can't watch this too many times. Favorite composer, favorite symphony. Wonderful!!!
13:13 Kurt Cobain travelled back in time and, after hearing this, he wasn't able to live knowing he never would make such wonderful music like Beethoven did.
Beethoven would have said, "look dude, I lived to 56 and made great music the last decade of my life, put down that damn shotgun and see what you can do."
@alejandroortin8941 ?
Dentro de TONELADAS de basura... RUclips guarda algunas verdaderas joyas.
En pocas palabras dice toda la verdad.
No pudiera estar más de acuerdo contigo.
totalmente de acuerdo, estimado amigo. una verdadera joya de la música
El Hijo del Rayo tienes toda la razón
Totalmente de acuerdo El Hijo del Rayo. Todo un tributo al Gran Beethoven interpretado por el actor Ed Harris.
Really enjoyed every minute of this heroic drama, greatly enhanced by the visual content. Superlative performances throughout.
Me encantó este film, muy poco conocido por el gran público. No se le dió la publicidad que merecía.
Nombre de la pelicula!?
@@Cornivus7 La Pasion de Beethoven
@@mmfmslp ?
Just incredible. Music did change forever! This still brings tears to my eyes.
Beethoven. El primer rockero .Rompedor de reglas. El rebelde por excelencia. Porque todo caos si quiere ser válido debe llevar ante todo elegancia. Porque hay caos también en el amor. Una mente libre. Fiel a su corazón. Genio indiscutible. Alma embriagada de dones. Pilar de la humanidad. En pocas palabras fuego único e irrepetible. Uf .
La rebeldía es pecado . Te aviso...
Beethoven did not need help to direct his music. doesn't matter that he was deaf. and he wasn't completely deaf, he could hear some of the music. and he was one of the greatest genius in human history. he would have directed the music if he was blind as well.
+William .Thorén
if you only hear music in your head without external acoustics, you speed up.. this also accounts for the dubious or even impossible metronome indications in some of his later works..
This notion of some woman being the hero is just modern subversive claptrap.
I know this is rooted in awe, but it is simply foolish to state this.
@@therealrealludwigvanbeethoven thank you for being so modest, Ludwig 😆
That's not true. This event did happen. He had help here just like the movie showed but it was a man.
And he was completely deaf
Edit: i meant he was completely deaf here
Excellent scene and an almost divine interpretation of this magical piece of music.
Этот шедевр без слез не посмотреть.
Эмоции зашкаливают.
Браво Бетховен❤🎵
Браво Маэтро👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Supposedly, when the Compact Disc was being developed, the chairman of the Sony Corporation demanded that the CD have the capacity to include Beethoven’s 9th in its entirety. Just a side note.
Such an underrated movie
What is it ?
For those who want to see/ hear the entire 9th symphony in total find BBC Proms from 2006 with The East/West Orchestra led by Daniel Barenboim. It’s beyond amazing.
Most underrated film in the world
With different musical pieces I can go along one onto the next.
Beethoven's Choral Symphony is so overwhelming, it commands me a prolonged deep silence afterwards.
Ed Harris is not a professional conductor and yet, he did an acceptable job here.
The Orchestra also did an excellent job, this movie should have had more exposure.
I agree.
@@404modestahousebills4 Thing is, its very historically inaccurate and more than a little insulting to Beethoven
Agree. He did a good job here of “conducting”...
@@staalman1226 it’s a movie....not his real life story.
@@gailwebb9619 That's no excuse. There have been plenty of movies with dead accurate plot points and details that are amazing. And with a character as complex and interesting as Beethoven, it's definitely not an excuse. If a writer feels the need to take creative liberties regarding Beethoven, they're either not trying or just not a good writer. And you'd be surprised at the number of people who believe a lot of stuff they see in the movies. Especially when it's written in a historical context.