The harp - instrument of the year 2016 | with Sarah Willis

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 4 ноя 2016
  • The 2016 instrument of the year in Germany is the harp. Marie-Pierre Langlamet, principal harpist of the Berlin Philharmonic, talks to Sarah about her instrument - with a little help from Minnie Mouse and Harpo Marx!
    Marie-Pierre Langlamet is originally from Grenoble, France. She studied music in France and the United States, and in 1988, she became the deputy principal harpist at the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra in New York. Marie-Pierre Langlamet has been the principal harpist at the Berlin Philharmonic since 1993. She also teaches at the Berlin University of the Arts.
    Sarah Willis is a British-American French horn player. In 2001, she joined the Berlin Philharmonic, becoming the first female member of its brass section.
    She was born in Maryland, USA and grew up in Tokyo, Boston, Moscow and London. At age 14 she started playing French horn and then attended the Royal College of Music Junior Department in London, UK. She studied full-time at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London, UK.
    In 1991, she moved to Berlin, where she became Second Horn in the Berlin State Opera under Daniel Barenboim.
    More videos with Sarah Willis:
    • SARAH'S MUSIC - with h...
    Subscribe to DW Classical Music:
    / @dwclassicalmusic
    #SarahWillis #FrenchHorn #Harp
  • ВидеоклипыВидеоклипы

Комментарии • 55

  • @jennhill8708
    @jennhill8708 5 лет назад +6

    Concert pedal harps are incredible, but my heart is with the lever harp, a folk instrument.

  • @AllenDec
    @AllenDec 5 лет назад +8

    What a great mini-documentary on the harp!!

  • @ClodoaldoLeiteJunior
    @ClodoaldoLeiteJunior 6 лет назад +10

    Thank you, Sarah! You're such an amazing music ambassador!

  • @kellycoleman715
    @kellycoleman715 3 года назад +1

    I love harp music. My sister had a friend years ago who played the harp. And don’t forget Harpo Marx! He was a very talented harpist.

  • @meredithwalker3955
    @meredithwalker3955 3 года назад +1

    I first saw and heard the harp from watching my mother’s old black and white movies. Harpo Marx was my hero, since then I always wanted to play the harp.

  • @HaraldReinhart
    @HaraldReinhart 7 лет назад +14

    so nicely done - thanks for introducing the instrument and Mme Langlamet, much appreciated!!

  • @vincentadegbile8022
    @vincentadegbile8022 6 лет назад +5

    Beautiful music... puts the mind to ease

  • @Metal-Possum
    @Metal-Possum 7 лет назад +20

    Nice reference to Rob Scallon. Last place I'd expect him to show up.

    • @ladyconan
      @ladyconan 4 года назад +1

      Hahaha! Yeaaah! I thought the same!!!

  • @loudspeakers3469
    @loudspeakers3469 Год назад

    Great video, love this series!

  • @zebra3stripes
    @zebra3stripes 6 лет назад +12

    I know people who work at that museum. If you'd like to play some of those old harps, I could pull a few strings for you.

    • @dwnews
      @dwnews 6 лет назад +9

      Nice pun. \tp

  • @morayoung3183
    @morayoung3183 4 года назад

    Awesome sound of the harp, where originated? Nice to see ladies playing a big instrument and so awesome sounds ! 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏💐🇧🇴❤️💛💚🌹😍🧡🤩💜🥳💓💗💞🥰💖💝💘🖤

  • @arthurvalentine3524
    @arthurvalentine3524 6 лет назад

    Tulani just blow my mind right now

  • @christophertsiliacos8958
    @christophertsiliacos8958 5 лет назад +1

    The harp is a beautiful sounding instrument. I don't play the harp, but if I were to learn to play the harp I would play it like I play the piano - the melody with my right hand, and the chords with my left. Why? I only read and play music in the treble [G] clef. 😉 🎼

  • @normanspurgeon5324
    @normanspurgeon5324 5 лет назад +1

    Did Sarah ever forgive her dad for making a crucial decision for her? Did she ever take up the harp? It would be very interesting to hear about the tuning of the instrument. Of course the tempered tuning is good to hear- how does it apply to the harp, with it's unique attributes? Are some keys favored?

  • @myteaissugarfree2436
    @myteaissugarfree2436 5 лет назад +2

    Funny looking harp you had in the first 10 seconds

  • @spamaccount1513
    @spamaccount1513 4 года назад +2

    Are the red and black strings in octaves and fiths?
    Edit: she actually says they are c's qnd f's

  • @ksilebo
    @ksilebo 6 лет назад +1

    Can someone explain how she does the "slide" at 6:39. what exactly does she do so the sound jumps higher?

    • @TonyM9
      @TonyM9 6 лет назад

      Ksile Bo - she is pressing down on the pedal for that string while it’s ringing. The pedals engage a mechanism that effectively shortens the string making it go up in pitch.
      Normally you don’t want the string ringing when you press the pedal for it so you have to either time the pedal change to happen at a time the string isn’t ringing, or you have to do as she mentioned earlier in the clip and muffle the string to stop it ringing before engaging the pedal. But to do a pedal slide is easy. You pluck the string and then press the pedal while the string is still ringing.

  • @Emperatriz_Valentina
    @Emperatriz_Valentina 6 лет назад +21

    It must be so annoying to tune that thing

    • @pleasedyes
      @pleasedyes 4 года назад +1

      AtsusunoアツスノChresolaくれそら lol it isn’t thaaattt bad

    • @tenoreDB
      @tenoreDB 4 года назад +4

      You know what is worse: if the harpist and the orchestral regie lost the tuning key. And the whole concert the harp is out of tune: its HORROR !

    • @jimp4170
      @jimp4170 4 года назад +5

      They say harpists spend half their lives tuning and the other half playing out of tune.

    • @heikorudi6105
      @heikorudi6105 4 года назад

      @@jimp4170 no thats the lutists!

    • @kukacostejberizs
      @kukacostejberizs 3 года назад +1

      Every day in the Morning...
      Even If every second day is okay.

  • @kcr7860
    @kcr7860 4 года назад

    Sarah, lass' Dich umarmen. Thany you, thank you very much for this "geijel instrument video". Remembering the guy who always said to the younger of my sisters: "Daisy mitdi Pillefüße". Today he is a protestantic pastor (Lol). Stichwort Harfe. Ich würde gerne folgendes 'Harfen-Instrument' ergänzen wollen: Sugar Plum Fairy by Tchaikovsky - GlassDuo LIVE (glass harp) [ ruclips.net/video/QdoTdG_VNV4/видео.html ].

  • @tajmahal8958
    @tajmahal8958 6 лет назад

    what is the song at 6:24 please reply.

    • @TonyM9
      @TonyM9 6 лет назад +1

      Taj Mahal It was Debussy’s Danse sacrée et danse profane. Definitely one of the more difficult pieces of classical harp repertoire due to its very chromatic nature requiring many difficult and fast pedal changes.
      It was actually written for a different kind of harp, the cross strung harp, which has all the chromatic notes on separate strings without the need for pedals. The piece was specifically commissioned by a manufacturer of these kinds of harps specifically to show of its ability to handle complex chromatic music.
      But the cross strung harp, although still played by some people, never really became popular. Definitely not as popular as the concert harp (double action pedal harp) and so Debussy made a version for pedal harp, which is what she was playing at that point in the clip.

    • @ivanperez6961
      @ivanperez6961 4 года назад

      TonyM9 thank you! different account and sorry for the late reply. I finally can enjoy this beautiful piece!

  • @trainliker100
    @trainliker100 2 года назад

    I'm afraid the harp didn't get much respect in the movie "Bugsy Malone". This is an odd gangsters during prohibition movie where all the actors are kids. They have a stereotype scene of a theater owner having auditions for vaudeville acts. Whenever he had seen enough, he yelled, "NEXT!" and the next act would come on stage. So somebody dances a little. "NEXT!" Somebody sings a few bars and that's enough. "NEXT!" Somebody wheels a harp onto the stage and before even one note is played, "NEXT!"

  • @octaviusthird6726
    @octaviusthird6726 6 лет назад

    I will never get a pedal harp because I live on third floor and no elevators.

    • @foljs5858
      @foljs5858 6 лет назад +1

      If you can afford the harp, you can afford to trivially rent a mechanical crane lift -- tons of people use such to move things like pianos and such to appartments

    • @harpfully
      @harpfully 6 лет назад +1

      There are also dollies/carts with special wheels for stairs.

  • @pabloantonio5003
    @pabloantonio5003 4 года назад +2

    2:32 the piano is larger and way heavier xD

  • @trainliker100
    @trainliker100 2 года назад

    I have now seen many, many things Sarah Willis has been involved in and I started getting suspicious. She seems to be everywhere doing everything all the time. I made spreadsheets of her activities and applied advanced mathematics. There must be at least three of her.

  • @cmw12
    @cmw12 6 лет назад +1

    Why don't harpsichords sound like harps? I wonder if there's a string/plectrum material that would produce the harp sound.

    • @foljs5858
      @foljs5858 6 лет назад +2

      Because they aren't plucked by human fingers, but are plucked by a harder material. The strings also aren't made by the same material. And the strings are closed into the cabinet.

    • @harpfully
      @harpfully 6 лет назад +1

      _Nothing_ produces the harp sound, excepts harps&harpists. :-) You'd have to invent a fleshy/strong/sensitive substitute for fingers.

    • @organist1982
      @organist1982 3 года назад

      Also because harpsichord strings are all wire strings, whereas most of the strings on a harp are gut (or nylon), and because harpsichord strings are plucked much closer to the end of the string, while harp strings are normally plucked near the center of the length of the string. There actually was a keyboard instrument invented at one point that tried to emulate the harp called a ClaviHarpe, and there was another instrument called a clavicytherium that is sort of between the claviharpe and a harpsichord; if you do a search on those, you can find some videos of ones being played; rather interesting!

    • @cmw12
      @cmw12 3 года назад

      @@organist1982 Now THAT was a helpful response!

    • @organist1982
      @organist1982 3 года назад

      @@cmw12 :-) Were you able to find videos of those instruments? If not, I could give links. Unfortunately, the ClaviHarpe videos (really just CD tracks) were uploaded at a rather low volume, but I'm intrigued by how much that instrument actually DOES sound like a harp! And the clavicytherium is quite fascinating!

  • @flippyflopper2360
    @flippyflopper2360 6 лет назад +2

    Do most harpists play without fingernails unlike the Spanish guitarists would?

    • @phoebeleung4316
      @phoebeleung4316 6 лет назад +3

      Flippy Flopper yes we always have to cut our nails!

    • @flippyflopper2360
      @flippyflopper2360 6 лет назад +3

      ah so it is all about finger-picking with the finger and not the nail. I like the pluck sound without the nail. The fingernail sound is too much, plus it's harder to fake that bass fuzz sound with a nail.

    • @Lewis_the_raider
      @Lewis_the_raider 6 лет назад +1

      There's the paraguayan harp, which is played with fingernails like you see here: ruclips.net/video/9vkPS4Qhrck/видео.html

  • @basimstefo4839
    @basimstefo4839 7 лет назад +6

    The Harp is from old Iraq ( Babylon) 1800 before Jesus

  • @turdusmerula1831
    @turdusmerula1831 5 лет назад +2

    Aaaaah, I do not like Marie-Pierre's attack. It is sooo harsh :-( Unfortunately harpists are generally told they should play louder especially in an orchestral context so even a lot of the world's leading harpists start making these rather harsh sounds. You can clearly hear at around 5:20 how the softer sound is much prettier than the example she is playing earlier