I bought this record many years ago, in my youth, and gave it as a present to a friend , a great singer along Paris orchestra. It was in my opinion, such a brillant and delicate piece of music, not so far from Kodaly ' s music. Then time has past and i do not regret it at all. It still remains one of the most expressive music i heared, a realy nice and clever score. I can hear, i can see the little Vixen juping through snow , and yelping after fox cubs. Refreshing. From France ! Christian.
In Europe, esp. in Germany, it is often in the repertoire. I saw it last month in Gelsenkirchen (a city in the Ruhr region, where we have 8 opera-houses).
Janáček absolutely captures the spirit of vixens in this incredibly moving orchestration! Better than anything even I could produce, I must say. I could only encapsulate childish characteristics.
@@logojimmy The recording of the full opera with Mackerras conducting the Vienna Philharmonic on Decca. Can't go wrong with any of the Mackerras/Vienna recordings. Mackerras is the conductor who put Janacek's operas in the repertoire and restored all his orchestration. I'd go to Jenufa after the Cunning Little Vixen.
I went there just before Covid and saw five of the operas, including the Vixen -- for me the greatest opera ever written -- and the virtually never staged "Beginning of a Romance" in a delightful production.
This music is exquisite, dynamic, fresh and elegant. It is the confluence point where a deep lyricism, ancient influences and rich harmony make you feel caressed by the peace of nature !
Around 4:00 is where the magic happens and then those violins at around 4:30-40 reach their most beautiful peak. It’s heart melting, it’s beyond beautiful. It’s truly, in all senses, alive.
Stunningly beautiful! Saw this with Lesley Garrett, and again with Lilian Watson.........both wonderful. Made an old man cry both times! This suite is great.
1 of greatest of fanfares. Blindingly lustrous, silly with pure genius, voice of the times, statement for 1920s, forward looking, fed by roots of Slav history, also a voice of Janacek in last years of life, his seventies, radiant with youth & affirmation, even ecstatic, yet in a sublimely controlled way. If this is "military," I'll be a soldier: if we settled our wars by who writes best fanfares, we'd be there. 1st 2 minutes, and @end of Finale, stir me @the core with or without my permission!
Those of us in classical music tend to get really hung up about overemphasizing the German, French, Italian and English classical traditions -- but the truth of the matter is, the Czechs have a tradition which every bit as strong and as deep as the four I just mentioned. Consider the roster of first-rank Czech composers: Martinu. Janacek. Smetana. Dvorak. Dussek (one of the really *great* writers of piano music, up there with Schubert and Beethoven). Vorisek. Tomasek. Benda. ALL of these composers are top-drawer composers. Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Schumann, Liszt, Brahms, Rimsky-Korsakov and Stravinsky were all keenly aware of the importance of the Czech tradition of composers.
Dear, Nevertheless, a remember when i was a teenager, i used to be welcome sincerly in a great family from the "Orchestre de paris"... and both of the parents were singers of the choir, and not the lasts... the only subject was "french composers" or "German composers", except Debussy... Honestly i learnt and receive much from each one in this family, but i also remember that when i brought this"little vixen" from Janáček and after Kodaly "the spinning room"... into my second home, none was realy interested. Much more, they didn' t say a single word when i offered this record when appeared in cd... Since i discovered myself, in the footsteps of Zoltan Kodaly, that folk-songs are treasures.. Institution slowly erase life in music, eventhough you can play and sing mozart... a certain delicacy doesn' t make authenticity ! I learnt myself the high value of folksongs and ethnomusicoloy... i still listen to wellknown composers, but less than any others, without any regrets, because, nowaday, i exchange as much as possible with great young prodigies, or their parents, far over the world, as it doesn' t exist in our schools or academies, nor musical institutions... i also learnt to appreciate arabic music, just an entire world, much more complex and rich than it is said anywere... and authentic...so pure by the way ! I just laugh a little bit when i think to an Iraki singer, who sold yet 100 millions of cd over the world, singing love and delicacy with modulations we lost from centuries...and in Europe it is impossoble to get only one record... hahaha ! Great occidental music area ! I remember that Debussy, the one i prefer from far, had a father well involved as "communard" in 1871, then thanks to a few month in prison, he met the future master of his young son Claude... so when you have fundamentaly courage and involvement for great cause, music comes, as love comes... the rest is so sad...and doesn' t bring any honnour in fact ! i wouldn' t go to "Pleyel" any more, and i prefer hearing Bruno Walter with my old Vinyles records, He, was a man !... and with Kathleen Ferrier; it is something different than current news ! ones always talks about composers... Human beings are much more important, through their renditions... the rest is so dependent of history and business...
Nationality means less than does geography in musical expression. Bach is obviously far more similar to Vivaldi than to Hindemith, and Martinu is far more similar to Carlos Chavez than to Zelenka.
@carp bear. You are so right and it remains a mystery to me why Martinu and Janacek in particular are not heard more often in many countries, particularly the U.S. Then there are the great under performed Scandinavian composers such as Nielsen, Stenhammar and Madetoja. Even Sibelius, one of the greatest composers of all time, was neglected in many European countries until the 1950's and I believe even now he is not greatly appreciated in Germany though this situation is starting to change.
I just cannot understand why Janacek operas are not fully appreciated in the Czech Republic. He, to my mind is their greatest composer. His operas are some of the most beautiful compositions in the world of opera.Totally original. On March 1st 2018 i will be in the National Theatre in Prague( on the front row of the stalls) for the Cunning Little Vixen. I can tell you now that all seats will not be sold and that the majority of the audience will be non Czech......virtually tourists like me and those genuine Czech Janacek lovers. Performances of Tosca, Butterfly,Aida have been sold out online for months! It's just a shame that i wont be in Prague to see their current production of Martinu's Juliette.
..... following comment...Nevertheless, a remember when i was a teenager, i used to be welcome sincerly in a great family from the "Orchestre de paris"... and both of the parents were singers of the choir, and not the lasts... the only subject was "french composers" or "German composers", except Debussy... Honestly i learnt and receive much from each one in this family, but i also remember that when i brought this"little vixen" from Janáček and after Kodaly "the spinning room"... into my second home, none was realy interested. Much more, they didn' t say a single word when i offered this record when appeared in cd... Since i discovered myself, in the footsteps of Zoltan Kodaly, that folk-songs are treasures.. Institution slowly erase life in music, eventhough you can play and sing mozart... a certain delicacy doesn' t make authenticity ! I learnt myself the high value of folksongs and ethnomusicoloy... i still listen to wellknown composers, but less than any others, without any regrets, because, nowaday, i exchange as much as possible with great young prodigies, or their parents, far over the world, as it doesn' t exist in our schools or academies, nor musical institutions... i also learnt to appreciate arabic music, just an entire world, much more complex and rich than it is said anywere... and authentic...so pure by the way ! I just laugh a little bit when i think to an Iraki singer, who sold yet 100 millions of cd over the world, singing love and delicacy with modulations we lost from centuries...and in Europe it is impossoble to get only one record... hahaha ! Great occidental music area ! I remember that Debussy, the one i prefer from far, had a father well involved as "communard" in 1871, then thanks to a few month in prison, he met the future master of his young son Claude... so when you have fundamentaly courage and involvement for great cause, music comes, as love comes... the rest is so sad...and doesn' t bring any honnour in fact ! i wouldn' t go to "Pleyel" any more, and i prefer hearing Bruno Walter with my old Vinyles records, He, was a man !... and with Kathleen Ferrier; it is something different than current news ! ones always talks about composers... Human beings are much more important, through their renditions... the rest is so dependent of history and business...
I agree with Amy, this is a lovely version. Years ago, living in N Michigan, I wrote down a list of 'musical loves' heard over Interlaken Public Radio. Forgotten, I just found it again last week! (I never throw ANYTHING away!) Your fine presentation explains why I included this breathtaking piece on my list in the first place. Thank you so much!
For most composers, the cause of their greatest suffering is music critics. Their damning and ignorant remarks cause not only suffering but damage to their sleep so necessary for composition.
I'll confess, I was familiar with his name but not his music - boy was I out to lunch. This is great and the sound quality of this recording is exceptional for RUclips (I'm listening with headphones).
You need to hear the following Janacek at a minimum - operas The Cunning Little Vixen and Jenufa, Taras Bulba, Sinfonietta, the 2 string quartets, the solo piano compositions 1905 Sonata and On an Overgrown Path, and the Glagolitic Mass.
Too true: I posted the above to a RUclips on the page, of Jancek's "Military Symphony" or Sinfonietta of 1926. Ironically, though, I got redirected somehow to this work, which I had never heard. Janacek is an amazing composer, his originality and pure modern flair that he envelopes his more astounding pieces, make him one of my favorites. I've concluded that Aaron Copland was heavily influenced by the Sinfonietta to write the "Fanfare for the Common Man," another great work for brass.
carp bear: Thank you for reminding us of the abundance of Czech composers, however you did forget at least two: Jan Dismas Zelenka who even J S Bach praised, and Anton Reicha who met and played in an orchestra with Beethoven. Although his 24 wind quintets were composed in a "cookie cutter" style, he not only taught at the Paris Conservatory, Reicha also wrote books on music theory subjects.
I wish he'd written more as well. Have you heard the two string quartets? I've tried to perform just the Violin Sonata adequately, and learning it made me wonder how he'd written_so much_? Janacek is very intense.
yes, please add the correct description that this is the recording by Sir Charles Mackerras and Czech Philharmonic, not like youtube automatically assigned a description.
Ok, music theory experts. Teach me. Why does what begins at 8:33 always mean "water, the ocean, the sea"? I know a lot of things but I can't figure that out. What is it about Leos' passage there, that "says" that? And why?
The discussion about nationalism and music is irrelevant nowadays. It hasn´t been in the last centuries because music was often used as a political statement and some composers, especially in the slavic countries, were very focused on glorifyingtheir fatherlands. If we talk about what´s typical Russian in Russian music of the 19th century, we find answers to that. Does it matter to a contemporary understanding? If we analyze structure, rhythmic patterns and such, yes. If we focus on the emotional impact it doesn´t, really. So I guess some guys here mix things up and get some pride out of the fact that there are Italian singers, Russian composers or Bolivian conductors. But it´s absolutely useless because you better be proud of something you achieved for yourself. Because if we were born in another time and place, we would have been different. And then what...?
I think Janacek and Vaughn Williams both put me in a contemplative mood, which no other composers seem able to achieve.
I bought this record many years ago, in my youth, and gave it as a present to a friend , a great singer along Paris orchestra.
It was in my opinion, such a brillant and delicate piece of music, not so far from Kodaly ' s music. Then time has past and i do not regret it at all.
It still remains one of the most expressive music i heared, a realy nice and clever score.
I can hear, i can see the little Vixen juping through snow , and yelping after fox cubs. Refreshing.
From France ! Christian.
Panebože, to jsou emoce. Tohle slova nedokáží popsat. Navždy v srdci, děkuji.
Janáček forever ❤️❤️❤️
I am surprised that this delightful music isn't played more often.
In Europe, esp. in Germany, it is often in the repertoire. I saw it last month in Gelsenkirchen (a city in the Ruhr region, where we have 8 opera-houses).
Orchestral suite from such an evocative opera. One of my all time favourites. I always cry hearing the final scene!
Clive .L Me too, it’s so elegiac, yearning, Comic and tragic simultaneously.
Janáček absolutely captures the spirit of vixens in this incredibly moving orchestration! Better than anything even I could produce, I must say. I could only encapsulate childish characteristics.
Genius, the opera moves me to tears, with the Suite one can have a little taste of it!
Please recommendations
@@logojimmy The recording of the full opera with Mackerras conducting the Vienna Philharmonic on Decca. Can't go wrong with any of the Mackerras/Vienna recordings. Mackerras is the conductor who put Janacek's operas in the repertoire and restored all his orchestration. I'd go to Jenufa after the Cunning Little Vixen.
@@Don-md6wn the Mackerras recordings are important but he's not my first choice here -- it would have to be Neumann's second version.
Every two years we visit the Czech Republic to attend the Janacek Brno music festival. The Vixen is one of my favorites.
I went there just before Covid and saw five of the operas, including the Vixen -- for me the greatest opera ever written -- and the virtually never staged "Beginning of a Romance" in a delightful production.
This music is exquisite, dynamic, fresh and elegant. It is the confluence point where a deep lyricism, ancient influences and rich harmony make you feel caressed by the peace of nature !
How beautifully put!
Well said!
Around 4:00 is where the magic happens and then those violins at around 4:30-40 reach their most beautiful peak. It’s heart melting, it’s beyond beautiful. It’s truly, in all senses, alive.
Francie, yes, absolutely! So dynamically beautiful and vivid!!
I couldn't agree more.
What a nice suite from the opera "The Cunning Little Vixen" so original and in the same time so much in the style of Janacek !!!! A gem !
Stunningly beautiful! Saw this with Lesley Garrett, and again with Lilian Watson.........both wonderful. Made an old man cry both times! This suite is great.
This painting is nice. Matches perfectly with the music
Janacek always keeps my ears refreshed.
1 of greatest of fanfares. Blindingly lustrous, silly with pure genius, voice of the times, statement for 1920s, forward looking, fed by roots of Slav history, also a voice of Janacek in last years of life, his seventies, radiant with youth & affirmation, even ecstatic, yet in a sublimely controlled way. If this is "military," I'll be a soldier: if we settled our wars by who writes best fanfares, we'd be there. 1st 2 minutes, and @end of Finale, stir me @the core with or without my permission!
Such little cunning vixens never die - especially if someone like Janacek makes them immortal.
Many thanks … Janacek really improved my mood today.
Bravissimo ¨!!!!!!!!!!!!
When this opera arrives to Spain, my country, everybody will know more of Janaček. I love the cunning little vixen!!!!!!!! 😍😍😍😍🦊🦊🦊🦊🦊🦊
Wow! What a find! So moving and full of surprises. Just love!!!
Fabulous music that takes you on a journey into dreams. Well done for the composer Janacek.
Jacques de Vendée.
Those of us in classical music tend to get really hung up about overemphasizing the German, French, Italian and English classical traditions -- but the truth of the matter is, the Czechs have a tradition which every bit as strong and as deep as the four I just mentioned.
Consider the roster of first-rank Czech composers: Martinu. Janacek. Smetana. Dvorak. Dussek (one of the really *great* writers of piano music, up there with Schubert and Beethoven). Vorisek. Tomasek. Benda. ALL of these composers are top-drawer composers. Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Schumann, Liszt, Brahms, Rimsky-Korsakov and Stravinsky were all keenly aware of the importance of the Czech tradition of composers.
Dear,
Nevertheless, a remember when i was a teenager, i used to be welcome sincerly in a great family from the "Orchestre de paris"... and both of the parents were singers of the choir, and not the lasts... the only subject was "french composers" or "German composers", except Debussy... Honestly i learnt and receive much from each one in this family, but i also remember that when i brought this"little vixen" from Janáček and after Kodaly "the spinning room"... into my second home, none was realy interested. Much more, they didn' t say a single word when i offered this record when appeared in cd...
Since i discovered myself, in the footsteps of Zoltan Kodaly, that folk-songs are treasures.. Institution slowly erase life in music, eventhough you can play and sing mozart... a certain delicacy doesn' t make authenticity !
I learnt myself the high value of folksongs and ethnomusicoloy... i still listen to wellknown composers, but less than any others, without any regrets, because, nowaday, i exchange as much as possible with great young prodigies, or their parents, far over the world, as it doesn' t exist in our schools or academies, nor musical institutions... i also learnt to appreciate arabic music, just an entire world, much more complex and rich than it is said anywere... and authentic...so pure by the way ! I just laugh a little bit when i think to an Iraki singer, who sold yet 100 millions of cd over the world, singing love and delicacy with modulations we lost from centuries...and in Europe it is impossoble to get only one record... hahaha ! Great occidental music area !
I remember that Debussy, the one i prefer from far, had a father well involved as "communard" in 1871, then thanks to a few month in prison, he met the future master of his young son Claude... so when you have fundamentaly courage and involvement for great cause, music comes, as love comes... the rest is so sad...and doesn' t bring any honnour in fact ! i wouldn' t go to "Pleyel" any more, and i prefer hearing Bruno Walter with my old Vinyles records, He, was a man !... and with Kathleen Ferrier; it is something different than current news ! ones always talks about composers... Human beings are much more important, through their renditions... the rest is so dependent of history and business...
Nationality means less than does geography in musical expression. Bach is obviously far more similar to Vivaldi than to Hindemith, and Martinu is far more similar to Carlos Chavez than to Zelenka.
@carp bear. You are so right and it remains a mystery to me why Martinu and Janacek in particular are not heard more often in many countries, particularly the U.S. Then there are the great under performed Scandinavian composers such as Nielsen, Stenhammar and Madetoja. Even Sibelius, one of the greatest composers of all time, was neglected in many European countries until the 1950's and I believe even now he is not greatly appreciated in Germany though this situation is starting to change.
I just cannot understand why Janacek operas are not fully appreciated in the Czech Republic. He, to my mind is their greatest composer. His operas are some of the most beautiful compositions in the world of opera.Totally original.
On March 1st 2018 i will be in the National Theatre in Prague( on the front row of the stalls) for the Cunning Little Vixen. I can tell you now that all seats will not be sold and that the majority of the audience will be non Czech......virtually tourists like me and those genuine Czech Janacek lovers.
Performances of Tosca, Butterfly,Aida have been sold out online for months!
It's just a shame that i wont be in Prague to see their current production of Martinu's Juliette.
English? More like German, Russian and Italian, in that order. England is below the Czech in terms of relevance in the repertoire.
what a lovely piece... and a beautiful painting!!
Janacek...always highly original
..... following comment...Nevertheless, a remember when i was a teenager, i used to be welcome sincerly in a great family from the "Orchestre de paris"... and both of the parents were singers of the choir, and not the lasts... the only subject was "french composers" or "German composers", except Debussy... Honestly i learnt and receive much from each one in this family, but i also remember that when i brought this"little vixen" from Janáček and after Kodaly "the spinning room"... into my second home, none was realy interested. Much more, they didn' t say a single word when i offered this record when appeared in cd...
Since i discovered myself, in the footsteps of Zoltan Kodaly, that folk-songs are treasures.. Institution slowly erase life in music, eventhough you can play and sing mozart... a certain delicacy doesn' t make authenticity !
I learnt myself the high value of folksongs and ethnomusicoloy... i still listen to wellknown composers, but less than any others, without any regrets, because, nowaday, i exchange as much as possible with great young prodigies, or their parents, far over the world, as it doesn' t exist in our schools or academies, nor musical institutions... i also learnt to appreciate arabic music, just an entire world, much more complex and rich than it is said anywere... and authentic...so pure by the way ! I just laugh a little bit when i think to an Iraki singer, who sold yet 100 millions of cd over the world, singing love and delicacy with modulations we lost from centuries...and in Europe it is impossoble to get only one record... hahaha ! Great occidental music area !
I remember that Debussy, the one i prefer from far, had a father well involved as "communard" in 1871, then thanks to a few month in prison, he met the future master of his young son Claude... so when you have fundamentaly courage and involvement for great cause, music comes, as love comes... the rest is so sad...and doesn' t bring any honnour in fact ! i wouldn' t go to "Pleyel" any more, and i prefer hearing Bruno Walter with my old Vinyles records, He, was a man !... and with Kathleen Ferrier; it is something different than current news ! ones always talks about composers... Human beings are much more important, through their renditions... the rest is so dependent of history and business...
With musicains like this I'm so proud I'm form Czechia!
I married a Bohemian Czech, now deceased. And I miss the connection deeply. Be proud, you have a lot to be proud of, believe me.
No such place. Czech Republic please.
@@axelx4770 Perhaps you don't know that Czechia is an official shortcut of the Czech Republic.
And what have YOU done to derserve that pride?
Proud to be Moravian just like Janacek
absolutely beautiful
I agree with Amy, this is a lovely version. Years ago, living in N Michigan, I wrote down a list of 'musical loves' heard over Interlaken Public Radio. Forgotten, I just found it again last week! (I never throw ANYTHING away!) Your fine presentation explains why I included this breathtaking piece on my list in the first place. Thank you so much!
July 3rd - Happy Birthday, Leos Janacek!
In my opinion, this song perfectly captures the beauty of the snow and stillness of winter in the woods
Song? Who is singing?
@@Altonahh10 I wrote this when I was 15 it's not that serious
@@Tjgtjgtjg And since being 15 you've still not learned that unless someone is singing there's no song?
@@baronmeduse Nope! I love this song
Blissful music!
I love slavic composers
they have something in their music that speaks to me more than german or french composers, maybe its the folk influence
I think it is suffering. People who have suffered, for some reason, create the most soul-reaching and stirring music...
For most composers, the cause of their greatest suffering is music critics. Their damning and ignorant remarks cause not only suffering but damage to their sleep so necessary for composition.
Threr is no folk influence in that orchestral suite.
Gérard Begni of course there is! He collected folk songs his whole life. If you are aware of it you can hear the folk motives in his compositions
I can understand that. It's the way they perceive, capture and express their feelings, emotions and language of the soul and heart ❤
Marvelous…
Гениально!
It makes me sad to think of the little vixen dying. Silly of me, I know.
I'll confess, I was familiar with his name but not his music - boy was I out to lunch. This is great and the sound quality of this recording is exceptional for RUclips (I'm listening with headphones).
You need to hear the following Janacek at a minimum - operas The Cunning Little Vixen and Jenufa, Taras Bulba, Sinfonietta, the 2 string quartets, the solo piano compositions 1905 Sonata and On an Overgrown Path, and the Glagolitic Mass.
Too true: I posted the above to a RUclips on the page, of Jancek's "Military Symphony" or Sinfonietta of 1926. Ironically, though, I got redirected somehow to this work, which I had never heard. Janacek is an amazing composer, his originality and pure modern flair that he envelopes his more astounding pieces, make him one of my favorites. I've concluded that Aaron Copland was heavily influenced by the Sinfonietta to write the "Fanfare for the Common Man," another great work for brass.
MORE A TREASURE..GREAT!..THANK YOU SO MUCH! YES!!
Oustanding !
carp bear: Thank you for reminding us of the abundance of Czech composers, however you did forget at least two: Jan Dismas Zelenka who even J S Bach praised, and Anton Reicha who met and played in an orchestra with Beethoven. Although his 24 wind quintets were composed in a "cookie cutter" style, he not only taught at the Paris Conservatory, Reicha also wrote books on music theory subjects.
1 petite pepite musicale !
I just love Janacek's music...too bad he didn't compose more...
something like Bruckner... he may have lacked the self-confidence and talent for self-promotion that someone like Liszt or Grieg had.
@@pbrower2a1 or maybe creation of such an original music style itself take a lot of time…
I wish he'd written more as well. Have you heard the two string quartets? I've tried to perform just the Violin Sonata adequately, and learning it made me wonder how he'd written_so much_? Janacek is very intense.
3:51 🥰
i like this
Pues en el comienzo de la suite unos compases concretos me han recordado El concierto de Aranjuez de Joaquín Rodrigo
Si esta ópera llegue a España, todos sabrán quién es Janaček.
beautiful piece and also the painting! who did this?
a real mavarick
yes, please add the correct description that this is the recording by Sir Charles Mackerras and Czech Philharmonic, not like youtube automatically assigned a description.
Paul Mauffray I love the shade lol
Can anyone tell me the artist of this painting?
Lizz Shill Renoir
my pa loves animals, but he is a hunter
MA CHE DELIZIA!
That's what i call proper interpretation of an oeuvre.
When it was composed and which tradition it relates to: romantic, impressionist, nationalist, modernist etc...?
With Janacek, no-one has a clue! All of those traditions, but not quite any of them. Pretty much defines why Janacek's music is so weird and powerful.
Hello Ayden434 - thank you for uploading this! Do you know what orchestra this is and who is conducting? Thanks!
The Haunting of M
Ok, music theory experts. Teach me. Why does what begins at 8:33 always mean "water, the ocean, the sea"? I know a lot of things but I can't figure that out. What is it about Leos' passage there, that "says" that? And why?
Not sure. In this case, this has nothing to do with that. It's the music right after [SPOILER ALERT] the Vixen's death in the opera.
I don't really know, but my people are from KS. We hunt and fish, so it makes sense to me.
foxes are just trade where i grew up.
no getting sensitive
Likely because the harmonies and textures sound a lot like Debussy La Mer.
Which orchestra is playing and who is the conductor?
The discussion about nationalism and music is irrelevant nowadays. It hasn´t been in the last centuries because music was often used as a political statement and some composers, especially in the slavic countries, were very focused on glorifyingtheir fatherlands. If we talk about what´s typical Russian in Russian music of the 19th century, we find answers to that. Does it matter to a contemporary understanding? If we analyze structure, rhythmic patterns and such, yes. If we focus on the emotional impact it doesn´t, really. So I guess some guys here mix things up and get some pride out of the fact that there are Italian singers, Russian composers or Bolivian conductors. But it´s absolutely useless because you better be proud of something you achieved for yourself. Because if we were born in another time and place, we would have been different. And then what...?
Does anyone know which arrangement of the suite this is?
Sounds a bit like Bartok
7:18 acte II
I came here after reading Haruki Murakami's 1Q84
Petit 2
Janáček: The Cumming Little Vixen - Orchestral Suite from the Opera
:-):-):-):-):-):-)