Rachmaninov: The Isle of the Dead, Symphonic poem Op. 29 - Andrew Davis

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  • Опубликовано: 11 янв 2025

Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @MichaelConwayBaker
    @MichaelConwayBaker 3 года назад +3333

    I first heard this music when I was five. I'm 84 and never get tired of it. A true masterpiece!

    • @famprima
      @famprima 3 года назад +87

      What a wonderful life of music you have!

    • @franzlugosi7295
      @franzlugosi7295 3 года назад +91

      ​@Halil Yaşar come on that's a macabre thing to ask someone

    • @KommSusserT0d
      @KommSusserT0d 3 года назад +21

      @@franzlugosi7295 you have a point, but when I read your name I died laughing

    • @Evelynmagic
      @Evelynmagic 3 года назад +17

      May you relish many more masterpieces. 😇🤝

    • @lilangeldreams2846
      @lilangeldreams2846 3 года назад +3

      you're here since 2007 ?? wo, shoot I feel young

  • @alcinado2072
    @alcinado2072 3 года назад +2022

    Interesting fact : Rachmaninov composed this piece only after a black and white reproduction of Böcklin's painting. When he saw the real painting some years later, he said that the colors weren't at all how he had imagined them. If he had seen the real painting first, he would have composed this symphonic poem totally differently.

    • @Aerodumb
      @Aerodumb 3 года назад +94

      I think it would be less dark

    • @paulbeard4218
      @paulbeard4218 2 года назад +47

      And we'd all love to hear that version .

    • @cengizinal8678
      @cengizinal8678 2 года назад

      well, I'm glad he didn't! :)

    • @lucyseyes1590
      @lucyseyes1590 2 года назад +11

      Better this way round.

    • @martymodus7205
      @martymodus7205 2 года назад +76

      Yes, although I think the quote implies that he wouldn't have even composed the work: "If I had seen first the original, I, probably, would have not written my Isle of the Dead. I like it in black and white."

  • @patchpatch4008
    @patchpatch4008 6 месяцев назад +254

    I am so grateful that Signalis introduced me to these series of paintings by Arnold Böcklin.

    • @totomzn
      @totomzn Месяц назад

      Same here!

  • @josephanthony8585
    @josephanthony8585 3 года назад +1847

    This painting is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. It is located by itself in a small room or cubicle with a bench in front of it while this music is playing. I sat on that bench transfixed looking at this painting while this music was playing. I stayed through the entire 21 minutes of its playing time.

    • @lekink5069
      @lekink5069 3 года назад +9

      Thx

    • @Jonsson474
      @Jonsson474 3 года назад +183

      There were actually five versions of this painting, painted between 1880 and 1886 but one of them was unfortunately destroyed. The one in the metropolitan art gallery is the second version. The one in this video is the one in the old national gallery in Berlin, Germany and not the one in New York.

    • @Wolfsgejaule
      @Wolfsgejaule 3 года назад +104

      It's true, i was the bench

    • @Raskolnikovtzs
      @Raskolnikovtzs 3 года назад +41

      Hitler was obsessed with this painting. In fact, he had one of the several versions made by Arnold Böcklin himself.

    • @KomissarLohmann
      @KomissarLohmann 3 года назад +6

      good for you

  • @gallowglass719
    @gallowglass719 8 лет назад +512

    I love how this piece constantly builds tension. Makes it difficult to stop listening.

    • @CLASSICALFAN100
      @CLASSICALFAN100 3 года назад +3

      And, that's the point...

    • @PavelDGromnic
      @PavelDGromnic 3 года назад +12

      The awe conjured up in the moment when the shore is finally realized takes my breath away.

    • @faridelkhatib4368
      @faridelkhatib4368 Год назад

      Min 8/9 is the plateau

    • @cristianmicu
      @cristianmicu 9 месяцев назад

      life is tension until it isn't.. shows how deep this goes into creating this... rachmaninov such a genius

  • @hk1222
    @hk1222 Год назад +427

    I listened to this before when I was a teenager, but after playing Signalis, I can't stop thinking about this song and painting.

    • @kezia_creates3264
      @kezia_creates3264 Год назад +2

      Wdym?

    • @sovviedan6791
      @sovviedan6791 Год назад +100

      @@kezia_creates3264 There's a very artistic video game called Signalis which released late last year, and one of the pieces of music in the soundtrack is a piano rendition of the beginning melody, as well as the painting being a core pillar of the game's theme of things being copied and ending up different than the last version. It's a very emotionally charged game, so the beauty of the song and painting are amplified by the story and visual direction, so they can leave a pretty amazing amazing impression and stay with you for a good while.

    • @lelagrangeeffectphysics4120
      @lelagrangeeffectphysics4120 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@sovviedan6791 and by artistic you mean pretentious... apparently the devs tought that flashing german sentences while glitching was the peak of art, the story never makes itself very clear, but its implied that the lesbian couple were sent to die in cold space because one of them was an Alma Wade level psychic that could wreak havoc.

    • @sovviedan6791
      @sovviedan6791 11 месяцев назад

      @@lelagrangeeffectphysics4120 Everything is pretentious when you don't understand it. They're German, dumbass. That's why they flash German words on the screen. You must've been playing with your eyes closed to not notice the heavy post-WWII East Germany vibe to Sierpinksi and Rotfront. And what you've pointed out isn't just "implied," it's literally outright stated in the documents on the ship and dialogue with Arianne. They couldn't have made it clearer. You skimmed over the surface of what the game had to offer and then had the audacity to call it lacking.

    • @finnegan6464
      @finnegan6464 11 месяцев назад

      @@lelagrangeeffectphysics4120 the game is from germany dude

  • @yellowbeard1
    @yellowbeard1 3 года назад +102

    I had no idea this music existed and I am really happy with the RUclips algorithm right now.

    • @voraciousreader3341
      @voraciousreader3341 3 года назад +2

      I am so glad you’ve started on this journey, and Rachmaninov is an amazing place to begin! Being able to move emotionally through this “world” is an experience greater in my life than nearly anything in my life, for nearly 60 years. If I may presume to give a suggestion, Vladimir Ashkenazy is, in my opinion, one of the best interpreters of Rachmaninov’s music, as a pianist and conductor. He would be an excellent place to continue!

    • @AdamGulotta
      @AdamGulotta 3 года назад +2

      @@voraciousreader3341 This wasn't my comment, but I just want to say that I am going to follow your recommendations for composers!

    • @CozyButcher
      @CozyButcher 3 года назад +2

      #metoo
      bless the people of Rus

  • @chiphowell4063
    @chiphowell4063 5 лет назад +372

    I fell in love with this piece of music when i was 10 years old and playing with Star Wars action figures and listening to my mom's Classical music LPs...the music always inspired stories and now that I'm substantially older, I hear this again (and again) and I think of those childhood stories. More than that, I love the music on its own terms. I still wanna be a Rachmaninov composition when I grow up.

    • @danknoize
      @danknoize 3 года назад +6

      listening to this now, loving it and just gave my wife's brother (a Star Wars geek and collector) my original Star Wars figures that I played with as a kid, but I wasn't fortunate enough to have parents that were into Rachmaninov, let alone music in general 😆

    • @samwisethebrave288
      @samwisethebrave288 3 года назад +1

      No. Go away.

    • @danknoize
      @danknoize 3 года назад +1

      @@samwisethebrave288 🤣🤣🤣

    • @PavelDGromnic
      @PavelDGromnic 3 года назад +5

      I listened to classical music as a child too, brought up in a household which had no interest in it. I flourished thanks to that open window. It's funny to remember how often I listened next to an actual open window. Do children listen to this any more without being dragged to hear it? Like tears in the rain.

    • @pontimaniac2303
      @pontimaniac2303 3 года назад +3

      I'm 69 yrs , and same when I was a kid, 5, 6, 7, could see so much in my head, I know you know what I'm saying, but by 8 it started fading , and fast , a song that still works pretty good for me is Debussey, prelude to the afternoon of a Faun, I hear it in this music score . Check it out if you are not familiar with it.

  • @jessicakespohl8340
    @jessicakespohl8340 6 лет назад +1930

    Rachmaninoff was not 6'6". That is classic Internet error. Eugene Ormandy said he was about 6'3", as did other friends. He also was underrated because modernist music was on the ascendant in his time. He was dissed by critics, but it's well to remember the quote from Sibelius, "Pay no attention to critics. No one ever erected a statue to a critic".

    • @DCM8828
      @DCM8828 6 лет назад +46

      I would say that a critic might be able to in good conscience unfavorably criticize Rachmaninoff if he or she could even pretend to write with the brilliance, originality, virtuosity, beauty and depth than Rachmaninoff wrote.

    • @melvynobrien6193
      @melvynobrien6193 6 лет назад +71

      I teach piano; Rachmaninoff had big hands. Most of the finest pianists in the world consider him to have been the greatest pianist of the recording era. Not to mention his brilliant compositions.

    • @Diniles
      @Diniles 4 года назад +110

      @S G Well he was hardly a music critic lol

    • @IrrelevantPlease
      @IrrelevantPlease 4 года назад +3

      hah! Fantastic quote. I am saving that one.

    • @pmlouisjuste
      @pmlouisjuste 4 года назад +1

      @@Diniles haha lol

  • @bwchapin9099
    @bwchapin9099 2 года назад +132

    I had never heard this piece until I decided to transcribe it from the original score into a digital one. What struck me was the story I feel as the music progresses. Rachmaninoff’s use of 5/4 alternating 3-2 to 2-3 in the first part mimics the way an oarsman would row, long pull short recovery followed by short pull longer recovery to correct course, etc. I see it as starting out from shore in calm waters and as the boat gets midway, rougher seas then it calms as it enters the isle harbor. The second part describes the unloading of the casket and carrying it upward while being met by spirits to assist until the casket is interred. There is a reference to a Dies Irea, a release of burden and sorrow the the descent of the oarsman or passengers back to the dock where the third part is the emptier boat returning from the isle with the same rowing rhythms. As a symphonic poem, it is one of the most descriptive.

    • @EnvironmentalCoffeehouse
      @EnvironmentalCoffeehouse 2 года назад +1

      Thanks for sharing that👍🌻

    • @coscinaippogrifo
      @coscinaippogrifo Год назад

      Wow, I wish I was able to get those deep insights into anything in my life, like you did with the description of this piece... Congratulations

    • @jaoziinh
      @jaoziinh Год назад

      YEEEEEEES

    • @jx5735
      @jx5735 Месяц назад

      *5/8 is the time signature initially

    • @NatalieJones-mi7xo
      @NatalieJones-mi7xo 12 дней назад

      Very sensitive interpretation, thank you I'll listen more intently because of it 😊

  • @pppaaaooo13
    @pppaaaooo13 8 лет назад +3723

    This painting needs its own movie!

    • @LordIvor6
      @LordIvor6 8 лет назад +135

      Reminds me of the ending of Black Butler, so gentle but dark as well.

    • @winterstorm8412
      @winterstorm8412 8 лет назад +87

      pppaaaooo13 Somehow reminds me of when King Arthur was mortally wounded, that he was taken to the Isle of Avalon.

    • @OiOBlinkingOwl
      @OiOBlinkingOwl 8 лет назад +10

      He is canonically either Arthur's son or just his nephew (depending on the literature) born from his relations with Morgana.

    • @YamiKodoku
      @YamiKodoku 8 лет назад +11

      Somebody knows the name of this painting?

    • @adrianovasco2059
      @adrianovasco2059 8 лет назад +38

      There is also a nice "remake" of this paining by Giger himself.

  • @ChaplainIdaeus
    @ChaplainIdaeus Год назад +965

    A painting of a strange island. Somehow, it feels very familiar.

    • @АртёмФедянин-д6ш
      @АртёмФедянин-д6ш Год назад +49

      Arnold Böcklin had created the painting naming it the same ("The Island of the Dead")... ok-ok, i got myself^) Rachmaninov was inspired of this master piece, when is creating his self piece. Two artists, two eras

    • @kreits7384
      @kreits7384 Год назад +158

      @@АртёмФедянин-д6ш the original comment refers to a game called Signalis, it's a copy-paste from what the main character says while inspecting this picture

    • @spacebear3537
      @spacebear3537 Год назад +83

      remember our promise

    • @jsunnj76
      @jsunnj76 11 месяцев назад +5

      you play too much Resident Evil friend......

    • @nikitakhmelevskyi6257
      @nikitakhmelevskyi6257 11 месяцев назад +28

      ​@jsunnj76 This is not about RE, but Signalis, who for sure was inspired by RE, but has absolutely another idea

  • @mistygroves3503
    @mistygroves3503 7 лет назад +78

    An Etheric world of neither Purgatory nor Paradise, with unfulfilled yearning, toil and glimpses of shining lights beyond....beautifully portrayed by Rachmaninov. An exquisite piece of music.

  • @PavelDGromnic
    @PavelDGromnic 6 лет назад +352

    This is pretty gripping. As one who is now approaching death, I am in awe of the boats' passenger nearing The Isle. Where those of us who have "passed" remain. The rocking boat, the trees, the dark shore, are real for me. This is how I have always envisioned it. Even as a child. I'll be glad to leave this life behind in order to achieve the peace I see on the Isle.

  • @Kusumi4chan
    @Kusumi4chan 10 лет назад +55

    Words cannot describe how perfect this piece is.

  • @ilonajoensuu3716
    @ilonajoensuu3716 5 лет назад +3528

    Pro tip: Listening to this while working on an excel spreadsheet makes everything more dramatic.

    • @silviasuto5275
      @silviasuto5275 5 лет назад +83

      This is EXACTLY MY CASE!!! my effing colleagues are so loud, i need to work always with my headphones on and I listen to this masterpiece or some others. Priceless.

    • @PaoloReaper
      @PaoloReaper 5 лет назад +69

      What the fuck. I never work on Excel. I'm doing it rn and this piece started playing and I find this comment. Strange.

    • @CLASSICALFAN100
      @CLASSICALFAN100 5 лет назад +18

      You really need to get out more...

    • @ilonajoensuu3716
      @ilonajoensuu3716 5 лет назад +60

      @@CLASSICALFAN100 Never!
      *makes gremlin noises*

    • @moncompte4150
      @moncompte4150 5 лет назад +4

      My feelings exactly

  • @YouGuessIGuess
    @YouGuessIGuess 11 лет назад +44

    I can't "Like" this video enough, or explain how much its existence has improved my musical life over the last few months.
    Thank you so much for uploading.

    • @franciscopinto6394
      @franciscopinto6394 10 лет назад +3

      That same thing happened to me about 2 years ago... amazing

  • @j-jbourdin316
    @j-jbourdin316 9 лет назад +43

    œuvre d'une intensité inouïe et d'une beauté surréaliste que Rachmaninoff génie absolu de la musique a légué à l'humanité. Pourrais-je l'écouter mille fois que j'aurais toujours le même émoi ; c'est à cela qu'on reconnaît un véritable chef-d'œuvre.

    • @portercrane6655
      @portercrane6655 5 лет назад +3

      Thanks Google translate!!! This comment made me smile so happily with how profound it is

    • @pumby78
      @pumby78 5 лет назад +1

      Haa :) voilà une âme reconnaissante de belle musique sans allez chercher la science classique de critiques que l'on peu lire en commentaire, c 'est affolant..... ils critiquent mais n'en feraient pas 1 centième de millimètre composée :) c'est vraiment un monde étrange la musique classique, on pourrait presque croire qu'ils ne vivent que dans la critique négative et non constructive.

    • @ВикторГрядовкин
      @ВикторГрядовкин Месяц назад

      Эмоции дважды заходят в Реку ? 😢

  • @josemanuelparrillalopez-br3024
    @josemanuelparrillalopez-br3024 8 лет назад +774

    for those wondering, that painting is the 'Isle of the Dead' by Arnold Böcklin, a swiss romantic painter

    • @dvduadotcom
      @dvduadotcom 8 лет назад +27

      Island of the Dead
      Arnold Böcklin (Swiss, Basel 1827-1901 San Domenico, Italy)
      Date: 1880
      Medium: Oil on wood

    • @ronwalker4849
      @ronwalker4849 8 лет назад +13

      ARNOLD BOCKLIN HAD SO MUCH SUCCESS WITH THIS PAINTING THAT HE MADE A NUMBER OF COPIES AND SOLD THEM ALL. 5 OR 6 I DON´T KNOW.
      I SAW THE PAINTING AT THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART, NY
      AND IT MADE A TREMENDOUS IMPRESSION ME WHICH I HAVE NEVER FORGOTTEN. IT IS OUR ETERNAL HOME.

    • @StahliCell
      @StahliCell 8 лет назад +24

      I feel so ashamed of myself. 23 years old, swiss and I've never EVER heard of this painter. I hate my arts teacher in high school, I have no one else to blame.

    • @ElCid48
      @ElCid48 8 лет назад +30

      +StahliCell. No need to feel ashamed. Get yourself other sources of information as long as they are reliable. Go to the library in your town. Read a lot. Very soon you'll know more than your stupid teachers. I've done that.

    • @lecobra418
      @lecobra418 8 лет назад +13

      Blame yourself then, because you're the only one responsible for your lack of knowledge.

  • @jelleepit
    @jelleepit 4 года назад +25

    The sense of musical scale is breathtaking. The knowledge of the instruments and their register is mind boggling. The genius of how to deliver this to me and have me weeping is God given. 6 foot of Russian misery no, 2 miles ladder into heaven yes.

  • @gailranson3966
    @gailranson3966 9 лет назад +31

    Rachmaninov is the first composer I listened to on purpose.Went to the library and borrowed a record.Loved him ever since.

    • @CLASSICALFAN100
      @CLASSICALFAN100 5 лет назад

      You listened to Rach *while riding on a porpoise*? (Oops, Spellcheck...lol)

  • @christofrip1723
    @christofrip1723 3 года назад +92

    I listen to a lot of music, classical is the purest form of music that helps me visualize dreams and emotions like no other genre

    • @paulbeard4218
      @paulbeard4218 3 года назад +6

      Amen. how very true .

    • @mixerD1-
      @mixerD1- 3 года назад +4

      Once electricity became involved it immediately lost its future context.

    • @oleflogger6828
      @oleflogger6828 3 года назад +3

      @@mixerD1- I wonder how the original audience must have felt listening to this, and without any electronic involvement. It, like most Rachmaninoff, is one of my absolute favorites.

  • @rcmodder
    @rcmodder 3 года назад +15

    So sad, and yet beautiful. Such a timeless piece in my heart.

  • @kimetsu_kids
    @kimetsu_kids 2 года назад +49

    ベックリンの死の島、人工物にも自然物にも見える岩の島に整えられた植生が収まっているという
    精巧さと不自然さが見事に共存したすごく美しい芸術作品だと思う

  • @AlexSteelOFFICIAL
    @AlexSteelOFFICIAL 6 лет назад +15

    I listened to this symphonic poem casually few months ago, but I immediatly fell in love with its intense crescendos. It is a real journey, I may say, even inside the painting, within the part we can only imagine.

  • @jaredbeers1036
    @jaredbeers1036 4 года назад +14

    Rachmaninov’s writing takes me to a different place on a journey. It’s hauntingly beautiful. This is truly a masterpiece it continues to blow my mind.

  • @ianboard544
    @ianboard544 Год назад +14

    I've gotten to like Rachmaninoff a lot since I've gotten older. He was so full of ideas. This is a beautiful piece.

    • @aleksPval
      @aleksPval Год назад

      i recommend listening to his vocalise... so nice.

  • @artmynk8999
    @artmynk8999 5 месяцев назад +6

    I think it is just simply beautiful that such a song has been incorporated into the artwork of a game that is Signalis

  • @ze_rubenator
    @ze_rubenator 9 лет назад +103

    Eerie, beautiful, timeless.

    • @MedievalRichard
      @MedievalRichard 9 лет назад +2

      +Ze Rubenator Totally agree. :)

    • @G123.
      @G123. Год назад

      Eerie? I think it's full of passion, longing.

  • @carolineblisslarsen4396
    @carolineblisslarsen4396 6 лет назад +30

    I've never heard this piece before now. I love it-dark, mysterious, lovely.

  • @LordQueezle
    @LordQueezle 8 лет назад +72

    Such an amazing song. I love the delicate highs and the heavy lows. This has a quality that most modern music just can't match.

    • @mandywong9369
      @mandywong9369 8 лет назад +1

      Lord Queezle

    • @LordQueezle
      @LordQueezle 8 лет назад +13

      You do have a point. I guess "piece" would be more accurate. :D I should know better then to just call everything mildly melodious a "song".

    • @manurossy9725
      @manurossy9725 5 лет назад +2

      Wtf "song"?! Are u serious?

    • @LordQueezle
      @LordQueezle 4 года назад +6

      Three years of music school later and I'm revisiting this work to write a paper on Symphonic Poems. xD

    • @walther2273
      @walther2273 4 года назад +3

      @@LordQueezle
      Rap is terrible...

  • @dmswan3172
    @dmswan3172 2 месяца назад +3

    Powerful, mysterious painting by Arnold Bocklin - evoked by this great mysterious masterpiece by Rachmaninov.

  • @DorothyOzmaLover
    @DorothyOzmaLover 2 года назад +21

    Masterful and stunning piece that leaves one wanting to return again and again.

  • @ausamusicofficial
    @ausamusicofficial 3 года назад +15

    walked around the louvre with this in my headphones on loop a couple years ago and I gotta say it was perfect

  • @fabianvanderelst9643
    @fabianvanderelst9643 5 лет назад +26

    I always thought classical music was boring, until I (on a lucky midnight) found this gem, alongside other classical music that is actually good! Some of the best music I've heard in ages! I can't believe there's actual classical music that I thoroughly enjoy, and not only respect the skills of!

    • @philmixer
      @philmixer 4 года назад +2

      All these classical pieces you should listen to are the works of geniuses.

    • @johnandreae2958
      @johnandreae2958 2 года назад +2

      Oh yes there’s a wonderful universe of classical music that goes straight to my heart !!

  • @bruceinoregon8163
    @bruceinoregon8163 3 месяца назад +4

    After an extended foreboding half cadence starting at 11:00 - he launches into the beautiful, romantic, lush, rising, climactic section that is the pinnacle of the piece. That section climaxes in the 15th minute or so, diminishes, reloads and climaxes again during the 17th minute or so; then it's all about descending, backing off, summarizing, and finishing out. Whether he was aware or not (my guess is that he was), humans and the rest of nature seem to have an affinity for the "golden mean" and the Fibonacci sequence (or vise versa perhaps), and it looks to have everything to do with where the climactic section was positioned in this piece.

  • @msherd130
    @msherd130 7 лет назад +30

    This makes me feel nostalgic for some reason. I love the emotions that Rachmaninov causes in his music.

    • @barbaramouk8374
      @barbaramouk8374 2 года назад

      Oh, yes! There's definitely a "memories" section.

  • @Minotauronabike
    @Minotauronabike 4 года назад +12

    I saw the painting in Berlin a couple of years ago, I had never heard of it before, and a beautiful young man came up to me and said "this is my favourite painting, can you take a picture of me with it?" It was amazing to see a stranger so moved and delighted by an artistic object, and a memorable shared moment. (This is the 1883 version btw, and I think the best of Böcklin's series).

    • @MargaretMargaretMargaret
      @MargaretMargaretMargaret 3 года назад +1

      That's the making of a wonderful movie or book. ❤

    • @buchenholz1574
      @buchenholz1574 3 года назад +3

      funny fact, the picture hung in Adolf Hitler's office because he thought it was so ingenious

  • @КимберлиСуратос
    @КимберлиСуратос 7 лет назад +638

    I love this painting. It perfectly captures the mood of death. It's so serene with the still water and muted tone. For some people, death is a nice, peaceful rest, free of the tumult and suffering that accompany life. Yet in the painting, the dark shadows that surround the trees give a sense of foreboding and remind you of the mystery and darkness associated with death.

    • @magnuschristianssen8999
      @magnuschristianssen8999 6 лет назад +8

      Or a bad death, the darkness a warning of the demonic torments to come. Has anyone written a piece about being tortured by demons in hell? I would love to hear that and even suggest it to atheists LOL!!!

    • @DavidA-ps1qr
      @DavidA-ps1qr 6 лет назад +4

      Off to the art gallery with you.
      99.9% of us are listening to the music not admiring paintings!

    • @raymondwilcox1303
      @raymondwilcox1303 6 лет назад +31

      @@DavidA-ps1qr . . .Speak for yourself.

    • @DisRespectoids
      @DisRespectoids 6 лет назад

      What about your profile photo? Does it fit that...

    • @TheConshuscriterion
      @TheConshuscriterion 5 лет назад +4

      Кимберли Суратос also too, though the Cypress trees are in reference to other things, when I saw them a thought crossed my mind!! The evergreen (our soul/spirit) almost completely walled off from everything else living! The eternal soul wrapped in death’s hewn stone coffin awaiting judgement in solemn silence yet not dispassionate! And the simultaneity of life only a breath away and death breathless hold spark the roller coaster of emotions

  • @IAmTheOnlyLucas
    @IAmTheOnlyLucas 11 лет назад +8

    I put this video in my Classical Music playlist sort of apathetically but every time I come back, it's better and better. Rachmaninov was a brilliant man.

  • @elena-xt7cs
    @elena-xt7cs 8 лет назад +820

    There is an anecdote about this piece, according to which Rachmaninov was inspired by a black and white reproduction of Boecklin's painting, not by the original version: when he eventually saw the actual artwork, he got so disappointed that he stated he would have probably never written this beautiful music, if he had seen the original one first. We would have missed one great piece.

    • @RalucaAriadna
      @RalucaAriadna 8 лет назад +3

      what a beautiful sentence. may I use it in a story?

    • @RalucaAriadna
      @RalucaAriadna 8 лет назад

      Thank you! :)

    • @elenabarri732
      @elenabarri732 8 лет назад

      jajaja such is life, beautiful story¡

    • @ronwalker4849
      @ronwalker4849 8 лет назад +16

      THAT SPEAKS MOUNTAINS ABOUT ORIGINAL WORKS OF ART AND COPIES.

    • @kingkeefage
      @kingkeefage 8 лет назад +3

      Individually, words and notes do not have owners. I can't own the word bird, but if I were to use it with words of MY choosing accentuating the bird, then the statement made thereafter belongs to me. And, of course music has an owner!!!

  • @benjaminponting4259
    @benjaminponting4259 6 лет назад +22

    I think I have listened to this piece about a hundred times now... it is one of those pieces that... it just MOVES one... it is a beautiful, amazing piece, one of my absolute favorites, of all time. In my eyes, it is indisputably one of the best pieces of music ever written. Just fantastic

    • @philmixer
      @philmixer 4 года назад +1

      Completely agree Ben. This is a superb atmospheric piece.

    • @paulbeard4218
      @paulbeard4218 3 года назад

      You declare a lot, but it's true .

  • @paulbeard4218
    @paulbeard4218 3 года назад +7

    The hypnotic magnetism of this work is palpable -- along with mystery and foreboding, It's stand alone great, as is it's composer !

  • @autumnleaves2766
    @autumnleaves2766 6 лет назад +150

    What a magnificent piece of music. Rachmaninoff's works always have so much depth, so much sense of longing, nostalgia, richness of harmony and yet haunting melodic lines. Though his output is considered relatively small by some standards, it seems that it was all of an incredibly high standard. My favourites include this piece, the 3rd piano concerto, the rhapsody on a theme of Paganini Op43, the variations on a theme of Corelli Op42, the variations on a theme of Chopin Op22, all the solo piano music, but there are other works I don't know so well and hence need to get to know. He had such huge hands he could stretch C-Eb-G-C-G with his left hand. Plagued by depression and ill health for much of his life, he felt compelled to leave Russia after the 1917 revolution. Part of the escape was done on a sleigh through the winter landscape of eastern Finland. Someone ought to make a feature film about him, he had a fascinating but difficult life in many ways. A CD I would recommend for the sets of variations I mentioned above would be the one recorded by Daniil Trifonov in 2015, which also includes the talented Russian pianist's own homage to Rachmaninoff, Rachmaniana, a set of short piano pieces. It's a Deutsche Grammophon CD, always a sign of quality.

    • @oleflogger6828
      @oleflogger6828 4 года назад +2

      My fellow Brooklynite, Danny Kaye, said (sang) it best: "I Love Russian Composers!" And, did it all in less than 1 minute. :>)

    • @remon563
      @remon563 3 года назад +2

      beautiful comment. I would love to make a film about this story although I wouldn't be able to do it's beauty justice. History but a ripple in time, waiting to be echoed.

  • @parcm
    @parcm 10 лет назад +69

    Böcklin's isle is creepy but fascinating. I always wonder whats behind the cypresses. It was commisioned by a young widow who sought the answer in the death of her husband. Masterpiece!

  • @HandattheHelm
    @HandattheHelm 6 лет назад +15

    What an evocative, incredible piece. Like a lucid, or maybe a fever, dream. Ravishingly beautiful.

  • @athiefinthenight6894
    @athiefinthenight6894 3 года назад +18

    "Never step between the fire and a man praying", he cautioned.
    Schultes began quietly to laugh. The shadows on the tipi wall were so much larger than the men beneath them. It was as if a gallery of spirits were dancing.

  • @SunRavenMusic
    @SunRavenMusic 8 лет назад +67

    First time I've heard this and there is a thunderstorm outside, fits perfectly.

  • @Dorjejinpa
    @Dorjejinpa 8 лет назад +614

    I hate to use words like "hauntingly beautiful" but what can I say? Rachmaninoff is at the very top my list

    • @BeckyMesser
      @BeckyMesser 8 лет назад +18

      That's the perfect phrase to describe Rachmaninoff :)

    • @Kindacutehuh
      @Kindacutehuh 7 лет назад +15

      You could say beautifully haunting!

    • @magnuschristianssen8999
      @magnuschristianssen8999 6 лет назад +6

      Yeah, you can't really use that term much, like when a husband turns to his wife and mutters "hauntingly beautiful" she slaps him. I suppose you could refer to an old Castle as "hauntingly beautiful" :D

    • @FaisalAzizFizzy20000
      @FaisalAzizFizzy20000 6 лет назад +15

      * top of my liszt

    • @DBEdwards
      @DBEdwards 6 лет назад +8

      Rachmaninoff. Say the name and I tremble for the majesty, profound feeling and sheer romantic poetry no other can duplicate. His piano concerti are unsurpassed in the annals of romantic music.

  • @MrExplosion449
    @MrExplosion449 Год назад +10

    It's always a treat to hear Rachmaninov

  • @reykhan233
    @reykhan233 2 года назад +469

    Saw this painting. Now I remember my promise.

    • @AlexBrutalin
      @AlexBrutalin 10 месяцев назад +7

      “Island of the Dead” (German: Die Toteninsel) is the most famous painting by the Swiss symbolist artist Arnold Böcklin

    • @AshesOfLaurel
      @AshesOfLaurel 9 месяцев назад +9

      @@AlexBrutalinit’s an insider joke

    • @yddet4369
      @yddet4369 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@AshesOfLaurelwhats it refrencing?

    • @AshesOfLaurel
      @AshesOfLaurel 8 месяцев назад +18

      @@yddet4369 a game about phenomena, existentialism and similar themes called signals. In that game the protagonist Elster and a human called Ariane volunteer for a space reconnaissance mission to find an inhabitable planet. Simply put they do not have enough resources to make it. Ariane falls in love with Elster, Ariana did know that they wouldn’t make it (which makes it even more tragic). After a certain time, when Elster also finds out that they won’t find a planet to survive, Ariana makes her promise to kill her. Since if she wouldn’t kill Ariane, Ariane would suffer a slow and terrible death from leaking radiation of the reactor of the ship. The game itself sets in after this, the player has to make his way through a lot of bs (why and how isn’t really important to the story) if the player did well enough, Elster will remember the promise and kill her loved one, simultaneously dying on her side.

    • @AshesOfLaurel
      @AshesOfLaurel 8 месяцев назад +10

      Ah yes I forgot, Ariane drew the toteninsel multiple times whilst on that space ship

  • @StarSeekerTarot
    @StarSeekerTarot Год назад +23

    The first time I saw this painting was actually in Animal Crossing. I'm so grateful I found it. It's so mysterious and stunning. 💜

    • @Nick-uq6ie
      @Nick-uq6ie Год назад +5

      i saw this picture in Signalis
      Games are really art!😍

  • @lolagagginw812lol7
    @lolagagginw812lol7 Год назад +143

    I heard about this song when I first played the game SIGNALIS by rose-engine. I highly recommend it and it introduced me to one Rachmaninov's works!

  • @MrFuchsiamagic
    @MrFuchsiamagic 9 лет назад +51

    This piece of music is often neglected and in my opinion is the best music Rachmaninov ever wrote (after Piano Concerto no 3 of course). Inspired by Arnold Bocklin's surreal painting, this work evokes such wonder and melancholy as to bring tears to the eyes in some parts. I first heard this on the radio about thirty years ago and was immediately captivated. I have never heard it played on the air since. A very under-rated piece which deserves more appreciation. I will never tire of listening to it.

    • @finnsteur5639
      @finnsteur5639 9 лет назад +5

      +Chris Martin After piano concerto n°2 of course.

    • @ranwanguva
      @ranwanguva 9 лет назад +2

      Agreed~

    • @TheVaughan5
      @TheVaughan5 9 лет назад +2

      +Chris Martin Yes, one of my favourites as well but "The Bells" is even better, one of the most extraordinary compositions ever IMO.

    • @sbeunis
      @sbeunis 7 лет назад

      "The bells", thats a nice definition of piano concerto nr. 2, his best.

    • @andrewpetersen5272
      @andrewpetersen5272 4 года назад +1

      Well about everything he penned was gold. Cello sonata, Second Symphony, Symphonic Dances, St. John, Vespers, The Bells .
      There is no before or after with Rachmaninoff.

  • @christianvennemann9008
    @christianvennemann9008 Год назад +23

    14:57 My favorite moment of this piece. To me, it represents finally reaching the isle, stepping out of the boat, and setting foot into the dark unknown that is the Isle of the Dead. Rachmaninoff was such a master of musical suspense and buildup 😍😍

    • @LordSkeleta
      @LordSkeleta Год назад +1

      I get why this is you're favourite part, it is mine too.

  • @SamuraiPie8111
    @SamuraiPie8111 5 лет назад +105

    I listened to this song a lot after the death of my father, who was taken suddenly from me. The music made me think of him moving on to the afterlife. It helped with closure but the sadness will always be there.

    • @madeleinedartois4689
      @madeleinedartois4689 5 лет назад +3

      here is a hug

    • @renamunich1
      @renamunich1 5 лет назад +1

      but he will always be with you!

    • @serkratos1216
      @serkratos1216 4 года назад

      I'm sorry for your loss, he may rest in peace.

    • @philmixer
      @philmixer 4 года назад

      That is one magnificent piece of music and I defy anybody not to have a lump in the throat or tear in the eye at the end of it.

    • @Twisted_drip
      @Twisted_drip Год назад

      I love you. Hope you’re doing okay

  • @Zomblard
    @Zomblard 6 лет назад +19

    Rarely have I experienced such a forceful, life-marking, deep piece of artwork.

  • @MrSebboxxx
    @MrSebboxxx 8 лет назад +11

    The music and the painting are an amazing combination ... this music and the painting can improve imagination more than any movie ...

  • @Bulvasaurio
    @Bulvasaurio 2 года назад +91

    Wow, i listened this as a child, now that i had played a Game by a german developler called signalis, i returned to this Masterpiece

  • @ApiolJoe
    @ApiolJoe 4 года назад +42

    I don' tlisten to "classical music", and just decided to have a listen for god know what reason. That was freakin' dope, so intense, so powerful.

    • @kingkeefage
      @kingkeefage 4 года назад +1

      I'm glad you did, but why are you putting it in quotations? I feel like you're trying to say it wasn't music before you listened to it.

    • @ApiolJoe
      @ApiolJoe 4 года назад +7

      @@kingkeefage I'm using quotations because I'm not sure if this music belongs to the classical genre or another genre like baroque or any other I may not know about, and I don't want to be the guy who calls "classical music" anything played with an orchestra.
      Not sure why you're attacking me over trying to be careful with how I'm refering to this music, maybe you should relax a bit.
      Have a nice day.

    • @kingkeefage
      @kingkeefage 4 года назад +3

      @@ApiolJoe 😂 I mean no offense, but you have some fragile sensibilities if you felt attacked. I simply asked a question and elaborated on my reasoning behind asking it by telling you my initial interpretation. This is Classical. It is from the Classical period. Mozart didn't really get to take part in the Baroque era. I believe he died just as it was getting popular. Though, if anyone tells you that you're ignorant because you don't know the proper terms for those styles, they're the idiots. People who are trained to know are aware that people who don't follow it won't know the differences.

    • @oleflogger6828
      @oleflogger6828 3 года назад +2

      "Dope"? What the Hell does that mean?

    • @halzander8573
      @halzander8573 3 года назад +2

      @@ApiolJoe Way after Baroque. Baroque is from about 1600 to 1750. Baroque does not play with emotions like this. This is from the impressionist period, around 1908.

  • @EsotericNostalgist
    @EsotericNostalgist 5 лет назад +32

    Classical Music of highest quality.

  • @niclas7300
    @niclas7300 2 года назад +22

    I don't know if anyone noticed this already, but at 20:33 you can hear the theme of liszt's dance of the death which is a nice touch

    • @llllllllllll878
      @llllllllllll878 2 года назад +2

      Thank you for pointing that out!

    • @Sandalath
      @Sandalath Год назад +9

      I am pretty sure it has been mentioned somewhere, but that is a part (the beginning) of the dies irae theme (mass for the dead) and it appears again in this and other similarly themed pieces! nice catch! :)

    • @santoshjanakiraman8907
      @santoshjanakiraman8907 9 месяцев назад

      @@SandalathTo a tiste andii, isle of the dead must resemble moon's spawn.

    • @Sandalath
      @Sandalath 9 месяцев назад

      @@santoshjanakiraman8907 Hah! true that! or Kharkanas even ;)

  • @erikbrowne8341
    @erikbrowne8341 3 года назад +9

    Been listening to classical music since I was 7 why have I never heard this before? it is fricken fantastic! thank you for Loading this epic masterpiece!

  • @cainen6355
    @cainen6355 4 года назад +26

    That image of the isle is damn perfect. That's actually some dark haunting stuff. Such a creepy atmosphere in every aspect.

    • @nickolausafon5458
      @nickolausafon5458 3 года назад +5

      Yes. Perhaps it’s the form of the imagery. A natural structure slowly crumbling into eternal nature, the ruins of human culture amid natural and subtle forces.

  • @paulmarquardt6881
    @paulmarquardt6881 2 года назад +11

    This as a whole is an absolute masterpiece, but I especially enjoy the build-up in the beginning!

  • @MrAam1964
    @MrAam1964 4 года назад +14

    Indeed a masterpiece of romantic and impressionistic music! The interpretation by the Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra directed by Termikanov is an excellent recent version while the interpretation by Rachmaninov himself is a historical document of first importance to consider strongly.

  • @FranciscoCastaneda-ix3bw
    @FranciscoCastaneda-ix3bw Год назад +16

    Rachmaninov nos lleva de paseo a la isla de los difuntos en la barca de su misteriosa música, entre apacible y trágica pero, invariablemente, plena de poesía.

  • @christianfleetwood1735
    @christianfleetwood1735 7 лет назад +14

    For me, this piece of music encapsulates the Romantics. It belongs alongside the works of Byron, Shelley and Wollstonecraft. Marvellous.

  • @redbirdairways5568
    @redbirdairways5568 5 лет назад +16

    I first heard this played by the Cleveland orchestra at one of their concerts, and it was incredible! A really beautiful piece!

    • @oleflogger6828
      @oleflogger6828 4 года назад

      I wonder if Dr. Szell conducted. What a great era that was for Cleveland!

  • @cjlkicks
    @cjlkicks Год назад +612

    *THINGS HAVE LEARNT TO WALK THAT OUGHT TO CRAWL*

    • @finnegan6464
      @finnegan6464 10 месяцев назад

      @roberttevault9794or demonic space lesbians

    • @Man_of_Tears
      @Man_of_Tears 9 месяцев назад +13

      And the milk in my fridge

    • @uhoh7545
      @uhoh7545 9 месяцев назад +18

      And the great holes are digged 😂

    • @annoyingassbean3070
      @annoyingassbean3070 9 месяцев назад

      like my gloves?????

    • @Bluecho4
      @Bluecho4 8 месяцев назад +27

      *GREAT HOLES SECRETLY ARE DIGGED WHERE EARTH'S PORES OUGHT TO SUFFICE.*

  • @lamusicadililia5737
    @lamusicadililia5737 Месяц назад +1

    Quando da bambina ascoltavo questo pezzo su dischi a 78 giri, ricordo che ne rimanevo terrorizzata, è non avevo ancora visto l’immagina del quadro che lo ispirò! Incredibile, ancora oggi , pur apprezzandone la bellezza, questa musica mi sconvolge…😢

  • @nfal445
    @nfal445 6 лет назад +10

    This piece seriously feels like you hang on the edge waiting for the climax through the whole song.

  • @tommypayne1980
    @tommypayne1980 6 лет назад +7

    I'm new to listening to stuff like this but if you close your eyes and listen with headphones on , this piece of music transports you to an different world which lets you imagine all sorts of things based on the notes in the music. I could listen to this type of music when I want to get away from the world we live in now and relax abit.

  • @utavtakt9361
    @utavtakt9361 3 года назад +5

    I can just close my eyes and Rachmaninov paints the most amazing masterpieces....

  • @mindfulnessinspiration8548
    @mindfulnessinspiration8548 4 года назад +6

    Thank you for creating and sharing this. It is very beautiful and soothing.
    2020 has been a challenge for all of us. I know, for some it's been more challenging than others. But I hope, whoever is reading this, things are changing for the better for you and your loved ones. These circumstances aren't permanent, they are temporary. Keep pushing forward, you will see the light soon. Always remind yourself in times of adversity that 'This too shall pass'. Try to stay positive and take care of yourself first, in order to take care of your loved ones. A big virtual hug to you.

  • @gugungwenya7819
    @gugungwenya7819 8 лет назад +179

    That picture compliments this music in a perfect way

    • @Guill0rtiz
      @Guill0rtiz 8 лет назад +64

      The painting inspired the music.

    • @thdbzok
      @thdbzok 8 лет назад +1

      What is the name of this painting please ?

    • @dannysnothere6230
      @dannysnothere6230 8 лет назад

      that picture is what the song is based on

    • @aeracs
      @aeracs 8 лет назад +16

      Literally Isle of the dead. Interesting history, check out the wikipedia article on it

    • @Aleph-Noll
      @Aleph-Noll 8 лет назад +1

      lol its the other way around

  • @jeremyw7215
    @jeremyw7215 9 лет назад +79

    Haunting. I keep picturing this in a ballet for some reason. Beautiful.

    • @themysticmaestro1287
      @themysticmaestro1287 9 лет назад +11

      jeremy w It would be a beautiful ballet

    • @filiusmeus8966
      @filiusmeus8966 9 лет назад +12

      +jeremy w a ballet about the underworld of greek mythology would be absolutely incredible in my opinion, if it were done in the Romantic style

    • @themysticmaestro1287
      @themysticmaestro1287 9 лет назад +10

      Yes it would be a beautiful ballet.

    • @GoldandAppel
      @GoldandAppel 7 лет назад +3

      jeremy w That's a good idea.

    • @wakka737
      @wakka737 5 лет назад +1

      this is a ballet now!! sf ballet just did it it was great

  • @AndreCaronCaron
    @AndreCaronCaron 9 лет назад +45

    Lugubres et magnifiques pages musicales. Un autre grand génie.

    • @adullday3296
      @adullday3296 6 лет назад

      Andre Caron
      Auriez vous des conseils?

  • @Nekolet
    @Nekolet Месяц назад +4

    I think signalis made the "second life" to this picture and song. A lot of fans of this game came here to hear the original. I think its really cool.

  • @danydonatto
    @danydonatto 8 лет назад +19

    Ah Rahmaninov, what a beautiful music I have heared

    • @cookiemonsterdayz
      @cookiemonsterdayz 4 года назад +1

      It is so.. powerful, so magnificent.... I can't find the right words. Let's just listen to this masterpiece.

  • @matthiasfsa
    @matthiasfsa 7 лет назад +10

    I must say, I fell in love with the painting. I belong to the isle of the dead, soon we will be reunited.

    • @mikhail8450
      @mikhail8450 5 лет назад +1

      United, not reunited. Shut up

    • @famprima
      @famprima 3 года назад

      #dramalama

  • @ElectronicHouseFlash
    @ElectronicHouseFlash 10 лет назад +13

    I just love how around 9:48 the music quiets down, almost feels like it's slowing down with descending chromatic chords, and a sprinkling of a sinister feeling (e.g., the brass section)

    • @jojoletyran447
      @jojoletyran447 5 лет назад +2

      I try not play LoL anymore
      Even in a rachmaninoff song i find a teemo
      Leave me aloooone 😭

  • @unederniereetaulitcitation1693
    @unederniereetaulitcitation1693 3 года назад +4

    Merci, cela m'a permis de découvrir Arnold Bocklin.

  • @kederd
    @kederd 9 лет назад +20

    I sat in a dark room and stared at the painting as I listened to the entire masterpiece and now I can taste colors

    • @cookiemonsterdayz
      @cookiemonsterdayz 4 года назад +1

      Dude. That's deep^^

    • @jaydenhoward8670
      @jaydenhoward8670 4 года назад +2

      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @barbaramouk8374
      @barbaramouk8374 2 года назад +2

      I know what you mean. When I listen to the beginning of Vaughn Williams's 5th Symphony, I smell salt water and feel fog.

  • @theonewithoutidentity
    @theonewithoutidentity 3 года назад +14

    Can't believe I'm hearing this piece now. I can already recall at least 3 distinct modern orchestral works inspired by this things specifically. Must have been really influential.

  • @williamhicks2299
    @williamhicks2299 5 лет назад +7

    What a wonderful performance of this glorious work! ANDREW Davis (not Colin!) has to be one of the most under appreciated maestri; everything I hear him do is exemplary in musicality, atmosphere, pacing, and reveals him to be a first class musician and conductor.

  • @yusuralu2260
    @yusuralu2260 Год назад +6

    この絵画みたいなのが神秘的で吸い込まれる✨

  • @leonardo9313
    @leonardo9313 5 лет назад +60

    From 5:17 until 5:59 is like a trip to paradise. Then, from 6:00 to 6:58 is like the return, a slow and sad goodbye.
    I think what's makes this music so beautiful is the high's and low's, like the good, happy moments and the sad/bad ones that life will give us through the time. As i see, this song is about the full lifetime, thing we'll see in the begining of our death, i mean, when we'll be arriving the Isle of Dead.

    • @paulbeard4218
      @paulbeard4218 3 года назад +3

      And hopefully an eternal one with our Creator .

  • @Jazgodel
    @Jazgodel 6 лет назад +8

    The light scattered through the dark cypresses, mixing with the shadows cast by the grey clouds above the island. We arrived the shore with a feeling of awe and dread, not knowing that awaiting us was a haunting dance with the dead.

  • @block36079
    @block36079 Год назад +80

    Die Toteninsel by 1000 Eyes is a nice rendition of this.

    • @meowmeowchan1724
      @meowmeowchan1724 Год назад +7

      glad that I'm not the only signals fan here

    • @LifeAwaits
      @LifeAwaits Год назад +3

      @@meowmeowchan1724 me too

  • @200m-n7u
    @200m-n7u Год назад +2

    Music is beyond words,and it expresses itself In a way words can't .

  • @Morale_Booster
    @Morale_Booster 5 лет назад +6

    Listening to this piece, I was swept away and read to by the music. It tells you a story so vivid you can almost hear the words

  • @suzannelabrie3523
    @suzannelabrie3523 8 лет назад +17

    L'Ile des morts est aussi le titre d'une peinture. L'image choisie ICI :: L'Ile des Morts (version 1883) de l'artiste Arnold Böcklin.
    Conservée à l'Alte Nationalgalerie de Berlin. --Représente une île au coucher du soleil, vers laquelle se dirige une embarcation conduite par Charon, le guide des morts. À ses côtés dans le bateau, un défunt debout, dans son linceul regarde vers la crique dans laquelle va entrer la barque.
    * Il en existerait trois autres versions dont 2 peintes en 1880 (conservées à Bâle et à New-York) et une peinte en 1886 (conservée à Leipzig)

    • @brodricdesaissac2840
      @brodricdesaissac2840 3 года назад +1

      Rachmaninov a justement composé ce morceau après avoir vu l’une de ces peintures de Böklin (une version qui aura été détruite postérieurement si je ne m’abuse)
      On raconte que Rachmaninov, ayant vu une autre version de ce tableau, aurait dit être déçu par celle-ci, qu’il n’aurait sûrement pas composé de morceau s’il avait d’abord vu cette autre version.

  • @bahldr01
    @bahldr01 8 лет назад +46

    Heard this for the first time this evening. Thank you.

  • @alexmur6411
    @alexmur6411 2 года назад +8

    I just started listening to classical music at 25, and never felt so alive. Wow I can’t believe this music existed all these years.

  • @fidelcastro9112
    @fidelcastro9112 4 года назад +38

    Quite possibly my favorite orchestral composition. Beautiful, dark, and tragic.
    3:40
    5:58
    6:42
    8:02
    8:46
    11:31
    12:59
    14:18
    16:28
    19:18
    20:22 sounds so beautiful, yet haunting. It feels as if I'm saying a final goodbye to all those I have lost in this life.

    • @pedrofuster9161
      @pedrofuster9161 4 года назад +2

      Thank you for adding those gateway moments

    • @lanimal.nokturn
      @lanimal.nokturn 4 года назад +2

      thank you

    • @Igor-my6ml
      @Igor-my6ml 4 года назад +3

      Uh man, I was all horrified by that sentence. Because I know exactly what you mean.

    • @Cineastre
      @Cineastre 4 года назад +2

      Thanks

    • @californigirl
      @californigirl 4 года назад

      Vocalise and Vespers are two others .

  • @JayRappa
    @JayRappa 7 лет назад +12

    Such a mind-opening piece to listen to...

  • @lilimadi7070
    @lilimadi7070 2 года назад +5

    Cette œuvre est sombre et magistrale , je ne me lasse pas d’écouter

  • @Pauly421
    @Pauly421 8 лет назад +3581

    Ahhhh the good side of youtube. Great music, nice friendly reflective comment sections, all the suggested videos are more orchestral and classical pieces with nice reflective commenters. Yeah :)
    All is well :)
    EDIT: Sheeeit that's a lotta likes haha

    • @iantbailey
      @iantbailey 8 лет назад +96

      +Paul McDonagh "Show more" >clicks >"All is well :)" That alone made me smile.

    • @windstorm1000
      @windstorm1000 8 лет назад +8

      yes, that can happen--but not often enough--we can do better.

    • @one-thirdofakind7138
      @one-thirdofakind7138 8 лет назад +101

      Even on the good side I see some bad comment chains, I got here from Devil's Trill Sonata, and there is a comment that says "I'm glad the average person like me can access beautiful music like this." (more or less) And someone got PISSED over him saying "average" and went on a rant about how we take our "privilege" for granted.

    • @Pauly421
      @Pauly421 8 лет назад +13

      Brandon Miner ugh

    • @adorno_gang37
      @adorno_gang37 8 лет назад +47

      +Paul McDonagh as someone who listens pretty much every genre... I can confirm this is definitely the good side of youtube :D

  • @Tobal588
    @Tobal588 4 года назад +198

    I remember when I was listen to this so high that in the first crescendo I felt I was going to die. With that being said, I have to say that it was a wonderful experience.

    • @adamgulley1399
      @adamgulley1399 3 года назад +6

      😂

    • @brennentaggart3291
      @brennentaggart3291 3 года назад +3

      That's awesome

    • @voraciousreader3341
      @voraciousreader3341 3 года назад +4

      Yet how amazing would it be if you could experience music like that without the aid of a drug, as I do....it must be a pretty hollow life, huh?

    • @brennentaggart3291
      @brennentaggart3291 3 года назад +3

      @@voraciousreader3341 FACTS you have a great point. I can FLY with the music, without the drugs

    • @pasadena2595
      @pasadena2595 3 года назад

      Ordet - forever