Stravinsky: Petroesjka / Petrouchka Concertgebouw Orchestra Live concert HD
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
- More concerts available on our website: www.avrotros.nl...
Koninklijk Concertgebouworkest o.l.v. Andris Nelsons
Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra
Stravinsky: Petroesjka / Petrouchka / Petrushka
Opgenomen: 16 november 2011, Concertgebouw Amsterdam
I'm just here for academic purposes, and I ended up liking Stravinsky's music.
Ikr, and I cant draw
HHAAHHAHAAHAHAHAHHAHAHA magsearch ka sa google!!!
anong drawing nyo?
pakopya
@@angelicaandal8725 Tom and Jerry HAHAHAHA
For people who have no clue as to what the story is it goes like this. At the shrovtide fair in St. Petersburg a magician brings three puppets to life. The first is Petrushka the clown, second is the ballerina and third is a moor. Petrushka loves the ballerina but the ballerina prefers the moor. They have a big scuffle and they leave the theatre. The moor kills Petrushka with his scimitar and Petrushka’s ghost haunts both the moor and the magician.
THANX FOR YOUR COMMENTS
Thanx for make me a little lees ignorant
Explications d'un musicologue très averti.Je rechercherai dirigé par "mon cher Lenny" ! oui, quand je regarde, et je ne m'en lasse pas, c'est comme ça! Merci de Votre Attention.
Thank you
how about the ballerina though :/ ?
i spent 6 years of my life searching for this. i'm 16. that means i spent 3/8 of my life looking for this. THIS is how iconic Stravinsky is. I listened to it once on a sitcom and I've been searching for this ever since.
Glad you found it
which sitcom was it that featured a Petrushka piece?
This is how music can change your life. I hope you never stop searching for the music that moves you and gets into your heart and mind.
You guys really take long time finding things.
@Robert Post Holland Toen ik 16 was (44 jaar gelden) studeerde mijn zwager op het conservatorium (orgel, trombone) en moest hij dit analyseren. Vloekend en mopperend zat hij in onze huiskamer. Ik zei toen:"man wat zeur je toch dit is prachtig".
What a magnificent score, changing 20th century music forever. Thanks Igor.
You’re welcome.
Yes, indeed. When you follow the score with the performance, you realize how beautifully the tapestry is woven together from its various fabrics and threads and likewise visualize the genius and brilliance behind its composition. But how the musicians play the complex mixed meters and cross-rhythms so perfectly is beyond me. I wonder how the 1911 musicians reacted upon first seeing their parts.
A masterpiece!!!!!
Игорь сделал много таких
This music is pure magic, Stravinsky's genius was different...
God bless all people who feel real joy hearing music.
Hello! I want to share with you my symphonic poem! I hope you will enjoy it! My best wishes for you ruclips.net/video/FtgOpfUirT4/видео.html
Real music at that -- not today's pop version .
Fr. I love orchestral music!
23:00 is such a brilliant pure childish part with that naive melody fully embraced by the orchestra and those echoes on the horns rising up and down at a distance. Gives me the chills every time.
yes i agree with you
L’Amerique. Pleure. par Les Cawboys Fringan
It's a Russian traditional song "Vdol po Piterskoi"
@@filippkarandeev139 Hey, thanks!
I love how incredibly excited the orchestra looks. Very high energy performance.
The part that starts around 18:40 ! The percussion is playing in a completely different rhythm from everybody else. So Stravinsky! There's a lot of that in this score & others of his pieces. These rhythmic complexities are SO beautifully organic - they're not forced onto the music but seem to be essential to it. A few years ago I attended a performance of The Rite of Spring and had a seat where I could really see the musicians. The rhythms were just insane.
This is the 2,345 time I have heard this piece and it never fails to blow my mind. This has always been my favorite piece. It is the most exciting, bright, alive piece written in the 20th century. I have no idea how Stravinsky came up with this new way of communicating in so short a time. I know that every player in the orchestra thinks they have the best part--the sign of a great orchestrator. How wonderful it is to see so many experts collaborating to create this amazing performance. There is no piece more electric than this...I know because my brain is fried.
This is the best comment I've read :-)
I've always thought of Tchaikovsky as the composer that makes sure that every player is having fun.
@@steftrando That is the sign or a great orchestrator. Tchaikovsky was certainly that.
Understandable.. the piece is such a towering masterpiece!
And he was only 29 at that time.
After you have listened to all the orchestral masterpieces of the 20th century you realize that this is the prize winner. It is the brightest, freshest, most lyrical and engaging musical journey you will ever undertake. I listen to it whenever I need my battery recharged.
Just your opinion. There is no prize winner among the master composers' works. What about Firebird? Le Sacre? Debussy La Mer? Bartok Concerto for Orchestra. Debussy Pelleas et Melisande, Messiaen Turangalila Symphony? Etc.
@@djmotise To each his own. I am sticking with Petrushka.
@@stephenjablonsky1941 The king is, in my humble opinion, The Rite of Spring, but this is also marvelous. Stravinsky was a true genius.
Yes.. an extraordinary masterpiece from the 1st to the final note
And holst the planets are all epic..I cant pick one because they are all great
Didn’t anybody else notice that in 6:07 the air conditioning turned the page of Emily Beynon’s music (principal flutist) and she just kept playing? Amazing!
ruclips.net/video/1EQxezURSe4/видео.html
OMG!!! 😲
Who knows, maybe the AC was hired as a page turner
🎉hisvisbpeteouchks my favoritevpiecby stravinsky❤im 🎉qkinf junior to see about
His teeth to wulf first thing in the morning lybia his flooding 10 ooo dead
I see motionless hair, I think it's a friend's hand turning the page.
Emily Beynon and the rest of the flute section are truly a gift to music. What a fabulous concert, I love the ensemble's interpretation.
스트라빈스키 페트루슈카
00:00 Tableau I
05:20 Le Tour de passe-passe
07:00 Danse russe
09:45~14:04 Tableau II - Chez Petrouchka
이중화음과 이중박자로 떠들썩한 분위기를 살려냄
0:19
Best trumpets and bassoons, clarinets, oboes, flutes and cor anglais I ever heard playing this piece. Wonderful all round. Captures the joy/tragedy of Petrouchka and the fabulous, exotic,russian, playful, virtuoso orchestration by Stravinsky. Still the most joyous piece in the whole orchestral repertoire.
Perhaps Stravinsky's finest composition.
Agreed.
Agreed; this was much better than the LSO's performance
@@nimeshsingh4943 LSO with Abbado conducting?
That cor anglais is the MVP
Incredible trumpet playing. 17:01 - Ballerina's Dance, 17:47 - Waltz (pt 1), 19:22 - Waltz (pt 2)
Ryan Spencer thank you for tagging these! I have an audition coming up that i need to practice! These solos are included in the excerpts
It's Giuliano Sommerhalder. No more words needed.
Yasssss proud as a trumpet player
I guess the conductor really liked that being a trumpets himself.
Thanks for your recognition for the trumpet section. Most did not see it.
The conductor is so joyful, I love it!
What a fantastic piece,and superbly played.The joy of music has returned to me at last!
what an astonishing work.....such a great gem of music ...an exotic experience...
Best Petrushka interpretation vor a long thime.Bravo bravi Andris Nelsons.bravo conserthebou
That conductor was having so much fun! Love it!
If you had nothing to do but wave your arms and dance on a podium while 80 brilliant musicians played great music, you would have fun too.
Fantastische uitvoering door een laaiend enthousiaste dirigent die het beste orkest ter wereld leidt. Stravinksy op zijn allerbest !
Q😊~/
The energy the brilliant young Nelsons communicates to the ensemble...simply breathtaking. A perfect Stravinsky machine. The force! The speed! The intonation! What an orchestra!
You are sooo right!!!!!
this piece sounds much like christmas to me.
listening to it always makes me cheerful.
So true!!
Don't think I've ever seen a conductor so happy to conduct a piece of Stravinsky... hahahah. And then that cue a 8:47. Hahahahah... XD
Wow! Last night I saw MTT at the Davies in San Francisco, but I agree with you and the others that the conductor was brilliant! I had forgotten how much I love Petrouchka.
Bro. Mark Mance, OFM Cap. Same!
Saul Knights If I we’re in the orchestra, I’d know exactly what he wanted.
Well cuz Danse Russe was a happy one
Bro. Mark Mance, OFM Cap. Огонь
what a brilliant performance! From "Rite of Spring" onward, its clear what a profound influence Stravinsky's music had on film composers like John Williams and Jerry Goldsmith, this is priceless stuff that continues to inform our musical landscape a century later.
Mi viene da piangere a pensare cosa un gruppo di persone possa creare (grazie al genio di un musicista come Stravinsky). Io la scorgo qui la divinità.
Love Stravinsky, and this performance is marvelous!
It's amazing how he put the orchestra to full use
So wonderful! Stravinsky's dynamic and lively Petrushka is definitely one of my top favourite classics. I love it! Great musical art.
For me it's the same. Stirs me up from deep within and gives me countless shivers every time I listen to it.
Thank you Master Stravinsky!
The flute parts give me so much of serotonin 😍🔥
Fantastic!! Have loved this piece from early childhood - My parents got the privilege to actually see Stravinski direct Petrouchka in Chicago.
one of the best piece in the human history.
Wie thaxkekeno (vorhaben oder tiefgruendig) und guenstig die Musik ist, Leuten sollen erkennen; es geniessen!
My number 1 favorite ballet ever!!!!
Not only is this an amazing piece for the reasons already mentioned, but there are insane polyrhythms!
Полиритмия, исполненная высокопрофессионально!
After hearing this Stravinsky become my fav composer.
A joy to hear this amazing piece performed and conducted exactly how it should be.
I love how it's so unpredictable.
Exactly!!!
Super-clear conducting and all totally engaged! Thrilling!
Exsultante!!!!
The begining of the first mov. feels like a spright morning rising in the woods, full of birds dancing and water spraying down a river. I can imagine this as the mood of any kind of natural landscape in a merry morning. It could even be the mood of a rising dawn in a snowy country. And it also fits so well at a brazilian morning in a field, a river, a waterfall...😎🤗
wow
tnanks for the idea
@@baby3361 😊🇧🇷 Glad you like it.🇧🇷
what a poetic appr.!
@@arjanterveen9534 🙃
What a lively, engaging, HAPPY performance! This is going on my "favorites"listing permanently! So many orchestral performances these days are so dead and tired. Not this one.
I LOVE the sheer joy, especially at the almost-before-the-end part
IMO it is with Petrushka that Stravisnky really hits his stride. Thank God for such a wonderfully joyous genius.
I love the smiles on the faces of the orchestra. Brilliant playing and masterful conducting. Bravo.
Without a doubt, this is the most joyous composition of all classical music.
Oh how little you know of the repertoire.
and brilliant& swinging& colorful& explosive & original .. what a masterpiece
The conductor is super enthusiastic! Such beautiful playing as well. I love this performance.
Definitely one of my favorite performances of Petrushka I've heard yet! The conductor is one of my favorite parts of the entire thing. He's so full of energy and it's awesome.
The first part of this symphony is one of the gladdest pieces of music I have ever heard
When a conductor gives a clear down beat and communicates, anything is possible.
I agree. Some conductors (or most) do only one and not both.
+Roberto Cruz II Andris Nelsons is a Boss. Amazing conductor of Russian music!
RATHER, IT IS THE UP BEATS WHICH GIVE LIFT TO THE MUSIC.
2020: There is a big difference in a" Down Beat"in Europe and one in US! It's slower like an
...arpeggio-at-ed... chord.... compared marching band last note from a percussion Drum!
@@blancasusanamariles9891 conductor is a guide not an abstract artist to figure out.
wow , this is the 1st time i have heard this . love it .
Ya know petrushka dies at the end, right?
Ya
I loved the flautist at 6:00. She is so a wonderfull player..and quite nice..also...
jchenergy The second flute player seems to thinks so too. She appears to enjoy it as much as us.
Checkmate1138 no
Emily Beynon 😍
One of my favourite pieces of music, and this performance is fantastic.
special thanks to the recording artists. even when playing this piece I couldn't hear all the layers and single instruments so clearly as it's shown here. mesmerised!
Sehr lebhafte und zugleich präzise Aufführung dieses anspruchsvollen Meisterwerkes. Das Orchester ist zweifellos eines der fünf besten Europas.
bellissima esecuzione.una dellecomposizioni piu belle del novecento.grande stravinsky
Wonderful performance of the masterpiece by Stravinsky.... I 've got chills and bumps all over... why ? Go figure. Thank you so much Avrotros and RUclips. You are the sunshine of our lives !!!!!!!
In my humble opinion I think the RCO is one of the best orchestra's in the world. Not mere technically but also regarding musical coherency and sound, the latter which I find incredible noble and warm...the acoustics of the concert hall alone is one of the finest in the world! Thank you so much for posting this remarkable rendition of this wonderful work of Stravinsky.
I can only fully subscribe this statement!!!
Good thing that the RCO is widely recognized as one of the world's best orchestras, not just you.
Got to love the conductor's face at 6:54!
B E A U T I F U L.....Excellent Orchestra....so symphatetic conductor!
This is SUCH and exciting performance! Great orchestra, great conductor. You can't pull this off without every musician onstage paying complete attention at very moment. Nelsons has done some superb concerts with the Boston Symphony.
thank you for posting this, Stravinsky's music is what got me into classical when I was younger and has remained my favorite composer since
Exectly the same with me. Now I'm 14yo and the first piece I've ever heard was le sacre du printemps 2 years ago.
Love Stravinsky. First time I heard The Firebird in 1970 it was a Damascus moment for me. Petrouchka was the 2nd piece I listened to. Couldn't believe that such music existed. This is a wonderful rendition. Ecstasy to have been in the audience.
Please tell me you've heard Rite of Spring! It's Stravinsky's most craziest and most technically challenging piece he's ever written.
I really enjoy the colors in Stravinsky's orchestra. It has that exciting yet delicate legacy of Ravel.
OMG I LIKE TO THANK THIS GREAT MAN FOR HIS TALENT BECAUSE MY NAME IS PATRISCHKA AND I'M 60 YRS OLD AND DIDN'T THKE A ENTRY IN WHERE MY NAME COMES FROM .........OMG I DO NOW THANK YOU IGOR THANK YOU❤️❤️❣️❣️❣️❣️🥰🥰🥰🥰
An absolutely wonderful performance of this masterpiece. Stravinsky had a real feel for the ballet! Bravo!!
It's not the orchestra, it's the composer!
Stravinsky has to be my favourite composer hands down!!
saameeeeee I play quite a few of his pieces on piano, even though they're EXTREMELY hard I still love playing them, though I can't play them perfectly
I listened to this as an infant...I was horrified by it, but transfixed...surely one of the reasons I'm so involved in music today...and am drawn to bartok, ligety, heavy metal, etc.
Stravinsky was a true master!!
One of the greatest.
There is a bust of S. at the Santa Fe Opera.
Stravinski was a genious without any doubt
A superb interpretation by a great orchestra and conductor! Loved it!!
I'm never getting bored when I listen to this performance
Господи, это чистый экстаз, на русском танце у меня все нутро содрогается от волнения 😅❤ браво оркестру за исполнение… не представляю, что было бы со мной слушай я это наяву 😅
love that the conductor shows every beat which helped me see the overall structure. loved the sounds of the instruments. they each were really full, winds, strings, brass, percussion. nice balance and interplay. great performance.
Truly original,solid quality & part of the new thinking and expression in the 20th century. All the musicians are challenged, as this work is not easy to do well .
В двух местах услышала лажу ) а в общем супер!!!!!!!! По сто раз готова слушать Петрушку Стравинского!
He was the greatest composer. I like this even more than The Rite of Spring.
I wouldn't say that, but it's amazing
This is one of the most lively performances of Petrouchka I've heard. I hate it when conductors try to make it their own and mess with the tempo, playing certain passages twice as slow, or vice versa; not the case here.
True. I totally agree with you
have you ever seen the score?😂
@@lyolevrich No, I can't read music
“I hate when conductors try to make it…..not the case here”…that’s why I asked you…It’s the case here!😆
Can’t imagine how phenomenal this would be live. Listening via RUclips gave me enough shivers and smiles.
people complaining about the way the orchestra moves while they play get on my nerves... like, haven't you ever been really into a piece of music?
It is possible to be into a piece of music without moving around. I think it has something to do with different instruments. As a trombone player, I always try to direct my sound forward and would never even think of moving around because it is not really feasible. However I do see people who play smaller instruments that don't point directly forwards often moving around. Also I will admit that in jazz playing I do notice myself moving very slightly with the direction of notes, but only in specific pieces that have no real correlation to how much I am "into it"
@@evanwhite5704 moving around helps communicate. Literally all the best players at my uni love when playing music. In flute there are even books that teach you ways to move while playing
While the school of thought that musicians should let the music speak for itself (sing?) exists, I'm with you. Especially as a featured Orchestra, where the audience is watching the musicians. Movement conveys energy and emotion.
If you've ever actually performed Petrouchka, you would know that it is a very nerve wracking experience due to the extreme meter changes employed by Stravinsky. Movements by the musicians may just be an attempt to keep time and relieve some excess energy in a piece like this.
How can you play an instrument without moving?
Beautifully presented! This was my introduction to Classical music in 1970, when rock was at the top, and this just slid in like it was part of the rock party ... thanks for the posting, much enjoyed
john-felice Ceprano this is actually the modern era in music
I know what he meant though. What's the proper name though, symphonic music?
@@michaelbauers8800 It's 20th century classical music where Igor Stravinsky brought in the idea of neoclassical music where in that trend, composers got influence from the classical era. Well neoclassicism was used by various other composers other than Stravinsky like Sergei Prokofiev. Stravinsky also used primitism in his music in his much later periods of his life. I am sorry he didn't introduce neoclassicism during the time period. His most famous pieces which you know are the three ballets Petrushka, Firebird and Rite of Spring were all primitism in his music. This is where modernism was introduced in western classical music
I love stravinsky, intervallic harmony awesome.
The music is incredible, transporting, and magical all at the same time.
I notice that the players in this orchestra move when they play, especially the winds. It's really nice to see. It's natural movement too.
My favorite Stravinsky since childhood.
..Love how their brass players are such Artists !!
Brilliant performance, Stravinsky's Petrouchka are spetacular here !
This conductor looks SOOO happy! :D
I would look and not only look but be the same standing infront of this orchestra.
That tuba solo is remarkable
Wonderful performance by a top-notch orchestra and conductor, perfectly filmed and available in HD. Bravo!
My fav Stravinsky piece! It is cheerful, funny, scary...I just love it :)
Why is it that some cultures don't appreciate the sheer joy of this? Much better than pounding on people to rap.
+Paula Harris Baca The problem with this music, unlike rap, is that it requires intelligent listeners.
+Per Olof Rydeström I don't know of you meant that to be funny, but I found your statement to be funny and true at the same time. Most people don't understand how this kind of music works. They would rather listen to unintelligible music that is only loved because it requires no understanding to appreciate it.
+Sol Kim I was serious! I feel sorry for the young people of today who are listening to hiphop and rap.
Per Olof Rydeström I know that you were serious. And although I respect music of every form, kind and shape, I find that rap and hiphop are highly nonintellectual whereas music like this requires thought and expression to enjoy.
The sheer excitement that can be conveyed thru classical music...it requires a teacher to excite a class. I recall after our so-called "gifted" class (I thought we actually were gifted, but my siblings and schoolmates thought we were either creepy or retarded or, in my brothers' opinions, SPOILED) we just were ecstatic. As the yellow buses took us back to suburbia through the Tenderloin of SF from the War Memorial Opera House, and we looked-- and waved, as adolescents do-- at the street peeps stood around, drinking out of paper bags and looking out the windows of the South of Market "hotels"...well, I was fascinated and intrigued. It was wonderful. I lost a fear as well. I later walked through the same area and wasn't bothered. (although if my own daughter were to try it, I'd go batshit)
The extraordinary shimmering section starting at 20:55 is miraculous beyond words .. like the sounds of the glowing Universe
Todo es magnífico. Quiero destacar la realización televisiva. Las cámaras están siempre donde deben estar.
Musique flamboyante , Stravinsky est mon musicien préféré avec Prokofief , les musiciens russes sont hors normes.
Igor Stravinsky would come to Chicago to sit with me at the piano while I did transcrpts of his music. Afterwards we became good friends. In fact we be ame friends over Petruska.
Still love it a year later !
For my ears and feel one of the most beautiful works ever been written!!! Great interpretion here with an extraordinary orchestra and a brilliant conductor and that in a wonderful recording!
I have some old vinyls with this ensemble and Neville Marriner and they all are excellent.
Btw: I looove great orchestras like here (six basses and all that...) because of the sheer loudness, energy and power..
Just to mention it: Love the ladies with the flutes.
Thank you for that time of pure bliss!!!
Regards from Berlin
A happy listener
The opening folk tune really is something else.
it is sooooo beautiful!love ya Igor,Happy Birthday!idol!