The Journey Goes On, Episode 34: Budapest, Hungary

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 15 сен 2024
  • Follow Mike and Aimee Hurley and their trusty Royal Enfield Meteor 350, Olive Oyle, on their journey around the world.

Комментарии • 2

  • @tamaslukacs3173
    @tamaslukacs3173 2 месяца назад +1

    Hi
    Strauss perfectly reproduces the atmosphere of Monarchy Vienna.
    The waltz is a Viennese genre.
    But Budapest was already a separate world.
    The waltz music during the folk dance is particularly disturbing.
    Maybe you don't know Hungarian music. I recommend the works of Ferenc Erkel, Ferenc Lehár, Imre Kálmán. Liszt is a more serious genre. One of Erkel's iconic works is Palotás. He regularly appears at graduation ceremonies and as the opening dance of elite dance events. This is actually a noble ballroom dance. It has been known since the 17th-18th century.
    Operetta is a distinctly Vienna-Budapest genre, Imre Kálmán's perhaps the most frequently played work is Csárdáskirálynő (The Queen of the Czardas).
    Lehár's best-known works are (Víg özvegy) The Merry Widow and A Luxemburg grófja ( The Count of Luxembourg ).
    He is clearly considered the king of operetta.
    Brahms is also known internationally. He collected folk motifs and used them in the works of Hungarian Dances. They mainly play the numbers 1 3 5, but there are 22 in total.
    10:48 Coat of arms of Great Hungary. This is the coat of arms of the historic Hungary. Its official name is the Central Coat of Arms. In the middle is the small coat of arms. This is the coat of arms of today's Hungary. Under the small coat of arms, from the top right, Croatia, Transylvania, Fiume (Rijeka), Slavonia, Dalmatia.
    The footage is fine though.

  • @juz3r1
    @juz3r1 3 месяца назад +3

    The choice of music was a bit wrong... :)