Dvořák - Symphony No.9 in E minor, Op.95; B 178, 'From the New World'
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- Опубликовано: 21 мар 2019
- Correction: 'From a New World' in the title card should be 'From the New World'. Apologies for the error!
Antonín Leopold Dvořák (8 September 1841 - 1 May 1904)
Symphony No.9 in E minor, Op.95; B.178, 'From the New World'
2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets in B-flat & A, 2 bassoons, 4 horns in E, C and F, 2 trumpets in E, C and E-flat, 2 tenor trombones, bass trombone, tuba, timpani, triangle, cymbals, strings
Berliner Philharmoniker (orchestra), Ferenc Fricsay (conductor)
Stereo recording, 1959
0:06 - I. Adagio-Allegro molto
10:07 - II. Largo
24:01 - III. Scherzo: Molto vivace
32:16 - IV. Allegro con fuoco
The Symphony No.9 in E minor, "From the New World", popularly known as the New World Symphony, was composed by Antonín Dvořák in 1893 while he was the director of the National Conservatory of Music of America from 1892 to 1895. It is by far his most popular symphony, and one of the most popular of all symphonies. In older literature and recordings, this symphony was often numbered as Symphony No.5. Astronaut Neil Armstrong took a tape recording of the New World Symphony along during the Apollo 11 mission, the first Moon landing, in 1969. The symphony was completed in the building that now houses the Bily Clocks Museum.
Dvořák was interested in Native American music and the African-American spirituals he heard in North America. As director of the National Conservatory he encountered an African-American student, Harry T. Burleigh, later a composer himself, who sang traditional spirituals to him and said that Dvorak had absorbed their 'spirit' before writing his own melodies. Dvořák stated:
"I am convinced that the future music of this country must be founded on what are called Negro melodies. These can be the foundation of a serious and original school of composition, to be developed in the United States. These beautiful and varied themes are the product of the soil. They are the folk songs of America and your composers must turn to them."
The symphony was commissioned by the New York Philharmonic, and premiered on December 16, 1893, at Carnegie Hall conducted by Anton Seidl. A day earlier, in an article published in the New York Herald on December 15, 1893, Dvořák further explained how Native American music had been an influence on this symphony:
"I have not actually used any of the [Native American] melodies. I have simply written original themes embodying the peculiarities of the Indian music, and, using these themes as subjects, have developed them with all the resources of modern rhythms, counterpoint, and orchestral colour."
In the same article, Dvořák stated that he regarded the symphony's second movement as a "sketch or study for a later work, either a cantata or opera ... which will be based upon Longfellow's The Song of Hiawatha" (Dvorak never actually wrote such a piece). He also wrote that the third movement scherzo was "suggested by the scene at the feast in Hiawatha where the Indians dance".
Dvořák was also influenced by the style and techniques used by earlier classical composers including Beethoven and Schubert. The falling fourths and timpani strokes in the New World Symphony's Scherzo movement evokes the Scherzo of Beethoven's Choral Symphony. In his fourth movement, Dvořák's use of flashbacks to prior movements is reminiscent of Beethoven quoting prior movements as part of the opening Presto of the last movement.
At the premiere in Carnegie Hall, the end of every movement was met with thunderous clapping and Dvořák felt obliged to stand up and bow. This was one of the greatest public triumphs of Dvořák's career. When the symphony was published, several European orchestras soon performed it. Alexander Mackenzie conducted the London Philharmonic Society in the European premiere on June 21, 1894. Clapham says the symphony became "one of the most popular of all time" and at a time when the composer's main works were being welcomed in no more than ten countries, this symphony reached the rest of the musical world and has become a "universal favorite." It was performed (as of 1978) more often "than any other symphony at the Royal Festival Hall, London" and is in "tremendous demand in Japan."
The theme from the Largo was adapted into the spiritual-like song "Goin' Home" (often mistakenly considered a folk song or traditional spiritual) by Dvořák's pupil William Arms Fisher, who wrote the lyrics in 1922.
Source:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symphon...)
Original score (in this video, the score is heavily modified for greater clarity of instrumentation):
SNKLHU's 1955 edition, edited by Otakar Šourek
imslp.org/wiki/Symphony_No.9,...
Project files:
github.com/Melonadev/Pentamer... Dvořák/Symphony No.9 in E minor%2C Op.95_ B.178%2C _From a New World_/Images
Recording:
• Video Видеоклипы
0:06 - I. Adagio- (2:03) Allegro molto
10:07 - II. Largo
24:01 - III. Scherzo: Molto vivace
32:16 - IV. Allegro con fuoco
This is accurate, and totally not a scam. Kudos to you for being _so_ helpful.
@@windmillwilly Is that sarcasm I smell? Sorry if this comes across as rude.
@@PentameronSV well i think it's not sarcasm because the time stamps are perfect. In the right second
@@rgibeli Well, glad to know.
The joke is that it's completely accurate, and my tone makes it sound like it's not. I'm sorry I had to kill the frog.
I’m so stupid that I had the video on 2x speed for half of it, I thought something was a bit off but didn’t actually realise till the 3rd movement when they took off at the speed of light.
MJFGamer actually laughed out loud lmao
@@namisa33 I tried it. 10/10 would do again.
At 2x speed the vibrato sounds like a goat mehing
@@boong-gwon ikr
I'm listening to it at that speed now you mention it, lol it's epic
I cried in the second movement, the theme is extremely touching. especially during this crazy time,I wanna go home.
yeah
Interesting you should say that, Dvořák himself actually wrote this piece while living in the US and within it he expressed a lot of nostalgia and homesickness towards his home country (the Czech republic). He's one of our best composers and the largo especially is quite special for us.
are you home yet? i hope you are 🥺
Interestingly the theme played on the English Horn in the second movement has been transcribed for other instruments, most well known being the highland pipes, the tune is called "going home"
Justin Harvey yes! ~~~~
II. Largo: 10:07
Choral of Trombone: 10:07
English Horn Solo: 10:59
Bassoon solo: 12:15
Clarinete solo: 12:31
Choral of Winds: 12:49
Strings Choral: 13:18
English Horn Solo: 14:17
Bassoon Solo: 14:31
Horn Choral: 15:00
Chora of Oboe and Flute: 15:26
Choral of Winds: 16:04
Clarinete Solo: 18:00
Strigns choral: 18:00
Oboe solo: 19:19
Choral of Winds : 19:23
Theme of the 4th movement: 19:44
English Horn Solo: 20:16
Strings Choral: 20:46
Violin Solo: 21:33
Cello Solo: 21:33
Winds Choral: 22:02
Choral of trombone: 22:51
Last Chord: 23:49
Thank you for the timestamps! I cried my soul out in this movement. Deffinetly one of the best ones I've heard. The solos are so simple but so expressive and warm, and the harmonies in the chorals are simply amazing. Dvorâk is massively underrated, Jesus Christ.
Tuba: :(
Oboe and flute……….gooosebumps
Hero!
I tear up whenever I hear the harmonies at 20:16. It's such a simple progression yet so poignant.
First Movement
0:06 Introduction
2:02 Exposition - First Theme
3:08 Exposition - Second Theme
4:22 Exposition - Third Theme
5:02 Development
6:41 Recapitulation
9:12 Coda
Saviour!
Thanks very much
@@pietrogusso8211 You*re welcome!
Pity the tuba player, who only has fourteen notes in the whole piece, and doesn't play at all in movements 1, 3 or 4.
And yet they get the same fee as everyone else 😉
@@zmoxon22 They should get more, because they are so bored, and have to be more careful with counting than you ever will.
Korewa Krusader hey I do music score videos, my whole life is counting!
@@zmoxon22 Nice save, yet so are Tubists lives.
How about the cymbal player? One note in the entire symphony...
The C# minor section in the Largo is chillingly heartbreaking. I really can’t describe it any other way. There’s a reason Dvorak 9 consistently ranks really high on lists of the best classical pieces.
What minute?
@@hey-ph6iq around 15:20
Minor?!
The piece tells you so much about American history (including, I think, slavery) without words. Yeah, it's gonna be essential for Florida high schoolers who have fewer AP course options now.
@@Winspur1982damn that's a statewide issue? I thought it only applied to the poor schools like mine. My school has ZERO AP courses. Like, VERY FEW!
It's without question been said before, but the largo is one of the most beautiful pieces of music in all of history.
32:16 Here comes the shark!!
Hehe
I was waiting for it the whole time knowing it was gonna come:)
IMPERIUM
Forget the shark, here comes WALTER
Here comes the chops
I can truly feel this piece. My imagination creates a vision of this "New world", different for each movement. It's fantastic how music can be real and touch your senses.
6:03 extremely fast extentions and shifts with basically no mercy
Which instrument are you referring to?
@@Jason-pt6mp I'm referring to the cello part.
whst do u mean?
Ez
This song is sight readable on violin but i dont play cello so im just assuming its much harder
The more I listen, the more I see how much John Williams and Alan Silvestri borrowed from this (Williams, 29:30 Star Wars: Phantom Menace; Silvestri, Largo intro, Avengers: Endgame)
Jaws?
@@jackminto7062 Yup its a public secret Jaws is inspired by 32:16
I don't hear any Alan Silvestri in there... The John Williams is very clear though.
@@SilloniusAeldarian Sssh don't betray the secret! ;)
Twoset posted a video about it
i thought that Beethoven's 9th was the best symphony because nearly all the movements were amazing (not really a big fan of rhe 3rd movement), but Dvorak's 9th..... every single second of every single movement is absolute class.
Second mvt gets me every time. One of the most beautiful Melody's ever written. Add in Dvorak's signature romantic lush read American+Chech roots harmonies and it's hard to top this. Barber owes a lot to Dvorak!
okay
You mean 'dvorakies'
Love it as well and I totally agree
@@oliverfrench467 Why dvorakies? Dvořák is his name so Dvořák's or at least Dvorak's is the correct form. And his name isn't english so there's not k like the k in key but just k at the end of knock.
@@vetaniellecalya1662 melody's
I have just finished listening to all nine of Dvorak's symphonies in turn. His ability and sincerity shine through all the time, but No.9 tops them by far, in my opinion. His feeling for drama and melody have made it many people's favourite symphony. Along with the Stabat Mater and the Cello Concerto it is one of his masterpieces.
It’s nice to know that I am not alone in listening to all nine of his symphonies.
I'd argue his cello concerto is THE greatest concerto, full stop.
Sure, I'm a cellist, but I wasn't one at the time I decided this. 😆
20:16 key change gets me every time
*tearing up* "*sniffle*- its beautiful"
This recording is probably the best quality conducting, performance, and emotional intensity by the Berlin Symphony in ALL the recordings available on RUclips by ANY orchestra performing this piece, bar num!!! Wow!!!
Also my favourite recording of this piece! (well, except that they didn't perform the repeat in the first movement, which made me kick myself)
My favourite part is the unintentional oboe solo at 23:51 :D
This is a great upload.
Thank You so much.
One of the most readable i have seen on YT
Glad you liked it!
Thanks for making this! This video was very helpful for me and it has allowed me to practice correctly.
Glad to have helped!
@@PentameronSV wow you replied really early
Never cease to amaze me how simple it looks on the score.
I'm having so much fun studying this score. Thank you so much for uploading it!
Glad to help!
Thx so much for sharing. The soundtrack of my childhood is resonating in every cell of my body.
My favorite symphony in the world! Thank you!
Thanks, dear Mr Dvorak, for this breathtaking music!
Thanks, dear Mr Karajan, for the breathtaking conducting.
And thanks, dear Mr Pentameron, for the laying out this wonderful piece of Czech soul.
Karajan is not the conductor here, it's Ferenc Fricsay.
@@PentameronSV , yes, sure. I just wanted to say, he did it before, and he's my favourite conductor
Dvorak play in Chicago Im your biggest fan
@@andrewm6244 lol
1 ч. Вступ 0:07
1 ч. ГП 2:03
1 ч. ПП 3:08
1 ч. ЗП 4:23
2 ч. Тема вступу 10:08
2 ч. Основна тема (1т.) 11:00
2 ч. 2т. середньої ч. 15:46
2 ч. 3т. середньої ч. 16:03
3 ч. Основна тема (1т.) 24:12
3 ч. Середина 1-го розділу (2т.) 25:35
3 ч. Тема спільної середини (тріо) 27:23
4 ч. ГП 32:34
Спасибо тебе, добрый человек!
The Second Movement Is My Favorite Of All Time. Such A Good Melody And It’s Very Beautiful.
О, это прекрасно!!! Тут все части удивительны по своей красоте, но четвёртая - это вообще что-то потрясающее! Обожаю четвёртую часть!
38:37 the fact that the 3 trombones only get FF while all the other instruments get FFF with the exception of the timpani,the 3 trombones just overshadows all the other instruments during that part,i am suprised that it wasn't FFF but only FF during that part for the 3 trombones
It's because Trombones always play too loud.
JakeTheGearHeart no such thing
That’s something a trombonist would say
@@counterfit5 the woodwind section begs to differ
24:02 Beethoven's 9th Symphony Scherzo?
Exactly what I heard.
Yes.
I call copycat!
I think it's more of an homage
@@grantwoolardMy god, it is really you! Love your classical music mash-ups.
Dvorak was a true magician, love this work so much!!
20:28 The minor second interval never fails to send shivers down my spine. Berlin Philharmonic does a great job expressing the colors in this part of the piece as well.
My favorite movements in order:
1) I. Adagio-- Allegro molto
2) IV. Allegro con fuoco
3) III. Scherzo: Molto vivace
4) II. Largo
Don't get me wrong, the 2nd movement is very beautiful, but the faster movements are VERY fun to play :)
Divino. Bravo! \o/
33:00 oh no, it's haacahama Sunday
😂😂😂
I will never not hear that.... HAACHAMACHAMAAA
15:01 to 15:30 that key change gives me goosebumps
Ein geniales Werk - und danke, daß man die Partitur mitlesen kann. Und dann immer so punktgenau. Ich weiß, was das für eine Arbeit ist ... 😌 😍
Most-magnificent opus by Dvorak, one of the best pieces of music ever-written! The Berliner Philharmoniker is brilliant, as always! The conducting is marred by numerous 'fakey' dead-air pauses and slow-downs for some supposed extra dramatic effect.
I played this in orchestra a few months back. Absolutely one of my favorite pieces, so fun to play and listen to. 1st and 4th movements are my personal favorites :)
I like 1st and 2nd best personally.
Great improvement, thank you!
You're welcome!
Thanks for posting the music. It's very enjoyable and interesting to read along with the music.
Glad to have helped!
This is awesome to see the score! I would like to see it done more.
Thanks for sharing, very stunning, I like so much Classical Music.
Woah Dvorak, time traveler much?? The quote in the description really got me, where he mentions that America must look to "negro music" to find its voice. That was before 1900, and from 1900 with ragtime, to blues, to jazz, to rock, to hip-hop, black artists or their influence have written America's musical history, whether or not classical composers have jumped along for the ride as Dvorak tried to tell them!
I have a book about his stay in America. He told American composers if he wanted their pieces to sound American and not Germanic (many studied in like Berlin and Austria to learn) he said that they need to look at their folk songs, plantation songs, and Indian melodies. The Conservatory in New York at the time didn't agree with him and said he didn't need Negro or "red man" melodies. Basically, he said fuck it and did it.
@@dumbpunk1165 Wow... Do you know the title by any chance? I'd love to read it!
@@AndromedaCripps Dvorak in America by Joseph Horowitz. its a short book, good for a Sunday read
A Buzzy Boi That Likes Memes Cool, thanks so much! 😁
Yeah, Dvorak, no, bad fucking idea.
The theme of Mvt II.... MASTERPIECE! I have goosebumps listening to this...
Ugh best symphony I can think of 😍😍😍
Thank you for score and recording. Love contrapuntal battle in the brass section (43:30 to 43:42), when some play the main theme of the I Movement contrasting the main theme of IV Movement. Dvorak, Mendelssohn, and Chopin are three of the greatest composers of all time.
Modern and nostalgic sound symphony.
32:33 the most holy part of the whole piece
7:52 I don't even know how to describe something so beautiful
easily my favorite symphony ever
Luffy- GUMMU GUMMU NO
Crocodile- DESERTO
Luffy- STORM
Crocodile- LA SPADA
32:16
0:06 - I. Adagio - Allegro molto
10:07 - II. Largo
24:01 - III. Scherzo - Molto vivace
32:16 - IV. WALTER
KKM Archives IMPERRRRRRIUUUMMM
IMPERIUM
The mat is sacred!
Gracias por compartir. Es una sinfonía hermosa. 🎶
3:36 is so epic...
Also the rest of the piece! Its just beautiful
Wow, what a response by viewers. I have read four biographies of Dvorak but recommend the novel by Josef Svorecky, “Dvorak in Love,” which describes how he and Anna fell for each other and married. Unlike so many other composers, he was true to his wife,. A good man as well as a great composer.
I just can't handle Allegro con fuoco... It's too much, I love it!
2nd movement is beautiful and the intro to the 4th movement is really, really loud and intense
Very beautiful, bravo.
Lindo demais!!!
My personal favorite is the fourth movement even though the second is absolutely beautiful.
It's a famous performance. Awesome and wonderful.
the 4th movement is unironically one of the absolutely hardest classical pieces i’ve ever heard 💪🔥
34:16 39:30 these two parts are absolutely beautiful and critically underrated. Almost shed a tear listening to these two parts for the first time actually 😆
I know right?
Going to Spillville Iowa this Summer to visit the places Dvorak stayed and began putting ideas together for his New World Symphony. Can't wait.
Correction: Dvorak had already finished his New World Symphony before he came to Iowa. The premiere of the symphony took place in New York City .
This is the first classic song(opus?) I fell in love with.. like.. I discovered it at a young age and listened to it dozens of times. I can probably recall the first movement completely in my head. Yeah I learned to memorize music. I'm that weird...
Not trying to be that guy but just trying to inform it’s a classical piece not a song. Song derived from sing so only music that focuses on the lyrical side could really be considered a song.
You're not weird to memorize it lmao. Also it's a piece
I do that to, i like to memorize music, so I can hear it in my head when I have nothing to do (nor my phone) and just relax while I "hear" it in my mind haha
It is the rests in the second movement that get me. How can silence be so beautiful?
Agree. It's like Dvorak was longingly trying to hear something during a star-filled night that reminded him of his home. There...no...yes...I don't know. Maybe? Gets me everytime. And that slow decent with just the 1st violins playing near the end of the movement. Ugh! Rips my heart out every time.
10:45 Largo ll
Für mich das bewegenste was je komponiert wurde! ❤ So einfach und so leicht,
trotzdem kullern mir da immer die Tränen, ich kann nicht anders...
This piece always makes me what could've become of it if he had added an extensive percussion section to the orchestra. Huge blasts from the tam-tam and bass drum, little subtleties with the triangle and tambourine...
I imagine the loud swells around the middle of the second movement and towards the end of the final movement can sound even more triumphant with an additional tam-tam and bass drum.
@@PentameronSV I can definitely see that! I would love to compose a percussion section to this piece one day, using an almost Ravel-like approach. It would for sure make for a more complex sound.
@@ThomasvanDun Best of luck!
My favorite orchestral works have always been those with lots of percussion. It’s a shame it wasn’t in fashion at this time.
An interesting thought! Perhaps listen to Stokowski’s recording, I think he adds a couple more cymbal crashes and a tam-tam in the finale haha. Although it sounds juicy on paper, it reaallly isn’t very convincing to my ears (although as far as I’m concerned, the score is so fluid and the actual music so damn good, I’m definitely not gonna discourage anyone from having fun with it). But considering the premiere was with the NY Phil, I don’t there would have too many restrictions on Dvorak’s use of percussion, especially since he uses quite large percussion sections in his late tone poems and operas. He could have used a larger percussion section if he wanted to, but the fact that he didn’t says something. As it stands, I absolutely love that Dvorak uses the percussion sparingly, very tasteful, but to each their own!
This is honestly one of my fav orchestral pieces...I feel like I've played second violin before but I can't remember when...
In a twist of fate, a year after making this comment, I actually led this piece
38:36 crazy
For years, I was an affectionado of Symphony 8, but I'm really really becoming nostalgic for my home continent. Dvorak and Haydn really saw something about the world. It's really beautiful.
Damn nice quality! Thanks you for creating this, mustve took quite some time, right?
Yep. In fact, this is the first score-video I made from scratch. Being a perfectionist, it took 3-4 months for me to make this video.
My only regret is not using a white background.
But thanks for watching!
Pentameron You deserve every possible praise: the scoring is irreproachable. I would like to be perfectionist as you are, and my lack of skill in video editing makes me unable to upload what I would like to. Yet your effort encourages me to try a new upload, even if not so perfect as yours. What software are you using to typeset the score?
@@OrbiliusMagister Sorry for the late reply.
Anyway, I don't typeset the scores, _but_ I use GIMP to edit the images I get from the score downloaded from IMSLP. It was a rather painstaking process since I was inexperienced at that time, but it was worth it.
I used Windows Movie Maker for this video, _but_ for some reason it didn't work for my later projects.
After trying out some other video editing softwares, I eventually settled with Adobe Premiere Pro, which I use for my later original* videos.
_*Videos I made from scratch, down to obtaining images from scores and picking the best recordings, and video editing. This doesn't include videos that are results of merging other videos on RUclips, which make up a majority of my channel. I'm not proud of the latter._
The most beautiful music ever in human history. Rich and colorful until the final silence fermato. Love The New World Symphony.
John Williams just lifted his whole career from the 3rd and 4th movements, didn't he?
yup, aside from the obvious jaws motif, I can here the phantom menace as well
Jaws
This music is used in Barbie Rapunzel
Nah, he mostly ripped off from the Planets Suite
[для 1фдт и себя любимого]
1 часть
ГП - 2:03
ПП - 3:08
ЗП-4:23
2 часть
Тема вступления - 10:08
Основная тема - 11:00
1 тема середины -15:46
2 тема середины - 16:03
3 часть.
Основная тема - 24:12
середина 1 раздела - 25:35
тема общ. середины - 27:23
Финал.
ГП - 32:35
СП - 33:33
ПП - 34:14
ЗП - 35:08
Тема 2 части в разработке - 37:08
в коде - 42:37
Тема 3 части в разработке - 37:30
в коде - 42:40
👍
Dvorak had such a gift for melody that few even among the other Great Composers could match.
Also, Tchaikovsky.
POV: Ur that one music kid that spends all their time watching twoset
Beginning of Dvorak's symphony 9 movement IV starts playing in music:
Everyone: JAWS
You: DVORAK'S 9TH SYMPHONY MOVEMENT IV
the oboe flute duet always makes me smile
whats the time stamp
@@briannaestrada7202 I'm a bit late, but 15:26
3:08 so beautiful!
And this part 7:22
Beautiful ~~
1 часть
2:01 ГП (призыв и ответ как эхо)
3:06 ПП (как повторный танец, лирически звучит)
2 часть
10:59 Тема (спокойствие, кларнет)
3 часть
24:01 Скерцо (як 9 симф, а потом сразу скачем на лошади в бой)
25:38 средний эпизод (что-то танцевальное)
27:27 Трио
4 часть
32:32 Тема (идем на войну)
I love this.
Damn Dvoràk's symphony 9 made me obssessed with this tune damn mi fa Sol fa mi mi ❤️ this hits my heart 😭 i am not into all this but after hearing this i can't stop thinking or listening
This piece gives me cravings for Dehydrated Zebra Tarantula for some reason...
Strange, I can feel it as well...
Oh no
i’m concerned on why
@@macca154 I also felt a disturbance in the force.
Bravp, braaaavooooooo Anton Dvorak,
I did not realise how complex this Symphony was.
movement 2 largo makes me remember the hibike euphonium anime scenes reina plays a dvorak song with the trumpet solo version.thats very touching song :'
Wow beautiful
7:21 best part ever, short, but perfect
I HAVE BEEN LOOKING FOR 32:16 FOREVER. I HAVE FINALLY FOUND IT BY HUMMING IT INTO GOOGLE
I'm glad Dvorak completed the work before his death
Su premiere fue 7 años antes de terminar el S XIX ( en 1893 ) pero es un clásico
cuyos compases y movimientos reflejan la impresión de Dvorak ante el forklore
y música de los Estados Unidos de América y es un ejemplo de lo quew es el
MELTING POT
Interestingly enough the second mvt theme sounds remarkably similar to the second theme in his third mvt to the 8th symphony. While not an exact copy it’s very similar feeling
A masterpiece for sure! Such a shame it's known only for the second movement (while it is still mind-blowing!)
4th too
Dvorak was one bad dude!! Like Beethoven, he made sure his themes permeated the entire piece!
32:16 CROCODILE VS LUFFY FINAL BATTLE
2:36 RIP microphones
I wrote a Noah’s Ark script and War drama script whilst listening to this and it so helped set the tone for the two diverse genres.
I once heard a recording of this by Leopold Stokowski in which I thought I heard a distant GONG struck on beat one in measure 322. Very effective. But I don't see it in the score here.
I met this music in Barbie Raperonzolo
14:17 I remember that part from Little Einsteins "Ring Around from The Planet" 😄
Finally found it