This Song From the 1500’s Blows Me Away

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  • Опубликовано: 8 янв 2025

Комментарии • 14 тыс.

  • @nirmalsuki
    @nirmalsuki Год назад +3550

    Us 1590s kids appreciate young artists like Breem for bringing songs from our childhood back.

    • @binkwillans5138
      @binkwillans5138 Год назад +147

      We don't have music anymore in the 21st century. Just some drum beats and heavy breathing. You kids were lucky.

    • @fraaggl
      @fraaggl Год назад +27

      you got one thing wrong, 15ty century means it started in 1400 and ended in 1499. And if you were born in 1499 (still a 15th century kid !) that would make you 91 years old which is kind of impossible for this period of time !

    • @noelle3551
      @noelle3551 Год назад +19

      ​@@fraagglmid to late 16th to early 17th centuries. Interesting era for music just on the cusp of Baroque period!!

    • @katrinat.3032
      @katrinat.3032 Год назад +11

      🤣

    • @purpleplanet108
      @purpleplanet108 Год назад +3

      😁😁😁

  • @ianrowe9331
    @ianrowe9331 Год назад +4416

    I went to a Julian Bream concert in Edinburgh. I rode the bus, a poor student. A small man in conservative clothes sat down beside me with his instrument case. I said, I'm going to the Bream concert, and he said, so am I. As I went to the entrance, we parted, and he went to another entrance. Of course it was him. BUT HE RODE THE BUS!

    • @lBJamiel
      @lBJamiel Год назад +212

      A lovely story.

    • @SummerRain368
      @SummerRain368 Год назад +132

      How thrilling! Thank you for sharing. ❤

    • @iggykarpov
      @iggykarpov Год назад +84

      Fantastic!!!

    • @AbolitionistPrivateer
      @AbolitionistPrivateer Год назад +89

      I caught one of his concerts in Germany in the very early 90s. Amazing.

    • @perfectloveIAM
      @perfectloveIAM Год назад +172

      I love that share!
      Once I was at a fair tapping on about an author as I was buying her books. She tapped me on the shoulder and said thank you for all that. Would you like me to sign them?
      Your story is even better.

  • @MusicLiberates
    @MusicLiberates 2 года назад +5644

    It’s really terrific how Rick is introducing people to high quality music from many different genres and time periods.

    • @joethebar1
      @joethebar1 2 года назад +20

      And some bad...

    • @markadams2907
      @markadams2907 2 года назад +64

      That6what being an artist is all about. Rick is truly an artist. Yes, he is a performer, but the man IS an artist.

    • @atruex4164
      @atruex4164 2 года назад +86

      Yep-telling 3mlln subs to listen to Dowland and Bach can reorganize the world for the better.

    • @adam872
      @adam872 2 года назад +46

      It's a beautiful thing isn't it.

    • @justathought88
      @justathought88 2 года назад +21

      Legit

  • @Mamakate2382
    @Mamakate2382 7 месяцев назад +56

    To this day I am so grateful that my choir director back in 1969 in a small Alabama college introduced me to the music of Palestrina. To this day I can still sing, play and recall the lyrics of “O Bone Jesu” and “O Magnum Mysterium”. And I’m glad two years of high school Latin paid off so I could know what the heck I was singing. LOL

  • @barbaravandoren3425
    @barbaravandoren3425 2 года назад +1484

    I LOVED this video. Thank you. I'm an elderly English woman, who's first husband was an aspiring classical guitarist. He absolutely idolised Julian Bream, so much so that we named our first son, JULIAN. (He's now 66!)
    I love this renaissance music, especially played on period instruments. Julian Bream was such a 'regular guy' with a really wide appeal. Here in London, we were all very proud of him & his ability to bring us the music of a distant era into contemporary life, which we otherwise might not have known of. It's lovely that American musicians appreciate him, too.

    • @snehasishguhathakurta9338
      @snehasishguhathakurta9338 2 года назад +37

      @Barbara Van Doren I hope you are doing great in this tough time.

    • @badcornflakes6374
      @badcornflakes6374 2 года назад +20

      What a beautiful thing it is

    • @ReverendDr.Thomas
      @ReverendDr.Thomas 2 года назад +17

      I saw Bream at the Perth Concert Hall in Australia in 1983, I believe it was.
      I even remember the title and name of one of the compositions he played ("The Blue Guitar" by Michael Tippett).

    • @rosieleat6868
      @rosieleat6868 2 года назад +51

      I am 61 - born in the London slums, now living in a beautiful place in the country side in another country but for a little while, I played the recorders and violin in a group that played old English music - when I hear this, I feel it deep in my bones and my skin, even though classical music moves me so deeply the most, (and I love Kate bush, nick cave, sing along songs etc, aurora) this music almost takes me back to a past life - and I can feel the grime in my skin, the hunger in my belly. What a great channel!

    • @elizabethhenderson3747
      @elizabethhenderson3747 2 года назад +34

      I love the arts played on original period instruments. In the 1980s I was listening to a piece from the baroque period on the radio, and I said to my girlfriend, who happened to be mostly self centered, and below my IQ, I said to her, "Wow! This is being played on original instruments!" And she gave me such a dirty look. And she said, "How would you-uuu know?" I responded, "I can tell from the texture of the sound." She didn't approve of my answer. When the piece finished, the radio announcer mentioned it was played on original instruments, my girlfriend's face shown such anger. I'm always glad I broke up with her.

  • @kelsycunningham8452
    @kelsycunningham8452 Год назад +771

    Imagine the composer at the time, being told that people would be getting down to his music 500 years later.

    • @siralexandersequeira3rdcou12
      @siralexandersequeira3rdcou12 Год назад +20

      Downland was a badass, he would be cool with it.

    • @twhmmh
      @twhmmh Год назад +14

      Imagine explaining ŸouTube to him...

    • @davidfleuchaus
      @davidfleuchaus 11 месяцев назад +12

      And “air lute.”

    • @operavin
      @operavin 11 месяцев назад +12

      And he’d be listening to Cardi B wondering what happened.
      “Well we got hit by a meteor.”
      Oh, well OK then.

    • @joedwyer3297
      @joedwyer3297 11 месяцев назад +20

      I ended up looking him up and showing some family members, we all enjoyed his tunes
      For being dead for like 400/500 years hes got like 160k monthly listeners😂

  • @TheCelticSeer
    @TheCelticSeer 8 месяцев назад +353

    Rick, When I was at school, way back in the Baroque Era of the Early to MId '70s (1973 to 1977), we did woodwork, my woodwork teacher was so good that he was building a Lute during our classes, while we were doing the assignments we had to complete. THe big thing about this is he was building two, from scratch, One was for Julian Bream the other was for John Williams, two very good friends, who both came to the school to meet our teacher and we got to listen to them both play guitar and lute!!

    • @ginger7044
      @ginger7044 5 месяцев назад +23

      Wow

    • @Esse-vp1bc
      @Esse-vp1bc 4 месяца назад +14

      So during the last Period of England then. All that culture since destroyed.

    • @topsecret1837
      @topsecret1837 3 месяца назад +4

      @@Esse-vp1bc
      It died with the ignorance of its listeners (refusing to listen to modern recordings because they think the older recordings are better)
      Voice of Music is a good channel for instance.

    • @Esse-vp1bc
      @Esse-vp1bc 3 месяца назад +14

      @@topsecret1837 Not my point at all. England was as cultured as the OP described, probably surviving up till the mid-1990's, in my small University dept several of my tutors were world leading experts in their fields & wrote the textbooks that other tutors followed . Now that era can be considered a foreign country, gone forever, replaced by an absurd, stupefying ideology.

    • @holliehoover6223
      @holliehoover6223 3 месяца назад +3

      I'm with your wife. Not my choice of dinner music.

  • @christian2M
    @christian2M 2 месяца назад +16

    I am an old guy from Romania and I've just discovered your channel. It is the best musical channel on youtube for musical education. Absolutely amazing. Thank you so much Rick!

  • @christophersuleske1905
    @christophersuleske1905 2 года назад +282

    Fantastic! 500 year old music that stands the test of time.

    • @johnsmith-cw3wo
      @johnsmith-cw3wo 2 года назад +9

      only kids from 1500's understand this music.

    • @Norvaal3
      @Norvaal3 9 месяцев назад +2

      A classic indeed

  • @erikhn9331
    @erikhn9331 Год назад +164

    My first record ever was Julian Bream playing English Renaissance music. It was in 1973, I was 10 years old. Loved this music ever since.

  • @maryjane-ei4hl
    @maryjane-ei4hl 2 года назад +335

    This piece of music made me weep .
    How can an old English composer reach out through four centuries and put his fi get on a mind today. So powerful .

    • @jmcc2275
      @jmcc2275 2 года назад +5

      It made me weep too…probably not for the same reason though.

    • @justynjonn
      @justynjonn 2 года назад +11

      The power of music.

    • @yogiine
      @yogiine 2 года назад +11

      Because time is not linear and we are not our bodies ❤

    • @abraxaseyes7
      @abraxaseyes7 2 года назад +11

      Music touches our hearts through time because our hearts are the same as the past. We forget our endlessness

    • @amazinggrace5692
      @amazinggrace5692 2 года назад +10

      Because music is in the DNA of all creation.

  • @Miles_ethan
    @Miles_ethan 12 дней назад +7

    I am just turned 19 last month, and I would never have heard of this beautiful music if it wasn't for Rick! Thank you for this.

  • @GuyFrets
    @GuyFrets 2 года назад +96

    My late wife loved Renaissance and Baroque music throughout our 48 years together. Early Music was a passion we shared!

  • @jreinhar1
    @jreinhar1 2 года назад +60

    Thirty some years ago I was a bass player in heavy metal garage bands. I heard a recording of Bream doing Dowland songs with the tenor Peter Pears and began learning classical guitar. Before I finished my studies at the U. of Toledo (Ohio), I played one recital of that material with a countertenor. Still best musical experience of my life.

  • @tullochgorum6323
    @tullochgorum6323 2 года назад +157

    Speaking from experience, the key thing to understand about the music of the Tudor period is that it is super-fun to play and sing. I was in a fine choir at a university college with beautiful Tudor buildings, and as Rick says, performing this music in those surroundings is a life-enhancing experience!

    • @HandmadeDarcy
      @HandmadeDarcy 2 года назад +8

      They make damn good post-rehearsal pub madrigals, too. Does a singer with a tankard of beer qualify as a period-appropriate instrument? 😁😁

    • @tullochgorum6323
      @tullochgorum6323 2 года назад +13

      @@HandmadeDarcy Every now and again we would get together with one of the women's choirs for a performance. Afterwards we'd head off in a little fleet of punts and park ourselves under one of the beautiful bridges over the river Cam. The acoustic was great, and we'd run through our repertoire of madrigals. By the time we emerged, the bridge would be packed with bemused tourists trying to figure out the source of this mysterious and wonderful sound!

    • @HandmadeDarcy
      @HandmadeDarcy 2 года назад +5

      Ah... There is little more satisfying than hyperventilating in harmony with fellow humans 😊😊

    • @abracadaverous
      @abracadaverous 2 года назад +3

      @@HandmadeDarcy That qualifies perfectly. The most portable instrument of all.

    • @chelseal654
      @chelseal654 2 года назад +2

      Exactly, they weren’t concert pieces, they were a pastime and entertainment.

  • @sbingham1979
    @sbingham1979 Месяц назад +7

    This is what I love about Rick Beato: his openness to all kinds of great music. Priceless.

  • @stevegrant7762
    @stevegrant7762 2 года назад +476

    Julian Bream, a hero of mine. I just love how wide ranging Rick’s tastes are. I’m with you on this man!

    • @numanuma20
      @numanuma20 2 года назад +4

      There is no music Rick hates.

    • @pauldallaway5794
      @pauldallaway5794 2 года назад +6

      Bream, Martha Agerich, Swervedriver and Holdsworth. Rick loves it all!

    • @TheSeeking2know
      @TheSeeking2know 2 года назад +3

      Yea I agree. It’s delightful and instructive.

    • @David-iv6je
      @David-iv6je 2 года назад +2

      We just gonna ignore Beato's Jerry Garcia look in that short clip?

    • @jules153
      @jules153 2 года назад +7

      I speak to many classical guitarist when I travel the world and 2 names keep cropping up Segovia and Bream.
      Bream just had a way of making music sound magical. His Bach is out of this world.

  • @DaveMiller2
    @DaveMiller2 2 года назад +114

    I like how Rick talks about different genre's and not just modern pop and rock. And he doesn't just talk, he educates.

  • @thebigpicture-elpanorama
    @thebigpicture-elpanorama 9 месяцев назад +70

    From an Irish man in Bangkok, this is the perfect ending to my day.

  • @sarathurston3318
    @sarathurston3318 7 месяцев назад +12

    I love Renaissance music! I have worn out every format of Waverly Consort’s “A Renaissance Christmas Celebration.” Imagine listening to this music in a candle and tree-lit room, fire blazing in the hearth and a glass of hearty red wine and a plate of cheese nearby. Heaven, I tell you!

  • @nightowl4206
    @nightowl4206 2 года назад +135

    I recognized this song right away because I had that Sting album for 15 years and knew every song almost by heart. Back in Russia in St Petersburg long ago I went to concerts like that ( " Shakespeare's music"), they were wearing gorgeous bright colored clothes and girls were singing so beautifully.. They were dancing too! I still remember how much I loved these concerts! It was such a magic..

  • @suedavis3525
    @suedavis3525 9 месяцев назад +241

    As a former pro classical musician trying to expand into other genres, I love that Rick is so eclectic. Good music is good music.

    • @mayasl1339
      @mayasl1339 3 месяца назад +1

      this

    • @Calatriste54
      @Calatriste54 2 месяца назад

      Bravo!

    • @jmorra
      @jmorra 2 месяца назад

      Good music is good music! Rick knows this and so do you, thank heavens!!

    • @Ouralbleu1
      @Ouralbleu1 2 месяца назад

      Yes ! Good music is good music ! 😊😊😊

    • @davidjackson2690
      @davidjackson2690 2 месяца назад

      Kinda like Deep Purple.

  • @aliceberethart
    @aliceberethart Год назад +265

    This is why i love love loveee the Tolkien Ensemble.
    It’s Tolkien’s poems played and sung as if they’re renaissance pieces. It’s absolutely stunning.

  • @Eyes3rd
    @Eyes3rd Месяц назад +15

    I discovered Julian Bream 30 years ago. I have always found his music timeless and beautiful. Beats modern pop music out of the water.

  • @paulcarter6962
    @paulcarter6962 Год назад +81

    My father sang opera professionally, and I did so in my younger years, though never professionally. I would say that people that listen to it growing up, or they learned it early, have a different appreciation. I watched my father sing with pavirotti and it couldn’t have impressed me more. My wife however could never know why or what I hear that moves me so much.

    • @Jill-ps1rs
      @Jill-ps1rs Год назад +2

      Paulcarter6962 wow, your dad must have been terrific. As children we listened to all kinds of music, classical, big bands and modern and pop. Musicals were also popular. I listen to Classic fm, and recently Mario Lanza was played. I d forgotten how incredible his voice was. My mum, always rated Pavarotti as tops, however, i think Mario has my vote. Beautiful to me
      Id be interested to hear in your preference??

    • @paulcarter6962
      @paulcarter6962 Год назад +4

      @@Jill-ps1rs my father was pretty terrific. It was tough for him coming up, but his voice carried him far. I don’t have many preferences as far as a voice is concerned. Pavarotti had a high note that never seemed to waver in power. I don’t think I’ve ever heard a bad note. I’m a bit closer to Pavarotti too, we have a few funny family stories whilst my father sang with him. However, my father was a Verdi Baritone, and I am a true bass, so I am swayed towards a darker voice that can be carried into higher tones. Samuel Ramey is one of my favorites too. Of course overall I love my fathers voice. It’s great to see others are still listening to this music.

  • @richardhoneycutt9437
    @richardhoneycutt9437 Год назад +114

    I fell in live with Medieval and Renaissance music in high school in the mid-1960s. I was a charter member of Musical heritage Society, who sold a lot of ancient music. On our first date, I took my wife to a music fraternity party. It was boring, so we went to my place and listened to medieval and renaissance MHS records. Great times!

    • @larrymiller4
      @larrymiller4 Год назад

      60's was my musical awakening. Late teens, very early 20's.

    • @Guus115
      @Guus115 Год назад

      ​@larrymiller4 the 1560's

    • @shellieeyre8758
      @shellieeyre8758 8 месяцев назад

      I took out an LP from the local library when I was about 11. It was David Munrow's New London Consort, "A Renaissance Dance Band" and I was hooked.

  • @chriswharton
    @chriswharton 2 года назад +184

    Man, I love the way you get into this. Not just a musician yourself, but a musical historian, who obviously adores everything with a master’s ear and appreciation. You’re attitude knocked me out.

    • @mrsmollyj
      @mrsmollyj 2 года назад

      THIS!! Yes! Agreed

    • @loumendes5723
      @loumendes5723 2 года назад

      Excellent thank you Rick Beato

  • @SamuTheFrog
    @SamuTheFrog 2 месяца назад +27

    Bro, he's always bringing out the best music of all time

  • @leswright4108
    @leswright4108 2 года назад +116

    I am a classical guitarist and very beginner lutenist and I focused on Early Music in my music degree. For Rick to turn his attention to likes of Dowland makes me feel joyous--and validated.

  • @RexFlux
    @RexFlux Год назад +101

    I am from Mexico and though not being a native speaker this musician is so relatable, it almost feels that I am a musician or a music historian myself. 😅 So much so, it almost feels as well as if English was my mother tongue😅
    Amazing communicator.
    I am glad the algorithm brought me here🎉
    Muchas gracias Sr. Beato😊

  • @mrbxv
    @mrbxv 2 года назад +145

    Just when you think you got Rick Beato all figured out, he goes waaaaay back to Renaissance music!!! Really great to hear and learn about this.

    • @chriskennedy2846
      @chriskennedy2846 2 года назад

      And he gave a mention to the Fairport, NY library - which I have been to a bunch of times. I have since left NY State and miss Guida's pizza.

    • @thetasigma5835
      @thetasigma5835 2 года назад +2

      The only thing I've figured out about Rick is someway, somehow, he's gonna blow my mind and expand my musical knowledge on styles/topics I never even considered.

    • @Muck006
      @Muck006 2 года назад

      Well ... if he went over to german medieval rock he could have it all combined.

  • @larryschmid3834
    @larryschmid3834 7 месяцев назад +28

    I was a staff writer in Nashville for a short time and while in Nashville I felt like I had come home. Everyone was on the same wave length, writing all the time, dreaming of getting a song cut and released and dieing when they passed on a hold. Watching your show gives me that same feeling. Your whole life is music and I "get" everything you come up with about music. I feel like I've come home watching you week after week. Please keep it up. Love your show. I like that middle ages stuff too, the middle ages song writers struggling to find a patron so they could eat. Nothings really changed. 9:34

  • @keifmullismusic2764
    @keifmullismusic2764 2 года назад +392

    Damien Kelly is one of my best friends since 2005. We are both huge Rick Beato fans and the fact that he features in this video has put both of us on a high! Hello from Ireland Rick! 🇮🇪

    • @michaelholmes9874
      @michaelholmes9874 2 года назад +26

      He sounds fantastic. I had a Julian Bream lo when I was a kid and it got me into classical guitar. He had his own tv programme back in the day on the BBC! Now it’s Married at First sight and all that crap….

    • @MrLeadb1
      @MrLeadb1 2 года назад +21

      It's hard to believe that such talented people are quite unknown even in their own countries.....Damien is incredible, I was very moved by his great performance....my eyes started sweating.

    • @marypatten9655
      @marypatten9655 2 года назад +9

      @@michaelholmes9874 yes. How did the BBC go so far down from such wonderful music and shows? Guess there was more money down there.

    • @lorenheard2561
      @lorenheard2561 2 года назад +1

      @@MrLeadb1 Had to say it.. Love your Leonidas' sign!! A positive affirmative to that !!

    • @sharongraham4256
      @sharongraham4256 2 года назад

      @@michaelholmes9874 except Married at first sight is not on the BBC.

  • @raymondward5106
    @raymondward5106 9 месяцев назад +48

    One of my favorite things on this planet, is listening to someone who shares thier joy and tries with sincerity to open that door to you. Bravo

  • @fernandogirard9702
    @fernandogirard9702 Год назад +175

    On my 70 bitthday, my daughter, who is a soprano, sang this beauty accompanied by bandoneon(!) played by her husband. So, so great.

    • @sameoldtunes7110
      @sameoldtunes7110 9 месяцев назад

      I’m from 2007 and so grateful to have been shown this song.

    • @theiloth1
      @theiloth1 Месяц назад

      Lucky you !

  • @DavidPerry-ui2qz
    @DavidPerry-ui2qz 24 дня назад +3

    Dec 2024 just watched this… what an exquisite piece of music. Absolutely brilliant! Goosebumps!

  • @mikealexander7017
    @mikealexander7017 2 года назад +167

    Dowland's songs are fantastic. I discovered them via the science fiction writer Philip K Dick, who was a fan. He even used a Dowland song in the title of one of his novels, "Flow my tears, the policeman said". I love the fluid movement between keys and major and minor in Elizabethan music. I was in a church choir as a kid, and always particularly loved music from that period - Tallis and Taverner, and things like the Coventry Carol. Really beautiful music.

    • @pineapplepenumbra
      @pineapplepenumbra 2 года назад +4

      Coincidence, I was reading Philip K Dick earlier today, for the first time in years.

    • @JulesN580
      @JulesN580 2 года назад +5

      Mike Alexander
      Now that is fascinating! I love such ‘flo-thru’ cultural connections, as well as the work of Philip K Dick’, which l read from a young age.. ‘Flow my Tears, the Policeman Said’ are also the opening lines to an early song by Gary Numan. And ‘Bladerunner’, the title given to the film adaptation of Dick’s ‘Do Androids Dream of Electric Shape’, is taken from a story by William S Burroughs… and so on!

    • @Belltuck
      @Belltuck 2 года назад +3

      I had to give you a like for mentioning the Coventry Carol. ❤

  • @matthewwalsh7813
    @matthewwalsh7813 2 года назад +95

    happy to stumble upon a channel like this featuring music like this. So many people shrug off genuinely good music before having even listened to it simply because it's a little foreign to them.

    • @flisscook8934
      @flisscook8934 2 года назад +1

      I LOVE THIS VID! Thank you so much for bringing such a human response to this wonderful music! I’m a trained classical musician/singer /teacher ….. we need you …. Your passion fills my heart with joy as you innately understand it! All music has in one way or another come from these glorious roots! I’m subscribing! You are a beacon of Light! Thank you 🙏🏼 🎉

  • @uli5000
    @uli5000 2 года назад +127

    OMG! I have this on record! I grew up with my dad listening to Bream and other classical guitarists and came to Love it myself as a little girl in east Germany. It is actually the root for my deep Love for all kinds of guitar music till this day. I inherited all my dads records and still listen to them.

    • @catkin3
      @catkin3 2 года назад +2

      Cherish them - they will be priceless!

  • @thomasmurray3920
    @thomasmurray3920 6 месяцев назад +9

    I played recorder and krumhorn in my college’s Early Music Ensemble. Renaissance music is EPIC. Then again, so is the Baroque.

  • @lynettegill14
    @lynettegill14 2 года назад +160

    Beautiful. I’m English. I think this music is in my dna! I hear very much the influence of this music in early Genesis with Peter Gabriel and in Jethro Tull too. I love that you’ve loved this sound for so long.

    • @maximilianogabriel9982
      @maximilianogabriel9982 2 года назад +5

      Love prog. Rock ..KC ,yes, old folkies, medieval ,barroque, greats from argentina 👈👌

    • @simonedangelosericola5742
      @simonedangelosericola5742 2 года назад +5

      Well said!!! Greetings from Italy (land of the best knonw and appreciated Prog Rock scene after the English one...)!!! 😉

    • @junemacauley6813
      @junemacauley6813 2 года назад +2

      I never made that connection, but now I hear it!

    • @valkyrie1066
      @valkyrie1066 2 года назад +11

      Yes, I loved Jethro Tull and early Genesis; and loved the medievally inspired pieces. They hit it hard in the 60-70's and have kinda gotten away from it. Love old English/Irish folk music as well.

    • @Life-Row-Toll
      @Life-Row-Toll 2 года назад

      Indeed!

  • @Scoots1994
    @Scoots1994 2 года назад +104

    I love Rick doing his "Oh!" to lute playing from the 1500s.

    • @neilross9867
      @neilross9867 2 года назад +2

      I read your comment at the very moment he shouted "Oh!!!". A little surreal if I'm honest

    • @scottbaines4747
      @scottbaines4747 2 года назад +2

      The "Oh!" is truly timeless. 🤣

  • @yvonnedidit
    @yvonnedidit Год назад +229

    I am a classical Cellist and I LOVE that era. That lute solo on the Sting version was nuts! I also play guitar and drums so I’m a little bit Rock and a little bit Classical. So glad you shared this music.

    • @victoriabarclay3556
      @victoriabarclay3556 Год назад +3

      The Sting album is wonderful. I also enjoyed Classical Barbara, though I’m not a huge Streisand fan, I l over this album. And her talent unquestionable

    • @davidfryer9359
      @davidfryer9359 Год назад

      That beautiful. That smart. And that talented. You are a triple threat to anyone standing in your way. I bow out and give you my leave.

    • @Dombarable
      @Dombarable Год назад +1

      You can't be a little ROCK and a little CLASSICAL. And, after all, renaissance is NOT yet entirely classical. If you're a bit of this and a bit of that you are, eventually, nothing of the both.

    • @realpropertymangement7640
      @realpropertymangement7640 Год назад +5

      ​@@DombarableRepectfully, disagree. One can most certainly be a bit of this and that. I know I am.

    • @elmoromalpaso3858
      @elmoromalpaso3858 11 месяцев назад +1

      well, renessaince and baroque are rack and roll! :D

  • @Fatfingertunes
    @Fatfingertunes 3 месяца назад +1

    Hey Rick, this is (just one of the) reasons I am a big fan. I did learn Dowland tunes, and collected Julian Bream's recordings... and named my first son Julian. You are some guy! Love you!

  • @alvaronunesdesousa878
    @alvaronunesdesousa878 2 года назад +54

    This episode was really surprising for me, I wasn't expecting you to cover Julian Bream! I still can't believe he has left us; not only he's one of the greatest guitarists ever, he even brought the lute back to life. John Dowland's works were really groundbreaking. Thank you!

  • @heavnnnsent
    @heavnnnsent Год назад +496

    Jethro Tull gets honorable mention here because they compose their own compositions which sound quite medieval, very much like Renaissance or medieval compositions, only they are contemporary, an amazing band

    • @mrw1208
      @mrw1208 Год назад +38

      Contemporary is a relative term. Jethro Tull is half a century old.

    • @heavnnnsent
      @heavnnnsent Год назад +13

      @@mrw1208 🤪

    • @ArjanKop
      @ArjanKop Год назад +30

      @@mrw1208yes, rub it in… 😢

    • @Realcernunnos
      @Realcernunnos Год назад +27

      hear hear, I'm a big Tull fan

    • @Beachgirl1
      @Beachgirl1 Год назад +28

      The 70’s Prog band “Renaissance” is a criminally underrated band who are aptly named. Their vocalist Annie Haslam is one of the best female vocalists of all time.

  • @GuitarLessonsBobbyCrispy
    @GuitarLessonsBobbyCrispy 2 года назад +62

    Makes you think, maybe some lute player back in the 1500's could have written the intro to Stairway to Heaven ( or something very similar ), but forgot to write it down and we never heard it again for another 400 years.

    • @GoldieBarrett
      @GoldieBarrett 2 года назад +6

      that stuff happens all the time. If one thinks of something but does not act upon it, it is still out there in the Universe for someone else to grab onto. And they always do. 🙏

    • @jmcc2275
      @jmcc2275 2 года назад +5

      He changed his mind and wrote “ Whole Lotta Love “ instead.

  • @LivingWatersUtube
    @LivingWatersUtube Месяц назад +12

    We LOVE that you are not afraid to post whatEver you like! Classical actually had a big effect on us, too.

  • @karens2111
    @karens2111 2 года назад +341

    Watching Rick enjoy a song is life affirming.

    • @cedricgist7614
      @cedricgist7614 2 года назад +7

      The man is passionate about music - not just his music but all thoughtful, well-played music. It's infectious!

    • @Blissed-Out
      @Blissed-Out 2 года назад +4

      @@cedricgist7614 Some of the expressions he makes really crack me up. I could easily see him doing stand up /acting.

    • @davidfleuchaus
      @davidfleuchaus 11 месяцев назад +1

      Air lute
      Aire lute
      Heir lute
      Herr Lute
      Err lute
      Hair lute
      Era lute
      Theme and variations

  • @azcodemonkey
    @azcodemonkey 2 года назад +237

    This would have been timeless if your wife had walked into the background when you started playing it, and rolled her eyes. Thank you, sir, as always. You rule.

    • @ocljtc
      @ocljtc 2 года назад +2

      😆😆😆😅

    • @rabbimeyer
      @rabbimeyer 2 года назад +1

      Yes! Very solid!

    • @blackvx
      @blackvx 2 года назад +2

      😂 With Rick dressed as a Renaissance man.

    • @chad9261
      @chad9261 2 года назад

      you look like a discord mod

    • @tamber5977
      @tamber5977 2 года назад

      @@chad9261 and you look like a nobody, "chad".

  • @pridgenwatkins2867
    @pridgenwatkins2867 2 года назад +61

    This could be my favorite Rick Beato YT clip. Keep up the great work, Rick. You're the pied piper showing a new generation of musicians how vast the music universe really is.

  • @khunlucie
    @khunlucie 4 месяца назад +3

    I like to listen to John Dowland's music when it snows.... So peaceful!! ❤❤

  • @thomasmoorer3887
    @thomasmoorer3887 2 года назад +219

    I am a classical guitarist and a huge Julian Bream fan. I am particularly drawn to Renaissance and Baroque music. Thank you for sharing this with others that enjoy your channel. I hope you will include more topics like this in the future.

    • @robertscharlow
      @robertscharlow 2 года назад +2

      Julian is great. His duets with John Williams are epic.

    • @raidrfrk
      @raidrfrk 2 года назад +1

      You must like Blackmore Knight

    • @ronaldhuff635
      @ronaldhuff635 2 года назад +8

      if it aint baroque,, dont fix it

  • @raydelrosario2366
    @raydelrosario2366 2 года назад +330

    When Mr. Beato says "OH!!" on music from the 1500s...you know he's well rounded. Truly a legit sensei of music.

    • @jsmith5278
      @jsmith5278 2 года назад +5

      truly...

    • @WutipongWongsakuldej
      @WutipongWongsakuldej 2 года назад +7

      When you call him sensei, I think it'd be interesting to see his comments on Japanese pop music.

    • @larsonfamilyhouse
      @larsonfamilyhouse 2 года назад +1

      Well he was a music professor for many years lol

    • @crhu319
      @crhu319 2 года назад +2

      He has to discover the Japanese female guitarists next...true senseis of the axe!

    • @OuijTube
      @OuijTube 2 года назад +5

      Early Music will really blow your mind if you let it, man. The great thing about this video is that we get to see different ways to perform this song, which is a treat. Too often, this kind of music gets tied up in the straitjacket of "SERIOUS PERFORMANCE." I mean, yeah, it IS serious music, but as other people noted, this was written originally as a DANCE. It was alive! The more we get this music out into the world, the more chances it gets to live, and that makes me happy.

  • @samforsyth
    @samforsyth Год назад +308

    “Shall I call her good, when she proves unkind”
    Such a heavy lyric. Love it!!!

    • @bobbydellmusic
      @bobbydellmusic Год назад +18

      This song is sometimes known as the “Earl of Essex Galliard,” as it’s dedicated to Robert Devereux, the second Earl of Essex, who was executed for treason by Queen Elizabeth I.

    • @teach-learn4078
      @teach-learn4078 Год назад +28

      ​@@bobbydellmusic After praying that God would preserve the Queen and asking the crowd to join him in prayer, he begged God to forgive his enemies. He then removed his gown and ruff and knelt at the block, looking up at the sky and saying the Lord's Prayer. After forgiving the executioner, who knelt in front of him, Essex repeated the Creed and then took off his doublet, as it was covering his neck, to display a waistcoat of scarlet, the colour of martyrs. He laid himself on the block, stretched out his arms and prayed, "Lord be merciful to Thy prostrate servant… Lord, into Thy hands I commend my spirit." After repeating two verses of Psalm 51, he could take no more and cried out, "Executioner, strike home!". The executioner swung his axe to behead Essex, but, unfortunately, it took three blows to sever his neck. When the deed was finally done, the executioner held the head aloft, shouting, "God save the Queen!"

      Essex had asked to be executed privately and accordingly, was beheaded on Tower Green on Ash Wednesday, 25 February 1601. He was aged thirty-four at the time of his execution and gained the distinction of becoming the last person to be beheaded within the Tower of London, he was beheaded at the same spot as Lady Jane Grey and Elizabeth's mother, Anne Boleyn had been. The first blow of the axe hit the Earl of Essex's shoulder and it was reported to have taken three strokes by the executioner Thomas Derrick to complete the execution. …

    • @christinesilberman8273
      @christinesilberman8273 Год назад +2

      ​@@teach-learn4078😊 no I'm not

    • @teach-learn4078
      @teach-learn4078 Год назад +4

      @@christinesilberman8273 You’re not “what,” milady?

    • @CorePathway
      @CorePathway Год назад +12

      Same heartache, different century

  • @HeikeWie
    @HeikeWie 2 месяца назад +3

    As a singer and classical guitarist who played and sang Dowland a lot, I find it absolutely wonderful how he let's Dowland's music (especially the parts with the hemiolas) just sweep him away and he can't sit still, like it's beat music or Rock'nRoll, which of course it IS. Dowland was the Mick Jagger of his days. Brilliant music, timeless.

  • @MerkinMuffly
    @MerkinMuffly 2 года назад +318

    My wife never liked this type of music either, but for a kid growing up in the 80s into fantasy novels, movies and D&D this was right up my alley

    • @wfemp_4730
      @wfemp_4730 2 года назад +3

      @Miles Doyle "But all the women children, that have not known a man by lying with him, keep alive for yourselves."

    • @MartijnVos
      @MartijnVos 2 года назад +1

      Speaking of psalms, I'm a big fan of the 1555 Genevan psalm melodies. There's just something to those scales and harmonies of that time.

    • @AaronLitz
      @AaronLitz 2 года назад

      Currently playing a 15th level Half-Elven Bard who has a Doss Lute. I managed to cast Charm Monster on two Bone Devils using it a while ago.
      He fights with a special pair of magical, crystal-bladed swords he crafted himself, that sound like paired glass armonicas as they cut through the air.

    • @kennyplay5982
      @kennyplay5982 2 года назад

      @ 7:55 really funny faces

    • @stefankrautz9048
      @stefankrautz9048 2 года назад +6

      i wonder what the older generation in the 1500's thought of this music. "dont you dare to go to the next castle-concert ! "

  • @Warrendoe
    @Warrendoe Год назад +57

    This music just touches my soul. I’m a 67 y.o English woman and visit Medieval/Tudor buildings brings me alive…as does plainchant. Thank you for this.

  • @donaldanderson6604
    @donaldanderson6604 2 года назад +78

    Shredding on the lute! I think there is plenty of Django in Bream's playing. (His dog was named Django.) He played in a jazz band when he did National Service and there are videos of him jamming Django-style. The lute players were expected to be able to improvise fast on the changes and had a lot in common with today's jazzers.
    One of Al di Meola's favourite records was Bream's album of 20th century music.
    I was lucky to have met Bream several times after concerts and he would just hang out and chat to the audience backstage. No ego, just talent.

    • @kathyadair8552
      @kathyadair8552 2 года назад

      How interesting! Thank you.
      Django ~ ❤!

    • @johnricercato740
      @johnricercato740 9 месяцев назад

      There’s a video somewhere of him playing with Stephane Grappelli the great jazz violinist. It’s not Julian’s music and Grappelli plays at a furious pace but JB mostly manages to keep in time…!

  • @FrancisPerreux
    @FrancisPerreux 2 месяца назад +2

    SHREDDING on the LUTE...Dude! Thank you so much for being a Music Geek and PROUD OF IT. This video made me a subscriber ❤

  • @alcyonemusica
    @alcyonemusica Год назад +49

    Finally a music producer with a lot of culture and rich in Information in America. Congratulations 🎉🍾

  • @berrykrautboy5368
    @berrykrautboy5368 2 года назад +87

    Rick, you really are a true scholar of music. Thank you for opening another door in the house of music.

    • @enshrinehd
      @enshrinehd 2 года назад +4

      Some of my favorite music! I never get tired of it

  • @maudessen573
    @maudessen573 Год назад +118

    OMG, Rick…you bring back the memories. As a student I studied briefly in London in the early 1970s. Early music was very popular then. We used to go to all the early music concerts we could…indoors and outdoors. We were so poor that we would walk miles to save tube money so we could pay for our tickets. And student ticket rates were so cheap! Anyhow, this is a lovely reminder of those long ago days.

    • @Catmom2004
      @Catmom2004 Год назад +4

      Memories are so sweet, the older we get. Don't you think? 🖖

    • @johncook30284
      @johncook30284 Год назад +2

      Julian Bream and John Williams, the guitarist, gateways to the past for me.

    • @David-yh4wz
      @David-yh4wz Год назад +2

      It still is! Although, to be fair, I'm talking about period ensembles and orchestras rather than early music per se. Some of my favorites are Musica Antiqua Köln, Brandenburg Consort, London Baroque, Avison Ensemble, Raglan Baroque Players, AAM, La Chapelle Royale, Les Musiciens du Louvre, English Concert, English Baroque Soloists, Ensemble Vintage Koln, Les Arts Florissants, Bach Collegium Japan, AOE, La Petite Bande, and many more excellent period ensembles and orchestras.

    • @RafaelHanussek
      @RafaelHanussek Год назад

      Sounds amazing!

    • @bogdiworksV2
      @bogdiworksV2 Год назад +2

      I was gonna say the same thing. Lots of opportunities to hear really well performed early and Baroque stuff in the UK.

  • @barbaraprice2550
    @barbaraprice2550 5 месяцев назад +1

    It is really really wonderful that you are playing music from the 1500s. They rock then and we should hear it.
    Kudos to you

  • @RemyCT63
    @RemyCT63 2 года назад +26

    Just when you think the art of guitar solo shredding is a product of the 1960s thru today, we clearly see this level of sophisticaticated playing dates all the way back to the 1500s. Very cool to see and thank you for educating and exposing us to a music category we most likely would never ever seek out on our own.

  • @tomdchi12
    @tomdchi12 2 года назад +97

    Dowland was early emo too: "He is best known today for his melancholy songs such as "Come, heavy sleep", "Come again", "Flow my tears", "I saw my Lady weepe" and "In darkness let me dwell""

    • @thetruthchannel349
      @thetruthchannel349 2 года назад +3

      *Before anti-depressants*

    • @bartolo498
      @bartolo498 2 года назад +8

      @@thetruthchannel349 The only had wine, women and song as antidepressants... unfortunately, all three can also work as depressants...

    • @russellbaston974
      @russellbaston974 9 месяцев назад +3

      Nobody did melancholy like the Tudors.

    • @feelthejoy
      @feelthejoy 9 месяцев назад +2

      Most art was pretty emo then

    • @felix0-014
      @felix0-014 5 дней назад

      I learned and memorized "flow my tears" in highschool. Always a favorite to sing for people because they never expect it!

  • @kengrimsley4172
    @kengrimsley4172 2 года назад +30

    I never tire of Rick's enthusiasm. I would literally listen to anything on Earth based on his recommendation...just because I know it's something I should learn.

  • @robjus1601
    @robjus1601 2 месяца назад +1

    Wow the first rock concert I ever went to was Sting in LA. I got joy watching how much you love this music.

  • @thenewmedic
    @thenewmedic 2 года назад +180

    Rick, the thing I enjoy most about you is you come across as less a sought-after professional music industry producer and more just a guy who genuinely enjoys music and just wants other people to enjoy it, too (and know why certain songs are great). You let the music do the talking while you're completely engrossed in it and it's infectious. Love your stuff, man.

  • @Markpig7
    @Markpig7 2 года назад +49

    I'm a metal/rock guy at heart. Ages ago I did three years full time at music school, classical guitar performance. Watching this put a lump in my throat, a smile on my dial and a life reaffirming/recalling chill down my spine. This touched my soul. Thank you.

    • @TheCubicleReview2
      @TheCubicleReview2 2 года назад +4

      Listening to that show I was like "that's metal"

  • @jasontaylor3898
    @jasontaylor3898 Год назад +141

    I listen to Renaissance music every morning as I sip my coffee and watch the sunrise.

    • @janel342
      @janel342 Год назад +3

      Sounds too perfect to be true. The sun rises when it’s raining?

    • @joedwyer3297
      @joedwyer3297 11 месяцев назад +10

      ​@@janel342be that as it may, the sun rises no matter what😅

    • @edwardx4979
      @edwardx4979 11 месяцев назад +3

      That's awesome! I guess it only gets better if you happen to live in an old cottage in the woods and there's chickens, swine, and cattle roaming around... 😁

    • @Cheetahdoll
      @Cheetahdoll 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@janel342NO WAY U JUST ASKED THAT 💀

  • @billbruno7163
    @billbruno7163 7 месяцев назад +2

    I used to live in Fairport in the 70s. Whitney Farms. Used to be nice and rural, except for the 8' snowbanks

  • @yvonnemccarthy4957
    @yvonnemccarthy4957 2 года назад +76

    Ok. I started my vocal career with Renaissance madrigals. I didn't think I could have more respect for you, Rick, but dammit, you just exploded my head. AWESOME video!!

  • @dannydoc1969
    @dannydoc1969 2 года назад +204

    I saw Julian Bream in concert twice, he was an amazing guitarist. Ian Anderson from Jethro Tull always reminded me of a renaissance bard.

    • @SadkoLitsky
      @SadkoLitsky 2 года назад +13

      Exactly !!! Exactly ! You voiced my thoughts! Now I understand where Jero Tull's feet come from. Already in the 16th century this music sounds jazz-rock.

    • @marnaehrech1223
      @marnaehrech1223 2 года назад +6

      Yes!!!! Exactly!

    • @patrickdaly5068
      @patrickdaly5068 2 года назад +4

      @@SadkoLitsky Yes’s intro on “Roustabout” is reminiscent of some of this music.

    • @davidlee6720
      @davidlee6720 2 года назад +6

      ian anderson the medieval jester par excellence

    • @tombusshart3971
      @tombusshart3971 2 года назад +3

      That's what I like about Jethro Tull ,the intermixture of various medieval and modern instruments along with Anderson's artistry of words gives me that feeling of sitting by a fire back in the 14th century.

  • @roberthiggins2162
    @roberthiggins2162 2 года назад +84

    John Dowland was the man. I studied lute many years ago and have played all his music.

    • @Cayres9
      @Cayres9 2 года назад +3

      He was the Malmsteen of his day LOL

    • @douglasgreen437
      @douglasgreen437 7 дней назад

      ​@Cayres9 😂

  • @gregorfussenegger
    @gregorfussenegger 2 года назад +171

    I'm still underestimating Rick's huge amount of knowledge about music. Soo cool! I'm learning with every new video!

    • @robertakerman3570
      @robertakerman3570 2 года назад

      @Jonathan Crews Yeah, but can He play lft-hnd'd(joking of course)

    • @gaguy2160
      @gaguy2160 2 года назад

      Rick is the man and I love his knowledge and passion

  • @debiddoki7755
    @debiddoki7755 2 года назад +147

    This is now my favourite video of yours Rick! When you can't stop conducting along with the music, playing your "air lute", and looking like a kid in a candy shop, it's infectious :)

    • @billjarvis9467
      @billjarvis9467 2 года назад +4

      Seconded.

    • @jcee6886
      @jcee6886 2 года назад

      Coming third for the bronze, me.

    • @colb999
      @colb999 2 года назад +1

      I just got this image of Rick being at school playing the 'air lute'. Made me laugh.

    • @peanutbutterisfu
      @peanutbutterisfu 2 года назад +8

      Many musicians say music is their life but Rick is on a different level he’s well rounded in all aspects playing instruments, composing music, producing, engineering, college music professor, guitar teacher and the list goes on! Something I have noticed that is very true is when someones life is really all about music they really don’t have genre boundaries industrial metal music might be their favorite but they will also listen and appreciate almost any genre. I listen to a pretty wide variety I can listen to pop punk now and then listen to the orchestral radio station ur great grandmother listened to but I can’t say music is my life I don’t live and breath music anymore. I really have so much respect for guys like Rick and I hope the younger generations will have people like Rick so all the music from today to a thousand years ago will still be taught and cared about!

  • @tamaralandreneau8005
    @tamaralandreneau8005 11 месяцев назад +34

    My Daughter & I love this style of music. The BBC plays this music in every Movie they make, depicting the music of the period. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @paulnorell7201
    @paulnorell7201 4 месяца назад +1

    I love watching a great rock musician like yourself, being so passionate about early and classical music. Music is not only the universal language, but it's also timeless.

  • @zizimycat
    @zizimycat Год назад +195

    I’ve always wondered why our current society shows little appreciation for Renaissance music or the instruments of the era. I love seeing this fellow savouring it. Great video.

    • @tatache5971
      @tatache5971 Год назад +9

      Agree. In the best case majority of the people find it fun, in the worst they find it weird. 15th to 17th century gave us so many incredible pieces. I love this period.

    • @janeclarkson8471
      @janeclarkson8471 Год назад +11

      It’s probably not exposed enough. It’s beautiful and charming with wonderful instruments.

    • @robertkrepek2561
      @robertkrepek2561 Год назад +7

      Seeing him enjoy it is as satisfying as the music itself.

    • @majorronaldmandell7835
      @majorronaldmandell7835 Год назад +1

      @@janeclarkson8471: Yeah! Charming!

    • @Visigoth_
      @Visigoth_ Год назад +8

      I never understood why traditional music isn't popular... most "contemporary" music is Trash (me and my RenFair friends know where it's really "at").

  • @AndyNyle
    @AndyNyle 2 года назад +121

    Ritchie Blackmore introduced me to Renaissance music through his interpretations of it. Great stuff. Very under appreciated

    • @Redplanetfilms1
      @Redplanetfilms1 2 года назад +7

      I worked with Ritchie once and he really did seem that he was a Renaissance musician in a past life. To the clothes he wore, to the castle like setting we recorded in, to way he held and played his guitar. I agree!

    • @hannahmillington5781
      @hannahmillington5781 2 года назад +6

      Ritchie always loved Renaissance music, and once he quit Purple/Rainbow he seemed much happier playing that style of music - I know he has made a comeback with Rock in recent times, but his real interest (and better playing in my opinion) is with this genre.

    • @trollstjerne
      @trollstjerne 2 года назад +1

      Same here. Love the 3 first Blackmore's Night albums.

    • @AndyNyle
      @AndyNyle 2 года назад +2

      @@Redplanetfilms1 yep he popularized those staccato runs in the context of rock and roll Rick was reacting to, and also lots of it with Blackmore Night’s

    • @oskarileikos
      @oskarileikos 2 года назад +2

      @@Redplanetfilms1 I've heard that he lives like a renaissance troubadour. No phone, no email address...

  • @markcolwell1120
    @markcolwell1120 2 года назад +178

    Sting did an entire album of Dowland songs on lute with readings from his diaries. It is titled "Songs from the Labyrinth."

    • @stevescuba1978
      @stevescuba1978 2 года назад +11

      Going to the search engine in 3...2...

    • @GardensAndGames
      @GardensAndGames 2 года назад +15

      There was a documentary and concert recorded for the release of that album as well. Sting discusses how difficult it was to learn the lute. During the concert where he's playing only Dowland songs someone shouts from the crowd "Play Roxanne!" 🙄

    • @Adyman182
      @Adyman182 2 года назад +7

      Featuring Bosnian lutenist Edin Karamazov.

    • @KCCheez
      @KCCheez 2 года назад +8

      Bowie did an entire Labyrinth album…

    • @natewhite455
      @natewhite455 2 года назад

      Rick Beato's, is a Hypocrite,still a good Guitarist but he criticize legendary Black Guitarist too much and does not have facts...

  • @user-man-now80
    @user-man-now80 3 месяца назад +1

    It's so refreshing, just for a little while, to listen to an intelligent chap sharing his enthusiasm for Renaissance music - and convincing me that it really is so beautiful. I have no talent for creating music, but I absolutely appreciate the quality of the music, and of course the skills of those musicians. Thank you so much. Cheers ! Sheffield South Yorkshire.

  • @joaocalladomusico
    @joaocalladomusico 2 года назад +75

    I love John Dowland's music and I totally agree that it influenced a lot of pop-rock british music. It was great hearing Sting sing it!

    • @Shrinkingviolett2
      @Shrinkingviolett2 2 года назад +3

      I love the Sting version too!

    • @lat1419
      @lat1419 2 года назад

      I actually don't like Stings versions. No reason, but perhaps he's spent his career trying to sing American and now struggles with "plain" English which is a pure tone. If you listen to it in stone rooms you might understand that indefinable quality. My house is stone, and the acoustic qualities are so different to other building materials.

    • @Bella-fz9fy
      @Bella-fz9fy 2 года назад +1

      If you imagine it with a drummer in the background,very like certain rock to me!I think some of the stones studying folk music helped their later ballad compositions too!

  • @eordonnadandrea8216
    @eordonnadandrea8216 Год назад +280

    I came from a rice field in Southern Louisiana. I was sent miles and miles away to LSU in Baton Rouge. The bookstore held a huge record sale. I bought a Renaissance album. It took my breath away. The harmonies.

    • @dorasmith7875
      @dorasmith7875 11 месяцев назад +1

      Life must have been AWFULLY dull in that rice field, if this music is a step up.

    • @sarae.mcneil462
      @sarae.mcneil462 10 месяцев назад +14

      I’m from the rice fields and cotton fields in Central Arkansas, and I love this music, too.

    • @lindanichols3415
      @lindanichols3415 9 месяцев назад +13

      ​​@@dorasmith7875Non gustibus est disputandum. Translated from the Latin means: In matters of taste there can be no dispute. Music is a spiritual experience and speaks to our individual souls which are as unique as our fingerprints 🤗

    • @lukaszgalon3000
      @lukaszgalon3000 9 месяцев назад

      @@lindanichols3415 I would agree if the new music nowadays wouldn't exist, I know people have different music tastes but there is good music and bad.

    • @Loki_Dokie
      @Loki_Dokie 9 месяцев назад +6

      ​@@lukaszgalon3000there is no good or bad, just what you like or don't like.

  • @mattmexor2882
    @mattmexor2882 2 года назад +307

    Galileo's father, Vincenzo Galilei, was a professional lutenist, music theorist, and composer.

    • @twenty3electronics
      @twenty3electronics 2 года назад +19

      Galileo, Galileo
      Galileo, Figaro - magnificoo

    • @MrBoker69
      @MrBoker69 2 года назад +7

      @@twenty3electronics Oh mama mia!!!!

    • @suzannehartmann946
      @suzannehartmann946 2 года назад +8

      I would not be surprised if it affected hi attitude towards the movement of stars and planets.

    • @brandonrobinson1785
      @brandonrobinson1785 2 года назад +6

      I had no idea! That's awesome.

    • @SkogIGimle
      @SkogIGimle 2 года назад +6

      My dad has diabetes

  • @forearthbelow
    @forearthbelow 12 дней назад

    @Rick Beato, 71 yo Englishman Londoner here. TOTALLY mesmerised by the content of this clip, made me proud we have THIS in our history.

  • @seanmatthewmills
    @seanmatthewmills 2 года назад +202

    “Whose heavenly touch, upon the lute, doth ravish all human sense”
    -Shakespeare.

    • @jcee6886
      @jcee6886 2 года назад +2

      🥰

    • @lev7509
      @lev7509 6 месяцев назад +2

      (the author of that specific sonnet in The Passionate Pilgrim is actually suspected to be Richard Barnfield)

    • @seanmatthewmills
      @seanmatthewmills 6 месяцев назад +4

      @@lev7509 Elizabethan authorship attribution is a very thorny subject. I agree that there is doubt about this particular sonnet, as well as others in the passionate pilgrim, but then again, there’s a lot of doubt about Shakespeare himself.

    • @lev7509
      @lev7509 6 месяцев назад +3

      @@seanmatthewmills fair enough ^^ i apologize for my "um actually" moment.
      Whoever wrote that had a point though 👍

    • @irtnyc
      @irtnyc 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@seanmatthewmills Yeah there is zero evidence William Shakespeare of Stratford could even sign his own name. Or ever attended any school or wrote anything whatsoever, himself. Not one letter exists evidencing he was literate, nevermind an author, nevermind playwright. All we have is works attributed to "William Shakespeare" most of which were published for the first time after the man living in Stratford was dead.
      As Mark Twain put it, he's a brontosaurus (ie a construct) put together out of "plaster of Paris" and assumptions.

  • @threearrows2248
    @threearrows2248 2 года назад +294

    Such a great piece! I forget how blessed I am to have grown up a classically trained musician with musician parents. Classical and jazz was a staple in our home and car. My husband just got me a speaker for my birthday and I've been playing classical for my kids every day during school time and it just changes the whole mood, it gets inside of you. Music used to mean something, we need to get back to that.

    • @johnmarcinko2484
      @johnmarcinko2484 2 года назад +7

      I wonder if Bach had any access to the music of Dowland, or other composer from this period...

    • @dont.ripfuller6587
      @dont.ripfuller6587 2 года назад +8

      You had parents? like...plural? 😦

    • @Chris-mf1rm
      @Chris-mf1rm 2 года назад +5

      Music has always meant something and still does. It’s just a matter of whether that particular piece of music speaks to you. Some modern stuff I hate, but I wouldn’t be so superior as to say it had no meaning.

    • @lauriesuzanne8848
      @lauriesuzanne8848 2 года назад +2

      Truth!

    • @brigeetalight4394
      @brigeetalight4394 2 года назад +2

      Yes, we do

  • @BoomerBends
    @BoomerBends Год назад +587

    Rick Beato singlehandedly doing more for the preservation of music than countless scores of his peers. Amazing guy!

    • @lm5730
      @lm5730 Год назад +5

      In the US. The rest of us already love it

    • @codswallop321
      @codswallop321 Год назад +8

      Fun fact: the sci fi grandmaster Philip K Dick was a huge Dowland fan. The title of his novel "Flow my tears, the policeman said" references Dowland's most famous song.

    • @wondrinminstrel
      @wondrinminstrel Год назад +1

      @@codswallop321 That's interesting. I was a huge Philip K dick fan back in the 90's when I was in my late teens. I read just about all his short stories and novels. Which song are you refering to please? OH and I still have a chuckle when telling friends about The Broken Bubble.

    • @helentee9863
      @helentee9863 Год назад +2

      I'm in my middle 60s, l was brought up on this style of music in the uk because my dad is a huge fan.
      'Stone age' music is what most classical musicians/singers tend to call it 😁.
      If you like this,try Googleing Michael Deller/ Counter Tenors

    • @katharinerawdon7398
      @katharinerawdon7398 9 месяцев назад

      @@wondrinminstrel The song is simply titled "Flow My Tears", or possibly "Flow, My Tears" - look for it, it's gorgeous!

  • @stugryffin3619
    @stugryffin3619 5 месяцев назад

    The child like joy pouring out of you as you listen and air-lute along makes this old music lover feel like he's 10 years old. This was such a great vid.

  • @MontyCraig
    @MontyCraig 2 года назад +76

    John Dowland's lute music is a gift of beauty to the world.

  • @PraisingAdonai
    @PraisingAdonai 2 года назад +140

    I am never bored with these "jewels" you find and bring to us. Thank you for all your efforts to share the love for the music of all flavors. Music is like ice cream, it comes in so many flavors, and all of them are so good. Shalom.

    • @wannabecarguy
      @wannabecarguy 2 года назад

      Bruh, this sucks. This had to be an April fool's thing.

    • @ignacioclerici5341
      @ignacioclerici5341 2 года назад

      @@wannabecarguy it's for intelligent people, not basic closed minded one sided people like you

    • @akidk1499
      @akidk1499 2 года назад +1

      @@wannabecarguy Ur taste is just bad...
      Ur musical sense has not been opened yet

    • @barryflick54
      @barryflick54 2 года назад +1

      Yes indeed....the only music genera I dont care for is modern country music

    • @petergilkes7082
      @petergilkes7082 2 года назад

      A great video. Thank you!

  • @SirWussiePants
    @SirWussiePants 2 года назад +36

    John Dowland was a master. I am a Punk and LOVE Lady Hundson's Puffe. Dowland's music was all incredible

  • @cybermavenmusic
    @cybermavenmusic 3 месяца назад

    Wow, I was today years old when I learned of Julian Bream!! Thank you, I love this era of music, but I am a casual when it come to knowing this part of music history! Wow, new rabbit hole.

  • @tonyqunta32
    @tonyqunta32 2 года назад +64

    John Dowland was and is one of the greatest composers of all time.
    No wonder artists such as Sting and the great Jan Akkerman have been influenced by Dowland!

  • @philhopkins159
    @philhopkins159 2 года назад +46

    Amazing video. I am a drummer who has a background in jazz but ended up playing a lot of this kind of music at Shakespeare's Globe Theatre in London, mostly with wind players. And this is what I found. The music swings! It has a groove! And the players get to improvise! I felt right at home. Well done Rick for reminding us of the joy to be found in music of all kinds.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 2 года назад

      Do you find the cadences of this similar to an Irish bodhran beat emphasis

  • @genuinetuffguy1854
    @genuinetuffguy1854 2 года назад +36

    I love how Rick gets so excited about the pieces he features. You can tell that he totally communicates through music…his soul is attuned to it.

    • @cbarfield1000
      @cbarfield1000 2 года назад +1

      Yeah, but he talks over everything. Stop yakking Rick!

    • @nihilioellipsis
      @nihilioellipsis Год назад +1

      it helps reduce the stigma that hipsters and others play on every kind of music they don't like. Rick truly embraces all music. there are so many people who can communicate with the general audience who are like that and who have knowledge.

    • @amandautah
      @amandautah Год назад

      Ya? The whole video I was thinking he was going to try it out on the keyboard. ...

  • @thebec8853
    @thebec8853 6 месяцев назад

    I discovered early music in college and still adore it, 50 years later. I love that you're sharing this with the world!

  • @maryvallas772
    @maryvallas772 2 года назад +56

    I love the intricacies of this music, it's so beautifully orchestrated.
    What I found very interesting here is is during this lute "shredding" moments I can very clearly hear the similarities to Greek Bouzouki music I grew up listening to. The Bouzouki is a type of lute, and the phrasing and style are so similar, even to this very day. Amazing.

    • @deekobald9260
      @deekobald9260 2 года назад +9

      Yes I love the bouzouki too. On one of my trips to Greece I bought one from a builder on Aegina (small island)... good memories.

    • @YARNBARF
      @YARNBARF 2 года назад +1

      Yes!! I heard that too and was reminded of the bouzouki!! I grew up listening to Greek music from my Dad's side of the family.