Beethoven 9 - Chicago Symphony Orchestra - Riccardo Muti

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 7 май 2015
  • On May 7, 1824, Beethoven shared his 9th Symphony with the world even though he could never hear it. On May 7, 2015 celebrate the anniversary of Beethoven’s most glorious and jubilant masterpiece with Riccardo Muti and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Chorus. An exhilarating testament to the human spirit, Beethoven’s Ninth bursts with brooding power and kinetic energy and culminates in the exultant hymn, “Ode to Joy.”The video is now available free on demand for all to enjoy! - See more at: cso.org/beethoven9
    For additional videos of Riccardo Muti, visit riccardomutimusic.com.
    September 19, 2014
    Orchestra Hall at Symphony Center
    Chicago Symphony Orchestra
    Riccardo Muti, conductor
    Camilla Nylund, soprano
    Ekaterina Gubanova, mezzo-soprano
    Matthew Polenzani, tenor
    Eric Owens, bass-baritone
    Chicago Symphony Chorus
    Duain Wolfe, director
  • ВидеоклипыВидеоклипы

Комментарии • 18 тыс.

  • @domenicogiordano3743
    @domenicogiordano3743 21 день назад +601

    Who's here after 200 years?

    • @isimsizsahs3817
      @isimsizsahs3817 21 день назад +14

      Very good bro 😂

    • @giorgio9741
      @giorgio9741 21 день назад +10

      I just went to La scala theater in Milan to listen to it

    • @diegofuentes6783
      @diegofuentes6783 21 день назад +4

      Me

    • @longknoll8065
      @longknoll8065 21 день назад +3

      ​@@giorgio9741Wow, cool! I hired a small nearby hall and played the symphony in there (to myself)!

    • @domenicogiordano3743
      @domenicogiordano3743 19 дней назад +3

      @@giorgio9741 wow, lucky you! I I bet it will have been a wonderful experience

  • @davegingrich8642
    @davegingrich8642 2 месяца назад +186

    My brother (horn) and daughter-in-law (soprano section leader in the chorus) both in this recording. I am blessed.

    • @herbiecactus6687
      @herbiecactus6687 21 день назад +5

      Best things about this recording- the unbeatable Dan Gingrich/Jim Smelser team, and Eugene Izotov on oboe.

    • @paulomarcelossobral3356
      @paulomarcelossobral3356 16 дней назад +5

      What a pride!!

    • @kurteifert2657
      @kurteifert2657 14 дней назад +2

      GOD BLESS THEM BOTH AND YOU - I'M CRYING!

    • @kurteifert2657
      @kurteifert2657 14 дней назад +1

      Please tell them from me, job well done and thank you!

    • @kurteifert2657
      @kurteifert2657 14 дней назад

      Pink or red dress? thank you!

  • @slydz
    @slydz 2 дня назад +15

    I played in the Chicago Symphony as a 16 year old today! I am very blessed for having such an amazing opportunity. It is very beautiful and special inside the hall. Good day to anyone reading this!

    • @stefanyzambrano7325
      @stefanyzambrano7325 2 дня назад +1

      Congrats 🎊🎈 🥰Enjoy your day!

    • @slydz
      @slydz 2 дня назад

      @@stefanyzambrano7325 thank you. You too

  • @jaimealvarezmd7245
    @jaimealvarezmd7245 21 день назад +67

    In honor of beethoven, i sit here, 200 years later listening to the gift he gave humanity.

    • @abisaijorgevegaperez5289
      @abisaijorgevegaperez5289 19 дней назад +2

      And sadly beethoven doesn't know about it for there's no life after death. The great wonder of classical music is the creation of something that goes beyond the comprehension of the creator

    • @EstaghfurullahiRabbiveEtubuile
      @EstaghfurullahiRabbiveEtubuile 15 дней назад +1

      😄

    • @believersinnersanctuary65
      @believersinnersanctuary65 8 дней назад +1

      @@EstaghfurullahiRabbiveEtubuile ...and what a treasured gift the maker of this video has given us - to be able to dowload this magnificence - THANK YOU.

    • @saintleger858
      @saintleger858 3 дня назад

      Nous sommes là pour honorer les 200 ans de cette symphonie !🙂

  • @zuzannawisniewska4464
    @zuzannawisniewska4464 10 месяцев назад +2588

    "To play a wrong note is insignificant ; to play without passion is inexplicable "
    -- Ludwig van Beethoven

    • @yanzoka5138
      @yanzoka5138 10 месяцев назад +35

      Beautiful quote❤

    • @taxodium22
      @taxodium22 9 месяцев назад +99

      Not inexplicable but inexcusable - but thanks for the quote 🙏

    • @joshuagregory8425
      @joshuagregory8425 7 месяцев назад

      @@yanzoka5138tn

    • @cindytartt4048
      @cindytartt4048 5 месяцев назад +10

      ⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠@@simonevans343which has been done (the bible) multiple times: either Ancient Hebrew or Aramaic & recopied; then into Koine Greek & recopied & changed many times; into Latin; recopied & changed many times; then translated into Elizabethan English & recopied & retranslated with opportunities for error at every turn, Don’t mind me, I’m not a purist. Quotes can be altered: it would be mind boggling if they weren’t.

    • @vaughn7910
      @vaughn7910 5 месяцев назад +14

      @@simonevans343 No, he was correcting the quote. Beethoven said inexcusable; not inexplicable. Not that it matters but just pointing it out.

  • @mud2479
    @mud2479 7 лет назад +6724

    Amazing how all this was inside a dude´s mind once.

    • @joncaju
      @joncaju 6 лет назад +349

      That dude is Herr Ludwig van Beethoven, but I know right, for a guy who lost his hearing

    • @sinisab69
      @sinisab69 6 лет назад +107

      Thanks for sharing my thought. That is beyond comprehention.

    • @MrHerodoto
      @MrHerodoto 6 лет назад +25

      Yeah! That really is.

    • @lostinthesauce3011
      @lostinthesauce3011 6 лет назад +119

      ... and now all that is in people's head is OneRepublic, Taylor Swift and Beiber.

    • @Duncanish41
      @Duncanish41 6 лет назад +89

      These youngsters will someday realise what great music is.

  • @NghiNguyen-pl5kw
    @NghiNguyen-pl5kw Месяц назад +35

    1st movement: 1:49
    2nd movement: 19:34
    3rd movement: 35:27
    4th movement: 52:12
    Ode to Joy: 54:48
    Choral: 59:23

  • @eddybabe7963
    @eddybabe7963 2 месяца назад +206

    Imagine hearing this for the first time in 1824. 200 years later still spine-tingling.

    • @scotter7663
      @scotter7663 Месяц назад +13

      Especially since access to music was limited back then. To hear this live at the symphony would change your life I'm sure, you'd be buzzing with the emotion from it for weeks

    • @jermalshemism3367
      @jermalshemism3367 Месяц назад +10

      Imagine writing this masterpiece completely deaf and never hearing it. Beethoven was completely deaf at this point.

    • @kurtrueckel1254
      @kurtrueckel1254 19 дней назад

      Can you imagine the conductor accidentally dropping his baton

    • @BirgerBosheinen
      @BirgerBosheinen 5 дней назад

      Bra o 32:34

  • @baekhyuneee5965
    @baekhyuneee5965 3 года назад +9767

    This quarantine changed me a lot

  • @Sharvyg
    @Sharvyg 8 лет назад +18915

    Beethoven : you guys want some symphonies tonight?
    crowd : *cheers loudly*
    Beethoven : I can't hear you.

    • @AshleyRiotable
      @AshleyRiotable 8 лет назад +69

      +Alyssa Hightower Really?

    • @imjohnmc7802
      @imjohnmc7802 8 лет назад +48

      +Sharvil Gandhi LOL

    • @kamiel79
      @kamiel79 8 лет назад +445

      +AshleyRiotable he tragically became deaf late in life, by the time he composed this masterpiece he couldn't hear a thing.. it makes it all the more divine

    • @AshleyRiotable
      @AshleyRiotable 8 лет назад +32

      kamiel verwer I already knew it I was ironic.

    • @elmoteroloco
      @elmoteroloco 8 лет назад +40

      +AshleyRiotable I'm sorry... what?

  • @Peter-Ondrej
    @Peter-Ondrej 21 день назад +65

    On May 7,1824, Ludwig van Beethoven 9 th symphony premiered in Vienna which is considered a magnificent work and which is relevant for today ´s time. Today, the entire musical world is commemorating the 200 th anniversary of the release of this magnificent work.

    • @makijo1571
      @makijo1571 21 день назад +4

      Noo I'm late by 30 MINUTES

    • @ahmedluther1694
      @ahmedluther1694 7 дней назад +1

      Así es, muy bien dicho, toda la música del mundo está de fiesta porque su máxima exponente está de aniversario.

    • @saintleger858
      @saintleger858 3 дня назад +1

      Nous sommes là pour honorer les 200 ans de cette symphonie !🙂

  • @TimLoydShopHero
    @TimLoydShopHero 22 дня назад +46

    200 years ago. It's hard to believe. I hope the world is still here 200 years from now. If it is, this will still be considered a MASTERPIECE!

  • @Dad4Life
    @Dad4Life 5 лет назад +6519

    When this was over, the crowd was ecstatic and applauding wildly but Beethoven heard none of it. The first violinist went to him and turned him around so he could see their reaction to his masterpiece. There are a few things in history that I wish I could time travel back and see and one of them would be the first performance of this with Beethoven himself conducting.

    • @davidwilliamson2115
      @davidwilliamson2115 5 лет назад +272

      What a MIND FUCK that would have been!

    • @SirGalaEd
      @SirGalaEd 5 лет назад +262

      @@cdeeznutsLOL I had also heard, (can't speak to the truth of it but I think to think it's true) that after the first performance was the only time he smiled after a performance.

    • @Caroline1261
      @Caroline1261 5 лет назад +480

      What's so amazing is when Beethoven wrote the 9th symphony he was completely deaf. Writing a sonata when your deaf is one thing, but writing a symphony with all the instrument parts for a whole 70 minute is quite something else. This man was a genius. Just amazing and magnifique and mind blowing!

    • @Caroline1261
      @Caroline1261 5 лет назад +111

      @Don P Yes and when the performance was done, the crowd was applauding and on their feet. But Beethoven didn't hear it and one of the musician had to turn him around so he could see it.

    • @mariateresabandini1526
      @mariateresabandini1526 5 лет назад +39

      So majestic and impressive, eccellenti musicista and one of the best conductors all over the world.

  • @maryuzu9174
    @maryuzu9174 Год назад +2191

    It's so strange how I went from hip hop and pop music to orchestral pieces in just a year and now all I want passionately is to witness this live one day.

    • @alexanderhealey9535
      @alexanderhealey9535 Год назад +124

      All music is incredible

    • @kimstanton2439
      @kimstanton2439 Год назад +43

      I saw it on Saturday - QLD Symphony Orchestra. Totally blew me away ! and the best thing I have ever seen and heard.
      I love all music types too (exception Country and Western)

    • @Michachel
      @Michachel Год назад +31

      I heard it live with this exact orchestra and conductor, it was incredible

    • @kimstanton2439
      @kimstanton2439 Год назад +17

      @@Michachel He is a fabulous conductor !

    • @tjstraw1
      @tjstraw1 Год назад +21

      As great as it sounds on here, it must sound that much better live.

  • @seantomlinson3320
    @seantomlinson3320 21 день назад +21

    200 years ago today. What an incredible masterpiece.

  • @a.dualdesaborit7209
    @a.dualdesaborit7209 21 день назад +9

    A timeless masterpiece premiered exactly two hundred years ago

  • @NFLization
    @NFLization 4 года назад +2217

    Imagine how lit the crowd was mustve been when this dropped like 300 years ago at a live concert.

    • @myarchus1
      @myarchus1 4 года назад +303

      There is a story that the performance received a standing ovation, but, since Beethoven was completely deaf, he couldn't hear it and the alto turned him around so that he could see the audience's reaction.

    • @seymourtrac
      @seymourtrac 4 года назад +208

      It was 200 not 300 years. More importantly it was highly unlikely the average citizen at the time would have heard that played more than a handful of times in their lifetime. Any one of us can have a full bore orchestra playing this beautiful music in our living room every night or on the subway on the way to the office. We take it for granted.

    • @neeltheother2342
      @neeltheother2342 4 года назад +67

      It was 200 years ago, but yeah, the crowd would have been lit all the same.

    • @vedantsinha6296
      @vedantsinha6296 4 года назад +2

      Idiot !!so now u want to go 300 years back.
      F***ing piece of sh*t,. Stop imagining something impossible and increase ur knowledge a little bit

    • @wheelie_tonk
      @wheelie_tonk 4 года назад +80

      @@vedantsinha6296 before he increases his knowledge you should increase your grammar skill

  • @zuzannawisniewska4464
    @zuzannawisniewska4464 2 месяца назад +273

    Its March 2024. No matter how many times I listen to this , I never get tired of it....

    • @asch4697
      @asch4697 2 месяца назад +5

      It's like a musical time capsule that keeps getting better with every play

    • @TheClaptonisgod1
      @TheClaptonisgod1 2 месяца назад +3

      I'm listening in too, fabulous indeed but Karajan 1968 is beyond anything I've ever absorbed. ♥️

    • @jeanphilippeyoh6639
      @jeanphilippeyoh6639 2 месяца назад +1

      I listen the whole at least once a week since 5 years. And some time at a daily basis. And it still amazes me and shake me to the core 🥲

    • @stevencoardvenice
      @stevencoardvenice 2 месяца назад +5

      Yeah I'm not a classical guy but this is probably the best music ever
      @1:01:42
      This the best part

    • @user-cq7wz3ts1r
      @user-cq7wz3ts1r 2 месяца назад

      0:49 ​🎉❤
      @@TheClaptonisgod1

  • @jimharris5688
    @jimharris5688 5 месяцев назад +49

    I had intended to get some work done this morning, but once i started listening I couldn't stop. Wishing everyone peace & joy

    • @flaviacassimiro9285
      @flaviacassimiro9285 3 месяца назад

      Lindo né

    • @dnelson951
      @dnelson951 2 месяца назад

      4:49 AM on a cold 03/27/2024 in Saint Paul MN. I was gonna listen to the First movement. Ended up listening to the whole damn thing it was so good!

    • @jermalshemism3367
      @jermalshemism3367 Месяц назад

      I can't listen to the first two movements without hearing the rest, if it plays on a commercial or movie it pisses me off so much. Also they play terrible version on the tv or movies, nothing compares to an uncompressed live version of it. I used to have a Vinyl of this I'd crank in my basement bar stereo as a teen. I miss that house so much. The accoustics and that oldschool Sony source entertainment system went hard. Cd's were there but after I learned the science behind the compression of CD's I opted to collect vinyl. My step dad had a really sick vinyl double single of ozzy's mr crowley. I had Ozzy as himself and him as Crowley Printed on the actual grooves of the record.

    • @pascalcor2624
      @pascalcor2624 10 дней назад

      Moi pareil, comme une drogue!. Un emballement total.

  • @nathanscully3651
    @nathanscully3651 2 года назад +2238

    If you watch this, it is the culmination of millions of hours of human effort. From the creation of the instruments, to the contours of the hall. Every bow string pull and push, pulsing to a set of notes from a long dead genius. It resonates now as it will in 200 years, a marvel of human creation. Thank you to Charlie and your family to allow the rest of us to experience 90+ minutes of the joy of being human

    • @gilgameshhawhaw2651
      @gilgameshhawhaw2651 Год назад +42

      U nailed the nail

    • @Cherryninja23
      @Cherryninja23 Год назад +10

      Excellent just marvelous

    • @BartleyTroyan
      @BartleyTroyan Год назад +24

      I have no words, but yours were quite good enough... I hope all of this survives what's coming for us. Even if the original written music somehow doesn't make it, some of the digital copies undoubtedly will. I just made one and so should we all.

    • @scottonandrew
      @scottonandrew Год назад +5

      Wow it is amazing the effort that goes into a thing like this....A bargain tho!

    • @captainkirkcabin
      @captainkirkcabin Год назад +9

      It is the absolute meaning of JOY.

  • @zacharybenjamin6920
    @zacharybenjamin6920 2 года назад +2813

    It breaks my heart that Beethoven would not be able to hear his own beautiful work. That he could still hear it in his head makes him truly a one-of-a-kind composer.

    • @hankzumbahlen4180
      @hankzumbahlen4180 2 года назад +218

      Beethoven going deaf was a crime against humanity.

    • @zacharybenjamin6920
      @zacharybenjamin6920 2 года назад +102

      @David Roosemailer he's exaggerating. It's a hyperbole he doesn't really mean it. He's saying that it's an offense to nature and Society for someone so special to lose their hearing abilities which are so Central to their profession in the special things they bring to us. It's just a fancy way of saying how tragic it was for Beethoven to lose his hearing.

    • @robertoardila352
      @robertoardila352 2 года назад +22

      @@hankzumbahlen4180 Whom shall we indict?

    • @grannyearth5496
      @grannyearth5496 2 года назад +29

      Agree! I think about Mozart in a paupers grave without any notoriety. If HE only knew KBAQ has Mozart Buffet every day at lunchtime. If those composers only knew how We treasure their works in 2021!!

    • @gregp1440
      @gregp1440 2 года назад +40

      One of a kind? It's likely that Beethoven and many other famed composers, including Mozart, could imagine a symphony in their mind. They just needed paper and a pen to record it. I can "hear" tunes I make up in my mind. Translating these tunes into written form is another matter.

  • @user-iw5wr2sp2u
    @user-iw5wr2sp2u 2 месяца назад +7

    one of the MOST GLORIOUS pieces of music...ever written...

  • @TheMaestromMephisto
    @TheMaestromMephisto Месяц назад +154

    -1824: Wow, this song is amazing!
    -2024: Wow, this song is amazing!
    Happy 200 years

  • @geoffdearth7360
    @geoffdearth7360 3 года назад +2322

    Just imagine how few people during Beethoven's lifetime could hear this? And what a gift it is to us.

  • @daisydarmon8543
    @daisydarmon8543 Год назад +1009

    I watched this entire thing with a friend high as a kite and we didn’t say a word the entire time, we were just mesmerised by the entire performance. I still remember the sensation this gave me to this day

    • @grittykitty50
      @grittykitty50 10 месяцев назад +44

      this is the definition of EPIC

    • @igorz3551
      @igorz3551 10 месяцев назад

      @@grittykitty50 needed some B A S S

    • @adog3129
      @adog3129 9 месяцев назад +60

      glad im not the only high person here

    • @marypoirotjones5563
      @marypoirotjones5563 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@adog3129 😆

    • @bundy254
      @bundy254 8 месяцев назад +2

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @schimmelms
    @schimmelms 29 дней назад +13

    ...one of the most beautiful pieces in music...ever written...

  • @ahmedanouarboussouf8731
    @ahmedanouarboussouf8731 2 месяца назад +21

    You will never listen to this symphony the same way, when you will know that the genius compositor was completely deaf by the moment he produced it. His only remaining instrument was his memory remembering how illustrative the music can be without hearing it ... every note...every shade. The most beautiful and sad picture of him I could imagine is : Van Beethoven turning to (not hearing) the applaude of people when he finished orchestring this master piece for the first time. Imagine composing/playing a symphony you never listened to in front of a selective and informed public. Rest in Peace Sir Ludwig. You are and have been a blessing to our ears.

    • @matthewlyons5462
      @matthewlyons5462 Месяц назад +1

      Thank you...Gary Oldman for...

    • @clementbr5216
      @clementbr5216 Месяц назад +1

      He started it when partially deaf and finished it when he was fully deaf.
      Without perfect pitch, he would have never made it to the end. An absolute genius mind

    • @wplains
      @wplains 23 дня назад +1

      @@clementbr5216The epitome of human genius!

  • @kmstirpitz4285
    @kmstirpitz4285 5 лет назад +2256

    I haven't seen a comment yet saying things about the musicians, but I sure do think they deserve all the claps and praises! Bravo Chicago Orchestra! Bravo! All of them!

    • @davidignatiusbalestreri1737
      @davidignatiusbalestreri1737 5 лет назад +51

      The musicians are great. Too much camera time for the man with the little stick

    • @googleisscary7845
      @googleisscary7845 5 лет назад +14

      Not to digress or argue but, as I get older, I continue to search (the internet and, alas, RUclips) for the "perfect" Beethoven's 9th performance. Aside from the number of "claps and praises' and the tally of RUclips's views and comments my search shall continue.

    • @gammafoxlore2981
      @gammafoxlore2981 5 лет назад +39

      @@davidignatiusbalestreri1737 The man with the little stick is himself a quite accomplished musician, but yes the orchester requires more attention.

    • @jcopp2031
      @jcopp2031 5 лет назад +31

      @@bradearly9689 || I agree, Brad. He is. The "perfect" 9th Symphony was in Beethoven's head when he wrote it. All performances since its publication are someone's interpretation of what Beethoven wrote. Since humans are incapable of perfection, we can only hope that performances such as this one by the CSO are as close as humanly possible to what Beethoven had in mind.

    • @jeremiahpacula1460
      @jeremiahpacula1460 5 лет назад

      I have not yet

  • @giuseppegiuseppe5875
    @giuseppegiuseppe5875 4 года назад +325

    Deutsche composer, Italian conductor, finnich soprano, usa orchestra and universal language...the music is life

    • @KRAFTPUNK
      @KRAFTPUNK 4 года назад +9

      Yes my friend. Well said.

    • @sixstringedthing
      @sixstringedthing 4 года назад +6

      Parole sincere, amico mio. Molto bravo.
      I migliori auguri a te.

    • @fitokitchen
      @fitokitchen 4 года назад +4

      Giuseppe Giuseppe 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻absolutely 👍🏻!...

    • @rriocdhoaerhdt6111
      @rriocdhoaerhdt6111 4 года назад +7

      totally agree! not forgetting Schiller, one of the greatest poets, who's written the lyrics

    • @user-ho3tm1zc2d
      @user-ho3tm1zc2d 4 года назад +3

      Giuseppe Giuseppe in orchestra half from chine

  • @Cisco853
    @Cisco853 22 дня назад +168

    May 2024! Who's here?

  • @zuzannawisniewska4464
    @zuzannawisniewska4464 2 дня назад +1

    As if anyone would still listen to this in 2024.This symphony never gets old ...

  • @lluviadai96
    @lluviadai96 2 года назад +1437

    To think we can enjoy such an epic performance for free while others some centuries ago had to pay fortunes to see, this is something that I am grateful for!

    • @ludwigvanbeethoven1853
      @ludwigvanbeethoven1853 2 года назад +32

      That would've gave us the real satisfaction , paying to watch the maestro and then just remembering the tune in your head all your life. Thats how things should be , watching live by paying

    • @user-xb7uv4bu3s
      @user-xb7uv4bu3s 2 года назад +1

      00000000000090000000000000900000000000000000090000000090000000000

    • @olivierf1632
      @olivierf1632 2 года назад +21

      @@user-xb7uv4bu3s drugs?

    • @regionalrange3052
      @regionalrange3052 2 года назад +27

      @@olivierf1632 No, he is Binary!!

    • @lo-firobotboy7112
      @lo-firobotboy7112 2 года назад +27

      If you ever get the chance, you should attend performance. RUclips will never compare to the physical sensation of having this music played live for you.

  • @arthuradler2800
    @arthuradler2800 7 лет назад +188

    This piece never fails to restore my faith in humanity again.

    • @eddiecrotty6022
      @eddiecrotty6022 6 лет назад

      Der Kuttelmann ní nó min, V IV

    • @traiep8406
      @traiep8406 5 лет назад +1

      fuck you

    • @Leo01471
      @Leo01471 5 лет назад

      Trai Đẹp No u

    • @sneddypie
      @sneddypie 4 года назад

      Trai Đẹp that was uncalled for

    • @-jess_160
      @-jess_160 4 года назад +1

      So true! Some people care about life after all C,':

  • @sierramay5934
    @sierramay5934 21 день назад +5

    Performing this during college was one of the greatest, most profound, joyous and memorable experiences of my life! Happy 200 years to this masterpiece!

  • @kristofkalocsai3837
    @kristofkalocsai3837 5 месяцев назад +104

    This is the peak of human music. Easily within the top 3 things ever written. Here I am, a grown man, properly tearing up from the sound of this magnificence. The passion, the depth, the harmony of all these people working together is truly overwhelming. Thank you Beethoven, thank you orchestra and choir. Literally awesome - in the true sense of the word.

    • @hillcresthiker
      @hillcresthiker 4 месяца назад +1

      Possibly within the top 3 things ever written. What would be the other two. For me its certainly the Mahler 2nd symphony

    • @anuartureshbayev1291
      @anuartureshbayev1291 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@hillcresthikerMaybe also the Hammerklavier

    • @NeaonBHB
      @NeaonBHB 3 месяца назад

      ​@@hillcresthikermoonlight sonata... beethoven violin concerto... lizst transcendental etudes... Berlioz symphonie fantastiqiue... Stravinsky rite of spring... mozart magic flute... brahms 3rd symphony... Saint saens danse macabre, and introduction and rondo cappriccioso ... Wagner pilgrims chorus... bach toccatta and fugue, brandenburg concertos... chopin etudes... Verdi Aida... schubert erlkonig.... prokofiev violin sonatas....how many hundreds more am I missing

    • @davegingrich8642
      @davegingrich8642 2 месяца назад +1

      @@hillcresthikerHandel's Messiah #1 for me. Beethoven 9 #2. Mahler 8 (Symphony Of A Thousand) #3.

    • @stevencoardvenice
      @stevencoardvenice 2 месяца назад

      ​​@@NeaonBHB
      Rachmaninoff 2nd piano concerto.
      I'm not a classical enthusiast, so it should carry extra weight when someone like me puts the 9th, and Rachmaninoff in their list of favorite music. I listen primarily to house/techno hip hop, classic rock, 90s rock, but to me, this symphony has to be best music ever made

  • @lindataghon5712
    @lindataghon5712 3 года назад +731

    Beethoven was completely deaf when he composed this, every single instrument, every sound he heard in his own soul and put it down on paper! He was a true marvelous Genius!>>< The bible speaks of heavenly JOY, THIS IS IT!!!

    • @michelgaffet5214
      @michelgaffet5214 3 года назад +5

      you can't don't agree

    • @troyaustria3857
      @troyaustria3857 3 года назад +9

      Not actually completely about 80 percent deaf i think

    • @elkeeffler173
      @elkeeffler173 3 года назад +24

      @@troyaustria3857 What does it matter? 80%, 100%? whatever, he was a genius. Lets not quibble over crumbs.

    • @paulcrumley9756
      @paulcrumley9756 3 года назад +36

      ​@@troyaustria3857 Ninth was composed between 1822 and 1824; Beethoven was 52 in 1822; by the time he was 44 or 45, he was totally deaf. When the ninth premiered, "Beethoven stood by the conductor Michael Umlauf during the concert beating time (although Umlauf had warned the singers and orchestra to ignore him), and because of his deafness was not even aware of the applause which followed until he was turned to witness it."

    • @paulcrumley9756
      @paulcrumley9756 3 года назад +1

      I was thinking the same thing as I listened to the intricacies woven into so much of the work.

  • @glennbulow8790
    @glennbulow8790 3 года назад +912

    I imagine composing while deaf is like painting while being blind. The gift he had is unimaginable.

    • @blasiodonatohillebrand8788
      @blasiodonatohillebrand8788 3 года назад +77

      He had such a perfect imagination so that he could write his music notes without hearing them at all. A real music genious! Cheers!

    • @erikc1775
      @erikc1775 3 года назад +31

      There is none like him, there probably never will be.

    • @dasbeast9881
      @dasbeast9881 3 года назад +61

      Not exactly....Beethoven could hear and knew the sounds of each instrument, note, nuance, etc. intimately. While I'm sure it was difficult, torturous and it clearly influenced his work, it is not an impossible task because he could imagine the sound. I'm sure conducting would have been a nightmare, since he couldn't hear if it was being played properly, but it wasn't impossible like painting while blind. Even if you had sight before, not being able to see would make painting impossible because you could not see the colors on your palette. It would be impossible to mix the paint to recreate what you saw in your mind in the same way a deaf person could pen the music they heard in theirs.

    • @udondondong8464
      @udondondong8464 3 года назад +19

      @@blasiodonatohillebrand8788 and also perfect intonation and rhythm, just imagine composing a piece without hearing the actual note 💀

    • @jimquim1574
      @jimquim1574 3 года назад +6

      I believe you cant be born deaf and compose music and paint when you where born blind

  • @AndySaenz
    @AndySaenz 6 месяцев назад +162

    I cannot be the only one who was moved by that choir. Their singing supported by the lush, gorgeous, majestic sound of the orchestra was just DIVINE. It moved me to tears.

    • @conormccaffery5821
      @conormccaffery5821 5 месяцев назад +4

      Hard to watch this without being brought to tears.

    • @stevencoardvenice
      @stevencoardvenice 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@conormccaffery5821yup

    • @reginaluz-tu2oi
      @reginaluz-tu2oi 4 месяца назад +1

      Sure it brings tears to eyes...cannot understand feelings...

    • @christian_sep42
      @christian_sep42 2 месяца назад +2

      The choir is what makes this piece so great. Especially in the finale.

    • @stevencoardvenice
      @stevencoardvenice 2 месяца назад +1

      @@christian_sep42 @55:40

  • @jhoodied4861
    @jhoodied4861 3 месяца назад +7

    I remember my parents took me to hear this. I was SOOOOOOOOOOOOOO BORED!! I now understand that I'm listening to a 200 year old master piece that still blows people away.

  • @rayreeves4681
    @rayreeves4681 7 лет назад +813

    Should be doing school work but cant stop watching. Thank you Beethoven and the chicago orchestra

    • @pjgumby
      @pjgumby 7 лет назад +76

      If you are beholding the works of Beethoven instead of doing your homework, then you are already more intelligent than most, don't worry about it. You are already a fast study.

    • @AGSFable
      @AGSFable 7 лет назад +22

      I have a presentation tomorrow, but I can't stop either XD

    • @johnries5593
      @johnries5593 7 лет назад +4

      Though it's helpful to be able to listen to great music while working; it provides much more listening time than one would have otherwise.

    • @MarcusHK1
      @MarcusHK1 7 лет назад +20

      You can just listen to the sound while you're working. I often do that.

    • @gullalaiakhtar4162
      @gullalaiakhtar4162 7 лет назад +12

      I did work and listen

  • @Btvn-wn5vu
    @Btvn-wn5vu 3 года назад +238

    I’m Japanese . In Japan, most of them said “ classical music is very old and not interesting.” I’m sad but when I saw this comment list and this movie, world is more big than we think. I want to spread classical music.

    • @mariemely5393
      @mariemely5393 3 года назад +9

      Me too! I’m French and it’s exactly the same thing in my school everyone says « Classical music is annoying » but I’m like no !! I love listening orchestra and the next year I want to incorporate a music conservatory.

    • @user-oj3cz6jq3r
      @user-oj3cz6jq3r 3 года назад +5

      There are many boring classical music's. But that's the same for everything, they are just not looking hard enough to find things like these.

    • @thedawgy1995
      @thedawgy1995 3 года назад +10

      My Mother was absolutely insistent that my siblings and I had to participate in children's choir, take piano lessons, and try at least one other instrument. As a kid, it definitely bothered me at times. But, it opened up a lifelong appreciation for many forms of music. I have commented at other times that mood and music are tied together rather tightly for me. In the right mood, I can listed to opera. In another mood, I might be listening to hip-hop. Pink Floyd fits into almost any mood. As for classical, it is a go to for me in several moods. Certain pieces are fantastic at soothing me when I've got anxiety going out of control. Others pieces are great for when I'm needing to work on a project. It saddens me when I hear people write off entire genres of music. It is fine to not like certain composers/artists as we all have preferences. But classical covers such a massive range of compositions and composers. Beethoven's 9th Symphony is a good example because it includes vocals that aren't used in his famous 5th Symphony. With a little effort, I think many could find something they really enjoy. Ultimately, it is their loss when they close their minds to such a rich genre.

    • @cliffordmaddox6532
      @cliffordmaddox6532 3 года назад +11

      It's a sad fact that modern culture revolves around pop culture .... ie that which requires no effort to understand it. People dismiss classical music, Shakespeare, abstract painting .... all because people have become lazy and don't want to have to study to be able to appreciate these things.

    • @thedawgy1995
      @thedawgy1995 3 года назад +10

      @@cliffordmaddox6532 I agree with you there. While I have an observational bias, I see it as more than just lazy with my fellow countrymen in the USA. Large swathes of the population prides itself on being ignorant. Being dumb is sexier than being a scientist. The latest gossip on some Hollywood clown gets far more attention than an event demonstrated in this video. It is more than just being lazy, it is a willful effort to dumb down the culture.

  • @Msmcarlos
    @Msmcarlos 8 месяцев назад +37

    How on earth a man with impaired hearing make something wonderful like this… Amazing

    • @Borzoi86
      @Borzoi86 3 месяца назад

      Beethoven was guided in his work by Angels. What other explanation could there be?

    • @PP1969GR
      @PP1969GR Месяц назад

      a deaf man

  • @Agh93
    @Agh93 5 лет назад +804

    the fact that Ludwig composed this after losing his hearing makes its even more amazing

    • @kingzor100
      @kingzor100 4 года назад +41

      he could probably still hear and imagine it in his mind,

    • @risingstar9903
      @risingstar9903 4 года назад +18

      He could hear. Only a little bit.

    • @adipsous
      @adipsous 4 года назад +52

      Imagine the inner organization and memory that takes, regardless or the ability to hear the harmonies in his mind without use of piano. Add that he can feel so poetically deeply. Greatest composer/artist of all time, arguably.

    • @pastafariannoodle7554
      @pastafariannoodle7554 4 года назад +12

      he bit down on metal rods to hear later in life

    • @ksenobite
      @ksenobite 4 года назад +20

      It is, but more. Fact this is most influential piece in whole symphonic art makes it almost an miracle. It matches that Einstein sat in a room alone and imagined universe with black holes in his mind. Human mind is incredible, and these guys are the proof :)

  • @kafkaesquee521
    @kafkaesquee521 Год назад +273

    Well done, Herr Ludwig Van Beethoven. Two centuries later we are still captivated.

  • @alexcampos3196
    @alexcampos3196 21 день назад +4

    200 años de ésta enorme obra...sin duda alguna es una de las hazañas más memorables que haya realizado persona alguna sobre la faz de la tierra...fue un sordo..el que compuso ésta obra....ufff!! Beethoven es el más grande artista que la humanidad ha dado...

  • @laithgobeidat
    @laithgobeidat 2 месяца назад +14

    ما قدمه بيتهوڤن للفن والموسيقى هو المعنى الأمثل للإعجاز البشري
    تحفة فنية هي الأفضل بالتاريخ حسب رأي الخبراء ولم يستطيع حتى سماع ماذا يكتب وما هي نتيجة عمله ولا حتى رأي جمهوره
    عمل يخلد قدرة البشر لا محدودة 👏👏

  • @forte609
    @forte609 4 года назад +899

    I really hope I can watch a live orchestra in my lifetime

    • @lizziehughes303
      @lizziehughes303 4 года назад +78

      Live orchestras are beautiful it's like you can feel the music in your heart.

    • @rogermetzger7335
      @rogermetzger7335 4 года назад +18

      The first time I played my violin during a worship service of the Free Methodists in Toddville, Iowa, few or probably none of the members had ever heard a violin "live". I later played in a Nazarene orchestra for a couple of years. Later still, in a baptist orchestra for a couple of years. The level of "musicianship" wasn't nearly what you hear here but please ask around to see whether there are any "church" orchestras near where you live. You might like the experience of hearing them live, even if they don't play "classical" music like this.

    • @jennalawrence5790
      @jennalawrence5790 4 года назад +1

      @@mattiasdanieldamsgaardwood1315 You just spelled "loser" wrong . . . It's only one "o."

    • @Peter22334
      @Peter22334 4 года назад +16

      If you can make it, go for it. I went for New Years concert and they had Beethovens 9ths and Karl Orf. It was stunning, absolutley phenomenal. Hearing it here is great, but it's only 10% of the experience live. I'am a hard guy, but I ahd to blink away tears during Ode to Joy.

    • @pumasgoya
      @pumasgoya 4 года назад +8

      Why can't you?

  • @ampullae6529
    @ampullae6529 3 года назад +865

    I. Allegro ma non troppo, un poco maestoso 1:43
    II. Molto vivace 19:45
    III. Adagio molto e cantabile - Andante moderato 35:41
    IV. Finale: Ode to Joy 52:13

  • @nunyabiznez6381
    @nunyabiznez6381 6 месяцев назад +21

    My aunt played the piano and she played it well. She was not on the level of a concert pianist but she could play as well as a typical high school music teacher could. My aunt learned to play as a young child. Then she got sick and lost her hearing. By the time I knew her she was profoundly deaf and could hear nothing but the loudest of noises and only slightly. She described it as wearing ear plugs with everyone whispering. I remember crying when I fully realized the ramifications of this fact. It meant that she could never hear her own beautiful music.
    I was a very young child when she and my uncle, who played violin, took me to a rehearsal of this piece and he was in the orchestra. The piece was so beautiful it brought me to tears, especially the choral in the last movement.
    For years, knowing that I loved classical music, my family would give me albums of the music created by the man whose birthday I shared and I was always so delighted to get them. As a young boy I always insisted that before we cut the cake we sing happy birthday to Beethoven as well.
    Then one day in middle school music class our teacher played moonlight sonata. I was probably the only student who had heard it before and more than one time. I had in fact been present for more than one live performance. When the teacher was done we talked about Beethoven's life. That is when I found out he was deaf for the later part of his life. I was devastated. I understood the implications. To me, it was like Moses being denied entry into he promised land. It was like Michelangelo being struck blind before painting the Sistine Chapel. For years I called it God's evil miracle. I still get a tear when I hear Beethoven played.

    • @Hobbitydobbity
      @Hobbitydobbity 6 месяцев назад +1

      Something so tragic but amazing about deaf musicians. Like a blind painter. Lovely story

  • @diegofuentes6783
    @diegofuentes6783 21 день назад +22

    Listening to this Wonderful performance of Beethoven's 9th Symphony today, May 7, 2024, THE 200TH ANNIVERSARY of its premiere 🎻 🎻 🎻 🎉🎉😊😊

  • @jacquesdespadas
    @jacquesdespadas 3 года назад +340

    You're only 250 once. Happy birthday to the greatest Western composer of all time.

    • @francescoarena6776
      @francescoarena6776 3 года назад +2

      Teardrp

    • @SuperPopem
      @SuperPopem 3 года назад +33

      Western? You mean greatest composer of all time full stop!

    • @nicatzeynalli3150
      @nicatzeynalli3150 3 года назад +5

      Mozart is a best !!

    • @nelamarela
      @nelamarela 3 года назад +4

      @@nicatzeynalli3150 couldn't agree more.

    • @dennispearson9287
      @dennispearson9287 3 года назад +21

      @@nicatzeynalli3150 Oh My God !!!....There's Always The Mozart Fan Lurking in The Shadows !!!.....

  • @davesmith6815
    @davesmith6815 7 лет назад +99

    Sometimes, you just have to come back to the greatest piece ever written.

  • @ericperu1542
    @ericperu1542 7 месяцев назад +60

    Unreal. Beethoven must have been from another planet to create something like this. Gave me chills

    • @jasoncummings7052
      @jasoncummings7052 7 месяцев назад +6

      And from one where music must be their only language. After 200 years this still holds up above the rest and is not even considered outdated.

    • @JillChristyGroup
      @JillChristyGroup Месяц назад +1

      Indeed! From a heavenly realm! A true gift of magnificent proportion.

  • @richardhamilton9840
    @richardhamilton9840 22 дня назад +7

    200 years today and still new

  • @jonahanderson9101
    @jonahanderson9101 Год назад +1163

    It’s amazing that when this was written only kings and nobles could enjoy this but now I’m watching this on my phone enjoying Beethoven. What a blessing

    • @kaichun_wong
      @kaichun_wong Год назад +129

      Not quite. The audience at the time were mainly comprised of the recently grown wealthy middle class. But it is surely a bless that we are still keeping this art in 2022

    • @jasoncummings7052
      @jasoncummings7052 Год назад +4

      Very good point.
      Amazing what the passage of time can do.

    • @Egon_Nordwint
      @Egon_Nordwint Год назад +14

      On phone? :-) forget it! Do you now what is classical music like live?
      (today a concert ticket prises is also for nobles!) As a teacherI I can't afford to go to Opera...

    • @ashrafthegoat
      @ashrafthegoat Год назад +17

      ​@@Egon_Nordwint Don't say that, just spend it. Don't live your life without that extraordinary experience. The universe will bless you later.

    • @macroeconomics101
      @macroeconomics101 Год назад +9

      @@jasoncummings7052 awful point, completely historically inaccurate

  • @user-sn4fj5el2b
    @user-sn4fj5el2b 21 день назад +6

    Happy 200th Anniversary!

  • @zuzannawisniewska4464
    @zuzannawisniewska4464 15 дней назад +2

    One of the most famous and outstanding works of classical music from 200 years ago. Beethoven's eternal gift to humanity. I love this performance. Thank you to the orchestra. Thank you for the choir.Thnk you Ricardo Muti! Great!

  • @tumtum4023
    @tumtum4023 2 года назад +843

    I am a Noob! This was the first time in my 37 years I have watched a complete symphony orchestra. The kids were put to bed and I put some headphones on and the rest is history. I am now changed forever and will never look at music the same! It’s wildly impressive and I can’t wait to watch some live symphonies! Why? - why did I wait this long to listen to this masterpiece 🤦 oh well I am grateful to have personally discovered real music for the first time! I’m hooked and am now going to get to know Beethoven through some documentaries!

    • @KG-nt9hr
      @KG-nt9hr 2 года назад +18

      Same. I feel like I've wasted so much time. Beethoven is just the best.

    • @baconispro9120
      @baconispro9120 2 года назад +20

      me too but i am 22

    • @truthfulfree
      @truthfulfree 2 года назад +7

      right on, good for you :) hearing symphonies live is incomparable, I pray we are all able to do so again soon

    • @gaopinghu7332
      @gaopinghu7332 2 года назад +5

      Curiosity is the key.

    • @appidydafoo
      @appidydafoo 2 года назад +12

      "Better late than never"

  • @ClassicalJazzy
    @ClassicalJazzy 10 месяцев назад +456

    To the person reading this, Good Luck! Don't stress, everything will be fine. No matter what difficulty you are facing right now, you can overcome it! You are strong and brave

    • @jaybuck9124
      @jaybuck9124 3 месяца назад +7

      God bless you bro🙏❤️

    • @djat7933
      @djat7933 3 месяца назад +4

      Thank you!

    • @praveenpgec
      @praveenpgec 3 месяца назад +5

      God bless you all ❤

    • @Borzoi86
      @Borzoi86 3 месяца назад +1

      This is a fine reading from a quality orchestra in my old home town, Chicago. One cannot listen to this in entirety without hearing the Voice of God. As the Brits like to say, "Steady on."

    • @tomasrosalesr
      @tomasrosalesr 2 месяца назад +1

      Thank you. I needed to hear that.

  • @WitchKingofAngmar24
    @WitchKingofAngmar24 6 месяцев назад +42

    After listening to this and other versions of Beethoven’s Ninth on RUclips for years, I finally had the immense pleasure one year ago to take part in this transcendental experience at the Royal Albert Hall in London, conducted by Toby Purser. The fact that arguably the best piece of music ever was composed by a person who was almost completely deaf at that time still haunts me. Beethoven is infinite. ❤️

    • @tugbaunal5187
      @tugbaunal5187 6 месяцев назад +3

      How lucky you are!Wish I will also be able to listen to this masterpiece live!

  • @vicentediaz237
    @vicentediaz237 21 день назад +6

    Happy 200th Anniversary!!

  • @kennyrama
    @kennyrama Год назад +220

    Bro this truly blows my mind how one man wrote a symphony as grand as this

    • @PsyburHam
      @PsyburHam Год назад +52

      Wrote it deaf too

    • @vespid8960
      @vespid8960 Год назад +4

      You would love Mahler

    • @ArtPath11
      @ArtPath11 Год назад +3

      ​@@vespid8960 yeah especially the iconic mahler 5

    • @vespid8960
      @vespid8960 Год назад +3

      @@ArtPath11 I think Mahler 2 may be the best the best though Mahler 5 is my absolute favorite, it’s epic and beautiful at the same time, and Mahler really mastered counterpoint at that time, those transitions always give me chills

    • @thedroidish
      @thedroidish Год назад +6

      He also wrote while he was deaf. Beethoven was deaf by his fifth Symphony.

  • @MS-eb8cf
    @MS-eb8cf 10 месяцев назад +564

    Hearing the 9th for the first time caused a massive paradigm shift in my life, as it does for most people who hear it and truly appreciate it’s significance. There’s no going back once you hear this symphony in it’s full glory. I’d argue that it’s saved me from being engulfed entirely by the void of depression and for that I owe Beethoven more than I could ever offer as gratitude for his art. Everyone should be able to hear this work.

    • @heavenlywanderer
      @heavenlywanderer 10 месяцев назад +24

      Genius and he may never know his works impact on humanity

    • @lefterisflerianos7855
      @lefterisflerianos7855 8 месяцев назад +26

      Ironic, considering how he himself wasn't able to hear it. Fun fact! The first time Bethoven presented his 9th symphony, conducting the orchestra himself, he wasn't able to hear the applause of the audience, and the first violonist had to turn him around to show him the crowd's reaction to the masterpiece.

    • @YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago
      @YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago 8 месяцев назад +12

      Beautiful words. I tend to feel the same way and I think at least part of it is because when you hear this you are hearing some kind of proof that what is good in our reality will always always eventually triumph and what is evil will one day perish and fail spectacularly it will be almost pathetic, and that there's an enduring purpose to life that is far greater than all the evil in the world would have us believe- and that evil is so utterly utterly USELESS as an idea and given enough time WILL fail so completely it's a wonder it hasn't happened already.
      Ok that's a little deep to get from a few notes I know and I can't explain it scientifically nor am I even religious but when I hear the great works this is something I feel beyond intellectual understanding. Maybe I'm going to deep with it but it's what comes to me. My faith in existence is always restored by the great works. And not just classical - ANY great works. I feel like there's a bigger message than simply the notes - or maybe I'm just high. But either way this is what I take from it. I believe it is true.

    • @ndiranguwanjohi3410
      @ndiranguwanjohi3410 7 месяцев назад +11

      Beauty will save the world. -Dostoyevsky

    • @ThePaleHorseCometh
      @ThePaleHorseCometh 7 месяцев назад +1

      Same here

  • @deguzmanroyjohn
    @deguzmanroyjohn 21 день назад +11

    200 years on!!

  • @gracec.f.1045
    @gracec.f.1045 5 месяцев назад +4

    I just listened to half of this with my 2.5yo rambunctious toddler, who didn’t utter a single complaint, but rather enjoyed her snack time quietly listening and watching. (She is usually hyper, can never sit still and is only entertained by Cocomelon, Baby Shark and the likes.) I don’t know if I’m more impressed by the whole production of this orchestral symphony or by the power of timeless music to capture even the youngest of minds.

  • @emilyloosli
    @emilyloosli 7 лет назад +43

    Fire. Passion. Love. Real struggle. Real triumph. I love you, I feel you, forever, Beethoven.

  • @maytedepaoli4671
    @maytedepaoli4671 3 года назад +378

    Perhaps the most beautiful symphony ever composed! When this pandemic is over, I will attend live concerts as much as I can and support the arts in my community. One does not appreciate as much these live events until they are impossible to access.😭😭

    • @bobbyboche9025
      @bobbyboche9025 3 года назад +6

      I want to attend stuff like these as well but I'm young and don't know how to find or go to events like these. Any tips?

    • @kaydog890
      @kaydog890 3 года назад +1

      @Jeffery Pullin Can not agree more; That well placed exclaim appears to have got you as excited, as I! Emoji Emoji

    • @elgordode1984
      @elgordode1984 3 года назад +1

      @@kaydog890 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂....tru tho. 😜👍🏼

    • @clairecross6722
      @clairecross6722 3 года назад +1

      Is this REAL? ruclips.net/video/-akBqiuoZrk/видео.html

    • @user-yc6vr8vn5j
      @user-yc6vr8vn5j 3 года назад +2

      @@jackgallahan9669 next concert over here in Sydney is February 2021, really excited! It'll be Ray Chen performing Tchaikovsky violin concerto which is pretty fitting...

  • @kurteifert2657
    @kurteifert2657 14 дней назад +3

    I can't stop crying!

  • @hellohello-nh4go
    @hellohello-nh4go 21 день назад +10

    Guys, it has been 200 years...

  • @rashafetouh
    @rashafetouh 8 месяцев назад +78

    Ode to joy is the greatest movement of all time.

    • @JeremyBobby
      @JeremyBobby 8 месяцев назад

      Hello, how are you doing? I'm sorry for leaving this message here on your comments. Actually you don't know me. I would love to be your friend if you don’t mind?

  • @chancewebster7953
    @chancewebster7953 5 лет назад +412

    May 7th, 1824 this masterpiece debuted. Happy 195th birthday

    • @jeremiahpacula1460
      @jeremiahpacula1460 5 лет назад +5

      Yay for chance Webster

    • @davekwan9643
      @davekwan9643 4 года назад +6

      What will they do on the 200th birthday of this piece?

    • @Skankhunter420
      @Skankhunter420 4 года назад +2

      Yay

    • @ErichLRuehs
      @ErichLRuehs 4 года назад +6

      Dang, I was just a kid back then

    • @777jones
      @777jones 4 года назад +1

      I’m surprised by all the meme bro comments

  • @djat7933
    @djat7933 21 день назад +4

    Happy 200th anniversary!

  • @TheSinkingTitanic2
    @TheSinkingTitanic2 21 день назад +3

    Happy 200th anniversary! A magnificent work, even after 2 centuries!

  • @rtt9617
    @rtt9617 3 года назад +381

    I am so grateful that this art is posted without commercials. Thank you to THE FAMILY that made this possible. What a lovely tribute to your loved one. May his spirit live on and inspire others. Thank you from the bottom of my heart

    • @tannhauser7584
      @tannhauser7584 2 года назад +7

      Didn't stop RUclips from pausing it to ask me if I wanted to continue listening, though....in the middle of the 4th movement, no less.

    • @alanross712
      @alanross712 2 года назад +3

      I thank my Mother and Father for their purchases of RCA Victor Red Label LP's into our home right after WWII, and the rest is history. More time must be spent in getting The Master of Classical Music in schools. I spend a lot of internet time in the classical music arena, which helps to eliminate listening to babbling bobbleheads whether elected or not!!!! Just to learn how it was done without and electronics, etc., is beyond belief!

    • @wanderingpalace
      @wanderingpalace 2 года назад

      i dont understand this piece very much tbh

    • @joshjosh320
      @joshjosh320 2 года назад +3

      ​@@wanderingpalace Give it another try sometime? At your own pace, in your own time. Turn it up loud and just...listen. It's really, really hard to beat.

    • @siuhhonkeung
      @siuhhonkeung 2 года назад +3

      I pay a little bit per month on youtube premium to stop the commercial. It is well worth it.

  • @peaceharmony4115
    @peaceharmony4115 7 лет назад +106

    Beethoven's final great gift for humanity, his celebration of the noblest aspects of the human spirit.

    • @gioragoldberg3980
      @gioragoldberg3980 7 лет назад +7

      Actually, the final gifts were the late quartets, especially the b-flat, C# and c. So is this piece with Muti.

    • @peggyfranzen6159
      @peggyfranzen6159 3 года назад

      Yes.🌳

    • @kalyanipatel9088
      @kalyanipatel9088 3 года назад

      love what you said.. :) HEART

  • @user-er7nj8im8o
    @user-er7nj8im8o 6 месяцев назад +11

    Had the opportunity to visit Vienna recently -had to go to Vienna's Central cemetery to pay my respects to this Master of Masters. Being close to his mortal remains was a really humbling experience. To pay respects to this genius - even though calling him genius is an understatement - he is surrounded by a few other music greats. Humbling - to say the least

  • @user-ds8xx5xt9y
    @user-ds8xx5xt9y 4 месяца назад +20

    After listening to this and other versions of Beethoven’s Ninth on RUclips for years, I finally had the immense pleasure one year ago to take part in this transcendental experience at the Royal Albert Hall in London, conducted by Toby Purser. The fact that arguably the best piece of music ever was composed by a person who was almost completely deaf at that time still haunts me. Beethoven is infinite. ️

  • @nooralzeidi
    @nooralzeidi 5 лет назад +259

    how could someone possibly make something this perfect. i'm totally speechless. i could cry!!!!!
    THANK YOU BEETHOVEN!

    • @jessamiranda7555
      @jessamiranda7555 4 года назад +3

      Maybe by having love and compassion in music.

    • @enriquelopez-12
      @enriquelopez-12 4 года назад

      Ask Frank Ocean. He knows a lot about making perfect works of music.

    • @davekwan9643
      @davekwan9643 4 года назад

      One word to summary Beethoven - FIRE!

    • @user-sl5nm9js8p
      @user-sl5nm9js8p 4 года назад

      I'm sorry, he can't hear you.

    • @gmshadowtraders
      @gmshadowtraders 4 года назад

      he can't hear you nigga

  • @sushiquad
    @sushiquad 4 года назад +359

    Traditionally I am a fan of jazz and rock and electronic music. However I have been starting to listen to classical and I have to say it is absolutely incredible how such a large group of people can play so perfectly in sync with eachother and create a true masterpiece.

    • @dhrvb
      @dhrvb 4 года назад +23

      That's why you need a conductor. He is the captain of the ship.

    • @johnp51d
      @johnp51d 4 года назад +12

      Welcome to the club 👍🏻

    • @neeltheother2342
      @neeltheother2342 4 года назад +21

      There is a whole world of treasures to find among western classical. And not all of it is orchestral, as there are piano sonatas, string quartets, concertos, chants, etc. It will take you multiple lifetimes to navigate it all.
      Have fun!

    • @MrSupernova111
      @MrSupernova111 4 года назад +8

      I sometimes refer to exceptional things as a masterpiece due to their rarity. But the 9th symphony is divine and replicating something this excellent is unlikely.

    • @abrahampalmer1153
      @abrahampalmer1153 4 года назад +1

      Same sometimes you need your whole grains trust me classical music is awesome idc what anyone thinks.

  • @longknoll8065
    @longknoll8065 21 день назад +4

    It's been 200 years 🎉🥳! Gladly as His suns speed through the glorious order of heaven, hasten, brothers, on your way, exultant as a knight victorious!

  • @barackyunus901
    @barackyunus901 7 месяцев назад +27

    Something’s cannot be taken away by technology, it’s so wonderful watching an orchestra😊

  • @RizwanJaganiViolist
    @RizwanJaganiViolist 7 лет назад +249

    I'm playing this in Austria in a few weeks!! I am so excited because it has been a musical dream to perform this!

    • @NatureLover-rl8cm
      @NatureLover-rl8cm 7 лет назад +8

      wish you all the best, have been in Vienna 1 month ago.

    • @RizwanJaganiViolist
      @RizwanJaganiViolist 7 лет назад +15

      +Ruedi Thomi thank you so much. I just have to make sure I don't get tired from the first three movements and I don't have an emotional breakdown in the fourth haha

    • @gloop7458
      @gloop7458 7 лет назад +3

      Awwww my gosh GOOD LUCK

    • @legendkilla3rd
      @legendkilla3rd 7 лет назад +5

      Wow congrats I envy those with enough talent in their hearts and hands to perform this as Ludwig imagined it.

    • @RizwanJaganiViolist
      @RizwanJaganiViolist 7 лет назад +3

      +Texas Made thank you! It's going to be amazing except the third movement our conductor wants SLOWER

  • @peiliangyuan9420
    @peiliangyuan9420 3 года назад +612

    Merry Christmas to everyone who loves Classic music!

    • @kd8227
      @kd8227 3 года назад +10

      like wise

    • @bonniechase5599
      @bonniechase5599 3 года назад +12

      This has been a year when we could all use the inspiration of great human potential and achievement. Let us not forget who and what we are, and what we are capable of, and how close God is to us, guiding us to our great destiny.

    • @wild4knature703
      @wild4knature703 3 года назад +3

      Happy New Year)))

    • @tereinfante7558
      @tereinfante7558 3 года назад +3

      Peace, calm and joy with Classic music in 2021

    • @charlottex2393
      @charlottex2393 3 года назад +3

      love u

  • @joseholguin-veras7992
    @joseholguin-veras7992 21 день назад +3

    A masterpiece for the ages...

  • @genieeeeeeeeus7526
    @genieeeeeeeeus7526 16 дней назад +2

    Happy 200 years! Such a magnificent, gorgeous and great piece… I have lost my words… Bravo!!!

  • @davidedalco834
    @davidedalco834 4 года назад +1556

    Red wine and this, best way to quarantine

    • @SpaceBabyFlaz
      @SpaceBabyFlaz 4 года назад +9

      Davide Dalco my man!

    • @garrettwoodruff5134
      @garrettwoodruff5134 4 года назад +13

      your a man drinking wine

    • @berniemarieful
      @berniemarieful 4 года назад +19

      Was wondering who else was watching this in quarantine! Best way to feel as if you are "going out" - or just have music and visuals while working from home ;)

    • @sarahmourad9611
      @sarahmourad9611 4 года назад +11

      Corona 2020 was here

    • @josylecheval123
      @josylecheval123 4 года назад +5

      Vous avez compris la vie !

  • @nishanthmandala1574
    @nishanthmandala1574 5 лет назад +289

    No matter how many times I listen to this, I never get tired of it.

    • @jvaught58
      @jvaught58 5 лет назад +4

      Impossible to get tired of it, Nishanth. Greatest piece of music ever composed.

    • @gdtxxq0620
      @gdtxxq0620 5 лет назад +1

      I sometimes get made fun of or embarrassed for listening to this in class

    • @NarutoSSj6
      @NarutoSSj6 5 лет назад

      @@gdtxxq0620 Adpt you lil shit, dont go online bragging about being the weird wheel

    • @catlord69
      @catlord69 4 года назад +3

      @@gdtxxq0620 everybody can listen to what they want, no reason to be embarrassed

    • @brownie3454
      @brownie3454 4 года назад +2

      @@gdtxxq0620 they probably have short attention spans

  • @kirival117
    @kirival117 2 месяца назад +4

    When Muti just drops the beat on the full symphony Ode to Joy as the horns come in at 57:44 it is SO cool. For about 25 seconds he just stands there and only gives one or two cues while sound washes over everyone.

  • @sparkplug1018
    @sparkplug1018 6 месяцев назад +10

    What is immortality?
    To create a work so profound and impactful that it can withstand time itself. On 7 May, 1824 Ludwig Von Beethoven gifted us such a work, almost 200 years later we continue to perform and enjoy it.

  • @jazlenysparkle7487
    @jazlenysparkle7487 5 лет назад +461

    No commercials I love it

    • @theultimatereductionist7592
      @theultimatereductionist7592 5 лет назад +14

      Oop! My bad! We interrupt your favorite Beethoven piece randomly at 1:15:00 with these commercial messages from your local Ford dealer. Drive home a Ford today.

    • @layoutgames-boris3481
      @layoutgames-boris3481 5 лет назад

      @@theultimatereductionist7592 HAHAHAHA THAT WOULD BE AWFUL 😂

    • @someguy007
      @someguy007 5 лет назад +7

      @@layoutgames-boris3481 LOL in fact both would be awful..... the commercial interruption AND driving a Ford home.

    • @_shivesh_12
      @_shivesh_12 5 лет назад +2

      I can just imagine a zomato ad when the 3rd movement is on track

    • @layoutgames-boris3481
      @layoutgames-boris3481 5 лет назад +1

      @@_shivesh_12 hahaahahaha that would be awful xD

  • @thedroidish
    @thedroidish 4 года назад +284

    If you've lost your faith in humanity, all you have to is listen to Beethoven, and you'll realize God touched us with a few great blessings.

    • @HansLotap
      @HansLotap 4 года назад +16

      more like real artist not God.

    • @late8641
      @late8641 4 года назад +11

      I've rather lost my faith in humanity because there are people who believe in God.

    • @patclaus8510
      @patclaus8510 3 года назад

      So true, Andy! We just found out that this is what our chorus will be singing when we finally return in the winter after having our spring concert canceled. What a joy it was for us!

    • @jooniebeangacha5836
      @jooniebeangacha5836 3 года назад

      @@late8641 and do you have a problem with that🙃

    • @buckshot_V
      @buckshot_V 3 года назад +2

      @Mister Brookes only if it collapses due to the Second Coming of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.

  • @Jennifer-MW
    @Jennifer-MW 21 день назад +3

    Tremendous. Just ... tremendous. Unmatched in the human experience.

  • @pakansardar3659
    @pakansardar3659 21 день назад +4

    Wow listening to this while studying is just amazing

  • @tyrannosauruszeppelin2205
    @tyrannosauruszeppelin2205 Год назад +1030

    1:06:51 one of the greatest moments in music history

  • @masterninjary2319
    @masterninjary2319 4 года назад +182

    The highest quality version of the Ninth Symphony I have ever heard.

    • @johnrr8854
      @johnrr8854 4 года назад +12

      True. The tempo is perfect,not too fast. And the soprano, alto, tenor and bajo are probably one of the best too.

    • @kablooey2369
      @kablooey2369 4 года назад +16

      The Chicago symphony is one of the best in the world, and generally considered the best in the states.

    • @user-fl3zh9xq5g
      @user-fl3zh9xq5g 3 года назад +3

      the same - the best I've heard

    • @CaravelKiwi
      @CaravelKiwi 3 года назад +4

      I prefer the Barenboim-West Eastern Divan performance at the 2012 Proms - awesome

    • @williamwu4608
      @williamwu4608 3 года назад +1

      The best version of this great symphony.

  • @HestiaBHN1
    @HestiaBHN1 5 дней назад

    As a child at a concert of this I was in tears...not only joyfully at the beauty, but also because I wanted so much to be a member of an orchstra doing this.
    Now at 78, I look back seeing that I never physically joined an orchestra, but I now realize that I , plus each and every being, are members of the most gloriously "orchestrated" sacred on-going event imagineable.

  • @rodolfomendoza3554
    @rodolfomendoza3554 7 месяцев назад +12

    This extant piece of music created by a legally deaf man is the exact example of what it means to lose one’s sense but still be considered an expert in your field. Music is love!

  • @shawnellemartineaux6212
    @shawnellemartineaux6212 3 года назад +76

    This symphony never gets old.

  • @jbdhjones2
    @jbdhjones2 4 года назад +596

    Interesting myth: the length of a CD is what it is because of this piece of music. Sony wanted this music to be able to fit on a CD
    without any breaks

    • @sw6188
      @sw6188 4 года назад +24

      It's a part of the reason a CD is 74 minutes long, but commercial and technical aspects played an even bigger part in determining the size of the CD.

    • @fredhaak1459
      @fredhaak1459 4 года назад +62

      Urban myth, this is the real story: The story that Sony Vice-President Norio Ohga insisted on the new medium being able to accommodate Wilhelm Furtwängler’s reading of Beethoven’s Ninth - at the time, the longest recorded performance of the piece - has passed not only into legend, but into many official histories. However, according to former Philips researcher Kees Immink, the 120mm diameter and 74-minute running time of the CD were actually the result of undignified horse-trading between Sony and Philips, whose relationship as co-developers of the format was sometimes rocky. Until quite late in the development process, the disc was to have been 115mm in diameter, but this would have given Philips a competitive advantage, as their subsidiary Polygram already had a plant set up to produce 115mm discs. To level the playing field, Ohga insisted on a late change in the size of the disc.

    • @maverik15j
      @maverik15j 4 года назад +61

      I prefer the urban myth.

    • @1earflapping
      @1earflapping 4 года назад +13

      @@maverik15j Yeah. Myths are more fun.

    • @agamaz5650
      @agamaz5650 4 года назад

      no way really?

  • @janety7264
    @janety7264 4 месяца назад +10

    I have listened to this at least twice every night these 2 to 3 months, and tonight I was standing against the wall in my bedroom and enjoying this fantastic the last 50 minutes several times, and at last at the last one minute the excitement and the grandest performance gave me the goosebumps Started from my calves and reaching up to my body and then I found my eyes were wet with tears. I’m just so incredibly grateful for I can hear this. I can enjoy this and it’s free so I expressed my gratitude to Beethoven to all the musicians to this fantastic, wonderful performance, and I also thank youtube and thank you for those people I’m grateful for those people in the history that helped keep and pass down this greatest masterpiece by the genius Beethoven ❤❤❤ 🙏