Tchaikovsky’s Signature Sound: A Conductor’s Insight

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  • Опубликовано: 21 дек 2024

Комментарии • 39

  • @nicholaswheeler8038
    @nicholaswheeler8038 Месяц назад +6

    Finally, the Manfred getting the respect for it's powerful and intense orchestration! Me being a violist/bassist, Tchaikovsky string writing never disappoints. Another thing I love about Tchaikovsky are his climatic buildups. Just when you think you’ve hit the ceiling, he blows it off the roof. Notably 5th Symphony 2nd movement, 4th Symphony 2nd movement, Romeo and Juliet, Francesca da Rimini, and Souvernir De Florence 1st and 2nd movements.

    • @gabrielhollander
      @gabrielhollander  Месяц назад

      All great examples indeed - thanks for your comment!

  • @briantorres3559
    @briantorres3559 Месяц назад +9

    The Pathetique has always been an amazing inspiration for my own compositions! The music is just first class!

    • @gabrielhollander
      @gabrielhollander  Месяц назад +2

      Lovely! I’d be curious to disocver your composition based on the Pathetique. Can this be seen online?

  • @BsktImp
    @BsktImp Месяц назад +11

    I think his Romeo & Juliet overture is perhaps the most compact unit that captures the essential characteristics: big melodies (of course) with syncopated WW and brass 'dabs' decorating or punctuating the section carrying the melody; high WW playing repeated tuplets providing 'below-the-radar' forward momentum; lots of diminished and half-diminished chords to build tension etc etc.

    • @gabrielhollander
      @gabrielhollander  Месяц назад

      You're completely right - very good points, thanks for sharing!

    • @steve-4045
      @steve-4045 Месяц назад +1

      I agree. It is the only Tchaikovsky piece I have ever conducted. It was part of my orchestral conducting class, and I led the university orchestra. I found it quite difficult at the time, but was well prepared enough that I think I did fine. I got good compliments from an orchestra member, who I later found out was a conducting major when I attended his senior conducting recital. So it turned out to be a much better compliment than I had known at the time. So naturally with knowing the piece much more thoroughly than any of his other works, it is a favorite of mine to listen to.

    • @gabrielhollander
      @gabrielhollander  Месяц назад

      @@steve-4045 thanks for sharing this anecdote - lovely compliment indeed!

  • @PosauneundPapier
    @PosauneundPapier Месяц назад +6

    I’ve always wondered what qualities make Tchaikovsky’s music so distinct and addictive to listen to. These are some great points and I definitely agree! I think his writing for the brass is always some of the best in the repertoire. He wrote some of the more interesting bass trombone parts that have melodies individual to the rest of the orchestra and even the rest of the trombone section. He very distinctly utilized the bass trombone individually

    • @gabrielhollander
      @gabrielhollander  Месяц назад

      Very good points, indeed! Thanks for sharing your ideas about the bass trombone parts!

  • @grisgriz85
    @grisgriz85 Месяц назад +8

    Would you like to talk about Rachmaninoff, who seems to be the obvious choice to follow your points on Tchaikovsky?

    • @gabrielhollander
      @gabrielhollander  Месяц назад +3

      @@grisgriz85 good point! It’s absolutely on the list of to-do videos - soon more info :)

  • @rufescens
    @rufescens Месяц назад +5

    What do you make of those crazy fast scales that Tchaikovsky uses that get passed on back and forth between the strings and the woodwinds, like in the fourth movement of Symphony No. 4 and the third movement of the Pathetique? They’ve always confused me.

    • @gabrielhollander
      @gabrielhollander  Месяц назад +1

      @@rufescens interesting question! Depending on which specific scenario, I feel Tchaikovsky uses those scales as a specific effect (even though abstract). For example, doesn’t the third movement of the Pathetique sound like a crowd laughing/cheering or clapping before the jubilant tutti theme comes back? Let me know if this makes sense :).

    • @rufescens
      @rufescens Месяц назад +1

      @@gabrielhollanderYes, it does! Though it’s sometimes struck me as not very effective to shift back and forth between different instruments mid-scale (which happens in the fourth Symphony.) What do you think? How do you handle that when you conduct?

    • @gabrielhollander
      @gabrielhollander  Месяц назад +2

      ​@@rufescens That's a good point - in the movement 4 of the 4th Symphony, these mid-scale changes happen often. I'd handle this during rehearsals as possible, in a few ways:
      • practice once slowly if the orchestra has not yet played this piece, so everyone understands how the interconnections are written
      • practice in tempo by feeling *directions* and not only *impulses* (if this makes sense - it's easier to play together when we feel the same energy pulled in the same direction)
      • on a psychological level, filling the "empty" beats with the sixteenth notes of the others musicians, and continue the pulse internally
      What could be an added potentiel complexity, is when the orchestra is really large or there's a lot of space between strings and winds. Depending on the rehearsal or concert space, it can be easier if the musicians are seated not too far away.
      It's a very interesting topic, and food for thought. Let me know if this make sense - I could even add the idea as a next video idea 😎!

    • @rufescens
      @rufescens Месяц назад +1

      ⁠@@gabrielhollander I see-thank you! Yes, that does make sense. It sounds like it’s a very interesting effect, but one that’s not easy to execute!

  • @IceOfPhoenix88
    @IceOfPhoenix88 Месяц назад +2

    i would add 5) he uses runs a lot. classic example: nutcracker pas de deux. there are those little runs up to the melody in the high register

  • @tomaswestholm4993
    @tomaswestholm4993 Месяц назад +3

    Love this! I'm really into tchaikovsky and this is making me want to read a second book about him. Just some feedback on the audio. Sounds like the voiceover is panned quite unusually, it's not centered (dual mono) rather it's louder in the right ear. I suspect it's because maybe you recorded the voiceover in stereo on that zoom recorder? So when you turn it around that also reflects in the panning. The sound is also very saturated (distorted)

    • @gabrielhollander
      @gabrielhollander  Месяц назад +1

      @@tomaswestholm4993 thanks for your comment - care to share what book you’re wanting to read about Tchaikovsky?
      Thanks for the feedback on the audio, I’ll definitely keep this in mind for the next videos 🙏!

    • @tomaswestholm4993
      @tomaswestholm4993 Месяц назад +1

      @@gabrielhollander I have read David Brown´s the man and his music. Very good.

    • @gabrielhollander
      @gabrielhollander  Месяц назад

      @@tomaswestholm4993indeed, thanks for the reference 🙏!

  • @PeterFamiko-lw8ue
    @PeterFamiko-lw8ue Месяц назад +1

    add 4th symphony

    • @gabrielhollander
      @gabrielhollander  Месяц назад

      @@PeterFamiko-lw8ue of course, this could be the subject of a future video 🤓

  • @fiddler1094
    @fiddler1094 Месяц назад +1

    Your audio is too much saturated, just an observation. I love your content. Just that little detail.

    • @gabrielhollander
      @gabrielhollander  Месяц назад

      @@fiddler1094 thanks for your feedback - you’re right, and I’ll take care of the audio in the future! 🙏

  • @davidrandolph1863
    @davidrandolph1863 Месяц назад +1

    I appreciate the analysis, but you must let the listener actually hear the musical examples to understand your points, perhaps repeat the same passage of the music after you've explained your point, so we can listen again and comprehend the lesson. You tell us to "listen" and allow us less than 3 seconds when you start talking over the music. Your viewers do not have your intimate knowledge of this subject matter... give us a several seconds to actively listen.

    • @gabrielhollander
      @gabrielhollander  Месяц назад

      Good point, thanks for sharing this feed-back, David 🙏!

    • @bomcabedal
      @bomcabedal 10 часов назад +1

      @@gabrielhollander Plus RUclips monetization gets a lot better after 10 minutes of runtime. Just sayin'...

    • @gabrielhollander
      @gabrielhollander  9 часов назад

      @@bomcabedal Thanks for this information 🙏!

  • @slateflash
    @slateflash 24 дня назад +1

    Tchaikovsky's signature sound is awful percussion writing

    • @gabrielhollander
      @gabrielhollander  24 дня назад

      Thanks for your comment! Care to expand your point of view :)?

    • @slateflash
      @slateflash 22 дня назад +1

      @@gabrielhollander Oh i would LOVE TO. Everytime he pairs cymbals with bass drum and triangle... it sounds like one of those annoying toy monkeys with cymbals. The last few bars of his symphony #2 contain 24 CONSECUTIVE cymbal crashes with bass drum. It's so excessive and tacky even though it might have been somewhat revolutionary back then. The worst thing is these are pretty much the only percussion instruments he uses besides timpani and so he does not have much room to experiment with interesting rhythms or having different instruments play different rhythms. All his percussion parts pretty much sound like that

    • @gabrielhollander
      @gabrielhollander  22 дня назад

      @ thanks for sharing your point of view on this insight - it’s indeed an interesting topic!

    • @slateflash
      @slateflash 22 дня назад +1

      @@gabrielhollander I'm not saying he's a bad composer btw, he's great but i hate his percussion writing and will never defend it

    • @gabrielhollander
      @gabrielhollander  22 дня назад

      @@slateflash Great :)!