A Beginner's Guide to Boléro by Maurice Ravel

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  • Опубликовано: 4 янв 2025

Комментарии • 58

  • @KeepitClassical
    @KeepitClassical  2 года назад +7

    Music found in this video:
    Gnossienne No.5 - amzn.to/3pD9ovJ
    Prelude a L'Apres Midi D'un Faune - amzn.to/3KfWXiR
    Boléro - amzn.to/3AE9A49
    Une barque sur l’ocean & Ma Mére L’Oye (for piano) - amzn.to/3Coww8U
    Une barque sur l’ocean (for orchestra) - amzn.to/3wrM33Q
    Ma Mére L’Oye (for orchestra) - amzn.to/3AIe6i9
    Le Tombeau de Couperin (for orchestra) - amzn.to/3CqhkrI

  • @GoWestOfEden
    @GoWestOfEden Год назад +14

    The Reason I LOVE Bolero Is. LESS IS MORE. Thats the beautiful thing about life's little secret. Less Is More

  • @davidharkins8880
    @davidharkins8880 Год назад +9

    As a ‘recent subscriber’ to your channel , I simply wanted to thank you for broadening and further developing my love of this genre of music. David 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @martinbrisebois1831
    @martinbrisebois1831 Год назад +3

    I guess I've started my own classical journey as Matthew was not even born, but wow, what a stellar reintroduction to works I love so much.

  • @valentinbetourne1963
    @valentinbetourne1963 Год назад +6

    You make such great and interesting content! Keep that up, looking forward to learn more and more about classical music thanks to you!

  • @livictori
    @livictori 7 месяцев назад +4

    The greatest piece to explain life

  • @Belloqs
    @Belloqs 2 года назад +4

    Excellent analysis. Bolero definitely inspired many of the minimalists. Reich and Glass to name two.

  • @schnabeltier516
    @schnabeltier516 Год назад +2

    Super interesting video, thank you!

  • @kjmav10135
    @kjmav10135 Год назад +1

    I am coming to your content late, and I love it! Thank you for what you have produced!

  • @tacovandijk8967
    @tacovandijk8967 2 года назад +3

    Just beginning to listen to classical music and this helps a lot so keep them coming,no preference not yet anyway.

  • @gordanagarment-y8i
    @gordanagarment-y8i Месяц назад

    Thank you so much. Respect.

  • @alexandras4651
    @alexandras4651 Год назад +2

    Wonderful video, thank you!

  • @spec0h632
    @spec0h632 2 года назад +2

    Thank you! This video was so insightful and interesting!

  • @redwoodprosth
    @redwoodprosth Год назад

    Enjoyed your video. And learned a lot. Thank you for the visual at 8:35. I found that helpful

  • @cperezloza
    @cperezloza 4 месяца назад

    Excellent video! Really I enjoyed it. You english is load and clear. I need to practice my listenning and your youtube channel is a very high quality video to learn classical music and english. Congratulations!

  • @Selyidar
    @Selyidar 4 месяца назад

    Thank you. Amazing work.

  • @robinhillyard6187
    @robinhillyard6187 10 месяцев назад

    Excellent video. I’ve always thought the same thing about it being an early (the first?) minimalist piece.

  • @haydenbutler2223
    @haydenbutler2223 2 года назад +1

    Great work!

  • @fantastiskchow8830
    @fantastiskchow8830 2 года назад +1

    Love this!!!!!

  • @fendipxx
    @fendipxx 2 года назад

    I was one of the students at zora neale hurston elemantry! Great Show

  • @wyuj888jgszpokrrtuz
    @wyuj888jgszpokrrtuz Год назад

    Dusting off the cobwebs and watching analysis videos on this piece because I realized something I've been working on has taken a very Bolero turn. Great vid.

  • @dsm2240
    @dsm2240 Год назад +1

    Very informative, but a discussion about the strenuousness of the snare drum part would have been interesting.

  • @williamharberts5514
    @williamharberts5514 Год назад +6

    I loved your analysis, more for covering the music than covering the composer. I've always loved Bolero but never had much of an idea why nor how it was constructed. I always thought that it would be among the hardest classical pieces for a conductor to control. It feels like it would run away from you. Think perpetual motion machine rolling downhill. Now if I could just figure out exactly when the kettle drums come in. They slip in so smoothly with the plucked basses that I can't tell exactly when they come in. They are simply suddenly there. Count me as a new subscriber.

  • @johnlee3508
    @johnlee3508 9 месяцев назад

    Love this video...Just listen to Bolero live (Kansas City Symphony conducted by Michael Stern)

  • @matthewleary3329
    @matthewleary3329 2 года назад +3

    I would greatly enjoy a video like this about Handel's Royal Fireworks music, any of Beethoven's symphonies or piano sonatas, Grieg's Peer Gynt Suite, or anything by Tchaikovsky.

  • @otaviopmartins
    @otaviopmartins Год назад

    Awesome

  • @hukes
    @hukes Год назад +2

    Please do Carmina Burana!

  • @chessematics
    @chessematics 2 года назад +2

    Great video. Came from reddit

  • @FLOJo83
    @FLOJo83 2 года назад

    I will always request Mahler! Great videos

  • @davidhartley3435
    @davidhartley3435 Год назад +1

    Inspiration of Ravel's Bolero came from ballet dancer, nude portrait model, Ida Rubenstein. She commissioned the piece and it was first performed in 1928. It is an erotic piece because of its repetiveness and 2 melodic structures. It is one of the most sexiest classical music pieces. Ravel couldn't decide to do it 3/4 or 4/4, to allow it to drag the repetive soloists and theme. The "orgasmic" crashes can be heard at the finale of the piece. When it was first performed in 1928 in NYC, it was reported that a woman was shouting in the audience "This is perverted garbage!" When the conductor told Mr. Ravel backstage what had happened, he said well, I guess she's the only one that understood the piece.

  • @hannahchristinah
    @hannahchristinah 2 года назад +4

    5:50 : insert 'Ratatouille' scene here.

  • @safid6420
    @safid6420 Год назад +2

    Great explain, really enjoy it. Could you choose other master piece of different composer to explain them? Thx 👍

    • @KeepitClassical
      @KeepitClassical  Год назад +1

      Stay tuned. That's my next video I'm working on rn

  • @r4chdm
    @r4chdm Год назад

    What's the name of the piano song passage played at 2:15?

  • @zahzahzee
    @zahzahzee Год назад +1

    Come back to posting!

    • @KeepitClassical
      @KeepitClassical  Год назад +2

      Working on the next one as we speak...

    • @zahzahzee
      @zahzahzee Год назад +1

      @@KeepitClassical Awesome! Can't wait!

  • @kfleetwood
    @kfleetwood 8 месяцев назад +1

    Curious why an analysis of the structure and music development of this piece should leave out any analysis of the ostinato of the snare drum and support instruments.
    Other than that, I enjoyed the talking points.

  • @bryanhyde8850
    @bryanhyde8850 2 года назад +11

    Claire De Lune would be my request, if there were only one piece of music I could listen to for the rest of my life that would be it.

  • @valerietaylor9615
    @valerietaylor9615 Год назад

    Bolero is a fun piece, but my favorite pieces by Ravel are Le Tombeau de Couperin and Alborada del Gracioso.

  • @bijanjan100
    @bijanjan100 Год назад +2

    I think bolero is an excelente example of the medieval practice of two melodies played in repeated sequences, in which the first melody is played and then repeated, followed by The secomd one and then repeated

  •  Год назад

    I think impressionism in music refers more with the kind of feeling it leaves with the listener or the viewer... that kind of soft, puffy, blurred feeling that impressions leaves... which is kind opposite of what expressionism is... that kind of sharp, intensely visceral feeling...
    But I'm just speaking from my own perspective...

  • @sullivanspapa1505
    @sullivanspapa1505 Год назад +1

    Without a doubt anything by Vivaldi…please!

  • @carmenderaleau5232
    @carmenderaleau5232 Месяц назад

  • @brianwilson49
    @brianwilson49 Год назад

    Symphonies of wind instruments - Stravinsky.
    Dieu parmi nous - Messiaen.

  • @paulaloeb4375
    @paulaloeb4375 Год назад

    ❤❤❤‼️🎶

  • @Rgoid
    @Rgoid 4 месяца назад

    Did Allegro Non Troppo bring anyone here?

  • @hukes
    @hukes Год назад

    1:09 I hear "strong independent" and my stomach starts churning.

  • @evitaaslanidou6150
    @evitaaslanidou6150 2 года назад

    Reverie by Debussy

  • @LeondeLure
    @LeondeLure Год назад

    Ida Rubinstein was Russian.

    • @KeepitClassical
      @KeepitClassical  Год назад

      Ida Rubinstein was born in Kharkiv, Ukraine

    • @KeepitClassical
      @KeepitClassical  Год назад +3

      ​@@martiglesias60 ...and California is part of the US, but it's still accurate for me to call myself a Californian.

  • @corrinneloudon525
    @corrinneloudon525 Год назад

    Thank you for this. I have always hated this piece but can now appreciate the way I which it was crafted. Still dislike it 😔

  • @thesyandthed
    @thesyandthed 6 месяцев назад

    Every figure skating fan nightmare 😭

  • @davidrummel133
    @davidrummel133 Год назад

    @9:07 yep, that's why I've come to really dislike Bolero to the point of it being intolerable. My wife just cranked it while doing the dishes and I wanted to jump out of the window. Seemingly endless crescendo and when it finally hits it's pretty damned unsatisfying.

  • @lamodedepinktag
    @lamodedepinktag 10 месяцев назад +1

    Wonderful video, thank you!