Dr Schmieder this arrangement is very intriguing. I'm so glad that you still are continuing your conducting. I will never forget your positive influence on my string/violin 🎻 studies at SMU. Blessings to you and your group!!
...i take it back, they're all watching the concert master lol, the final cutoff the conductor had *nothing* to do with it. an impressive orchestra and concertmaster
It annoys me when the audience starts applauding the very second the performance is over. Please give few seconds for the ringing of the music to end. It shouldn't be a race. It is like drinking wine; you don't gulp it.
Audiences should be trained and educatede to respect the depth of the music, so they let that tone out completely - and a little longer - before clapping and, at worst, shouting. I can not help but get the thought that they have not been inside the music at all, but only perceive the surface, since they can so quickly get into an external focus.
@@gnothyself Well the chords are given by Bach in his original chaconne and they should be followed. For example, the A major chord (3rd chord of the piece) is meant to be a first inversion chord. He has changed it to a root position A major chord which just doesn't work that well.
I love a good arrangement, and I love a recording which actually includes the bass frequencies. Very nice upload, thanks
Great!! I enjoyed it deeply.
Dr Schmieder this arrangement is very intriguing. I'm so glad that you still are continuing your conducting. I will never forget your positive influence on my string/violin 🎻 studies at SMU. Blessings to you and your group!!
❤
🧡
anyone else have no idea what the conductor is doing?
Chasing away flies, it would seem...
He is doing too much.
Urinating on a masterpiece
so i thought, and yet the orchestra was entirely in time so somehow they must know how to read him
...i take it back, they're all watching the concert master lol, the final cutoff the conductor had *nothing* to do with it. an impressive orchestra and concertmaster
❤
This sounds real wonderful, though maybe not so "hopelessly lonely" as a single violin does.
very enjoyable, good mood
Strangest conducting I've ever seen. The musicians seem to be ignoring him almost completely.
It annoys me when the audience starts applauding the very second the performance is over. Please give few seconds for the ringing of the music to end. It shouldn't be a race. It is like drinking wine; you don't gulp it.
These professional clappers should be photographed and banned from future concerts. HATE THEM!!
Audiences should be trained and educatede to respect the depth of the music, so they let that tone out completely - and a little longer - before clapping and, at worst, shouting. I can not help but get the thought that they have not been inside the music at all, but only perceive the surface, since they can so quickly get into an external focus.
It just a violin tutti with string harmony, it cannot show the original idea of Bach why he wrote this music piece.
When the main melody is the violin, why is the video recording the cello? ? ?
Praise to the musicians, except to the arranger. This isn't the tragic Bach's Chaconne.
It has lost so much in this arrangement. Perhaps it was supposed to be a lonely and desperate individual after all.
I'm sorry but bad harmony, whoever arranged this.
Not bad, just amateurish. Bach is intimidating to arrange.
@@gnothyself Well the chords are given by Bach in his original chaconne and they should be followed. For example, the A major chord (3rd chord of the piece) is meant to be a first inversion chord. He has changed it to a root position A major chord which just doesn't work that well.
@@LachlanTyrrell2003 I agree.
I guess every arranger/transcriber wants to make a unique mark; too bad it's hard to improve on perfection.
@@LachlanTyrrell2003 yes it lost a lot of the tension going to the A in the bass
@@MrMusic238 Yes. There is also a very awkward bassline at 0:12, which should've just gone from Bflat to G and then to A for the cadential 6-4.