Edgard Varèse, Ionisation - Ensemble intercontemporain

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 16 окт 2024

Комментарии • 387

  • @chuliard1967
    @chuliard1967 3 года назад +74

    When you watch a clip like this on RUclips, you’ll never be interrupted with advertisements.

    • @sonicsabbath
      @sonicsabbath 3 года назад +5

      Adblock plus does that

    • @talastra
      @talastra 4 месяца назад +2

      @@sonicsabbath That's not the joke :)

    • @talastra
      @talastra 4 месяца назад

      Hilarious. Well done. I smiled for the first time today :)

    • @spangalang
      @spangalang 2 месяца назад

      Cause you know big Eddy V's gonna be coming to collect if you allow advertising.

  • @zolarczakl3880
    @zolarczakl3880 4 года назад +37

    Zappa had this record and would put chalk marks on the vinyl where the loud parts came in to cut to them when trying to impress his friends with this music. The average teen in the 50s was listening to Elvis and Pat Boone...

    • @MrTheBaron
      @MrTheBaron 3 года назад +10

      At the final months of his life, the last work Frank did was producing an album of Varèse performed by the Ensemble Modern, with whom he had worked with for The Yellow Shark. The session even saw Nicolas Slonimsky, the conductor of the premiere performance of Ionisation and a friend of Frank, take up the baton and conduct the piece. That album has yet to be released.

  • @patrickkeenan8443
    @patrickkeenan8443 5 лет назад +101

    Performed this many years ago, forgot how much groove there is to certain sections. Grade A club smasher.

    • @iainctduncan
      @iainctduncan 4 года назад +3

      Same here! one of my most memorable musical experiences in my life. what a trip.

    • @KonStafylides
      @KonStafylides 3 года назад +8

      Hey man, freshman musicology student, just wanna say I love your comments. I just saw you commenting on Webern's symphony Op. 25, it's nice to see people that aren't a) lmao frank zappa or b) holy fuck im 145 years old and love this

    • @patrickkeenan8443
      @patrickkeenan8443 3 года назад +10

      @@KonStafylides I love Webern. He really was on top of his pointilistic serial banger game. Whenever I hear his 5 bagatelles dropped in the club I lose my shit.

    • @KonStafylides
      @KonStafylides 3 года назад +4

      @@patrickkeenan8443 Keep it up lmfao

    • @m.s.g1890
      @m.s.g1890 Год назад

      @@KonStafylides Zappa

  • @alexjohnston2439
    @alexjohnston2439 6 лет назад +191

    I have a theory about why the teenage Zappa loved this so much.
    Listen to it. The snare drum has a definite motif. Zappa’s first instrument was marching band drum. He was taught the rudiments, and the recorded evidence shows that he wasn’t a bad drummer. The snare drum is basically the lead instrument in this piece, with the sirens an important supporting instrument.
    Zappa grew up with a father who worked as a contractor for the Department of Defense. He spent the earliest years of his life growing up next door to Edgewood Arsenal in the Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Maryland. He must have got used to the sound of sirens; they used to be used all the time. I had friends as a kid who lived in Cork city in Ireland, and sirens were used every morning to alert dock workers that it was time to clock in. You could hear them all over the city. They must have been used even more frequently in US military installations, if only for emergency drill purposes.
    The teenage Zappa hears a piece of modern music that incorporates snare drum, his own instrument, and sirens, the sound he most didn't want to hear.
    No wonder he wanted to become a composer.

    • @jsbrules
      @jsbrules 5 лет назад +9

      I should hate to make another silly comment, but: surely we must all agree that Zappa continued to be very good at the "rudiments".

    • @robvillevoye6076
      @robvillevoye6076 5 лет назад +21

      Zappa was a schild of the cold war thearetenings in the 50/60ties and thus, growing up in a military zone used to the alarms of danger. Read his own whritings in the Great Frank Zappa book or in 'the negatieve dialect of poodle playing'. My english is not so good but I do understand where he got his musical conuntation . Overall: Zappa learnt me so much about art . Look further than what society is trying to get you focussed on. Edgar Varesse, stockhausen, Nam June Paike and Zappa and all those fantastic minds have shown me another way of thinking listening being. The modern day composer refuses to die.

    • @AndreaMercurioMusic
      @AndreaMercurioMusic 4 года назад +2

      I know it's old but, what a fascinating theory Alex ! I really liked that !

    • @jfleminator
      @jfleminator 4 года назад +1

      Cool. Can we get a psychoanalysis for why he might have liked webern, stravinsky, amd the shaggs?

    • @zolarczakl3880
      @zolarczakl3880 4 года назад +5

      @@jfleminator
      I believe Zappa liked the Shaggs because they were so horribly bad, they were a force to reckon with.

  • @DerUfen
    @DerUfen 11 лет назад +77

    This is beautiful. I don't believe that I'm able to comprehend entirely what's going on. But the sheer sounds of the instruments as they go along in the composition are very stimulating. I would love to hear that in a concert hall.

    • @BethanyLowe8773
      @BethanyLowe8773 2 года назад +7

      If you're enjoying it, you're understanding it! Maybe not true of all pieces of music but here the sound and the vibe are all important :)

    • @jeffryphillipsburns
      @jeffryphillipsburns 10 месяцев назад

      @@BethanyLowe8773 It depends what you mean by “understand”. I think DerUfen means he doesn’t see how the piece is structured. It also depends what you mean by “sound”. A melody by Puccini is just a series of sounds (at least as performed), but the timbre of the voice singing and the timbre of the orchestral instruments accompanying are secondary to the pattern of the sequence of pitches (in other words, to the structure of the melody). You don’t have to be able to articulate analytically that structure, but if you can’t apprehend it synthetically, you”ve missed the melody entirely.

    • @irmin8196
      @irmin8196 7 месяцев назад

      Spectralmusic hat auch etwas mit Mathematik zu tun! Diese Aufführung ist einfach nur grandios!

    • @talastra
      @talastra 4 месяца назад

      @@BethanyLowe8773 Sometimes understanding it is the opposite of enjoying it too.

  • @eastportland
    @eastportland 4 года назад +12

    Frank and Ruth. I'm still a fan. They're still my heroes.

  • @dwh82001
    @dwh82001 2 года назад +20

    That had to have been the most sensitive and moving performance of an air raid siren I’ve ever heard.

    • @adude9882
      @adude9882 4 месяца назад

      I found it tastefully understated.

  • @Steve27775
    @Steve27775 9 лет назад +93

    To me, it seems to be about aerial bombing. It could be considered as an audio complement to 'Guernica'. Building up to it - banging the drums of war, air-raid sirens, the deafening explosions, sirens becoming wails of despair, then just an eerie silence. But it's open to virtually limitless interpretations.

    • @charliem9579
      @charliem9579 6 лет назад +4

      I agree this would be a good soundtrack for viewing Guernica.

    • @EtcEtcAndEtc
      @EtcEtcAndEtc 6 лет назад +28

      @Jack Clare don't be such an absolutist, there is no rule on how you 'should' listen to music. Often the composer may intend the music to conjure images. Music is rarely entirely abstract.
      Plenty of stuff in music can be explained and discussed, but you may be uncomfortable with
      the fact that you will rarely reach a definite conclusion, as to receive a clear answer you must first ask a clear question!

    • @austinshoupe3003
      @austinshoupe3003 4 года назад +1

      There's pretty strong evidence that the composer didn't have any real world imagery for this. He was a descendent of the futurists, who believes heavily in breaking from pitch as the dominant tool of music. The sirens were selected because that have the smoothest glissando, not for any cheesy programmatic purpose.

    • @Travmann777
      @Travmann777 3 года назад +1

      @@EtcEtcAndEtc 2 years later and I feel the need to add on to what I feel the original commenter was referencing. Could you describe a what something tastes like? Yes, but you will never convey the entirety of what it means to experience that sense in words. Words are approximations of experiences of the senses, and sometimes it's best to just experience something as it is without putting barriers in the way of that experience.
      But it's also fun to put words to these experiences we have, and we do, and that's ok. I'm with you, absolutists are always no fun. :)

    • @jwc3o2
      @jwc3o2 3 года назад

      @@Travmann777 waitaminnit - "absolutists are ALWAYS no fun"? well, isn't that "a what something"!

  • @9uweeoncbmd890
    @9uweeoncbmd890 6 лет назад +53

    Fantastic recording. Glad the mixing was capable of making all instruments properly audible unlike many other recordings available on RUclips.

    • @ensembleinter
      @ensembleinter  6 лет назад +9

      Thanks !

    • @jeffryphillipsburns
      @jeffryphillipsburns 10 месяцев назад

      Mixing? Real composers don’t depend on mixes to patch holes in their scoring. An important part of composing is writing in such a way as to achieve a proper balance-without the artificial use of mixing boards.

    • @2112426gh
      @2112426gh 10 месяцев назад +1

      That runs a cold second to...
      Musicians capable of Dynamics!
      Ie all the instruments can be heard in a proper fashion, as the composer intended.

  • @wowhitedrs
    @wowhitedrs 11 лет назад +14

    I am delighted anyone undertakes a performance of Edgar's wonderful landmark work! Bravo for you ! I have studied and been an admirer or Edgar since 1969! Thank you for keeping Varese alive and in the halls.

  • @mh1almighty
    @mh1almighty 10 лет назад +26

    Totally blown away! When i first heard the audio of this, I had my fair share of doubts if anyone would be able to pull this off live. You guys did a splendid job!

    • @jeffryphillipsburns
      @jeffryphillipsburns 10 месяцев назад +1

      What? You thought the “audio” was put together by overdubbing, splicing, and punching in? That’s not how a real composer works.

  • @fuel925
    @fuel925 11 лет назад +17

    It's awesome listening to all the different timbres of the percussion instruments, and the variety of sound that can be coaxed from each instrument depending on how it is played. Great audio quality too :)

  • @staffanolofsson8201
    @staffanolofsson8201 3 года назад +2

    Susanna Mälkki has brought me here. I like her stile and her clothes and her way of leading this group. And I like the drummers, the percussion people. But I have to confess, I have it a little bit hard about that electric machine that now and then disturbes this concert. But Edgar wanted it this way . Brecht also wanted us not getting too envolved, to stop and think: "Wait, this is only a performance!"

  • @elainebmack
    @elainebmack Год назад +1

    I haven't heard this piece since I was in college. Great job here. The different timbres, articulation, and style are perfect. One might think that a percussion piece would be all loud - boom bang boom- but not this one. Superb camera work too.

  • @benzimmermanmusic
    @benzimmermanmusic 3 года назад +3

    Kudos on the multiple cameras for a Varese piece !

  • @matthewpaluch777
    @matthewpaluch777 10 лет назад +96

    BRAVO!
    Now I know why this was one of
    Frank Zappa's favorite compositions!

    • @johnappleseed8369
      @johnappleseed8369 8 лет назад +7

      The one that made him decide to pursue music!

    • @VeggiePower303
      @VeggiePower303 4 года назад +1

      But Zappa immediately thought , "I can do better than this." and he did.

    • @n.f.7342
      @n.f.7342 4 года назад

      did he though?

    • @jwc3o2
      @jwc3o2 3 года назад +4

      @@VeggiePower303 not "I can do better than" but more like "I can go somewhere from"...

  • @raskullsshako
    @raskullsshako Год назад +10

    Percussionists are hella underrated so this is awesome to me as a percussionist, it’s cool that they have the majority of the spotlight! ✨

  • @EthanReadsHisBooks
    @EthanReadsHisBooks 8 лет назад +119

    Gotta say. I'm gunna need a little more cowbell!

    • @MrIdontwanttomakeach
      @MrIdontwanttomakeach 3 года назад

      I wish I was an edgelord too

    • @charlesdavis7087
      @charlesdavis7087 3 года назад

      Personally, I'd rather listen to Varese being beaten with a cowbell for 7 mins and 27 seconds. Better him than me. Too bad Edgard didn't listen to his father and become an engineer.

    • @segmentsAndCurves
      @segmentsAndCurves 3 года назад

      @@charlesdavis7087 Cry about it

  • @babischatzis5620
    @babischatzis5620 5 лет назад +11

    "According to Varese, in order for the
    projection to yield a highly complex form, in other words, a cosmic distribution, what is necessary is a simple figure in motion and a plane that is itself mobile; otherwise, you get sound effects"
    Deleuze, Guattari- A Thousand Plateaus p.344

  • @TheHive616
    @TheHive616 6 лет назад +19

    Ensemble Intercontemporain has always played the bizarre pieces they choose in a wonderful way, but THIS performance is easily one of my favorite recordings in the world. the conductor is very good, keeping pace with the strange meter, her movements large enough to be noted by the performers without seeming gratuitous or self-important. Fantastic performance, I watch it every couple months and am moved and impressed each time. Thank you for this performance!

    • @davewestner
      @davewestner 4 года назад

      This really is an astounding recording, from a performance point of view as well as a technical point of view. Thanks to the engineer(s) that recorded this. I don't believe there is an engineering credit listed in this video unfortunately.

  • @AlexReynard
    @AlexReynard 11 лет назад +35

    I can very easily understand this being the piece of music that started Frank Zappa's interest in composing.

    • @AlexReynard
      @AlexReynard 2 года назад

      @Uzair And now I feel old. But noticed! :)

    • @AlexReynard
      @AlexReynard 2 года назад +1

      @Uzair I'm almost 40. Try reading stuff you wrote in high school. That'll fry your skull for sure.

  • @6StringPassion.
    @6StringPassion. 6 месяцев назад +1

    Studied Varèse at Juilliard back in the 70s.

  • @davewestner
    @davewestner 2 года назад +2

    Nicely done. Well played, recording sounds great and nice videography.

  • @unabarry5496
    @unabarry5496 6 лет назад +21

    Fantastic piece! Had to study it for my music degree in the 70s.

  • @Nuxunumo
    @Nuxunumo 3 года назад +7

    Probably one of the best performances of this piece I've ever heard wooooow

  • @dgunde13gunderson78
    @dgunde13gunderson78 3 года назад +1

    This reminds me of my alma mater UCSD.....we'd have these strange concerts going on constantly. Varese was best man when
    Nicolas Slonimsky was married in the 30s....great bio fr latter: Perfect Pitch. Kind regards Dgunde, viola, piano, etc.....

  • @JahnBeukesMusic
    @JahnBeukesMusic 10 лет назад +2

    BRAVO! Awesome work, ladies and gentlemen!

  • @19200ussel
    @19200ussel 5 месяцев назад +1

    Écoute conseillée par un ami cher et c'est en cela qu'on reconnaît ces vrais amis ...

  • @dc5815-j1n
    @dc5815-j1n 3 года назад +4

    this is my favourite roadtrip song

  • @hughshrapnel4448
    @hughshrapnel4448 6 лет назад +3

    Wonderful piece - what an ending!

  • @shabbyroadscholar
    @shabbyroadscholar 3 месяца назад +2

    You know I've been a musician for over 50 years and I've done a lot of experimental music ambient music electronic music I love experimenting but I've listened to this and others and it doesn't make me cry. Mussorgsky makes me cry.

  • @jwc3o2
    @jwc3o2 3 года назад +3

    let's not forget that this work is dedicated to Nicolas Slonimski, who gave it its 1st performance in 1933 at Carnegie Hall & first recording on Columbia in 1934 (& that Slonimski guested on keyboards with Zappa when he was 83!)

  • @pawdaw
    @pawdaw 4 года назад +4

    Perfect tempo. Textural clarity.

  • @DrMattMusic
    @DrMattMusic 11 лет назад +3

    Okay, this is the tightest and most civilized performance of this work I've seen on RUclips, capturing far more of the spirit and accurate notes than the Boulez.
    Kudos to Ms. Mälkki. I'd love to work with you.

  • @iainctduncan
    @iainctduncan 5 лет назад +6

    I had a chance to play this at UBC with the perc ensemble, such a gas to play! And hard as hell to keep your place.

  • @SpyrosPanouts
    @SpyrosPanouts 9 лет назад +10

    Another classic side with percussion.

  • @lucabrignole
    @lucabrignole 5 лет назад +18

    the point is not about Zappa etc bla bla.. the point is: "mr .Varese" wrote this in 1929...

    • @jeffreydershin5763
      @jeffreydershin5763 5 лет назад +2

      1929, wow. The public must have thought Varese came from outer space!

    • @austinshoupe3003
      @austinshoupe3003 4 года назад

      @@jeffreydershin5763 the futurists had already made their mark by this point. The ballet Russe, Satie's ballets with Picasso, and the dadaists had already been around by the time this premiered. The interwar period was explosive and unstable for art music.

    • @paulphilemon2370
      @paulphilemon2370 4 года назад +1

      Je trouve votre phrase parfaite, au fil de la lecture des interventions ci-dessus publiées, son apparition m'a fait hurler de rire 🤣 (et ça fait beaucoup de bien... merci)
      Drôle et poétiquement dit M. Lucas Brignole " etc bla bla .. Zappa Varese 1929 The point is… " 🤣🤣🤐 En accord avec vous, Même si j'adore aussi Frank Zappa....

    • @lucabrignole
      @lucabrignole 4 года назад +2

      @@paulphilemon2370 merci! rien contre M. Zappa bien sûr, mais souvent beaucoup de gens se perdent en regardant le doigt, quand le sage désigne la lune ;)

  • @jean-michelsapristi6348
    @jean-michelsapristi6348 7 лет назад +1

    Le documentaire passé récemment sur Arte m'a fait découvrir la personnalité hors-norme de Franck Zappa : Un gars à la fois lucide, libre et créatif. Rafraichissant par les temps qui courent...
    C'est en quelque sorte sur ses "conseils" que je découvre ce morceau de Varèse (et c'est balèze).

    • @diezelle57
      @diezelle57 7 лет назад

      En effet, Varèse, c'est du balèze ! :)

  • @stevemontanya4842
    @stevemontanya4842 6 лет назад +48

    "The present-day composer refuses to die." Edgard Varese

    • @MIDIPipe
      @MIDIPipe 4 года назад

      Amén.

    • @jwc3o2
      @jwc3o2 3 года назад

      actually, i think it was "the present day composers refuse to die"...

  • @pedroleal7118
    @pedroleal7118 2 года назад

    Nice performance.
    ps I also now know who has my Ludwig 'Coliseum' snare! Thanks for sharing!

  • @willnabors6463
    @willnabors6463 3 года назад +10

    When you're in band practice and you ask your drummer to play a four on the floor

  • @sandc411
    @sandc411 10 месяцев назад +1

    awesome. just awesome...

  • @camusandinternet
    @camusandinternet 11 лет назад +4

    This ensemble absolutely NAILED this piece. They've played it at the exact tempo I like to hear it (not too languorous the way Boulez performs it - which is possibly more accurate - but not too fast like other recordings.)

  • @artemagica3486
    @artemagica3486 3 года назад +6

    Give me Varèse any day! I think, he was not only way ahead of his time but will still be contemporary in the 23rd Century.... (if humanity makes it that far 🤔).

    • @charlesdavis7087
      @charlesdavis7087 3 года назад

      If one thinks of this as "Music," there may well never be a 23rd Century. Ingram Marshall composed a work having to do with the slamming of the prison doors in Alcatraz. This work I found very haunting and full of disjointed memories that didn't really want to be remembered. For me, the best part of Ionization was the few seconds after I realized it had ended. (What is a joke without a punch line? A Zen Koan.).

  • @eduardofernandez2240
    @eduardofernandez2240 7 лет назад +1

    La meillleure version! Bravo!

  • @inzyster
    @inzyster 9 лет назад +29

    The Black Page, part 0 - the impossible version :)

  • @JahnBeukesMusic
    @JahnBeukesMusic 10 лет назад +2

    AWESOME job! Bravo!

  • @sohyunlee7
    @sohyunlee7 9 лет назад +4

    totally awesome!

  • @juancaem
    @juancaem Год назад

    Excellent recording!

  • @folaticisse8238
    @folaticisse8238 5 лет назад +1

    Très bonne vidéo sur la ionisation de varese

  • @yagiz885
    @yagiz885 3 года назад +2

    Very catchy! Genius' masterpiece!

  • @janesdisorder1565
    @janesdisorder1565 3 года назад +6

    Frank Zappa makes so much more sense now. He had so many moments in his live shows and recordings that mimic this.

    • @macleadg
      @macleadg 3 года назад

      Zappa met Varese once as a teenager, and kept an autographed picture of him. He revered Varese.

  • @needleboy17
    @needleboy17 3 года назад +1

    So much percussion. Nice.

  • @marcosr2
    @marcosr2 6 лет назад +2

    Great Work, perfect!!

  • @plasmaa1407
    @plasmaa1407 Год назад

    Merci la prof de musique

  • @paulsomers6048
    @paulsomers6048 3 года назад

    Sussanna Mälkki is a brilliant conductor. Her Sibelius is fantastic!

  • @geist3756
    @geist3756 6 месяцев назад

    I had recognised Edgard Varese as an influence on Frank Zappa. This made me interested in trying to find a piece of his work to listen to. After repeating the name many times, I gave up on Alexa.

  • @saraondo2698
    @saraondo2698 3 года назад +1

    "Threnody for Frank Zappa ".
    "She dances in the wind "by Tony villodas composer

  • @trithucvacuocsong
    @trithucvacuocsong 2 года назад

    What an exciting video! I see that your channel is perfectly suitable for the platform known as Ganjing World. May I repost and keep everything as is. Please let me know your thoughts. Have a lovely day!

  • @RonOrGina
    @RonOrGina 3 года назад +2

    I can definitely see the big influence in Frank Zappa's music. FZ had good taste. :)

    • @roadgrit801
      @roadgrit801 3 года назад +1

      I heard an interview with Zappa in which he said (after first hearing Varese) "Boy, that sounds great. I'm going to have to write some of that."

  • @charlesdavis7087
    @charlesdavis7087 3 года назад +2

    This isn't music. This is something else. Not sure what it is... but I'll listen to some more of Varese's efforts.

    • @downsouth420
      @downsouth420 3 года назад

      There is a natural music intertwined in the chaos. I guess it’s all in how you think about it.

    • @tomfurgas2844
      @tomfurgas2844 Месяц назад

      Varese himself called it "organized sound".

  • @ICA17887
    @ICA17887 4 года назад +1

    J'adore ce morceau emblématique de Varèse starter de la carrière musicale de Zappa.

  • @ivanbosco7551
    @ivanbosco7551 9 лет назад +6

    Does this have anything to do with war?

  • @tomelliott964
    @tomelliott964 3 года назад +1

    Wonderful! This piece is both an auditory and a visual delight!😀😀😀

  • @davidlaymanpiano
    @davidlaymanpiano 4 года назад +12

    I did my Master's recital on this stage.

    • @horstbienek2108
      @horstbienek2108 4 года назад +3

      AFTERWARDS I WAS WITH THE RATS IN THE CELLARS

  • @carlosbartnickitort6557
    @carlosbartnickitort6557 2 года назад

    Wonderful playing.

  •  10 лет назад +1

    Delícia, ver os instrumentos em uma filmagem tão boa dá muito mais prazer do que só escutar, parabéns!

    •  8 лет назад

      de onde voce é? no brasil raramente se escuta musica contemporanea. sempre param em stravinsky. o augusto de campos diz que estamos há 100 anos atrasado na musica!!!!!!

    • @demetriusgiovannisoares3822
      @demetriusgiovannisoares3822 5 лет назад

      uma pergunta retórica em tempos de patrulha politicamente correta: seria machismo dizer que é sempre um prazer assistir música clássica contemporânea e mulheres bonitas numa mesma sala de concerto? ok, podem jogar as bombas... rsrs

  • @elfcounsul
    @elfcounsul 3 года назад +4

    Now listen to Zappa’s Black Page.

  • @s_eliza
    @s_eliza 8 лет назад +3

    this piece was so good in Hannibal

  • @robertokinks7251
    @robertokinks7251 8 месяцев назад

    assolutamente fantastico! avanti 200 anni.

  • @VersaillesP88
    @VersaillesP88 3 года назад +1

    J'adore, tout simplement ! Rythme, scansion, pulsion et impulsion. Au commencement était l'action !

  • @mutantbaby1672
    @mutantbaby1672 9 лет назад +3

    Perfectly done.

  • @brucebennett5338
    @brucebennett5338 2 года назад +1

    magnifique!

  • @6591lucaf
    @6591lucaf 7 лет назад +22

    Unbelievably, still today how many ignorant comments we are forced to read for an old classic like this. It is ridiculous. And they still think there are very funny !

    • @crazyorganist1609
      @crazyorganist1609 6 лет назад

      6591lucaf I know. Sad isn't it

    • @pawdaw
      @pawdaw 6 лет назад +1

      and it's just a sonata-form movement with a coda!

    • @TheMikkis100
      @TheMikkis100 5 лет назад +2

      You should probably watch the video unmuted. Maybe you'd understand the comments after that.

    • @Civilizashum
      @Civilizashum 5 лет назад

      @@TheMikkis100 You should maybe take your head out of your ass before you do anything like consider some music.

    • @TheMikkis100
      @TheMikkis100 5 лет назад

      @@Civilizashum I don't have enough flexible body to have my head up my ass. Is that something you people listening to this "music " usually do.

  • @607
    @607 3 года назад

    The version with Pierre Boulez is not on RUclips anymore?

  • @gabrieltorres2381
    @gabrieltorres2381 3 года назад +1

    Surprisingly catchy.

  • @docpearson
    @docpearson 3 года назад +3

    Definitely will be a platinum album.

  • @aneteruyz8253
    @aneteruyz8253 4 года назад +1

    Omg fantastic

  • @uromaniac
    @uromaniac 2 месяца назад

    Frank Zappa documentary brought me here. Zappa mentions Varese as a strong influence on his young self. Easy to see that.

  • @behzadrostamipour
    @behzadrostamipour Год назад

    Awesome 👌

  • @grantbratrud4949
    @grantbratrud4949 4 года назад +3

    Larger tempo, more accessible... great performance! Note perfect! Love the bull roarer!!
    No, it does not get a whole lot better than this. From a pastoral, grass-fed world, to the mechanized world of plastics and other large man-made molecules-- or small ones, like NaZi Terror-- think of today's film compared with the Nastassja Kinski's nipple in Polanski's immortal film treatment of Hardy's "Tess of the d'Urbervilles". Machine guns vs cavalry + bravery. We were better off with grass-fed. Antibiotics were a plus (thank God for Fleming and the Scientific Method), but grass-fed even helped the sad urbanites, back then.

  • @darylcumming7119
    @darylcumming7119 3 года назад

    Thank you.

  • @xavierlouis12
    @xavierlouis12 Год назад

    surpuissant !!!

  • @udomatthiasdrums5322
    @udomatthiasdrums5322 2 года назад

    still love it!!

  • @agst2006
    @agst2006 2 года назад

    art works of rhythms, frequencies and intensities

  • @CharlieMessing
    @CharlieMessing 6 лет назад +3

    Music starts about 1:07

    • @00Haydz
      @00Haydz 4 года назад +1

      Thx M8

  • @klangschatten5610
    @klangschatten5610 3 года назад +1

    Amazing music, awesome performance.

  • @billmcanally7782
    @billmcanally7782 6 месяцев назад

    the siren suggests urgency and carries with it a sense of disquiet!

  • @mariagomes9005
    @mariagomes9005 2 года назад

    Magnifique

  • @Manormouse-04
    @Manormouse-04 11 месяцев назад

    This is so very much ahead of it's time, as is a lot of his work.

  • @Harriet1822
    @Harriet1822 2 года назад

    Thank you. First time I heard anything like that. Music composed by space aliens.

  • @m.s.g1890
    @m.s.g1890 Год назад

    is this supposed to make you think or feel?

  • @neseas
    @neseas 6 лет назад +1

    incredible.

  • @stefanotorelli55
    @stefanotorelli55 6 лет назад

    Siamo supposti doverci commuovere/entusiasmare?

  • @0049User
    @0049User 11 лет назад

    Wonderful. I have only ever heard the original Varese recording (i have a 1970's vinyl re-release) and it is very powerful to see young musicians playing this piece so well.

  • @karimhabet6404
    @karimhabet6404 6 лет назад +1

    quels beaux rythmes. magnifique version.

  • @ShindlerReal
    @ShindlerReal 4 года назад +2

    Damn, it sounds a lot like percussion pieces in Aliens.

  • @frankalfar
    @frankalfar 4 года назад +1

    An awesome performance👏👏👏👏👏

  • @redape6870
    @redape6870 3 года назад +1

    now i totally see how this inspired frank zappa.

  • @alfredodelgadillo7461
    @alfredodelgadillo7461 4 года назад +1

    very interesting