Yes indeed! :) Sooner or later Gothmog (lord of Balrogs), Curumo (Saruman), Thuringwethil (a vampire), and Boldog (a great orc) will no doubt join them.
@@Lovelylondly Yes your right but it was predominantly the bible. Melkor, Balrogs, Gandalf, Sauron, Frodo, Arda, Auindalla, the valar, the maiar, the elves etc Jesus, Satan, Angels, Demons, Earth,
Years and years after i come back to this video, it still gives me goosebumps stronger than the last time i hear it. Silmarillion is my favorite book by Tolkien and every time i finish it, i come back to this video and relive the moments, but each time i comprehend more than i did last time and look at things like i haven't done before. Wherein the beauty chiefly comes. I love this book and i love all the Valar, but Yavanna the most, also known as Kemuntari, the spouse of Aule and mother of nature. I love her the most, more so than Varda, lady of the stars who is beloved by all of the Eldar. Not only did she love the children of Illuvitar and always had them in thought. But she also loved her creation, from two trees of Valinor to every flower and grass. What a wonderful and timeless world did Tolkien create, if it came to me i would love to dwell in blessed realm forever. But now iam rambling too much i suppose. Thank you for this wonderful piece of art. Enjoy your readings!
It was used to create an even more sublime world called Eä and now the board has been set. Then they entered and had to build everything from scratch. The ainur that became the Maiar and Valar. And now have to play out something greater than them. Playing their parts. Then the world gets remade again. Becoming a world greater than even the perfect design melkor ruined and poisoned and forced said world to bleed out its magic.
Tolkien was to mythic literature what Beethoven was to music, and what Shakespeare was to dramatic literature. Each universalised his culture by creating masterpieces for all the world* that bring the human spirit closer to the presence of God. All hail, to Illuvatar's eternal praise! * I know that a masterpiece is, by definition, for all cultures and all times. But this is not known widely enough that I felt that I should avoid the tautological phrasing.
@@giuseppepapaleo3030 Naturally, I revere Mozart as one of the all-time great composers. Nevertheless, let me provide some evidence that Beethoven's compositions were greater, generally speaking. _ Beethoven put much more work into composition than Mozart did. Several of Beethoven's pieces were developed and perfected over periods of years, sometimes many years (e.g., the glorious Ninth Symphony). By contrast, according to James Keays of the Redlands Symphony, Mozart composed 'his three greatest (and final) symphonies' over a period of only a month and a half, from 26 June through 10 August of 1788 (www.redlandssymphony.com/pieces/symphony-no-41-jupiter-k-551). (Some sources say three months, but this is probably because three months were involved, June, July, and August -- though, in fact, it was only small fractions of two of those months.) Moreover, Beethoven's achievement resulted, in part, from building upon Mozart's achievement. Therefore, unless Mozart's genius was significantly greater than Beethoven's -- very unlikely, I think we can agree -- we must conclude that, generally speaking, Beethoven's compositions were greater than Mozart's. _ Some think that Beethoven's extra work per unit of output was just a consequence of his deafness. However, his extraordinarily lengthy composition periods began _before_ he went deaf. For example, according to Wikipedia, Beethoven began work on his second piano concerto in 1788, revised it from 1794-95, and finished it in 1798 (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_compositions_by_Ludwig_van_Beethoven).
@@sudanemamimikiki1527 When a man of genius does the kind of work that is proper to his kind of genius, it is very likely that the more he works, the greater is his accomplishment. I know of no reason to think that Beethoven was an exception. _ Perhaps the reason that none of your compositions will ever be superior to any of Mozart's compositions is simply that his musical genius is much greater than yours. At least you will admit that it is possible. I said in my comment that I was assuming that Mozart's musical genius was not significantly greater than Beethoven's. Naturally, if this is not so, then my reasoning fails.
@@sudanemamimikiki1527 I never claimed to have proven my point, merely to have provided some evidence in its favour. It seems that you and I simply have different views on what explanations of the evidence are more likely in this instance. I'm happy to live with that. I rejoice that you are a lover of great music, and pray that it helps to lift your spirit far above the depravity of the world around us. God bless!
Yes Tolkien's works were and are very inspirational to all who read his manuscripts. Tolkien is know as the father of epic illustrations. The music had a gave a good touch to Tolkien's words.
Melkorian theme is not necessary dark in the begin, it can be even powerful and mesmerizing as Lucifer by Alan Parsons, but it is self repeating and in discord to the Ainur theme and struggling to consume other melodies, later yes it becomes darker and more violent, revealing it's nature
Dawn Echoes Yupp.But dont forget,it hant been finished,it was just some stories,released after his death.He should have given 2 more years,would have bedn enough to finish his book.
I'm on my 5th time reading it ,it's my bible I love it ,I've lost count how many times I've read the Ainulindale chapter ,ive not got the words of how much it gets to me .
Whenenver I read the first few pages, it is literally like the bible. Valar are Archangels, Maiar are Angels. And the Valar lords are 7 too, the same number as the Archangels. (Although there are 14 Valar in total). One of them is the fallen one, Melkor, in the Bible it's Lucifer (Satan).
@@raembesmelkor isn’t that at all. Tolkien hated allegory. Especially that kind. Tolkien And Mytholovers article gives full context of his “it’s a fundamentally catholic work” that too many keep pushing without knowing the whole story and the whole conversation between Tolkien and certain people where that statement came from. Tolkien, (The OG of all Authors) was a veteran of the First World War and many other battles such as The Battle Of Somme etc. his works of art were to give back to the England as a form of restoring lost mythologies that he himself was a master of since he was a top professor of philology at Oxford. He did ALOT of his writing while in the trenches during WWI during small “breaks” while down in those trench forts built into the ground. And while he eldest son was in the Second World War; his Lord Of The Rings writings was strictly created above all else to give his eldest something to read while stationed wherever he was stationed. I forgot that part. They sent letters back and forth about it all the time. He was also the one and only son that actually protected his fathers legacy and work. A lot of his other work were put together BY his son after his father passed away. It’s well worth to react to the documentary behind the scenes film the director and crew and cast created together as well as the interview with the son Christopher Tolkien who you get to sort of enjoy a nice indoor and outdoor chat for like what came to about 1-2 hours of wonderful footage from an era that really must not be forgotten. His work shed a light on things like The Finnish Kalevala, Norwegian Elder Edda, The Welsh Mabinogion, The Norwegian Nibelungen, The Indian Bhagvagita & Several Irish Folklore + other Cultural things! The man also restored and translated ancient relics for the governments as one everyone trusted. Much of what’s in our dictionary come from his efforts as well. Anytime he spoke & even posted several comments into the paper as an editorial or response to certain issues as a very involved man for the world and the environment everyone turned their head to listen to him as everyone knew his worth and respected him greatly. His works show how NOT to glorify war; shows in the films if you pay close attention while watching the next films. Sharing what you know now via the after thoughts at the end of the second film! Remember. Extended edition. There is a lot missed out on especially in the second movie regarding Boromir backstory which there is much more in the books but the films WANTED to keep more but the cinemas and Harvey Weinstein literally harangued him into making a “theatrical cut” which is why you have two versions. The real version and the “theatrical cut”. It was all to make more money for the company that is the theatres/cinemas. To get more showings in per day during the year. And believe me. People were camping outside and travelling the country to watch it MORE THAN ONCE. His creations literally lead to inspiring the most currently famous books games & movies we all literally wouldn’t have enjoyed and be touched to our souls core without him and his spiritually connected brilliance. That and he was a philologist professor at Oxford first and foremost which covers so many things. Not just linguistic. The man was a true genius and Jack of all trades but ultimately LOVED the simple life. The inspiration for Lord of the Rings was not any war, but author J.R.R. Tolkien's love of language. Especially Welsh, Finnish and Old English. He lamented the loss of any true English folklore, that was wiped out after the Norman invasion of 1066, so Tolkien wrote many books on these new "legends" he came up with himself. Much of which is centered around three languages he fully developed himself. Two Elven languages and Dwarvish., Númenorean Adunaic, Black Speech(warped Numenorean and elvish) They all have syntax, vocabularies, and a whole writing system that can be learned as the Tengwar alphabet is moreso to match with the spoken elvish rather than one to one for other country’s alphabet. Hundreds of people worldwide speak elvish fluently. Tolkien did draw upon his personal experience in the trenches of World War ONE, not Two, as inspiration for some parts, most notably, the Dead Marshes that Frodo and Sam and Gollum pass through in The Two Towers. But war was not the inspiration for the entire series. World Of Warcraft. Skyrim, Harry Potter, Diablo, D&D, even Warhammer and so forth wouldn’t have. Existed without taking inspiration from and or completely ripping off from Tolkien. I’d also like to explain Gandalf a bit too: Tolkien drew alot of inspiration from the norse mythology. Magical rings, Gandalf (Staff elf in old norse), Gandalfs outfit (Odin), Gandalfs title 'the grey wanderer' (Odin), Shadowfaxe (The horses of day and night Rhimfaxe and Skinfaxe), Trolls, elves, dwarves etc. * Odin had a legendary horse, Sleipnir, who had eight legs and was said to be one of the greatest horses known to the gods. Gandalf had Shadowfax, who had no equal among horses in Middle-earth and could understand the speech of men. * Ødin’s legendary gear-the spear Gungnir and the ring Draupnir-could have influenced Gandalf’s legendary sword Glamdring or, more likely, the magic staff he carries, while the ring possibly influenced Gandalf’s possession of the ring Narya (Sturlson 145). * Gandalf and Odin both receive new wisdom as a result of sacrifice, as Gandalf is reincarnated after his fight with the Balrog, and Ødin gains power and wisdom after hanging himself on the tree Yggdrasil for nine days (Sigfusson 80-85). * One of the most apparent ways in which Gandalf and Ødin are alike is that they both take the shape of an old grey pilgrim, with a wide-brimmed hat and grey cloak when they wander the mortal world and deal with the inhabitants (Pitts 7). * Gandalf and Ødin are virtually reflections of each other, as can be observed through examining their gear and animal companions, the way they sacrificed themselves and were rewarded with wisdom, and the fact that they walk the earth as old men in tattered clothing. The Renowned Steeds of Gandalf and Odin Gandalf and Ødin both have renowned horses and staves with magical properties. Odin carries the legendary spear Gungnir, which is said never to miss its mark when thrown (Sturlson 145); however, he also carries it as his staff when he wanders the earth as an old man. In the Poetic Edda, the Valkyrie Sigrdrifa advises Sigurd about the magical application of runes and tells him that there are runes inscribed on the tip of Gungnir (Sigfusson 291). This spear could be a parallel to Glamdring( High Elven King Turgon’s sword, that was forged for the Goblin wars but is most likely influential to the staff Gandalf carries on his journeys. Strikingly similar to Shadowfax, Odin possesses a legendary horse named Sleipnir, who has eight legs and can run on the ground and through the air at great speeds. This sounds very similar, in some ways, to Tolkien’s description of Shadowfax in The Two Towers, “Shadowfax tossed his head and cried aloud as if a trumpet had summoned him to battle. Then he sprang forward. Fire flew from his feet; night rushed over him” (Tolkien 228). Elden Ring, Dungeons And Dragons, Diablo, Zelda, Harry Potter, vamp diaries, Red Sonja, Oath Breakers, Dragon Lance, Willow, Conan, Swords and Magic, Highlander movie+series and so much more were inspired by Tolkiens works.
+Ana Kulić is right ! This song is magnificent. The woman singing... it makes me think to Yavanna music, the one when she creates the two trees of Valinor, Laurelin and Telperion. Great job !
+Ana Kulić Neither can i to be honest. I've always loved this one. You really are a sweet one aren't you? We all can't do anything but marvel at the things that are truely beautiful.. to think this was also created from a single mind of one person, in this music, I mean.
I love the transition you used between Melkor's second theme and Iluvatar's third. I might have made Melkor more metal, but still, extremely good work.
A profound music! However, as for the subtitles, a very important part is missing, I suppose: "And it essayed to drown the other music by the violence of its voice, but it seemed that its most triumphant notes were taken by the other and woven into its own solemn pattern."
Tolkien, (The OG of all Authors) was a veteran of the First World War and many other battles such as The Battle Of Somme etc. his works of art were to give back to the England as a form of restoring lost mythologies that he himself was a master of since he was a top professor of philology at Oxford. He did ALOT of his writing while in the trenches during WWI during small “breaks” while down in those trench forts built into the ground. And while he eldest son was in the Second World War; his Lord Of The Rings writings was strictly created above all else to give his eldest something to read while stationed wherever he was stationed. I forgot that part. They sent letters back and forth about it all the time. He was also the one and only son that actually protected his fathers legacy and work. A lot of his other work were put together BY his son after his father passed away. It’s well worth to react to the documentary behind the scenes film the director and crew and cast created together as well as the interview with the son Christopher Tolkien who you get to sort of enjoy a nice indoor and outdoor chat for like what came to about 1-2 hours of wonderful footage from an era that really must not be forgotten. His work shed a light on things like The Finnish Kalevala, Norwegian Elder Edda, The Welsh Mabinogion, The Norwegian Nibelungen, The Indian Bhagvagita & Several Irish Folklore + other Cultural things! The man also restored and translated ancient relics for the governments as one everyone trusted. Much of what’s in our dictionary come from his efforts as well. Anytime he spoke & even posted several comments into the paper as an editorial or response to certain issues as a very involved man for the world and the environment everyone turned their head to listen to him as everyone knew his worth and respected him greatly. His works show how NOT to glorify war; shows in the films if you pay close attention while watching the next films. Sharing what you know now via the after thoughts at the end of the second film! Remember. Extended edition. There is a lot missed out on especially in the second movie regarding Boromir backstory which there is much more in the books but the films WANTED to keep more but the cinemas and Harvey Weinstein literally harangued him into making a “theatrical cut” which is why you have two versions. The real version and the “theatrical cut”. It was all to make more money for the company that is the theatres/cinemas. To get more showings in per day during the year. And believe me. People were camping outside and travelling the country to watch it MORE THAN ONCE. His creations literally lead to inspiring the most currently famous books games & movies we all literally wouldn’t have enjoyed and be touched to our souls core without him and his spiritually connected brilliance. That and he was a philologist professor at Oxford first and foremost which covers so many things. Not just linguistic. The man was a true genius and Jack of all trades but ultimately LOVED the simple life. The inspiration for Lord of the Rings was not any war, but author J.R.R. Tolkien's love of language. Especially Welsh, Finnish and Old English. He lamented the loss of any true English folklore, that was wiped out after the Norman invasion of 1066, so Tolkien wrote many books on these new "legends" he came up with himself. Much of which is centered around three languages he fully developed himself. Two Elven languages and Dwarvish., Númenorean Adunaic, Black Speech(warped Numenorean and elvish) They all have syntax, vocabularies, and a whole writing system that can be learned as the Tengwar alphabet is moreso to match with the spoken elvish rather than one to one for other country’s alphabet. Hundreds of people worldwide speak elvish fluently. Tolkien did draw upon his personal experience in the trenches of World War ONE, not Two, as inspiration for some parts, most notably, the Dead Marshes that Frodo and Sam and Gollum pass through in The Two Towers. But war was not the inspiration for the entire series. World Of Warcraft. Skyrim, Harry Potter, Diablo, D&D, even Warhammer and so forth wouldn’t have. Existed without taking inspiration from and or completely ripping off from Tolkien. Many great documentaries to react to about him also more about him and AWESOME stuff from the hours & hours of behind the scenes documentaries from the DVDs of the movies which are also on RUclips & I can send you a playlist to react to from top to bottom on the channel called Pajasek99. I’d also like to explain Gandalf a bit too: Tolkien drew alot of inspiration from the norse mythology. Magical rings, Gandalf (Staff elf in old norse), Gandalfs outfit (Odin), Gandalfs title 'the grey wanderer' (Odin), Shadowfaxe (The horses of day and night Rhimfaxe and Skinfaxe), Trolls, elves, dwarves etc. * Odin had a legendary horse, Sleipnir, who had eight legs and was said to be one of the greatest horses known to the gods. Gandalf had Shadowfax, who had no equal among horses in Middle-earth and could understand the speech of men. * Ødin’s legendary gear-the spear Gungnir and the ring Draupnir-could have influenced Gandalf’s legendary sword Glamdring or, more likely, the magic staff he carries, while the ring possibly influenced Gandalf’s possession of the ring Narya (Sturlson 145). * Gandalf and Odin both receive new wisdom as a result of sacrifice, as Gandalf is reincarnated after his fight with the Balrog, and Ødin gains power and wisdom after hanging himself on the tree Yggdrasil for nine days (Sigfusson 80-85). * One of the most apparent ways in which Gandalf and Ødin are alike is that they both take the shape of an old grey pilgrim, with a wide-brimmed hat and grey cloak when they wander the mortal world and deal with the inhabitants (Pitts 7). * Gandalf and Ødin are virtually reflections of each other, as can be observed through examining their gear and animal companions, the way they sacrificed themselves and were rewarded with wisdom, and the fact that they walk the earth as old men in tattered clothing. The Renowned Steeds of Gandalf and Odin Gandalf and Ødin both have renowned horses and staves with magical properties. Odin carries the legendary spear Gungnir, which is said never to miss its mark when thrown (Sturlson 145); however, he also carries it as his staff when he wanders the earth as an old man. In the Poetic Edda, the Valkyrie Sigrdrifa advises Sigurd about the magical application of runes and tells him that there are runes inscribed on the tip of Gungnir (Sigfusson 291). This spear could be a parallel to Glamdring( High Elven King Turgon’s sword, that was forged for the Goblin wars but is most likely influential to the staff Gandalf carries on his journeys. Strikingly similar to Shadowfax, Odin possesses a legendary horse named Sleipnir, who has eight legs and can run on the ground and through the air at great speeds. This sounds very similar, in some ways, to Tolkien’s description of Shadowfax in The Two Towers, “Shadowfax tossed his head and cried aloud as if a trumpet had summoned him to battle. Then he sprang forward. Fire flew from his feet; night rushed over him” (Tolkien 228). Elden Ring, Dungeons And Dragons, Diablo, Zelda, Harry Potter, vamp diaries, Red Sonja, Oath Breakers, Dragon Lance, Willow, Conan, Swords and Magic, Highlander movie+series and so much more were inspired by Tolkiens works.
As much as I love the LOTR movies, sometimes I feel like they are too gloomy and natural colored, not bright enough. When I read Tolkien's stories I always imagine scenarios much more magical and even with a cosmic and ethereal look, specially in The Silmarillion. I like to imagine exagerated unatural elements. And music, music wherever the characters are! I really like the movies and they were the reason for me to fall in love with Middle-Earth, but they are too action oriented. Tolkien wrote pure art and this video captures exactly what I imagine when I read it!
There's always one rebel in a family. The one with greed and ambitions and dreams of dominance. Shall I thank Melkor for all the great battles I so thoroughly enjoy? 😅
To make this easy clear. At the beginning there was a God Iluvatar who crated Ainurs or the Angelic spirits. He teached them to sing, amd after some time they started to be more impressive to him and he was pleased. One of those Ainurs Melkor later known as a Morgoth decided to sing on his own way ruining their Harmony so he played techno instead of Classical music. Iluvatar warned Morgoth 2 times, but he still wanted to sing song on his own. After that Iluvatar stood up and with his stike he stoped this madness, and music stoped.
Love this! Great video though had to pause the texts many times to read it all. Many of those things I know from the heart too 🙏🌌 Just started to read Silmarillion for the third time. One of the best books ever!
You have inspired me to compose my own take on The Music of the Ainur, and try as hard as I want, my music will *never* be superior to yours! Yours is the best I've heard so far! (plus you earned a subscriber :-))
Muy bueno! a partir del 4:40 me ha encantado ese toque epico y tambien la orquestacion al principio, muy del estilo de Howard shore en la trilogia del señor de los anillos. Voy a darme un vuelta por tu canal. Seguro que merece la pena. Buen trabajo!
Wow, awesome video bro! Amazing. I do have one thing to point out, though it's by no means a complaint. The Ainur chose to take the form of the Children of Iluvatar once they arrived on Arda. Originally, when the music happened, they didn't look like humans or elves, or whatnot. They were probably just formless spirits. But of course your version works better visually. I wouldn't expect you to attempt to make this video with puffs of mist, that are supposed to be the valar, haha. =) nice video.
Skooma Joe Thanks! You are right. It would've been really hard to make a visual interpretation of what Tolkien wrote about in this chapter, but using these images turned out nicely in my opinion!
Ainur became the elves and men? Maybe. We know that men are extension of Eru’s thought and is another reason why they were mortal so Morgoth couldn’t follow them beyond the coils of the world when they die. That and before Morgoth cursed their ancestors before Finrod was the first elf to meet Men they were already holding the gift of Men regardless. Before the curse and haunting and harming and manipulating men for a long time before meeting elves had already had a severely reduced lifespan so when some became Númenoreans they had their lifespan restored to their origins before they were cursed. This is in his more deep writings that are in other books.
Wow - this skipped me from the seat. It was a hard task to create musik to this stuff and you mastered it perfect. For me you are the Artist of the year.
@@DiegoMitreMusicopen an community page and post into it. RUclips communities form and flourish like crazy when someone opens community tabs! Please continue your endless journey through Arda. Our Midgard. ❤ keep on making music from Silmarillion etc.
Nope. He stated openly about allegory vs applicability. He put forwards in all his books about this as well as it’s connection to war and essentially glorifying it. Every live interview he pushed back on people pushing religion into it all.
Tolkien, (The OG of all Authors) was a veteran of the First World War and many other battles such as The Battle Of Somme etc. his works of art were to give back to the England as a form of restoring lost mythologies that he himself was a master of since he was a top professor of philology at Oxford. He did ALOT of his writing while in the trenches during WWI during small “breaks” while down in those trench forts built into the ground. And while he eldest son was in the Second World War; his Lord Of The Rings writings was strictly created above all else to give his eldest something to read while stationed wherever he was stationed. I forgot that part. They sent letters back and forth about it all the time. He was also the one and only son that actually protected his fathers legacy and work. A lot of his other work were put together BY his son after his father passed away. It’s well worth to react to the documentary behind the scenes film the director and crew and cast created together as well as the interview with the son Christopher Tolkien who you get to sort of enjoy a nice indoor and outdoor chat for like what came to about 1-2 hours of wonderful footage from an era that really must not be forgotten. His work shed a light on things like The Finnish Kalevala, Norwegian Elder Edda, The Welsh Mabinogion, The Norwegian Nibelungen, The Indian Bhagvagita & Several Irish Folklore + other Cultural things! The man also restored and translated ancient relics for the governments as one everyone trusted. Much of what’s in our dictionary come from his efforts as well. Anytime he spoke & even posted several comments into the paper as an editorial or response to certain issues as a very involved man for the world and the environment everyone turned their head to listen to him as everyone knew his worth and respected him greatly. His works show how NOT to glorify war; shows in the films if you pay close attention while watching the next films. Sharing what you know now via the after thoughts at the end of the second film! Remember. Extended edition. There is a lot missed out on especially in the second movie regarding Boromir backstory which there is much more in the books but the films WANTED to keep more but the cinemas and Harvey Weinstein literally harangued him into making a “theatrical cut” which is why you have two versions. The real version and the “theatrical cut”. It was all to make more money for the company that is the theatres/cinemas. To get more showings in per day during the year. And believe me. People were camping outside and travelling the country to watch it MORE THAN ONCE. His creations literally lead to inspiring the most currently famous books games & movies we all literally wouldn’t have enjoyed and be touched to our souls core without him and his spiritually connected brilliance. That and he was a philologist professor at Oxford first and foremost which covers so many things. Not just linguistic. The man was a true genius and Jack of all trades but ultimately LOVED the simple life. The inspiration for Lord of the Rings was not any war, but author J.R.R. Tolkien's love of language. Especially Welsh, Finnish and Old English. He lamented the loss of any true English folklore, that was wiped out after the Norman invasion of 1066, so Tolkien wrote many books on these new "legends" he came up with himself. Much of which is centered around three languages he fully developed himself. Two Elven languages and Dwarvish., Númenorean Adunaic, Black Speech(warped Numenorean and elvish) They all have syntax, vocabularies, and a whole writing system that can be learned as the Tengwar alphabet is moreso to match with the spoken elvish rather than one to one for other country’s alphabet. Hundreds of people worldwide speak elvish fluently. Tolkien did draw upon his personal experience in the trenches of World War ONE, not Two, as inspiration for some parts, most notably, the Dead Marshes that Frodo and Sam and Gollum pass through in The Two Towers. But war was not the inspiration for the entire series. World Of Warcraft. Skyrim, Harry Potter, Diablo, D&D, even Warhammer and so forth wouldn’t have. Existed without taking inspiration from and or completely ripping off from Tolkien. Many great documentaries to react to about him also more about him and AWESOME stuff from the hours & hours of behind the scenes documentaries from the DVDs of the movies which are also on RUclips & I can send you a playlist to react to from top to bottom on the channel called Pajasek99. I’d also like to explain Gandalf a bit too: Tolkien drew alot of inspiration from the norse mythology. Magical rings, Gandalf (Staff elf in old norse), Gandalfs outfit (Odin), Gandalfs title 'the grey wanderer' (Odin), Shadowfaxe (The horses of day and night Rhimfaxe and Skinfaxe), Trolls, elves, dwarves etc. * Odin had a legendary horse, Sleipnir, who had eight legs and was said to be one of the greatest horses known to the gods. Gandalf had Shadowfax, who had no equal among horses in Middle-earth and could understand the speech of men. * Ødin’s legendary gear-the spear Gungnir and the ring Draupnir-could have influenced Gandalf’s legendary sword Glamdring or, more likely, the magic staff he carries, while the ring possibly influenced Gandalf’s possession of the ring Narya (Sturlson 145). * Gandalf and Odin both receive new wisdom as a result of sacrifice, as Gandalf is reincarnated after his fight with the Balrog, and Ødin gains power and wisdom after hanging himself on the tree Yggdrasil for nine days (Sigfusson 80-85). * One of the most apparent ways in which Gandalf and Ødin are alike is that they both take the shape of an old grey pilgrim, with a wide-brimmed hat and grey cloak when they wander the mortal world and deal with the inhabitants (Pitts 7). * Gandalf and Ødin are virtually reflections of each other, as can be observed through examining their gear and animal companions, the way they sacrificed themselves and were rewarded with wisdom, and the fact that they walk the earth as old men in tattered clothing. The Renowned Steeds of Gandalf and Odin Gandalf and Ødin both have renowned horses and staves with magical properties. Odin carries the legendary spear Gungnir, which is said never to miss its mark when thrown (Sturlson 145); however, he also carries it as his staff when he wanders the earth as an old man. In the Poetic Edda, the Valkyrie Sigrdrifa advises Sigurd about the magical application of runes and tells him that there are runes inscribed on the tip of Gungnir (Sigfusson 291). This spear could be a parallel to Glamdring( High Elven King Turgon’s sword, that was forged for the Goblin wars but is most likely influential to the staff Gandalf carries on his journeys. Strikingly similar to Shadowfax, Odin possesses a legendary horse named Sleipnir, who has eight legs and can run on the ground and through the air at great speeds. This sounds very similar, in some ways, to Tolkien’s description of Shadowfax in The Two Towers, “Shadowfax tossed his head and cried aloud as if a trumpet had summoned him to battle. Then he sprang forward. Fire flew from his feet; night rushed over him” (Tolkien 228). Elden Ring, Dungeons And Dragons, Diablo, Zelda, Harry Potter, vamp diaries, Red Sonja, Oath Breakers, Dragon Lance, Willow, Conan, Swords and Magic, Highlander movie+series and so much more were inspired by Tolkiens works.
Yes. And then the world is remade more refined and beautiful than even the original Eä and beyond arda marred. Keeping all the wisdom from arda marred to better appreciate the healed world.
There were 3 themes: Eru, Manwe, and the 3rd unattributed. There is earth, hell, and tartarus (hell of fire). In hell there is a city pandamonium and a citadel, Atlantia. There are 3 keys, copper, silver, and gold.
This kind of reminded me of Melkor (Yingue Mulmsteen) using his guitar like Melcore but the orchestea takes his music and weaves it in. Thumbs up if you agree
when people tell you to shut up and start worldbuilding without knowing that ainur music is far more efficient at it than manually sculpting the world as aule would do in later years.
+hiero0410 Thanks! Well, yeah, every song is kind of a struggle. But this one particularly wasn't as difficult as other songs because I was using the narration as a sort of guideline, and that made it for me much easier to write. I started composing it around January 2014, so it took me around 5 months to complete it!
+Diego Mitre Well, I think it's awesome. I fits perfectly with what I had in mind. You see, I've been thinking to do something like this, only I've never did something like that. It will not be easy, but that's the fun about it!
Yup. Here’s more detail context for this! Tolkien, (The OG of all Authors) was a veteran of the First World War and many other battles such as The Battle Of Somme etc. his works of art were to give back to the England as a form of restoring lost mythologies that he himself was a master of since he was a top professor of philology at Oxford. He did ALOT of his writing while in the trenches during WWI during small “breaks” while down in those trench forts built into the ground. And while he eldest son was in the Second World War; his Lord Of The Rings writings was strictly created above all else to give his eldest something to read while stationed wherever he was stationed. I forgot that part. They sent letters back and forth about it all the time. He was also the one and only son that actually protected his fathers legacy and work. A lot of his other work were put together BY his son after his father passed away. It’s well worth to react to the documentary behind the scenes film the director and crew and cast created together as well as the interview with the son Christopher Tolkien who you get to sort of enjoy a nice indoor and outdoor chat for like what came to about 1-2 hours of wonderful footage from an era that really must not be forgotten. His work shed a light on things like The Finnish Kalevala, Norwegian Elder Edda, The Welsh Mabinogion, The Norwegian Nibelungen, The Indian Bhagvagita & Several Irish Folklore + other Cultural things! The man also restored and translated ancient relics for the governments as one everyone trusted. Much of what’s in our dictionary come from his efforts as well. Anytime he spoke & even posted several comments into the paper as an editorial or response to certain issues as a very involved man for the world and the environment everyone turned their head to listen to him as everyone knew his worth and respected him greatly. His works show how NOT to glorify war; shows in the films if you pay close attention while watching the next films. Sharing what you know now via the after thoughts at the end of the second film! Remember. Extended edition. There is a lot missed out on especially in the second movie regarding Boromir backstory which there is much more in the books but the films WANTED to keep more but the cinemas and Harvey Weinstein literally harangued him into making a “theatrical cut” which is why you have two versions. The real version and the “theatrical cut”. It was all to make more money for the company that is the theatres/cinemas. To get more showings in per day during the year. And believe me. People were camping outside and travelling the country to watch it MORE THAN ONCE. His creations literally lead to inspiring the most currently famous books games & movies we all literally wouldn’t have enjoyed and be touched to our souls core without him and his spiritually connected brilliance. That and he was a philologist professor at Oxford first and foremost which covers so many things. Not just linguistic. The man was a true genius and Jack of all trades but ultimately LOVED the simple life. The inspiration for Lord of the Rings was not any war, but author J.R.R. Tolkien's love of language. Especially Welsh, Finnish and Old English. He lamented the loss of any true English folklore, that was wiped out after the Norman invasion of 1066, so Tolkien wrote many books on these new "legends" he came up with himself. Much of which is centered around three languages he fully developed himself. Two Elven languages and Dwarvish., Númenorean Adunaic, Black Speech(warped Numenorean and elvish) They all have syntax, vocabularies, and a whole writing system that can be learned as the Tengwar alphabet is moreso to match with the spoken elvish rather than one to one for other country’s alphabet. Hundreds of people worldwide speak elvish fluently. Tolkien did draw upon his personal experience in the trenches of World War ONE, not Two, as inspiration for some parts, most notably, the Dead Marshes that Frodo and Sam and Gollum pass through in The Two Towers. But war was not the inspiration for the entire series. World Of Warcraft. Skyrim, Harry Potter, Diablo, D&D, even Warhammer and so forth wouldn’t have. Existed without taking inspiration from and or completely ripping off from Tolkien. Many great documentaries to react to about him also more about him and AWESOME stuff from the hours & hours of behind the scenes documentaries from the DVDs of the movies which are also on RUclips & I can send you a playlist to react to from top to bottom on the channel called Pajasek99. I’d also like to explain Gandalf a bit too: Tolkien drew alot of inspiration from the norse mythology. Magical rings, Gandalf (Staff elf in old norse), Gandalfs outfit (Odin), Gandalfs title 'the grey wanderer' (Odin), Shadowfaxe (The horses of day and night Rhimfaxe and Skinfaxe), Trolls, elves, dwarves etc. * Odin had a legendary horse, Sleipnir, who had eight legs and was said to be one of the greatest horses known to the gods. Gandalf had Shadowfax, who had no equal among horses in Middle-earth and could understand the speech of men. * Ødin’s legendary gear-the spear Gungnir and the ring Draupnir-could have influenced Gandalf’s legendary sword Glamdring or, more likely, the magic staff he carries, while the ring possibly influenced Gandalf’s possession of the ring Narya (Sturlson 145). * Gandalf and Odin both receive new wisdom as a result of sacrifice, as Gandalf is reincarnated after his fight with the Balrog, and Ødin gains power and wisdom after hanging himself on the tree Yggdrasil for nine days (Sigfusson 80-85). * One of the most apparent ways in which Gandalf and Ødin are alike is that they both take the shape of an old grey pilgrim, with a wide-brimmed hat and grey cloak when they wander the mortal world and deal with the inhabitants (Pitts 7). * Gandalf and Ødin are virtually reflections of each other, as can be observed through examining their gear and animal companions, the way they sacrificed themselves and were rewarded with wisdom, and the fact that they walk the earth as old men in tattered clothing. The Renowned Steeds of Gandalf and Odin Gandalf and Ødin both have renowned horses and staves with magical properties. Odin carries the legendary spear Gungnir, which is said never to miss its mark when thrown (Sturlson 145); however, he also carries it as his staff when he wanders the earth as an old man. In the Poetic Edda, the Valkyrie Sigrdrifa advises Sigurd about the magical application of runes and tells him that there are runes inscribed on the tip of Gungnir (Sigfusson 291). This spear could be a parallel to Glamdring( High Elven King Turgon’s sword, that was forged for the Goblin wars but is most likely influential to the staff Gandalf carries on his journeys. Strikingly similar to Shadowfax, Odin possesses a legendary horse named Sleipnir, who has eight legs and can run on the ground and through the air at great speeds. This sounds very similar, in some ways, to Tolkien’s description of Shadowfax in The Two Towers, “Shadowfax tossed his head and cried aloud as if a trumpet had summoned him to battle. Then he sprang forward. Fire flew from his feet; night rushed over him” (Tolkien 228). Elden Ring, Dungeons And Dragons, Diablo, Zelda, Harry Potter, vamp diaries, Red Sonja, Oath Breakers, Dragon Lance, Willow, Conan, Swords and Magic, Highlander movie+series and so much more were inspired by Tolkiens works.
Music is actually beautiful, but it's just Men interpretation, so it doesn't even capture the quarter of the magnificence of Ainulindale and Eru Ilúvatar!
Ainur - "Laaaaaaaaa laaaaaaaaaaa laaa laaaa laaaaaaaaa"
Melkor - DAH DAHHHH DAHHHHHHH"
Ainur - La la la la
Melkor - I wanna rock!
@@Philin_Strixovich.999 you are right certainly 😚
LOL
I guess the two dislikes are from Melkor and Sauron.
Isaac Jones lol so true 😂😂😂
Yes indeed! :) Sooner or later Gothmog (lord of Balrogs), Curumo (Saruman), Thuringwethil (a vampire), and Boldog (a great orc) will no doubt join them.
yes, and many barlogs.
And now we had his troll, orc, ... who join his force to dislike it. :))
Fun fact Sauron was the only servant of Melkor that did not originally deviate from Eru's theme.
The idea of a universe created through divine music is so stunningly beautiful. Thank you Tolkien - for everything 💙
ruclips.net/video/giUsVew-96g/видео.htmlsi=KbeqH-5dOnWMmXqD there is scientific proof too
@@IslandArcConsultingyes. And tie eldalieva alongside a scientific based shaman guy prove it as well with in depth videos together.
Much of what Tolkien wrote he got from the bible. Eru, the balrogs, Gandalf,
@@planes3333Actually he used various beliefs
@@Lovelylondly Yes your right but it was predominantly the bible. Melkor, Balrogs, Gandalf, Sauron, Frodo, Arda, Auindalla, the valar, the maiar, the elves etc
Jesus, Satan, Angels, Demons, Earth,
Years and years after i come back to this video, it still gives me goosebumps stronger than the last time i hear it. Silmarillion is my favorite book by Tolkien and every time i finish it, i come back to this video and relive the moments, but each time i comprehend more than i did last time and look at things like i haven't done before. Wherein the beauty chiefly comes. I love this book and i love all the Valar, but Yavanna the most, also known as Kemuntari, the spouse of Aule and mother of nature. I love her the most, more so than Varda, lady of the stars who is beloved by all of the Eldar. Not only did she love the children of Illuvitar and always had them in thought. But she also loved her creation, from two trees of Valinor to every flower and grass. What a wonderful and timeless world did Tolkien create, if it came to me i would love to dwell in blessed realm forever. But now iam rambling too much i suppose.
Thank you for this wonderful piece of art. Enjoy your readings!
You’d like all 25 of his Middle Earth related books !
Can't still belive Gandalf was one of them singing before Arda was created.I mean,he have a greater origin than I thought.
Sauron and Saruman too
And Radagast. And even all the Balrogs, too.
@@WhatIsThatThingDoing Balrogs too? I thought they were created later by Melkor
@@xanmaslanl5832 Balrogs, also known as the Valaraukar, were Maiar that were seduced and corrupted by Melkor into his service
@@lonelysenseproductions6326 oh, now i get it. thanks a lot
I imagine that Illuvatar didn’t mind Melkors song at first, but when it became too chaotic, he had to put a stop to it
It was used to create an even more sublime world called Eä and now the board has been set. Then they entered and had to build everything from scratch. The ainur that became the Maiar and Valar. And now have to play out something greater than them. Playing their parts. Then the world gets remade again. Becoming a world greater than even the perfect design melkor ruined and poisoned and forced said world to bleed out its magic.
Tolkien was to mythic literature what Beethoven was to music, and what Shakespeare was to dramatic literature. Each universalised his culture by creating masterpieces for all the world* that bring the human spirit closer to the presence of God. All hail, to Illuvatar's eternal praise!
* I know that a masterpiece is, by definition, for all cultures and all times. But this is not known widely enough that I felt that I should avoid the tautological phrasing.
like mozart was to music. beethoven is remembered mythicall as well but not as mozart.
@@giuseppepapaleo3030 Naturally, I revere Mozart as one of the all-time great composers. Nevertheless, let me provide some evidence that Beethoven's compositions were greater, generally speaking.
_
Beethoven put much more work into composition than Mozart did. Several of Beethoven's pieces were developed and perfected over periods of years, sometimes many years (e.g., the glorious Ninth Symphony). By contrast, according to James Keays of the Redlands Symphony, Mozart composed 'his three greatest (and final) symphonies' over a period of only a month and a half, from 26 June through 10 August of 1788 (www.redlandssymphony.com/pieces/symphony-no-41-jupiter-k-551). (Some sources say three months, but this is probably because three months were involved, June, July, and August -- though, in fact, it was only small fractions of two of those months.) Moreover, Beethoven's achievement resulted, in part, from building upon Mozart's achievement. Therefore, unless Mozart's genius was significantly greater than Beethoven's -- very unlikely, I think we can agree -- we must conclude that, generally speaking, Beethoven's compositions were greater than Mozart's.
_
Some think that Beethoven's extra work per unit of output was just a consequence of his deafness. However, his extraordinarily lengthy composition periods began _before_ he went deaf. For example, according to Wikipedia, Beethoven began work on his second piano concerto in 1788, revised it from 1794-95, and finished it in 1798 (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_compositions_by_Ludwig_van_Beethoven).
@@sudanemamimikiki1527 When a man of genius does the kind of work that is proper to his kind of genius, it is very likely that the more he works, the greater is his accomplishment. I know of no reason to think that Beethoven was an exception.
_
Perhaps the reason that none of your compositions will ever be superior to any of Mozart's compositions is simply that his musical genius is much greater than yours. At least you will admit that it is possible. I said in my comment that I was assuming that Mozart's musical genius was not significantly greater than Beethoven's. Naturally, if this is not so, then my reasoning fails.
@@sudanemamimikiki1527 I never claimed to have proven my point, merely to have provided some evidence in its favour. It seems that you and I simply have different views on what explanations of the evidence are more likely in this instance. I'm happy to live with that. I rejoice that you are a lover of great music, and pray that it helps to lift your spirit far above the depravity of the world around us. God bless!
How many have read the silmarillion
Reading it a second time. Love it!
Reading it right now
Rereading it again!
Max B. me too :D just finished the first part
moi
Yes Tolkien's works were and are very inspirational to all who read his manuscripts. Tolkien is know as the father of epic illustrations. The music had a gave a good touch to Tolkien's words.
Beautiful music.
Melkorian theme is not necessary dark in the begin, it can be even powerful and mesmerizing as Lucifer by Alan Parsons, but it is self repeating and in discord to the Ainur theme and struggling to consume other melodies, later yes it becomes darker and more violent, revealing it's nature
Morgoth, Sauron, Gothmog, Ungoliant, Ancalagon and one orc disliked this.
XMarioXtremeX Gameplays What happened to Gothmog and Ancalagon?
Azazel Viking Gothmog was slain by Ecthelion during the Fall of Gondolin. Ancalagon was cast down by Eärendil.
Dawn Echoes Thankyou!
Azazel Viking no problem. I love the book very much
Dawn Echoes Yupp.But dont forget,it hant been finished,it was just some stories,released after his death.He should have given 2 more years,would have bedn enough to finish his book.
I'm on my 5th time reading it ,it's my bible I love it ,I've lost count how many times I've read the Ainulindale chapter ,ive not got the words of how much it gets to me .
Whenenver I read the first few pages, it is literally like the bible. Valar are Archangels, Maiar are Angels. And the Valar lords are 7 too, the same number as the Archangels. (Although there are 14 Valar in total). One of them is the fallen one, Melkor, in the Bible it's Lucifer (Satan).
@@raembesmelkor isn’t that at all. Tolkien hated allegory. Especially that kind. Tolkien And Mytholovers article gives full context of his “it’s a fundamentally catholic work” that too many keep pushing without knowing the whole story and the whole conversation between Tolkien and certain people where that statement came from.
Tolkien, (The OG of all Authors) was a veteran of the First World War and many other battles such as The Battle Of Somme etc. his works of art were to give back to the England as a form of restoring lost mythologies that he himself was a master of since he was a top professor of philology at Oxford.
He did ALOT of his writing while in the trenches during WWI during small “breaks” while down in those trench forts built into the ground. And while he eldest son was in the Second World War; his Lord Of The Rings writings was strictly created above all else to give his eldest something to read while stationed wherever he was stationed.
I forgot that part. They sent letters back and forth about it all the time. He was also the one and only son that actually protected his fathers legacy and work.
A lot of his other work were put together BY his son after his father passed away.
It’s well worth to react to the documentary behind the scenes film the director and crew and cast created together as well as the interview with the son Christopher Tolkien who you get to sort of enjoy a nice indoor and outdoor chat for like what came to about 1-2 hours of wonderful footage from an era that really must not be forgotten.
His work shed a light on things like The Finnish Kalevala, Norwegian Elder Edda, The Welsh Mabinogion, The Norwegian Nibelungen, The Indian Bhagvagita & Several Irish Folklore + other Cultural things! The man also restored and translated ancient relics for the governments as one everyone trusted. Much of what’s in our dictionary come from his efforts as well.
Anytime he spoke & even posted several comments into the paper as an editorial or response to certain issues as a very involved man for the world and the environment everyone turned their head to listen to him as everyone knew his worth and respected him greatly. His works show how NOT to glorify war; shows in the films if you pay close attention while watching the next films.
Sharing what you know now via the after thoughts at the end of the second film! Remember. Extended edition. There is a lot missed out on especially in the second movie regarding Boromir backstory which there is much more in the books but the films WANTED to keep more but the cinemas and Harvey Weinstein literally harangued him into making a “theatrical cut” which is why you have two versions.
The real version and the “theatrical cut”. It was all to make more money for the company that is the theatres/cinemas.
To get more showings in per day during the year. And believe me. People were camping outside and travelling the country to watch it MORE THAN ONCE.
His creations literally lead to inspiring the most currently famous books games & movies we all literally wouldn’t have enjoyed and be touched to our souls core without him and his spiritually connected brilliance. That and he was a philologist professor at Oxford first and foremost which covers so many things.
Not just linguistic. The man was a true genius and Jack of all trades but ultimately LOVED the simple life.
The inspiration for Lord of the Rings was not any war, but author J.R.R. Tolkien's love of language. Especially Welsh, Finnish and Old English.
He lamented the loss of any true English folklore, that was wiped out after the Norman invasion of 1066, so Tolkien wrote many books on these new "legends" he came up with himself. Much of which is centered around three languages he fully developed himself. Two Elven languages and Dwarvish., Númenorean Adunaic, Black Speech(warped Numenorean and elvish)
They all have syntax, vocabularies, and a whole writing system that can be learned as the Tengwar alphabet is moreso to match with the spoken elvish rather than one to one for other country’s alphabet. Hundreds of people worldwide speak elvish fluently. Tolkien did draw upon his personal experience in the trenches of World War ONE, not Two, as inspiration for some parts, most notably, the Dead Marshes that Frodo and Sam and Gollum pass through in The Two Towers. But war was not the inspiration for the entire series.
World Of Warcraft. Skyrim, Harry Potter, Diablo, D&D, even Warhammer and so forth wouldn’t have. Existed without taking inspiration from and or completely ripping off from Tolkien.
I’d also like to explain Gandalf a bit too: Tolkien drew alot of inspiration from the norse mythology. Magical rings, Gandalf (Staff elf in old norse), Gandalfs outfit (Odin), Gandalfs title 'the grey wanderer' (Odin), Shadowfaxe (The horses of day and night Rhimfaxe and Skinfaxe), Trolls, elves, dwarves etc.
* Odin had a legendary horse, Sleipnir, who had eight legs and was said to be one of the greatest horses known to the gods. Gandalf had Shadowfax, who had no equal among horses in Middle-earth and could understand the speech of men.
* Ødin’s legendary gear-the spear Gungnir and the ring Draupnir-could have influenced Gandalf’s legendary sword Glamdring or, more likely, the magic staff he carries, while the ring possibly influenced Gandalf’s possession of the ring Narya (Sturlson 145).
* Gandalf and Odin both receive new wisdom as a result of sacrifice, as Gandalf is reincarnated after his fight with the Balrog, and Ødin gains power and wisdom after hanging himself on the tree Yggdrasil for nine days (Sigfusson 80-85).
* One of the most apparent ways in which Gandalf and Ødin are alike is that they both take the shape of an old grey pilgrim, with a wide-brimmed hat and grey cloak when they wander the mortal world and deal with the inhabitants (Pitts 7).
* Gandalf and Ødin are virtually reflections of each other, as can be observed through examining their gear and animal companions, the way they sacrificed themselves and were rewarded with wisdom, and the fact that they walk the earth as old men in tattered clothing.
The Renowned Steeds of Gandalf and Odin
Gandalf and Ødin both have renowned horses and staves with magical properties. Odin carries the legendary spear Gungnir, which is said never to miss its mark when thrown (Sturlson 145); however, he also carries it as his staff when he wanders the earth as an old man.
In the Poetic Edda, the Valkyrie Sigrdrifa advises Sigurd about the magical application of runes and tells him that there are runes inscribed on the tip of Gungnir (Sigfusson 291). This spear could be a parallel to Glamdring( High Elven King Turgon’s sword, that was forged for the Goblin wars but is most likely influential to the staff Gandalf carries on his journeys.
Strikingly similar to Shadowfax, Odin possesses a legendary horse named Sleipnir, who has eight legs and can run on the ground and through the air at great speeds. This sounds very similar, in some ways, to Tolkien’s description of Shadowfax in The Two Towers, “Shadowfax tossed his head and cried aloud as if a trumpet had summoned him to battle. Then he sprang forward. Fire flew from his feet; night rushed over him” (Tolkien 228).
Elden Ring, Dungeons And Dragons, Diablo, Zelda, Harry Potter, vamp diaries, Red Sonja, Oath Breakers, Dragon Lance, Willow, Conan, Swords and Magic, Highlander movie+series and so much more were inspired by Tolkiens works.
Beautiful ! Silmarillion is the best book I never read !
Ecthelion Of Foutain Of course! It is my all time favorite book.
Dawn Echoes How you are here mellon nin !
Ecthelion Of Foutain I use RUclips also
Dawn Echoes love your profile picture
Ecthelion Of Foutain thanks, guess who's that (I'm sure you know ^^)
I've heard many versions of the song of the Ainur but this one is by far the best! Great job ;)
Ana Kulić Thank you, glad you liked it!
Diego Mitre Composer Actually thank you :D
I can't stop listening to it!
+Ana Kulić is right !
This song is magnificent.
The woman singing... it makes me think to Yavanna music, the one when she creates the two trees of Valinor, Laurelin and Telperion.
Great job !
+Ana Kulić Neither can i to be honest. I've always loved this one. You really are a sweet one aren't you? We all can't do anything but marvel at the things that are truely beautiful.. to think this was also created from a single mind of one person, in this music, I mean.
hi
Absolutely epic!!! I wish Tolkien was around to here this. Very well done - gave me the shivers more than once!
Easily one of my favorites music pieces composed by a youtubers.
Great depiction of the beginning of the Silmarillion!
it's been ten years and I still listen to this version of Ainilundale. the best
This suits the Ainulindale. Your work is very very good. Well done sir. My compliments to you!
I saw this a while ago but i couldn't help but come back. It's just too good.
+please god anything but that Your username and picture is very chuckleworthy
"LITTLE
HAIRY
WOMEN"
I love the transition you used between Melkor's second theme and Iluvatar's third. I might have made Melkor more metal, but still, extremely good work.
Haha totally! I always thought of metal when reading the parts of Melkor, but I wanted to make a purely orchestral song. Happy you liked it!
T-1000 theme by Brad Fiedel uses discordant beats.
The Silmarillion, my biblie!
its one hell of a history :)
Me too , Tolkien is the Great Creator !!
Carlos Sosa My favorit Book of Genesis
Well it is based on the bible
JustFriendly Exactly,many part ripped off.
Wow, this is totaly amazing and really close to my imagination when i was reading the Silmarillion.
Thanks for sharing that with me! I enjoyed watching and listening to it. Great job!
Hey, Derek, thanks for watching! I'm glad you liked it, always good to hear that from other musicians.
Your music perfectly encapsulates the essence of the creation (Ainulindale). Amazing work! 🤘⭐🍺👍🏼
Melkor: Time to play some good old heavy metal!
Well- yes actually.
The opening chapter of The Silmarillion is the first time I cried tears of joy while reading!
Great job,this is an amazing interpretation of the Music of the Ainur that was sung before Arda was built
Very well done! I love listening/reading this video, it's such a beautiful story and song
Wow that sound awesome and fits very well! Great work!
A profound music! However, as for the subtitles, a very important part is missing, I suppose:
"And it essayed to drown the other music by the violence of its voice, but it seemed that its most triumphant notes were taken by the other and woven into its own solemn pattern."
Great song but the transitions (and a lot of the song in general) don't match the Silmarillion's description at all.
@@Hirungolwe make your own
The beauty of this video is profound.
Tolkien, (The OG of all Authors) was a veteran of the First World War and many other battles such as The Battle Of Somme etc. his works of art were to give back to the England as a form of restoring lost mythologies that he himself was a master of since he was a top professor of philology at Oxford.
He did ALOT of his writing while in the trenches during WWI during small “breaks” while down in those trench forts built into the ground. And while he eldest son was in the Second World War; his Lord Of The Rings writings was strictly created above all else to give his eldest something to read while stationed wherever he was stationed.
I forgot that part. They sent letters back and forth about it all the time. He was also the one and only son that actually protected his fathers legacy and work.
A lot of his other work were put together BY his son after his father passed away.
It’s well worth to react to the documentary behind the scenes film the director and crew and cast created together as well as the interview with the son Christopher Tolkien who you get to sort of enjoy a nice indoor and outdoor chat for like what came to about 1-2 hours of wonderful footage from an era that really must not be forgotten.
His work shed a light on things like The Finnish Kalevala, Norwegian Elder Edda, The Welsh Mabinogion, The Norwegian Nibelungen, The Indian Bhagvagita & Several Irish Folklore + other Cultural things! The man also restored and translated ancient relics for the governments as one everyone trusted. Much of what’s in our dictionary come from his efforts as well.
Anytime he spoke & even posted several comments into the paper as an editorial or response to certain issues as a very involved man for the world and the environment everyone turned their head to listen to him as everyone knew his worth and respected him greatly. His works show how NOT to glorify war; shows in the films if you pay close attention while watching the next films.
Sharing what you know now via the after thoughts at the end of the second film! Remember. Extended edition. There is a lot missed out on especially in the second movie regarding Boromir backstory which there is much more in the books but the films WANTED to keep more but the cinemas and Harvey Weinstein literally harangued him into making a “theatrical cut” which is why you have two versions.
The real version and the “theatrical cut”. It was all to make more money for the company that is the theatres/cinemas.
To get more showings in per day during the year. And believe me. People were camping outside and travelling the country to watch it MORE THAN ONCE.
His creations literally lead to inspiring the most currently famous books games & movies we all literally wouldn’t have enjoyed and be touched to our souls core without him and his spiritually connected brilliance. That and he was a philologist professor at Oxford first and foremost which covers so many things.
Not just linguistic. The man was a true genius and Jack of all trades but ultimately LOVED the simple life.
The inspiration for Lord of the Rings was not any war, but author J.R.R. Tolkien's love of language. Especially Welsh, Finnish and Old English.
He lamented the loss of any true English folklore, that was wiped out after the Norman invasion of 1066, so Tolkien wrote many books on these new "legends" he came up with himself. Much of which is centered around three languages he fully developed himself. Two Elven languages and Dwarvish., Númenorean Adunaic, Black Speech(warped Numenorean and elvish)
They all have syntax, vocabularies, and a whole writing system that can be learned as the Tengwar alphabet is moreso to match with the spoken elvish rather than one to one for other country’s alphabet. Hundreds of people worldwide speak elvish fluently. Tolkien did draw upon his personal experience in the trenches of World War ONE, not Two, as inspiration for some parts, most notably, the Dead Marshes that Frodo and Sam and Gollum pass through in The Two Towers. But war was not the inspiration for the entire series.
World Of Warcraft. Skyrim, Harry Potter, Diablo, D&D, even Warhammer and so forth wouldn’t have. Existed without taking inspiration from and or completely ripping off from Tolkien. Many great documentaries to react to about him also more about him and AWESOME stuff from the hours & hours of behind the scenes documentaries from the DVDs of the movies which are also on RUclips & I can send you a playlist to react to from top to bottom on the channel called Pajasek99.
I’d also like to explain Gandalf a bit too: Tolkien drew alot of inspiration from the norse mythology. Magical rings, Gandalf (Staff elf in old norse), Gandalfs outfit (Odin), Gandalfs title 'the grey wanderer' (Odin), Shadowfaxe (The horses of day and night Rhimfaxe and Skinfaxe), Trolls, elves, dwarves etc.
* Odin had a legendary horse, Sleipnir, who had eight legs and was said to be one of the greatest horses known to the gods. Gandalf had Shadowfax, who had no equal among horses in Middle-earth and could understand the speech of men.
* Ødin’s legendary gear-the spear Gungnir and the ring Draupnir-could have influenced Gandalf’s legendary sword Glamdring or, more likely, the magic staff he carries, while the ring possibly influenced Gandalf’s possession of the ring Narya (Sturlson 145).
* Gandalf and Odin both receive new wisdom as a result of sacrifice, as Gandalf is reincarnated after his fight with the Balrog, and Ødin gains power and wisdom after hanging himself on the tree Yggdrasil for nine days (Sigfusson 80-85).
* One of the most apparent ways in which Gandalf and Ødin are alike is that they both take the shape of an old grey pilgrim, with a wide-brimmed hat and grey cloak when they wander the mortal world and deal with the inhabitants (Pitts 7).
* Gandalf and Ødin are virtually reflections of each other, as can be observed through examining their gear and animal companions, the way they sacrificed themselves and were rewarded with wisdom, and the fact that they walk the earth as old men in tattered clothing.
The Renowned Steeds of Gandalf and Odin
Gandalf and Ødin both have renowned horses and staves with magical properties. Odin carries the legendary spear Gungnir, which is said never to miss its mark when thrown (Sturlson 145); however, he also carries it as his staff when he wanders the earth as an old man.
In the Poetic Edda, the Valkyrie Sigrdrifa advises Sigurd about the magical application of runes and tells him that there are runes inscribed on the tip of Gungnir (Sigfusson 291). This spear could be a parallel to Glamdring( High Elven King Turgon’s sword, that was forged for the Goblin wars but is most likely influential to the staff Gandalf carries on his journeys.
Strikingly similar to Shadowfax, Odin possesses a legendary horse named Sleipnir, who has eight legs and can run on the ground and through the air at great speeds. This sounds very similar, in some ways, to Tolkien’s description of Shadowfax in The Two Towers, “Shadowfax tossed his head and cried aloud as if a trumpet had summoned him to battle. Then he sprang forward. Fire flew from his feet; night rushed over him” (Tolkien 228).
Elden Ring, Dungeons And Dragons, Diablo, Zelda, Harry Potter, vamp diaries, Red Sonja, Oath Breakers, Dragon Lance, Willow, Conan, Swords and Magic, Highlander movie+series and so much more were inspired by Tolkiens works.
Good work. I liked the moods of your composition, and the expression you achieved with the vst.s
Happy you liked it!
Melkor must have disliked this.
Yeah
and Sauron
lol
and the rest will be the Balrogs ^^
Don't forget about the Orcs and Werewolves XD
2:04 - 3:10 sounds like Varda and Melkor are battling each other
My thoughts exactly
More like 4:41 through to 6:57 is said battle or war of wrath. But I love your comment regardless. ❤
This is probably the best interpretation I've heard. Well done.
Can you make an epic battle theme for Feanor or Fingolfin?
Noldorius Fongolfin A battle theme for the Fingolfin vs Morgoth fight is something I have in mind.
+Diego Mitre Composer oh please do it!!!!
As much as I love the LOTR movies, sometimes I feel like they are too gloomy and natural colored, not bright enough.
When I read Tolkien's stories I always imagine scenarios much more magical and even with a cosmic and ethereal look, specially in The Silmarillion.
I like to imagine exagerated unatural elements. And music, music wherever the characters are!
I really like the movies and they were the reason for me to fall in love with Middle-Earth, but they are too action oriented. Tolkien wrote pure art and this video captures exactly what I imagine when I read it!
LOTR is set in an age where the magic from the world is already fading. It makes sense that it's not super colorfoul.
Third age was showing an already dying world around places like Lothlórien which was Dortiath 2.0 etc.
Typo: "I win sit and hearken"
This is a really lovely piece. Thank you.
This is wonderful! Glad some of our members sent this our way! Added to our Music saves!
There's always one rebel in a family. The one with greed and ambitions and dreams of dominance. Shall I thank Melkor for all the great battles I so thoroughly enjoy? 😅
Much like I imagined it.
Thank you!
Listening to this while reading The Silmarillion is AMAZING❤😍
Beautiful, I am sure you can and will develop this heavenly seed further to a magnificent tree of a symphony; J.R.R: Tolkien would have liked this!
Amazing! You did a very good job! I love it ^^
To make this easy clear. At the beginning there was a God Iluvatar who crated Ainurs or the Angelic spirits. He teached them to sing, amd after some time they started to be more impressive to him and he was pleased. One of those Ainurs Melkor later known as a Morgoth decided to sing on his own way ruining their Harmony so he played techno instead of Classical music. Iluvatar warned Morgoth 2 times, but he still wanted to sing song on his own. After that Iluvatar stood up and with his stike he stoped this madness, and music stoped.
Love this! Great video though had to pause the texts many times to read it all. Many of those things I know from the heart too 🙏🌌 Just started to read Silmarillion for the third time. One of the best books ever!
I salute you for the accuracy of this. (Y) Perfect, thank you for this epic music.
You're very welcome, happy you liked it!
Wow this is super good! Gave me all kinds of chills. Very nice!
Beautiful and impressive...
So Eru was basically saying "Dude, wtf? Stop messing up the song we just made here.".
melkor is the ultimate discord raider
Буду откровенен: это великолепно. Слушаю уже почти полгода, время от времени, и это очень воодушевляет в трудные ситуации. Это достойно Толкина.
Трудных ситуациях.*
You have inspired me to compose my own take on The Music of the Ainur, and try as hard as I want, my music will *never* be superior to yours! Yours is the best I've heard so far! (plus you earned a subscriber :-))
Where can we find that?
@@Makkaru112 In my head, at least for now :D
Muy bueno! a partir del 4:40 me ha encantado ese toque epico y tambien la orquestacion al principio, muy del estilo de Howard shore en la trilogia del señor de los anillos.
Voy a darme un vuelta por tu canal. Seguro que merece la pena. Buen trabajo!
Gracias, qué bueno que te gustó!
Tolkien’e çok teşekkür ediyorum 🙏
Wow, awesome video bro! Amazing. I do have one thing to point out, though it's by no means a complaint. The Ainur chose to take the form of the Children of Iluvatar once they arrived on Arda. Originally, when the music happened, they didn't look like humans or elves, or whatnot. They were probably just formless spirits. But of course your version works better visually. I wouldn't expect you to attempt to make this video with puffs of mist, that are supposed to be the valar, haha. =) nice video.
Skooma Joe Thanks! You are right. It would've been really hard to make a visual interpretation of what Tolkien wrote about in this chapter, but using these images turned out nicely in my opinion!
Ainur became the elves and men? Maybe. We know that men are extension of Eru’s thought and is another reason why they were mortal so Morgoth couldn’t follow them beyond the coils of the world when they die. That and before Morgoth cursed their ancestors before Finrod was the first elf to meet Men they were already holding the gift of Men regardless. Before the curse and haunting and harming and manipulating men for a long time before meeting elves had already had a severely reduced lifespan so when some became Númenoreans they had their lifespan restored to their origins before they were cursed. This is in his more deep writings that are in other books.
Blood chillingly beautiful
Wow - this skipped me from the seat. It was a hard task to create musik to this stuff and you mastered it perfect. For me you are the Artist of the year.
Thank you for your words, means a lot. Thanks for watching!
@@DiegoMitreMusicopen an community page and post into it. RUclips communities form and flourish like crazy when someone opens community tabs! Please continue your endless journey through Arda. Our Midgard. ❤ keep on making music from Silmarillion etc.
2:02 Nienna sang this. No one can change my mind about that.
Melkor was a metalhead
Hansi would be proud
If this is even adapted in the future, this is going to be the hardest in production.
...When the morning stars sang together, and all the sons of God shouted with joy....
I add this to my "Young Fresh Composers" Playlist.
Glad to be a part of it!
This is basically a metaphor of the book of Genesis. The whole lore of LOTR is so full of Christian allegories it's crazy
Nope. He stated openly about allegory vs applicability. He put forwards in all his books about this as well as it’s connection to war and essentially glorifying it. Every live interview he pushed back on people pushing religion into it all.
Tolkien, (The OG of all Authors) was a veteran of the First World War and many other battles such as The Battle Of Somme etc. his works of art were to give back to the England as a form of restoring lost mythologies that he himself was a master of since he was a top professor of philology at Oxford.
He did ALOT of his writing while in the trenches during WWI during small “breaks” while down in those trench forts built into the ground. And while he eldest son was in the Second World War; his Lord Of The Rings writings was strictly created above all else to give his eldest something to read while stationed wherever he was stationed.
I forgot that part. They sent letters back and forth about it all the time. He was also the one and only son that actually protected his fathers legacy and work.
A lot of his other work were put together BY his son after his father passed away.
It’s well worth to react to the documentary behind the scenes film the director and crew and cast created together as well as the interview with the son Christopher Tolkien who you get to sort of enjoy a nice indoor and outdoor chat for like what came to about 1-2 hours of wonderful footage from an era that really must not be forgotten.
His work shed a light on things like The Finnish Kalevala, Norwegian Elder Edda, The Welsh Mabinogion, The Norwegian Nibelungen, The Indian Bhagvagita & Several Irish Folklore + other Cultural things! The man also restored and translated ancient relics for the governments as one everyone trusted. Much of what’s in our dictionary come from his efforts as well.
Anytime he spoke & even posted several comments into the paper as an editorial or response to certain issues as a very involved man for the world and the environment everyone turned their head to listen to him as everyone knew his worth and respected him greatly. His works show how NOT to glorify war; shows in the films if you pay close attention while watching the next films.
Sharing what you know now via the after thoughts at the end of the second film! Remember. Extended edition. There is a lot missed out on especially in the second movie regarding Boromir backstory which there is much more in the books but the films WANTED to keep more but the cinemas and Harvey Weinstein literally harangued him into making a “theatrical cut” which is why you have two versions.
The real version and the “theatrical cut”. It was all to make more money for the company that is the theatres/cinemas.
To get more showings in per day during the year. And believe me. People were camping outside and travelling the country to watch it MORE THAN ONCE.
His creations literally lead to inspiring the most currently famous books games & movies we all literally wouldn’t have enjoyed and be touched to our souls core without him and his spiritually connected brilliance. That and he was a philologist professor at Oxford first and foremost which covers so many things.
Not just linguistic. The man was a true genius and Jack of all trades but ultimately LOVED the simple life.
The inspiration for Lord of the Rings was not any war, but author J.R.R. Tolkien's love of language. Especially Welsh, Finnish and Old English.
He lamented the loss of any true English folklore, that was wiped out after the Norman invasion of 1066, so Tolkien wrote many books on these new "legends" he came up with himself. Much of which is centered around three languages he fully developed himself. Two Elven languages and Dwarvish., Númenorean Adunaic, Black Speech(warped Numenorean and elvish)
They all have syntax, vocabularies, and a whole writing system that can be learned as the Tengwar alphabet is moreso to match with the spoken elvish rather than one to one for other country’s alphabet. Hundreds of people worldwide speak elvish fluently. Tolkien did draw upon his personal experience in the trenches of World War ONE, not Two, as inspiration for some parts, most notably, the Dead Marshes that Frodo and Sam and Gollum pass through in The Two Towers. But war was not the inspiration for the entire series.
World Of Warcraft. Skyrim, Harry Potter, Diablo, D&D, even Warhammer and so forth wouldn’t have. Existed without taking inspiration from and or completely ripping off from Tolkien. Many great documentaries to react to about him also more about him and AWESOME stuff from the hours & hours of behind the scenes documentaries from the DVDs of the movies which are also on RUclips & I can send you a playlist to react to from top to bottom on the channel called Pajasek99.
I’d also like to explain Gandalf a bit too: Tolkien drew alot of inspiration from the norse mythology. Magical rings, Gandalf (Staff elf in old norse), Gandalfs outfit (Odin), Gandalfs title 'the grey wanderer' (Odin), Shadowfaxe (The horses of day and night Rhimfaxe and Skinfaxe), Trolls, elves, dwarves etc.
* Odin had a legendary horse, Sleipnir, who had eight legs and was said to be one of the greatest horses known to the gods. Gandalf had Shadowfax, who had no equal among horses in Middle-earth and could understand the speech of men.
* Ødin’s legendary gear-the spear Gungnir and the ring Draupnir-could have influenced Gandalf’s legendary sword Glamdring or, more likely, the magic staff he carries, while the ring possibly influenced Gandalf’s possession of the ring Narya (Sturlson 145).
* Gandalf and Odin both receive new wisdom as a result of sacrifice, as Gandalf is reincarnated after his fight with the Balrog, and Ødin gains power and wisdom after hanging himself on the tree Yggdrasil for nine days (Sigfusson 80-85).
* One of the most apparent ways in which Gandalf and Ødin are alike is that they both take the shape of an old grey pilgrim, with a wide-brimmed hat and grey cloak when they wander the mortal world and deal with the inhabitants (Pitts 7).
* Gandalf and Ødin are virtually reflections of each other, as can be observed through examining their gear and animal companions, the way they sacrificed themselves and were rewarded with wisdom, and the fact that they walk the earth as old men in tattered clothing.
The Renowned Steeds of Gandalf and Odin
Gandalf and Ødin both have renowned horses and staves with magical properties. Odin carries the legendary spear Gungnir, which is said never to miss its mark when thrown (Sturlson 145); however, he also carries it as his staff when he wanders the earth as an old man.
In the Poetic Edda, the Valkyrie Sigrdrifa advises Sigurd about the magical application of runes and tells him that there are runes inscribed on the tip of Gungnir (Sigfusson 291). This spear could be a parallel to Glamdring( High Elven King Turgon’s sword, that was forged for the Goblin wars but is most likely influential to the staff Gandalf carries on his journeys.
Strikingly similar to Shadowfax, Odin possesses a legendary horse named Sleipnir, who has eight legs and can run on the ground and through the air at great speeds. This sounds very similar, in some ways, to Tolkien’s description of Shadowfax in The Two Towers, “Shadowfax tossed his head and cried aloud as if a trumpet had summoned him to battle. Then he sprang forward. Fire flew from his feet; night rushed over him” (Tolkien 228).
Elden Ring, Dungeons And Dragons, Diablo, Zelda, Harry Potter, vamp diaries, Red Sonja, Oath Breakers, Dragon Lance, Willow, Conan, Swords and Magic, Highlander movie+series and so much more were inspired by Tolkiens works.
keep up the good work.
this is brilliant
Marvellous. Now let's try to figure out that every part of the music must have probably lasted as long as every Age conresponding to it.
Yes. And then the world is remade more refined and beautiful than even the original Eä and beyond arda marred. Keeping all the wisdom from arda marred to better appreciate the healed world.
This was certainly powerful music very
Beautiful
Well displayed! Bravo!
Love it
this is the best music in our sillmarilion RPG campaign
What age? I am very interesting about the first age in general..
@@cool06altthen you’d love to join my LOTR server group
I love you ainulindale
There were 3 themes: Eru, Manwe, and the 3rd unattributed. There is earth, hell, and tartarus (hell of fire). In hell there is a city pandamonium and a citadel, Atlantia. There are 3 keys, copper, silver, and gold.
This kind of reminded me of Melkor (Yingue Mulmsteen) using his guitar like Melcore but the orchestea takes his music and weaves it in. Thumbs up if you agree
ruclips.net/video/3Wp7L8i0jGw/видео.html
Awesome...
when people tell you to shut up and start worldbuilding without knowing that ainur music is far more efficient at it than manually sculpting the world as aule would do in later years.
I this the song was beyond comprehension, something above sounds, but this version is pretty neat
so nice
phenominal. bravo!
Perfection I love angels always.
this is so sweet :S
Wow. You did a great job! Was it difficult to make it? And how long did this take you?
+hiero0410 Thanks! Well, yeah, every song is kind of a struggle. But this one particularly wasn't as difficult as other songs because I was using the narration as a sort of guideline, and that made it for me much easier to write. I started composing it around January 2014, so it took me around 5 months to complete it!
+Diego Mitre Well, I think it's awesome. I fits perfectly with what I had in mind. You see, I've been thinking to do something like this, only I've never did something like that. It will not be easy, but that's the fun about it!
Ainur- Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!
Melkor- DEEEEEEEEeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeerp! DEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEERP!
Eru- Listen here, you lil sh*t!
Fun Fact: Eru Illuavatar is actually based on Odin Allfather
Yup. Here’s more detail context for this! Tolkien, (The OG of all Authors) was a veteran of the First World War and many other battles such as The Battle Of Somme etc. his works of art were to give back to the England as a form of restoring lost mythologies that he himself was a master of since he was a top professor of philology at Oxford.
He did ALOT of his writing while in the trenches during WWI during small “breaks” while down in those trench forts built into the ground. And while he eldest son was in the Second World War; his Lord Of The Rings writings was strictly created above all else to give his eldest something to read while stationed wherever he was stationed.
I forgot that part. They sent letters back and forth about it all the time. He was also the one and only son that actually protected his fathers legacy and work.
A lot of his other work were put together BY his son after his father passed away.
It’s well worth to react to the documentary behind the scenes film the director and crew and cast created together as well as the interview with the son Christopher Tolkien who you get to sort of enjoy a nice indoor and outdoor chat for like what came to about 1-2 hours of wonderful footage from an era that really must not be forgotten.
His work shed a light on things like The Finnish Kalevala, Norwegian Elder Edda, The Welsh Mabinogion, The Norwegian Nibelungen, The Indian Bhagvagita & Several Irish Folklore + other Cultural things! The man also restored and translated ancient relics for the governments as one everyone trusted. Much of what’s in our dictionary come from his efforts as well.
Anytime he spoke & even posted several comments into the paper as an editorial or response to certain issues as a very involved man for the world and the environment everyone turned their head to listen to him as everyone knew his worth and respected him greatly. His works show how NOT to glorify war; shows in the films if you pay close attention while watching the next films.
Sharing what you know now via the after thoughts at the end of the second film! Remember. Extended edition. There is a lot missed out on especially in the second movie regarding Boromir backstory which there is much more in the books but the films WANTED to keep more but the cinemas and Harvey Weinstein literally harangued him into making a “theatrical cut” which is why you have two versions.
The real version and the “theatrical cut”. It was all to make more money for the company that is the theatres/cinemas.
To get more showings in per day during the year. And believe me. People were camping outside and travelling the country to watch it MORE THAN ONCE.
His creations literally lead to inspiring the most currently famous books games & movies we all literally wouldn’t have enjoyed and be touched to our souls core without him and his spiritually connected brilliance. That and he was a philologist professor at Oxford first and foremost which covers so many things.
Not just linguistic. The man was a true genius and Jack of all trades but ultimately LOVED the simple life.
The inspiration for Lord of the Rings was not any war, but author J.R.R. Tolkien's love of language. Especially Welsh, Finnish and Old English.
He lamented the loss of any true English folklore, that was wiped out after the Norman invasion of 1066, so Tolkien wrote many books on these new "legends" he came up with himself. Much of which is centered around three languages he fully developed himself. Two Elven languages and Dwarvish., Númenorean Adunaic, Black Speech(warped Numenorean and elvish)
They all have syntax, vocabularies, and a whole writing system that can be learned as the Tengwar alphabet is moreso to match with the spoken elvish rather than one to one for other country’s alphabet. Hundreds of people worldwide speak elvish fluently. Tolkien did draw upon his personal experience in the trenches of World War ONE, not Two, as inspiration for some parts, most notably, the Dead Marshes that Frodo and Sam and Gollum pass through in The Two Towers. But war was not the inspiration for the entire series.
World Of Warcraft. Skyrim, Harry Potter, Diablo, D&D, even Warhammer and so forth wouldn’t have. Existed without taking inspiration from and or completely ripping off from Tolkien. Many great documentaries to react to about him also more about him and AWESOME stuff from the hours & hours of behind the scenes documentaries from the DVDs of the movies which are also on RUclips & I can send you a playlist to react to from top to bottom on the channel called Pajasek99.
I’d also like to explain Gandalf a bit too: Tolkien drew alot of inspiration from the norse mythology. Magical rings, Gandalf (Staff elf in old norse), Gandalfs outfit (Odin), Gandalfs title 'the grey wanderer' (Odin), Shadowfaxe (The horses of day and night Rhimfaxe and Skinfaxe), Trolls, elves, dwarves etc.
* Odin had a legendary horse, Sleipnir, who had eight legs and was said to be one of the greatest horses known to the gods. Gandalf had Shadowfax, who had no equal among horses in Middle-earth and could understand the speech of men.
* Ødin’s legendary gear-the spear Gungnir and the ring Draupnir-could have influenced Gandalf’s legendary sword Glamdring or, more likely, the magic staff he carries, while the ring possibly influenced Gandalf’s possession of the ring Narya (Sturlson 145).
* Gandalf and Odin both receive new wisdom as a result of sacrifice, as Gandalf is reincarnated after his fight with the Balrog, and Ødin gains power and wisdom after hanging himself on the tree Yggdrasil for nine days (Sigfusson 80-85).
* One of the most apparent ways in which Gandalf and Ødin are alike is that they both take the shape of an old grey pilgrim, with a wide-brimmed hat and grey cloak when they wander the mortal world and deal with the inhabitants (Pitts 7).
* Gandalf and Ødin are virtually reflections of each other, as can be observed through examining their gear and animal companions, the way they sacrificed themselves and were rewarded with wisdom, and the fact that they walk the earth as old men in tattered clothing.
The Renowned Steeds of Gandalf and Odin
Gandalf and Ødin both have renowned horses and staves with magical properties. Odin carries the legendary spear Gungnir, which is said never to miss its mark when thrown (Sturlson 145); however, he also carries it as his staff when he wanders the earth as an old man.
In the Poetic Edda, the Valkyrie Sigrdrifa advises Sigurd about the magical application of runes and tells him that there are runes inscribed on the tip of Gungnir (Sigfusson 291). This spear could be a parallel to Glamdring( High Elven King Turgon’s sword, that was forged for the Goblin wars but is most likely influential to the staff Gandalf carries on his journeys.
Strikingly similar to Shadowfax, Odin possesses a legendary horse named Sleipnir, who has eight legs and can run on the ground and through the air at great speeds. This sounds very similar, in some ways, to Tolkien’s description of Shadowfax in The Two Towers, “Shadowfax tossed his head and cried aloud as if a trumpet had summoned him to battle. Then he sprang forward. Fire flew from his feet; night rushed over him” (Tolkien 228).
Elden Ring, Dungeons And Dragons, Diablo, Zelda, Harry Potter, vamp diaries, Red Sonja, Oath Breakers, Dragon Lance, Willow, Conan, Swords and Magic, Highlander movie+series and so much more were inspired by Tolkiens works.
mellifluous!!!!
Can you share Blue Wizards tune?
Its very awesome and excitiment
2:03 Amazing!!!
it is magnificent. it was like i was listening to the voice of a god.
My favorite book!!!
Fuller detailed version of it is unfinished tales.
@@Makkaru112 I know and it is alos great! :D
There was Eru, who in Arda is called Iluvatar
God is Eru Illuvator
Music is actually beautiful, but it's just Men interpretation, so it doesn't even capture the quarter of the magnificence of Ainulindale and Eru Ilúvatar!
My god... 😢❤️
A true cosmic battle of the bands....
Oh my Eru
linda
PERFECT
Is beautiful