Mendelssohn - Hebrides Overture (Fingal's Cave) (Abbado)

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 22 ноя 2010
  • Felix Mendelssohn - Hebrides Overture (Fingal's Cave), Op. 26
    London Symphony Orchestra - Claudio Abbado
  • ВидеоклипыВидеоклипы

Комментарии • 1,7 тыс.

  • @lilwen4063
    @lilwen4063 3 года назад +1413

    At primary school in the UK 1960s, late afternoon, we would close our eyes and rest our heads on our desks to have some quiet time. My teacher at the time, Mr Jones, would play classical music for us to listen to, this was always one, if not my favourite! I'm 65 now and have listened to and enjoyed classical music every day of my life since then! My children and grandchildren are devoted fans too having been brought up on such classical masterpieces.

    • @brunorossibonin788
      @brunorossibonin788 3 года назад +50

      @Lil Wen You had a great teacher!

    • @marielouiseweeksb33attitud33
      @marielouiseweeksb33attitud33 3 года назад +47

      How amazing. I’m 62 and our Headmistress did the same in 1960’s. Miss Gayford (Primary school in the UK) played this and it has stuck ever since.

    • @ianskilton7641
      @ianskilton7641 2 года назад

      Q

    • @MOGGS1942
      @MOGGS1942 2 года назад +38

      On rainy days, we would gather in the hall at lunchtime and the Headmaster would play classical music for us. My introduction to such gems as Swan Lake, Peter and the wolf, etc. I still remember those occasions with great fondness.

    • @ClariceAust
      @ClariceAust 2 года назад +37

      I'm 65; why on earth didn't they do that in Australia, too? It would have been brilliant. As it was, it took me decades to discover the joys of classical music.

  • @nicholaskelly6375
    @nicholaskelly6375 3 года назад +111

    Interesting Fact. Whilst on his way to Scotland Felix Mendelssohn stopped to inspect the Liverpool & Manchester Railway. The first locomotive worked Inter-City Railway in the World was in its final stages of construction. Robert Stephenson escorted the composer around the new railway. He became the first member of the public to travel on the line between the two cities!

    • @andymoore9977
      @andymoore9977 3 года назад +8

      Two 19th century geniuses together. I hope they had translators around. German to English.... English to Geordie.... Geordie to English etc... apparently Robert Stephenson's accent was so broad he really did have a translator with him when he traveled outside of the north east.

    • @oldenweery7510
      @oldenweery7510 3 года назад +8

      @@andymoore9977 Wow, that's a neat fact! (I've been a model railroader since 1953 and a classical music fan before that.) Stay safe.

    • @aaaaaeiou627
      @aaaaaeiou627 9 дней назад

      kkk

  • @kathleenogrady8459
    @kathleenogrady8459 2 месяца назад +38

    I named my oldest son after Mendelssohn because of this piece. You can't get more respectful than that!

    • @richt4285
      @richt4285 2 месяца назад +3

      SO you're telling me your family name is Overture?

    • @Sheehan1
      @Sheehan1 Месяц назад

      Felix is a good historic name but your son *will* be mocked

    • @user-qr9uh1fd8g
      @user-qr9uh1fd8g Месяц назад +2

      Felix is a beautiful name ​@@Sheehan1

    • @Sheehan1
      @Sheehan1 Месяц назад

      @@user-qr9uh1fd8g Yes even Fingal would have been a good name

    • @kennethpalmowski-wolfe7923
      @kennethpalmowski-wolfe7923 Месяц назад

      I too have a son named Felix. We had the most fortunate opportunity to meet his great-grandson Thomas Wach at the Mendelssohn Haus in Ried, Switzerland a few years ago. One of the most incredible moments of my life - to tell Herr Wach that it was "nicht aus Versehen" that our son was so named.

  • @ProbablyYoghurt
    @ProbablyYoghurt 9 лет назад +1149

    My mother said that this was playing when she gave birth to me, hence the reason why I decided to look it up. Seems pretty awesome to think that this was the first thing I would have heard.

    • @beaglybeagle
      @beaglybeagle 6 лет назад +48

      Wow! That is quite an anecdote to share! Fascinating that this welcomed you into the world!!

    • @fanofnormalclips
      @fanofnormalclips 4 года назад +49

      Unborn babies can already hear in their mother's womb.

    • @spikespa5208
      @spikespa5208 4 года назад +43

      But the strings don't come through very well underwater.

    • @firebert2000
      @firebert2000 4 года назад +8

      you had to look it up? didn't you remember it?

    • @ProbablyYoghurt
      @ProbablyYoghurt 4 года назад +20

      Nah my memory is pretty crappy haha

  • @GringatTheRepugnant
    @GringatTheRepugnant 2 года назад +296

    I headed out from the isle of Iona to Staffa where Fingal's cave is located yesterday. The Atlantic surge was too much to be able to moor at the island so we could only just hold on to the sides of the wooden boat while staring into the crashing darkness between the basalt pillars.
    Then the captain told us about the crashing of the surf is what inspired Mendelssohn when he came here in 1856(?) to write this piece, and it played over the tannoy while cormorants dived and guillemots swam around us, the sea heaved, the foam sprayed up around the rocks, and the grey seals watched us from their breeding ground around the island's side.

    • @maxgregorycompositions6216
      @maxgregorycompositions6216 2 года назад +16

      1829.

    • @wadesaleeby2172
      @wadesaleeby2172 2 года назад +1

      Yes! ☺️

    • @tarengo3
      @tarengo3 2 года назад +37

      Wow... this man just managed to use the words tannoy, cormorant, and guillemots.
      in the same sentence...
      Let's take a moment to recognize his perspicacity
      whatever that means

    • @cminor3016
      @cminor3016 2 года назад +6

      Lord have mercy. Thank you.

    • @rilke1791
      @rilke1791 2 года назад +19

      @@tarengo3 i wish people still had the ability to speak like this. I love reading it and it's so much more interesting describing it like that

  • @briars-d6251
    @briars-d6251 Год назад +54

    I remember playing this at music camp while it was pouring rain outside. One of the best experiences of the summer.

    • @doddsino
      @doddsino 2 месяца назад +1

      I remember seeing a Mynah bird walk to this song.

  • @maddy3090
    @maddy3090 4 года назад +501

    i was supposed to play this for my final concert of the session for my youth orchestra and it was cancelled because of the covid-19. this was my favorite piece out of everything we played :(

    • @dpagain2167
      @dpagain2167 4 года назад +20

      You will always remember that just as I remember that the school puppet show I was to take part in at Christmas 1957 was cancelled because half the class, including myself, contracted the Asian Flu.
      Of course at that time we all stayed in school until sick.

    • @tonybologna4489
      @tonybologna4489 4 года назад +7

      LOL GET REKT

    • @lovinescu7260
      @lovinescu7260 4 года назад

      F

    • @jacksmales4973
      @jacksmales4973 4 года назад +3

      Really sorry to hear that:(

    • @spicymeatball3807
      @spicymeatball3807 4 года назад +2

      Oof

  • @luvbach1
    @luvbach1 8 лет назад +1101

    Perhaps the most underestimated of the great composers. And he was nothing less than great.

    • @burkewhb
      @burkewhb 8 лет назад +43

      Definitely agree. My favorite is his Italian Symphony.

    • @Peter0955
      @Peter0955 8 лет назад +25

      I'm sure you love the Scottish. So uplifting and saying Yes to Life!

    • @AlexandrosDeligiorgis
      @AlexandrosDeligiorgis 7 лет назад +14

      One of my 5 favourites.

    • @sherlockholmeslives.1605
      @sherlockholmeslives.1605 7 лет назад +36

      Sheer GENIUS! The quintessential romantic sublime!

    • @steveschwieterman9109
      @steveschwieterman9109 7 лет назад +38

      I agree with all of you that he is underestimated, and so is Dvorak, to some degree. But they both have composed some beautiful pieces, this one among them.

  • @robertgage8163
    @robertgage8163 9 лет назад +97

    As a 16 year old i played this with the Lafayette, Indiana symphony in 1966. I have loved it ever since......beautiful overture.

    • @doylestownstew
      @doylestownstew 8 лет назад +11

      +Robert Gage Amen for music education in High School!

    • @reconote
      @reconote 8 лет назад +6

      +Robert Gage Hmm. I was 18 in 1966 here in Lafayette, IN. I think I might have been there for the performance. At that big meeting house (I forget the name) a block north of Main St.? Not at Mars theater?

    • @cassierexroad2154
      @cassierexroad2154 2 месяца назад

      I just heard it done at the indianapolis symphony orchestra!! It was stunning!

  • @krypticth
    @krypticth 2 года назад +42

    I've been to the actual cave. Unbelievable beauty. Music is the only way to describe it, because it's beyond words.

    • @Kayem967
      @Kayem967 4 месяца назад +2

      Thats impressive. Im from the west coast, and like many people from an area, we are the worst tourists and don't explore as we should. That cave, from pictures, I would describe as a natural cathedral, so it must be something in reality.

    • @doddsino
      @doddsino 2 месяца назад

      I wonder if there are any Mynah Birds in that cave?

  • @graemeleary9796
    @graemeleary9796 3 года назад +39

    Having twice been in the actual Fingal's Cave in the island of Staffa, this has particular significance both for the peerless music and the natural grandeur of the Cave itself. No wonder Mendelssohn was moved to compose this superb piece.

  • @goldkhw
    @goldkhw 2 года назад +30

    When I was a child of 7 in England and my brother was 9, we loved this piece of music whenever it was played on the radio. That's the only place we heard it. We'd sit there transfixed. So beautiful.

  • @jillchaney7086
    @jillchaney7086 2 года назад +19

    I also listened to this at primary school in the 1960’s,we used to lie down and close our eyes to listen.Magical,a distant time now 😢

  • @richardweil8813
    @richardweil8813 5 лет назад +142

    Went to the Hebrides in a heavy rainstorm. Mendelssohn definitely caught the feeling of those islands on the edge of the North Atlantic.

    • @HouseClubber75
      @HouseClubber75 3 года назад +3

      Went there back in '95, beautiful weather... It was August. I miss the Atlantic... Greetings from Italy

    • @philipwilliams5808
      @philipwilliams5808 2 года назад +2

      I went from Mull to Iona and then on to Staffa, on a fantastic August day when the sky was blue with fluffy white clouds, the sea was a fabulous azure and the sand as white as snow. It is the most beautiful memory matched by this beautiful music.

    • @doddsino
      @doddsino Год назад

      @WastingMyLifeInGlasgow
      The only other place in the world would have Mynah Birds.

  • @chelamcguire
    @chelamcguire 2 года назад +190

    Such joy! I could taste the salty sea air. majestic. Moving me to tears before that baton was laid aside.
    I am actually the proud owner of this powerful piece on a 78 which was recorded in 1928. My maternal grandfather was the previous owner of this 78 which, when played on the old gramophone, he would conduct his invisible orchestra! Ordinarily, his 'conducting' was carried out on a Sunday morning before we all set off to church. I would call into my grand parents house which was on our farm, and I'd find my grandfather wearing his pyjama's and a bow tie. The perfect outfit for all conductors! After he performed this energetic form of art, he'd quickly shower, get properly dressed and before we knew it we were in the church. A brilliant start to a Sunday for any young child!

    • @philipwilliams5808
      @philipwilliams5808 2 года назад +10

      That's lovely. I have been to Fingal's Cave it is a magical place, like the house of your Grandfather obviously was for you!

    • @Volcano-Man
      @Volcano-Man 2 года назад +6

      @@philipwilliams5808It is indeed. I visited it yonks ago, the music coursing through my mind as I oggled the basalt columns - that's the trouble with being a geologist we 'consume' the rocks.

    • @philipwilliams5808
      @philipwilliams5808 2 года назад +8

      @@Volcano-Man Hi Gerard, It must be very gneiss to be a geologist!

    • @kithughesx
      @kithughesx Год назад +2

      That is such a wonderful story.

    • @chelamcguire
      @chelamcguire Год назад +1

      @@kithughesx Bless you - thanks! Just a wee trip down memory lane and music does tend to draw us there. Enjoy your day.

  • @harryandruschak2843
    @harryandruschak2843 6 лет назад +220

    I have been inside this cave. One little known fact...if you are well inside the cave, and look towards the entrance, you can see the entrance framing the Isle of Iona.

  • @nickwright6034
    @nickwright6034 2 года назад +12

    So many appreciative comments here...
    And I, too, have much to recognise, acknowledge and appreciate.
    My reception teacher, Miss Irwin, in 1959, was an outstanding teacher and musician.
    Sadly, long gone, I pay public tribute to a truly lovely lady who helped to shape my life and life-long interest in music.
    RIP Miss Irwin.

  • @marshallhackett990
    @marshallhackett990 5 лет назад +97

    There is no tune that so invokes the sea as this one. I must have been a seaman in a past life, because I long for this life...

    • @katypagemusic1260
      @katypagemusic1260 3 года назад +2

      I remember having the little mermaid audio tape when I was a kid each chapter started with this. Always makes me think of plunging to the depths of the ocean!

    • @leonj.e.6770
      @leonj.e.6770 2 года назад +3

      listen to the first movement of Shahrazade by Rimsky Korsakov who was a captain in the Czar's navy.

    • @jaakkokeskinen
      @jaakkokeskinen 2 года назад +3

      What about beginning of 3rd act of Wagner's Tristan und Isolde? That is, to me, the best sea description ever in music.

    • @jackpinekid1
      @jackpinekid1 2 года назад

      FTN

    • @alicemilne1444
      @alicemilne1444 Год назад +1

      @@jaakkokeskinen The sea has many faces. The prelude to Act 3 of Tristan and Isolde sounds like a powerful but largely calm sea, such as the Baltic.
      Listen to Wagner's prelude to The Flying Dutchman to get an impression of a stormy sea, such as that which Wagner and his wife experienced on a crossing to England after they had fled Riga in the eastern Baltic.
      Or listen to the Sea Interludes in Benjamin Britten's opera Peter Grimes.
      Mendelssohn is describing sea passages around Hebridean islands in the eastern Atlantic.
      I grew up close to the North Sea coast in Scotland and have seen the Atlantic in Scotland, Ireland, France, Spain, Portugal, Iceland and Norway. It can be a very, very wild indeed. I've been on ferries in a Force 10 gale. The Baltic just doesn't get gales like that.

  • @dingo4ever369
    @dingo4ever369 6 лет назад +31

    Rusty Walrus theme sounds beautiful😍

  • @nyrokushii
    @nyrokushii 2 года назад +14

    I played crash twinsanity years ago and I DIDN’T EVEN RECOGNIZE THIS MUSIC BUT I SAW THE NAME OF THE SONG

  • @davidosorio4980
    @davidosorio4980 3 года назад +26

    Both a Tuba Player and a Crash fan at the same time i love it.

    • @johndsimmonsdds8704
      @johndsimmonsdds8704 3 года назад +1

      Tubas rule!

    • @jesselotspeich4936
      @jesselotspeich4936 3 года назад

      I a Tubaist also loved the transcription we played in college. Hard Hard Hard but twice the fun. Never got to play it with the Symphony.

    • @doddsino
      @doddsino 2 месяца назад

      I'm a mynah bird lover.

  • @maximus4765
    @maximus4765 Год назад +24

    There are two people who listen to this song.
    Classical music enjoyers
    And Crash twinsanity fans.

    • @doddsino
      @doddsino Год назад +6

      Or those who appreciate the Mynah Bird

    • @edwardcarberry1095
      @edwardcarberry1095 27 дней назад

      Former . two thumbs up. I started in about 1972.

  • @johnnydutchman
    @johnnydutchman 10 лет назад +141

    Tears in my eyes- this is what music is all about - emotion

    • @curioustruth
      @curioustruth 6 лет назад +3

      Lenny V so very, VERY true! 😎

    • @kristine6996
      @kristine6996 6 лет назад +1

      Lenny V ... and mathematics and instruments and people ...

    • @clownia6024
      @clownia6024 6 лет назад +2

      it's all about the crash twinsanity remakes for the song and fresh meat for my pot

    • @John-qj2xi
      @John-qj2xi 5 лет назад +4

      Further proof that the best music is composed by whites.

    • @Hithere-ek4qt
      @Hithere-ek4qt 4 года назад +4

      @@John-qj2xi Ha ha ha ha ha - what a ignorant remark, Mr White Supremacist.

  • @PlasmaCoolantLeak
    @PlasmaCoolantLeak 8 месяцев назад +5

    I love this piece. I always think of a windy, cloudy day at the beach when I hear this, the cold air biting.

  • @empireentertainmentevents1353
    @empireentertainmentevents1353 5 лет назад +84

    Mr Felix Mendelssohn ... you composed many breath taking Masterpieces. I admire and have always thought of you as among the all time great composers in the same level as Bach, Handel, Schubert, Schumann, Tchaikovsky, Brahms, Mozart and Beethoven.

    • @CIMAmotor
      @CIMAmotor 3 года назад

      Lennon, McCartney...

    • @agenziapagano4928
      @agenziapagano4928 2 года назад +1

      i love Mendhellsohn. It's underrated.

    • @wovenfur6711
      @wovenfur6711 2 года назад

      @@agenziapagano4928 he’s*

    • @epicaunleashed8764
      @epicaunleashed8764 2 года назад

      @@agenziapagano4928 Mendelssohn...

    • @celiamantovani3484
      @celiamantovani3484 Год назад +2

      Likewise! I grew up listening to everything in Classical music, and Mendelssohn has been always among my dearest composers. Playing the piano, I asked my father his book for piano Romance without Words, which I got for one of my birthdays as a teen. Such a joy to be able to play his wonderful compositions.

  • @wille.2215
    @wille.2215 5 лет назад +717

    There are two types of people:
    “This is a truly beautiful classical masterpiece”
    *“YUMMY FRESH MEAT FOR MY POT”*

  • @medwaybusinessawards8496
    @medwaybusinessawards8496 4 месяца назад +2

    Playing this at full volume whilst sailing in a yacht up the west coast of Scotland is memorable.

  • @alexgabriel5650
    @alexgabriel5650 5 лет назад +82

    This and the Scottish symphony make me miss Scotland and I've never even been there.

    • @jacquelinelockeline5061
      @jacquelinelockeline5061 4 года назад +7

      I have the same feelings about Scotland, but I've been there twice and it's breathtakingly amazing!

    • @DanceCommandant
      @DanceCommandant 4 года назад +12

      I feel the same way about "Donald Where's Your Troosers?"

    • @denisewilliams9405
      @denisewilliams9405 4 года назад +5

      DanceCommandant oh you bloody heathen😂😂

    • @geenadasilva9287
      @geenadasilva9287 4 года назад +3

      amazingly beautiful country. pity it has the worst weather on earth... oh and my horrible, toxic mother lives there, so i will make do with memories...
      why does this overture make me think of Luis Buñuel?

    • @1evonvielen
      @1evonvielen 4 года назад +4

      Same, bro, same. I feel some weird kind of patriotism for this country without ever having been there :'D

  • @jamesa901
    @jamesa901 Год назад +18

    I wonder if Mendelssohn was freaking out when he wrote this, thinking "This is really good. It's going to be a classic. 200 years from now, people will download this from the internet and leaving comments on how good it is. This is great!"

    • @vinyltapelover
      @vinyltapelover Год назад +1

      James A ""This is really good. It's going to be a classic. 200 years from now, people will download this from the internet and leaving comments on how good it is." , and that darn Mynah Bird:).

    • @StimParavane
      @StimParavane 11 месяцев назад

      Wow. He conceived of the internet at the same time as writing this piece. Extraordinary...

  • @davidsnyder9424
    @davidsnyder9424 9 лет назад +217

    "That's the beauty of music. They can't get that from you... You need it so you don't forget...there are places in this world that aren't made out of stone. That there's something inside... that they can't get to, that they can't touch - that's yours."
    -- Andy Dufresne, "The Shawshank Redemption"

  • @sukualderson5517
    @sukualderson5517 5 лет назад +10

    Absolutely love Mendelsohn - his music gives serenity to my soul and heart- especially this particularly...

  • @exessex3522
    @exessex3522 2 года назад +2

    My old school friend Bill had this played at his funeral. He spent every summer holidaying in the Scottish isles.

  • @julianl6369
    @julianl6369 11 месяцев назад +5

    I first heard this on that 1943 film, The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp, when the main character went to the POW camp after WW1 to find his prewar German friend. That music was playing in the background, and I liked it so much, I looked it up 😊

  • @jeffreyburger5255
    @jeffreyburger5255 3 года назад +40

    My absolutely favorite piece of music. Something majestic and airy about this emotional experience absorbing this performance. I wish Mendelssohn had a larger library of compositions. But ill settle for this small piece of perfection

    • @palmermonsen9098
      @palmermonsen9098 3 года назад +2

      His violin concerto is amazing though

    • @XY-ke5mj
      @XY-ke5mj 3 года назад +4

      @@palmermonsen9098 @jeffrey burger His Octet for Strings is one of the greatest pieces of chamber music ever written and he wrote it when he was....wait for it....16.

    • @doddsino
      @doddsino Год назад

      This small piece of perfection is made better by a small walking Mynah Bird.

  • @gravecactus
    @gravecactus 8 лет назад +14

    nothing made me feel more whole than playing a piece like this in class. i miss those days.

    • @lynnharris2934
      @lynnharris2934 8 лет назад +1

      I am 67 And I just love this maybe because I am scottish

    • @jasonvinton1612
      @jasonvinton1612 5 лет назад

      50 years old and just joined a symphony orchestra in my area. Never played this before and I love it.
      @@lynnharris2934

    • @devin3378
      @devin3378 3 года назад

      Cook

  • @fontainemusique7248
    @fontainemusique7248 10 лет назад +48

    C'est MAGNIFIQUE!!!

  • @drb_physix
    @drb_physix 10 лет назад +16

    Beautiful, and beautifully rendered by a master conductor.

  • @elionaidgranados1005
    @elionaidgranados1005 4 года назад +8

    Sends shivers every time!!!

  • @bigbenbuckaroo1976
    @bigbenbuckaroo1976 11 лет назад +83

    I love this piece. It moves me and inspires me. Mendelssohn was indeed one of the greatest composers of his time and one of the greats of the ages. Thank you for loading this wonderful work of art for the world to enjoy!

    • @jackporter9257
      @jackporter9257 Год назад +1

      Just beautiful;

    • @doddsino
      @doddsino Год назад +1

      @@jackporter9257
      It is the Mynah Bird that is truly beautiful.

  • @joytaylor6784
    @joytaylor6784 2 года назад +6

    One of my favourite pieces of classical music

  • @michaelrimmington4981
    @michaelrimmington4981 6 лет назад +5

    This was the piece that introduced me to classical music at the age of 14.

  • @songsmith31a
    @songsmith31a 5 лет назад +22

    Was there ever a piece of music that so perfectly captured the ebb and flow...the constant
    rise and fall of the ocean in all its moods? I think not. A top orchestra and conductor
    do it justice here.

    • @neilbriscoewhite4953
      @neilbriscoewhite4953 4 года назад

      It's a wonderful work, Mark. Allow me to suggest you listen to "La Mer" (The Sea) by Debussy. With closed eyes.

    • @petersmith9077
      @petersmith9077 3 года назад

      I can think of at least 2 composers who had storm passages(pardon th pun)in their music. BEETHOVEN the Pastoral Symphony and KORSAKOV'S Scherezade

    • @petersmith9077
      @petersmith9077 3 года назад

      They were pretty good yes? They really are exactly like natural storms. Beethoven th thunder& th storm moving on. Korsakov's sea storm - u can imagine th swell of waves growing taller & more violent! PJS.

    • @songsmith31a
      @songsmith31a 3 года назад

      @@neilbriscoewhite4953 Thanks Neil. I know Debussy's La Mer and agree
      with your point about its quality in thsi regard.

    • @songsmith31a
      @songsmith31a 3 года назад

      @@petersmith9077 Peter - absolutely right. It requires not only a musical
      skill but the necessary imagination to write music of this sort. In more
      modern times Richard Rodgers wrote some fine music in a similar nautical vein for the 1950s TV series "Victory at Sea" (arranged by R.R.Bennett, I seem to recall). The title theme "Song of the High Seas" was a good example.

  • @maryalegado3036
    @maryalegado3036 Год назад +2

    In high school in Greenock Scotland beginning 1956, we had an amazing music teacher named Mrs.Waldron. I appreciate her for giving me an introduction and love for good classical music.Also studying the life and times of composers. She taught us to listen to what was going on in each piece. This overture won hands down for effect.......Yes Mrs.Waldron you were a great lady and I know you are in a happy place. Never forgotten.

  • @katewilmot4375
    @katewilmot4375 4 года назад +7

    I am going to hear this tonight at the Sydney Town Hall - Sydney Symphony orchestra and I am so excited ...never heard it live and I think this is one the most evocative pieces of music of all time.

  • @deborahpeniket6631
    @deborahpeniket6631 Год назад +9

    I visited Fingal's Cave on Staffa last week with my family and little dog. Oh my goodness, it was amazing. It was particularly poignant as Staffa tours play this music as they enter the cave before you get off the boat to explore. It is really worth the journey and so moving to listen to this piece of music.

    • @doddsino
      @doddsino Год назад

      Did a little Mynah Bird walk by?

  • @johnbisby2850
    @johnbisby2850 4 года назад +7

    After visiting many of the islands it's quite moving to hear this music again capturing the mood and rugged beauty of such an outstanding part of the world
    We live on a planet with some extraordinary stunning places and the inner and outer Hebrides counts as one of them

  • @alexmustata4089
    @alexmustata4089 5 лет назад +54

    My favourite classical piece. Criminally underrated, and pure genius.

    • @alancumming6407
      @alancumming6407 3 года назад

      In what way is it criminally underrated?

    • @alicemilne1444
      @alicemilne1444 Год назад +2

      @@alancumming6407 That's just a turn of phrase for saying that the person who likes the piece thinks that others who don't or don't even know it are philistines for not appreciating it.

    • @alancumming6407
      @alancumming6407 Год назад

      @@alicemilne1444 Yes that's it. Well said.

    • @ct92404
      @ct92404 Год назад

      @@alicemilne1444 No, unfortunately I had never heard of this until just recently. When I was a kid, they never taught anything in school about Felix Mendelsohn and whenever anyone plays classical music it's always the same old Mozart and Beethoven stuff over and over again.

    • @alicemilne1444
      @alicemilne1444 Год назад

      @ct6502 That's a pity. There's so much more than those two, isn't there? Still, it means plenty to discover.

  • @Romulus980
    @Romulus980 8 лет назад +15

    This the kind of music that sets the imagination and emotions, perhaps it will entice the other music lover to classical music..

  • @VladykaTeofano
    @VladykaTeofano 7 лет назад +33

    Nada mas brillante que empezar la mañana con esta hermosa obra de Mendelssohn

  • @breesevere
    @breesevere 7 лет назад +63

    I had the pleasure of hearing this live in LA and I cried like a baby.

  • @aaronjorgefridman5662
    @aaronjorgefridman5662 3 года назад +18

    El re"descubridor" de J. S. Bach. Uno de los más grandes compositores del romanticismo

  • @rodparisst
    @rodparisst 6 лет назад +19

    I've never been to the Hebrides and most likely never will, but this music helps imagine those islands. Thank you.

    • @parsmanjim7366
      @parsmanjim7366 4 года назад +2

      You are seriously missing out, these islands are wonderful, just like the music !

    • @pammillerhoward7785
      @pammillerhoward7785 8 дней назад

      I hope you do. I never thought i would either, but after surviving cancer and recently pnuemonia, I am returning at nearly age 73. Keep dreaming. You can make it happen. ( We travel cheaply).

  • @corsairman1956
    @corsairman1956 Год назад +6

    Did not make it to The Hebrides on our recent Scotland tour. Yet made it to Skye, and couldn’t help but whistle this masterpiece upon which our tour guide said, “You whistle that quite nicely.” 🎶

    • @The-Real-Blissful-Ignorance
      @The-Real-Blissful-Ignorance Год назад

      The Isle of Skye is part of the Inner Hebrides, so technically you did make it to the Hebrides. 🤓

  • @sammysamdon
    @sammysamdon Год назад +3

    Got to play this on double bass many years ago and as difficult as it was, I still look back with fond memories of playing this piece. That was at least 10 years ago

  • @avandyke
    @avandyke 9 лет назад +72

    Fantastic tone poem and an amazing way of tuning into the life all around. Mendelssohn was a true artist.

    • @doddsino
      @doddsino Год назад +1

      Indeed, much like the sacred Mynah Bird.

  • @egorvodopoev7756
    @egorvodopoev7756 3 года назад +62

    How can one dislike such a masterpiece?!

    • @lusilva9911
      @lusilva9911 3 года назад +9

      Not everyone can truly comprehend a masterpiece. Totally understand your reaction tho!

    • @bt9124
      @bt9124 2 года назад +4

      Go figure?

    • @VetusBarbatus
      @VetusBarbatus 3 месяца назад

      I think the appreciation of music its pretty subjective . Many people out there would discard classical music all together.

    • @edwardcarberry1095
      @edwardcarberry1095 27 дней назад

      Can I ask, how many know of/about the "" Schumann Resonance """ I think, I Suspect that those who do , who have learnt know more about music??
      It has always been an addition for me!!!!!!!!!!!
      What is the lowest tone of Singing??

  • @acekelis5943
    @acekelis5943 Год назад +3

    First time ever hearing classical music I was 7 and absolutely enthralled. Love other forms, but my classics are my home.

  • @sherlockholmeslives.1605
    @sherlockholmeslives.1605 7 лет назад +10

    Sheer GENIUS! The quintessential romantic sublime!

  • @pathawkins9302
    @pathawkins9302 3 года назад +3

    I was introduced to this in school, aged 11, and it remains a favourite,

  • @CL-bs7vr
    @CL-bs7vr 3 года назад +6

    I can hear this over and over. With this I can dream myself to the sea, I always assume it must be autumn. This is my favorite recording of this.

  • @hojoinhisarcher
    @hojoinhisarcher Год назад +7

    There was a cartoon that featured a snippet of this when I watched as a kid.Never bothered to listen to the entire piece till now. Genius. Artstry. Combined.

    • @manuel2cinco6
      @manuel2cinco6 Год назад +3

      Inki and the Minah bird

    • @hojoinhisarcher
      @hojoinhisarcher Год назад +1

      @@manuel2cinco6 ha!

    • @katrinafelixmiaw
      @katrinafelixmiaw 2 месяца назад +1

      Muy cierto , buscando ese cartoon y por un comentario sobre el autor de esta pieza de arte estoy aquí

  • @luisbreva6122
    @luisbreva6122 3 года назад +4

    This was my gateway drug for classical music

  • @davidwright8432
    @davidwright8432 4 года назад +7

    I had the great good fortune to be invited to go to Fingal's Cave, on an island off Mull, when visiting the Hebrides. Mendelssohn's musical imagination captures the place wonderfully, down to the surging tides and eddies by the cave mouth. Listen, and you're there! Promise.

  • @mrspenn1611
    @mrspenn1611 10 лет назад +17

    this is the piece of music which got me into classical symphonium music........still love this, just about my fave piece.....

    • @andrearock6766
      @andrearock6766 5 лет назад

      I'm the very same, this is the first life of classical music I ever heard. I was 12 and in school and I fell in love with it.

  •  9 лет назад +23

    An inspiring music, captivating...

  • @markjpope
    @markjpope 10 лет назад +39

    Wow- amazing! Such a beautiful, haunting melody to listen to on a cold evening huddling in a warm room.

  • @ecologygarden
    @ecologygarden 4 года назад +4

    A truly great composer and yet many people pass over him without a glance he deserves more recognition. Only true connoisseurs of music recognise this man's genius.

  • @davidreed9849
    @davidreed9849 3 года назад +3

    One of my favorite pieces of music. I first heard it a few years ago, one night at Symphony.

  • @marcosmartinezcortes8186
    @marcosmartinezcortes8186 6 лет назад +19

    What in Gods name mendelssohn was a genius!!**

  • @brianbela
    @brianbela 12 лет назад +6

    Mendelssohns masterpiece.Definitely my favorite piece of his,hands down.What grandeur!

  • @zuhaansariiii_250
    @zuhaansariiii_250 2 месяца назад +2

    iam inn primary school and when we are doing an asssesd piece of writing my teacher ms Anson would pla y this piece for us this is y favorite and I nearly listen to it every day

  • @xaviermena2033
    @xaviermena2033 3 года назад +6

    Mendelson, es genial su música te da una paz infinita

  • @gwendolynfish2102
    @gwendolynfish2102 4 года назад +7

    We are going to Scotland, hopefully in May. One of our stops will be Iona, the Ferry to Staffa and Finns Cave the inspiration for this masterpiece is there!

  • @mr.tomasiorubinshtein
    @mr.tomasiorubinshtein 2 года назад +71

    You can say that this song will never get... rusty.

  • @MilciadesAndrion
    @MilciadesAndrion 6 лет назад +3

    This music is universal and eternal. You feel the legend.

  • @kwmitchell
    @kwmitchell 5 лет назад +7

    The opportunity to visit Fingal's cave as I did recently and experience first hand where the young Mendelssohn envisioned this wonderful overture was sublime. It perfectly translates the beauty and tumult of this remarkable place.

    • @paullittle5200
      @paullittle5200 Год назад

      Totally agree,a beautiful piece that captures that emotion.

  • @indy_go_blue6048
    @indy_go_blue6048 4 года назад +5

    I first heard this sometime in the '80s in an old "Don Winslow of the Navy" serial; it was the main theme of the show IIRC. Anyway the music wasn't attributed; it took me some 20 years to finally learn the name and composer, but I never forgot its haunting beauty. Nor have I forgotten since.

    • @g.k.failla9389
      @g.k.failla9389 2 года назад +1

      The "Don Winslow
      Of the Navy" serial was the first time I heard this too. The main theme played when the enemy submarine appeared. Took a long time to discover the entire piece. Then I found Otto Klemperer's recording of it. (That record also had Mendelssohn's "Scottish" and "Italian" symphonies).

  • @annettegiannini7047
    @annettegiannini7047 10 лет назад +19

    We're playing Hebrides in our University concert next Friday! So excited!

  • @PilgrimVisions
    @PilgrimVisions 6 лет назад +80

    "Now from the gray mist of the ocean the white-sailed ships of Fingal appear. High is the grove of their masts, as they nod, by turns, on the rolling wave. Swaran saw them from the hill. He returned from the sons of Erin. As ebbs the resounding sea, through the hundred isles of Inistore; so loud, so vast, so immense, returned the sons of Lochlin against the king. But bending, weeping, sad, and slow, and dragging his long spear behind, Cuthullin sunk in Cromla's wood, and mourned his fallen friends. He feared the face of Fingal, who was wont to greet him from the fields of renown! ... Fingal, tall in his ship, stretched his bright lance before him. Terrible was the gleam of his steel: It was like the green meteor of death, setting in the heath of Malmor, when the traveller is alone, and the broad moon is darkened in heaven." (Epic of Fingal III from the Poems of Ossian)

    • @katewilmot4375
      @katewilmot4375 4 года назад +3

      I have to find that , thank you 😊

    • @loricichowic8517
      @loricichowic8517 2 года назад +1

      This masterpiece of literature is echoed in the masterpiece of a musical work! Thanks for your comment!👌👍

    • @Lighthazzles
      @Lighthazzles 2 года назад +2

      Thankyou. This transported me away from all the idiocy and madness and onto beautiful landscapes of legends and myth with mountains and storm lashed coves.

  • @plantsoda
    @plantsoda 7 лет назад +11

    I'm studying Classical Music and felt I'd lost all love for the subject, but this piece ALWAYS rekindles it. It's so beautiful.

    • @doddsino
      @doddsino Год назад

      I'm studying Mynah Birds.

  • @duncancoutts-taylor7903
    @duncancoutts-taylor7903 4 года назад +5

    I remember my teacher at school played this once and over time it stuck in my mind and as I've got a lot older I appreciate more classical music of my own tastes but this evokes emotion of storms also rolling of the seas and calmness lots of emotion

  • @feestor5660
    @feestor5660 2 года назад +12

    We had a teacher in 1970. Miss Lamb. She taught us well and exposed us to this early. Her father was the choir master at the Cathedral. I remember those days from the 70s well.

  • @paulinebrowaeys5252
    @paulinebrowaeys5252 3 года назад +4

    Imagine floating on this music, crossing the Hebrides, can we ever come closer to heaven?

  • @Selcuk.Aytimur
    @Selcuk.Aytimur 2 года назад +2

    A masterpiece by the great Abbado R.I.P sir.

  • @philipkelly4628
    @philipkelly4628 5 лет назад +3

    I love mendelssohn overtures stirring and romantic, wonderful uplifting music.

  • @patricktetteroo9950
    @patricktetteroo9950 2 года назад +5

    A great masterpiece! I often listen to this beautifull music.. close my eyes and imagine I am at the Hebrides.

  • @AszrayelLawgiver
    @AszrayelLawgiver 7 лет назад +2

    This moved me a lot when I first heard it played on a BBC micro in 1984. I still listen to it now when I cannot sleep to relax. Masterful, exilerating and relaxing at the same time.

  • @DrCrabfingers
    @DrCrabfingers 2 года назад +2

    Last night I had a dream...I heard the most wonderful music, multi layered, passionate, romantic, it was music I'd never heard before or at least music I didn't know, it was majestic and immense. I have no idea where that music came from, but in my dream it was as though I was at a concert or listening to a recording of new music, every instrumental layer of the symphony was clear and filled me with awe. I had the impression that the music was Mendelssohn for some reason, so here I am! Trying to find that piece of music....but perhaps it was of my own making?? How amazing. The wonder of the human mind.

  • @cminor3016
    @cminor3016 2 года назад +4

    Thank you! So important to keep this genre going strong- mendelssohn and Sebelius are like superheros

  • @richardmoon1852
    @richardmoon1852 8 лет назад +7

    Thanks again for this wonderful Treat.

  • @TomGoymour
    @TomGoymour 4 года назад +18

    Listening to this very late one Sunday night - (well, easily Monday morning now ...) I am just reminded of what an underrated genius Felix Mendelssohn was. There is something about this piece of music that takes you right to the place the inspired him ... I feel like I am in that cave on that Scottish isle looking out on to the world with different eyes ... perhaps, sharing his eyes of the time? I feel connected.
    In fact, about twenty five years ago I did just that very thing - I have piece of paino music that I wrote, it's stashed away somewhere, and it was provisionally entitled 'Scottish Isle piece' It doesn't bear much resemblance to this Mendelssohn masterpiece other than the mood and the concept. But over a couple of days in the mid nineties I was completely taken with a theme I had in my head and I fleshed out a piece for piano ...i must dig it out sometime soon.

  • @shin-i-chikozima
    @shin-i-chikozima 3 года назад +35

    Just by listening to this masterpiece ,
    the worries of this fleeting life will be blown away
    From Tokyo of the Land of the Rising Sun 🇯🇵

    • @davidbarber4709
      @davidbarber4709 3 года назад +5

      We are living in extremly strange times and the world is in stress factor but listening to classical music seems to take the worrying pressure away if only for a short while to the people of Japan be careful keep safe take care love as always Dave ENGLAND a land next door to heaven

    • @shin-i-chikozima
      @shin-i-chikozima 3 года назад +1

      @@davidbarber4709
      Thank-you
      Take care of yourself
      Good luck !
      For the second year in a row , we have refrained from the banquet under the cherry blossoms in full bloom in the parks of Tokyo , which is a very pity .

    • @cdog9559
      @cdog9559 3 года назад +1

      Yes these are stressful times and good wholesome music helps. And watching Baby Sea Otter Joey & Friends also provides hours of relaxation. Hope you are well.

    • @shin-i-chikozima
      @shin-i-chikozima 3 года назад

      @@cdog9559
      Thank-you so much to your wonderful comments
      Which is your country ?

  • @shaviolinist4995
    @shaviolinist4995 9 лет назад +46

    This is perfection.... and we're playing this with our chestra, I'm so happy:3

    • @niahawkins8885
      @niahawkins8885 4 года назад +1

      Me too

    • @jean-pierredevent970
      @jean-pierredevent970 4 года назад +1

      I play trumpet in it now with our amateur orchestra. Here I hear that much dynamics is indeed inherent to this piece but it's rarely coming from the instruments that find this the most easy : the brass.

  • @user-yz6vd1gb3x
    @user-yz6vd1gb3x 10 лет назад +7

    It is wonderful overture.
    Thank you very much.

  • @takaharrue
    @takaharrue 7 лет назад

    This piece is definitely one of my favorites of all time....... It's so emotional.

  • @happycommuter3523
    @happycommuter3523 7 лет назад +2

    I had the pleasure recently of hearing this performed live by the Boston Symphony Orchestra. It's lovely.

  • @teller6910
    @teller6910 10 месяцев назад +35

    1x speed: what lovely music i'm listening to
    1.5x speed: AHHH YUMMY! FRESH MEAT FOR MY POT!!

    • @HAMZA_OLYMPUS
      @HAMZA_OLYMPUS 10 месяцев назад +3

      😂

    • @GoosyGooseMX
      @GoosyGooseMX 4 месяца назад +6

      I precisely came for that game and I didn't expect to find any comment referencing it

    • @galatheumbreon6862
      @galatheumbreon6862 2 месяца назад +1

      confusion

    • @kakarot2686
      @kakarot2686 Месяц назад

      ​@@galatheumbreon6862they're referencing crash twinsanity, a game that features this song in an acappella style

  • @waynehowells6301
    @waynehowells6301 2 года назад +4

    Such a wonderful piece! Moving, powerful!

  • @robertallbright
    @robertallbright 7 лет назад +2

    absolutely wonderful

  • @maureenmcdade2
    @maureenmcdade2 3 года назад +1

    Glorious. I close my eyes and I am there. Wonderful, simply wonderful.