►The easiest way to learn piano: bit.do/graffity-flowkey Classical performance go wrong or it was staged? Check out best funny concert moments! Subscribe!
@Vaahteranlehti :: We are getting less & less from singers who think they are giving more :: cartwheels during a concert performance netrebko dancing unsettlingly stupid productions Whatever they try, sometimes it works ; sometimes not ; whatever they try, they will never be able to camouflage the fact that great -- truly great -- singers aren't w / us anymore.
@@alejandrom.4680 :: Why don't you stop making disingenuous comments about people who criticize singers as if our opinions don't matter because we don't sing. It's a great art-form & if the audience is getting second- third-rate singers, the price of a ticket gives _members of the audience_ an automatic opinion about what they've seen & especially heard. _The next time you criticize a restaurant for its bad food, open one of your own._
@@cliffgaither don’t state things as fact, when In fact....they are nothing but opinion, informed with powerful narratives (seemingly influenced by strong cognitive distortions). There are great singers. Fantastic singers. However, your confirmation bias (your belief that none exist anymore) will blind you to any potential evidence that proves otherwise. Your bias will insist that you only see “proof” that there aren’t any good singers. Therefore, you dictate your reality...your lens, without challenging these biases and narratives. I hope for 2021, you can challenge your foundational subconscious conditioning, which informs your beliefs. Thoughts aren’t always correct. Question them, rigorously...with the same intensity you do a singer.
@@Chanie787878 The singers name is Sirkka Lampimäki (finnish) and the orchestra is Sinfonia Lahti/ Lahti symphony orchestra. the piece is Adele's Laughing Song from Die Fledermaus by J.Strauss II. You can also see the original video at the orchestras RU-vid channel! :)
I miss this moments. I remember my grandmother asking me to go to a Concert with her but I was only alone backstage standing there watching the rest and I asking were was my grandmother then I saw my grandpa doing the piano solo and my grandmother singing beside him. It was awesome and the greatest memory of my grandparents ever. I was 6 back then and I'm sad that I can't go anymore and see both of them again.
I was at a classical concert about 6 months before covid. Toward the end of the last piece on the programme as the double-basses finished playing a section they all, in unison, suddenly span their instruments as though they were part of a jazz band. This was followed by lots of other strange moves & dancing around the orchestra sections, culminating in the violins doing a Mexican wave, all the while playing impeccably as the conductor slowly lost his mind. At the end of the piece, as the orchestra then segued straight into 'Happy Birthday to You', the audience caught on & joined in singing. The orchestra had turned up the prank level to 11 for the conductor's birthday.
I was a chorus member singing in a Spokane Symphony concert when the director proposed to a violinist. We had no idea this was to be on the program. Very sweet. Thankfully she said "Yes!"
@@annnewton2878 Lol-I suspect the romantic proposer/conductor knew his fiancee would not want to play the concert sporting her new rock and probably put it back in the box before the performance. 💍
As an orchestral musician, I can attest to the fact that every single time I've performed Firebird, nearly everyone in the audience jumps, and at least one audience member audibly gasps at the downbeat to the third movement. I also teach classroom music, and I play this for my students every year just so I can get that reaction and get the kids to laugh out loud.
I've played the 1st and second trombone parts of the 1919 Firebird Suite several times and in several orchestras, and I agree: the beginning of the Dance of King Kaschei always gets a cry of shock out of at least _one_ audience member. Another "waker-upper" is about ten minutes into the 1st Movement of Tchaikovsky's 6th Symphony. The loud _sƒz_ that immediately follows a very quiet "a capella" clarinet solo will sometimes catch a napper. Honorable Mention could go to the opening of the Dies Irae of Verdi's Requiem, I suppose. 😆
That lady who screamed with that impact was unexpected. And the opera singer really has a talent. She should ended up with a split. 😁 And that proposal! Congratulations! 😍🎊
Re: "I thought she was gonna rip off her skirt", a guy brain always imagines that, so I expected something different to counter it rather than give in to my horny instincts.
The music is 'actually' from the Firebird Suite by Stravinsky and what woke the sleeper was the start of Kastchei's Infernal Dance, and she probably thought it was infernal, too. And, yes, some of it was used in the film that you mention.
I performed in symphony orchestras professionally for nearly 40 years, and there WERE those wonderful AND not-so-wonderful moments. This video brought tears to my eyes. I miss it so much!
@@lukewagithuku I performed for several years in an orchestra with a conductor who insisted on premiering newly-composed symphonic pieces by American composers who had absolutely no sense of aesthetics. Those were some very long not-so-wonderful moments. 😉
I may not have heard you perform but I thank you from my heart for the music you brought to all those who did throughout those 4 decades of your musical journey! Regards and love from India. 🙏🏼😊
When concerts are usually quite serious it was really great to see a little fun side esp the lady who still keeping in tune while doing that cartwheel fantastic 🎶🎺🎷🎻🎻
I can't be the only one who thinks "Let me pressure you into saying 'yes' by proposing to you in front of a gigantic crowd of friends and strangers" sounds like a terrible idea.
Кульбит и кот мило, но последний эпизод очень порадовал! Пусть счастливы будут эти люди!!!! А также все музыканты, дирижер и весь рукоплещущий зал! И все те, которые вне этого зала и все те, кто живет в этом городе и в этой стране, пусть все будут счастливы! Не поддерживайте войну, пусть во всем мире воцарится мир и благоденствие!
2:00 This is part from the Operetta "The Bat" and it´s even high with a high "A" or "B" to sing and then make that spin without loose the right Tone is really high skilled.
The best part when all are drunk and and singing "Brüderlein and Schwestelein" ...BTW. that is very difficult to sing because the Chorus singing parted in two groups and set each Time on tact later in then the first. Nice to Sing , but no easy.
"Julie Li with the First Violins, I'd like to ask you a question and I want everyone to hear it. Will you pick up milk on the way home tonight? I used the last of it with my bowl of cereal this morning."
to that conductor in the first clip, stravinsky would be so proud of you dude. the buildup to it was incredible (and i sympathize with the spooked lady, the fantasia 2000 version scares the crap out of me)
Oh, nice!!! I never was in a concert, thought was really serious. I really appreciate how the soprano held the note and voice in the meantime. And... Oh god, it's so romantic that wedding proposal!!! I want have the same!!!!
Some cats like music, I think. Our cats are utterly unconcerned about whatever is on the stereo. Chamber music, Mahler, opera, whatever. One of them likes to beg for my attention while I'm practicing organ music.
I did props for theater in the round. The orchestra was actually under the stage. The conductor's head was just above stage level so he could see what was happening on stage. During one performance of Music Man, the mayor's wife's petticoat came untied. She kinda danced over to the conductor, stepped out of her petticoat, he saw it, reached up and whisked it off stage. I always wished someone had caught that on video.
0:17 about 15 yrs ago I had just upgraded my stereo system to high-end speakers and amplifier, and had my parents over, sitting on the couch listening to this piece, and when the that drum all of a sudden went BOOM to start the 2nd movement, they both rose about 2 inches off the couch.
Haha it's my favourite part. Typically in nearly every music piece, there's always a calm period.. then moments like this. I like to call it ''calm before the storm''.
The proposal brought me to tears. I wonder if she took off the ring to play, tho? If it’s large it could get a little in the way. Then again, just getting a proposal in front of everyone could be a bit of a distraction , as well. First violin! I hope it sang like an angel that night ♥️🐿🌻
I know for a fact that if I was in this situation, being a clarinetist, I would’ve let out the biggest screech trying to play after that from laughing so hard lmao
Der Schrei am anfang ist so mega ... ich höre mir das 20 mal an und muss immer mehr lachen .... vielen vielen Dank für die lustigsten Sekunden in meinem Leben!!! (gilt auch für die Unbekannte Schreierin :-) )
@@theevildrummingsithlord1492 This is do freaking embarrassing! My sister still reminds me of this occasion as an ultimate trolling facts. The thing, I hate the most about such an accident: you really love all the musicians and the music they are providing, after long and hardworking day you finally go to relax and to part with some truly magnificent audial sorcery... But instead all the respect and suspense of enjoyment, your tired body meanly deceiving you and voila! You can spoil all the performance without any bad thought. And even worse, when such a disaster happens in small chambers, like one of my very favourite kirche in Moskow, what I am often visiting to listen to organ and a-Capella singing.
@@thomasray I think in person it may have been "funny" but highly entertaining because who would expect that. The hilarity comes from the unexpected. And then you just enjoy because, it's a lady cartwheeling and singing. 😁😁
I've always thought it a bit unfair for the lady to have that done to her in public. Too much pressure and sometimes it backfires if she runs away. Luckily for this fellow, she appears to have accepted.
@Think for yourself ; Yes, I have seen proposals like that too, where the lady walked out and said no. So, no, I don´t think we women can really be pressured into saying Yes, if we really don´t want to.
Unless the bf had been dropping mad hints that he wanted to propose to her, or she had been hinting that she wanted to marry him, then I don’t think that would’ve too much pressure for her.
Very nice. I remember hearing of an incident when a dog got loose in the middle of an opera, barking along, and then decided to play catch with the conductor's baton.
@@CSDELISI_. Ben de Türk'üm ama yabancılar da biliyor kedi videosu çok internette ayasofya kedisinden tut sokak kedisi belgesellerine kadar bir sürü içerik var.