Я слушаю и пересматриваю много раз, но не так часто , не хочу чтобы это надоело. И каждый раз у меня бегают фриссоны и слёзы счастья ! А если бы я слушал и видел это вживую, то я был бы ещё больше счастлив!❤
Don't know why, Interstellar theme always hits in the feels. And it's never just 1 emotion. It's like remembering something lost, or something we hope to find. Lost love, aspirations, a way out, a new beginning, it can be anything. Gives me goosebumps every single time
You just nailed it! The emotion of Mathew leaving earth with the last part of that song as he blasted into space…Leaving his family behind in sacrifice for the greater good for humanity and his posterity. Etc etc etc. Beautiful movie on many levels. Takes some time to sink it all in. Moved to my top 2 all time favorites films after a few years of watching it.
I was there, I bought a ticket for my mum, who is in a wheelchair. She had never been to a concert before and I tell you guys, take your parents to a concert and enjoy the time together :-) It was one of the best concerts of my life and we both loved it.
I went to watch Hans Zimmer, bought the best tickets, and I was absolutely blown away. So much emotion listening to this song too. I've booked for the O2 in Jun 2023 again! I can't wait!!!
i disagree. this particular video does not have the data but if his Live performances were properly recorded with multiple microphones, it could capture what it’s like to be there.
A true anecdote about the origin of this legendary theme... When Chris Nolan was done writing the story of Interstellar, he went over to Hans Zimmer and told him a short beautiful story about a father who is leaving his child to do an important duty. He told him two main lines, "I'll come back" and "When?". A day later, Zimmer called over Nolan and played this fragile, touching track he had written for his son. It was only then that Nolan started telling Zimmer about the plot of the movie, which had outworldly concepts like space, black holes, and higher dimensions. Zimmer was confused if the theme he had composed would pair right with such a plot. To which Nolan responded, "Now I know where the heart of the movie is." A couple years later both, the movie and the theme turned out to be one of the legendary pairs in the history of filmmaking.
Correction, Nolan never mentioned father and son theme. Hans wrote this for Nolan with the request that Hans write something extremely personal to himself. Interstellar then became a father son film.
@@bryanpedraza6409Actually, it is mostly true. If you watch some interviews from Christopher Nolan, he confirms this is how it happened. It is also in the new Hans Zimmer documentary in Netflix where Nolan says the same thing.
Also for those of you that don't know, all those musicians being shown are well known in their own right and on an elite level of talent. Seeing them all in one room to recreate this song with Hans Zimmer is exceptionally awesome.
Fun fact: Christopher told Hans to compose music that is about "a father's love for his children" and didnt tell him anything else. So, as a father himself, Hans Zimmer put his soul into this song and created the masterpiece we know of today.
abyss, that's the feeling this theme produces to me, which, if u think about what means becoming a father, it has double sense, but, when we think about black holes, worm holes, space, galaxies, that's when it becomes a triple meaning, this theme have the perfect emotion for 3 meanings, how is that possible}? genius
I am not a father so I find it difficult to relate to this having a meaning towards being a parent. When I hear this song, all I can think about is space, time, physics, and math. It motivates me to study!
@@ElPollito17 that's why I think he represented the emotion of "abyss" so perfectly in this song, that's what space, cosmos, the unknown is, and also, being a father, that I don't know which one is more terrifyng
Can you imagine an entire orchestra so coordinated that you don't need a conductor? He literally just left his piano and felt the music... what a legend.
@@traveltonshl yes that’s true, most modern orchestras no longer need a conductor for keeping the time… HOWEVER they do need them to guide the volume and to coordinate each musician… to change the tempo as needed to bring instruments in and out as needed
Everybody has got In ear monitors and every instrument is either plugged or captured by mics to FOH Of course they are all exceptional but there’s no need for a conductor here i guess
@@dbisic1 even if you could hear all of them, as someone who has played in large band performances, you can not in real time know where the flow of music needs to go, if time is to be slowed down or sped up, if certain sections need to be louder or quieter, if some notes must be played staccato or slurred in a moment. That must be decided by the conductor, the hand motions are not just “1 2 3 4” it is, harder, softer, staccato, slurred, slow, loud, quiet, faster, stop, start, etc. could a football team without a coach play? Yep. Would they preform as well? Nope.
I grew up with Dad always asking me, “Do you know who performs this song?” “Who’s the guitar player on this album?” Or some other such question. It was a matter of pride to know your music. And question after question turned into music trivia. This is the last piece of music we listened to together. He had Alzheimer’s and yet we still questioned each other, “Who’s the guitarist?” “Which one? Johnny Marr or Guthrie Govan?” He’s gone now. And 2 and a half years later I’m still using this piece of music as a tesseract to move through space and time so we can sit in the car, listening to tunes by the radio light, or putting the needle on the turntable and turning the volume to ten. I’m never going to be Murph from the movie, using a watch to save the world, but we do have love and music to send us across the universe so we can be with each other. Thanks Hans, for a portal to visit Dad every now and again.
Fun Fact: Christopher Nolan visited Hans Zimmer and asked him to create a music that depict a father-daughter relation and didn't inform him that movie is about space travel. He had no idea about the scenes.
@@marktamparong8618 Yes and no. According to Zimmer he was given a one page story about a father child relationship and he wrote the soundtrack as a musical love letter to his son. Then Nolan came and listened to it and told him he had better make the movie now.
I was listening to this and my girlfriend felt inspired to finally watch interstellar after I told her this is the soundtrack. This music is not just part of the movie, it is it’s own entity.
This theme is so Cosmic and so Human at the same time. I think that's where the genius of this soundtrack lies. It combines human love and fear with the immensity of the Universe
Can you imagine being in that audience and feeling the height of the music? Must have been awe inducing. I'd love to have witnessed this masterpiece. What a time to be alive with beauty like this.
I saw this when they released it on DVD in 2017, I made it a life goal to watch him live and I finally got to do that in Dubai this year. It's a dream come true.
When I feel too numb to cry, this helps me release. I rarely get through a piece like this with dry eyes. Take care Hun, hoping for brighter days for you
The weight of this song is truly remarkable. This will be remembered for hundreds of years. I don’t think many people understand that. This is greatness, this is genius, this is mastery, this is a gift.
i saw the movie today. tears were flowing like rivers. The end where he meets her again, murph is old and surrounded by family, broke me. i never understood the hype for this song, just appreciated it. now I understand, I do.
Imagine the unbearable pain of knowing that you lied to your child and in the end as a young man seeing your daughter as an old woman in her final moments. At least she understood what it was all for in the end.
It’s not odd to cry when they play STAY. Honestly one of the best pieces I’ve ever heard in my life. The emotional connection I have with that song is wishing my father was still here today and hearing STAY makes me feel sadness but also comfort. Does anyone else feel that way?
As a musician, there are some nights or even tiny moments - there is no specific word to describe it, but I will say - you feel ONE AND SOLID with your band. It's like you're all melting away and becoming ONE again in the song. If you look at 5:31, you can witness such a moment. Check how their bodies are reacting to crescendo. It's like the same. Cause in a sense, they were the same person for a moment.
@@nyrage17 The cutie with the strawberry blond hair on the kettle drums is practically glowing. It just shows they know they're part of something truly special.
Honest to God I've never heard a collection of music able to elicit such powerful emotional reactions in me. The interstellar score is no joke a master work.
I'm so glad i'm not the only one that feels similarly. This body of work is Ethereal to me, literally don't think there's a song that exists that i've heard that engages me the way that this one does. Not to say i've never heard other exceptional music, but to say that this one is just the absolute most moving to me personally. A song I will never forget.
I understand the feeling, but for me, it's "How to Train Your Dragon," especially Test Drive. Other soundtracks that elicit the same emotions are Gladiator and Last Samurai.
Knowing that Hans thought the Organ notes were impossible to play, only for the guy they hired to blaze through them like it was nothing, makes your comment even funnier.
yes i know he wrote this piece but playing without looking at the keys is still extremely impressive even if you have played something a million times. So talented!
Try playing flute or piccolo. You can't see the keys at all. You just trust where your hands and fingers are. I played for 15 or so years but gave it up eventually because I had other things I needed to do.
This composition is the quintessence of life. In my opinion, the composition is divided into several semantic fragments: 1. pathfinding 2. doubt, fall, disbelief in one's own strength 2. Hope 4. achieve something great in your life
80% of the music I listen to is hip-hop, but certain musical scores just absolutely amaze me and create such a powerful feeling inside of me. This is one of them. I would kill to see this man live.
@@brokendrummachine2539music taste is very subjective. and hiphop is also a beautiful form of music, if your pallette allows it. you can express yourself through your words, just like poetry. produce versatile beats, and sample and twist anything else. hiphop is very flexible. i understand that some of the artists are quite irritating, like that colourful rap guy sixnine. but there's a ton of other good artists aswell.
@c4lmchor most of the really good poetic hip hop artists are not main stream or widely heard. Just the gimmicky ones are really put out there. Does the genre such injustice.
When i saw the movie the first time in imax, i loved the soundtrack right away. It makes the movie so much more powerfull. Years later, when i became a father, i truly understood the music. I cannot hear this soundtrack without tearing up. Imho the greatest work of him.
This is the greatest piece of music ever composed. This will live forever like the 5th Symphony. It’s that good Stop trying to classify it as just a sci-fi movie music
It's almost as if they made the movie for this music , it carries weight , it's arrangement is masterful , A truly remarkable assembly. Let's not forget , Guthrie Govan , the legend on guitar
Zimmer had Nolan write him a letter without talking about the entire movie or the plot, just the feels, as they say. Nolan did, and Hans wrote this about that letter, and it's exactly how you imagined. Nolan said he needed to write the movie because Hand already wrote this legendary shii for it
Fun fact, when Hans wrote the bass melody for the film, Nolan never told him the theme of the movie nor the genre - he just said “Make me something” and Hans said he wrote something that he wanted to be emotional and it came from his love as a father towards his son and the meaning of being a father. When Nolan first heard it he said it’s weird that’s where you pulled the emotion to write this because the theme of the film is about the love of his father toward his daughter. Like the score was just meant to be
Interstellar is my favorite movie ever: music by Hans Zimmer, Matthew McConaughey is my favorite actor and the subject is the Universe. Absolutely perfect ❤
The Interstellar theme is the closest we have come to portraying the human soul in way that it can be experienced by anyone. Absolutely amazing thing. Very few things can bring instant tears to my eyes and fill me up with awe, joy and excitement at the same time.
I went to his concert in Oslo this year and at the time i had not seen the movie but it was still an amazing experience, the feeling of sitting there while the music tears your body apart is out of this world. Today I saw the movie, 100/10 breaks the scale, I will go to another concert and experience it again, only now I think with the emotional story I know it wil take me even further.
Lock by the algorithm in an infinite loop. From an Interstellar video to the Interstellar movie back to a video. I'm 100% watching the movie again for the 20th time tonight
I can't lie. I feel lucky being the generation to have witnessed his music first-hand. He will be remember as one of the greatest composers of all time in a few centuries, probably studied in music schools etc. And I was the first generation to have listened to his work. How cool is that?
Это просто то что я не когда в этой жизни не слышал лучшего этого шедевра, до самой глубины души, слезы на глазах, это большее чем мы можем представить, это не просто музыка, это что то больше, это наше будущее, это то к чему мы должны придти в ближайшее будущее, мы ещё не осозноëм наш мир для чего мы, но мы на пути к точке понимания!
My love introduced me to Interstellar! I’ve been hooked ever since! We broke up today💔 Jeff, if you ever see this … I love you & I’ll never forget what we shared !!
The film educated us on power of love and it being associated with a extra dimension we use and feel but not fully understand it scientifically. This music; especially the second part which begins with the guitar fully glorifies it and for a while makes you feel so alone and painful on thought of you being away from your loved ones.
Im a father of 3 boys! Every single time i hear this i cant help but to tear up and want to hug my boys! This is powerful! Hans is amazing for this! Thank you sir! And thank you to all those amazing musicians, they are incredible!! Respect!
Don't know for some reason .I cry ..I just cry. When I hear this master piece...it brings all kind of feeling within you... I can't even describe the feeling I get when I hear this epic...blessed to have listened to this epic composition...it's the sound of universe
Close your eyes! Run through all your memory since your birth till date!! So much revitalizing and gives supremacy and makes you feel how previous is human life! Thank you Hans Zimmer for this master piece 🔥
No sé si has tenido la oportunidad de vivir uno de sus conciertos. Si no lo has hecho,te lo aconsejo... Yo lo ví en Viena y no paré de llorar en cada una de ellas jajajaja! Pero ese día mágico,fue que yo no sabía que el repertorio,estaba en la lista la de él último samurái Para mí esa me llega a lo más profundo de mi ser.... Verlo en directo fue impresionante Son todos unos grandes músicos y gracias a estas personas,podemos llenar los oídos de una calidad de música bestial,tanto,que nos lleva a lugares emocionalmente hablando,que ni nosotros conocíamos!!