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Igor Stravinsky - Septet [With score] 

Damon J.H.K.
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-Composer: Igor Fyodorovich Stravinsky (17 June 1882 - 6 April 1971)
-Performers: European Soloists Ensemble, Vladimir Ashkenazy (piano)
Septet for Clarinet, Bassoon, Horn, Piano, Violin, Viola and Cello, written in 1953
00:00 - I. ♩ = 88
02:52 - II. Passacaglia, Circa ♩ = 60
07:43 - III. Gigue, dotted ♪ = 112-116
For much of their two respective careers Igor Stravinsky and Arnold Schoenberg were seen by the musical establishment as representing two opposite ideals of twentieth-century music -- two mutually exclusive stylistic and technical mentalities that, in the end, couldn't possibly be reconciled to one another. Certainly the two composers, by virtually ignoring each other during their lengthy period as neighbors in Hollywood during the 1940s, did little to discourage the animosity that frequently flared up between their respective followers. We now know, however, how wrong that idea was, for almost immediately after Schoenberg's death in 1951 Stravinsky began to explore -- tentatively at first, then with more surety of purpose -- the possibilities that the Second Viennese School's developments might offer him. It is as if composing The Rake's Progress in the late 1940s had finally purged Stravinsky of most of his so-called Neo-Classical urges and left him in a position to begin investigating other vehicles of musical thought. One of the earliest works in which we can really begin to see the incorporation of serial techniques (note that this does not by any means mean twelve-tone techniques -- at least not yet) into Stravinsky's own personal idiom is the remarkable Septet for clarinet, bassoon, horn, piano, violin, viola, and cello, composed during 1952 and 1953 and first performed at Dumbarton Oaks in early 1954.
To be fair, even as early as the 1920s Stravinsky had used recurrent pitch organizations in a way very similar in detail -- if not sound -- to the fundamentals of Second Viennese School's thinking. In the Septet, however, the manner of working such basic intervallic units out on a structural level can rightly be heard as something new in the composer's music.
At the beginning of the first of the work's three movements we find the clarinet singing out the seven note figure -- A-E-D-C-B-A-C sharp -- from which almost all of the thematic and accompanimental material of the entire work is derived. The seventh pitch is certainly of great significance over the course of the work: the conflict of C natural and C sharp within an A tonal context shows, as does the basic superficial style and rhythmic layout of this first movement, a strong connection to the Neo-Classical phase the composer was just beginning to depart from; perhaps even more significantly, that same chromatic alteration is made into the basis of all the chromatic meanderings of the theme used in the second movement.
The second movement, Passacaglia, is built on repeated statements of a sixteen-note subject that begins with the first five pitches (transposed up a fifth) of our intervallic unit. Throughout the seven variations (and one final statement) that make up the movement, all of the basic serial operations are made -- inversion, retrograde, and the various combinations of the two.
The same intervallic material is used as the basis for four fugal episodes -- the first and third featuring the strings, the second and fourth the piano and winds -- in the final, quick-paced Gigue. Throughout the second and third fugues, the piano echoes the music of the string fugues while the woodwinds go off on their own, justifying the idea -- hinted at all along (including in the title) -- that the piano is really a kind of mediator between the two disparate instrumental trios.
[allmusic.com]

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31 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 370   
@resteds6348
@resteds6348 6 лет назад
Came here for Petscop, stayed for the good music.
@cyclcrclicly9840
@cyclcrclicly9840 6 лет назад
oh hey the guy is alive cool
@jonasdanielseneskeland3001
@jonasdanielseneskeland3001 3 года назад
What is petscop?
@ncrt.e.d.d9072
@ncrt.e.d.d9072 3 года назад
Same
@crusty_croissant
@crusty_croissant 3 года назад
@@jonasdanielseneskeland3001 it's a kind of creepypasta in the form of a let's play (hope my English isn't bad)
@definitelyahumanperson
@definitelyahumanperson 2 года назад
@@jonasdanielseneskeland3001 a rabbit hole u dont wanna get into
@stoplight2554
@stoplight2554 6 лет назад
For the OP and others, Petscop is a horror-ish webseries and it's most recent installment referenced this song.
@plekkchand
@plekkchand 6 лет назад
It's not a "song", for God's sake...
@ClancyXanecrest
@ClancyXanecrest 6 лет назад
@plekchand Maybe tone down the elitism a smidgen
@definitelynotethan7959
@definitelynotethan7959 5 лет назад
@@ClancyXanecrest LOL
@mackenziecleland9664
@mackenziecleland9664 5 лет назад
@@ClancyXanecrest It isn't elitist to insist on proper terminology.
@ClancyXanecrest
@ClancyXanecrest 5 лет назад
@@mackenziecleland9664 Nice of them to suggest the proper phrasing. Oh wait, they didn't.
@culwin
@culwin 4 года назад
This guy was a master on the Needles Piano
@howdoipickaname9815
@howdoipickaname9815 2 года назад
my favorite was his "care's melody"
@alexxperepolov6447
@alexxperepolov6447 2 года назад
Yes, but for fairness' sake it should be told that syncopation on pizzicato in basses is slightly delayed
@davinou26
@davinou26 3 года назад
I came here with Petscop but what I found here is wow. Stravinsky's music is so interesting. The second movement is mélodic, dark and complex at the same time. I've never heard something like that. What a masterpiece!
@matraquematrice4754
@matraquematrice4754 2 года назад
Same XD
@sweetjohnson5076
@sweetjohnson5076 2 года назад
Same shit lol
@Mrbagel-ui4cc
@Mrbagel-ui4cc Год назад
@@matraquematrice4754 ye
@johnryskamp2943
@johnryskamp2943 Год назад
Have your hearing checked. Your mind, too.
@Dragynn999
@Dragynn999 6 лет назад
Amazing how the classic music fans and petscopfans clash with each other. IMO the classic music lovers here should be happy that a few might discover the beauty of classic music because someone decided to make it a part of their narative. Children behave and everything will work out just fine.
@user-xh6eg1ts1t
@user-xh6eg1ts1t 5 лет назад
Dragynn999 I agree
@kylej.whitehead-music309
@kylej.whitehead-music309 5 лет назад
You can be simultaneously happy that new people are listening to this and annoyed that they all feel the need to announce "I'm here from [stupid TV\Netflix thing]! Anyone else?" It's annoying. I'm sure half of them just skip to the section that appears in the show anyway. I'm also not thrilled that this music will now always be associated with some TV show. It takes away from Stravinsky's original intentions. He didn't write this piece to be intertwined with popcorn fodder. Obviously it's nice that people are discovering good music, but that doesn't mean the comments aren't annoying.
@AzykSteam
@AzykSteam 5 лет назад
I dont see Blonde Redhead complaining tho
@AzykSteam
@AzykSteam 5 лет назад
Just cause your butthurt doesnt mean you have to call the series a trash netflix series (not even in netflix lol)
@noelleholiday61
@noelleholiday61 5 лет назад
@@kylej.whitehead-music309 my guy. Its not a trash tv or netflix thing. It's an actually-pretty-neato youtube thing
@codascheuer8426
@codascheuer8426 2 года назад
I’m a petscop fan and a classical music fan. People need to realize those two things aren’t mutually exclusive.
@NoeticSystem
@NoeticSystem Год назад
I've never even heard of Petscop before. I used to listen to Stravinsky's Septet while playing Minecraft, lol.
@TheTaiylorWallace
@TheTaiylorWallace 5 лет назад
To everyone getting elitist versus the Petscop folks: You should be glad they're here. A game introduced people to a piece of classical music. I can guarantee at least a handful of people will take this as a jumping-off point into a RU-vid dive of classical music, and it may lead to some people choosing their favorite pieces by different composers. And even if they don't dive into compositions and beautiful music, they know more about at least one and may call back to it and remember it in the future. Always be glad that someone is looking at something you like, even if they lack the experience and knowledge to appreciate it as deeply. It is important to share what we ourselves feel is important, and it is so very important to share the arts and music in a day and age when schools are shutting down arts programs and adults are coming into the world with no real culture, especially in America. It pains me in my very soul when I meet people who don't care about music or art or any form of expression and entertainment other than television or viral videos. I met someone the other day who didn't even know Tchaikovsky and the Nutcracker Ballet existed, like had genuinely never heard a whole piece or known what it was from. So please, welcome others, be accepting of other peoples' interests even if they don't interest you. This kind of 'no gamer nerds allowed' elitism is exactly what makes fanbases toxic and causes the vocal minority to do and say awful things to random people. It shouldn't be 'us vs. them.' It should be 'oh, they want to see what we like? Cool, they get to be part of us for a while, and we'll teach them about what we love!'
@Very-Uncorrect
@Very-Uncorrect 5 лет назад
TLDR
@TheTaiylorWallace
@TheTaiylorWallace 5 лет назад
@@Very-Uncorrect You want a Tl;Dr? Here you go: you're being a dick, and elitism helps no one.
@GlowZoe
@GlowZoe 5 лет назад
Taiylor Wallace game? It's not a game? It's a web series
@GlowZoe
@GlowZoe 2 года назад
@Gregor Kerr a game that does not exist therefore its still just a webseries
@autumn7719
@autumn7719 3 года назад
never in my life would i see arg horror fans and classical music enjoyers fighting it out in a comment section but yet, here we are!
@adamant_will
@adamant_will 6 лет назад
If you're here from Petscop, the second movement starts at 2:52
@katebahr1480
@katebahr1480 6 лет назад
William Blevins thanks! :)
@badsideoftherandomness320
@badsideoftherandomness320 6 лет назад
Hey do you think this is what Paul playing in Petscop 11 yet it was stated in 12?
@duhskuh
@duhskuh 6 лет назад
Bad Side of the Randomness it was played in the quitters roomin petscop 7
@Sanjidub
@Sanjidub 6 лет назад
What? petscop? who's here from petscop? not me, that's for sure, you guys, and your petsco... it's 2:52? right?
@bk2active
@bk2active 5 лет назад
thanks
@KiwiTrek
@KiwiTrek 6 лет назад
For those who came for Petscop, the 2nd movement is played in the Quitter's room, if you didn't notice.
@cyclcrclicly9840
@cyclcrclicly9840 6 лет назад
woaH that is some SHARP hearing you got there nice and nice
@jacobthesomething
@jacobthesomething 6 лет назад
i dont know what a movement is as i am retarded can someone explain
@SupaBlue64
@SupaBlue64 6 лет назад
A movement is a section of a song that typically separates itself from other parts of the song. A mini song if you will. This song has three and is separated by a very long rest (AKA a pause) indicated by the conductor in performance. However, if movements are used in modern day music (Which they rarely are.) they're typically strung together without a rest in between and rely completely on a change in tone and lyrics. The best example of this a probably Green Day's song: Jesus of Suburbia. There are five movements in that song. And that's like 3000x more information than you need to know. XD
@adamant_will
@adamant_will 6 лет назад
A lot of classical music is split up into separate sections called "movements." Movements in a piece often differ from each other in style, speed, or even key but can share themes and passages. If you don't know that a piece has movements, it will sound like the musicians are playing lots of small songs because they most often come to a full stop between movements.
@jacobthesomething
@jacobthesomething 6 лет назад
William Blevins thanks
@looney1023
@looney1023 6 лет назад
That last chord is crazy! What an interesting piece. The first movement is stunning
@person26dx
@person26dx 2 года назад
as a classical music nerd who also really loves and treasures petscop, when this piece was mentioned in the latter i had this really joyful moment of "hey a thing i like referenced another thing i like!" especially since afaik it isn't particularly well known to people who aren't also classical nerds. i've always wondered what the intent was in referencing this particular work, and how petscop's creator came across it in the first place.
@codascheuer8426
@codascheuer8426 Год назад
In one of game theory’s videos on petscop he talks about the significance of the septet and how it fits in with petscop’s story. To give a simplified version, it has to do with the fact that the 2nd movement is tied to the rebirthing process, which makes sense considering that the first movement of this piece is in Stravinsky’s neoclassical style, and the 3rd movement being in his serialist style, with the 2nd movement being the transition between the two (basically Stravinsky “rebirthing” himself as a composer). And the fact that it’s a passacaglia and uses 12-tone serialism also ties into the story. It was incredibly well chosen piece
@GianNzrneMCmlgn
@GianNzrneMCmlgn 5 лет назад
I can see many smiley-faces with the notes.
@paulamrod537
@paulamrod537 4 года назад
Soon hereafter Stravinsky changed to a completely different style. Agon for example. This piece still has resemblance to his music since 1917 which represented an incredible amount of wonderful pieces.
@felipe_sh
@felipe_sh 3 года назад
I love how intricate this sounds. It really does an impression that the composer tried to break up with his previous installment and went for something new, against of what he believed.
@gerardbegni2806
@gerardbegni2806 6 лет назад
This was a first step of Stravinsky out of neoclassicism.
@Sacrogus
@Sacrogus 6 лет назад
Gérard Begni but neoclassic yet...
@EdoardoFittipaldi
@EdoardoFittipaldi 3 года назад
After writing so much ugly neoclassical music, some light, something truly musical again! A new beginning!!!
@gerardbegni2806
@gerardbegni2806 2 года назад
@@Sacrogus Yes basically the harmony remains eocalssic as well as some wriing techniques but it is amazing to see how the various cells are distributed and the relationship between them. I do not think that, at that time, Stravisky knew the music of Webern, or in e very superficial way. But there is here something like a fertile soil waiting for hte seeds. So, when Robertcraft will initiate him to Webern's writing technique (mainly through op. 22), il will be rasy and quite natural for Stravinsky to adopt this writing technique while remaining Stravinsky - and I dare to write: retrieveing soms roots of Stravinsky.
@DavidA-ps1qr
@DavidA-ps1qr 2 года назад
@@gerardbegni2806 This is pushing neoclassicism to the limit surely. It never moves from it, merely pushes the boundaries. That's what makes it such an intriguing composition.
@johnryskamp2943
@johnryskamp2943 Год назад
But he never got out of the swamp. Les noces is the last interesting work he wrote. Fool.
@DavidA-ps1qr
@DavidA-ps1qr Год назад
This is a complex septet that only Stravinsky could have written. But it proves that he was equally comfortable writing for a small ensemble as he was writing for a full orchestra (i.e.the Rite of Spring).
@Ohokok_channeledition
@Ohokok_channeledition 2 месяца назад
That first bit was just so jolly and lovely
@knic__8799
@knic__8799 6 лет назад
on the needles
@makotoyukikinnie
@makotoyukikinnie 5 лет назад
I played it wrong
@howdoipickaname9815
@howdoipickaname9815 2 года назад
Do
@howdoipickaname9815
@howdoipickaname9815 2 года назад
It
@howdoipickaname9815
@howdoipickaname9815 2 года назад
Right
@howdoipickaname9815
@howdoipickaname9815 2 года назад
Next
@TeddyLeitner
@TeddyLeitner 6 лет назад
Holy crud this is actually calming
@gusk775
@gusk775 5 лет назад
Reminds me of haunted house music or the music disc “mellohi”
@Tfrne
@Tfrne 4 года назад
The Second Viennese School: As the inventors of the 12-tone method, we clearly have the best understanding of its abilities and limitations, and can make the most creative use of its resources. Igor Stravinsky: Hold my beer.
@joshuaadler8754
@joshuaadler8754 3 года назад
*Scotch
@paulamrod537
@paulamrod537 5 лет назад
An absolute fabulous piece shortly before his final stage with Agon etc.
@bookworm_of_heaven
@bookworm_of_heaven 4 года назад
This is really a breathtaking piece
@thedaychr
@thedaychr 5 лет назад
Stravinskys style its so developed at this point
@Very-Uncorrect
@Very-Uncorrect 5 лет назад
Perfect Everything, This (is) So Clean, Openly Popular
@AzykSteam
@AzykSteam 5 лет назад
Paul Enters The Song Choosen Out Precisely
@yumerasis-vol.alicehe4ven-760
@yumerasis-vol.alicehe4ven-760 5 лет назад
Please Eliminate The Scared Cruel Odd Play game
@NOEYEDGURL
@NOEYEDGURL 4 года назад
im glad i am not the only one coming from petscop
@oscargallegocovarrubias7949
@oscargallegocovarrubias7949 7 лет назад
Wonderful work! Thanks!
@janewarrington9681
@janewarrington9681 2 года назад
Stravinsky was/is/will be for all time.
@alekosthecrow
@alekosthecrow 5 лет назад
Wow he lived a long life. You didn't see many people live that long back then.
@bobygreen8429
@bobygreen8429 4 года назад
Some parts of the first and third acts actually scare me, just the chaos of so many instruments at once. Also, some parts sound like it's being played in reverse even though I know it's forwards, it honestly reminds me of the Beatles' Revolution 9.
@DeflatingAtheism
@DeflatingAtheism 3 года назад
Parts being played in reverse is called retrograde motion. 😀
@MuseDuCafe
@MuseDuCafe 4 года назад
Tonal - Serial, Neoclassical Stravinsky. Hey, if you think it is dry, its still wonderful -- masterly -- music.
@reverendbryan
@reverendbryan 4 года назад
"At night the (human totem) pole would talk to itself, and the chatter wasn't too good." - Don Van Vliet. *note to self; ignore comments* Thank you for posting this. The more Stravinsky in my life, the better!
@Shiropluff
@Shiropluff 6 лет назад
Lovely
@cyclcrclicly9840
@cyclcrclicly9840 6 лет назад
Lovely
@howdoipickaname9815
@howdoipickaname9815 2 года назад
She
@howdoipickaname9815
@howdoipickaname9815 2 года назад
Tripped
@howdoipickaname9815
@howdoipickaname9815 2 года назад
And
@howdoipickaname9815
@howdoipickaname9815 2 года назад
Fell
@oxychim
@oxychim 5 лет назад
God this sounds great
@Xzavier1_
@Xzavier1_ 5 лет назад
I came here from petscop and i was interested to listen this song and its good i like it
@user-xh6eg1ts1t
@user-xh6eg1ts1t 5 лет назад
Evy TheUndying 👍
@Coldd333
@Coldd333 6 лет назад
2nd movement starts at 2:50 ish
@subplantant
@subplantant 7 лет назад
Played this at college. That piano part fucked me up
@xHannaHx33
@xHannaHx33 6 лет назад
Care A too far... u went too far O.O
@ellayea3440
@ellayea3440 3 года назад
When instead of proceeding, you go down the stairs and take a right and become a shadow monster man
@Da_maul
@Da_maul 6 лет назад
Hello to everyone else who feels the need to listen to a music piece when its referenced to in any medium.
@skill_issuezz
@skill_issuezz 3 года назад
Absolutely. Even from an extended creepypasta on the internet lol.
@Da_maul
@Da_maul 3 года назад
@@skill_issuezz I'm pretty sure I saw it referenced in a Visual Novel but yeh
@Tracks777
@Tracks777 7 лет назад
I enjoyed the video! Keep it up!
@Atlas-uy9fs
@Atlas-uy9fs 6 лет назад
The only person who came to this video to actually appreciate the song
@user-xh6eg1ts1t
@user-xh6eg1ts1t 5 лет назад
The third movement sounds like it should be the soundtrack of Eugène Ionesco’s plays
@1undeadmoth
@1undeadmoth 6 лет назад
Wow the comments here got flooded fast.
@paxwallacejazz
@paxwallacejazz 6 лет назад
Sparkling elegant contrapuntal neoclassic Igor. Checkout the Octet.
@radimleher5428
@radimleher5428 3 года назад
Sounds like something what Bach would wrote if he was living at the 20's
@cyclcrclicly9840
@cyclcrclicly9840 6 лет назад
when i last checked, this had 9 comments now it has 24 petscop what have you done
@bad3nergytroll
@bad3nergytroll 5 лет назад
Well.. it got people to listen to some good shit..
@maxcaulfield8211
@maxcaulfield8211 5 лет назад
226
@DemonixTB
@DemonixTB 5 лет назад
hi caaclc
@torikenyon
@torikenyon 3 года назад
Now it has 300
@hope6840
@hope6840 3 года назад
333
@Tfrne
@Tfrne 6 лет назад
I'm here because I love Stravinsky, I have no fucking clue what Petscop is.
@UtsyoChakraborty
@UtsyoChakraborty 7 лет назад
Ah yes!
@milest3560
@milest3560 6 лет назад
OK Pall Do it right next time
@Very-Uncorrect
@Very-Uncorrect 5 лет назад
Screw you.
@editedfalafel2434
@editedfalafel2434 4 года назад
I don't like your profile picture so screw you
@howdoipickaname9815
@howdoipickaname9815 2 года назад
Sad
@JoshSaysStuff
@JoshSaysStuff 3 месяца назад
Alright, so I understand that bringing up Petscop here is controversial, but I just want to say that I’m SO glad I was introduced to this septet through it. Not only is it beautiful and complex; the second movement also emphasizes the way it was referenced in the series. When played on the needles piano, the melody was reduced to a monophonic interpretation of the primary motif. Even in its reductive form, the concept of “you’re never going home” shines through, as every few bars hints at a resolution, but that resolution is withheld from the listener. But in the actual piece? That theme is only amplified. Each instrument plays a few notes of the motif at a time, and the accompanying instrumentation is equally unresolved. There were so many moments when I felt like the interwoven melodic and harmonic lines were ABOUT to resolve to a “home chord”, but they didn’t. There is no key center. There is no home to return to. So sure, you can be mad at me for being exposed to this piece by an online unfiction series. You have every right to feel that way. But personally? I’m just happy I was exposed to something so beautiful and haunting.
@marekvodicka
@marekvodicka 4 года назад
Stravinsky grooves hard
@truBador2
@truBador2 8 месяцев назад
Divine Madness.
@gerardbegni2806
@gerardbegni2806 7 лет назад
ONe of the works that mark the assimilation of serialism by Stravinski.
@hope6840
@hope6840 3 года назад
Disagree and it is Stravinsky
@averysax6429
@averysax6429 3 года назад
The new music Tonal Scale is as thus: 12 7 5 2 3 : 1 4 5 9 14 Not 12 with 7 & 5 BUT 14 with 9 & 5 [2^(1/14)] These are the Tonal Scales growing from f (by cycles of fifths): All Scales build from the first mode: equivalent to Lydian f White keys are = & Black keys are | 12 with 7 & 5 [2^(1/12)] =|=|=|==|=|= {1,8,3,10,5,12,7,2,9,4,11,6} 1thru7are= 8thru12are| 7 with 5 & 2 [2^(1/7)] ===|==| {1,3,5,7,2,4,6} 1thru5are= 6&7are| 5 with 2 & 3 [2^(1/5)] =||=| {1,3,5,2,4} 1&2are= 3thru5are| Now evolving up the other end 5 with 4 & 1 [2^(1/5)] ==|== {1,3,5,2,4} 1thru4are= 5is| 9 with 5 & 4 [2^(1/9)] =|=|=|==| {1,8,3,7,5,9,2,4,6} 1thru5are= 6thru9are| 14 with 9 & 5 [2^(1/14)] =|=|===|=|===| {1,12,3,14,5,7,9,11,2,13,4,6,8,10} 1thru9are= 10thru14are| Joseph Yasser is the actual originator of the realization, that scales develop by cycles of fifths. www.seraph.it/blog_files/623ba37cafa0d91db51fa87296693fff-175.html www.academia.edu/4163545/A_Theory_of_Evolving_Tonality_by_Joseph_Yasser www.musanim.com/Yasser/ The chromatic scale we use today is divided by 2^(1/12) twelfth root of two Instead of moving to the next higher: the 19 tone scale 2^(1/19) nineteenth root of two I decided to go all the way down and back up the other end: So 12 - 7 = 5 & 7 - 5 = 2 & 5 - 2 = 3 Now we enter to the other side: 2 - 3 = -1 & 3 - -1 = 4 & -1 - 4 = -5 & 4 - -5 = 9 & -5 - 9 = -14 ignoring the negatives we have 1 4 5 9 14 Just follow the cycles how each scale is weaved together, as shown above. Each scale has its own division within the frequency doubling, therefore the 14 tones scale is 2^(1/14) fourteenth root of two
@arthurchallat8530
@arthurchallat8530 2 года назад
I dedicate this song to everyone who knows.
@attangfangirl
@attangfangirl 6 лет назад
ughhhh I was hoping the Petscop fanbase wouldn't be "that" fanbase who has to announce their arrival.
@jacobthesomething
@jacobthesomething 6 лет назад
make this top comment
@carlyk4375
@carlyk4375 6 лет назад
no fun allowed
@attangfangirl
@attangfangirl 6 лет назад
If you think annoying the shit out of people is fun then you need to stop existing
@megagustman
@megagustman 6 лет назад
*+ATTangFangirl* And if you think that simply because people leave a "I come from X" comment on a nearly unrelated video they should die then you are the one with the problem not them.
@attangfangirl
@attangfangirl 6 лет назад
megagutsman Yeah it’s pretty obvious I have a problem with obnoxious-ness, that was the intention of my comment
@danielefaraotti8676
@danielefaraotti8676 7 лет назад
ah good ! very
@trashcankyle
@trashcankyle 4 года назад
I found this piece through Petscop but Mvmt 2 is so interesting I'm gonna have to find out more about twelve-tone serialism.
@skill_issuezz
@skill_issuezz 3 года назад
I came here from petscop as well. But I also am a music person. Twelve tone serialism is basically taking a chromatic scale and not using any intervals or scales to create the music. In my opinion it's music that reverses the way we generally think of it. Basically everything but the actual pitch matters lol.
@jamiecisfemalesheher5250
@jamiecisfemalesheher5250 4 года назад
Petscop anyone?
@DavidA-ps1qr
@DavidA-ps1qr 2 года назад
An extraordinary example of neo-classicism.
@ItIsMeTime123
@ItIsMeTime123 6 лет назад
mii channel theme but it's written by stravinsky
@dagsmokeds844
@dagsmokeds844 5 лет назад
Huh, i thought that the classical music was all boring, but i actually like this. Thanks Petscop
@antonb.152
@antonb.152 4 года назад
This is not classical music actually, this is 12 tone serialism which is under a different category
@codascheuer8426
@codascheuer8426 2 года назад
@@antonb.152 No, this is part of contemporary classical music. Stravinsky was a classical composer
@Twentythousandlps
@Twentythousandlps 10 месяцев назад
For most of the 50's IStrav wrote music incorporating elements of both neoclassic and serial thought, as here.
@AlexiaBobadilla
@AlexiaBobadilla 6 лет назад
2:53 this is the part of quitters room
@AlexiaBobadilla
@AlexiaBobadilla 6 лет назад
now i think that is a little bit creepy
@Bugleur
@Bugleur 5 лет назад
How the bassoon can play a low A ? (2nd Movement...)
@tomhsia4354
@tomhsia4354 5 лет назад
Ah, Vladimir Ashkenazy, one of my favorite pianists, especially for Chopin's music.
@miljanaantic8712
@miljanaantic8712 3 года назад
Does someone know where I can get a free score for this piece?
@TheTrueAltoClef
@TheTrueAltoClef 5 лет назад
This all feels so extremely tonal to me, and that raises the question, what defines tonal music, what exactly sounds dissonant. Music theory can't accurately define it, because music is an extremely relative art
@stueystuey1962
@stueystuey1962 Год назад
Webern twice then this. Not bad. 👍🙏
@figloalds
@figloalds 6 лет назад
Came for petscop. Stayed for ... Wow this is actually quite very beautiful. Like Paul would have said: "uh... yeah... ok."
@klauslay2091
@klauslay2091 Год назад
Fließbandarbeiter. Ameisenstraße.
@yetanothermetaname1118
@yetanothermetaname1118 3 года назад
Do trills count as repetitions before the whole series has been stated? 🤔
@Searonix
@Searonix 6 лет назад
petscop kid very smart
@renandes.santana3487
@renandes.santana3487 6 лет назад
for those who knows music and stravinsky (along with petscop, or not): is there a reason to say the second movement is related in any sense to the ideas of birth, being born, or, better yet, being reborn as someone else?
@douwemusic
@douwemusic 6 лет назад
Renan de S. Santana Stravinsky was a tonal composer until Schoenberg died, who was kind of the "founder" of serialism which is atonal by it's nature. This was Stravinsky's first attempt at serialism, which can be seen as "being reborn". Especially since he seemed to have opposed atonal music for a while.
@AzykSteam
@AzykSteam 5 лет назад
Its actually from a note the character finds in a room, it says “Do you remember being born?” The little detail is that this song was playing in the background, so now we all just flooded in to hear this beautiful piece again I dont personally know what it has to do with rebirthing, but i wanted to comment this Just more food for thought
@sirSamBurgers
@sirSamBurgers 2 года назад
Well it depends. The actual reason, I don't really know, but the reason we petscop fans associate it with re-birth is because this peice is played many times through out the game, specifically the second movement. Petscop is the story of a killer, a family, and a reincarnation, which is why petscop fans see it as related to be reborn. Though I'm sure that the reason the second movement was included was because it is actually associated with rebirth, which is what happened to a character in Petscop, Tiara, who got reborn as her killers child, "Care".
@arlekino0792
@arlekino0792 5 лет назад
And how long I started hearing order in chaos? Why there order in chaos?
@pierreemad2220
@pierreemad2220 4 года назад
This piece sounds more impressionist than avant-garde minus the arpeggio abuse and an intended image
@torikenyon
@torikenyon 6 лет назад
_PLAY NEEDLES PIANO NOW_
@Alzter0
@Alzter0 5 лет назад
@BSC0TCH She fell and tripped
@klickonthat5244
@klickonthat5244 4 года назад
Did y'all know that this song was used in the Streets of Rage 3 bad ending? It starts at around 0:36.
@choyikugatsu1228
@choyikugatsu1228 5 лет назад
this is indeed the weirdest piece of classical music I've ever heard but it actually sounds pretty good and has a special taste in it glad I was brought here by petscop
@sweetjohnson5076
@sweetjohnson5076 2 года назад
PETSCOP !
@Abra391
@Abra391 2 года назад
1:30 suddenly we're in a Hitchcock movie
@skylarlimex
@skylarlimex Год назад
stravinsky always ending on a crunchy chord haha
@yearsoffilth
@yearsoffilth 2 года назад
Me when needle piano
@bronkingrn
@bronkingrn 2 года назад
omg its the petscop song
@epsilon347
@epsilon347 6 лет назад
petscop is coming
@cyclcrclicly9840
@cyclcrclicly9840 6 лет назад
s'mae
@christophermacintyre5890
@christophermacintyre5890 5 лет назад
Tin soldiers and Petscop's coming...
@FredrikFazBjorn
@FredrikFazBjorn 5 лет назад
It's here
@bookworm_of_heaven
@bookworm_of_heaven 4 года назад
Petscop: Here I Come
@UoirLocer
@UoirLocer 4 года назад
@@bookworm_of_heaven what No
@linky0064
@linky0064 6 лет назад
Classical music fandom, meet Petscop fandom. Petscop fandom, classical music fandom.
@ricinaddict
@ricinaddict 6 лет назад
Theo Hamilton noooooooo, stop with that. Fandoms are garbage.
@wretchedheaded7
@wretchedheaded7 6 лет назад
When you worship an autistic pedophilic graphic artist so much you look up fan art of his characters and make it your RU-vid profile pic
@linky0064
@linky0064 6 лет назад
Eyes Among ... I'm completely lost as to whom you're refering to. But actually it was drawn for me by Alastair Casey; check him out on RU-vid!
@SophiePukeRainbows
@SophiePukeRainbows 6 лет назад
Eyes Among A+ fandoms are cancer
@noelleholiday61
@noelleholiday61 5 лет назад
All yall insulting folks are just insecure sweaty nerds who dont want to let people enjoy things how they want. I say, if someone wants to show their love for something by drawimg cringey fanart, let them. Etc. Etc.
@shadow_leaf7965
@shadow_leaf7965 2 года назад
Dont mind me, just here from Petscop
@simon5927
@simon5927 6 лет назад
How can you play this alone with a piano ?
@winrar42
@winrar42 4 года назад
You could either only play the piano part. You could also play the Clarinet part for the melody and pick maybe the basson or play both piano part with the left hand.
@howdoipickaname9815
@howdoipickaname9815 2 года назад
or you could play it on the needles piano
@milest3560
@milest3560 6 лет назад
Play Needles Piano Now
@kanghyunkim3764
@kanghyunkim3764 4 года назад
혹시 이 곡이 한국에서 연주된적이 있나요??
@joshuasilva5429
@joshuasilva5429 5 лет назад
I hear a "Dumbarton Oaks" vibe in the first movement, without the stable tonality.
@silveremperor1287
@silveremperor1287 6 лет назад
Has anyone figured out if there is a connection between this and Petscop yet?
@jessem.3808
@jessem.3808 6 лет назад
King Of Spades Duh...The notes??? Haha
@fromthecherryvine
@fromthecherryvine 6 лет назад
The second movement is played in the Quitter's room
@silveremperor1287
@silveremperor1287 6 лет назад
WhyAmIEvanHeere? I gathered. But what's the connection between the Quitter's Room and Stravinsky. Should be a reason why it's played in there.
@fromthecherryvine
@fromthecherryvine 6 лет назад
King Of Spades I don't know if this helps, but I find the description of this video... Very interesting.
@silveremperor1287
@silveremperor1287 6 лет назад
WhyAmIEvanHeere? I agree, but there's no smoking gun yet.
@Loka_a_waterbottle
@Loka_a_waterbottle 5 лет назад
Really interesting music, I kinda get it at one moment but then it switch a little and I get confused and a tad stressed 😅 kinda reminds me of old Disney movies when the instruments try to be scary (and a scared kid I was) like from that movie I don’t remember but do, where I saw a windmill in stormy and windy weather and grasspipey things singing with help of the wind (OwO more windmills? Yes I know petskop but don’t really look at the vids because they creepy af )
@j9rq560
@j9rq560 8 месяцев назад
This was on Petscop??
@lifesoldier
@lifesoldier 4 месяца назад
only a few bars from the second movement
@StuffedLlamaYT
@StuffedLlamaYT 2 года назад
she tripped and she fell and she is lost but the problem is that i am speaking with a playstation controller
@Mobius14
@Mobius14 6 лет назад
streets of rage 3 bad ending at 4:16?
@eyllifrey4465
@eyllifrey4465 3 года назад
Do you remember being born ?
@brharley0546
@brharley0546 5 лет назад
what is petscop? is that a game?
@sodacushion2815
@sodacushion2815 5 лет назад
It's a horror story in the form of a lets play youtube video of a fictional game
@yumerasis-vol.alicehe4ven-760
@yumerasis-vol.alicehe4ven-760 5 лет назад
A true “LIFE” game
@sakihuzi1301
@sakihuzi1301 6 лет назад
Which part was played by pall?
@howdoipickaname9815
@howdoipickaname9815 2 года назад
He didn't play this, it was in the start of Petscop 7
@pablostufff
@pablostufff 5 лет назад
I'm so disappointed with this comment section in general.
@Shadic358
@Shadic358 6 лет назад
Petscop, anyone?
@lucchi018
@lucchi018 6 лет назад
Shadic358 I believe that for a long time People Will be coming here for petscop...
@Phatologico
@Phatologico 6 лет назад
like. a LOT of people
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