Тёмный

Keeping Score | Dmitri Shostakovich: Symphony No. 5 (FULL DOCUMENTARY AND CONCERT) 

San Francisco Symphony
Подписаться 35 тыс.
Просмотров 210 тыс.
50% 1

The Fifth Symphony of Dmitri Shostakovich is the story of a fall from grace and redemption. Shostakovich was the golden boy composer until, virtually overnight, his patriotism was questioned and condemned in the most public way possible. Written in 1937 in Stalinist Russia, the Fifth Symphony marked his triumphant return. But the question remains: what did the composer mean to say with this enigmatic music? In scenes filmed in St. Petersburg and Moscow, Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony offer clues to unlocking Shostakovich’s musical secrets and make the case for how this symphony may have saved his life.
Bonus Features:
Full-length concert performance of Shostakovich's Symphony No. 5 by the San Francisco Symphony originally filmed in high-definition 16:9 widescreen and 5.1 surround sound at London's Royal Albert Hall as part of the BBC Proms concert series.
More information about DVD and Blu-Ray discs available here: www.warnerclassics.com/releas...
The music will play on. GIVE TODAY
SFSYMPHONY.org/give
Stay connected with us:
Facebook: / sfsymphony
Twitter: / sfsymphony
Instagram: / sfsymphony
Tumblr: / sfsymphony

Видеоклипы

Опубликовано:

 

18 мар 2020

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 253   
@johnwalters1341
@johnwalters1341 4 года назад
The most memorable concert of my life occurred back in the 1970s, when as a grad student at the University of Hawaii, I used to attend the concerts of the Honolulu Symphony. It was strictly a provincial orchestra in those days, but they scored a coup when Maxim Shostakovich visited and conducted his father's Fifth Symphony. It was a big social event; the Soviet consul flew out from San Francisco to attend the concert. I was still learning music; I had an indifferent recording of the Fifth, but wasn't terribly impressed. But that night Maxim had that orchestra playing WAY over their heads--he took the piece at a much slower tempo than my recording, and it was a positive revelation! The rest of the audience was similarly moved--there was a thunderous standing ovation, and Maxim stood there on the podium with his father's score held over his head. I was a convert there and then, and have remained so all these years.
@steftrando
@steftrando 3 года назад
Is there a write up of that concert?
@davidkuder4356
@davidkuder4356 2 года назад
Beautifully described. Thank you for sharing!!
@HAEngel-cr5gp
@HAEngel-cr5gp Год назад
Tears in my eyes.... I so well understand.
@bobjary9382
@bobjary9382 Год назад
How extraordinary ! These sublime moments are treasures in our memory
@josemiguelmonardesmuller5803
😢Bendito eres por vivir eso MOMENTO Histórico😮🤯29.6.2023
@afrofinka
@afrofinka 4 года назад
Awesome ! As a musician, I can only praise the high quality of the Keeping Score series, musically and graphically. Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra are simply incredible ! Thank you very much !
@Quotenwagnerianer
@Quotenwagnerianer 4 года назад
If you look at this symphony in the context of the 4th Symphony it gets even more impressive of an achievement. In the 4th he did not hide anything of what he was feeling, and it was so obvious that he had to withdraw it before its premiere, because the musicians feared they would all end up in the Gulag for playing it and Shostakovich would probably have been shot. And it ended up being shelved until 1961 when the political climate had changed enough. Then he figured out a way to say the same things in the 5th without being obvious.
@bartrazin
@bartrazin 2 года назад
So true! The fourth is also one of my favorite symphonies and indeed Shostakovich wrote the music without holding back or thinking about any reprimandes. The coda of that symphony would have been enough for a one way trip to Siberia.
@Troubleshooter125
@Troubleshooter125 Год назад
@@bartrazin Oh, jeez! The coda to the Fourth to me is pure magic, and the magic comes almost exclusively from the celesta. I must have heard that work a couple dozen times, but those beautiful, mysterious bell notes fracture me *EVERY LAST TIME!*
@jasonrich4940
@jasonrich4940 4 года назад
This is my favorite symphony. So rich is symbolism and interpretation, without losing the raw human element of the composer. A perfect study in how to write in and encode deep meaning into music. He was such a brave man
@yttrium55
@yttrium55 2 года назад
Normally that much restrictions on creational freedom would have killed the outcome, but Shostakovich managed to present a masterpiece. It must be quite a miracle. I appreciate MTT’s analysis.
@bobhourigan7626
@bobhourigan7626 4 года назад
A very hearf felt thank you to both Michael Tilson Thomas and the members of the SFO. These programs so remind of Leonard Bernstein and the Young Persons Concerts of the 1950s and 60s.
@anti64
@anti64 8 месяцев назад
This was an incredibly well made documentary and analysis, thank you so much for making it available for free to the world!
@nanbokor
@nanbokor 4 года назад
A beautiful analysis of a wonderful symphony. Many thanks to Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony.
@aliciacody9535
@aliciacody9535 2 года назад
I'm literally Lui Lui Ii
@robertbox7666
@robertbox7666 4 года назад
I played this in high school concert band. 2nd trumpet. I loved this music over the last 55 years.
@StuartSimon
@StuartSimon 4 года назад
I really admire how you managed to make a convincing argument how the symphony and its ending are deliberately subversive without having to refer to Shostakovich’s Memoirs. To me, debating the symphony has been pointless since the Memoirs make it all too obvious. What I wanted to discover was the clues in the music, and you helped me do just that,
@scardon1940
@scardon1940 4 года назад
There are arguments that the memoirs are forged in certain areas, which makes it harder to make an argument for either side
@sophiatalksmusic3588
@sophiatalksmusic3588 3 года назад
If you mean "Testimony" when you refer to the "memoirs," most experts do not consider that book reliable. There are debates as to how credible it is, but there's a pretty general agreement it's not 100% accurate. Personally, after reading Shostakovich's letters, it's become apparent to me that "Testimony" did not portray many aspects of him accurately at all, although there are arguments from credible people that its portrayal of his political views are accurate. I've come to my own conclusions on Shostakovich, myself, but these are largely based in primary sources such as letters and documents.
@anteb.k.8396
@anteb.k.8396 3 года назад
@@sophiatalksmusic3588 Be aware that the letters in those times were far too often opened up and read by the communists in power so it would be pointless for Shostakovich to write openly about politics in any letters..
@krozjr5009
@krozjr5009 2 года назад
@@sophiatalksmusic3588 I knew I’d find you here. Of course. Like a flame for a moth, isn’t it?
@jazzporridge1506
@jazzporridge1506 4 года назад
I find the finale harrowing, as an (amateur) player and as a listener. There we are on the strings hammering out our scream hoping the first trumpet makes that high note. Then the crowd roars. What a great performance. And having gone on about the Proms it was very nice to see so many regulars looking so young in this video. Thanks very much in particular to the Russian members of the orchestra for their personal insights: "played for Shostakovich" is quite a thing. As for the staircase, I thought Julian Barnes book 'The Noise of Time' expressed the banality of that terror with exquisite precision. I'd put off watching this one because I find Dmitri's music disturbing, and in our current circumstances... But as QuotenWagner.. says in effect, if Shostakovich could pull off the 5th in his circumstances, what do we have to worry about. Glad I watched. Thanks SFS, MTT, BBC
@sophiatalksmusic3588
@sophiatalksmusic3588 4 года назад
I'm a really big Shostakovich fan, so this was a really interesting video to me. Although I was already familiar with the story of the Fifth Symphony and many aspects of Shostakovich's life, I had never seen the interior of the apartment/museum. This was a wonderful video and Mr. Thomas' conducting and explanations more than deliver, but what really got me was that goddamned STAIRCASE around 30:24. There are some accounts that say that he was so frightened of being arrested, he'd sleep outside his apartment by the stairs with a packed briefcase, fully dressed, so that his family wouldn't see if it were to happen. I'd like to point out that most sources say that the story of him nearly being interrogated most likely wasn't true, however. But nonetheless, this was a fantastic documentary that greatly moved me! Bravissimi to the orchestra and Mr. Thomas!
@BytomGirl
@BytomGirl 2 года назад
The story is true according to my book which was written 100% based on accounts of his friends, aquaintances and family
@selenamorton422
@selenamorton422 Год назад
He also kept a suitcase full of his belongings underneath his desk too.
@miguele.rosario-vega935
@miguele.rosario-vega935 4 года назад
WHAT AN AMAZING PERFORMANCE AND INTERPRETATION!! Thank you MTT, the San Francisco, Symphony, and the BBC for making this documentary and performance available in this platform!
@InCAdocumentaries
@InCAdocumentaries 4 года назад
It has nothing to do with the BBC. It was all created here in San Francisco.
@uralbob1
@uralbob1 4 года назад
My God, this is so striking and beautiful. I'm so greatful for this series.
@cornel999
@cornel999 4 года назад
i played this piece in youth orchestra about 45 years ago. i knew it was dark and dreary, but i didn't really understand the full context of its creation. mostly what i knew was it was really fun to play - the 1st violin part is full of great meat and potatoes fiddling.
@gabbyhyman1246
@gabbyhyman1246 3 года назад
Ha. In youth orchestra I got to play the timpani. Hard to be humble 😂😂
@johannesbowman5327
@johannesbowman5327 4 года назад
Thank you so much! Merci Beaucoup! Grazie mille! Спасибо большая! I loved Keeping Score as a 11-year old. Now I’m 21 and a musician/composer. All thanks to great music and great musicians! Thank you Tilson Thomas, the SF Symphony and all those Beijing the scenes... you inspired me!
@hanzhang99
@hanzhang99 4 года назад
Thank you SFO and MTT. Just like MTT's interpretation on Mahler, it was very thorough analysis of a piece by composer background, music comparison block by block, passage by passage. Such a great video!
@willcoleman2014
@willcoleman2014 3 года назад
I grew to know and love this music without realising any of this history behind it. Now I love it even more. Thanks for posting this!
@scuunjieng
@scuunjieng 4 года назад
Bravissimo this is my favorite music of all and Shostakovich my favorite composer. Thank you Maestro. I have over 15 recordings of this work and have seen over 10 live performances but never had the opportunity to listen to yours. Hope I get the chance to do so.
@zevnikov
@zevnikov 4 года назад
Me the same. I have all recordings of Shostakovich ever published ;)
@joekbaron1205
@joekbaron1205 2 года назад
@@zevnikov i know this is a lot to ask and for everyone it’s different but can you tell me your favourite recording of each individual symphony of shostabear?
@zevnikov
@zevnikov 2 года назад
@@joekbaron1205 Barshai the whole cycle, especialy 15, 14 Nelsons 10,9,5,6 Wyjung Mung Chung , 4th...
@anthonyb4479
@anthonyb4479 4 года назад
The five dislikes are stalin
@josephcarlbreil5380
@josephcarlbreil5380 4 года назад
That's Stalin with a capital "S".
@BytomGirl
@BytomGirl 4 года назад
Joseph, it's capital for those who like him, for those of us who despise him, he is undeserving of respect
@TWOCOWS1
@TWOCOWS1 4 года назад
Why, you thought the dogmatic stalinists are dead? no. there is Antifa setting fire to universities who dare inviting speakers they do not like. why not thumbing down Shostakovich in here??
@peted1594
@peted1594 4 года назад
haha
@joshuagearing937
@joshuagearing937 4 года назад
The fourteen dislikes are the returns of Stalin...
@blsharpley
@blsharpley 4 года назад
Thank you so much for putting this series up! Please keep it posted!
@crafend6040
@crafend6040 3 года назад
Just one thing: Thank you, this was amazing. The "dead end" notes in the credits were haunting.
@andreahillmer882
@andreahillmer882 4 года назад
my jaw dropped when I saw this video
@psycalibur4291
@psycalibur4291 4 года назад
The chorus of coughing that ensues at the end of the first movement really personifies the world events that would soon take place not long after this concert.
@stickom
@stickom 4 года назад
This movie is... PHENOMENAL, thank you!
@Tinaso2010
@Tinaso2010 4 года назад
Thank you so much ....
@turriwiet
@turriwiet 4 года назад
It reached me. Thank you!
@ellastarrr1st149
@ellastarrr1st149 10 месяцев назад
Very interesting comments on my favourite composer, this is real music, I fell in love with it when I was just a kid the records I bought purchased had to be by the USSSR Symphony orchestra it had a sound of its own.
@bhsisthebest
@bhsisthebest 10 месяцев назад
Wonderful video and sommentary. Thank you.
@zevnikov
@zevnikov 4 года назад
Dear Michael. This is simply amazing presentation. Greetings from Gimnazija Kranj Symphony Orchestra.
@davidalbrecht6507
@davidalbrecht6507 4 года назад
What a great series - just discovered this - thanks for posting!
@JohnMassari
@JohnMassari Год назад
Incredible documentary. Thank you 🙏
@FaustoSaporito
@FaustoSaporito 4 года назад
Amazing! Awesome! All of you!
@wolfgangresch1650
@wolfgangresch1650 4 года назад
What that man lived through, and what he accomplished regardless-speechless-Thanks and God bless you Maestro and SFO for taking the time to educate and entertain us 🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗
@ThePubliusHuldah
@ThePubliusHuldah 3 года назад
Thank you for your fascinating and enlightening walk-thru of this Symphony.
@Vajrayogini-pp1gr
@Vajrayogini-pp1gr Месяц назад
Wow... What a brilliant documentation👍🏽 thank you
@renatinn
@renatinn 4 года назад
Thank you
@carlnorman7403
@carlnorman7403 3 года назад
Awesome. What a fascinating and insightful analysis of this great work.
@davebournemouth
@davebournemouth 4 года назад
Really excellent programme, so informative,I learned so much. Thank you.
@TheJojoaruba52
@TheJojoaruba52 4 года назад
Fantastic music history course. Really brilliant interpretations and videography.
@lorenaguineatrigo3658
@lorenaguineatrigo3658 3 года назад
Bravo por este programa! Muchas Gracias. Un saludo desde España
@occultist_10
@occultist_10 Год назад
I learned so much from this. Thanks to the filmmakers and interpreters.
@s02229
@s02229 3 года назад
I am so thankful for this. I’ve been reading books about Shostakovich because he is one of my favorite figures. His life poses so many questions like how to live with integrity and write for his people and for himself despite basically being held at gun point. He made a lot of mistakes especially nearing the end of his life, (quite possibly) unknowingly condemning his colleagues. Should he be forgiven? His story is one of humanism and human frailty. But because of my limited musical knowledge, I couldn’t quite connect these with clues in his music even though I enjoy them immensely. Thanks again for this. Looking forward to discovering other masterpieces through this series and hoping that you will make another one for Shostakovich’s other works if possible
@LeongParenting
@LeongParenting Год назад
Love this series! ❤
@Skitdora2010
@Skitdora2010 9 месяцев назад
This was very nice. It reminds me of the type of concerts our family used to go to when I was a kid at the Knickerbocker Arena (Then Pepsi Arena and now MVP Arena) and The Saratoga Performing Arts Center.
@sergiuarapan5023
@sergiuarapan5023 3 года назад
Thank you very much for revealing the depths of the genius of Shostakovich, who encoded in his music the Russian-Soviet history and people's sufferings and tragedy.
@curtisgrindahl446
@curtisgrindahl446 3 года назад
THIS is great viewing! Thanks to MTT and the San Francisco Symphony for this excellent presentation. I honestly don't care at all for this music, but putting it in historical context makes it meaningful for me.
@user-eq7jc3om1v
@user-eq7jc3om1v Год назад
Очень сильное исполнение до слез до мурашек СПАСИБО!!!!!!!!!!!
@pierogiuseppetaiti8507
@pierogiuseppetaiti8507 4 года назад
splendide esecuzioni
@technik-lexikon
@technik-lexikon 4 года назад
2:43 that trumpet melody reminds of the burlesque finale of DSCH's Violin Concerto
@robinblankenship9234
@robinblankenship9234 2 года назад
Late 2021, in the U.S. Truly a symphony for our time.
@jazzporridge1506
@jazzporridge1506 3 года назад
The timpanist never takes his eyes off MTT This is such a moving piece of work. Thanks to all of you involved in its production (especially the first hand Russian participants)
@_alicia__
@_alicia__ 4 года назад
That low horn excerpt S L A P S
@slavaaa100
@slavaaa100 6 месяцев назад
Спасибо
@peterhaslund
@peterhaslund 2 года назад
This is among the most moving symphonies of all eras for me, and it takes a brute to not hear the suffering of ordinary peoples under Stalin
@Raulrpar
@Raulrpar 4 года назад
Great material. Would it be possible get the subtitles in many languages too? Many thanks
@DariusSarrafi
@DariusSarrafi 3 года назад
Shostakovich wasn't the only one persecuted. Khachaturian and Prokofiev were equally condemned.
@gibbogle
@gibbogle 2 месяца назад
Millions were persecuted, hundreds of thousands killed.
@DariusSarrafi
@DariusSarrafi 2 месяца назад
@@gibbogle I didn’t know they had millions of composers!
@gibbogle
@gibbogle 2 месяца назад
@@DariusSarrafi Nor did I!
@gibbogle
@gibbogle 2 месяца назад
I'm watching this while reading Elizabeth Wilson's excellent book "Shostakovich A Life Remembered". Thomas's interpretation is consistent with Wilson's.
@murrayaronson3753
@murrayaronson3753 4 года назад
Marshal Tukhachevsky, who was a music lover, was a patron and friend of Shostakovich, was purged and executed during the Great Terror. This hit close to home for Dmitri Shostakovich. Shostakovich was supposed to be an atheist, but I saw a cross oh his tombstone when I visited his grave in Novadevichy cemetery in May 2013.
@gibbogle
@gibbogle 2 месяца назад
I doubt that DDS put it there.
@nenadpetrovic5595
@nenadpetrovic5595 2 года назад
Shostakovich 's Glory to Stalin, to the detriment of the audiences, remains to this day forgotten. The world needs brave ppl who will resurrect this great work. Shame that music remains politicised.
@richardwilliams473
@richardwilliams473 3 года назад
I find it amazing that timpanist David Herbert has adapted to the German configuration of his drums!
@MrSNJ582
@MrSNJ582 3 года назад
RU-vid: How many commercials do you want to cut between music? SFS: YES!
@absolutevideo1899
@absolutevideo1899 3 года назад
His LSO performance is truly the best on RU-vid the clarity and virtuosity of the orchestra are out of this world...
@abgrunder
@abgrunder 4 года назад
26:16 an old man giving out kittens to lovers :)
@josephcarlbreil5380
@josephcarlbreil5380 4 года назад
Shostakovich was a cat lover. Good on him.
@andrewnguyen1220
@andrewnguyen1220 3 года назад
I thought was a heart or lung
@alvarito45
@alvarito45 4 года назад
It's weird to see a man at the harp! First time I find this. Marvelous Shostakovitch in all his music, but I It's magic, and I it's character, it's symbolism.
@yungheehong5613
@yungheehong5613 2 года назад
I first heard this symphony in 2022, the week when Russia invaded Ukraine - couldn't get any more relevant for me
@igorshadrin8729
@igorshadrin8729 Год назад
What about other countries invaded by USA? :))
@e.hutchence-composer8203
@e.hutchence-composer8203 4 года назад
48:26, that interruption killed me
@johannschneider6372
@johannschneider6372 3 года назад
Дмитрий Дмитриевич is definitely the greatest composer of the Post-Wagnerian music.
@jamescpotter
@jamescpotter 3 года назад
My question is if he was under intense scrutiny to conform to the ideology of the times, was his symphony sincere and genuine? Was he voicing his own voice or was he placating to the autocracy and writing what they expected? Or perhaps this is a symphonic protest against the regime? Because music can appear ambiguous, Shostakovich get's the final word beautifully orchestrated in each phrase and bar. The 5th is my favorite symphony of all symphonies including Beethoven, Tchaikovsky, and especially Mahler. Whatever his intentions, Shostakovich penned the perfect symphony. It is exquisite!
@MOTOMINING
@MOTOMINING 3 года назад
Aside from the amazing music and and narrative by the conductor, I find it intriguing that everybody waits for a break in the music and coughs all at once.
@steftrando
@steftrando 3 года назад
1:41:46 this part right here is godlike
@aldeayeah
@aldeayeah 2 года назад
The heroic theme at the beginning of the 4th movement is reprised as a dirge. Brilliant. From that part up until the end, that's some of my favorite music ever.
@doklincoln6314
@doklincoln6314 3 года назад
Thank you. Osu
@marcelouz1
@marcelouz1 Год назад
Shostakovich had to compose this symphony, because some of his earlier works were considered by Stalin and the Soviets as counterrevolutionary music, so with all the terror and fear the dictatorial regime composed the 5th with a memorable name "An artist's response to a fair criticism", without realizing that he had written his best symphony, received with an avalanche of applause that lasted almost half an hour. How ironic! at the same time
@batymahn
@batymahn 3 года назад
I remember hearing it the first time in the winter of 1978 at the National Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Mstislav Rostropovich. It was a Standing Ovation. To me it speaks so much to our time; with so much justice not being realized (Epstein) and nothing being done about it. You feel helpless but always hopeful. Even now the Fifth Symphony gives me comfort.
@albertmm96
@albertmm96 Год назад
To reduce Shostakovich's music to his reaction to the political situation is a great mistake. By the way, Anna Andreyeva, the wife of the great Russian visionary writer Daniel Andreyev , ( they both were present at the premiere) gave us another vision of the last movement 's coda: it's a prayer. If we think about it in this way, the coda unexpectedly results positive: it's the immortal faith in the triumph of the good over the evil
@gibbogle
@gibbogle 2 месяца назад
It wasn't just about the Soviet political situation. He was aware that Fascist authoritarianism can take many forms.
@albertmm96
@albertmm96 2 месяца назад
@@gibbogle you haven't got what I was saying.
@gibbogle
@gibbogle 2 месяца назад
@@albertmm96 If you say so.
@paytporik
@paytporik 2 года назад
My Shostakovich.......
@tdot2413
@tdot2413 Год назад
eerie parallels of today in the beginning
@steftrando
@steftrando 3 года назад
1:20:55 god this part sounds so cool
@pprudencio1966
@pprudencio1966 2 года назад
Not gonna lie, the “happy” version of the ending actually sounds really good in an unironic way, very Mahler-esque.
@mostafaasemani4839
@mostafaasemani4839 5 месяцев назад
The best performance was conducted by Gianandrea Noseda in Proms 2004.
@becut95
@becut95 Год назад
I'm hearing about the Gulag and then suddenly a beer ad appears. Paradoxes of modern life I suppose
@SarekOfVulcan
@SarekOfVulcan 3 года назад
Are the 22 dislikes because of the ads that keep popping up in the middle of phrases, instead of between movements?
@ahmetibin3684
@ahmetibin3684 4 года назад
1:06:57 -Tarkan
@user-uf6hu6oy8o
@user-uf6hu6oy8o 5 месяцев назад
I felt Shostakovich made the symphony for not only soviet but for his posthumous work.
@hrvojebartulovic7870
@hrvojebartulovic7870 Год назад
You didn't mention his most striking feature: his glasses!! In prominence comparable only to Mahler's and Lenon's!
@nenadpetrovic5595
@nenadpetrovic5595 2 года назад
Mravinsky and Shostakovich were friends and we should turn to Mravinsky's interpretation to find out how Shostakovich liked it played.
@SolidBanner
@SolidBanner 5 месяцев назад
Does anyone know the name of the circus theme that plays at 19:14?
@Majestad15
@Majestad15 Год назад
What's that piece at 4:06? Ik it says golden age ballet but which part???
@richardsmith3121
@richardsmith3121 3 года назад
Just watched the documentary - very informative if ruined by 17 advert breaks in a little over 50 minutes. Getting ridiculous..
@gibbogle
@gibbogle 2 месяца назад
Get Adblock Plus (free). I see no ads.
@ilfagocchio
@ilfagocchio 4 года назад
which piece is from 4'06'' to 5'42''?
@michaweinst3774
@michaweinst3774 4 года назад
It's an excerpt from Shostakovich's ballet The Golden Age
@darkgreenambulance
@darkgreenambulance 3 года назад
Appreciate so many comments! Poor old Russia - some things never change - see what is happening today ..............!
@serendrixsan9191
@serendrixsan9191 4 года назад
4:32 what is this piece? Pls help
@tritonfryar2043
@tritonfryar2043 4 года назад
The Golden Age by Shostakovich
@FraudMonet
@FraudMonet 4 года назад
Dance of the two soviet soccer players, from “The Golden Age”.
@andrewlankford9634
@andrewlankford9634 3 года назад
51:15 He loved big brother.
@aldeayeah
@aldeayeah 3 года назад
Wow, I made the same connection. It really feels like the same kind of ending.
@aldeayeah
@aldeayeah 2 года назад
Or this other 1984 quote: "If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face - forever.”
@emastilak
@emastilak 4 года назад
Can someone identify the music playing around the 5:00 minute mark? Thank you
@pgustavwestin
@pgustavwestin 4 года назад
it's from his "Golden Age" Suite. I believe it is mentioned at around the 4:06 mark
@serendrixsan9191
@serendrixsan9191 4 года назад
But which part?
@emastilak
@emastilak 4 года назад
@@serendrixsan9191 I finally tracked it down. It is "Dance of the Black Man and 2 Soviet Football Players" from Act I Scene 2 of the Golden Age.
@laurencebeck7072
@laurencebeck7072 Год назад
Horn Section expression : 1:13:42
@jtobiasthomasrose
@jtobiasthomasrose 2 года назад
Can someone tell me the art piece at 3:27?
@pnl4660
@pnl4660 Год назад
The Demon seated by Mikhail Vrubel
@makyhsmakyhs6766
@makyhsmakyhs6766 2 года назад
At what year was the concert
@chezfeliz
@chezfeliz 3 года назад
what piece is playing at 30:00?
@alexanderbayramov2626
@alexanderbayramov2626 3 года назад
It's around the middle of the 3rd movement
@janicewolk6492
@janicewolk6492 8 месяцев назад
I would also point out that the Soviet Union sponsored the arts which did let kids from Siberia get to St Peterburg or Moscow if they displayed great talent.
@asmakabbous7019
@asmakabbous7019 5 месяцев назад
so exacerbe i can bearly listen to 20 out of 40 min introspectation
Далее
Yevgeny Mravinsky: Soviet Conductor, Russian Aristocrat
54:53
НОВАЯ ПАСХАЛКА В ЯНДЕКСЕ
00:20
Просмотров 273 тыс.
Leonard Bernstein Discusses Shostakovich's 9th Symphony
18:16
Why Listen to Mahler?
20:11
Просмотров 641 тыс.
Stray Kids "Chk Chk Boom" M/V
3:26
Просмотров 33 млн
Miyagi & Эндшпиль - RudeBoys (Official Audio)
3:16
지민 (Jimin) 'Who' Official MV
3:28
Просмотров 14 млн