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Mahler - Symphony No.5 - Abbado - Lucerne Festival Orchestra 2004 

José Manuel
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Gustav Mahler
Symphony No.5
Claudio Abbado
Lucerne Festival Orchestra, 2004
0:00 - Opening
I.
0:55 - Traeurmarsch. In gemessenem Schritt. Streng. Wie ein Kondukt
13:36 - Stürmisch bewegt. Mit grösster Vehemenz
II.
28:20 - Scherzo. Kräftig, Nicht zu schnell.
III.
45:17 - Adagietto. Sehr langsam.
53:49 - Rondo-Finale. Allegro-Allegro giocoso. Frisch.
1:10:10 - Credits
_________________________
Dear RU-vid User
If you are the COPYRIGHT OWNER of this performance I kindly ask you to first contact me requesting to delete the video but avoiding to fill a complaint to RU-vid administration and I WILL DELETE IT IMMEDIATELY.
I uploaded the video just to promote the music I love.
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Thanks for your understanding

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8 сен 2012

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Комментарии : 1,7 тыс.   
@gustavmahler3840
@gustavmahler3840 3 года назад
One of my compositions. Like that !
@sfbirdclub
@sfbirdclub 3 года назад
Yup! Just like that!
@arkazoo4769
@arkazoo4769 3 года назад
You're full of it! You stole it from me. I'd sue your rear for plagiarism! I bet my lawyer can beat up on your lawyer with his eyes closed.
@gustavmahler3840
@gustavmahler3840 3 года назад
What ! Nope
@percyyang8367
@percyyang8367 3 года назад
hello Mahler dad!!!
@gustavmahler3840
@gustavmahler3840 3 года назад
Hello everyone, I finished my 11th and 12th symphonies now. The 11th's final revision is done but I only finished three movements of the 12th.
@Manu_007
@Manu_007 12 дней назад
2024, anyone here?
@pyrosanguineous
@pyrosanguineous 11 дней назад
Right here!
@ibish9513
@ibish9513 8 дней назад
Until the end of days.
@francescocardamone3393
@francescocardamone3393 8 дней назад
Bawngiorno
@mihaelaserea6035
@mihaelaserea6035 8 дней назад
Yes, me! Just listening.
@kittyonoprich7704
@kittyonoprich7704 7 дней назад
🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
@DaviSilva-oc7iv
@DaviSilva-oc7iv 3 года назад
When I started listening Mahler I just thought it was boring, but now I am discovering a whole new universe of great music, Mahler composed differently from other romantic composers, his music is quite odd but the more I listen to his music the more I realize how great it is. Mahler is an acquired taste.
@tobilori8824
@tobilori8824 3 года назад
true, i think most of his composition is not immediately catchy, but after hearing it a few times, it is very rich and beautiful. If you havent heard it yet, i recommend "ich bin der Welt abhanden gekommen" from the Rückert Lieder. That is played in the movie Birdman, and its really nice. :)
@dhjerth
@dhjerth 3 года назад
Agreed. There's just nothing to grab your attention in Mahler. For a long time, I had no idea how to listen to his symphonies, it all just sounded incoherent and indulgent to me. Then I listened to "Das Lied von die Erde", and loved it, and that made something click, the other symphonies suddenly made sense. Now I love Mahler. I love Maaaahler
@scottmiller6495
@scottmiller6495 3 года назад
@@dhjerth He was the greatest composer of Symphonies by anyone of all time. It started with his Symphony No. 1 which is a landmark work that grabs your heart right from the start! Nobody in history of classical music has been able to achieve this brilliance in such a short amount of time! He only lived 51 short years and composed 10 symphonies that are above and beyond Incredible atleast most people finally agree !!!!!
@Tod_oMal
@Tod_oMal 3 года назад
No matter what I do, I still find Mahler boring. For how long should a continue to discover it?
@dhjerth
@dhjerth 3 года назад
@@Tod_oMal Did you try his lieder? Most are very stormy and unboring
@knownanonymous1691
@knownanonymous1691 3 месяца назад
I want to apologise to myself for not discovering Mahler any sooner💔 but I'm celebrating my 20th birthday with this breathtaking piece of music. This is insanely beautiful
@mohammedtafat1769
@mohammedtafat1769 2 месяца назад
Yes with malher life is wondrful
@davidchukwuocha7052
@davidchukwuocha7052 2 месяца назад
Happy birthday mate !
@dst0212
@dst0212 Месяц назад
Happy birthday
@scottmiller6495
@scottmiller6495 7 дней назад
I love Mahler, listen to his Symphony No 1 and you'll be hooked ! His No. 1 is the Best Composed First Symphony of All Time!!!!!
@davidmoss9926
@davidmoss9926 Год назад
🟦 1st Movement : Trauermarsch 🔸Five part structure: Main section (A) - Trio I (B) - Main Section (A') - Trio II (B') - Coda (A'') ◾Main Section (A) in C-sharp minor 1:01 First part beginning with trumpet solo 2:10 Second part, elegiac character 3:10 First part again (altered) 4:02 Second part again (altered) 5:14 Third part beginning in A-flat major and closing in D-flat major / D-flat minor ◾Trio I (B) in B-flat minor 6:26 First Part 6:48 Second part beginning in E-flat minor 7:13 Third part (linked to the first) in B-flat minor ◾Main Section (A') in C-sharp minor 8:00 First part (altered) 8:53 Second part (altered) 10:00 Third part (altered) in D-flat major 10:48 Transition ◾Trio II (B') in A minor 11:00 First part 11:27 Second part beginning in D minor 11:59 Third part in A minor with collapselike climax ◾12:30 Coda (A'') in C-sharp minor 🟦 2nd Movement : Sturmisch bewegt! Turbulently Rough! 🔸Sonata Form, thematically linked to first movement ◾Exposition 13:37 Main section in A minor, part 1 14:10 Main section, part 2 (trumpet motif prominent) 14:48 Transition (tritone motif in trumpets and inferno figures in woodwinds) 14:57 Secondary section in F minor (new setting of Trio II, 11:00) ◾Development 17:06 Diminished 7th chord with inferno figures 17:10 Development and combination of the motifs from the main section 17:40 Tritone motifs (trumpets, later trombones); inferno figures (woodwinds); sighing in strings 17:54 Monody of the 'lamenting' cellos in E-flat minor 19:00 New setting of secondary section in E-flat minor; contrapuntal combination with motifs from the main section 20:10 Motifs from the main section 20:22 Return to the 'main section' of the first movement (10:00), now in B major 21:08 March-like section beginning in A-flat major, growing in intensity 21:43 Pesante: anticipation of the chorale (in A major) ◾Recapitulation 21:52 Main section beginning in A minor and leading to E minor 22:25 Secondary section beginning in E minor and leading to E-flat minor 24:25 Wuchtig/Weighty : contrapuntal combination of motifs from the secondary sections 25:13 Pesante: Chorale in D major (Vision of Paradise) ◾Coda 26:30 Diminished 7th chord over a nonchord B-flat, main motif of the movement, inferno figures, sighing motifs 26:37 First part of the main section in D minor (a surge of intensificiation leads up to a collapselike climax) 27:23 Area of resolution in A minor 🟦 3rd Movement : Scherzo ◾Main section 28:29 First period (main theme) 28:45 Second period (main theme with modified contrapuntal restatement) 28:56 Third period (variation of the main theme) 29:10 Fourth period (with a new eighth-note theme and a concise rhythmic counter theme beginning in B minor and leading into the substance of the main theme) 29:44 Fifth period 29:54 Sixth period (beginning with the eighth-note theme and leading into the substance of the main theme) 30:34 Seventh period ◾Trio I (in B-flat Major) 30:51 Period 1 31:15 Period 2 ◾Main section (shortened recapitulation) 31:45 Period 1 31:59 Period 2 32:12 Fugato on the eighth note theme ◾Trio II 32:33 First section (of preparatory character) 32:53 Second section (beginning slow and with growing intensity) 33:31 Third section: four line episode in G minor 34:56 Fourth section: New version of the theme, reminiscent of Trio I 35:32 Fifth section: imitative treatment of the theme 36:39 Sixth section: new version of the theme with added reminisces of Trio I and the main theme) ◾Development 37:50 Development and contrasting of the motifs of Trio I and the main theme ◾Recapitulation (greatly modified) Main Section, Period 1 (38:53), 2 (39:08), 3 (39:20), 4 (39:31) 40:07 Trio I 40:23 Trio II combined with the eighth-note theme 41:23 Strongly, motifs of Trio I and of the main theme developed in two large waves of intensification 42:33 New version of the episode from Trio II ◾Coda 44:21 Stretta 🟦 4th Movement : Adagietto 45:25 ◾Popularized in Luchino Visconti’s film Death in Venice, ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-iHB_YWIWkE8.html ◾Its mood and certain melodic turns are related to the Ruckert song Ich bin der Welt abhanden gekommen. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-TzJyIWxjX9o.html ◾Mahler’s declaration of love for Alma! ◾Middle section: quotes the “gaze motif” from Wagner’s Tristan and Isolde. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-hcYjKs_9ov8.html @ 3'10" 🟦 5th Movement : Rondo-Finale ◾Introduction 53:51 Presentation of several motifs that play a role in the fugal passages [note bassoon 54:05 = clarinet in Lob des hohen Verstandes from Das Knaben Wunderhorn @0:06 ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-qrAUpv3e2I4.html] ◾Exposition 54:33 Main section, arranged in bar form = Rondo theme in D major: allegro giocoso. Fresh 55:10 Fugal Part I (D Major) [note 55:27 is a transformation of 25:58] 56:38 Main section : Rondo theme in D major 57:15 Fugal Part II (B-flat major, D major, f-sharp major) 57:41 Secondary section (grazioso) in B major [a metamorphosis of 49:39 from IV] 58:36 Epilogue in B major ◾Development 58:45 Introductory section (flowing) 59:18 Fugal Part III 59:54 Section beginning in C major 1:00:26 Section beginning in B major and modulating to D major 1:01:02 Secondary section in D major, partly treated imitatively and partly provided with countermelodies 1:01:59 Epilogue 1:02:08 Fugal Part IV ◾Recapitulation 1:03:24 Main section varied : Rondo theme in D major 1:04:09 Fugal Part V 1:05:08 Development of the main section in A-flat and A major 1:05:59 Secondary section in G major 1:07:10 Transition [gradually and constantly faster] 1:07:34 Chorale in D major ◾Coda 1:08:20 Stretta 1:08:41 Interesting form of the chorale melody in the horns "the mood is at times reminiscent of the second Wayfarer song ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-6VCpbMPhmWY.html and its wholesome world, as well as the first movement of the 4th with which the Rondo-Finale share some childlike figures", eg. flute @ 55:35 similar to @1:27 ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-YnfhInZLmUQ.html ◾notes based on Constantin Floros : Gustav Mahler The Symphonies, Amadeus Press (1985)
@thepianoturtle9347
@thepianoturtle9347 Год назад
you are my hero
@zoeyadventures2659
@zoeyadventures2659 Год назад
@jps-fun
@jps-fun Год назад
The most valuable player! Not all heroes wear capes!
@47nalva
@47nalva 10 месяцев назад
Excelente trabajo!, muchas gracias David!
@miroslavvilhan8273
@miroslavvilhan8273 10 месяцев назад
Bro..... good job. You are really into classicall form. I bet you wrote an essay about it
@gabrielebatista2723
@gabrielebatista2723 Год назад
As an enthusiast of great classical music I came here not only because of Cate Blanchett's exceptional performance in Tár (in her maestro role) but also because I could not get rid of this mesmerizing piece of music. What a gift it is being able to watch and listen to Claudio Abbado! Surprised how I only came to discover him and Mahler this year, for sure I will not forget them so soon.
@rodrigofurtado5542
@rodrigofurtado5542 Год назад
She is beyond perfection in the movie. And also her performance made me curious about conduction of this masterpiece
@russellbruzek9668
@russellbruzek9668 Год назад
Saw Film last Month, did not care fot it, but, music, was Wonderful. Listing to Mahler 5th Now.CAN't belive SHE is up for an OSCAR????
@obbie1osias467
@obbie1osias467 Год назад
@@rodrigofurtado5542 "Conduction"?😳😳😳
@rodrigofurtado5542
@rodrigofurtado5542 Год назад
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conducting
@rodrigofurtado5542
@rodrigofurtado5542 Год назад
@@obbie1osias467 sorry about my English, Shakespeare…
@slmhcgqu
@slmhcgqu 3 месяца назад
abbado's lucerne mahler cycle is incredible
@scottmiller6495
@scottmiller6495 7 дней назад
His Mahler No. 1 from 2009 is thee best and thrilling with a roaring standing ovation along with his own curtain call after the orchestra leaves, WOW 😳😳😳😳😳
@asl3497
@asl3497 3 года назад
twoset reccomended them, therefore here i am
@LuxiferreArt
@LuxiferreArt 3 года назад
You are fast my boi
@darksiderr_1352
@darksiderr_1352 3 года назад
lol saame
@pxpeiphang9077
@pxpeiphang9077 3 года назад
Same
@8starsAND
@8starsAND 3 года назад
who the fck is twoset? next yt kid streamer?
@enriqueandres1998
@enriqueandres1998 3 года назад
@@bies22 no it doesn't matter.
@progresso2023
@progresso2023 8 лет назад
We miss you Abbado !
@themike97_58
@themike97_58 8 лет назад
+Daniel Oliveira I don't think anybody now or past ever put so much emotion into conducting as did Abbado.
@progresso2023
@progresso2023 8 лет назад
Yes I agree with you
@mydogskips2
@mydogskips2 8 лет назад
Valery Gergiev. Perhaps Solti. Dudamel.
@vincentbourgon2517
@vincentbourgon2517 7 лет назад
allow me to suggest Yannick nezet séguin
@TheRemyWagner
@TheRemyWagner 7 лет назад
Bien sûr!!
@alirezapajouhandeh9793
@alirezapajouhandeh9793 3 года назад
How could a piece be both intense and comforting at the same time😍
@scottmiller6495
@scottmiller6495 3 года назад
Because of Mahler and Abbado!!!!!
@DavidD-KingWolf65
@DavidD-KingWolf65 3 года назад
@@scottmiller6495 the greats. I really liked Bernstein until seeing Abbado. A conductor of true enjoyment and understanding deserves praise and I wish he was still living by this time that I know of him.
@scottmiller6495
@scottmiller6495 3 года назад
@@DavidD-KingWolf65 Agreed.
@marcwayne9514
@marcwayne9514 Год назад
You should listen to Paul Desmond .
@spiritualatheist1
@spiritualatheist1 7 лет назад
At the very start, the camera picked out Maestro Abbado's lifelong friend, pianist Maurizio Pollini (the one wearing glasses and blue tie). They tried to never miss each other's concerts and Abbado conducted Pollini on piano on occasion.
@JohnSmith-ju7xc
@JohnSmith-ju7xc 7 лет назад
Loved both of them and always tried (and still try with Pollini) to attend their New York appearances. This orchestra with him conducting is stunning.
@TheSavonarole
@TheSavonarole 6 лет назад
John Smith t
@lorenzodaponte2827
@lorenzodaponte2827 6 лет назад
Pollini played Beethoven's fourth concert in the first part of evening.
@TomAngPhoto
@TomAngPhoto 5 лет назад
Well spotted!
@matteogenerani5097
@matteogenerani5097 4 года назад
Chris Doby at 0:43!
@abundance6692
@abundance6692 6 лет назад
A Mahler's 5th for the ages. People will be listening to this performance hundreds of years from now. There probably has never been an orchestra so totally suited to play Mahler's music as this version of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra, seen and heard at its peak here. The clarity of all the contrapuntal lines in the finale is amazing. No other performance I've heard (there have been many) has achieved this.
@Tuxedo2680
@Tuxedo2680 5 лет назад
I couldn't agree more. For me it was as if I was hearing it for the first time. Unlike you, I hadn't heard any other versions other than Karajan's but in the first few bars of the 1st movement, the contrast is already striking. Like you said, the degree of clarity, detail and sheer musicality of Abbado and the LFO elicits boundless admiration and pure joy. This recording and all the others in this series (Mahler symphonies 1 to 7 - Abbado - LFO) are an absolute must-have for any true connoisseur of Gustav Mahler's music.
@stewiewonder2601
@stewiewonder2601 5 лет назад
Totally agree, however I can't understand why it's not possible to get all of these on CD.
@Tuxedo2680
@Tuxedo2680 5 лет назад
@@stewiewonder2601 I got the 4-disc Blu-Ray set (Mahler Symphonies 1-7, Rückert -Lieder + Prokofiev Piano Concerto No.3) from Amazon for around $60 (a great bargain IMO) but not being able to have it on CD was my main complaint to EuroArts and I would have gladly bought those as well. It is possible however to extract the stereo LPCM sound track from those with AnyDVD + TSmuxer and make your own CD's or MP3's using the WavePad editor. The downsides are that AnyDVD is not free and there's about 20 hours of tedious work involved. All depends how badly you want them.
@barrysmith1202
@barrysmith1202 4 года назад
no disrespect here, but i'm very curious about a few things re mahlers' works: ** i'm 64, a rather casual fan of a very wide spectrum of music; ** Melody-- what are your thoughts on Melody? eg, Hummable tunes; i'm just curious; ** in the mid 90s, i saw a movie (an 'independent', 'art-theater' film), a bio-drama about mahler, family, in which mahler proclaimed ''beethoven is dead'; in one scene, his wife is sitting in the front row, opening night of his latest composition; the movie director made absolutely clear, via extreme close-ups, that the wife was thoroughly, seriously, aghast at the whole thing; ** all this so far, is of course, simply (?) a matter taste--eg, your taste, my taste, the movie directors' taste, mahler fans, etc; ** there are a few minutes of a couple of mahlers' works, that i find quite worth listening to-- the rest? i just don't get it, in a world where one COULD be listening to-- what would one call it__ dozens of bubblegum classical pieces?
@denise2169
@denise2169 4 года назад
Barry, I understand what you are saying. When I first heard a Mahler Symphony in my university music studies, I didn't appreciate that there was not a 'hummable' melody. I am 68, and only now that I have retired and and been isolated with the Covid crisis, with time on my hands, have I really started listening to Mahler. And I only started listening to his music because it is conducted by Claudio Abbado, who's work am I discovering is truly amazing. What I am learning, as I listen to more and more of Abbado's work - and through the youtube documentaries about him - is that to him, music is about emotion and passion on a deep level - he does not have an ego with this. Now, when I listen to these youtube recordings, I feel these emotions from deep inside ME - they often make me cry, as they are so beautiful and moving. And when I watch and listen to these recordings, I hear and see that Abbado feels and transmits immense joy and energy (as in this symphony) or sublime calm (please listen to Mahler's 3rd symphony with Abbado, especially the beautiful slow 4th movement, starting at about 45:10, I think), and all of the emotions in between. To me, he is the only conductor that truly becomes one with his orchestra and brings out these passions from all of the orchestra members. In one documentary that I saw about him in rehearsal, he tells the orchestra members to listen to one another - his musicians say that he does not think of himself as the boss, but rather, he is able to bring all of the different 'musical lines' together. This means that there is not one melody, but that different instruments have different counter-melodies that are all woven together. So, there is generally no one hummable melody, as there are many all flowing together. These are called contrapuntal lines, and what I am beginning to appreciate in Mahler's music, is that despite all of these different instrumental lines going on at the same time, there is an over-riding passion and emotion that Abbado's orchestra is able to bring together through their conductor. When I look at video shots showing the whole orchestra, I see the musicians all moving intensely together, with the same energy, as if they are one. It's quite magical, and not something I really see with other conductors and orchestras. And looking at Abbado's and their faces, I can see the joy and emotion that they are experiencing. I hope you continue listening to more of Abbado and his work, for I have been learning a lot. Sometimes, I will even get up and listen, when I can't sleep in the middle of the night!
@enriquesanchez2001
@enriquesanchez2001 10 лет назад
This is THE MOST BELOVED conductor of his generation! May he rest in ETERNAL PEACE and JOY!
@MASKANDPLAY
@MASKANDPLAY 10 лет назад
It's amazing to see someone in the last few years of their life conducting with such energy. RIP
@ojtrumpet
@ojtrumpet 10 лет назад
+ Maestro Stefan Dohr
@DavidClay1206
@DavidClay1206 5 лет назад
lol Martin nice to see you here
@felixfourcolor
@felixfourcolor 3 года назад
If you want to sound smart, just say you love Mahler.
@ferrisgrummer7337
@ferrisgrummer7337 3 года назад
I love Mahler
@medoudou441
@medoudou441 3 года назад
Hummm...two set there buddy?
@scottmiller6495
@scottmiller6495 3 года назад
Mahler is now finally considered the best symphony composer of all time Ever !!!!!
@scottmiller6495
@scottmiller6495 3 года назад
@@ferrisgrummer7337 So do I Mahler was the best Symphony Composer of all time Period !!!!!
@jhaymarthortiz9939
@jhaymarthortiz9939 3 года назад
I love Wagner.
@PilekKwiatowy
@PilekKwiatowy 3 года назад
Mahlers genius. Abbados one of the greatest. But my comment is for video director. He knows and feels the music and gives us a look on who’s instrument is soloing. Thank you
@planetsoccer99
@planetsoccer99 7 лет назад
I have come back so many times. This symphony is always there for me. Mahler is the king.
@StefanSchmalhaus
@StefanSchmalhaus 3 года назад
I couldn't agree more.
@germangarcia3426
@germangarcia3426 3 года назад
Best
@pmlouisjuste
@pmlouisjuste 3 года назад
Mahler is an absolute genius. I like Tchaikovski's 6th as well (among other haha)
@pipster1891
@pipster1891 3 года назад
Great shot from 22:32 seeing all the musicians swaying around like a sea, putting everything into it.
@iankclark
@iankclark 2 года назад
Wow, that is a great shot - a visual metaphor of a storm at sea.
@joachimsaxer4812
@joachimsaxer4812 11 месяцев назад
Yes, right. "Tár" makes use of this when Cate Blanchett talks about "freie Bogenführung" in the talk with her impresario.
@polaewmvdionadcfrtuoy7054
@polaewmvdionadcfrtuoy7054 11 месяцев назад
so vivid
@Tuxedo2680
@Tuxedo2680 5 лет назад
I. 0:55 - Trauermarsch. In gemessenem Schritt. Streng. Wie ein Kondukt II. 13:36 - Stürmisch bewegt. Mit grösster Vehemenz III. 28:20 - Scherzo (Kräftig, Nicht zu schnell) IV. 45:17 - Adagietto (Sehr langsam) V. 53:49 - Rondo-Finale (Allegro)
@DaviSilva-oc7iv
@DaviSilva-oc7iv 2 года назад
Is actually Trauermarsch*, not Traeurmarsch.
@Tuxedo2680
@Tuxedo2680 2 года назад
@@DaviSilva-oc7iv Typo corrected. Thank you.
@brichpmr
@brichpmr 4 года назад
This orchestra under Abbado was an all-star collection of some of the greatest orchestral players on the planet; and Abbado was a sympatico musical genius.
@andrescastilloarce
@andrescastilloarce 7 лет назад
Abbado was a true master of Mahler
@pega17pl
@pega17pl 5 лет назад
When Abado was very first time strudent at Vienna he runs into funeral procession with music band by accident. At this moment he knows how to play Mahler. (Told by himself at an interview.)
@GuneyTuncer
@GuneyTuncer 3 года назад
This is not only the best performance of Mahler's 5th symphony but one of the best performance of whole symphonic history.. RIP Abbado.
@user-vo9gp2jf2h
@user-vo9gp2jf2h Год назад
Романтично, впечатляет!
@brave1671
@brave1671 Год назад
😂
@CutieSenussi
@CutieSenussi 9 месяцев назад
It’s fairly cheesy music compared to the baroque masters to be honest.
@ThomasRomanowski
@ThomasRomanowski 8 месяцев назад
@@CutieSenussi bro just said Mahler is cheesy
@karrotkake
@karrotkake 10 дней назад
@@CutieSenussisorry, i know this comment is late, but cheesy? how can such complex music be "cheesy"? its very cinematic and energetic/exciting, thats for sure, but what makes it cheesy? i mean personally the only baroque composer i might put above mahler is bach, but no one else made symphonies like mahler and thats an undeniable fact. the symphony didnt even exist in the baroque era
@suedwestfunk
@suedwestfunk 6 лет назад
Nothing compares to this. Thanks to the musicians and the unforgettable Claudio Abbado: It's my strongest antidepressant, a never failing way back to joy and courage.
@suedwestfunk
@suedwestfunk 5 лет назад
Und es macht leider süchtig.
@youngwoo5860
@youngwoo5860 Год назад
구스타프말러에 오자 댓글수준이 너무 높아졌네
@denise2169
@denise2169 3 года назад
And what I also love, is that Abbado allows his musicians to truly be expressive in their own right - I see this in their faces and in their movements! What an amazing feeling this must have been! I wish that I had the talent to have been a member of this fine ensemble!
@virginiastofler1703
@virginiastofler1703 2 месяца назад
Ho scoperto Mahler solo ieri ed è nuovo per me, rimarrò all' ascolto per molto tempo lo sento affine. Grazie Maestro❣️🌹🫂
@organboi
@organboi Месяц назад
They're not HIS musicians
@trupttks
@trupttks 10 лет назад
A musician and conductor who I have always admired, Rest in Peace Maestro Claudio Abbado.
@Lady-gd8zl
@Lady-gd8zl Год назад
Must confess, I came here from the movie “Tar”, glad to discover Mahler.
@hhgygy
@hhgygy Год назад
Lydia Tár brought me here. Beautiful.
@simonf8902
@simonf8902 2 месяца назад
She loves it.
@mikemiller7957
@mikemiller7957 6 лет назад
I'm here because Steve Vai told me to listen to Mahler's 4th and 5th ten times with an open mind and it would change my life. I'm a rocker for the most part but I must say this is fantastic stuff. I don't really understand classical music but this I am enjoying!
@Balfour.
@Balfour. 5 лет назад
Mike Miller I'm also a rocker and I listen to Mahler since I was a kid. Let me tell you, not being familiarized with classical music and somehow having a genuine interest to get into Mahler's repertoire it's pretty ballsy. Bravo sir! I hope your path in this universe has just begun.
@mikemiller7957
@mikemiller7957 5 лет назад
Thanks! I have noticed that I hear music differently now that I 've been listening to Mahler for about a month. There is so much in there I hear something new every time I listen.
@youririnsema1148
@youririnsema1148 5 лет назад
Enjoying the music is more important than understanding it :)
@michelleclerc3857
@michelleclerc3857 4 года назад
@@mikemiller7957 "There is so much in there I hear something new every time I listen." This is a great sentence, and honestly it tells why there is something in art that justifies our interest in it at all - because if that weren’t the case enjoying and loving Nature and the beauty in humans and animals would be so much more worth our while. As a lifelong listener and humble practitioner of great music may I point out your next steps in Mahler? You will know that he has a darker side that revolves around loss and suffering and death n(Steve Vai did point out to you the to "happiest" symphonies by Mahler. But you may want to listen to the 3rd, which takes one and a half hour and has six movements, first. There is a lot of enjoyment of Nature in it and then it ends with a long slow movement that celebrates human love really (like a grander, more solemn companion to the 5th’s Adagietto. Then, moving towards Mahler’s darker side, listen to the 1rst movement of the 2nd, which is basically a tragic, very serious song of despair at a friend's passing. Steeled by that movement (and by the darker rock music, I’d say) do tackle Mahler’s most severe and bitter Symphony, the 6th - one gigantic struggle against Fate. Your appreciation of that Symphony will lead you into the world of his final symphonies (from 7 to 10 really, as well as the Song of the Earth) who all basically say: "And still I do have hope!” Something appropriate to our times, maybe?
@Quotenwagnerianer
@Quotenwagnerianer 4 года назад
"I don't really understand classical music but this I am enjoying!" You don't have to understand it. Enjoying it is more than enough. I grew up with this kind of music. Especially Mahler I loved from my first encounter with him around the age of 6. Do you think I did understand what he does at that age? No. I was just swept away. Now I understand what he does because I studied music and it adds to the enjoyment and appreciation of his genius. But is it necesarry? No. It's just a bonus. So boldly venture forth into the classical repertoire. You'll find lots to enjoy.
@keithyeung9097
@keithyeung9097 3 года назад
Now at 2021, I still can't find a better conductor than Mr. Claudio Abbado. He is such a great conducting giant.
@scottmiller6495
@scottmiller6495 3 года назад
He was and loved by millions all over the world!!!!!
@aileenteo7027
@aileenteo7027 2 года назад
Claudio Abbado is in his element. God only made one Claudio for us to enjoy. No comparison. He is a class of his own.
@Wahl95
@Wahl95 11 лет назад
What an AMAZING interpretation of this symphony. Reinhold Friedrich is an exceptional trumpet soloist: one of the best I have heard.
@setharenstein8497
@setharenstein8497 Год назад
Agree...never overblows, his solos are understated yet fit the tone beautifully
@RoyalFizzbin
@RoyalFizzbin Год назад
Is there a name for the type of trumpet he is using?
@rgibeli
@rgibeli Год назад
@@RoyalFizzbin They use rotary trumpets
@alandickinson8234
@alandickinson8234 5 месяцев назад
He IS the best
@gaetanofrancescodesantis1273
It makes my want to cry to listen to this Symphony, this orchestra, and watch Abbado’s face. So intensely moving…❤
@skny2282
@skny2282 3 года назад
Who came here to receive true enjoyment for our ears and souls?
@luciawu1029
@luciawu1029 3 года назад
I am here from TwoSet
@costinaarama1358
@costinaarama1358 3 года назад
same here
@arhamidrish5824
@arhamidrish5824 3 года назад
Hehe boi
@cuddlingteddybears
@cuddlingteddybears 3 года назад
I actually have to watch this and do a concert report on it for a college class, but I also love TwoSet lol
@jacoblittle1444
@jacoblittle1444 3 года назад
same
@neil7137
@neil7137 3 года назад
Why? Is this video referenced in one of their videos?
@yourmomsfavoritegay
@yourmomsfavoritegay 7 лет назад
Reinhold Friedrich is truest a wonderful trumpet player
@breadh1277
@breadh1277 3 года назад
Read this wrong almost pressed dislike
@BruceBoschek
@BruceBoschek 2 года назад
Yes, what a stunning performance!
@vierto8878
@vierto8878 5 лет назад
Mahler & Abbado they still my heros since I was teen, now at 62 I feel the same...
@antwerpsmerle1404
@antwerpsmerle1404 3 года назад
@Vierto I agree! My first Abbado concert was Mahler 5 in 1972, and the last was Bruckner 5 in 2011. Both in London. A great musician who just got better and better. RIP, Maestro.
@scottmiller6495
@scottmiller6495 3 года назад
@@antwerpsmerle1404 Nobody talks about Abbados curtain calls from the remaining audiences after the orchestra leaves the stage, usually this occured in Europe where the people automatically loved him and immediately gave him standing ovation s that would wake up the dead!!!!!
@scottmiller6495
@scottmiller6495 3 года назад
Incredible duo that you won't see anymore. Klaus Tenndstedt was runner up, listen to his performance from 1990 in Chicago of Mahler No. 1 where the audience went crazy for him just like Abbado got !!!!!
@antwerpsmerle1404
@antwerpsmerle1404 3 года назад
@@scottmiller6495 yes, curtain calls in Europe can be very prolonged and enthusiastic. Abbado had some wonderful and well-deserved ones when he brought Die Zauberflöte to the Edinburgh Festival. The most extreme I witnessed was on the last night of the Bayreuth Festival, after Tristan with Jerusalem, Meier and Barenboim. The ovations only ceased, after 25 minutes, when Siegfried Jerusalem made a gesture which clearly said “please may I now go and have a glass of beer?”. Klaus Tennstedt was also VERY special to his adoring audience in London. He had a wonderful rapport with the LPO, but they and we all knew that his health was fragile, and that there would be cancellations. A lifetime of smoking had wrought irreversible damage, but somehow that fact added to the unbelievable and almost unbearable intensity of his concerts. Even now my eyes fill with tears when I remember him.
@mutantbaby1672
@mutantbaby1672 8 лет назад
Incredible playing. Simply stunning.
@leilah219
@leilah219 8 лет назад
+Mutant Baby I agree ! The best combination!
@onshanma3842
@onshanma3842 7 лет назад
t
@d1d4d0
@d1d4d0 10 лет назад
Probably the greatest conductor of the last 40 years...
@MegaLajeunesse
@MegaLajeunesse 10 лет назад
Inégalé pour moi dans Mahler. Mahler m'ennuyait avec Abbado j'adore.
@giuseppeconsonni4768
@giuseppeconsonni4768 5 лет назад
minchiata immensa||
@christophetetu3948
@christophetetu3948 5 лет назад
@@MegaLajeunesse : écoutez la Symphonie no.5, 4ème mouvement : "Adagietto" interprétée par le World Orchestra for Peace et dirigée par Valery Gergiev...
@castellimariachiaracastell7423
@@giuseppeconsonni4768 uno che risponde così volgarmente nemmeno è degno di accostarsi a nessuna musica
@astridarraut9502
@astridarraut9502 4 года назад
Probably? No he is the greatest period.!
@stanimiradervenova217
@stanimiradervenova217 Год назад
They breathe music and silence. I have rarely heard so much silence played by an orchestra ❤ Bravo, maestro !
@nancylee8061
@nancylee8061 6 месяцев назад
All of Claudio Abbado's Mahlers have a special place in my heart.
@scottmiller6495
@scottmiller6495 7 дней назад
Me too his Lucerne Festival Concerts from the early 2000s were fantastic and incredible with enthusiastic fans and roaring standing ovations!!!!!
@mannsquest9953
@mannsquest9953 4 года назад
An unbelievable conductor leads an unbelievable ensemble playing an unbelievable composer in a manner which is truly head and shoulders above all else. Ever. Period.
@301250
@301250 10 лет назад
The classical music world has lost one of the greatest conductors who has ever graced the podium. Never a showman, Abbado's interpretations of Mahler (and Beethoven et al) will surely go down in history as being among the best around. RIP, maestro.
@hansjurgenmunch9680
@hansjurgenmunch9680 2 года назад
Ich liebe diese Musik, kann garnicht genug davon hören, mit das Schönste was es gibt
@tritonneptune3834
@tritonneptune3834 Год назад
Just visually, that shot 22:29 is so captivating, the way everything is moves. So grateful for the filming of this concert and the upload!
@user-sh2wz8oe5m
@user-sh2wz8oe5m 8 месяцев назад
Yeah this is so amazing
@SCX2k
@SCX2k 4 месяца назад
It is my favourite moment in all art
@rel375
@rel375 3 года назад
Genius is a small word to describe Maestro Abbado. What kind of brain made him able to memorize the nine big and complicated Mahler's symphonies and conduct them (without score) with such brilliancy ? I think Mahler himself couldn’t do it. RIP Great Maestro Abbado.
@megabugginout
@megabugginout 2 года назад
👏 👏 👏 👏
@Queeen7q
@Queeen7q 2 года назад
Mahler was one of the greatest conductors of his time.
@pascalpoussin1209
@pascalpoussin1209 Год назад
A Google chip was inserted into his brain, brilliant.
@scottmiller6495
@scottmiller6495 Год назад
@@Queeen7q And maybe the greatest composer of symphonies of all time as well! Start with no. 1 and go from there, it,s unbelievable how brilliant he was ! 10 Outstanding symphonies in his short 51 years of life !!!!!
@GuilhermeMichel
@GuilhermeMichel Год назад
@@scottmiller6495 Beethoven is more genius, but I like more Mahler's symphonies.
@andrewiwai3881
@andrewiwai3881 11 месяцев назад
The adagietto, with the lovely chords and the beautiful deep notes, stirs some emotions deep inside of me every time I hear it. Amazing.
@bernardverner4743
@bernardverner4743 4 года назад
I have never listened to play " the adagietto " in so emotional, so sensitive a way! It is there an absolute wonder which it will be extremely difficult to surpass! Violins at the top of the workmanship of the bow... Exceptional!
@phillipbaritone3843
@phillipbaritone3843 2 года назад
Claudio was spectacular, I really wish I had the opportunity to have listened to him live in the flesh. RIP maestro. His style was one of a kind, and the tone he produced was so lush and powerful
@joseagustincandanedo2998
@joseagustincandanedo2998 3 года назад
Abbado's big smile shows that he is enjoying the experience to the fullest!!
@hornkix
@hornkix 10 лет назад
I think Mahler love the french horn very much !!!
@docoftheworld
@docoftheworld 10 лет назад
one of the greatest symphonies
@kyeongashin
@kyeongashin 2 года назад
So miss Abbado..I love his interpretation of Mahler's fifth symphony.
@deebeeloves
@deebeeloves 3 года назад
45:17 🥺🤍 my heart just melts listening to this movement.
@garnettlivingston3739
@garnettlivingston3739 2 года назад
This performance is astounding! The Maestro told the story from start to finish allowing these fine musicians to do what they do best.
@giorgio1948
@giorgio1948 8 лет назад
Mahler, Abbado, Lucerne Orchestra. Di più non è possibile. Umanamente.
@mentariorudy
@mentariorudy 8 лет назад
+giorgio1948 .-De acuerdo en todo Giorgio....pero algunas veces, el Maestro, se combierte en extraterrestre.
@GilraenSwan
@GilraenSwan 6 лет назад
umanamente, una sottigliezza che Mahler ci ha confessato.
@guidodeclercq7022
@guidodeclercq7022 3 года назад
@@GilraenSwan Niet akkoord
@guidodeclercq7022
@guidodeclercq7022 3 года назад
Bernard Haitink
@brunoantonello9478
@brunoantonello9478 2 года назад
Grande sinfonia e grande Abbado, uno dei più grandi che l'Italia abbia avuto!
@billsullivan3920
@billsullivan3920 8 лет назад
A great video of the the Lucerne Festival Orchestra 2004 hand picked by Abbado. Some critics called these concerts as some of the best orchestral playing ever recorded. With very good speakers this video is very special. Given the fact that Abbado has passed, this shows him before his health problems. All the Abbado Lucerne concerts show that he wanted to make music with only special people. Some special musicians show up in all his festival concerts. Abbado was a great humanitarian.
@Aldous944
@Aldous944 4 года назад
Abbado conducts Mahler without a score. That, to simple old me, is one of the first signs that we are seeing a genius at work. All the superlative conductors can do this. I'm not knocking the conductors who need a score. (I took a summer-long course on conducting, and found it magical to be able to read a score and do anything with it. But I hadn't a hope of conducting anything without the score.) There are some very good conductors who still need the score as an aid. Klemperer conducted with the score, as did Pierre Boulez, both genius conductors. They and Abbado are undoubtedly in the pantheon of the greats, with Karajan, Bernstein, Rattle... I love what Abbado can get out of an orchestra.
@enryclaptone1668
@enryclaptone1668 7 лет назад
Grandissima opera... grandissimo Maestro e... grandissima Orchestra! Un regalo. Grazie a tutti!
@adude394
@adude394 Год назад
Absolutely spellbinding. I've performed this symphony (French horn player), and I can tell you from the inside just how difficult this music is. The fact that these players made it seem so easy is a testament to their phenomenal skills, and Maestro Abbado's consummate musicianship.
@adrianagmlima
@adrianagmlima 3 года назад
I’m 46 years old now and there’s one year I’ve find out this piece. This is simply the most perfect music composed by someone. Thank you Gustav Mahler. The sound of my soul ✨
@scottmiller6495
@scottmiller6495 3 года назад
Wait a minute, Mahler was the greatest symphony composer of all time and if you love him the way I do then listen to his fantastic Symphony No 1 which is incredible and if you find it amazing, then listen to No. 7 too. Believe you me it will definitely make you a bigger Mahler fan than you already are!!!!!
@paulvarn4712
@paulvarn4712 2 года назад
The 9th Adagio still hypnotizes me every time. Even now over 100 years later it's as modern and inventive as anything written today. Mahler was also the highest paid symphony conductor in the world at the time. He taught world world how to orchestrate the amazing music we take for granted in spectacular movie scores. He taught us how to help the listener feel intensely.
@itemasylum3185
@itemasylum3185 2 года назад
ok
@notaire2
@notaire2 4 года назад
Lebhafte und wunderschöne Aufführung dieser großartigen Sinfonie mit gut harmonisierten und perfekt balancierten Töne aller Instrumente. Der vierte Satz klingt fast himmlisch. Der unvergleichliche Maestro dirigiert das ausgezeichnete Orchester im inspirierenden Tempo mit völlig effektiver Dynamik. Einfach wunderbar!
@geoffroymb
@geoffroymb Год назад
What people probably don't realize is that all these players are super stars in their own rights, soloist-level players, all gathered in one outstanding orchestra, probably the best in the world!
@isaacm3946
@isaacm3946 3 года назад
The fourth movement touches my heart. Respect.
@QA-ut7dd
@QA-ut7dd 3 года назад
I could just listen to that second brass chord at 8:23 over and over and over again wow!
@915harry
@915harry 10 лет назад
R.I.P. maestro Abbado. This is one of the best versions of this symphony!!!!
@gianseb
@gianseb 10 лет назад
Now you are with your beloved Gustav Mahler, for ever. Thanks Maestro!
@galinakrivulin6767
@galinakrivulin6767 2 года назад
Stunning performance, fascination and love of Claudio Abbado conducting the orchestra. Watching on tv. Follow everyone’s faces, they are under the spell of magic coming out of the Great Conductor. Total perfection!
@theingabo212
@theingabo212 2 года назад
Not enough words to describe this Epic performance!
@Merisi1610
@Merisi1610 11 лет назад
Claudio Abbado is conducting, one of the greatest italian Director - good is not the word, maybe magnificent is just a bit closer to his art. Enjoy it
@PanProductionsliveit
@PanProductionsliveit 3 года назад
I mean, my god! This is exquisite! I'm listening to the 5th from other maestros which I really admire at the same time, but god, there is no comparison. The sound quality, the brass levels, the percussion, EVERY instrument's definition, the ridiculous amount of connection between the whole orchestra and the maestro, the volume control note to note, the expression, everything breaths and expresses freely throughout the whole piece. And when it comes to the second part and on, well , words just fail me. I rarely write comments on RU-vid, but I felt the need to express my thanks and my most sincere congratulations to everyone who made this utterly amazing performance happen. This performance will educate and inspire more and more people in the years to come.
@Crew7340
@Crew7340 3 года назад
I strongly agree, the musicians here are truly extraordinary.
@bma1955alimarber
@bma1955alimarber 2 года назад
Yes you are right
@scottmiller6495
@scottmiller6495 2 года назад
Top of the line all the way Superb !!!!!
@thorstentopp3824
@thorstentopp3824 4 года назад
Fantastic performance. I love Abbado! The orchestra is really great.
@bordaz1
@bordaz1 5 лет назад
This is the finest recording of this piece i've yet heard, and I grew up steeped in the tradition of Leonard Bernstein, Georg Solti, and Bruno Walter. I recommend anyone that loves this seek out the Documentary film covering Abbado's music directorship of this festival orchestra (EuroArts). Why? It will be extremely important to understand how the Maestro recruited players to make an ensemble that sounds like this. All i'll say is, I think we have been teaching orchestra backwards for a very long time
@pepemartinez1007
@pepemartinez1007 3 года назад
Abbado en Lucerna una maravilla para todos y para siempre.Muchas Gracias Maestro
@stridentscrub6753
@stridentscrub6753 2 года назад
5:13. I've never seen a wooden flute playing Mahler in a orchestra. It makes the sound so gorgeous
@denise2169
@denise2169 3 года назад
Every time I listen to this performance, I am overwhelmed by the tenderness and beauty of this interpretation of the Adagietto. Thank you to the orchestra and to Abbado for this gift!
@johnpresnell
@johnpresnell Год назад
Tár brought me here!
@rticante
@rticante Год назад
Hope you appreciate your stay, Abbado was one of the greats (a real Mahler specialist) but most importantly he was a good and very kind man by all accounts. There are at least a couple documentaries about him here on youtube (one about when he first arrived in Berlin as the new conductor) and there's also some videos of him rehearsing with the Berliners and other orchestras. As an Italian, one of the thing that impressed me the most is that, when he unfortunately died of cancer in 2014, the La Scala philarmonic of Milan made a funerary concert in his honor (broadcast on national tv) as he had been main conductor there for many years - and he was also originally from Milan. Here it is: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-QIY-3-EjxtA.html. They played the funeral march movement from Beethoven's 3rd symphony (called "Eroic Symphony".) And the tradition is for former conductors of La Scala to have a funerary concert with all the theatre seats completely empty and the doors of the theatre wide open to the square so that the live music from the orchestra resounds in the empty building and then exits booming in the crowded square where all the people of Milan have assembled to listen freely and pay their respects to a great conductor and fellow citizen. Also, the conductor of this performance was Daniel Barenboin who is also mentioned in Tár in regards to the video of Elgar's concerto. Sorry for the infodump lol
@stephenmessick865
@stephenmessick865 4 года назад
Remarkable! I have edited my comment concerning audio problems, as I have listened to the piece again and found none. Must have been my laptop. What a performance by dear Abbado and his Lucerne charges.
@Jmay6901
@Jmay6901 10 лет назад
What a conversation is now going between Abbado and Mahler! Gustav and Claudio together at last! VIVA ABBADO!
@jingrongtan8946
@jingrongtan8946 5 дней назад
Listened to it three times this week. Because I heard Mahler's Sixth Symphony live in Houston in March, and I became addicted to Mahler's works.😂
@JJHunsecker
@JJHunsecker 2 года назад
I once heard the Adagio for this piece in a movie and I was wracking my brain trying to find out who composed it. 🎻Now I finally have the answer: Gustav Mahler deserves a place in Heaven for that alone.
@ProgettoMemoria
@ProgettoMemoria Год назад
The attention to details, phrasing, counterpoint, tempi, colors, structure and story telling is unparallel. Together with this world stars orchestra he has elevated Mahler to the highest level possible.
@flylooper
@flylooper Год назад
My God, how I miss Abbado. A phenomenal director.
@maraineswarts5919
@maraineswarts5919 9 месяцев назад
That opening scene of the auditorium is magnificent!!!
@thylatrash7668
@thylatrash7668 3 года назад
i'm here after twosetviolin ranked mahler 5 s tier and i can now confidently say: they are right! i'd never consciously listened to it before, but it really is just an incredibly big, epic and truly satisfying piece, this performance was especially enjoyable to listen to i can only imagine how much fun it must have been to play this with such a great big orchestra
@999a0s
@999a0s 2 года назад
i performed this piece on tour with an orchestra. during our final performance, i remember tearing up during the adagietto, and i looked around - almost all of the first violins were crying. then i realized everyone was crying. our conductor, impassive, had tears running down her face.
@karenglenn2329
@karenglenn2329 2 года назад
Twosetviolin is my latest love. I am so drawn into this performance. Can l say l am numbed by this master piece
@marshm3llow467
@marshm3llow467 2 года назад
What a coincidence to find not only another TwoSetter but another trekkie and spirk shipper! That's so cool. Great piece, yeah!
@hilalaslan897
@hilalaslan897 2 года назад
#twosetgang 💪
@yanaikuchuk9714
@yanaikuchuk9714 2 года назад
I am here because of Eddy and Brett too!
@maryyueil
@maryyueil 7 лет назад
The first cellist is Claudio Abbado's good friend Natalia Gutman, famous Russian cellist.
@OscarGeronimo
@OscarGeronimo 5 лет назад
Everybody there is famous/recognized/respected/a master. That's the point of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra.
@RBP1963
@RBP1963 3 года назад
Really stunning adagio and the whole performance at a highest level !thanks Mr. Abbado, you are unforgettable!
@siavashshaghighi2655
@siavashshaghighi2655 Месяц назад
This is really the first time I am listening to Mahler music! In the past I only heard the symphonies but this time I got hooked. I listened to the maestro
@barbarabarry3799
@barbarabarry3799 4 года назад
Wonderful performance, beautifully phrased, connected between all members of the orchestra, Abbado in his element and Lucerne Festival at their peak.
@michaelbevan6989
@michaelbevan6989 2 года назад
Wow, Abbado is so wonderful
@santiagorubenbilotta7714
@santiagorubenbilotta7714 8 лет назад
Verdadera obra maestra de la música romántica la 5a. Sinfonía de Mahler, magistralmente ejecutada por la Orquesta del Festival de Lucerna, Suiza, bajo la batuta del organizador y coordinador de la misma el Gran Maestro italiano, que ya no esta con nosotros, Claudio Abbado. Gracias por compartir este video.
@andreapandypeterpan4062
@andreapandypeterpan4062 3 месяца назад
I have listened to this stupendous performance now five times! A million comments are possible - but how clear it is that in this symphony Mahler shows with complete rhetorical eloquence how s/he inhabits two vastly separated worlds. That of pre-Great War Vienna, of supreme opulence and exquisite sensibility and philosophical ambition. The world of Klimpt and Schiele, the Vienna Secession, of Karl Krauss, of the symbolist Arnold Schoenberg who wrote "Transfigured Night" and "Pelleas und Melisande". Of Freud, and early Thomas Mann, and the family Wittgenstein. And then it is as if we are ejected out of such decadent refinements, and into the biting world of cynicism, parody and surrealism of post-war Berlin and Vienna .... of shattered empires and crippled veterans on every corner, and rouged yet starved erotic services girls and boys fucking and sucking their way from one day to the next. A vista of millions pointlessly slaughtered, and the grinding bitterness of Otto Dix and Max Beckmann. A world of Dadaism, surrealism, of politicised psychoanalysis, of revolutionary Marxist Leninist politics and art, of Brecht and the Bauhaus. The world also of the Frei Corps and the incipient bacillus of reactionary petit-bourgeois fascism. Where the ideas of rationality and progress were just twisted rubbish, and one could do nothing but mouth and parrot obsolete ideas. One soon to be blessed even further by the economic and social whirlwind of the Wall Street Crash of 1929. That is why Mahler's music is often so simultaneously heartbreaking, and sentimental, and self-consciously bathetic-banal-trashy, and yet sensuous and profound, and full of quotes and echoes and mockeries and parodies. Music of stunning polyphonic brass chorales praising and straining for a heaven lost forever. As if one was taking a cup of hemlock tasting like vintage champagne to celebrate the beauties that once existed. In that way, Mahler is one of the finest and most ironic "socialist-realist artists" of any modern era. Indeed, to hear much of his work, with contemporary ears, is to be (what analogy can one grasp) walking in 1945 through the ghettos of Warsaw and Kraków, haunted by the lives of the millions slain and thrust into the ovens, and the ghastly sight of their cities in rubble. A world of Kafka and absurdism and Sonderkommandos, and the outraged analysis and protests of Hannah Arendt. Mahler is a "pre-figuring prophet and witness" to that complete destruction of the confidence of the Enlightenment which still envelopes and strangles our present world. Our lives are what? An idiotic morally and psychologically depraved "escapade in techno-fantasy", the extolling of masculine emotional infantilism and eroticised depravity, moral and psychical and emotional and political bankruptcy masquerading as an enlightened "absolute novelty" wrought of a vast demented fiction gloriously enrobed as "Virtual Reality". In short, an epoch of revolting masculine and patriarchal "psychical cripples" strutting with huge technical prowess. A globally interconnected world of light-speed rumours and manufactured outright lies, of a million childish perspectives prompted to microscopic focus on complete trivia, of malevolent yet tremulous and timorous government agencies spying upon billions of fools who blindly trust their absolute political and financial masters. Of impending global chaos as the nuclear tipped Yankee Petro-Dollar Empire teeters into collapse. Of the new Nazis in Tel Aviv, murdering and displacing millions of Untermenschen now called Palestinians. How well our Zionist brothers and sisters have become enthralled by this psychotic entrapment, so luridly manifested by the failed painter and paranoid pamphleteer form Vienna. All these worlds are the handicraft of men, and of their ever-ready but misguided co-conspirators, drawn from the ranks of far too many women, who ought to know better. Love, andrea
@dimikireeff
@dimikireeff 10 месяцев назад
Man! I've been listening to recordings of this piece since the 80s but, like someone said below, this one is like listening to it for the first time. There's an amazing clarity of the lines and still mesmerizing dynamics and subtlety. Loved it. What an amazing orchestra and what a genius was Abbado.
@jeanfourton5351
@jeanfourton5351 4 года назад
Une écriture toujours inattendue, imprévisible, servie par une interprétation géniale pas à pas attentive et complice...
@minotme64
@minotme64 3 года назад
Thank you for uploading this performance!! Truly magical and beautiful and I wouldn't have been able to enjoy it without your uploading.
@dst0212
@dst0212 25 дней назад
Ich liebe diese Musik von Mahler
@ShoyuTao
@ShoyuTao 3 года назад
Spectacular performance with inspired playing with world class sound and video. Bravo Maestro Abbado,you are missed but this is a testament to your lasting greatness!
@sim773
@sim773 6 лет назад
Abbado is the best of Mahler interpreters so far. No one is able to be so faithful to the score and make it so intense, alive and true at each bar. We all keep learning from him and enjoying his creations. We miss you Maestro....but you are still with us.
@francescopomini6334
@francescopomini6334 Год назад
I played this Symphony in 1982 with maestro Abbado many times, English Horn by ECYO... Unforgettable, specially when we performed in GoldenerSaal Wien! But listen please also to the version of Bernstein! Difficult to say better... or worst...
@annacyran716
@annacyran716 3 года назад
Merci! Excellent ! The most beautiful adagietto in the history of Music ! 🙏❤️🎼❤️👏👏👏👏
@annacyran716
@annacyran716 3 года назад
And that's how I met G. Mahler for the first time - hearing that adagietto in the movie "Death in Venice" in 1977 ... at the cinema in Wroclaw...great love at first hearing! 💙🎼💙💫👏👏🙏
@jdeeside
@jdeeside 8 лет назад
The sheer joy this performance gives is almost overwhelming. It is a stunning performance by an group that play as one and clearly enjoy being together.
@vincejamison2401
@vincejamison2401 6 лет назад
An absolutely superb performance. One of the best I've ever heard. The orchestra appeared to be having fun with this. Stefan Dohr's corno obbligatto in the Scherzo is amazing! Thanks for posting!
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