Escena de la película Amadeus donde Mozart dicta a Salieri el confutáis de su misa de Réquiem, aquí se pueden apreciar la instrumentación que conforman la pieza
I played with a guitarist years ago who was an phenomenal musician. He was miles ahead of me and the drummer of the band. I can remember moments when he would dictate ideas to us just like Mozart does here with Salieri and then irately say "don't you see!" when inevitably neither of us could follow him.
@Malicant I had one colleague in elementary school, we were in the same class. He was so talented at drawing that he would tell others to randomly doodle on paper and he would transform that into drawings. It was mesmerizing seeing random and chaotic lines shining with order and beauty. He also drew small bits of explicit content for us in exchange for pocket money and sweets. These natural talents are something else. This kid was taken out of my school by an art professor from University. Last time I met him was at an art gallery painted by him when we were close to highschool. He even had orders for paitings. And these paitings would take 2 weeks to dry. Never heard of him ever since. This was almost 20 years ago.
I know in ye olde day people of this class would have written more with paper more than i do, but i can barely write a sentence in the time he writes a phrase for all the vocal parts
That crazy laugh he had is actually true. They said he was a social imbecile- yet a musical genius!! He had several children but lost all but one to disease.. I forget what he died from but with medication of today- he would have survived..
one thing i liked about this scene is how, while composing, Mozart asked Salieri to show him the sheet, and Salieri did so. Later, as he was getting more and more excited about their work together, when Mozart asked Salieri to show him the sheet again, he didn't do it like before. Instead, he sung it to Mozart, just like he was doing while composing the piece. It's like, you can see that, for a moment, Salieri was so invested on writing the Requiem, he forgot about manners, ettiquete, and was just enjoying the moment: he sung it as he imagined it, just like Mozart did
@@youtuubaAs someone who adores Bach and has learned about half of his organ works, not all of Bach is better than requiem. I think requiem is about on par with the best of Bach. Beautiful, difficult, harmonious. I’ve recorded requiem as a member of the violin section, and several Bach pieces (BWV 564,565, 578, 581, and whatever number the passacaglia is) and the requiem will always hold a special place in my heart
sin duda el compositor más famoso escuchado y universal de todos los tiempos es L.V.Beethoven en todo caso y para muchos el mayor Músico que ha pisado esta tierra otros dirán que Mozart y otros Bach
This was what was magnificent about Mozart. He had no drafts himself. Everything played in his head and he transcribed it perfectly. Everything fell into place as they all should in perfectly blended harmony. He truly was one of the most brilliant minds in music.
This is by far the best thing I have ever scene about Mozart’s process. Taking a scene from a 1984 film and using these graphics shows his true genius so well, it should be an edit for the film. Bravo!!! Incredible!!🙌🔥
Esta es la escena más extraordinaria de lenguaje musical que he visto una obra cinematográfica. La composición de esta maravillosa obra maestra de este genio musical que fue Mozart, dando sus últimas indicaciones en su lecho de muerte a su propio majestuoso réquiem. Lo que hizo el autor de este video aquí es realmente brillante, lo felicito.
Francamente la escena es sencillamente de oro, CONMUEVE como quizá ninguna escena musical cinematográfica aunque quizá exagere,las escenas de las películas Beethovenianas Amor Inmortal y Copyng Beethoven cuanto el sordo de Bonn está componiendo el no va más de la Música Universal y la estrena en 1824 cuando después de los 17 acordes finales en Re de la orquesta el público arranca en aplausos con la más intensidad y ferocidad posible conmueva más si cabe,el compositor de espaldas no sabe que la obra ha terminado no lo ha escuchado y no es consciente del inmenso ÉXITO Universal que ha tenido
Ahhh! Que obra de arte este film, retratando la genialidad de Mozart y la frustración de Salieri! Dos grandes interpretaciones! 👏👏👏La vi en el cine cuando se estrenó y me conmovió profundamente...aún veo esta escena y me emociona hasta las lágrimas! ❤
Es por este tipo de videos que pienso que RU-vid debería tener, aparte del botón de "pulgar arriba", un botón de "Me encanta". Hay videos que me gustan, y arriba estos.
La música es el reflejo de la grandeza de Allah Todopoderoso a través de las personas. ¡La música es la bendición de Allah Todopoderoso! Así como Allah crea la curación a través de los médicos, ¡Él crea la música a través de compositores geniales! ¡Es Allah Todopoderoso quien creó todas las características que amamos en nuestras celebridades favoritas! Infinitas gracias a Allah Todopoderoso!
La música es el reflejo de la grandeza de Allah Todopoderoso a través de las personas. ¡La música es la bendición de Allah Todopoderoso! Así como Allah crea la curación a través de los médicos, ¡Él crea la música a través de compositores geniales! ¡Es Allah Todopoderoso quien creó todas las características que amamos en nuestras celebridades favoritas! Infinitas gracias a Allah Todopoderoso!!
I loved this scene in the movie- even while very ill, Mozart has these masterpieces already envisioned and constructed in his mind- they stream out of his consciousness, and Salieri struggles to just keep up with the transcription. True genius is so far beyond the mechanics and structure of the Art- they are but the nuts and bolts that carry a thousand human souls as they soar toward heaven- only in his hands. This clip illustrates the complexity and structure of the music during creating, while we marvel at how it touches and pulls at our very hearts.
Muy discutido de siglos atrás a lo largo de tantas generaciones millones de melómanos/as y profesionales de toda clase y condición están seguros de que fue Beethoven y otros muchos millones Bach...la pregunta es.. dónde está la máxima encarnación de genio musical?
Although this scene depicted in the movie likely did not happen in reality, the actors and director did a magnificent job of showing the troubled relationship between the two men and their devoted love for music. Bravo to all.
One of the frustrations of my life is, having watched this as kid, never again seeing any biographical movie about a major composer that comes close to this level of quality.
This video is a magnificent piece of work and would have been a spectacular addition to the movie, adding to the understanding and brilliance of the compositional process, not only by Mozart, but by Salieri as his collaborator.
The way Saliere delivers the line “it’s wonderful!” Is a masters class in subtlety. Knowing his rival, the very person he plans on killing after this is writing the masterpiece that Saliere will claim as his, he’s already anticipating that satisfaction of his plans fruitions
@@laulago3771 Mozart died before it was ever finished. From what I recall during my time as a choir boy who actually performed Mozart's Requiem at Carnegie Hall; Mozart had a bunch of other little bits and parts written for the other movements before he died and it was his contemporary, "Süssmayr who completed the piece. To be honest pretty much everything after the Lacrimosa is pretty much a rehashing of the first few movements. The last 2 movements are literally just the first 2 with different words
The movie is great. The best part about reality though is that Salieri was a huge fan and supporter of mozarts. It makes the scene better knowing that they truly enjoyed each other as musicians in real life
Fun music fact: The origin of the "C" time signature wasnt meant to stand for "Common Time" but rather symbolized an incomplete circle. The circle represented perfection, the holy trinity, IE a triple meter. So when you saw an incomplete circle in the time signature, you knew it would be some sort of duple meter.
yeah, mozart is globally known as one of the most important three composers in music's history AND somehow is really underrated. good observation Michelle
I used to think this was a pointless movie. It's basically made a 180 in my world. First saw it in grade school, got assigned questions about the movie. Naturally I wanted to get it all over with, which made it difficult to enjoy the movie. Without homework or anything to be accountable for, watching the movie for pure enjoyment is actually worth it.
Imagine how much each could have learnt if he befriended Mozart from the start. Mozart I always felt was like a Jazz player of that era, he wants all the notes and to do a billion things at once merely to show off yet slightly toned down or made differently it could've been something not known to this world.
I Bassi, nel “gere curam mei finis”, che cantano sfasati rispetto a tutte le altre voci, a loro contrapponendosi in un contrappunto SUBLIME, aumentano una tragicità già colma…. Incredibile!!!, e ogni volta è terrificante….
La música es el reflejo de la grandeza de Allah Todopoderoso a través de las personas. ¡La música es la bendición de Allah Todopoderoso! Así como Allah crea la curación a través de los médicos, ¡Él crea la música a través de compositores geniales! ¡Es Allah Todopoderoso quien creó todas las características que amamos en nuestras celebridades favoritas! Infinitas gracias a Allah Todopoderoso!
this reminded me of the time that i and my very smart friend were writing an english essay, i infront of the computer and him behind me instructing me in the same way as this video XD
As a musician, this was my favorite scene in the film. Two master composers and musicians getting this down without using an instrument. At this level, with such fluency in the language of music, they don't need one. Just brilliant.
Here on this scene I see only one master. The other is a miserable recorder. I see a pure heart verses the dishonest one. I see an abuser extacting life out of a needy one. I see a Breliant mind against a petty one. The fact of using or not using instrument is inconsequential.
@@josephk2414 wasn't the whole point of this scene that Salieri finally realized the genius of Mozart supersceded his jealousy and he wanted him to be able to finish this master piece. He commissioned it after all, so even if Mozart didn't realize it wasn't a real request, Salieri knew but all of that was put aside. He wasn't on Mozart's level and his character in the movie (which was not real life accurate) was well acted as a horrible person, but he was still a master in his own right not just a miserable recorder. He wouldn't have been able to pick up on Mozart's intentions for all the different parts at that speed if he wasn't himself a master.
@@josephk2414 You do know the ENTIRE story is not true, right? It's a great movie, one of my favorites., but it is entirely fiction....with a true historical facts here and there. Almost no scene on this movie actually took place as shown.
La música es el reflejo de la grandeza de Allah Todopoderoso a través de las personas. ¡La música es la bendición de Allah Todopoderoso! Así como Allah crea la curación a través de los médicos, ¡Él crea la música a través de compositores geniales! ¡Es Allah Todopoderoso quien creó todas las características que amamos en nuestras celebridades favoritas! Infinitas gracias a Allah Todopoderoso!
I love the way it brings the music alive, in fact I think this is more effective than the actual film when it comes to demonstrating the incredible end result and not just showing the conception
Too bad they didn't think of using something like this in the film. Although absurdly fast-paced in keeping focus on the desperation of the scene, it delves into the mechanics, though superficially, of what masterful composition entails. Hauntingly beautiful scene with superb acting. The ethereal musical notes, seemingly appearing from nowhere, on fire, wonderfully capture the power of what mere ink put to paper possess. Without the two mediums, there is only silence.
i cant imagine how much effort and knowledge it would take to translate the notes on to paper from a sick man singing it to you. i just cant imagine being on that level
Music is the reflection of the greatness of Allah Almighty through people. Music is the blessing of Allah Almighty! Just as Allah creates healing through doctors, He creates music through great composers! It is Allah Almighty who created all the features we love in our favorite celebrities! Infinite thanks to Allah Almighty! La música es el reflejo de la grandeza de Allah Todopoderoso a través de las personas. ¡La música es la bendición de Allah Todopoderoso! Así como Allah crea la curación a través de los médicos, ¡Él crea la música a través de compositores geniales! ¡Es Allah Todopoderoso quien creó todas las características que amamos en nuestras celebridades favoritas! Infinitas gracias a Allah Todopoderoso!
Once you understand, music theory the circle of fifths, and all related majors and minors it’s not as bad as you think… on another note, he still in the Guinness book of world records for most symphonies in one year it’ll never be broken
Always saddens me when I think of all the music that was never written because he died so young. Think how much more brilliance there would be there for us to enjoy had he lived long.
Agree, the Requiem was probably the first mature piece he made and in my opinion the best work of his. If he survived the sickness he might have been what Beethoven became much later.
But consider, if Mozart lived longer he would be teaching Beethoven, thus probably becoming a huge influencing on him. We might not have gotten the same masterpieces from Beethoven that we have today
I’ll love the moment of enlightenment at 3:24, it’s not that he literally didn’t understood mozard, he didn’t understand what he was trying to do. And the music suddenly popped into he’s ear, he heard it. He got it, he didn’t just understood the music, he got it. What a beautiful moment.