@@nameless5053 yes this part is pure genius, I can't help but smile when I hear it, it's dancing and gentle and then at 2:46 it transitions back at the original theme very smoothly.
Regardless of whether we have nationality, religion, or different ways of looking at reality, it is masterpieces such as this that truly unite us into one humanity.
I believe that ONLY MUSIC can do that; nothing and nobody else. In fact, look at an orchestra; it's heaven on earth. If not, what other group of people is as perfect as an orchestra playing a masterpiece?
The first time Mozart wrote a symphony the quality of which nobody in the world was capable of matching. At 17 he was already the best composer in Europe. Worth listening to all the symphonies from k16 on.
@@바르톨로메오크리스토 No 40 was Mozart's 2nd from last symphony and composed 3 years before his death. Mozart was composing world class great music from the age of a teenager. Yes he got better as he got older but there are works written when he was 25 that were as good as the later works. K271 piano concerto for example.
This music 🎶 is so unbelievably good. I mean Mozart was such a sensitive talented soul. May God have him in his glory for all his amazing legacy to humanity.
Уважаемый, я так полагаю, что Бог и без нашей просьбы уже прославляет его в царстве своем небесном. Однако не будьте столь наивны расхваливая якобы запредельно прекрасные качества его души. По многочисленным воспоминаниям современников, характер его был не столь благостным как его музыка, но сложным, неоднозначным, и довольно часто полным ядовитого сарказма, по отношению как к собратьям по музыкальному ремеслу так и к окружающим людям, не причастным к нему.
I hope you realize your point is moot, and that if by any chance you feel the need to subject anyone else to your tenuous position, please realize. Your opinion is worthless, and only meaningful for the beholder. As is my response, and opinion of this piece.
Jim Millen Bernstein had a command of Mozart, didn’t he? He knew he was part of a select few deserving of that honor. Those who knew him and worked with him never gave it a second thought. They knew they were in the midst of greatness. Lovely man!
16:52 is just pure perfection! That's what I love about Mozart. The 3rd movement starts ultra epic, and then, just out of the blue this childish motive. It's just beautiful!
GREAT commentary!!!!!!! This "out of the blue" is unique of Mozart !!! There is not anywhere else, not Bach, not Beethoven, not Brahms, not anyone of the considered greats
He would be institutionalized today because he would have been taken away from his father for child abuse and put into a foster home for special children since he was autistic. We should start not giving a fuck about kids again, maybe it'll pop out another musical prodigy. I mean, if we look at the past, Mozart, Beethoven, Haydn, Brahms all had shitty childhoods.
LOL. It's true. But the Brahms' story is probably the worst. Just terrible. Playing piano in brothels at 15 yo because he was so good looking he could pass off as a girl. I can't help but think that's to blame for his later extremely weird relationship with Clara Schumann, and his even weirder behavior at old age. I mean, going around Vienna telling people "If only I had written The Blue Danube!" Truly sad...
Amen to the call to stop the coddling. But the worst abuse of all is forcing a "different" child to conform to the crowd, of course, for his own good--parental love and other tragedies. I say yank a different child out of public school and let him develop on his own. Would Mozart have been helped had his father followed today's prescription of child-raising by forcing Mozart to go to public school and probably be bullied by mediocrities who weren't worthy to tie his shoelaces, and to spend all day every day bored to death by teachers droning shit that had nothing to do with the development of his God-given talent. Thank the Lord for Leopold Mozart, who ignored all that crap about the importance of socializing children by forcing them to go to school. What on earth does that accomplish? Home-taught kids actually do better academically and socially in college than public school dimwits. Another assumption of the Left, the "socialization" thesis, blown out of the water.
A écouter à fond. Se laisser emporter par le génie de Mozart, sa fougue, sa joie, ses envolées. Les notes rien que les notes magiques, belles. Pour moi le luxe absolu. ❤❤❤🎼🎵🎵🎵🎵🎵🎵🎵🎼🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶
Watching Bernstein work leaves us with no doubt how he was able to precisely get what would please a composer. Musicians trusted him and made sure to bring only what would please the composer as well through the person Bernstein. Lovely man!
Me senti nocauteada com essa sinfonia quando assistia a primeira cena do filme Amadeus. Eu tinha 9 anos e estava conhecendo Mozart.... Foi muita emoção!! Nunca tinha ouvido nada tão impressionante e lindo!...a cena da Gran Partita acabou me influenciando para escolher estudar oboé!
Beautiful symphony, like every Mozart's masterpiece. Specially the beginning of this symphony is extraordinary, exciting 🎵🎼🎻💜 I'm almost sure that "AMADEUS", the movie, begins with this symphony. It is fantastic, wonderful
@@patriciabravoriscal6264 Thanks for your fast reply. I happen to be listening to the Requiem right now! It is indeed wonderful Never heard of Piano Concert #20. That will be next on my list. My favorite musical composition of his outside of his symphonies is Eine Kleine Nachtmusik (a little night music) Have loved that ever since my childhood days! take care.
@@8176morgan Yes, I've heard "Eine Kleine Nachtmusik", also beautiful. I forgot to tell that after piano concert 20, the one I love and like most is number 9.
@@patriciabravoriscal6264 I had heard concerto #20 before but did not know it by number. #9 which I am listening to right now I have never heard before but is definitely quite good. For me it is somewhat hard at times to distinguish between his many symphonies and his many piano concertos, although #9 definitely does feature quite a lot more piano music in it compared with #20, which I like better. I have about 30 classical CD’s in my collection that I listen to from time to time by several renowned composers. The first one that I bought, and all of them for usually around a dollar each, was one by Paganini (his Violin G Concertos) and it was excellent. That got me started. Next came Russian Nights - with such classics as Waltz of the Flowers, and Night on Bald Mountain, and was just as good. Then came one called Best Classics Vol 4 and that was even better. One of the abridged compositions was Mozart’s 25 Symphony - that’s how I became acquainted with it. An absolute masterpiece in my opinion. I’ve also got The Best of Mozart Vol 1 which features Symphony 41, the Overture of the Marriage of Figaro, and Symphony No.1 - all three are great! Classical music is wonderful to listen to for uplifting one’s mood and also just to relax with. There is a great deal that I haven’t heard yet, so buying a CD from a second-hand store or a street vendor nearly always has an element of surprise for me as only rarely am I ever disappointed with what I have bought for so little expenditure.
🎶 Your music is like a balm for the soul, soothing and uplifting. The melodies resonate with a universal beauty, and your artistry has the power to transcend boundaries. Thank you for sharing your musical magic! 🙏🎼🌌
For some reason I always had this serious image of Bernstein in my head. But the smile, the tip-toeing, and the shoulder shimmies during this performance really had my mind turned around.
I love how Bernstein interprets the close of the first movement. Goes from very soft to forte in such a short time. It's intriguing - like listening for a high speed train trackside and not only realizing it is approaching but that now is the moment!!
И где же уважаемый Вы услышали в этой музыке хоть каплю покоя, тогда как вся она проникнута , динамикой смятенной души человека находящегося в состоянии неразрешимого, неизбывного, трагического конфликта с неизбежными обстоятельствами его непростой жизни.
There was an ad of Titan Watches on IndiaTV Channel , long time back. I liked this music very much ., and I used to play it .Today after so long time I searched for that music and came to know It is Mozart Symphony. I must say music is excellant by any standards.
Estoy descubriendo el genio de Mozart y ya he escuchado varías sinfonías y piezas de ópera y mis favoritas son: Primer movimiento 25ª sinfonía, Primer movimiento 40ª sinfonía y la obertura de las bodas de Fígaro. Esta pieza es absolutamente sublime, y está versión me parece la mejor
@@PhilobachBach était en fait en retard sur son temps. Pedant que la plupart était dans le style galant, lui était tpujours dans les formes archaïque de la musique baroque, la figue, les premières formes sonates.
@@WALT1Z Bach n' a pas cherché à tomber dans le piège de la médiocrité qui plait au plus grand nombre.... Son contrepoint se marie à son inventivité mélodique…. comme dans cette figue d’ un autre monde : ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-CBP_fOR2aaY.html
This is my favorite Mozart simphony because is so expresive and dramatic. I read some years ago he wrote this piece after a son of him died being a little child.
Recuerdo que yo era muy pequeña cuando vi este concierto en tv, no sabia quien lo habia compuesto, ni como se llamaba, pero se quedo en mi mente, luego supe que pertenecia a Mozart.
Bernstein deve amare così tanto Mozart da volerlo migliorare.Ma il genio dei geni che Salisburgo ci donò riesce sempre a sorridere quando ascolta la versione del grande statunitense.
Bryecnab, please, talk American on the Internet so everybody in the world can understand you and not just a few people in whatever out-of- the-way village you live in talking that strange language you posted in. Thank you, for complying.
permian350 please go buy yourself a brain. Viaceslav writes in Russian, only one of the most spoken language in the world, you ignorant ass. A lot of people in the world don't speak English, also on the internet, deal with it and quit whining. By the way you should start working on your Chinese : it won't be long before New-York is a suburb of Beijing...
I add Johann christian schikhardt a less know n German baroque composer . please listen his one flute and two oboes in g minor.you will be surprised how young Mozart transformed the idea in his own way.
Outstanding! This makes me so happy. "God was singing through this little man to all the world, unstoppable, making my defeat more bitter with every passing bar." -Antonio Salieri
I know this. I'm pretty sure anybody who's seen the movie knows also. Why I figured I didnt have to put F. Murray Abraham. While that's his real name, obviously he only said this qoute because well he was playing Antonio Salieri.
4:20-4:44 Satyajit Ray directed two Feluda movies - Sonar Kella(1974) and Joi Baba Felunath (1978).In which he used this symphony as its theme music. The famous Titan Watches-commercial ad jingle by A.R.Rehman is also based on this symphony.
Simplemente genial, Mozart es un monstruo de la genialidad, hizo lo que quizo con la musica, nos dejo un gran repertorio durante su corta pero productiva vida, vivio en tiempo de genios musicales, fue de los mas grandes , si no el mas grande. Me gusta mucho el manejo de la orquesta asi como la interpretacion, de Bernstein.