When it’s the 18 century and you driving your horse with your family on the back bout to go see the beheading of the town fool and this banger comes on the radio
As a european the antiquity of the continent is a huge source of pride. I'm glad we are able to share our thoughts over the internet like this, I agree on your comment.
When I was 9 years old I began my piano lessons. My father told me “to me, when you’ll be able to play the rondò alla turca, then you’ll be a pianist”. I learned it at 12 and never forgot it. My father didn’t know that there’re a lot of musical pieces far harder than this but this show how, in people’s heart, Mozart is the apex. Sorry for my English, it’s maybe twisted, I’m not a native speaker
i’m twelve years old now and currently learning how to play this:) reminded me of my what piano teacher said. “playing mozart will make you want to quit piano, but once you’ve learned it you’ll understand why he has created it.”
When I was a kid, my mum would fall asleep with the radio on. I was about 6 years old and sleeping in her bed as my room was being painted. I woke up to this playing on the radio in the middle of the night and i was so astonished by it that I couldn't get back to sleep.
I usually listen to pop/metal, so my music taste is quite different from classical music, but this ofc still made it on my playlist,, it's a timeless masterpiece
@@Nebulisuzer While i do adore and love the entertainer very much, I somehow always got distracted when wanting to add it to my playlist, but that is over now, as i have finally added it, thank u for reminding me :) as for the "can can" I'm not exactly sure what u song u are referring to, if u are referring to the Offenbach - Infernal Galop then yes, I have already added it to my playlist long ago... thinking about it classical music is a genre i love
This piece gives us an experience entirely out of reach in ordinary life: perfection. It sounds so simple, yet the right hand soars like a butterfly -- unpredictably, yet exactly right -- while the left shimmers like the bed of flowers the Monarch is traversing. It is sublime.
After having listened to my 4th-grade brother play this without dynamic contrast or a sense of direction/rhythm, for a year, it is nice to hear how the piece is actually supposed to be played for once.
I found this one in the comments of the first song i clicked on (fur elise): CHARLES HEUMADER 11 months ago am I the only one who sways from side to side while listening to this?
I remember when I was Mozart's friend. He used to play my keys everyday, but one day, I retired, and he never played me again, which is why he's been quiet for 300 years.
Sorry to be a bit serious, but I've always thought he looks kinda sick in that portrait. The artist tried to hide his reddish face and eye marks but couldn't do it completely, he was probably ill.
yo mozart, i'm a big fan when's your next concert? i've been waiting 300 years or so i'm 312 years old, i've still some time, so i'm not gonna rush you just keep doing what you're doing till you're dead, haha! edit: why do people keep telling me he's dead? he's not dead right? edit 2: 313 years old now, maybe, mozart, you could, y'know, hurry up? but no pressure, i still have time edit 3: people keep telling me he's dead but this ain't true right right guys? right?
Every time the part at 2:15 plays I always remember the 'write 5 words and write a classic song with your 5 words' task in Taskmaster and the song was used by Fern Brady and Munya Chawawa
One of my teachers in elementary science class played classical music when we would take tests... i have adhd and it was extremely distracting but i fell in love with this song when it was played one time, so while I remember being frustrated because I couldn't concentrate, this song is so pretty that it was also instantly relaxing :)
Bruh, RU-vid reccomandations be like: 1783: no 1784: no 1785: no 1786: no 1787: no 1788: no 1789: no 1790: no 1791: no 1792: no 1793: no 1794: no 1795: no 1796: no 1797: no 1798: no 1799. no 1800: no 1801: no 1802: no 1803: no 1804: no 1805: no 1806: no 1807: no 1808: no 1809: no 1810: no 1811: no 1812: no 1813: no 1814: no 1814: no 1815: no 1816: no 1817: no 1818. no 1819: no 1820: no 1821: no 1822: no 1823: no 1824: no 1825: no 1826: no 1827: no 1828: no 1829: no 1830: no 1831: no 1832: no 1833: no 1834: no 1835: no 1836: no 1837: no 1838: no 1839: no 1840: no 1841: no 1842: no 1843: no 1844: no 1845: no 1846: no 1847: no 1848: no 1849: no 1850: no 1851: no 1852: no 1853: no 1854: no 1855: no 1856: no 1857: no 1858: no 1859: no 1860: no 1861: no 1862: no 1863: no 1864: no 1865: no 1866: no 1867: no 1868: no 1869: no 1870: no 1871: no 1872: no 1873: no 1874: no 1875: no 1876: no 1877: no 1878: no 1879: no 1880: no 1881: no 1882: no 1883: no 1884: no 1885: no 1886: no 1887: no 1888: no 1889: no 1890: no 1891: no 1892: no 1893: no 1894: no 1895: no 1896: no 1897: no 1898: no 1899: no 1900: no 1901: no 1902: no 1903: no 1904: no 1905: no 1906: no 1907: no 1908: no 1909: no 1910: no 1911: no 1912: no 1913: no 1914: no 1915: no 1916: no 1917: no 1918: no 1919: no 1920: no 1921: no 1922: no 1923: no 1924: no 1925: no 1926: no 1927: no 1928: no 1929: no 1930: no 1931: no 1932: no 1933: no 1934: no 1935: no 1936: no 1937: no 1938: no 1939: no 1940: no 1941: no 1942: no 1943: no 1944: no 1945: no 1946: no 1947: no 1948: no 1949: no 1950: no 1951: no 1952: no 1953: no 1954: no 1955: no 1956: no 1957: no 1958: no 1959: no 1960: no 1961: no 1962: no 1963: no 1964: no 1965: no 1966: no 1967: no 1968: no 1969: no 1970: no 1971: no 1972: no 1973: no 1974: no 1975: no 1976: no 1977: no 1978: no 1979: no 1980: no 1981: no 1982: no 1983: no 1984: no 1985: no 1986: no 1987: no 1988: no 1989: no 1990: no 1991: no 1992: no 1993: no 1994: no 1995: no 1996: no 1997: no 1998: no 1999: no 2000: no 2001: no 2002: no 2003: no 2004: no 2005: no 2006: no 2007: no 2008: no 2009: no 2010: no 2011: no 2012: no 2013: no 2014: no 2015. no 2016: no 2017: no 2018: no 2019: Oh YeAh oBvIoUsLy Edit:2020:YuP, eVen nOW
Mozart, Beethoven, Leonardo and Einstein are the proof that we are not alone in the universe. We don’t know (yet) where they were from but they come to us from another planet.
This song takes me back to kindergarten. When lunch ended we’d have a 15 minute quiet time where we had to put our heads down for 15 minutes and do nothing and our teacher would play this song and some others I don’t even remember. Good times.
What most people do not know is that Mozart was a prodigious pianist himself too - maybe similar great as he was a composer. This perception shifted over time because all his works remain but you cannot hear him playing the piano anymore 😢
A meme played with this song and I just remember it being the first song I remembered. I'm 24 but I just remember being a small child no more than 4 or 5 and watching little enstiens and this came on. Hell yea loved Mozart before I knew what anything was