So here we are. I lost my front tooth which is a weird start for a stranger to admit but I'm really sad about it but this song is playing in my head constantly and I haven't got sick of it yet. Life is truly worth living
Yo los abrazo a todos los que estén tristes, es una vela que encenderá la de ustedes hermanos, todos tenemos el poder de ser y dar luz. Ánimo! Esta canción me llena de mucho amor.
This video has become compulsive viewing now. Beautiful people playing good music beautifully. Let's get rid of all the hyped up pop stars and overblown talent show contestants and give the stage to these guys.
This is, quite simply, the most stunning live version of this theme. Without the video you could be forgiven for thinking it was the film soundtrack score.
Wow! They're incredible, just incredible. I've seen a lot of these ensembles and so many of them are so good, but nothing like these guys. I love the two women on the left (audience left). Especially the second from audience left. She's got art in every bone of her body; she won't even let gravity influence her work. She entranced me, utterly entranced me.
watch this 3 times and just watch one of the 3 girls who are playing the Marimba each time. they all have art in their bodies and get so into the tune. marvellous to watch and well as listen to.
Hans Zimmer heavily references the much more subtle Carl Orff/Gunhild Keetman piece "Gassenhauer" that Terrence Malick used to accompany the end credits of "Badlands" (1973).
Gassenhauer was actually by Hans Neusidler in 1536 for the lute - Orff just did a (great) arrangement ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-3IBoKJ0-yfw.html
You play it better than the Hans Zimmer orchestra because you're actually playing the second section which is the most heartwarming part. Congratulations, "You're So Cool" indeed!
As a drummer, I have a special feeling with the bass, so I watched the girl in green all time, but I have to admit the girl on the right was doing great
I play this on loop in my class for the kids when they're meant to be working in small groups or when they're writing something. It's been my favorite song since True Romance, and this is an amazing performance of it.
I've listened to this so many times now and become ever more impressed by the seeming ease with which these people produce the perfect rendition. And so I take back my comment from a week ago. They are not musicians, they are music personified.
Who are these Marimba Ensemble people? Where do they come from? They're so quiet and unassuming, yet clearly dedicated and splendid musicians. Their performance is delightfully compelling, and all the more enjoyable for being devoid of ego. They obviously perform for their own enjoyment and that of their listeners, not for self-aggrandisement as is more usually the case. Congratulations and thanks to them.
This song is on the one hand so simple and on the other hand so ingenious, no, so cool due to the multi-rhythms. And this interpretation is really great and worth listening to, even if the strings are missing at the end! 💚 この曲は、一方ではとてもシンプルで、他方ではマルチリズムのおかげでとても独創的、いや、とてもクールだ。そしてこの解釈は本当に素晴らしく、最後のストリングスが欠けていたとしても聴く価値がある!💚
As an Asian person, I know you mean well, but this is an incredibly reductive thing to say. It plays straight into the “Asians are a model minority” myth, and trust me when I say it makes us sad.
@@BlownMacTruck I'm not sure how you get that. It's got more to do with two things, 1) your genetics, and 2) your penchant for discipline. How you could perceive my comment as offensive is quite perplexing as it was in fact purely a high compliment. If you choose to misinterpret things people say, that's on you.
@@justind9858 Like I said - look at the Asian model minority myth and all the studies that show just how reductive it is to Asians. What you just said about genetics and “discipline” is actually making it MUCH worse.