Wow this really hits different cuz I just finished Isaiah and Jeremiah and now I’m on Ezekiel. This song really captures the contrast between glorious yet justified inevitable wrath of the almighty.
And watch who we entertain when we drink to get drunk and drunken bartender drunk of drunks winieing and complaining because you just never know if we entertain Angles or humanity or the mirror!
Mozart wrote about 8 bars. His student sais "I will finish what you started, Master." And proceeded to make this piece of art and gave his master all the credit. Very honorable, Süssmayr.
The story behind this piece really kinda fits with the setting. It was never fully finished by Mozart and the true ending was never known due to his passing. So the only way people will ever know the end is in death.
also i've heard that his wife let his piece get finished i hope someone will finish berserk, just like mozarts requim, miuras masterpiece needs to be finished
@@StallionFernando Theres a finite infinite, we called it Universe, because we are more finite than that would be. Edit: omg dudes read again. Im literally saying the universe is FINITE, but in our eyes is INFINITE, stop wasting your time explaining what's or not a infinite thing...
@@StallionFernando you somehow managed to miss the point entirely and go for the simplest, most straightforward counterargument you could think of that adds nothing to the conversation - well done!
That’s what occurs when you don’t have iphones, computers, highly satiating foods, tons of casual sex, with access to enough entertainment to lobotomize even the most creative of spirits who knows if there was another Mozart among us that was destroyed by this endless access to hedonism.
@@johnduffy2777 Mozart wrote everything up to the Lacrymosa. Then after he died, his student finished the work. There is a marked difference in the compositional style and quality after the Lacrymosa.
@@ClergetMusic He didn't complete the Lacrimosa. He only wrote the first 8 bars of it (the first 50ish seconds here) in not quite complete sketch. Only the Requiem Aeternam and Kyrie were fully complete ad orchestrated. From the Dies Irae to the Confutatis he fully wrote out the vocal parts, the bass line, and some instrument bits here and there. Then 8 bars of the Lacrimosa. Then for the Domine Jesu and Hostias he wrote the vocal parts too but not much of the accompaniment. It's only the Sanctus, Benedictus and Agnus Dei that Süßmayr fully wrote by himself.
we will all die and we will be resurrected by the creator. make sure you live a life that will make this day beautiful for you. for most people it will be a day of wrath. a day of tears. like the music says.
The meaning behind Lacrimosa’s lyrics is a guilty man standing trial before God, and the souls are begging for God’s mercy on him. It’s a beautiful, haunting song.
@@achi3982 is it not obvious that there is NOT a god. it's too bad people believe in supernatural while there is literally zero evidence of any form. if anything there is evidence of no god at all or at least he doesn't care
Lacrimosa in combination with this beautiful, powerful painting sums up the best of humanity. If aliens ever finds us, let these 2 things be the proof of our existence.
According to tradition, on December 4th, he wrote, with great difficulty, a few bars of the Lacrimosa movement. He then asks three friends who are with him to sing what he has just written. He himself tries to sing the alto part, but starts crying and passes out. A priest, hastily called, comes to give extreme unction. At midnight Mozart says goodbye to the family. At five to one morning on the fifth of December 1791 die Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
I’ve been in love with this painting since watching this video. I return to say that I was able to see it in person today, at The Tate Britain in London. It is glorious.
“Were the humans real?” “No. Just a myth.” Edit: Guys, can we stop trying to compete for the deepest comment? I wrote this half asleep, it wasn’t meant to be a goddamn writing prompt 😂
"It is quieter than I recall." "The day humanity dies..." "I don't know, I expected more flair and anguish. More... I don't know, heroism." "That is because, last time, you were on the receiving end. Now, you get to see what it is like to watch. To know, that it will be the end for many, but not for you." "It is so quiet." "Suffering is quiet, Raven. It always has been."
It's called the "Opening of the Sixth Seal". Haunting piece that essentially shows the second to last part of the rapture as humanity is annihilated by earthquakes, floods, violent winds, etc. A key feature is the fact that the sun turns red. Absolutely brilliant, terrifying piece
After reading the ENTIRE comment section, I have learned Lacrimosa turns any person into a poet, into a philosopher. To confraternize with my fellow Lacrimosa listeners, this is my amateur impression on this masterpiece, by the one and only Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Here it is: "After all the evil that hell could conjure, all the wickedness that mankind produced as its great legacy, when you hear the song, somewhere at the end of time, serenity will settle in, and give you a peace of spirit. Then suddenly I see, suddenly you see. Humanity has not ended. It has transcended. For this is not the end of all. It is just a new beginning."
This song was sung by a church choir at my friend's funeral. I found it beautiful then, find it beautiful now, and will forever find this song both heartbreaking and wonderful. Rest In Peace.
Why do think mozarr said that. The moral he tried to say in his death bed, that he reach the end alone, the most hard thing ever. No one for him to give him some love, or to kiss him good buy. My friend if you have a wife go back today and kiss her, you have no idea what world musician lives in, a cold hard lovelyness just fo what. Beethoven had the same fate and you can see the lovelyness in his master peice longing just to tell people what he want to say. I think there is a moral in that, and it is why left music 12 years ago.
@@BrenoSobral17 mozart in his last days of life saw something that made him compose this, either he saw great beauty beyond life or he saw death straight up
You can play this during any apocalypse scene and it would instantly be more dramatic, even if the apocalypse involves people turning into orange juice
“When the last candles of humanity have been snuffed out, when the final people have withered from existence, when the smoke clears and the fires stop churning all of Earth’s bastions, when the rocks stop moving to cause more brimstone, there will be nothing but the frigid remains of what used to be, now no longer, mankind.”
And Death listened carefully, his black cape rocking with a silent wind, while Mozart explained the ending of Laccrimosa. Only Death would ever know what mortals wouldn't.
Mozart knew a movie would be made about him, and he composed this knowing it would be used during his burial scene in Amadeus. The film won 8 Oscars and it’s a timeless masterpiece. Well done, Mozart! Well done!
This piece reminds me of the time I was late for the bus and as I was getting to the bus stop, all I see is the bus passing through and all I could do was look at it vanish into the distance. Very sad moment for me.
I hear you, the bus drivers in my area know exactly when I'm gonna show up at the bus stop and make sure they arrive 30 seconds earlier as I'm waiting for the red light across the street. Life is truly nothing but pain.
Once, long long ago, there was a race that called themselves "human." A terrifyingly brilliant species, it's said that in their final moments they sent a message into the vast cosmos. It simply read, "Stay with me tonight; you must see me die. I have long had the taste of death on my tongue, I smell death, and who will stand by my Constanze, if you do not stay?" along with a haunting melody written of a human long passed. Like the cry of a woman whose just been widowed, it was full of sorrow, like the song itself was mourning the dying planet. It served as a warning to those who witnessed the cataclysm of human entropy. They tore each other apart like stray dogs fighting over scraps. So blinded by hate they forgot their mutual bonds. However in their final hour, they ceased their fighting and wept, weeping for times long gone, before the end of their home planet. Riddled by pestilence, and plagued by jealousy and envy the fire of human determination finally burns out. All that was left of them were their creations and their final requiem on display for the universe to see. Perhaps one day the earth will recover and allow new life, give the humans a second chance, and maybe they will join together and build each other up instead of tear each other apart.
The Industrial Revolution and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. They have greatly increased the life-expectancy of those of us who live in “advanced” countries, but they have destabilized society, have made life unfulfilling, have subjected human beings to indignities, have led to widespread psychological suffering (in the Third World to physical suffering as well) and have inflicted severe damage on the natural world. The continued development of technology will worsen the situation. It will certainly subject human beings to greater indignities and inflict greater damage on the natural world, it will probably lead to greater social disruption and psychological suffering, and it may lead to increased physical suffering even in “advanced” countries.
@@featherpen5878 The world's state is not a consequence of the Industrial Revolution or any technology from the period. The state of the world is because people used that technology to amass enormous piles of wealth and then proceed to influence the world to allow them to continue their deeds. Technology is not inherently evil, only the people that use it
It’s a bit like the Christian apocalypse, which predicts that the world does get destroyed in the end- but that glimmer of hope is the new world that God will create
"The humans were terrifying, if not fighting among each other, team work was their greatest asset. They could strategize with great results. They could cool down while expending energy. If not killed they'll heal. And their will was unmatched. If just one abandoned their dignity they were capible of anything. We had to eradicate them, we could not allow them to reach beyond their world."
It will remain one of the most outstanding works of art ever created, probably until the end of the Human race itself. It will last forever and till eternity. I got shivers now.
"When the first living thing existed, I was there, waiting. When the last living thing dies, my job will be finished. I'll put the chairs on the tables, turn out the lights, and lock the universe behind me when I leave." Death.
@@MicahSMoore “for we that are in this tabernacle do groan, being burdened: not for that we would be unclothed, but clothed upon, THAT MORTALITY MIGHT BE SWALLOWED UP OF LIFE.” II Corinthians 5:4 “Sound words are the unerring framework upon which the blessed conscience revolves”. And. “Flexibility enables the conscience to expand into the proverbial big picture.” These two original axioms are chief components and guardians of this young philosopher’s blessed trajectory and radiant life. PEACE and LOVE, Paul W. Green
Lyrics: Lacrimosa dies illa (Mournful, that day) Qua resurget ex favilla (Rises from the ashes) Judicandus homo reus (To be judged) Lacrimosa dies illa (Mournful, that day) Qua resurget ex favilla (Rises from the ashes) Judicandus homo reus (To be judged) Huic ergo parce, Deus (God spare him therefore) Pie Jesu Domine (Piety Jesus, Lord Jesus) Dona eis requiem (Grant them eternal rest) Dona eis requiem (Grant them eternal rest) Amen.
Like a hegemony nerd muffin sex doll dancing like Shiva and all the Papua New Guinea birds of paradise all at once while smoking gun powder and shrieking like synergistic cicadas.
"This remains the only intact musical piece by the species known as 'Humanity'. Launched into space upon a flimsy satellite the day their race perished, it has been broadcast for thousands of years across hundreds of light-years, like an eternal funeral dirge for a dying planet. We have cordoned off their Solar System to serve as a testament to the beauty and tragedy that the Humans were so supremely capable of. May their achievements and their downfall serve as a warning for us all."
@Misfit Music Humans are just too numerous. I feel like even if some nuclear or climatic flare wipes humanity off the face of the earth, there would still be tiny pockets of populations that would survive around the globe.
I'm actually pissed that this song wasn't one of the many classics that we launched into space. It summarizes the insanity that we produce on such a large scale
@@AureliusLaurentius1099 but still thousands upon thousands of nukes more powerful than those that obliterated Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I still think nuclear war won't happen any time soon though, it would be suicide for the person that presses the botton first.
I met a traveller from an antique land, Who said-“Two vast and trunkless legs of stone Stand in the desert. . . . Near them, on the sand, Half sunk a shattered visage lies, whose frown, And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command, Tell that its sculptor well those passions read Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things, The hand that mocked them, and the heart that fed; And on the pedestal, these words appear: My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings; Look on my Works, ye Mighty, and despair! Nothing beside remains. Round the decay Of that colossal Wreck, boundless and bare The lone and level sands stretch far away.”
Imagine a film about the end of the world, but in that final horrible moment, all the screams perfectly form the sound of this song - as the final death cry of humanity it'd be bloody terrifying
Exactly. And the post-credits scene will show the opposite, the universe dying with a groan. While the narrator says: And after an unimaginable time, every species, stars and black holes will disappear, the creation will be cooling down to absolute zero. Time and space once so disposable are now insignificant. Nothing happened, nothing happens and nothing will happen forever. With love, God.
It's even more intense. You feel the bass in your bones. The high trebles rattle the ears. There is so much hidden reverb and subtle notes that fill your head with a well designed auditorium. I'd recommend anyone with an interest in classical music to experience one. If you live in Europe, The Sounds of Hans Zimmer and John Williams are playing around Germany and Austria From January through April of 2022.
This song with this painting... It's almost indescribable with how hauntingly beautiful it is. Like someone, on their deathbed, drawing their last breath, and as they do, they truly have one moment of clarity, of true vison, all of their mistakes and the mistakes of others, they fully understand everything. Things that would be incomprehensible to the human mind at any other point are truly revealed, every question that could ever be answered is. they truly become all-knowing and all-seeing for that one moment. Only for death's icy hand to take it's firm grip on them, stealing them from the mortal world for their own good, and as their prize.
there's this little white spark in the painting, left and under the dark boulder... it's like a tiny spark of hope trying to rise above the carnage if you start at the tail, say around 2:08, and then follow it upwards.. but slowly... you can match your view with this emotional delivery of the piece, up to and including the crushing bit in a massive sense once you end up at the boulder and what your eyes will see after.. It works SO well you can wonder if this was a deliberate act... Thank you So Very Much for making me find this... 💖💖
This Song (Lacrimosa) was written in 1791 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. This painting (The Great Day of His Wrath) was made in 1851 by John martin. The words to this song in English are: "Mournful that day When from the dust shall rise Guilty man to be judged Therefore spare him O God Merciful Jesu Lord Grant them rest! Amen!" A contemplative free written poem by me: May we all repent of our sins and entrust our souls to God through Jesus Christ, this is the only thing that matters- salvation from the holy wrath of God and eternal life through God's forgiveness for our wicked deeds. The day has surely passed, the night is here at last, when the wolves come out to play, who will fight them away? Those deadly sins killed our fathers, killed our mothers, yet into them we run, "oh it's alright, its just a little fun!" One day we will stand, before the almighty judge, to give unto him an account for all our sins. His justice is supreme, wisdom greater then us all, his eyes penetrate your thoughts and lies, his eyes see all. Who trembles at his mighty name? Who faithfully proclaims- the awful day of judgement that comes. Who falls before him in awe? Who's lips grow silent at all? Though all mankind forget the Lord- sovereign still he reigns. Though all mankind reject the Lord- steadfast in faithfulness he remains. Though all mankind mock the Lord- patient he truly is.
God be like “hey if you have to worship me so I don’t condemn you to a like of eternal suffering, even though you could be the best person on earth, you still have to pray to be saved from the things I might do to you.”
Other than another species debating whether or not we existed, imagine just the moment everything ends violently for us instead. The last moment while you're looking around at the horror mixed with the indifference of nature, the sky being so beautiful despite the horrific reality that everything is over for us. You look around and have an amazing mixture of sadness, terror and peace while you see the last millisecond before the impact.
We don’t even exist, let alone other life. We’re a dream lived by many different characters in that dream. Just as your subconscious splits and you believe them to be fully fleshed people while dreaming, so too are we of the universe. “God”. Call it Nature if you want, but Nature is the law of existence, and nothing violates it. Any “violation” is found to be a law. We exist under the law of the dream world, we’re not lucid. We think we are. Praise be to Law, our whole from which we are born
The angels peek through the clouds, noticing that there isn't a single human left alive on earth. Slowly, they are encouraged to sing a piece by Mozart called Lacrimosa, so that it can be heard all over the earth. It isn't something strange or scary if there isn't a single soul listening to it...
But the angels sing in joy. For now, without humans, the Earth, like its creator, is perfect once more. ---- Between the song and your comment, I felt the inspiration hit me hard. As an atheist, this isn't a normal comment 😆
Imagine if it is soon as the angels finished singing God in heaven decided to make the animals intelligent so that the world could not go to waste. I guess in a way that really would be the meek inheriting the earth wouldn’t it?
@@gabiacevedo9032 why we all are waiting our end?... why do not try to start building a new society without of all inhuman convictions and unfair business of our resources here...
nemo enim hoc carmen est. est sicut flos in vertice montis crescens. ejus pulchritudo non est hominibus oculis destinata. perfectio fit pulchritudo, quando arcanum suum cum eis assumitur ad sepulcrum.
This is amazing to listen to. It’s currently 4am and the last day of the semester and the horrible grind is beginning. It’s nice to vibe to something so powerful as the coffee kicks in
yeah, I'm in the last 2 weeks of school and I have a playlist named "POV: you're a high school student with 30 late/missing assignments and suffering from severe depression" and like i think this is going to be the grand finale
@@natalieholt2598 Being slightly different remains the same to you? This version is way more pronounced and atmospheric. It's the same song yes. It's not the same result though
@@QuarkStorm What about this is slightly different to "the original"? Beyond the differences you would expect between performances from different orchestras, but with the same notation? If the credits are to believed, this is "just" a performance of Requiem like any other, arranged from the original music that Mozart wrote, possibly with slight changes in instrumentation. Which is always done with almost any classical piece performed by any orchestra. A pretty nice one
@@QuarkStorm this is not rearranged the music is similar simply electronically edited to give it this effect, a different version would be if the tempo is changed, the notation or the lyrics
This song fits so well with a place that has echo such as a cave or a long tunnel. It is like this image, it's a song that sings from the depths of the underworld.
This music is eternal. We may not live forever, but we can do something beautiful for this world, as Mozart did. Let classical music always rest in our hearts ...
After all... It ended. All the happiness, all the first smiles, and first tears, all the love, all the pain, all the books and all the art, all the brave and smart ones and all the ones who didn't care at all... It was all anyone's memories now because there was no one to remember how was to be human. The biggest temples the men made to communicate with the gods, the highest skyscrapers, and a sandcastle a kid made sometime in history. All the uncountable lives taken away by war and all the uncountable times a child cried after falling for the first time. All the first steps and last breaths. It was all done. And it was nothing. The world had been torn apart. It wasn't the same Earth. In the middle of an infinity universe and infinity other worlds, the blue planet was now gone and there was not actually a reason to mourn about it... Because it simply didn't matter at all. And in the surface of that dead planet, in the middle of nowhere... No one heard it, but a specific song written by a random person in some random time of human existence was playing... In requiem to a buried existence: Lacrimosa.
If you are a musician you might be pleased to know that the chromatic progression, from the last 2 measures he wrote, contains the BACH theme in the bass. I was blown away when I noticed it, and I doubt it is a coincidence. Mozart knew he was going to die and he blended his last notes with the most iconic musical signature. Thus showing respect to the master, Bach. (Copied from another video. The original is mine too.)
There’s is a name for that. Don’t remember what it’s called, but its when you take a melody of one piece and use it as the bass or rhythm for your own pieces with their own lead, and then someone does that to you with your melody, so on and so on. Concerta? Maybe? No, that’s not it. It was done A LOT in classical music at the time, and can even be found in modern music today. Quite interesting, and I thought it would violate copywrite BUT it apparently doesn’t because legally within music Bass and Melody are two separate things and using someone else’s melody as bass counts as transformative. Quite an interesting musical history fact
@@UTTPOfficerBennie For example, there are scientific facts about the universe in the Quran(written thousands of years ago) which were proven 100% accurate in recent times.
" Neither a lofty degree of intelligence, nor imagination nor both together go to the making of genius. Love, love, love that is the soul of genius. " - W. Mozart
@@alexm7627 "Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal. 2 And though I have the gift of prophecy, and understand all mysteries, and all knowledge; and though I have all faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not charity, I am nothing. 3 And though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and though I give my body to be burned, and have not charity, it profiteth me nothing." 1 Corinthians 13 KJV
Mozart's "Lacrimosa" from the Requiem in D minor is a hauntingly poignant masterpiece that transcends time, echoing the profound emotions of its creator's final days. The mere 45 seconds Mozart crafted before his passing encapsulate a spectrum of emotions, from sorrow to awe. The fact that this unfinished symphony endures, with his students completing the composition, speaks volumes about Mozart's enduring influence as a teacher and the timeless resonance of his musical legacy. It's a testament to the power of art to evoke chills and stir the soul, even centuries after its creation.
So you added an echo, I usually don't appreciate people messing with Mozart, but this is impressive. Like its being performed in a huge empty cathedral.
One of the best memories of my childhood singing this piece in front of a couple of hundred people together with a talented orchestra, choir and Kantor.
whenever I hear Lacrimosa , I feel like a supernatural being watching a great event happening from the top . I am not sure if everyone feels like this.
The true horror of the end, is the knowledge you're alone but the feeling that you're surrounded. Entombed by the thoughts of the others around you, staring, yelling, helping, watching. It is a moment as important as your birth, it is your destiny, your final performance, and the very purpose that encouraged your actions in life. It can be many things, deserving or sudden, ironic or unexpected. Death is personal, and in those final moments, your last thoughts may be of why, or who is there, or even how it happened. This is the song I heard in my head as my eyes lazily glanced around the ER room, as I was bleeding out from a large cut in my arm. Hazy thoughts, doctors and nurses pushing and pulling flesh, can't really hear, feel like sleeping. I just wanted them to go away and leave me alone. Right as I was closing my eyes to catch a nap, I could've sworn I could feel the familiar warmth of the sun on my face, barely smell the fresh scent of pine trees, and even hear the wind blow through the long grass of the hills where I use to play as a kid. I'm not religious, but to this day I think it was either the outer gates of what I would've called heaven, or the blood loss causing some delusions. Whatever it was, my views on dying were 20 times more positive after my close call. What I assumed to be scary and morbid, is now what I believe to be simply a part of life that gives it purpose. What most of us fear is the waste of time we could have lived, that we believe we will pay with death, for previous actions and choices. For THAT....we feel alone in the process of our death. For THAT...we also feel surrounded. By other dead watching, by hindsighted living, and by the future of those that live beyond our time, using our last moment of life as an example of what not to do. That last part is why my opinion changed. It is lighter to tread on a path that you believe is welcoming, than to walk the minefield of criticism
Heres my spin on it In twilight's embrace, silence falls, Echoes of our stories fade, Cities crumble, nature reclaims, Humanity's fleeting arc, In the quietus, a whisper remains, Of dreams once dared, And lessons learned, In the dust of stars, We find our peace, As the cosmos sighs, And time releases.
The End of the World, commonly known as The Great Day of His Wrath, is an 1851-1853 oil painting on canvas by the English painter John Martin. Leopold Martin, John Martin's son, said that his father found the inspiration for this painting on a night journey through the Black Country
@@bayerischemotorenwerke5252 lmao u bastard, nah it's about birmingham being very dark, uk with the industrial districts, the smoke etc. I think at least, I'm french anyway
Lacrimosa in general gives me god, heavenly vibes, at war Romans fighting, and it’s crazy to think that The first Part where Mozart wrote is the part he finished what a song to die to, the song gives, Death, desire, grace, a Horrific feeling but yet a Subtle tone, screaming of pain and joy, screams of despair and many emotions throughout it this is what makes it my favorite piece of classical work of all time.
Scary I had a dream with this exact imagery some months back, and it ended with crumbling rocks and mountains like this. Never seen this before as well. Happy to have such a strong visual representation of it now tho.
When this played near the end of the movie "Come and See" (1985) where Flyora followed the rest of the partisians into the forest, it gave me absolute chills because its possible some of them may not come back in one piece. The film is very hard to watch so I suggest you have a strong mind and heart beforehand.
"Depressing sight ain't it? Thousands worth of history yet many more stories remain unspoken. Billions of words leading to this unfortunate fate, a supposed grander future now snatched, engulfed in one huge bang." The figure said to another, who both remained seated and watch the spectacle of Human Failure.
@@featherpen5878 Then your elegiac mind must be a marvel to explore! Thus forgive me for being so persistent, but i must repeat my question: Is there a specefic place where you display such authorings? I simply cannot let a person this capable of writing pieces of literature slip out of my fingers without witnessing more of them.
@@Hoda.M Well I do write stories. But yeah that's it, I don't see myself as an Expert of a Writer. More like an Amateur if you will, however for my stories I do advise you it will only downgrade from there as I am lazy.
i cant believe the feeling one would have felt hearing this for the first time any human had ever heard such music. What a god like moment, lovely. Truly a great piece of art in its finest form.
The only thing that remains is what we did for ourselves. The world is yours. Don’t let religion, society or media stop you from doing what you what. When everything will be gone anyways, why not live the way you want now? Affirm yourself.
@@sirhauzenh.3735 The world will eventually move on and so will every spect of our existence, all our creations will eventually amount to nothing in such a world, taken back by the world we inhabit.
I can still hear. That noise. It's unbridled anger is unmatched, and it's words convey a message more complex than time, space and reality. And then I hear it... Noot.. Noot...
For those wondering, the painting is called "The great day of His Wrath" by John Martin
Thank you :)
Wow this really hits different cuz I just finished Isaiah and Jeremiah and now I’m on Ezekiel. This song really captures the contrast between glorious yet justified inevitable wrath of the almighty.
would fit better with dies irae since the lyrics literally say that
Why does it feels like that both were made for each other (the song and the art I mean)
That day is not great for sinners but great for the pure.
Mozart was creating final boss music before it was even a thing
Prehaps in his final moments, As he was composing this peice, he saw something either truely beautiful, or horrifying.
There’s the lack-of-a-mustache man
hey a comment of you with little likes
its rare to find a comment you made with less than 100 comments
no. he was creating the first unkillable boss
From dust you were made, and to dust, shall you return.
Peace
And watch who we entertain when we drink to get drunk and drunken bartender drunk of drunks winieing and complaining because you just never know if we entertain Angles or humanity or the mirror!
This must be a high class bar and one belonging to a ghetto bar but both having the same wine and booze
@@zapatapancho4203
Yeah but what if the best way to understand everything was to get a grip on your shard pipe
Not really.
Mozart wrote about 8 bars. His student sais "I will finish what you started, Master." And proceeded to make this piece of art and gave his master all the credit.
Very honorable, Süssmayr.
You didn't make that up
@@MattiaPezz source
Sussy baka
@@MattiaPezz You can always search it up and verify that lil bro
Sissymar was known to be dishonest
The story behind this piece really kinda fits with the setting. It was never fully finished by Mozart and the true ending was never known due to his passing. So the only way people will ever know the end is in death.
And what’s the story behind the painting?
bullshit. he died before finishing, yes, but his students finished this piece in a similar way Mozart would. this is the finished version.
@@PianotuberX he said it wasnt fully finished by mozart, not his students (who wouldnt know how mozart would've done it)
@@Toersk1 the painter died of a stroke before he could finish the series of which this painting is a part.
also i've heard that his wife let his piece get finished
i hope someone will finish berserk, just like mozarts requim, miuras masterpiece needs to be finished
“We all die. The goal isn’t to live forever, the goal is to create something that will”
Thanks Mozart.
Humans can't create anything that lives forever, finite creatures can only create finite things.
@@StallionFernando
Theres a finite infinite, we called it Universe, because we are more finite than that would be.
Edit: omg dudes read again. Im literally saying the universe is FINITE, but in our eyes is INFINITE, stop wasting your time explaining what's or not a infinite thing...
@@StallionFernando you somehow managed to miss the point entirely and go for the simplest, most straightforward counterargument you could think of that adds nothing to the conversation - well done!
and look at us in 2022 listening to this..
@@StallionFernando Fart sniffer
In case of a nuclear war I will be saving this for when it all ends.
No nuclear war. The Bible shows a different outcome. Yes fire will come down from heaven to consume the wicked.
Based
You have 1 minute to play it right after the warning
Gotta click fast
@@vendoaguasa5lucas930 whats that country flag?
@@JacksonZ. im losing my shit at this comment
It's incredible how an unfinished 200 years old music it's better than almost everything we have created in modern times
@@gmmgmmgkinda generic ngl
True story....
That’s what occurs when you don’t have iphones, computers, highly satiating foods, tons of casual sex, with access to enough entertainment to lobotomize even the most creative of spirits who knows if there was another Mozart among us that was destroyed by this endless access to hedonism.
I’m not going to agree with this but I will say the staying power of classical music is really something special
@@priley817 A M O N G U S
This is one of the most perfect choral works ever written.
That is the last composition of Mozart. He died on 5 th december 1791!
@@siegfriedweber7956 Mozart didn’t write most of it
@@johnduffy2777 Mozart wrote everything up to the Lacrymosa. Then after he died, his student finished the work. There is a marked difference in the compositional style and quality after the Lacrymosa.
@@ClergetMusic He didn't complete the Lacrimosa. He only wrote the first 8 bars of it (the first 50ish seconds here) in not quite complete sketch. Only the Requiem Aeternam and Kyrie were fully complete ad orchestrated. From the Dies Irae to the Confutatis he fully wrote out the vocal parts, the bass line, and some instrument bits here and there. Then 8 bars of the Lacrimosa. Then for the Domine Jesu and Hostias he wrote the vocal parts too but not much of the accompaniment. It's only the Sanctus, Benedictus and Agnus Dei that Süßmayr fully wrote by himself.
yasa
Now THIS is a Requiem. You can just _feel_ the finality along with the grief
CRINCH
Cringe
fr tho
Wait, are you saying.... KORA GA.... REQUIEM DA?
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NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI? NANI?
cringe
0:13 I can't describe how beautiful this moment feels
The Ultimate Ending Theme
we will all die and we will be resurrected by the creator. make sure you live a life that will make this day beautiful for you. for most people it will be a day of wrath. a day of tears. like the music says.
bro see this part then 2:20
“My brother in Christ, I’m dying, this is my last album, so I gotta make it good” - Mozart
“Nah, let the others finish that for you. We have a tight schedule” - God
@@KaKa-cd9de underrated comment 😂😂😂😂
@@KaKa-cd9de thats peak
@@calisongbird yes
@@capiche1378 bruh just respect what people believe in
You sound like a literal redditor
The meaning behind Lacrimosa’s lyrics is a guilty man standing trial before God, and the souls are begging for God’s mercy on him. It’s a beautiful, haunting song.
"A guilty Man stand before God."
This is literally every single one of us.
Best of luck. You have to go there alone.
@@achi3982 I tried following Christ but I blew out my flip flop...
...stepped on a pop top.
Cut my heel; had to cruise on back home...
too bad god doesn't exist eh. but religion brought a lot of good music so that's cool I guess
@@achi3982 is it not obvious that there is NOT a god. it's too bad people believe in supernatural while there is literally zero evidence of any form. if anything there is evidence of no god at all or at least he doesn't care
i wish everyone on this comment section would accept that not everyone believes in the same thing , listen to people and let them be !
Lacrimosa starts playing and everybody start turning into poets.
edgy poets
fr
Or hitmen. I know it's Ave Maria but still
@@johnw1954 your comment is also edgy..s.bsbstnean ar
Prose and verse start running my veins in dactylic haxametre.. μῆνιν ἄειδε θεὰ Πηληϊάδεω Ἀχιλῆος οὐλομένην, ἣ μυρί’ Ἀχαιοῖς ἄλγε’ ἔθηκε
i still remember when this was dropped couple of hundred years ago damn still hits hard
good old days😂
Classic golden oldie for sure
Ahh yes back when i still had my slaves good times 😂
@@Walter-vq3vmbro went to far💀
@@yotamoren818 sorry bro game is game😭.
*Lacrimosa starts playing*
The entire comment section: You know I'm something of a poet myself.
And thats why here in denmark we have very small tables
Noot noot
@@nemesis6057 () _ ()
O_O
Lacrimosa in combination with this beautiful, powerful painting sums up the best of humanity. If aliens ever finds us, let these 2 things be the proof of our existence.
According to tradition, on December 4th, he wrote, with great difficulty, a few bars of the Lacrimosa movement. He then asks three friends who are with him to sing what he has just written. He himself tries to sing the alto part, but starts crying and passes out. A priest, hastily called, comes to give extreme unction.
At midnight Mozart says goodbye to the family. At five to one morning on the fifth of December 1791 die Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
Poisoned Though
@@thenigma6519 no evidence for that + only used in a cringe "movie" for dramatic effect
@@thenigma6519 no evidence for that + only used in a cringe "movie" for dramatic effect
@@FHT1883 what movie?
@@veratsia the heavily fictionalized 'biography' movie "Amadeus" alludes that Salieri poisoned Mozart (if I remember correctly, I only saw it once)
Can't wait to hear his next album, very talented!
💀
Very original comment
☠️
Oh god no
I'm his biggest fan, loved his concert in atlanta back in 2013
I’ve been in love with this painting since watching this video. I return to say that I was able to see it in person today, at The Tate Britain in London. It is glorious.
I am so happy to hear that!
“Were the humans real?”
“No. Just a myth.”
Edit: Guys, can we stop trying to compete for the deepest comment? I wrote this half asleep, it wasn’t meant to be a goddamn writing prompt 😂
I have a strong urge to write a far future science fiction/biblical piece
sounds like something from the "humans are space oddities" tag on Tumblr
@@tokki03 I would love to read it.
Who the hell is speaking
@@EthNet34756 talking sponges
"It is quieter than I recall."
"The day humanity dies..."
"I don't know, I expected more flair and anguish. More... I don't know, heroism."
"That is because, last time, you were on the receiving end. Now, you get to see what it is like to watch. To know, that it will be the end for many, but not for you."
"It is so quiet."
"Suffering is quiet, Raven. It always has been."
Is that from somewhere, a novel, poem etc.?
this is my fav episode of that’s so raven
@@gogostify It is from a short story featuring a character from a larger series, called When the Stars Align. The short story's name is 'Steelborn'
@@river8292 Thank you for replying and thank you for sharing.
@@gogostify Of course, no problem! You might not find it online, as it is currently still in development phase though.
are we just going to ignore how stunning the art is? like genuinely, it’s so good
It's called the "Opening of the Sixth Seal". Haunting piece that essentially shows the second to last part of the rapture as humanity is annihilated by earthquakes, floods, violent winds, etc. A key feature is the fact that the sun turns red. Absolutely brilliant, terrifying piece
Yes we gonna ignore it
Yeah I was planning on ignoring it tbh if you don't mind
@@siddsingh8804 tysm for the info!! do u know who made it?
edit: found out, it's by Francis Danby (1793-1861) !!
@@jubiloks_ Wait, it's not john martin?
After reading the ENTIRE comment section, I have learned Lacrimosa turns any person into a poet, into a philosopher. To confraternize with my fellow Lacrimosa listeners, this is my amateur impression on this masterpiece, by the one and only Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
Here it is:
"After all the evil that hell could conjure, all the wickedness that mankind produced as its great legacy, when you hear the song, somewhere at the end of time, serenity will settle in, and give you a peace of spirit. Then suddenly I see, suddenly you see. Humanity has not ended. It has transcended. For this is not the end of all. It is just a new beginning."
i know a Doom Eternal reference when i see one
@@alexr1318 well met, kindred spirit
Wow. Some people really don’t have a life.
@@333dogLove to see people spreading love on the internet. Beautiful
@@fartbike but am I wrong?
This song was sung by a church choir at my friend's funeral. I found it beautiful then, find it beautiful now, and will forever find this song both heartbreaking and wonderful. Rest In Peace.
Sorry for your loss, I hope your friend lived righteously.
@@rhettC5 🙊
Read John 3:16 🙏
@@reclusiarchgrimaldus1269 thank you. It means so much to me. I hope he rests happier than he was when he was here, wherever he is
@@rhettC5 thank you. He did.
this piece is so much more diffrent for mozarts other piece. more sinister and i love it
in fact, Mozart only wrote the first bars of lacrimosa. the rest was composed by Süssmayr.
It's not really Mozart's work. He wrote only some of the first tacts. It was written by his student Sussmayr.
@@Kchkchkch8415 ik isnt it his kid. still if you just listen to the first tacts its still so diffrent form what he normally writes
@@d4rkness455 well, all his requiem is different from the rest of his pieces.
@@Kchkchkch8415 yeah that is what i mean and it is quite something
"Classical beats to listen to while watching the universe die."
I hope my fart is the last to expel from an asshole
People dying: "Let me see my wife for the last time"
Mozart dying: "Get me a piece of PAPER"
great!... 😂💖💪
Why do think mozarr said that. The moral he tried to say in his death bed, that he reach the end alone, the most hard thing ever. No one for him to give him some love, or to kiss him good buy. My friend if you have a wife go back today and kiss her, you have no idea what world musician lives in, a cold hard lovelyness just fo what. Beethoven had the same fate and you can see the lovelyness in his master peice longing just to tell people what he want to say.
I think there is a moral in that, and it is why left music 12 years ago.
"To blow on to rid of your tears?"
"TO WRITE MORE I'M NOT DONE YET"
“But sir your body is crippling…”
“I DON’T CARE IM WRITING THIS PIECE TONIGHT!!”
Good career move
Both 'Lacrimosa' and 'The Great Day of His Wrath' happens to be my favorite piece if music and art respectively. Thank you for combining them both.
"His" lmao
absolutely obsessed with john martin
@@arcanefire7511 Thats the title. 'The Last Day of His Wrath'.
@@doogelyjim8627 There's something about his work its so calming yet the world is on the brink of Apocalypse.
@@erebus3059 ik. It's cringe is what I'm saying
“Two possibilities exist: either we are alone in the Universe or we are not. Both are equally terrifying.” Arthur C. Clarke
edit: DAD I'M FAMOUS
Your comment has nothing to do with what the song means
@@BrenoSobral17 the song gives feels, that’s the point
@@BrenoSobral17 mozart in his last days of life saw something that made him compose this, either he saw great beauty beyond life or he saw death straight up
@@HassleHoffer372 but that's not what the song means, just read the lyrics
@@BrenoSobral17 dude, buzz kill
mozart really said "i'm not going out without a bang" then dies before finishing the piece
He said "I'm going out with a banger" and he was right
@@knipsi22 who he banged?
@@sarcastaball I don't know who he banged, that's none of our business bro. But the song is a banger if you know what I mean.
@@knipsi22I don't care about his composition. I wanna know who he banged. His sister maybe? U think he was into kinky stuff?
@@sarcastaball he wrote this while dying..his final "banger hit."
You can play this during any apocalypse scene and it would instantly be more dramatic, even if the apocalypse involves people turning into orange juice
I understood that reference.
Eh heh I get it lol
@@preommosharrofmir7592 I didn't
Explain please
@@joaofernando5043 I’d rather not explain, because it’s important in some anime
This song hits straight to the core of my soul.
No evidence of a soul whatsoever
So what separates you from a PC ?@@matimus100
@@matimus100laughs on Aristotle's anima et animus
“When the last candles of humanity have been snuffed out, when the final people have withered from existence, when the smoke clears and the fires stop churning all of Earth’s bastions, when the rocks stop moving to cause more brimstone, there will be nothing but the frigid remains of what used to be, now no longer, mankind.”
What a heaven that would be
A silent world reclaimed by nature
How is Warhammer so freaking quotable?
U just fucked me with that paragraph
@@wonderland5613 gay take
And Death listened carefully, his black cape rocking with a silent wind, while Mozart explained the ending of Laccrimosa. Only Death would ever know what mortals wouldn't.
cringe
@@ryanjames9599 “cringe” says the one making a cringe comment lmao
death like 'ok but i still prefer yeezus'
@@ryanjames9599 I dunno man, at least they're actually good at something, unlike you.
@@Seanph25 cringe is cringe?
“I’m not the hero the world needed, I’m the villain it deserved”
RIGHT >
noot noot
who said that one
@@criminal2421 No clue
Joker vibes
Mozart knew a movie would be made about him, and he composed this knowing it would be used during his burial scene in Amadeus. The film won 8 Oscars and it’s a timeless masterpiece. Well done, Mozart! Well done!
Amadeus will forever be a masterpiece
well played sir, well played.
if he new previously about the movie, nobody knows, but that he watched it, absolutely yes!...
all according to keikaku
Mozart was the real Tupac
This piece reminds me of the time I was late for the bus and as I was getting to the bus stop, all I see is the bus passing through and all I could do was look at it vanish into the distance.
Very sad moment for me.
That story fits to the music 😂
momento brasil
I hear you, the bus drivers in my area know exactly when I'm gonna show up at the bus stop and make sure they arrive 30 seconds earlier as I'm waiting for the red light across the street. Life is truly nothing but pain.
That happened to me once except I ran after the bus till the next stop, I made it
Villain arc, *start* .
This makes me feel a sense of unbearable dread and peace as the world is crumbling underneath my feet
Makes me feel like my testicles are being itched gently but agonizingly
it's honestly a breath taking feeling
its a song-
@@devronscott6299 LMAO
No
Once, long long ago, there was a race that called themselves "human." A terrifyingly brilliant species, it's said that in their final moments they sent a message into the vast cosmos. It simply read, "Stay with me tonight; you must see me die. I have long had the taste of death on my tongue, I smell death, and who will stand by my Constanze, if you do not stay?" along with a haunting melody written of a human long passed. Like the cry of a woman whose just been widowed, it was full of sorrow, like the song itself was mourning the dying planet. It served as a warning to those who witnessed the cataclysm of human entropy. They tore each other apart like stray dogs fighting over scraps. So blinded by hate they forgot their mutual bonds. However in their final hour, they ceased their fighting and wept, weeping for times long gone, before the end of their home planet. Riddled by pestilence, and plagued by jealousy and envy the fire of human determination finally burns out. All that was left of them were their creations and their final requiem on display for the universe to see. Perhaps one day the earth will recover and allow new life, give the humans a second chance, and maybe they will join together and build each other up instead of tear each other apart.
The Industrial Revolution and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. They have greatly increased the life-expectancy of those of us who live in “advanced” countries, but they have destabilized society, have made life unfulfilling, have subjected human beings to indignities, have led to widespread psychological suffering (in the Third World to physical suffering as well) and have inflicted severe damage on the natural world. The continued development of technology will worsen the situation. It will certainly subject human beings to greater indignities and inflict greater damage on the natural world, it will probably lead to greater social disruption and psychological suffering, and it may lead to increased physical suffering even in “advanced” countries.
CHILLS
Dude...
@@featherpen5878 The world's state is not a consequence of the Industrial Revolution or any technology from the period. The state of the world is because people used that technology to amass enormous piles of wealth and then proceed to influence the world to allow them to continue their deeds. Technology is not inherently evil, only the people that use it
bro
This song makes it feel like humanity didn't just die off, but instead fought a giant war against something and lost
We fought among ourselves and lost
@@Limeasaxdar Idk why that made me laugh lmao 🤣
Pride. The greatest monster humanity has ever faced.
The last few seconds though allude to a hope, the smallest glimmer of hope and that really sets the piece off for me
It’s a bit like the Christian apocalypse, which predicts that the world does get destroyed in the end- but that glimmer of hope is the new world that God will create
"The humans were terrifying, if not fighting among each other, team work was their greatest asset.
They could strategize with great results.
They could cool down while expending energy.
If not killed they'll heal.
And their will was unmatched.
If just one abandoned their dignity they were capible of anything.
We had to eradicate them, we could not allow them to reach beyond their world."
Damn we sound badass
@@impulsiveman5901 then you remember all of us will look at our shit after we wipe
@@Lesaloote gotta give it the stare down before I flush it down the toilet
@@Lesaloote Gotta make sure your poop is brown and not red
humanity won't go extinct, things will only change in humanity's dire moments, maybe temporarily, but that's how things go.
Without a doubt, this is one of the most fascinating classical musics I've ever listened to.
It will remain one of the most outstanding works of art ever created, probably until the end of the Human race itself. It will last forever and till eternity. I got shivers now.
agreed, hannibal
daddy hannibal
"When the first living thing existed, I was there, waiting. When the last living thing dies, my job will be finished. I'll put the chairs on the tables, turn out the lights, and lock the universe behind me when I leave."
Death.
VAIN IMAGINATION! INDEED! PWG
Is this from Sandman?
@@MicahSMoore “for we that are in this tabernacle do groan, being burdened: not for that we would be unclothed, but clothed upon, THAT MORTALITY MIGHT BE SWALLOWED UP OF LIFE.” II Corinthians 5:4 “Sound words are the unerring framework upon which the blessed conscience revolves”. And. “Flexibility enables the conscience to expand into the proverbial big picture.” These two original axioms are chief components and guardians of this young philosopher’s blessed trajectory and radiant life. PEACE and LOVE, Paul W. Green
Lyrics:
Lacrimosa dies illa
(Mournful, that day)
Qua resurget ex favilla
(Rises from the ashes)
Judicandus homo reus
(To be judged)
Lacrimosa dies illa
(Mournful, that day)
Qua resurget ex favilla
(Rises from the ashes)
Judicandus homo reus
(To be judged)
Huic ergo parce, Deus
(God spare him therefore)
Pie Jesu Domine
(Piety Jesus, Lord Jesus)
Dona eis requiem
(Grant them eternal rest)
Dona eis requiem
(Grant them eternal rest)
Amen.
I was always wondering what those screams are, thanks
@@borealis5379lmao 😂 same here bro
Thanks jeb
How in lords name am I supposed to sing this?
Qua resurget ex favilla judicandus homo reus - when from the ashes will rise the guilty man to be judged.
This hits different right about now
Like a nuke
Like a giant American mom taking on you
was looking for this comment
Like a hegemony nerd muffin sex doll dancing like Shiva and all the Papua New Guinea birds of paradise all at once while smoking gun powder and shrieking like synergistic cicadas.
@@electriccoffeehello700 what teh fuck did I just read
"This remains the only intact musical piece by the species known as 'Humanity'. Launched into space upon a flimsy satellite the day their race perished, it has been broadcast for thousands of years across hundreds of light-years, like an eternal funeral dirge for a dying planet.
We have cordoned off their Solar System to serve as a testament to the beauty and tragedy that the Humans were so supremely capable of. May their achievements and their downfall serve as a warning for us all."
@Misfit Music Humans are just too numerous. I feel like even if some nuclear or climatic flare wipes humanity off the face of the earth, there would still be tiny pockets of populations that would survive around the globe.
I'm actually pissed that this song wasn't one of the many classics that we launched into space. It summarizes the insanity that we produce on such a large scale
@@pureone8350
Nuclear war today is pretty survivables since there are now less nukes
@@AureliusLaurentius1099 and bunkers that even the sun would have trouble getting through
@@AureliusLaurentius1099 but still thousands upon thousands of nukes more powerful than those that obliterated Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I still think nuclear war won't happen any time soon though, it would be suicide for the person that presses the botton first.
With that picture, i imagine when the world has finally end and that song starts playing. It sounds terrifyingly pretty.
The painting is incredible. I feel like it's moving with the music
Well it is
nah you're just high
Hi! Can someone help me? I've been trying to find an apocaliptic song that is mostly humming!
@@fildariusv7045 i think this is the song you mean th-cam.com/video/dQw4w9WgXcQ/w-d-xo.html&ab
@@fildariusv7045 search for "solitude - felsmann+tiley" it's a good post apocalyptic song
Sounds like a certain person has achieved Heaven, ended a certain bloodline and inadvertently erased the universe while doing so
Pucci
It certainly sounds like it
Pucci: Resets the universe
Everyone .0000000001 seconds later: It's yeehaw time
God, if this song were actually used for that moment in the anime, I would lose my mind and stop thinking
Do you believe in gravity?
Listening to this notes in a period where the world seems to implode it's pretty frightening
so many poets at the comments lol
No it isnt, give your nuts a tug. you watch too much CNN
Hehe "in a period"
@@NyckolahzMarfull apparently people can't express their feelings, because instantly they're ''poets''?
@@Teuwufel bro these people are writing poems
humanity has ended,
but it has not died.
we hear it still.
who says humanity has ended?, nope!, we continuous forever!...
I met a traveller from an antique land,
Who said-“Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. . . . Near them, on the sand,
Half sunk a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command,
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
The hand that mocked them, and the heart that fed;
And on the pedestal, these words appear:
My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings;
Look on my Works, ye Mighty, and despair!
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal Wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away.”
Where is that from
@@chilluxtheduck8023 ozymandias percy shelly
classic
I had to read this is dam class, don't bring that round here 🤮
"my name is Homo Sapiens, Hominid of Hominids..."
Imagine a film about the end of the world, but in that final horrible moment, all the screams perfectly form the sound of this song - as the final death cry of humanity
it'd be bloody terrifying
Wow, that amazingly deep
kinda cringe
@@twod0ves ur cringe
Exactly. And the post-credits scene will show the opposite, the universe dying with a groan.
While the narrator says: And after an unimaginable time, every species, stars and black holes will disappear, the creation will be cooling down to absolute zero. Time and space once so disposable are now insignificant. Nothing happened, nothing happens and nothing will happen forever.
With love, God.
@@twod0ves every comment in this video is cringe
“The sounds of every scream and cry can be heard very well in far distance, it is like a very good music for me… entertaining yet horrifying.”
Careful, that edge is very sharp
Where does this quote come from?
@@stefamart7 same question
Quite cringy, ngl
@@stefamart7 I think he created it
At 17 years old, this guy Mozart turned himself into a legend. Insane!
This is exactly what i imagine when saying : "Some men just want to watch the world burn". Just listening to Mozart Lacrimosa and watch from above
Quoted by Alfred lol.
it's a reference to that anime I don't remember the name of
The Dark Knight..
@@carinasunil same here
@@ripjawsquad hunter x Hunter I guess
I imagine live performances in person sounded like this.
It's even more intense. You feel the bass in your bones. The high trebles rattle the ears. There is so much hidden reverb and subtle notes that fill your head with a well designed auditorium. I'd recommend anyone with an interest in classical music to experience one. If you live in Europe, The Sounds of Hans Zimmer and John Williams are playing around Germany and Austria From January through April of 2022.
@@pappi8338 Oh wow. I thought it was already insanely cool with headphones on. I am looking forward to seeing it live if I have the chance.
@@pappi8338 Thx for the info
I will definetely try to go to one of them
@@pappi8338 what about if you live in London
@@basmalasaad3039 Good luck getting here. UK covid laws are crazy. I don't think you have to quarantine if you have booster shot
"If humanity has ended, why do i hear humans singing?"
*They are no longer humans*
they are not humans, they are the fallen angels
I love the sound of Angelic farts
All Tomorrows type shit
@@Ziaotic Allternate
The are all dead
This being the end credits song after humanity's extinction would make it less depressing
Tbh I'd add more bass for apocalyptic effect. Cuz, yknow, when mountains fall, oceans boil and the sky is broken all u hear is deep, heavy thunder.
Wait is this what bible says for doomsday?
Cuz if ıt's I'm in
Interesting
Is that describing a meteor hitting the earth
@@michaelc.5809 a big enough one would surely end humanity
To me, It sounds perfect the way it is. The visual representation of the artwork makes up for you say is lacking. To me at least.
This is one of the classics that you don't just listen to, you absorb it into your soul
**FARTS**
**EXCRETES**
**SHARTS**
D:
This song with this painting... It's almost indescribable with how hauntingly beautiful it is. Like someone, on their deathbed, drawing their last breath, and as they do, they truly have one moment of clarity, of true vison, all of their mistakes and the mistakes of others, they fully understand everything. Things that would be incomprehensible to the human mind at any other point are truly revealed, every question that could ever be answered is. they truly become all-knowing and all-seeing for that one moment. Only for death's icy hand to take it's firm grip on them, stealing them from the mortal world for their own good, and as their prize.
Yes indeed everything u said is tru
K edgelord
@@luyang14 thank you
@@manmoneyiscool me personally I wouldn’t take that disrespect…. But that’s just me tho 😶🌫️😶🌫️😶🌫️
it's not a song, it's a piece! Jokes aside, I totally agree with you.
2:19 is one of the best moments in music imo
I have always loved the hopeful note around the 2 minute mark of this piece
It hits differently.
just to be crushed by the recapitulation and repeat of the main theme in the minor tone
there's this little white spark in the painting, left and under the dark boulder...
it's like a tiny spark of hope trying to rise above the carnage
if you start at the tail, say around 2:08, and then follow it upwards.. but slowly...
you can match your view with this emotional delivery of the piece,
up to and including the crushing bit in a massive sense once you end up at the boulder and what your eyes will see after..
It works SO well you can wonder if this was a deliberate act...
Thank you So Very Much for making me find this... 💖💖
@@patrickkanne its a very present theme in the bible
This Song (Lacrimosa) was written in 1791 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
This painting (The Great Day of His Wrath) was made in 1851 by John martin.
The words to this song in English are:
"Mournful that day
When from the dust shall rise
Guilty man to be judged
Therefore spare him O God
Merciful Jesu
Lord Grant them rest! Amen!"
A contemplative free written poem by me:
May we all repent of our sins and entrust our souls to God through Jesus Christ, this is the only thing that matters- salvation from the holy wrath of God and eternal life through God's forgiveness for our wicked deeds.
The day has surely passed, the night is here at last, when the wolves come out to play, who will fight them away?
Those deadly sins killed our fathers, killed our mothers, yet into them we run, "oh it's alright, its just a little fun!"
One day we will stand, before the almighty judge, to give unto him an account for all our sins.
His justice is supreme, wisdom greater then us all, his eyes penetrate your thoughts and lies, his eyes see all.
Who trembles at his mighty name? Who faithfully proclaims- the awful day of judgement that comes.
Who falls before him in awe? Who's lips grow silent at all?
Though all mankind forget the Lord- sovereign still he reigns.
Though all mankind reject the Lord- steadfast in faithfulness he remains.
Though all mankind mock the Lord- patient he truly is.
thank you.. that's beautiful.
God be like “hey if you have to worship me so I don’t condemn you to a like of eternal suffering, even though you could be the best person on earth, you still have to pray to be saved from the things I might do to you.”
@@ieajackson5518 No one asked what your opinion was.
@@sanctusstreams101 ok. So?
@@sanctusstreams101 he can share something as much as he wants to lol.
Other than another species debating whether or not we existed, imagine just the moment everything ends violently for us instead.
The last moment while you're looking around at the horror mixed with the indifference of nature, the sky being so beautiful despite the horrific reality that everything is over for us.
You look around and have an amazing mixture of sadness, terror and peace while you see the last millisecond before the impact.
But thankfully we got someone special to save us from such horrible fate
th-cam.com/video/gg_Ep0x_Bi8/w-d-xo.html
We don’t even exist, let alone other life. We’re a dream lived by many different characters in that dream. Just as your subconscious splits and you believe them to be fully fleshed people while dreaming, so too are we of the universe. “God”. Call it Nature if you want, but Nature is the law of existence, and nothing violates it. Any “violation” is found to be a law. We exist under the law of the dream world, we’re not lucid. We think we are. Praise be to Law, our whole from which we are born
@@flavourruling2162 what
@@flavourruling2162 lmao wtf are you smoking
@@beepboop6199 Goated pfp
The angels peek through the clouds, noticing that there isn't a single human left alive on earth.
Slowly, they are encouraged to sing a piece by Mozart called Lacrimosa, so that it can be heard all over the earth.
It isn't something strange or scary if there isn't a single soul listening to it...
But the angels sing in joy. For now, without humans, the Earth, like its creator, is perfect once more.
----
Between the song and your comment, I felt the inspiration hit me hard. As an atheist, this isn't a normal comment 😆
@@5Demona5 I think that's a pretty decent finale 👌
Imagine if it is soon as the angels finished singing God in heaven decided to make the animals intelligent so that the world could not go to waste. I guess in a way that really would be the meek inheriting the earth wouldn’t it?
@@gabiacevedo9032 why we all are waiting our end?... why do not try to start building a new society without of all inhuman convictions and unfair business of our resources here...
nemo enim hoc carmen est. est sicut flos in vertice montis crescens. ejus pulchritudo non est hominibus oculis destinata. perfectio fit pulchritudo, quando arcanum suum cum eis assumitur ad sepulcrum.
This is amazing to listen to. It’s currently 4am and the last day of the semester and the horrible grind is beginning. It’s nice to vibe to something so powerful as the coffee kicks in
Holy sh- i can download-
yeah, I'm in the last 2 weeks of school and I have a playlist named "POV: you're a high school student with 30 late/missing assignments and suffering from severe depression" and like i think this is going to be the grand finale
This is beautiful. Better than the original to my ears. It truly demonstrates how an atmosphere can change music itself. Well done!
"Better than the original"???? what do you mean? *IT IS THE ORIGINAL* wbk
If only we could've listened to it live. The reverb could've made it sound similar.
@@natalieholt2598 Being slightly different remains the same to you? This version is way more pronounced and atmospheric. It's the same song yes. It's not the same result though
@@QuarkStorm What about this is slightly different to "the original"? Beyond the differences you would expect between performances from different orchestras, but with the same notation? If the credits are to believed, this is "just" a performance of Requiem like any other, arranged from the original music that Mozart wrote, possibly with slight changes in instrumentation. Which is always done with almost any classical piece performed by any orchestra.
A pretty nice one
@@QuarkStorm this is not rearranged the music is similar simply electronically edited to give it this effect, a different version would be if the tempo is changed, the notation or the lyrics
This is, in my humble, un-scholarly opinion, one of the most beautiful pieces of music ever composed.
This song fits so well with a place that has echo such as a cave or a long tunnel. It is like this image, it's a song that sings from the depths of the underworld.
"You know, if you think about it, we really had everything didn't we?"
Goosebumps
What's this from I wonder?
is this a line from don't look up?
exurb1a
@@askholand8132 yes
This music is eternal. We may not live forever, but we can do something beautiful for this world, as Mozart did. Let classical music always rest in our hearts ...
After all... It ended.
All the happiness, all the first smiles, and first tears, all the love, all the pain, all the books and all the art, all the brave and smart ones and all the ones who didn't care at all... It was all anyone's memories now because there was no one to remember how was to be human.
The biggest temples the men made to communicate with the gods, the highest skyscrapers, and a sandcastle a kid made sometime in history.
All the uncountable lives taken away by war and all the uncountable times a child cried after falling for the first time.
All the first steps and last breaths.
It was all done.
And it was nothing.
The world had been torn apart. It wasn't the same Earth. In the middle of an infinity universe and infinity other worlds, the blue planet was now gone and there was not actually a reason to mourn about it... Because it simply didn't matter at all.
And in the surface of that dead planet, in the middle of nowhere... No one heard it, but a specific song written by a random person in some random time of human existence was playing... In requiem to a buried existence:
Lacrimosa.
Wow just wow
Is this from somewhere?
@@RandomHistoric nah it's just a generic "ooh the earth died scary" comment
I appreciate the effort put in to this but it just comes off as overly edgy
Cringe
this song is fitting on what we are heading rn
If you are a musician you might be pleased to know that the chromatic progression, from the last 2 measures he wrote, contains the BACH theme in the bass. I was blown away when I noticed it, and I doubt it is a coincidence. Mozart knew he was going to die and he blended his last notes with the most iconic musical signature. Thus showing respect to the master, Bach.
(Copied from another video. The original is mine too.)
There’s is a name for that. Don’t remember what it’s called, but its when you take a melody of one piece and use it as the bass or rhythm for your own pieces with their own lead, and then someone does that to you with your melody, so on and so on.
Concerta? Maybe? No, that’s not it. It was done A LOT in classical music at the time, and can even be found in modern music today. Quite interesting, and I thought it would violate copywrite BUT it apparently doesn’t because legally within music Bass and Melody are two separate things and using someone else’s melody as bass counts as transformative. Quite an interesting musical history fact
@@flavourruling2162 letimotif?
@Tanish 13 Portamento is a type of legato that slides between notes
wow.. to learn so much in a mere four comments... I thank you all deeply...🤜💖🤛
such a gem of a comment section this is turning out to be...💖
Mozart really created the first ever easter egg huh
"When the word needed a hero, they called a villain"- Felonius Gru
It's world
The World
Za WARUDO
And also 69 likes
This song is actually really fitting. It’s about Grieving and not knowing what happens to us after we have died.
It is actually about Judgement following our death which will be terrifying for some and rewarding for others.
@awheeler And your evidence?
read the Quran and u'll know
@@CygnusX-11 proof?
@@UTTPOfficerBennie For example, there are scientific facts about the universe in the Quran(written thousands of years ago) which were proven 100% accurate in recent times.
Lacrimosa, And O Fortuna are truly beautiful pieces, i have no words to describe them.
Goosebumps every time this requiem starts.
fr I feel like Im Alexander The Great
That's nature
" Neither a lofty degree of intelligence, nor imagination nor both together go to the making of genius. Love, love, love that is the soul of genius. " - W. Mozart
That is somewhat similar to what the apostle paul wrote
@@alexm7627 "Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal.
2 And though I have the gift of prophecy, and understand all mysteries, and all knowledge; and though I have all faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not charity, I am nothing.
3 And though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and though I give my body to be burned, and have not charity, it profiteth me nothing."
1 Corinthians 13 KJV
@@TiaguinhouGFX thanks for sharing this!
@@TiaguinhouGFX Also what God through Paul said, that between faith, hope, and love the greatest of these is love
Only 1790’s kids will remember
Yea bro i remember. Good ol' days!
I remember this playing when i was at the cinema back in the 1790s ahh when it was such a hit
I feel so bad for those who have not given into art
Don't feel bad for them. Share art in hopes that something clicks in the right place with those who don't yet have what they need.
This is such a pretentious thing to say. Your so-called pity is thinly-veiled elitism.
Mozart's "Lacrimosa" from the Requiem in D minor is a hauntingly poignant masterpiece that transcends time, echoing the profound emotions of its creator's final days. The mere 45 seconds Mozart crafted before his passing encapsulate a spectrum of emotions, from sorrow to awe. The fact that this unfinished symphony endures, with his students completing the composition, speaks volumes about Mozart's enduring influence as a teacher and the timeless resonance of his musical legacy. It's a testament to the power of art to evoke chills and stir the soul, even centuries after its creation.
So you added an echo, I usually don't appreciate people messing with Mozart, but this is impressive. Like its being performed in a huge empty cathedral.
One of the best memories of my childhood singing this piece in front of a couple of hundred people together with a talented orchestra, choir and Kantor.
Sounds like a wonderful memory. It's *piece btw
@@Alaskanman Thanks. That happens when you use a German keyboard on the iPad while typing English and autocorrect.
If humanity has ended why do i hear
Humans singing?
Who's to say they're not the wailing souls of the dammed?
*A N G E L S*
The punished wail their cries across the world, revenge never could've been sweeter...
*They're angels*
They're not humans they are devils and demons
whenever I hear Lacrimosa , I feel like a supernatural being watching a great event happening from the top . I am not sure if everyone feels like this.
"The darkness of the afterlife is all that awaits you now. May you find more peace in that world than you found in this one."
Even though I usually don't like these "Something, BUT something something" titles, this one is just great. So concise, so pretty
idk why "Something, BUT something something" made me laugh
Title style B DP doesn't usually like, BUT thinks this one is great
@@Foxyy01 that sounds like a 2009 romcom film title
The true horror of the end, is the knowledge you're alone but the feeling that you're surrounded. Entombed by the thoughts of the others around you, staring, yelling, helping, watching. It is a moment as important as your birth, it is your destiny, your final performance, and the very purpose that encouraged your actions in life. It can be many things, deserving or sudden, ironic or unexpected. Death is personal, and in those final moments, your last thoughts may be of why, or who is there, or even how it happened.
This is the song I heard in my head as my eyes lazily glanced around the ER room, as I was bleeding out from a large cut in my arm. Hazy thoughts, doctors and nurses pushing and pulling flesh, can't really hear, feel like sleeping. I just wanted them to go away and leave me alone. Right as I was closing my eyes to catch a nap, I could've sworn I could feel the familiar warmth of the sun on my face, barely smell the fresh scent of pine trees, and even hear the wind blow through the long grass of the hills where I use to play as a kid.
I'm not religious, but to this day I think it was either the outer gates of what I would've called heaven, or the blood loss causing some delusions.
Whatever it was, my views on dying were 20 times more positive after my close call. What I assumed to be scary and morbid, is now what I believe to be simply a part of life that gives it purpose.
What most of us fear is the waste of time we could have lived, that we believe we will pay with death, for previous actions and choices. For THAT....we feel alone in the process of our death.
For THAT...we also feel surrounded. By other dead watching, by hindsighted living, and by the future of those that live beyond our time, using our last moment of life as an example of what not to do.
That last part is why my opinion changed. It is lighter to tread on a path that you believe is welcoming, than to walk the minefield of criticism
God damn man, I respect your point of view a lot sir.
God damn dude…
God damn dude...
That’s a really good view of death
Heres my spin on it
In twilight's embrace, silence falls,
Echoes of our stories fade,
Cities crumble, nature reclaims,
Humanity's fleeting arc,
In the quietus, a whisper remains,
Of dreams once dared,
And lessons learned,
In the dust of stars,
We find our peace,
As the cosmos sighs,
And time releases.
The End of the World, commonly known as The Great Day of His Wrath, is an 1851-1853 oil painting on canvas by the English painter John Martin. Leopold Martin, John Martin's son, said that his father found the inspiration for this painting on a night journey through the Black Country
A trip to Birmingham will have anyone contemplating the end of days
Wouldn't have those problems in a white country
@@bayerischemotorenwerke5252 man black country is just birmingham
@@ardugaleen2231 That's sad, i can't believe Birmingham is a black country now
@@bayerischemotorenwerke5252 lmao u bastard, nah it's about birmingham being very dark, uk with the industrial districts, the smoke etc. I think at least, I'm french anyway
Lacrimosa in general gives me god, heavenly vibes, at war Romans fighting, and it’s crazy to think that The first Part where Mozart wrote is the part he finished what a song to die to, the song gives, Death, desire, grace, a Horrific feeling but yet a Subtle tone, screaming of pain and joy, screams of despair and many emotions throughout it this is what makes it my favorite piece of classical work of all time.
As if An Angel graced upon this earth
Just Shivers
Scary I had a dream with this exact imagery some months back, and it ended with crumbling rocks and mountains like this. Never seen this before as well. Happy to have such a strong visual representation of it now tho.
My friend. You saw one of the many signs of judgment day
@@moosamanzoor ؟
@@m._.m3180 it is in the holy book. The last one. The dream this person had is the description of judgment day
@@moosamanzoor what holy book
@@m._.m3180 the Muslims call it the holy Quran
When this played near the end of the movie "Come and See" (1985) where Flyora followed the rest of the partisians into the forest, it gave me absolute chills because its possible some of them may not come back in one piece. The film is very hard to watch so I suggest you have a strong mind and heart beforehand.
"Depressing sight ain't it? Thousands worth of history yet many more stories remain unspoken. Billions of words leading to this unfortunate fate, a supposed grander future now snatched, engulfed in one huge bang."
The figure said to another, who both remained seated and watch the spectacle of Human Failure.
This. THIS text is pure literary genius. It's so well written, yet concise and harrowing. Thank you.
Is this piece written by you, dear sir? If so, where can i find more literature pieces of yours?
@@Hoda.M Yes I wrote it, I simply wrote whatever words came in my mind.
@@featherpen5878 Then your elegiac mind must be a marvel to explore! Thus forgive me for being so persistent, but i must repeat my question: Is there a specefic place where you display such authorings? I simply cannot let a person this capable of writing pieces of literature slip out of my fingers without witnessing more of them.
@@Hoda.M Well I do write stories. But yeah that's it, I don't see myself as an Expert of a Writer. More like an Amateur if you will, however for my stories I do advise you it will only downgrade from there as I am lazy.
i cant believe the feeling one would have felt hearing this for the first time any human had ever heard such music. What a god like moment, lovely. Truly a great piece of art in its finest form.
There will come a time when only one man is left alive. And then he will die. There will be nothing to show we were ever here
Except the world we have destroyed
The only thing that remains is what we did for ourselves. The world is yours. Don’t let religion, society or media stop you from doing what you what. When everything will be gone anyways, why not live the way you want now? Affirm yourself.
@@sirhauzenh.3735 The world will eventually move on and so will every spect of our existence, all our creations will eventually amount to nothing in such a world, taken back by the world we inhabit.
@@urekmazino8799 based
Good.
I can still hear.
That noise.
It's unbridled anger is unmatched, and it's words convey a message more complex than time, space and reality.
And then I hear it...
Noot.. Noot...