I must've listened to this stunning piece at least 50 times since I discovered it like 2 weeks ago. This piece is amazing and Apollo's Fire's work is fantastic. Thank you :)
I would be unbelievably thankful if you were able to release the sheet music and/or score for this. I would absolutely love to put together an ensemble with my friends playing this
It is said that Apollo soared across the Greek skies in his chariot, sometimes flying as far as Turkey in the east and Europe in the west. It is said that Apollo played and taught the music and instruments he saw and heard during his flight to humans in other regions. So Apollo is said to have become the god of music.
I don’t think it’s cultural appropriation at all. Rather, cultural renewal and regeneration. There’s been a significant revival of Yiddish in recent years, and many of the leading klezmer musicians (including my sister and the clarinetist in this video) are Jewish musicians who have studied with klezmorim who survived the Holocaust and have passed on the torch to a younger generation. There are klezmer festivals not only in the US and Canada, but in Weimar, Krakow, and other places in Europe. To be sure, Yiddish culture in Europe was decimated in WWII. Yet it lives on, and this performance is a beautiful example of that. (Full disclosure-I‘m one of the performers in the concert from which this video is excerpted, and I studied Jewish liturgical music with a cantor who learned his craft in Europe before the war and brought his knowledge to the US and passed it on to me more than 50 years ago.) You can‘t appropriate something that already belongs to you.
@@jeffreystrauss4127Yiddish is coming back in Melbourne, which I’m glad of. I absorbed it from my parents, never learned it as such. Glad to hear klezmer music is doing so well now.
I must've listened to this stunning piece at least 50 times since I discovered it like 2 weeks ago. This piece is amazing and Apollo's Fire's work is fantastic. Thank you :)
I’m so thankful that you share these videos on TH-cam as so many of us are unlikely to ever see you in person. Thank you SO much!
Bloody hell...this was BRILLIANT!
J’ai suis d’accord 😊
Apollos fire, you’ve outdone yourselves again! Absolutely sensational, was a pleasure to watch, and can’t wait to see you in England soon!
Vega, thank you! We're playing this program in London on Monday! - April 17, at St Martin in the Fields. Hope to see you there
@@apollosfirebaroqueyou will! I’ve booked to see it! Can’t wait to see you there Monday!
I love klezmer!
Great presentation as always! Greetings from Brazil!
Beautiful.
From here to eternity this will sound amazing!!!
We need a million more comments, this is amazing!!!
Total absolute fun!! 👏🏻 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Beautiful, joy to watch.
So excited to see you all in England on Monday evening!
Please come back to the UK. You are amazing!!!!
I would be unbelievably thankful if you were able to release the sheet music and/or score for this. I would absolutely love to put together an ensemble with my friends playing this
We want a concert in Belgium too !
...and then Portugal!
Glorious AF
Woah!!!!❤❤❤❤❤
Bring it to Montreal!!!
Excelentní
MARAVILLOSA
Its biutiful
Great 🙏🙏 L‘Chaim
❤Magnifique
It is said that Apollo soared across the Greek skies in his chariot, sometimes flying as far as Turkey in the east and Europe in the west. It is said that Apollo played and taught the music and instruments he saw and heard during his flight to humans in other regions. So Apollo is said to have become the god of music.
Bravi.😉
Some how watching the musicians and the music seems incongruous.
Very similar to Crimean Tatar melodies
Beautiful...however it's cultural appropriation! Just an impression of something expunged.
I don’t think it’s cultural appropriation at all. Rather, cultural renewal and regeneration. There’s been a significant revival of Yiddish in recent years, and many of the leading klezmer musicians (including my sister and the clarinetist in this video) are Jewish musicians who have studied with klezmorim who survived the Holocaust and have passed on the torch to a younger generation. There are klezmer festivals not only in the US and Canada, but in Weimar, Krakow, and other places in Europe. To be sure, Yiddish culture in Europe was decimated in WWII. Yet it lives on, and this performance is a beautiful example of that. (Full disclosure-I‘m one of the performers in the concert from which this video is excerpted, and I studied Jewish liturgical music with a cantor who learned his craft in Europe before the war and brought his knowledge to the US and passed it on to me more than 50 years ago.) You can‘t appropriate something that already belongs to you.
Is the dance accurate? If it is, I can think they're trying to reconstruct a typical Yiddish wedding.
@@jeffreystrauss4127Yiddish is coming back in Melbourne, which I’m glad of. I absorbed it from my parents, never learned it as such. Glad to hear klezmer music is doing so well now.