Yoshimatsu has inhaled the complete history of music, can quote at will without embarrassment, writes convincingly in several styles and delivers here a wide adagietto with stands next to Mahler (and the great Morricone)
Wow, thanks, I came here looking for! Spent hours trying to remember from where it was, even tried to check some compound-meters movements from Tchaikovsky, Dvorák and Mahler. Berlioz wasn't on the list of suspects, though!
Je suis consterné de ne découvrir sa musique de ce compositeur qu'à l'hiver de mes années….. La totalité et les nuances de cette architecture sonore est comme une envolée dans le Sublime, L'une des musiques les plus divines et évocatrices que j'ai jamais écoutée à ce jour
It’s a symphony I know I will keep coming back to over and over again. I had heard of Yoshimatsu but had skipped over him, but this symphonie has totally gripped me. It sounds like something an old Russian composer wrote and forgot.
I particularly adore the slow third movement. It's so tender and somehow sweetly sorrowful. Were it written in the Romantic heydays, It would have become a otherwise more recognized classic
@@unnamed_boi Yes, I found out later when I heard Yoshimatsu's Pleiades Dance. It's the velvet waltz. I like how Yoshimatsu uses his own melodies in different works.
Does that mean you liked it? Who does not like the works of this composer on the channel says that it looks like pop music, or that there is nothing Japanese ...
@@vectoranderson3641 It also seems to me that there is a certain affinity between Yoshimatsu's music and the anime universe. I am not a great connoisseur, but I saw several of the beautiful animations of Studio Ghibli, those by Makoto Shinkai, those by Satoshi Kon (who died prematurely) and some others that seemed worthwhile.
@@pedrohenriqueprata yeah thats right Im talking specifically about Japanese anime Although he has never composed for anime Accept for sth called robot boy if im not mistaken it
Innocenza, trasparenza, delicatezza, compostezza: sono virtù che richiedono buon ingegno e fantasia. Tanto basta, augurabilmente, oggi! Lasciamo da parte per un pò presunti infiniti di micro e macrocosmi. Sandro Perotti
Puede ser que sea un saludo musical mediante un breve citado o una simple estilización... Yo he hallado 4 saluditos así en el 2do movimiento: citadas la "Fantástica" de Berlioz y la firma personal de Schostakovich, DSCH. Y también he oído medio esbozadas la Serenata para cuerdas de Tchaikovsky y "La Valse" de Ravel😊 Es probable que tu Hisaishi vive allí tal cual en plan de referencia y homenaje a su obra😮
I noticed this quote a few days ago when someone told me that at 12:06 there was a quote from Shostakovich. I couldn't identify which work by the Soviet composer is cited, although I noticed his style, but shortly thereafter I identified a brief passage quoting "La Valse".
Hellen Silva É uma litografia "nihonga" [arte japonesa contemporânea, mas usando técnica e estilo da arte tradicional anterior à ocidentalização] do artista Kaii Higashiyama (1908-1999). Segundo pude apurar a tradução do título japonês seria algo como "Fim do ano", é um trabalho de 1968. www.pinterest.com/pin/433049320394801484/
Now here at last we have a piece where people can actually say, this "sounds like that" because it is actually "that" Most below get it right but fail to mention Shostakovitch, who gets 10 notes at 12:06. Easily missed I suppose. :-) :-)
What work by Shostakovich is cited? I didn't identify. In fact, at 12:40 what I seemed to hear was a quote from "La Valse". But just listening now, before I hadn't realized.
@@DavidA-ps1qr A while ago I saw a movie from 2017, which I thought was excellent, called "The Death of Stalin", with a soundtrack that I was pretty sure used music by Shostakovich, although I couldn't tell which specific work had taken the music. . I thought it might be based, for example, on the music the composer wrote for the movies, which in fact I've never heard. However, researching about it I found that the soundtrack was original and had been written "in the way of" Shostakovich.
@@pedrohenriqueprata They probably used Shostakovitch's music. But he wrote a lot of film scores. Films like "A Year is Like a Lifetime" "The Fall of Berlin" "The Young Guard" "The Maxim Trilogy" all Russian made productions.This music is largely forgotten and could easily be played in the concert hall. I went to college with a guy called Mark Fitzgerald, who, a couple of years, ago produced a CD of Shostakovitch's complete film music to "The Gadfly" I have it in my library. Worth checking out. Now here's a piece you should listen to, I think it's on You Tube: John Harbison: Symphony No 4. Happy listening. David A.
I keep thinking of the BBC Panorama theme. From approximately 4.20 onwards for a short period of time resembles this th-cam.com/video/on1GoCLk-4I/w-d-xo.html
Here after Eddy's story on Instagram :)
I literally just saw it too lol
Lol same
same
same
Lol samee😭😂
i'd love to thank TwoSet for introducing me to this composer daaaaaaamn I love his work!!
Same! Thanx to Eddy for his IG story this morning ⭐ This is just pure beauty (music and illustration!)
You too?! Nice 👌
Thank you eddy
This is beautiful
Yoshimatsu has inhaled the complete history of music, can quote at will without embarrassment, writes convincingly in several styles and delivers here a wide adagietto with stands next to Mahler (and the great Morricone)
Long time ago that I started crying whilst listening to a symphonie...
Eddy should really make a playlist🤩
Thanks Eddy
11:54 That is a reference of the waltz theme from the second movement of Berlioz's Symphonie ''Fantástique''.
Wow, thanks, I came here looking for! Spent hours trying to remember from where it was, even tried to check some compound-meters movements from Tchaikovsky, Dvorák and Mahler. Berlioz wasn't on the list of suspects, though!
@@gabrielnascimento161 Happy to know I helped someone :)
Haha! Nice quotes in the second movement - Berlioz, Bruckner, Mahler and many more :) Very enjoyable potpourri.
まず間違いなく、私が今まで出会ってきた中で最も崇高な音楽家だ。
Je suis consterné de ne découvrir sa musique de ce compositeur qu'à l'hiver de mes années….. La totalité et les nuances de cette architecture sonore est comme une envolée dans le Sublime, L'une des musiques les plus divines et évocatrices que j'ai jamais écoutée à ce jour
An incredibly beautiful work from Takashi Yoshimatsu. Thanks so much for making my day more relaxing.
Very nice! I like Takashi Yoshimatsu since he quotes almost all of my favourite composers!
I very much love:"The Piano folio to a disappeared Pleiad" and now I am going to love this Symphony No: 4. 🌷🌷🌷 (The Netherlands-eu.)
Thanks for posting this ! I love Yoshimatsu's music, it is unpretentious but immensely enjoyable and very well written.
The 3rd movement is so beautiful!
It's amazing!!!
So american too😂 Copland&Respighi all the Symph😊
Disney music, i should also say😊, but very jovial and easily digestive😅
Love the timelessness of styles mixed together seamlessly in this work. Has been a great inspiration to me!
Wow, 17:33〜17:47 quoted from "Uruseiyatsura 2 :Beautiful Dreamer"(Directed by Mamoru Oshii), my most favorite anime movie !
i think likely the opposite happened. I may be wrong!
It’s a symphony I know I will keep coming back to over and over again. I had heard of Yoshimatsu but had skipped over him, but this symphonie has totally gripped me. It sounds like something an old Russian composer wrote and forgot.
I particularly adore the slow third movement. It's so tender and somehow sweetly sorrowful. Were it written in the Romantic heydays, It would have become a otherwise more recognized classic
Your channel is a blessing. Thank you very much for all the beautiful uploads, please keep it up :)
who wants to be in this painting?
俺😂
Interessantíssimo compositor, desconhecido no Brasil. Excelente, Rique!
I Agree wholeheartedly with Richard Hu regarding the third movement. A beautiful tune indeed.
11:54 Wow! Straight from Symphonie Fanstastique
Woaoo!! muy buena esta Sinfonia! excelente, impresionante, comtemporaneo y fácil de digerir...
Fácil de digerir SEEEEE, bien dicho! 😂😂😂😜👍
I just want to live inside this music
Aghh
It’s so nice to listen to for the ears ^^
It’s really inspiring to write to
Eddy has good taste in music 👍
Can we just talk about how beautiful that Adagietto is?
We can! Isn`t that a beautiful Adagietto, is it?
I'm here because Eddy's stories, thanks Eddy 😇😇
Thank you for this divine music. Really beautiful.
The adagietto has an appealing intrigue of successive realization
Reference to the 2nd movement of Beethoven's 9th Symphony at 12:39-12:43
19:32 So beautiful the way he comes back to the first theme
Love this music!
Beautiful.
Lovely! ❤
17:32 come out, Joe Hisaishi, we've finally found your secret hiding place!
No, it's not Joe Hisaishi's phrase. It's Katz Hoshi's.
Dedicated to the times me and my brother are together.
Here from eddy's story
who?
Same
@@buffbear7890 two set
Same!
聴きやすい響きでいいと思います。
Fantastic!
12:25 I remember that Waltz from somewhere else, does anyone know something?
no. 3 from his 3 waltzes for piano i'm pretty sure
@@unnamed_boi Yes, I found out later when I heard Yoshimatsu's Pleiades Dance. It's the velvet waltz. I like how Yoshimatsu uses his own melodies in different works.
It may just be the picture, but the music has quite a wintry feel to me.
It is quite different from Yoshimatsu's other works, I like it.
This is one of the most beautiful pieces I have ever encountered.
11:54 Symphonie Fantástique
12:03 Bruckner's Symphony No.9
12:39 Beethoven Symphony No. 9 - Mvt. 2
12:12 - shostakovich's dsch motif
12:25 - yoshimatsu's own "velvet waltz"
17:31 - yoshimatsu's own "waltz in green" (and again at 21:55)
And Ravel, Ravel, Ravel, Debussy, Bernstein and and and - he has absorbed the hole bunch - and that is really fantastic.
And Mahler at his best - and even Strauß Johann
@@unnamed_boi 12:05 - Malher's Symphony 1 - 2mvmt
..A mosaic of intense colours..
12:25 Velvet waltz middle section
17:47 21:56 Green waltz
0:00 Supple Prelude
th-cam.com/video/ATI8UF0HwLg/w-d-xo.html
Although it's not a quote, I think the beauty of 14.30 to 17.30 is up there with William Walton's "Touch her soft lips..........."
I cant believe this is symphony wowwwww
Does that mean you liked it? Who does not like the works of this composer on the channel says that it looks like pop music, or that there is nothing Japanese ...
@@pedrohenriqueprata I definitely like it
its completely incomparable with other contemporary symphony I heard
It remembers me Japanese anime
@@vectoranderson3641 It also seems to me that there is a certain affinity between Yoshimatsu's music and the anime universe. I am not a great connoisseur, but I saw several of the beautiful animations of Studio Ghibli, those by Makoto Shinkai, those by Satoshi Kon (who died prematurely) and some others that seemed worthwhile.
@@pedrohenriqueprata yeah thats right
Im talking specifically about Japanese anime
Although he has never composed for anime
Accept for sth called robot boy if im not mistaken it
18:03 is the best part
ラヴェルとキース・エマーソンの影響を強く感じる。
第2楽章で「ラ・ヴァルス」に似た部分が出てくるし、第3楽章の出だしは「マ・メール・ロワ」の「妖精の園」を連想させる。
はっきりとわかる形でベルリオーズの幻想交響曲のメロディが第2楽章でストレートに登場するのは、何を意味しているのだろう?
いずれにしても、無味乾燥した12音主義に対するアンチテーゼなのは間違いないだろうけど。
Innocenza, trasparenza, delicatezza, compostezza: sono virtù che richiedono buon ingegno e fantasia. Tanto basta, augurabilmente, oggi! Lasciamo da parte per un pò presunti infiniti di micro e macrocosmi. Sandro Perotti
Capolavoro.
At around 6:52 to about 7:11 I momentarily forgot I was listening to a Yoshimatsu symphony. I swear this part kinda sounds like Hisaishi.
Puede ser que sea un saludo musical mediante un breve citado o una simple estilización... Yo he hallado 4 saluditos así en el 2do movimiento: citadas la "Fantástica" de Berlioz y la firma personal de Schostakovich, DSCH. Y también he oído medio esbozadas la Serenata para cuerdas de Tchaikovsky y "La Valse" de Ravel😊 Es probable que tu Hisaishi vive allí tal cual en plan de referencia y homenaje a su obra😮
Genius
Masterpiece.
Basically you either commented years ago or you're here bc of twoset (thanks eddy😊)
listen to berlioz symphony fantastique 2nd movement ... the theme is used in this
17:30 similar waltz
Did anyone else notice the brief Berlioz un bal (symphony fantastique) Easter egg in the second movement?
20:31 16:09 12:24 10:56 17:31 26:49
12:27 quote from ravels la valse! :)
I noticed this quote a few days ago when someone told me that at 12:06 there was a quote from Shostakovich. I couldn't identify which work by the Soviet composer is cited, although I noticed his style, but shortly thereafter I identified a brief passage quoting "La Valse".
@@pedrohenriqueprata that does indeed sound like Shos. I just found a new one 13:29 ravels piano concerto I believe.
12:12 DSCH
Shostakovich?
Yep, his signature D-Eb-C-B appears right there. And in the same rhythm as it appears in Shostakovich's Tenth, third movement!
That's why there's a similarity between the two.
Where is the image from? It's beautiful!
Hellen Silva É uma litografia "nihonga" [arte japonesa contemporânea, mas usando técnica e estilo da arte tradicional anterior à ocidentalização] do artista Kaii Higashiyama (1908-1999). Segundo pude apurar a tradução do título japonês seria algo como "Fim do ano", é um trabalho de 1968. www.pinterest.com/pin/433049320394801484/
Rique Borges uau! Quanta informação boa! Valeu mesmo Rique ^^. Curti muito seu canal, muita música boa de ouvir. To inscrita :)
Now here at last we have a piece where people can actually say, this "sounds like that" because it is actually "that" Most below get it right but fail to mention Shostakovitch, who gets 10 notes at 12:06. Easily missed I suppose. :-) :-)
What work by Shostakovich is cited? I didn't identify. In fact, at 12:40 what I seemed to hear was a quote from "La Valse". But just listening now, before I hadn't realized.
@@pedrohenriqueprata 10th Symphony 2nd Movement ( that's off the top of my head, I'd have to check it)
@@pedrohenriqueprata Thank you Rique. Well, as the Chinese say:
"Sometimes even the blind chicken picks up something to eat"
:-) :-)
@@DavidA-ps1qr A while ago I saw a movie from 2017, which I thought was excellent, called "The Death of Stalin", with a soundtrack that I was pretty sure used music by Shostakovich, although I couldn't tell which specific work had taken the music. . I thought it might be based, for example, on the music the composer wrote for the movies, which in fact I've never heard. However, researching about it I found that the soundtrack was original and had been written "in the way of" Shostakovich.
@@pedrohenriqueprata They probably used Shostakovitch's music. But he wrote a lot of film scores. Films like "A Year is Like a Lifetime" "The Fall of Berlin" "The Young Guard" "The Maxim Trilogy" all Russian made productions.This music is largely forgotten and could easily be played in the concert hall.
I went to college with a guy called Mark Fitzgerald, who, a couple of years, ago produced a CD of Shostakovitch's complete film music to "The Gadfly" I have it in my library. Worth checking out.
Now here's a piece you should listen to, I think it's on You Tube: John Harbison: Symphony No 4. Happy listening. David A.
I need need NEEED the score for this
14:35 so epic
Eddy brought me here
Am I the only one wondering who is Eddy?
I don't have instagram. !!
It kind of sounds like music from a fairytale or some Disney film.
There is indeed a shadow of sibelius's work
Quotation of Ravel too
i hear it alot in the open voicings and structure
I wish my music was this good 🤣
27:50
I keep thinking of the BBC Panorama theme. From approximately 4.20 onwards for a short period of time resembles this th-cam.com/video/on1GoCLk-4I/w-d-xo.html
Db maj.9
LING LING 40 HOURS!
This sounds so much like Zelda Breath of the Wild
Lol, the place looks like it’s from demon slayer
I’m not here because of Twoset 😎
I found it to be very listenable, but also not very memorable. It does not seem to go anywhere.
Silly stuff.
20:30