Edward Elgar - Enigma Variations, Op.36: IX. (Nimrod)
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 5 เม.ย. 2021
- In 1899, English composer Edward Elgar created his Enigma Variations; a set of variations on the one melody, with each one representing a different friend of his. From his wife to his music publisher, each friend was immortalised in music as their different personalities shone through. This piece has never lost popularity, especially with the moving and powerful ‘Nimrod’ variation.
Conducted by Peter Luff.
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My father knew Edward Elgar. As a small boy in the same village of Broadheath, he would see Elgar as an older man in his garden, he loved flowers. He would always say hello and look at my father and stop his gardening to speak to him and his brothers and sister as they walked past. I was lucky to live in the same village many years later. Sadly, now all family have gone. But what beautiful music!! I am approaching 70 years now but this moves me, such talent!
What an absolutely lovely family memory that is! Elgar was quintessentially English, a formidable creative force.
His music speaks to me. It’s so nice that your father had met Elgar ❤
WOW. That is amazing.Thnaks for sharing that
One of the best melodies of history! Kent Vogel A.S.C.A.P
I've been in Queensland in 2005, I am from Brasil. Happy to listen this orquestra from Queensland and also Love Edward Elgar, specialy this variation.
The older I get the more this piece makes me want to cry.
I had a premature emergency c-section due to severe pre-eclampsia a year ago. The preeclampsia was exasperated after contracting covid, and I was in the hospital at 34 weeks. They tried to slow it down with magnesium, but I was in too bad of a shape to remain pregnant, so I had to have an emergency c-section. I wanted so badly to be able to breastfeed. My baby was immediately taken to the NICU and I was too sick to even get out of bed. They brought me a pump. I listened to this on repeat while I looked at pictures of the baby to help stimulate milk production. It worked.
This piece has such a triumphant ending. A year later, I have my health back and a healthy active little boy who still breastfeeds.
Thank goodness, you and your baby were saved and are thriving now. The power of music is indeed miraculously strong, a divine medicine in my opinion. It’s a gift from God. Best wishes to you and your loves ones❤
I haven’t listened to this in a while. Yes, tears. Also almost passed out because I forgot to breathe.
Arguably the most beautiful 4 minutes of music ever composed. The beating heart of Elgar's great Enigma Variations
I really wish this was the English National Anthem. Reminds me of summer days when I was young, looking up through elm and oak trees at the bright blue sky. A place now gone.
Yes, the English National Anthem but NOT the National Anthem.
This piece was written for Elgar's friend, editor, and publisher, Augustus J Jaeger. Elgar struggled with depression and questioned his own worth and abilities. Through the years they worked together, Jaeger was there for Elgar through depressive episodes, and reaffirming the composers' abilities. Apparently, this is meant to be a musical telling of their relationship. It's one my favorites.
'Nimrod ....Nimrod is a biblical figure mentioned in the Book of Genesis and Books of Chronicles. The son of Cush and therefore a great-grandson of Noah, Nimrod was described as a king in the land of Shinar. The Bible states that he was "a mighty hunter before the Lord [and] ... began to be mighty in the earth"......Jaeger was Norwegian .Jaeger in Norwegian translates as 'Hunter'....therefore 'The 'Enigma ' of the enigma variations!.Clever old Elgar!
May not be very appropriate but.....long live depressive geniuses.....
Ik kan alleen maar zeggen FANTASTISCH, GEWELDIG mooi nummer.🙏♥️🇳🇱
@@peedee-zo1yqdon't care too much about the history .. He wrote it for me.
Musicians put their hearts into their instruments and their emotions into the music and then into their orchestra so that the audience hears the music but feels what the composer is saying. This reminds me of a time when people, rich and poor, actually loved this place. You can't play with a broken heart.
Probably because they practice a lot, but I always wonder why no musician actually gets overcome with emotions playing a piece like this and lets a tear escape.
It happens quite a bit in rehearsals.
Let me tell you, everytime I play this piece in my orchestra I'm near tears 😂
It's because we pour all the emotions into the music
As a chorister I've teared up in rehearsal's a few times, not to this obviously. The adrenaline kicks in at the performance.
The second half of Mozart's 'Confutatis' will do it every time.
Spine tingling
Thanks for the feedback guys! Good to see that great music still has the ability to make grown men cry, and who can blame them.
For me the best bit is near the end when everything suddenly goes quiet after the tumultuous build-up. It is so peaceful and relaxing.
I choke up almost every time I hear this. Thanks to Elgar and the Queensland Symphony for helping me release my emotions when nearly nothing else makes me cry like that. I hope there is an afterlife and that Elgar knows how beloved his work has become.
This piece of music - words can barely describe my affection for it.
i performed this with an honors orchestra in high school, and it was the greatest feeling in the world
This piece allows us to hear a true crescendo. Very moving.
Beautiful performance...no schmaltz or exaggerated slow tempos...just Elgar's magnificent music speaking for itself!!
This is the single most moving piece of music ever made. lest we forget.
Agree!
This moving, short jewel embodies the British spirit of resilience and perseverance.
And you don’t have to be one to get tears in your eyes listening to it.
I live in chicago area, I have been here since 11 years old. Born near Istanbul. I am 39 now, been listening to Elgar since my early 20s. Timeless beautiful music, doesn’t matter where you are or came from, we can all appreciate the brilliance this man put on paper and this orchestra playing it so masterfully.
I'm British but I don't get patriotic when listening to this. This song and my constant battle with loneliness and depression are one and the same. I can't explain it, but this song helps me realize the few things I have in life are worth living for.
@@tombows6980 keep strong mate, never be ashamed to ask for help, and remember better times are almost certainly round the corner. All this is temporary.
oh boo hoo hoo!
one of my favorite pieces and out of many I've heard this is the best performance yet. Unlike many of the performances, the winds and strings are balanced here. Just absolutely jerks the tears right out of your face. So perfect. thanks so much Queensland S. O.
I hail from a former British colony, the British conquered us and then on certain occasions massacred us and treated us slaves, and stole and pillaged all our wealth so as a man from a former British colony I have a bitter taste for the British, but having said that we had a certain love and respect for Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the second, she had a dignified personality fit to be a Queen, in her younger days she was a beautiful damsel, and she lived an untarnished life so your comment corresponds perfectly to this piece of classical music.
I hear the first notes and immediately I relax and feel calm. Such a beautiful piece of music, I wonder whether young people today who don't grow up with classical music the way I did are even able to relate to it and appreciate it.
Probably the best orchestral version of this piece, I have ever heard. Brilliant!
Listen to the Warsaw Philharmonic orchestra conducted by Jacek Kaspszyk,you,ll get the whole Enigma Variations, it,s good!!
Nimrod will forever be associated with the days following the death of Her Late Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. The solace in the cords, matches beyond our sorrow. Gone but never forgotten. May She rest in eternal peace.
Beautiful….never get tired of listening to this wonderful piece of music!
Exquisite piece, beautifully performed. More so than God Save The Queen or Rule Britanna, this piece embodies the essence of 'Britishness' for me - courage, resolve and hope, tinged with a wistful melancholy and romantic yearning. It is the music we play on sad occasions, such as state funerals. And I think the music a nation turns to on such occasions says a lot more about it than its celebratory music, and more honestly expresses its deep identity.
Such a beautifully expressed comment. Thank you for sharing a bit of your sensibility. My affection for your country runs deep.
@@johnandkathleenodonnell4130 I used to have similar sentiments about that country but not now, since Brexit. IMO it has revealed a nasty side that i didn't really know existed. Long live Europe/EU and its wonderful musical heritage
@@martinwfarrell Most people in the UK did not vote for Brexit. It was an appalling abuse of democracy that misrepresented the will of the majority. Please be assured that the majority of the british people are as open-minded, internationalist and pro-European as we were before that scandalous and fraudulent corruption of our political process.
You’re Catholic aren’t you? I’m also an Englishman and agree entirely, but you speak with a spirit I think I recognise
Yes i am but i don't see the relevance of my faith.
I am not French or Italian but i love their national anthems. Music transends
One of my father's favourite classical works. Whenever it was on the radio he'd have it on loud. I remember a Thursday when i was packing to go away for a weekend and this piece was on his radio downstairs. Suddenly i just didn't want to go away and leave my dad for the weekend. I had a far bigger stereo than his radio downstairs, maybe i should have put it on it.
Brilliantly reproduced, thank you.
A piece of music forever linked to Remembrance Day, and credited to one of the finest musicians that ever lived.
Touches the heart at its deepest, vulnerable, tender point: Thank you for giving me such a blessing!
What is it about this piece touches so many in such a profound and emotional way?
For me, at least in part it evokes a sense of loss for a time, a place and people we knew loved and are now and forever gone.
One of the greatest piece of music by one of the most impressive composers , performed by a talented group of individuals. Thanks you for the pleasure.
One of the best renditios of Nimrod I've ever heard
"Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few",
it's hard not to think of Remembrance Sunday when I hear this The sheer depth of emotion always elicits tears.. The climax always gets me, no matter how often I have heard it. The sign of truly great music that it survives even familarity.
What a stunning performance of this lovely piece. Brought tears to my eyes.
Beautifully performed. Excellent tempo, rendering mystery and bliss to this masterpiece.
Amongst all the wonderful moments composed by Edward Elgar, surely this is the most beautiful, exquisite and heart-wrenching. If I compose even one minute of music in my lifetime as extraordinary as this, I will consider that I have achieved greatness!
The second movement of Edvard Grieg's Holberg Suite is equally beautiful and moving along with his famous gorgeous Piano Concerto in A minor. We could say that also about the deeply beautiful and moving piano concertos by the equally iconic Russian composers Rachmaninoff and Tchaikovsky! Elgar has plenty of company in this regard!
Cello concerto
Elgar was without a doubt a musical and compositional genius. Land of Hope and Glory, Nimrod, Pomp and Circumstance, etc. - any song that captures the essence and plenitude of our country was by his hand. This song in particular never fails to bring a tear to my eye, and it's quite incredible how one man could compose something of such depth and pathos. Rest in peace, Sir Edward Elgar.
Absolutely gorgeous......so well done my friends
Absolute perfection.
Beyond beautiful
Four minutes of absolute beauty..... 🎶
Thank you, QSO. 🙏
M 🦘🏏😎
This is a beautiful rendering of a masterpiece. There are infinite interpretations however this one is decidedly unique.
Excellent performance. Love the slow and steady buildup to the crescendo and then down to end. Well done
As I hear this, I am writing a list of the war victims in my home island - only a few miles across - but the list keeps getting longer and longer. Fathers who did not return home. Mothers who lost children. This, and only this, is what we get with war.
What a beautiful, beautiful piece.
An admirable interpretation of the famous "Nimrod"! How I wish the QSO would play the entire "Enigma Variations" beginning with the equally famous, yet simple, theme statement. Before we are lucky to have that, however, I'd highly recommend listeners try the performance of the complete "Enigma" by the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra (under the baton of Kaspszyk), available on TH-cam. The experience may enhance your appreciation of the "Nimrod" variation, whether by the QSO or any other orchestra, even more.
Here out of curiosity after reading Kieron Gillens X-men forever and I can’t believe how familiar this is. I think I must have heard it in a dozen movies
Damn, it's hard to get through this without crying. I'm not going to speculate if his love for Jaeger was romantic plutonic or fraternal, but it was an immeasureable love just the same, and to witness such an expressioin of love is humbling. Thank you Mr Elgar for sharing one of your most intimate expressions of love with the world.
Plutonic love sounds deathly sinister and grim. It's a far cry from the sadness of the piece.
@@psijicassassin7166 Wow, that's an interesting take. First, there's nothing sinister about plutonic love (the love between friends). Also, the Nimrod variation isn't sad to me.
@@josephdadey Isn't Pluto the god of the underworld? Sounds morbid and ghastly.
@@psijicassassin7166 Yes, I believe that's true, but it's from the Greek philosopher Plato , not the Roman god Pluto.
@@psijicassassin7166 By the way.. thank you. I have misspelled platonic far too much herein. I was going to edit my posts, but I didn't want your comment to lose context, so I'll just confess to being a dumbass :)
Played at my fathers funeral. Nuff said or the tears might start. Thanks Dad. Love you.
Elgar advised that the famous secret melody to his Enigma Variations must play "through and over" each movement as a counterpoint. Felix Mendelssohn's version of "Ein feste Burg" (A Mighty Fortress) forms an elegant counterpoint with Variation IX (Nimrod):
What 🤔
@@ianpeake7711 The enigma variations were created with a well recognized theme in mind that fits with the variations. Elgar never stated what the theme was but gave some rules of what it was.
I don't know whether I want us to find out, or for it to be forever a mystery.
Play a recording of Big Ben Westminster chimes over Nimrod .Westminster Tower is the dark place,any vicars daughter could recognise the chimes and Big Ben's chimes is the most famous sound in the world bar none that it's a wonder no,one made the link before now. Elgar' said it is based on a theme , not a tune.
@@nomates3204 th-cam.com/video/myjjfkJ27cw/w-d-xo.html
So beautiful, thank you so much!!
Some pieces of music feel like they existed before time began. This is one such piece. Thanks for bringing it to us QSO
❤ bravi. Bravi tutti. Le percussioni... bravissimo.
Divinely beautiful melody but then that's where divinely beautiful music comes from , heaven! As a lifelong pianist/composer of lyrical pieces for piano and an American folk opera, I can personally attest to that, music from the angelic spheres, out there in the heavens as well as from the heart and soul! May Edward Elgar rest in peace on the Other Side, our "spiritual home"! "We're spiritual beings having a human experience"...the late Dr. Wayne Dyer and before him, French philosopher and Jesuit priest Pierre Teilhard de Chardin in the 1700s! Hard to get this moving melody out of one's head! ❤🎼🎹🎵♥
Nimrod, a lone hunter-king of Assyria, is the name support of the most great piece of classic music of XXth century from England.
Perhaps, and only perhaps, the music's names are correlated at inverse with the quality of the music they represent.
Very well touched by orchestra.
I believe the conductor plays the French Horn as well? Nice to see Tim Corkerin on timpani
Mr. Sinister favorite
A stalagmite with no stalactite above it brought me here. This music touched my heart and soul.
I love this piece, and this is in my opinion the best performance available on TH-cam. The others get the tempo too slow.
Formidable interprétation ! Merci...
A perfect tempo and a perfect balance between different instruments of the orchestra
Esta música llega hasta lo más profundo de mi ser.
❤ IT S0 MUCH❤
Beautiful, Queensland Symphony Orchestra, just Beautiful, this always makes me emotional.
I will make sure my freshly hatched Grand daughter hears this often. Not just during a televised event, but at home when it is just right for a bit of Elgar.
I can't belive it has taken me this many years to find this good composer. Yes I heard it first through Matrix and Blade, and I had to search back to find this gentleman!. Thank you!
It's like stepping through the gates of Heaven.
🇳🇬
Absolutely beautiful. Thank you
"Nimrod" by Edward Elgar, is a masterpiece that captures the pain of separation and the subsequent power of rebirth. With its melodic structure, it delves deep into emotions and reignites hope. This composition celebrates the human ability to find strength and be reborn amidst challenging times.
Yes, it's very English.
I think I first heard of the Queenslad symphony, like many other people aroud the world, when they made those very fine rerecordings of Franz Waxman film scores back in the 80' for the Varese Sarabande label. I must have had a vague notion Queensland was in Australia, but the important thing was that the recordings were extremely well done, with a seriousness and musicality you usually expect for the classical repertoire. I also realised several years later, after listening to other Waxman rerecordings, that Richard Mills was an outstanding conductor with a perfect understanding of that kind of music.
Stunningly beautiful!
Loved this since I first heard it when I was 7 years old. This and Holst's Planet suite were amazing at seven and remain so at almost 70. I also love The Rolling Stones who I discovered about the same time!
Stunning.
I was today years old when I learned that this piece is the product of bromance. Brilliant. ❤
What an amazing piece of music and so beautifully performed.
Encontré la versión en Spotify y ahora la busco aquí, me ha encantado demasiado! Es una belleza exquisita...
Such a majestic and emotional music piece. This will always remind me of Queen Elizabeth 2, rip. ❤
There are no words to describe how much this piece,this version,moves me. Thank you
Breathtaking performance😍. And so many familiar faces😉.
For all our dday heroes, Thank you Dad . 🇬🇧
This music symbolize the ultimate sacrifice of former citizens of Britain/Commonwealth whether they volunteered or conscripted a call to arms to a country in need this is not about Glory as some counties glorify thier dead in a pointless. Ritual draping there flag with there medals and ribbons it's about the futility and waste fullness of war it's about. Remembrance the fallen men and women during the great war ww1 and ww2 that cost thousands of thousands lives.
what a great piece and what a wonderful team performance from all.
rest in peace her majesty
HardThrasher’s excellent Battle of Britain history series brings me here. I cried when this played during the end of his video, and I cried again now. Incredible piece
Spectacular ♥️
I agree with you!!
Estos grandes hombres. Seguramente han sido tocados por la mano de Dios. Su inspiración es muy grande. Nunca se perdera la música clásica.
Beautifully played.... as a Brit in the UK I can confirm this great orchestra sounded more English than English in this famous piece.... each crescendo was beautifully executed,and the tempo was magic.
Nothing like music can move even an old cynic like me to tears it transcends emotion ❤❤❤
Wow …just wow….👍
Simplesmente magnífica!!!!!!!!!!
The perfect kind of musical piece for this time in history. Just like this song kept up British morale during WW2, so this song can help people stay resilient through this pandemic
Yes. Pure British perseverance, and resilience!
The Sydney Symphony performed this last weekend. A very moving experience.
Very touching music. My favorite variations to Elgar's work are the breif IV and know also IX.
The slow built-up comprising of the Nimrod variation reminds me of the fugal second movement part of Also Sprach Zarathustra by Strauss titled 'Of the Backworldman', it also has a very emotional built-up climax, one of my favorite pieces of music as a teenager, from a stand point of sheer impassable romantic beauty.
Agree about the final movement "EDU" - a memorable performance of which can be found played by
the Warsaw Philjharmonic in their complete version of "Enigma" elsewhere on TH-cam.
This is glorious fantastic music.
Listening to this on Remembrance Sunday, @/lessweforget
Fantastic.
This should play at the title screen of the universe. It's perfect from the origin and the end, I like this kind of sense of finality, because it doesn't sound sorrow.
My orchestra will be performing this in honor of her late majesty, Queen Elizabeth II. Such a moving and majestic piece of music.
No one cares
@@chrisg0001 u cared enough to even say that lmao
How can anyone not be moved by ths
Absolutely stunning.
Heavenly...just heavenly
Life Changing
Overwhelming.
just gets me every time I hear it, beautiful!!🥲🥲🥲