l La viole de gambe est un très bel instrument qui rend si bien toute la subtilité et la diversité de ces Folies d'Espagne composées par Marin Marais et tant d'autres grands musiciens pendant plusieurs siècles .C 'est une musique intemporelle et universelle car on ne peut rester insensible à son rythme entrainer ni ne pas être apaisé par sa magnifique mélodie ; merci pour ce partage
Quelle vibration cette viole de gambe! J'approuve ce qui précède d'autant plus que je vis en EHPAD où n'existent pas ces références musicales. Seule prévaut une culture de masse qui m'est toujours étrangère, même à 73 ans .
@@mamam.d.8898 Agreed, heartily - but VERY selectively. One can never fully disregard the conditions under which these were written - at least I can't. Imagine a 17th Century appointment with your "dentist".
@@titolucreci0 I can't speak for "humanity", for its varieties are infinite- but these compositions are performed by some very talented (strong,if you will) humans indeed.
Bon, bon, je ne suis pas un spécialiste, juste un spectateur ! Merci pour vos informations dans tous les cas. ;-) Cependant Marin Marais était bien français lui :-P
Comme la première lumière du crépuscule, cette musique vous ouvre les yeux sur de nouvelles promesses et sur toutes les anomalies de la nature. Evocatrice de pouvoirs au-delà de l'observation, cette pièce tire les ficelles du cœur, attire la nostalgie et réveille les regrets, les vies écorchées et la torpeur des veilleurs tourmentés!
Tous les matins du monde est un film français réalisé par Alain Corneau et sorti en 1991. Il est tiré du roman éponyme écrit par Pascal Quignard, qui retrace la vie du compositeur français du XVIIe siècle, Marin Marais, et ses relations avec un autre compositeur contemporain, Jean de Sainte-Colombe. Il rencontre un important succès, avec plus de deux millions d'entrées, et remporte le César du meilleur film (1992). Il contribue à la renaissance de la musique baroque et à faire connaître la viole de gambe, interprétée dans le film par Jordi Savall, grand spécialiste de cet instrument.
The first time I heard this melody was when I was a kid. I never knew its name, but I kept its tone and rithymn in my mind. More than twelve years later, I heard it again and immediately recognized it. It was a beautiful feeling to hear it again. I will always keep this song in my heart.
Wow. What an epic finale, it took my breath away! I have been an aficionado of western classical music since 1979 from a land where it was and is still regarded as a pariah. My enjoyment of this form of "Pleasure is yours" began with accidentally listening to the aforementioned classical music request program on BBC shortwave radio and the theme music of the program hooked me into the wonderful world of classical music (Armstrong was correct :what a wonderful world). But the advent of internet platforms like TH-cam changed my appreciations of wonderful music pieces of the Masters(still my all time favorites are maestros like JSBach, Mozart and Beethoven together) to the newly discovered gems like this wonder.I wonder how they were left out by ignoring the magical music pieces like this. Nowadays, I listen to this gem every morning and I can't describe how it changes my state of mind before getting into the monotony of office life till evenings. Thanks again and my appreciations to the wonderful people responsible for uploading this for the enjoyment of millions. Three cheers!
there is such an enormous world of western classical music beyond bach, mozart, and beethoven - it’s frustrating (well, except for bach IMO, i could listen to bach forever) how they dominate the initial landscape most people encounter.
Music is universal, to hell what others may think,I listen to music from all over the world there are no boundaries as far as music is concerned. Greetings from Wales. I started my musical journey in 1956 with Handel's Messiah at school thanks to my music teacher. Cheers
Great, from 1956 but it's not a great achievement for a westerner as you are supposed to be enjoying your classical music at a young age.But if you are well versed in music from all over the world I have to yield!
This music (called Folia) is a traditional music of Spain from Renaissance period. Many composers have made variations (Vivaldi, Salieri, Lully...even Bach). The best modern version is from the catalan composer Jordi Savall. I suggest you listen to it.
Hello Xavier. Please do always mention that the portuguese peasants would also dance as it is refered in works by Gil Vicente, Portugal's legendary dramatist.
Isn't Savall just the interpret ? I saw he made two whole discs about "La Folia", but no track is claimed to have been composed by him. He just played them.
I would like to comment that I listen to this piece daily, and never tire of it--in fact, every experience leaves me more at peace and focused than before; the story told behind each note never grows old.
Imagine as a race brining fourth a culture, who produces the most talented composers the world has ever known, who compose and wrote melodies so complex that it caused those who listened to it intensively (scientifically proven) to progress cognitively. Tell that to those zionist BLM supporting haters of the white European Christian race.
Un peu tôt pour le baroque, j’ai une certaine réticence à appeler la musique française de cette époque par ce nom, elle est si particulière . À redécouvrir les leçons de ténèbres de couperin , une splendeur absolue
For the love of God, what an astonishing sound and beautiful song. Something magic. Harpsichords explosions and violas progressions are from heaven came.
Ralph Yznaga True! This is one of the best version I’ve heard of Folias, however, I prefer this one by Jordi Savall and also the one played by Los Otros. th-cam.com/video/5Frq7rjEGzs/w-d-xo.html
If you want to listen a fine Follia, take the 26 variations on this theme by Salieri. Yes, you've correctly seen. It's the same about whom they said he were jealous on Mozart. Such a scrap! Mozart was pushed post mortem by the Free Masons. During his lifetime he never had a contract, just short-sighted.
Voir et revoir et entendre la sublime interprétation du grand Marin Marais par le grand acteur et regretté Jean Pierre Marielle, dans le film "tous les matins du monde" .
quand j'entends la musique, je me sens prête à tout, gagner le paradis, aller à Tombouctou c'est un simple baiser déposé sur ma joue, l'appel en liberté qui me retient debout sans chercher à faiblir sous le jet de caillou je serai la merveille prostrée sur ses genoux je serai le soleil et ferait des jaloux plus rien ne me retient, je vais aller au bout, jusqu'à ce que renaisse la grenouille Zouzou jusqu'à ce que soit libre chacun de nos hiboux...
... nach meinem Empfinden hat Marais die beste Bearbeitung des "La Follia"-Themas geliefert. Sie ist am empfindsamsten, aber wohl auch die technisch schwierigste Version. - Wie eine Stimme aus der Vergangenheit, die aber auch heute noch zu begeistern vermag!
Quite simply the most elegantly melancholic piece I ever heard and uncounted are-encounters have never dimmed that first love... wrote an entire play with this echoing in my imagination... and never stop trying to write ✍️ around it the words as evocative as the melody🥺
Ich bin einfach immer wieder überwältigt von der Größe dieser Musik , des Gambisten Marais . Der Glanz des Sonnenkönigs ! Jeder der improvisiert sollte diese Musik studieren . Diese Klangfarben und das Kontinuum und das Feuer .
I cant stop revisiting this piece and this particular rendering of it, seamlessly spanning from serenely beautiful peace to stadium mosh pit. Absolutely fantastic. So well done - thank you!
Efectivamente, me uno a lo que algunas personas comentan... Es para mí imposible escuchar esta maravilla sin dejarme llevar por una especie de nostalgia, una especie de recuerdo difuso pero increíblemente sublime y bello de algo pasado que no he vivido, pero que mi alma recuerda gracias a la puerta que esta maravillosa música le abre. Incomprensibles y bellas sensaciones...
What an amazing thing is sheet music. Despite his death 291 years ago, Marin Marais still turns our ears with his tunes. And 300 years hence, not only will our descendants still play Marais, they will be able to listen to the Beatles as though they were in the next room.
la musique baroque a une spécificité particulière par rapport autres musiques toutes aussi remarquables. ET je ne parle pas que de la musique classique, jazz, rock , pop, folklore , variétés, tout ça est merveilleux aussi. mais LE BAROQUE A UNE construction intellectuelle basée sur Les mouvements EN RAPPORT A LA danse. je répète la DANSE !! . gavotte, sarabande, gigue etc.. , d’où sa modernité essayez de danser sur une symphonie de Beethoven ?; cela touche une autre région de notre cerveau, une mélodie de Faure, un air d’opéra de Mozart, l'adagietto de Mahler, un air d’opéra de Puccini, tout CA est sublime mais différent, il y a quelque chose d'autre dans la musique baroque qui dégage une inégalable pureté , une joie franche si proche de nos attentes
Oui tellement exceptionnelle....les ornements qu'elle rajoute sont joués de manière si élégante, et puis le son, comment la viole de gambe résonne...et puis tout le reste, les reprises à tempo, les passages lents et coulés... la plénitude quand on écoute...
I have only recently discovered the folia, and have enjoyed exploring it's variations. However, I keep coming back to this piece. I believe it's grip is not from the music as written, but from the musicians that play it. Particularly Sophie Watillon. How tragic to discover a musician whose art is transcendent, only to learn she has passed on. Her art still lives and inspires.
This theme is Universal even Beethoven's 5th Symphony make use of it. In fact nobody knows who composed it, and it is ancient, very ancient, in fact the oldest or recurrent themes known in Europe. My favorite interpretation of it is from Antonio Salieri: 26 variations on La Folie (contrary to popular culture impression created by the movie Amadeus, Salieri was a brilliant composer, this image was created on Weimar Republic to get a musician that could be a hero for the German people, and as Salieri and Mozart mutually hated each other and Salieri was Italian they turned him on his nemesis what was never true).
Awesome performance; I play this magnificent piece on a treble recorder for almost 35 years. And it remains always challenging to play it. It sounds even good without the continuo. I have played this for an audience many times this way.
From the beginning to the end this melody is an exquisite composition of culture, nostalgia, and elegance I can just imagine the Spanish aristocracy dancing to the piece, very well done .
It’s great, it really is. But it would be a shame to discard the wealth of other fantastic music out there… I’m listening to Saint-Saëns 3rd symphony as I write this… a magnificent work Holst’s Planets is fabulous, Vaughan Williams 5th is sublime, the there is Ravel, Joseph Jongen, Delius, Bax, Hovhaness, Mussorgsky, etc. There is just so much incredibly beautiful music out there, it would be a shame to miss it 😊
Un souvenir ému de Sophie Watillon, que j'ai rencontré une fois : une véritable virtuose, qui nous a quitté bien trop tôt et bien trop jeune ! Elle a souvent joué avec Jordi Savall.
Elle nous a quitté très tôt. Pourtant, Sophie Watillon est parvenue a rester immortelle avec son enregistrement de Marais. Le meilleur Marais jamais joué de nos jours.
I’m proud to have played this instrument. I wish to go back to playing. Unfortunately the instrument is so expensive. I played 7 years when I was a child ❤😢
Gary Gray omg yes !!!! Thanks !!! Thats exactly the words I was looking for ! This one and passacaille darmide are just moving everything from inside and i feel like i dont belong here but where I was before.
Maravillosa musica que nos reconforta ,nos rescata de este universo tan enfermo y loco y nos eleva ,por un instante, de toda la estupidez y vulgaridad que nos rodea. Esta maravilla nos impulsa a continuar vivos.
Les Folies d'Espagne with its variations composed by various authors in different periods, are all beautiful and interesting but what I consider the best, is that of Marin Marais for viola da gamba and continuo, and that of Arcangelo Corelli entitled La Follia, for violin and continuo. This interpretation of Sophie Watillon, unfortunately died prematurely, is very beautiful.
There's something I don't quite understand, "les folies d'Espagne" literally means "los folios de España" but I'm reading that this woman is French... is it just a name and the music it's unreletad to Spain or something?
@@celeridad6972 Actually, in spite of its name, les folies d'Espagne or Follia is originaly a Portugese dance of the Renaissance. Its modern and most famous version (the melody of this variations set) is first attested in variations composed by Lully in 1672. A lot of composers have then used this piece in variations like Corelli, Vivaldi, Marin Marais (this piece), Salieri... I precise that the composer of this piece, Marin Marais, is not a woman but a man. This is not him on the picture.
This is beautiful beyond words and time. No wonder why musical geniuses such as Jean Baptiste Lully and Vivaldi made their own versions. This kind of things validates TH-cam.
I lived a past life in the 18th century. Ever since I was five years old and I learned about the American revolution; I’ve been in love with that time period. The rich culture, and passion for the arts.
Marais lived in the 17th century. You confuse with Bach, Rameau, Vivaldi, Haendel for the first part of the 18 th century and Mozart and Haydn for the second part. Marais doesn't belong to the Baroque period. Marais was nearly 30 years old when Bach was born.
Красивая девушка с виолончелью и шикарная музыка!!! Да, старина всегда притягивает своей романтичностью, и несмотря на то, что для людей того времени их жизнь была обыденностью, и они отчетливо ощущали на себе её тяготы, для нас то время окутано тайной, а потому его невозможно не романтизировать. Кто знает, быть может, если человечество протянет ещё несколько сотен лет, то наши потомки через лет 200 тоже будут романтизировать наши времена, да так, что нам будет сложно представить. «Что вообще можно увидеть романтичного в современном капиталистическом обществе потребления?» - думают многие из нас. Однако, если бы некоторые из нас оказались в будущем и нам бы рассказывали потомки о нашем времени, мы бы, возможно, попытались бы по другому смотреть на нашу жизнь. Сложно пересмотреть свою точку зрения, если всё окружающее тебя становится обыденностью, если ты живёшь в этом, поэтому невозможно прямо сейчас представить, что таинственного и загадочного найдут потомки в нашем времени.
10 gennaio 2020 h.09 Torino sotto una coltre di gelo. Questa Musica con la emme maiuscola, accarezza il cuore e la mente. Quale dono poterla ascoltare!!!🎻🎼
Depuis que les riche ceux cache ils ya plus de folklore et des aventures et histoire passionnante jador les poque victorien le monde et tellement banale de puis
@Boris Clover-- Indeed the picture is rococo and seen the style, it should be of the French painter, François Boucher (1703-1770), then later to Marin Marais (1656-1728). However, both had contacts with the court of Louis XIV. And then the illustration shows a 7-string viola da gamba that was the viola played by Marin Marais and invented by his teacher, Monsieur de Sainte Colombe. So, there is a certain consistency. But these are little things, the important thing is that this work by Maris is extraordinary, as is the execution of Sophie Watillon.
Like Antoine Vaillant already mentioned in his comment, the picture shows Anne Henriette de Bourbon (alias "Madame Seconde" or "Madame Henriette"), doughter of Louis XV. and his wife Maria Leszczyńska. She lived from 1727 till 1752- The Portrait was not painted by Boucher but by Jean-Marc Nattier (1685-1766) as a kind of memento mori shortly after she died and with her most beloved instrument the gamba. The picture is in display in the Chambre de Madame Victoire, a part of the "Appartements des Mesdames" at the ground flor of the Château de Versailles.
And yet her clothing appears more late Baroque than rococo to me. I guess you can't argue with the facts of the painting, but the lack of a separate stomacher and robe reminds me of earlier bodices. Although, on second look, her stays are definitely of the period in which it was painted, with such a distinct conical shape to her torso. And obviously the hair as well. Just the dress seems strange to me.
@@briannaysiamodonnell478 The Follia or Folies d''Espagne originaly comes from Portugal, then it became popular in whole Europe during the 17th century. His modern and most famous form is first attested in variations by Lully. This melody was then used in a lot of variation like this ones, by Marin Marais, French violist and composer who lived during the reign of Louis XIV and the begining of the Louis XV's one. So this is not music from the Spanish court at all, but from the French one.
Pour certains on ne pourrait pas admirer ou être nostalgique d'une époque que l'on n'a pas vécue ! Mais alors ,c'est effacer l'histoire et tenir le passé pour inexistant ! Pourtant, on admire un héros du passé que l'on n'a pas connu , un grand musicien comme Mozart, un grand médecin et chercheur comme pasteur, un grand navigateur comme christophe Colomb etc... l' homme contemporain ne considérerait que ce qu'il connaît par sa propre expérience ? Mais des hommes ont existes avant lui et méritent notre respect : les architectes et ouvriers des pyramides dans l'Égypte ancienne et ceux des cathédrales gothiques . Bien sûr tout n'était pas parfait et des changements étaient nécessaires.
@@henryfonteneau8087 Oui👍Quand le roi construisait des grands palais partout,plusieurs des maçons et des ouvriers avaient perdu leur vie.Il y avait beaucoup d'analphabétisme de pauvreté,de misère ...non?
@@ΝικηΚαραισκου-π7χ oui,des souffrances et de la misère existaient à cette époque, la société était inégalitaire, mais d,autres regimes , a des époques récentes ont fait souffrir le peuple : je pense en particulier à l'horreur qui régna en Russie sous Staline!!!
Comment supprimer cette correction systématique de certains mots et noms propres qui nous empêche d'écrire ce que l'on souhaite !vous avez dit intelligence artificielle ?
l La viole de gambe est un très bel instrument qui rend si bien toute la subtilité et la diversité de ces Folies d'Espagne composées par Marin Marais et tant d'autres grands musiciens pendant plusieurs siècles .C 'est une musique intemporelle et universelle car on ne peut rester insensible à son rythme entrainer ni ne pas être apaisé par sa magnifique mélodie ; merci pour ce partage
J'admire votre récit.
Quelle vibration cette viole de gambe!
J'approuve ce qui précède d'autant plus que je vis en EHPAD où n'existent pas ces références musicales.
Seule prévaut une culture de masse qui m'est toujours étrangère, même à 73 ans .
The portrait is of Princess Henriette, one of the children of Louis XV, by Jean-Marc Nattier- she died of smallpox at the young age of 24.
The portrait is nicely done, but the gamba is all wrong. It's got six strings and seven pegs, and the frets are all wrong.
She looks like him.
@@therealzilch that’s a violone
Wait nvm you’re right 🤦♀️
@@RachaelLongLastName It must be the tiniest violone in existence. But it still has six strings and seven pegs and wrong frets.
Apparently its possible to feel nostalgia for something you've never experienced
beautiful comment
Perfectly said
@@mamam.d.8898 Agreed, heartily - but VERY selectively. One can never fully disregard the conditions under which these were written - at least I can't. Imagine a 17th Century appointment with your "dentist".
@@joeboyle5864 that´s the point, humanity it´s too weak nowadays. we are disgusting
@@titolucreci0 I can't speak for "humanity", for its varieties are infinite- but these compositions are performed by some very talented (strong,if you will) humans indeed.
La musique baroque française est une oeuvre d'art et un plaisir pour l'ouï.
To be honest it is not French baroque. It is Italian music. The original composer is Corelli.
folias is Spanish not french ni italian
@@Merry19ss The author of this Folia is Corelli. He is Italian.
@Ferdinand De Beaujeu As far as I know the author of this Folia is Correli. Please correct me if I am wrong.
Bon, bon, je ne suis pas un spécialiste, juste un spectateur !
Merci pour vos informations dans tous les cas. ;-) Cependant Marin Marais était bien français lui :-P
Je pense que si la beauté était transformée en musique, ça sonnerait quelque chose comme ça ...
@@aureliusvictor4285 La beauté est éphémère, la musique est éternelle 😉
@@jeandeblaize4175 Oui , absolument ! Ainsi que tous les grands arts , peinture , sculpture , architecture , littérature , et arts de le scène ! 🌹🌟🌹
Like 99 todos vuestros comentarios son de genios
Comme la première lumière du crépuscule, cette musique vous ouvre les yeux sur de nouvelles promesses et sur toutes les anomalies de la nature. Evocatrice de pouvoirs au-delà de l'observation, cette pièce tire les ficelles du cœur, attire la nostalgie et réveille les regrets, les vies écorchées et la torpeur des veilleurs tourmentés!
La seule anomalie dans la nature, c'est l'humain. Mais il lui arrive de faire des trucs chouettes en effet.
Tous les matins du monde est un film français réalisé par Alain Corneau et sorti en 1991. Il est tiré du roman éponyme écrit par Pascal Quignard, qui retrace la vie du compositeur français du XVIIe siècle, Marin Marais, et ses relations avec un autre compositeur contemporain, Jean de Sainte-Colombe.
Il rencontre un important succès, avec plus de deux millions d'entrées, et remporte le César du meilleur film (1992). Il contribue à la renaissance de la musique baroque et à faire connaître la viole de gambe, interprétée dans le film par Jordi Savall, grand spécialiste de cet instrument.
A fine film. I enjoyed it.
“Vous faites de la musique… mais vous n’êtes pas musicien!”
on a découvert plus tard que Jean de Sainte Colombe avait aussi un fils qui vivait en Angleterre et qui était professeur de... viole de gambe!
Jordi Savall maestro catalán español ❤❤
The first time I heard this melody was when I was a kid. I never knew its name, but I kept its tone and rithymn in my mind. More than twelve years later, I heard it again and immediately recognized it. It was a beautiful feeling to hear it again. I will always keep this song in my heart.
Wow. What an epic finale, it took my breath away! I have been an aficionado of western classical music since 1979 from a land where it was and is still regarded as a pariah. My enjoyment of this form of "Pleasure is yours" began with accidentally listening to the aforementioned classical music request program on BBC shortwave radio and the theme music of the program hooked me into the wonderful world of classical music (Armstrong was correct :what a wonderful world). But the advent of internet platforms like TH-cam changed my appreciations of wonderful music pieces of the Masters(still my all time favorites are maestros like JSBach, Mozart and Beethoven together) to the newly discovered gems like this wonder.I wonder how they were left out by ignoring the magical music pieces like this. Nowadays, I listen to this gem every morning and I can't describe how it changes my state of mind before getting into the monotony of office life till evenings. Thanks again and my appreciations to the wonderful people responsible for uploading this for the enjoyment of millions. Three cheers!
there is such an enormous world of western classical music beyond bach, mozart, and beethoven - it’s frustrating (well, except for bach IMO, i could listen to bach forever) how they dominate the initial landscape most people encounter.
Music is universal, to hell what others may think,I listen to music from all over the world there are no boundaries as far as music is concerned. Greetings from Wales. I started my musical journey in 1956 with Handel's Messiah at school thanks to my music teacher. Cheers
Great, from 1956 but it's not a great achievement for a westerner as you are supposed to be enjoying your classical music at a young age.But if you are well versed in music from all over the world I have to yield!
The finale always brings me to tears... and sends chills down my spine, it is simly breathtaking
Ultimul mohican.
This music (called Folia) is a traditional music of Spain from Renaissance period. Many composers have made variations (Vivaldi, Salieri, Lully...even Bach). The best modern version is from the catalan composer Jordi Savall. I suggest you listen to it.
Hello Xavier. Please do always mention that the portuguese peasants would also dance as it is refered in works by Gil Vicente, Portugal's legendary dramatist.
My favorite version is Vivaldi’s one.
Isn't Savall just the interpret ? I saw he made two whole discs about "La Folia", but no track is claimed to have been composed by him. He just played them.
@@xavier_03 that is
Anche Corelli...ed è una variazione stupenda!
Does this music bring tears to anyone else's eyes? It does me! Beautiful!
It does doubly ::the music and the knowing of your crying........to the same emotion
G luck
I would like to comment that I listen to this piece daily, and never tire of it--in fact, every experience leaves me more at peace and focused than before; the story told behind each note never grows old.
Imagine as a race brining fourth a culture, who produces the most talented composers the world has ever known, who compose and wrote melodies so complex that it caused those who listened to it intensively (scientifically proven) to progress cognitively. Tell that to those zionist BLM supporting haters of the white European Christian race.
It is, truly, a stunning performance of a sublime piece of music so liisten every day, or more often, and enjoy!
Like the Bolero.
Yep, I never tire of it either.
Le charme envoutant des instruments baroques, dont la voix semble flotter vers l'infini...
Philip Chretien Karlsson un veritable songe ..
Un peu tôt pour le baroque, j’ai une certaine réticence à appeler la musique française de cette époque par ce nom, elle est si particulière . À redécouvrir les leçons de ténèbres de couperin , une splendeur absolue
bénédicte Gandoulas peut-être baroque « primitif » ? :)
Je trouve cette musique d’autant plus envoûtante que ces instruments ont plus de trois siècles
N P ça doit être ça 😃
このどこか哀愁を帯びた優美なメロディーが胸に染み入ります。C'est magnifique!
Les accords et les gammes ne changent pas, et pourtant, jamais je ne me sentirai lassée de cette oeuvre d'art sonore.
For the love of God, what an astonishing sound and beautiful song. Something magic. Harpsichords explosions and violas progressions are from heaven came.
dont forget the lute.
This is the best performance that I've ever head of this magnificent music. Thanks so very much.
Ralph Yznaga True! This is one of the best version I’ve heard of Folias, however, I prefer this one by Jordi Savall and also the one played by Los Otros. th-cam.com/video/5Frq7rjEGzs/w-d-xo.html
There is something haunting and eternal about Folias. Transcendental.
If you want to listen a fine Follia, take the 26 variations on this theme by Salieri. Yes, you've correctly seen. It's the same about whom they said he were jealous on Mozart. Such a scrap! Mozart was pushed post mortem by the Free Masons. During his lifetime he never had a contract, just short-sighted.
I agree,magic
And if you want the original portuguese one from the XVI century : th-cam.com/video/I1gb3GGHPv0/w-d-xo.html
@@Malheirods the originals are from the 1450's in León
Agreed. I once knew a Marian Svoboda in Rome, are you related
Quels talents ! les mots ne suffisent pas a decrire l emotion que provoquent en moi Marin Marie et la talentueuse Sophie Watillon. Merci !
Voir et revoir et entendre la sublime interprétation du grand Marin Marais par le grand acteur et regretté Jean Pierre Marielle, dans le film "tous les matins du monde" .
@@francisvicaire178 c est bien vrai.
In Memoriam Sophie Watillon (1965 - 2005)
Haunting music and the artist died so young.
Why did she die so young? :(
@@WinrichNaujoks she died of cancer
Fantástico el sonido de la viola de gamba . Bravo !! 👏 ❤️🌺
quand j'entends la musique, je me sens prête à tout,
gagner le paradis, aller à Tombouctou
c'est un simple baiser déposé sur ma joue,
l'appel en liberté qui me retient debout
sans chercher à faiblir sous le jet de caillou
je serai la merveille prostrée sur ses genoux
je serai le soleil et ferait des jaloux
plus rien ne me retient, je vais aller au bout,
jusqu'à ce que renaisse la grenouille Zouzou
jusqu'à ce que soit libre chacun de nos hiboux...
De qui est-ce ce bien joli texte ?
@@alainlejeune1981 de moi. Pour en lire plus ca se passe la : facebook.com/DjinnGrey/
... nach meinem Empfinden hat Marais die beste Bearbeitung des "La Follia"-Themas geliefert. Sie ist am empfindsamsten, aber wohl auch die technisch schwierigste Version. - Wie eine Stimme aus der Vergangenheit, die aber auch heute noch zu begeistern vermag!
Quite simply the most elegantly melancholic piece I ever heard and uncounted are-encounters have never dimmed that first love... wrote an entire play with this echoing in my imagination... and never stop trying to write ✍️ around it the words as evocative as the melody🥺
I understand your feeling... i would put the music for the funeral of Queen Anne, by Purcell, on the same level.
¡Hermosa música! No me canso de escucharla. Fantástica interpretación de la viola de gamba.
I tell yоu, nо; but unless yоu repent yоu will all likewise perish. Luke 13:3 ✝
Ich bin einfach immer wieder überwältigt von der Größe dieser Musik , des Gambisten Marais .
Der Glanz des Sonnenkönigs !
Jeder der improvisiert sollte diese Musik studieren . Diese Klangfarben und das Kontinuum und das Feuer .
I cant stop revisiting this piece and this particular rendering of it, seamlessly spanning from serenely beautiful peace to stadium mosh pit. Absolutely fantastic. So well done - thank you!
Efectivamente, me uno a lo que algunas personas comentan... Es para mí imposible escuchar esta maravilla sin dejarme llevar por una especie de nostalgia, una especie de recuerdo difuso pero increíblemente sublime y bello de algo pasado que no he vivido, pero que mi alma recuerda gracias a la puerta que esta maravillosa música le abre. Incomprensibles y bellas sensaciones...
muchas gracias
Concuerdo con vos
Un agrado escuchar esta maravillosa interpretacion musical, que da mucha paz y serenidad en estos momentos de pandemia.
Un saludo de Stgo.de Chile
ola
What an amazing thing is sheet music. Despite his death 291 years ago, Marin Marais still turns our ears with his tunes. And 300 years hence, not only will our descendants still play Marais, they will be able to listen to the Beatles as though they were in the next room.
Sorry, but the Beatles never have been, nor ever will be, equal to Baroque music!!
@@mimiduquette8786 I'm afraid I never claimed that the Beatles were from the Baroque period. Quelle Horreur!
The Peatles ? Oh My GOOOOOOD NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
I think about the ordinary people like me, who have lived and died but never got to hear any of this music.
stop trashing the beatles lol
la musique baroque a une spécificité particulière par rapport autres musiques toutes aussi remarquables. ET je ne parle pas que de la musique classique, jazz, rock , pop, folklore , variétés, tout ça est merveilleux aussi.
mais LE BAROQUE A UNE construction intellectuelle basée sur Les mouvements EN RAPPORT A LA danse. je répète la DANSE !! . gavotte, sarabande, gigue etc.. , d’où sa modernité
essayez de danser sur une symphonie de Beethoven ?; cela touche une autre région de notre cerveau, une mélodie de Faure, un air d’opéra de Mozart, l'adagietto de Mahler, un air d’opéra de Puccini, tout CA est sublime mais différent, il y a quelque chose d'autre dans la musique baroque qui dégage une inégalable pureté , une joie franche si proche de nos attentes
Merci pour cette petite explication . Je comprends maintenant pourquoi ma préférence va à la musique baroque et en particulier à Vivaldi.
Remarque très pertinente. Merci.
Excelente ejecución de la Viola da Gamba. Música histórica tan bien ejecutada es un privilegio!!!!!!!!!!
Notre culture.est brillante, généreuse et invincible
Amen! ❤
Amen
Un document exceptionnel a bien des égards... Une gambiste exceptionnelle qui nous manque.
Oui tellement exceptionnelle....les ornements qu'elle rajoute sont joués de manière si élégante, et puis le son, comment la viole de gambe résonne...et puis tout le reste, les reprises à tempo, les passages lents et coulés... la plénitude quand on écoute...
De quelle Gambiste parlez vous ?
Celle qui interprète Marin Marais ?
Si c'est bien d'elle, c'est clair quelle " cartonne " à la Viole !
Sophie Watillon .... OKkkkkk !
Ne te plains pas, actuellement, en France nous avons un président exceptionnel, et pour longtemps./
@@carolemuller533 totalement de votre avis...
I have only recently discovered the folia, and have enjoyed exploring it's variations. However, I keep coming back to this piece. I believe it's grip is not from the music as written, but from the musicians that play it. Particularly Sophie Watillon. How tragic to discover a musician whose art is transcendent, only to learn she has passed on. Her art still lives and inspires.
God rest her sole
This theme is Universal even Beethoven's 5th Symphony make use of it. In fact nobody knows who composed it, and it is ancient, very ancient, in fact the oldest or recurrent themes known in Europe. My favorite interpretation of it is from Antonio Salieri: 26 variations on La Folie (contrary to popular culture impression created by the movie Amadeus, Salieri was a brilliant composer, this image was created on Weimar Republic to get a musician that could be a hero for the German people, and as Salieri and Mozart mutually hated each other and Salieri was Italian they turned him on his nemesis what was never true).
Oui son art vit toujours. Inoubliable Sophie Watillon.
Me gusta esa calma frialdad invernal que transmite la vibración y sonido de cada instrumento. Me recuerdan días muy nublados.
Inmortal Sophie Watillon en esta interpretación.
“Immortal” is unfortunately a poor choice of word. She passed away far too young
Awesome performance; I play this magnificent piece on a treble recorder for almost 35 years. And it remains always challenging to play it. It sounds even good without the continuo. I have played this for an audience many times this way.
You should post to youtube
From the beginning to the end this melody is an exquisite composition of culture, nostalgia, and elegance I can just imagine the Spanish aristocracy dancing to the piece, very well done .
If one can stomach the Spanish aristocracy
I've found it. I've found the greatest piece of music in history.. thus far
It’s great, it really is. But it would be a shame to discard the wealth of other fantastic music out there… I’m listening to Saint-Saëns 3rd symphony as I write this… a magnificent work Holst’s Planets is fabulous, Vaughan Williams 5th is sublime, the there is Ravel, Joseph Jongen, Delius, Bax, Hovhaness, Mussorgsky, etc. There is just so much incredibly beautiful music out there, it would be a shame to miss it 😊
Un souvenir ému de Sophie Watillon, que j'ai rencontré une fois : une véritable virtuose, qui nous a quitté bien trop tôt et bien trop jeune ! Elle a souvent joué avec Jordi Savall.
+Avalon8741 Las, elle nous a quitté trop vite... Une virtuose de la viole de gambe !
Elle nous a quitté très tôt. Pourtant, Sophie Watillon est parvenue a rester immortelle avec son enregistrement de Marais. Le meilleur Marais jamais joué de nos jours.
Avalon8741 jjh
Beautiful music of the Spanish court...
🙏🌬👂💖😇
Just love that "happy ending". Reminds me of The Four Seasons. Virtuoso of the viola.
Soulful. Inspiring. Riveting. Amazing!
I’m proud to have played this instrument. I wish to go back to playing. Unfortunately the instrument is so expensive. I played 7 years when I was a child ❤😢
This music resonates from the fiber of my being. It’s like genetic memory.
Gary Gray omg yes !!!! Thanks !!! Thats exactly the words I was looking for ! This one and passacaille darmide are just moving everything from inside and i feel like i dont belong here but where I was before.
From the very first listening on.
Same! It feels like a literal part of my being.
Me too!
same here
Un pur bijou, morceau d'une profondeur incroyable et merveilleusement bien interprété, bref on est transporté.
Brava, Ms. Watillon. This is magnificent.
I love the transitions especially with the theorbo and guitars
celestial, luminous, as well the composer and the players.
TY
Cela est beau avec une pointe de délicatesse jolis musique à écouté 😄👌💕😀💯🎵🎵🎵🎶😜☺️💋
Maravillosa musica que nos reconforta ,nos rescata de este universo tan enfermo y loco y nos eleva ,por un instante, de toda la estupidez y vulgaridad que nos rodea. Esta maravilla nos impulsa a continuar vivos.
Por certo ! Eleva-nos a alma .
Que bella Composición y Armonía Adoro La Viola de Gamba. La Musica del Periodo Barroco y el Preromaticismo es Estar en los Campos Eliceos.
THis tune -- La folia -- obsessed Baroque composers. They all wrote variations.
Indeed. Im finding more and more
Vivaldi's is my favorite. Any other recommendations?
@@kuanimal123 th-cam.com/video/P1ngcsx1Drs/w-d-xo.html
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@@kuanimal123 Try the Falconieri! th-cam.com/video/vx9qR6ovHcA/w-d-xo.html
Gyönyörű zene, kitűnő előadásban! Köszönöm a föltöltést!
So.beautiful
Lockdown seems more bearable. Le confinement passe mieux.
i really appreciate this precious music
Я в восторге .От музыки и исполнения.
Superb artistry by the composer and performers. Balm for the soul.
Nobody knows who the composer is
What a passion! It starts like any other piece of Barocco music, but then it transforms into something as fiery as Spanish castagnettes.
La musique baroque française était un plaisir pour Louis ... XIV
ce que je regrette c'est que ça n'a pas été filmé car c'est plus qu'excellent
Absolument fabuleux, merci!
I am listening to this piece over and over. I've recently discovered it and it's amazing.
A big smile, tears, and goosebumps. Excellent.
This is really cool to listen to with headphones, especially when the guitars first come in at 2:59 :-)
no son guitarras, son vihuelas
@@anamargaritaalbarran9887 Oh ok, thanks for informing me.
;-)
Beautiful music of the Spanish court...
Katelyn Groh I agree- very cool. 😌
opabinia56 la viola da gamba no tiene una sonoridad parecida a la guitarra ni a la vihuela, que son de cuerda punteada
Les Folies d'Espagne with its variations composed by various authors in different periods, are all beautiful and interesting but what I consider the best, is that of Marin Marais for viola da gamba and continuo, and that of Arcangelo Corelli entitled La Follia, for violin and continuo. This interpretation of Sophie Watillon, unfortunately died prematurely, is very beautiful.
Wrong! The best variations on Follia are the 26 for violin, harp and orchestra by Antonio Salieri.
There's something I don't quite understand, "les folies d'Espagne" literally means "los folios de España" but I'm reading that this woman is French... is it just a name and the music it's unreletad to Spain or something?
@@celeridad6972 Actually, in spite of its name, les folies d'Espagne or Follia is originaly a Portugese dance of the Renaissance. Its modern and most famous version (the melody of this variations set) is first attested in variations composed by Lully in 1672. A lot of composers have then used this piece in variations like Corelli, Vivaldi, Marin Marais (this piece), Salieri...
I precise that the composer of this piece, Marin Marais, is not a woman but a man. This is not him on the picture.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Marc_Nattier
Suddenly all my aches and pains have disappeared, I think its the strings music vibrations, music is healing
Its called death when ur pains
disappears
J'adore ! Encore merci pour cette magnifique et émouvante interprétation !
This is beautiful beyond words and time. No wonder why musical geniuses such as Jean Baptiste Lully and Vivaldi made their own versions. This kind of things validates TH-cam.
I lived a past life in the 18th century. Ever since I was five years old and I learned about the American revolution; I’ve been in love with that time period. The rich culture, and passion for the arts.
Αha!Moi aussi!J'ai vécu dans la Révolution française!Après à Suisse 👍
Marais lived in the 17th century. You confuse with Bach, Rameau, Vivaldi, Haendel for the first part of the 18 th century and Mozart and Haydn for the second part. Marais doesn't belong to the Baroque period. Marais was nearly 30 years old when Bach was born.
Que maravilla de musica❤❤y por alguna razón me hace sentir poderosa escucharla 🤩🤩
Es una obra maestra 😍❤️❤️
Romina, no solo usted, yo tambien
Красивая девушка с виолончелью и шикарная музыка!!!
Да, старина всегда притягивает своей романтичностью, и несмотря на то, что для людей того времени их жизнь была обыденностью, и они отчетливо ощущали на себе её тяготы, для нас то время окутано тайной, а потому его невозможно не романтизировать. Кто знает, быть может, если человечество протянет ещё несколько сотен лет, то наши потомки через лет 200 тоже будут романтизировать наши времена, да так, что нам будет сложно представить. «Что вообще можно увидеть романтичного в современном капиталистическом обществе потребления?» - думают многие из нас. Однако, если бы некоторые из нас оказались в будущем и нам бы рассказывали потомки о нашем времени, мы бы, возможно, попытались бы по другому смотреть на нашу жизнь. Сложно пересмотреть свою точку зрения, если всё окружающее тебя становится обыденностью, если ты живёшь в этом, поэтому невозможно прямо сейчас представить, что таинственного и загадочного найдут потомки в нашем времени.
Une musique tellement moderne et qui fait du bien au moral
c'est certainement parce que Hollywood s'en est inspiré, la musique du film le dernier des Mohicans lui ressemble étrangement
Am listening to this while strolling in rural Occitanie, Southern France. Bliss.
Музыка соразмерная человеку. Как они чувствовали гармонию!!! Интересно, это люди или эпоха?
Эпоха Барокко.И,конечно же ,люди.Той эпохи.
Восхитительная музыка!
ok
Muy bien.... Muy bien. MUY BIEN. Ejecución elegante, sentida, sutil y deliciosa.
10 gennaio 2020 h.09
Torino sotto una coltre di gelo. Questa Musica con la emme maiuscola, accarezza il cuore e la mente. Quale dono poterla ascoltare!!!🎻🎼
absolutely splendid.
The variations are spectacular , Bach , Mozart and Beethoven could danced Sevillians to this jazz ! 😎
Pure magic. Thank you.
¡Música que inspira el alma! Desata el pensamiento y las ideas.
So beautiful I almost can't stand it.
Sencillamente, maravilloso, meravellós, meraviglioso, maravilhoso, merveilleux, mirabile, wonderful, wunderbar
Watillon’s oerformance has got it all. It makes me weep - and dance - and rouses longing - and puts my mind at rest
Admiration and Total happiness!!! Humble thank you to you five
Admiration et bonheur Total !!! Humble merci a vous cinq
陰影というか、静寂と動というのか、対比が凄いね 激しいし、ザワザワしてくる 素晴らしい!
What a divine harmony! Who could for God's sake give dislike to this?
Depuis que les riche ceux cache ils ya plus de folklore et des aventures et histoire passionnante jador les poque victorien le monde et tellement banale de puis
Sublime musique.
@Boris Clover-- Indeed the picture is rococo and seen the style, it should be of the French painter, François Boucher (1703-1770), then later to Marin Marais (1656-1728). However, both had contacts with the court of Louis XIV. And then the illustration shows a 7-string viola da gamba that was the viola played by Marin Marais and invented by his teacher, Monsieur de Sainte Colombe. So, there is a certain consistency. But these are little things, the important thing is that this work by Maris is extraordinary, as is the execution of Sophie Watillon.
Like Antoine Vaillant already mentioned in his comment, the picture shows Anne Henriette de Bourbon (alias "Madame Seconde" or "Madame Henriette"), doughter of Louis XV. and his wife Maria Leszczyńska. She lived from 1727 till 1752- The Portrait was not painted by Boucher but by Jean-Marc Nattier (1685-1766) as a kind of memento mori shortly after she died and with her most beloved instrument the gamba. The picture is in display in the Chambre de Madame Victoire, a part of the "Appartements des Mesdames" at the ground flor of the Château de Versailles.
This music was from the Spanish court...
And yet her clothing appears more late Baroque than rococo to me. I guess you can't argue with the facts of the painting, but the lack of a separate stomacher and robe reminds me of earlier bodices. Although, on second look, her stays are definitely of the period in which it was painted, with such a distinct conical shape to her torso. And obviously the hair as well. Just the dress seems strange to me.
@@briannaysiamodonnell478 The Follia or Folies d''Espagne originaly comes from Portugal, then it became popular in whole Europe during the 17th century. His modern and most famous form is first attested in variations by Lully. This melody was then used in a lot of variation like this ones, by Marin Marais, French violist and composer who lived during the reign of Louis XIV and the begining of the Louis XV's one.
So this is not music from the Spanish court at all, but from the French one.
@@areithan1998 thank you
Grande lavoro.... Grazie 🌹 🌹 🌹 🌹 🌹 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Nostalgique de cette époque où la France était grande !
Pour certains on ne pourrait pas admirer ou être nostalgique d'une époque que l'on n'a pas vécue ! Mais alors ,c'est effacer l'histoire et tenir le passé pour inexistant ! Pourtant, on admire un héros du passé que l'on n'a pas connu , un grand musicien comme Mozart, un grand médecin et chercheur comme pasteur, un grand navigateur comme christophe Colomb etc... l' homme contemporain ne considérerait que ce qu'il connaît par sa propre
expérience ? Mais des hommes ont existes avant lui et méritent notre respect : les architectes et ouvriers des pyramides dans l'Égypte ancienne et ceux des cathédrales gothiques . Bien sûr tout n'était pas parfait et des changements étaient nécessaires.
@@henryfonteneau8087 Oui👍Quand le roi construisait des grands palais partout,plusieurs des maçons et des ouvriers avaient perdu leur vie.Il y avait beaucoup d'analphabétisme de pauvreté,de misère ...non?
@@ΝικηΚαραισκου-π7χ oui,des souffrances et de la misère existaient à cette époque, la société était inégalitaire, mais d,autres regimes , a des époques récentes ont fait souffrir le peuple : je pense en particulier à l'horreur qui régna en Russie sous Staline!!!
r!
(pardon pour le francais) .Je suis D'ACORD avec tous votres paroles
Comment supprimer cette correction systématique de certains mots et noms propres qui nous empêche d'écrire ce que l'on souhaite !vous avez dit intelligence artificielle ?
I Love it so muuuch
Meu Deus ! como e possível tanta SAUDADE de um tempo que não vivi. Isto é sublime!
Hermosa interpretación del grupo felicidades!!!!
I dress in my 18th century coat and wig for this.
Except That Marais lived mainly in the 17th century.
@@antoinemozart243 still counts tho
@@antoinemozart243 Wigs were in style in the 17th Century too, so it still works.
I can't get tired of this.
Fantastic music that takes to another world
Merci a Monsieur de Saint-Colombe ...