Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way to Heaven. We've all sinned and deserve Hell. Sins like lying, lusting, etc. Repent and trust only in Jesus, and you will be saved! You can be saved because he took the punishment for our sins on himself when he died on the cross, just like someone can pay your speeding fine in court, and you get off free. Romans 3:23 John 3:16❤😊❤
After listening to this piece several times, I still can't decide if it's pure genius or just scripted chaos. Either way, I think Leo accomplished what he was going for!
Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way to Heaven. We've all sinned and deserve Hell. Sins like lying, lusting, etc. Repent and trust only in Jesus, and you will be saved! You can be saved because he took the punishment for our sins on himself when he died on the cross, just like someone can pay your speeding fine in court, and you get off free. Romans 3:23 John 3:16❤😊
Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way to Heaven. We've all sinned and deserve Hell. Sins like lying, lusting, etc. Repent and trust only in Jesus, and you will be saved! You can be saved because he took the punishment for our sins on himself when he died on the cross, just like someone can pay your speeding fine in court, and you get off free. Romans 3:23 John 3:16❤😊
Hamlin’ s genius lies so much in his courage to explore the unknown and his skill in guiding others along with him. There is simply no one better. Thank goodness for him!
Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way to Heaven. We've all sinned and deserve Hell. Sins like lying, lusting, etc. Repent and trust only in Jesus, and you will be saved! You can be saved because he took the punishment for our sins on himself when he died on the cross, just like someone can pay your speeding fine in court, and you get off free. Romans 3:23 John 3:16❤❤😊
Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way to Heaven. We've all sinned and deserve Hell. Sins like lying, lusting, etc. Repent and trust only in Jesus, and you will be saved! You can be saved because he took the punishment for our sins on himself when he died on the cross, just like someone can pay your speeding fine in court, and you get off free. Romans 3:23 John 3:16❤❤😊
ChristianTheSnowman Maybe it was. Maybe it wasn't. ;) You gotta understand that everyone has all kinds of different tastes in music, though. Even if you don't agree with 'em. :D
Oceaniqo Entertainment I do understand that different people like different music genres-the first minute of this song sounds like an intro to a very fast, intricate, classical piece, and I just wasn't expecting the entire song to be like the beginning.
Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way to Heaven. We've all sinned and deserve Hell. Sins like lying, lusting, etc. Repent and trust only in Jesus, and you will be saved! You can be saved because he took the punishment for our sins on himself when he died on the cross, just like someone can pay your speeding fine in court, and you get off free. Romans 3:23 John 3:16😊
He was my great uncle. He stopped composing and performing at the peak of his celebrity and lived a very private and secluded life. One of my musical heroes, Frank Zappa, was influenced by Leo's music. I was a small child last I saw him, when he became estranged from family. His father, my great grandfather, disapproved of, and did not support, his choice of career. He lived to be 106 years old.
I really love the way Ornstein is playing with beautiful tone colour. Especially the chord at 1:49 has something very special. It's a C9-4-3-2-b13. Very special. Thanks. Ornstein. Love it.
I believe there was another version of Hamelin playing this, but it must have been removed years ago now. I know I had it saved on a pc somewhere so hopefully I'll be able to find it one day.
I'd rather be locked in a sensory deprivation tank with very little oxygen with this on repeat than even consider Katy Perry as a viable musical option.
I don't know about how Ornstein's neighbors felt when he practiced/played this piece...I can only tell you that my neighbors threw bricks at my windows, breaking them so they could hear it louder.
This is one of the rare pieces that almost sound as if it wasn't even written down. There is still some feeling of direction or intent behind this piece.
He was my grandfather's brother. I met him once, when I was a child, at his father's 100th birthday celebration. He was an amazing pianist as well as composer. There is a recently published biography of my Uncle Leo. You should check it out. Who was your history teacher....it's possible it was my sister?
Mitchell....I had forgotten that my first cousin, Lorraine Huzar is a history teacher. I contacted her and she confirmed the connection. She is a great person and dedicated teacher (as you probably know) and she thinks very highly of you.
paul abrams I wish I had met this man. He was, is and will be a great composer in the history of music. Sadly, I bornt 2 years after his death, and I’m not from United States neither, but his harmony have influenciated a lot in my short journey of composer. I hope you did spend time with your uncle Leo, he probably has been an excellent person, as well as an excellent pianist and composer.
+OrangeSodaKing I can't read music, but I've heard another recording of Hamelin playing this, and something sounds a bit different around 2:14. I'm probably wrong.
This guy wasn't just ahead of his time... he was probably from the future and decided he liked the 1910s more than the 2010s. I COMPLETELY understand... well, until those wars happened.... and that great depression.
he stopped making this music, because he realized he wasn't ahead of his time, and the futurist movement is a complete waste of noise, made to appeal to the stupid "avant-garde" morons of the modern art world
@@GUILLOM I'm starting yo believe you use the clown emoji as a form of projection, I doubt in a hundred years you could compose a piece more competent than that of 15 year old mozart, as your view on music is so shrouded in stupidity and you look at it as something with endless possibilities, like a child that thinks they can eat candy all their life.
This is pretty much classical music with all rules and boundaries broken. I find Schoenberg and a lot of atonal music kinda dull but this is atonality done the right way.
@@camthesaxman3387 I forgot all about this comment. But this is true, there is definitely a lot of overlap. Both kinds of music demand extreme virtuosity, and can be full of power and aggression. Both use elaborate musical structures that are not the standard verse/chorus pop format. Both emphasize instrumentation over vocals. Both deal with the heavy parts of life, like death, nature, the monstrous, and religion. One of the major differences, on the other hand, is the lack of dynamics in metal, caused by the nature of electricity and amplification. Also, classical has such an immense variety of genres and encompasses so many time periods that it would perhaps be better to compare death metal to specific styles of classical like, say, violin concertos in particular, or in the case of Gorguts, atonal music like Penderecki and Shostakovich, whom they were influenced by. One solution to the dynamics problem did come from black metal, where instrumental piano pieces and lots of synthesizer work fills in quieter moments on albums. But yes, there are interesting parallels to be found all over. You can just as easily compare Schubert or Beethoven to bands like Dissection or Emperor as you can compare Penderecki to Gorguts. Or you can do what most people do, and compare "symphonic" metal bands to more mainstream classical pieces, but once you dive beneath the surface, it gets a lot more interesting.
Honestly, I've never thought pieces like this are good. They just sound like nonsense with a patterns. But this one definitely has a "wild" side to it. The name tells me that this piece might be about how confused we get by unrecognized and new practices. If we encountered a group of wild men dancing, we probably would see the patterns in their dance but have no idea what the dance means. It's confusing to us, yet we watch/listen anyway because we're curious at the same time.
Nonsense with a pattern. That's the same thing you think when listening to any "new" genre of music. That's what rappers think when they hear rock. That's what punkers think when listening to country. That's what pop fans think when listening to techno. Give it more time, one needs to develop a certain taste for such music, the same way that one would develop taste for wine, through confrontation. Just my two cents.
@@7Volkan6 you're so fucking stupid. There is no taste to this. Leo Ornstein stopped making this music years before its death, because this is just nonsense with a pattern, he realized it, you should too. No pop fan thinks that when listening to techno, unless they are exaggerating. Here it is not an exaggeration, and you are just fucking stupid, musically incompetent, and all you look in music, is taste. Completely wasting your life away, and personally helping the destruction of music.
i wonder how his neighbours felt when he practised this
Haha!
I was thinking this about myself hahahaha
you're playing it wrong, no its suppose to sound like that.
Just like Jackson Pollock!
I thought Francis Bacon!
Charming little waltz at 0:25. Strauss would be proud.
Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way to Heaven. We've all sinned and deserve Hell. Sins like lying, lusting, etc. Repent and trust only in Jesus, and you will be saved! You can be saved because he took the punishment for our sins on himself when he died on the cross, just like someone can pay your speeding fine in court, and you get off free.
Romans 3:23
John 3:16❤😊❤
@@christianweatherbroadcastingok
Lmfao
@@christianweatherbroadcastinga bit irrelevant to the video but ok
After listening to this piece several times, I still can't decide if it's pure genius or just scripted chaos. Either way, I think Leo accomplished what he was going for!
Why not both? The script is remarkable - and subtle in places (I'm not joking).
Dude drop the “or”
Both
@@CurlyFry311 or what
Not genius. He’s going for unique. Plus he did drugs.
As a fan of Heavy Metal - I salute this piece of music for it's crushing heaviness - created 60 years before Heavy Metal was invented!
Stravinsky put on prog metal gigs way before TooL and Meshuggah 😆th-cam.com/video/dYvc7oNlbEg/w-d-xo.htmlsi=KtAnWr5ftACN3ZaH
Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way to Heaven. We've all sinned and deserve Hell. Sins like lying, lusting, etc. Repent and trust only in Jesus, and you will be saved! You can be saved because he took the punishment for our sins on himself when he died on the cross, just like someone can pay your speeding fine in court, and you get off free.
Romans 3:23
John 3:16❤😊
@@christianweatherbroadcastingmy mum hits me
Tries to play this.
"You Died"
Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way to Heaven. We've all sinned and deserve Hell. Sins like lying, lusting, etc. Repent and trust only in Jesus, and you will be saved! You can be saved because he took the punishment for our sins on himself when he died on the cross, just like someone can pay your speeding fine in court, and you get off free.
Romans 3:23
John 3:16❤😊
Hamlin’ s genius lies so much in his courage to explore the unknown and his skill in guiding others along with him. There is simply no one better. Thank goodness for him!
Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way to Heaven. We've all sinned and deserve Hell. Sins like lying, lusting, etc. Repent and trust only in Jesus, and you will be saved! You can be saved because he took the punishment for our sins on himself when he died on the cross, just like someone can pay your speeding fine in court, and you get off free.
Romans 3:23
John 3:16❤❤😊
My little cousin learned to play this piece when he was three years old! I am so proud of him!
Lmao
Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way to Heaven. We've all sinned and deserve Hell. Sins like lying, lusting, etc. Repent and trust only in Jesus, and you will be saved! You can be saved because he took the punishment for our sins on himself when he died on the cross, just like someone can pay your speeding fine in court, and you get off free.
Romans 3:23
John 3:16❤❤😊
@@christianweatherbroadcastingPlease go away. No one invited you to share your delusions. This is about music.
Omg, your cousin is a genius!
That was the best piece of piano music I've heard in YEARS.
I hope that, that was sarcasm...
ChristianTheSnowman
Maybe it was. Maybe it wasn't. ;)
You gotta understand that everyone has all kinds of different tastes in music, though. Even if you don't agree with 'em. :D
Oceaniqo Entertainment I do understand that different people like different music genres-the first minute of this song sounds like an intro to a very fast, intricate, classical piece, and I just wasn't expecting the entire song to be like the beginning.
ChristianTheSnowman
Piece, not song.
Nathaniel Ouzana
For those who don't know, what is the difference? :D
He is my hero, I do not understand his music, but his story is amazing. he lived in 3 centuries.
My mum played this one day while vigorously cleaning my piano.
@@SeigneurReefShark His mum is Leo Ornstein.
....in drag!
@@SeigneurReefShark cry
@@SeigneurReefShark wooshed right over your head
@@justaperson8852 what ?
Now we need an orchestral version xD
That would probably actually sound remarkably good. I'm thinking about orchestrating this...
goingfortheone1
Great!
I imagine this being mostly percussive.
An orchestral version would sound so much like Ginastera.
@@goingfortheone1 yes, we needs this!
God Bless M-A Hamelin for giving coverage to this...
The most impressive thing is that this is actually a dance
Anyone who thinks this is just random notes clearly has never tried to play this
amazing, and so ahead of it's time
This one of the first pieces in the high modernist styles that I was introduced to, and I love it!
Terrific performance.
recital goals
@Felis Skalkotris Sorabjitus hi president
Good luck with that, this shit is harder than Liszt lol.
He played a wrong note.
I heard the same thing - I was outraged.
At 2:31 onwards, there are multiple wrong notes. MAH IS THE WORST PIANIST EVERRR!!!!!!
Mad Men's Dance.
This makes the piano a percussive instrument.
I think my neighbours would kill me if I'd start practicing this piece.
Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way to Heaven. We've all sinned and deserve Hell. Sins like lying, lusting, etc. Repent and trust only in Jesus, and you will be saved! You can be saved because he took the punishment for our sins on himself when he died on the cross, just like someone can pay your speeding fine in court, and you get off free.
Romans 3:23
John 3:16😊
I actually don’t dislike this, especially 0:26 sounds quite nice
He was my great uncle. He stopped composing and performing at the peak of his celebrity and lived a very private and secluded life. One of my musical heroes, Frank Zappa, was influenced by Leo's music. I was a small child last I saw him, when he became estranged from family. His father, my great grandfather, disapproved of, and did not support, his choice of career. He lived to be 106 years old.
Leo is your uncle? Bravo.
Ah, that cleared the sinuses!
Dedicated to his mom... wow, not a joke but, I wonder if Ornstein had a bad childhood?
See what I mean Toothless, you're everywhere I am!!
(Have a nice week btw)
I see you two literally everywhere XD
I guess he didn't like her cooking.
LOL
LOL
So dissonant that it's not dissonant
The notes left out are consonant.
I really love the way Ornstein is playing with beautiful tone colour. Especially the chord at 1:49 has something very special. It's a C9-4-3-2-b13. Very special. Thanks. Ornstein. Love it.
It's Hamelin playing.
@@themobiusfunctionThat wasn't what OP was talking about
What a discovery, a fan immediately.
I sing this in the shower every morning.
Yo same
You two are geniuses
I play this after a hard day at the office - it really helps.
Imagine this as a deleted scene of _Fantasia_ some guy found on a dusty film reel in the cellar of an abandoned animation studio.
An amazing piece indeed! Probably even more than amazing.
YEYEYYEYEYEYEYE
I believe there was another version of Hamelin playing this, but it must have been removed years ago now. I know I had it saved on a pc somewhere so hopefully I'll be able to find it one day.
youre right.. i had it too
I think I'll play this at my piano concerts its a real bang but i can play the whole thing without any mistakes that anyone would notice 😆 lol
Top tier death metal even Shostakovich is afraid of
now this is musically extremely difficult
When that old bat of your aunt asks you: "Will you play a piece for me?" This is perfect, she'll never ask again!
I like this
very katy perry
+Elijah Markovic LOL LOL LOL LOL
much tonal, so consonance
I'd rather be locked in a sensory deprivation tank with very little oxygen with this on repeat than even consider Katy Perry as a viable musical option.
Its like Rudepoema on Acid and Ecstasy at the same time
The ancestor of mathcore!
LOL
Noot noot!
Piano abuse , approved
Scariness , approved
Holy water, needed
My favorite piano piece
This is awesome :D
This is wildness indeed.
Hamelin moment
Cecil Taylor definitely studied this piece a lot...
No Name
My first thought as well.
me too
Beautiful controlled chaos
Thank you
love it
Never imagine the stagement of this dance
Thank you for sharing this.
I love this
Incredible
Also reminds me of George Antheil's Sonata Sauvage
Leo, you were crazy boy...
HonorataMusica but we loved you anyway...
I don't know about how Ornstein's neighbors felt when he practiced/played this piece...I can only tell you that my neighbors threw bricks at my windows, breaking them so they could hear it louder.
wow, insane, really impressive
Love, love, love!
You can call it a clusterfuck.
This is one of the rare pieces that almost sound as if it wasn't even written down. There is still some feeling of direction or intent behind this piece.
Me scribbling my homework that is due to tomorrow be like:
Ornstein: I'm gonna make a full-clustered piece
Antheil: Good idea *steals the idea and make a Sonata named Sauvage*
this is what ligma sounds like
funny to think that Ornstein is the late grand-uncle of my former history teacher. I'm dead serious.
He was my grandfather's brother. I met him once, when I was a child, at his father's 100th birthday celebration. He was an amazing pianist as well as composer. There is a recently published biography of my Uncle Leo. You should check it out. Who was your history teacher....it's possible it was my sister?
Mitchell....I had forgotten that my first cousin, Lorraine Huzar is a history teacher. I contacted her and she confirmed the connection. She is a great person and dedicated teacher (as you probably know) and she thinks very highly of you.
paul abrams I wish I had met this man. He was, is and will be a great composer in the history of music. Sadly, I bornt 2 years after his death, and I’m not from United States neither, but his harmony have influenciated a lot in my short journey of composer. I hope you did spend time with your uncle Leo, he probably has been an excellent person, as well as an excellent pianist and composer.
He was my great-half-uncle's third cousin. Great times we had!
Did he made this with extremely ultra concentrated anger?
This shit is what my baby cousin plays when he sees my piano. Altough I like the first part of this. Then it just goes downhill.
This is like a real life Parker meek score
To my dear "MUMS".
this is like the dark souls of men's dances
M Stenbæk without panties
I see what you did there !
anyone else think some parts sound like the melody from the first movement of Tschaikovsky's 5th symphony?
I feel chaos hearing this
It's like a dish of Ustvolskaya with Prokofiev frosting and a little topping of Czernowin...
Black midi back then
Jokes apart, that is absolutely nasty... and fantastic
In terms of notes per second it mustbe up there with the best of them
Andy Wright heard of black midi?
@@qpqpqpqpqpqpqpqp I think he was talking about playable pieces
You could easily picture this in the current top ten
Great performance, but did anyone find the one misreading?
+OrangeSodaKing I can't read music, but I've heard another recording of Hamelin playing this, and something sounds a bit different around 2:14.
I'm probably wrong.
I think it is in minute 2:01 , the pianist plays a c insted of the written d natural in the top melody
@@ssimoessimIt's a hard ass piece y'all cut him some slack lol.
the man has charisma
Basically how to practice this:
Just break your piano by mashing every single key at the dynamic ffffffff. It's that simple.
sodelicious............
Ah yes,very SAVAGE!!!!!!!
Gosh..
This guy wasn't just ahead of his time... he was probably from the future and decided he liked the 1910s more than the 2010s. I COMPLETELY understand... well, until those wars happened.... and that great depression.
But he ended up living until 2002, when he died age 108 or 109.
he stopped making this music, because he realized he wasn't ahead of his time, and the futurist movement is a complete waste of noise, made to appeal to the stupid "avant-garde" morons of the modern art world
@@Whatismusic123 🤡
@@GUILLOM I'm starting yo believe you use the clown emoji as a form of projection, I doubt in a hundred years you could compose a piece more competent than that of 15 year old mozart, as your view on music is so shrouded in stupidity and you look at it as something with endless possibilities, like a child that thinks they can eat candy all their life.
@@Whatismusic123 ñññññññññññ
I feel bad for the piano lol.
Sounds like it was the model for Strawinskys Sacre?
Notes closer together than siamese twins, godamn
This is pretty much classical music with all rules and boundaries broken. I find Schoenberg and a lot of atonal music kinda dull but this is atonality done the right way.
This is random noise.
@@Whatismusic123 No, it isn't. This is what we call "music".
When you speed it up it sounds like a nancarrow piece
Kind of catchy
someone literally played it💀💀
and?
@@ţťþtţttlolilol
Epic
This sounds like someone with ADHD playing the piano at 3am
...........what did Ornstein think of to make this piece????
I'm curious what listeners of this piece would think of dissonant death metal bands like Demilich and Gorguts.
There's actually a surprisingly large overlap of classical music fans and death metal fans.
@@camthesaxman3387 I forgot all about this comment. But this is true, there is definitely a lot of overlap. Both kinds of music demand extreme virtuosity, and can be full of power and aggression. Both use elaborate musical structures that are not the standard verse/chorus pop format. Both emphasize instrumentation over vocals. Both deal with the heavy parts of life, like death, nature, the monstrous, and religion. One of the major differences, on the other hand, is the lack of dynamics in metal, caused by the nature of electricity and amplification. Also, classical has such an immense variety of genres and encompasses so many time periods that it would perhaps be better to compare death metal to specific styles of classical like, say, violin concertos in particular, or in the case of Gorguts, atonal music like Penderecki and Shostakovich, whom they were influenced by. One solution to the dynamics problem did come from black metal, where instrumental piano pieces and lots of synthesizer work fills in quieter moments on albums.
But yes, there are interesting parallels to be found all over. You can just as easily compare Schubert or Beethoven to bands like Dissection or Emperor as you can compare Penderecki to Gorguts. Or you can do what most people do, and compare "symphonic" metal bands to more mainstream classical pieces, but once you dive beneath the surface, it gets a lot more interesting.
Talk about plagarism! If this doesn't sound like Beethoven's Sixth Symphony, Mvt. II verbatim...WOW! How does a person get away with that!
Ah yes, beating up a piano
MEjammmmm
Dedicated to his mom? I bet she was thrilled - or concerned haha
Honestly, I've never thought pieces like this are good. They just sound like nonsense with a patterns. But this one definitely has a "wild" side to it. The name tells me that this piece might be about how confused we get by unrecognized and new practices. If we encountered a group of wild men dancing, we probably would see the patterns in their dance but have no idea what the dance means. It's confusing to us, yet we watch/listen anyway because we're curious at the same time.
Nonsense with a pattern.
That's the same thing you think when listening to any "new" genre of music.
That's what rappers think when they hear rock. That's what punkers think when listening to country. That's what pop fans think when listening to techno.
Give it more time, one needs to develop a certain taste for such music, the same way that one would develop taste for wine, through confrontation. Just my two cents.
@@7Volkan6 you're so fucking stupid. There is no taste to this. Leo Ornstein stopped making this music years before its death, because this is just nonsense with a pattern, he realized it, you should too. No pop fan thinks that when listening to techno, unless they are exaggerating. Here it is not an exaggeration, and you are just fucking stupid, musically incompetent, and all you look in music, is taste. Completely wasting your life away, and personally helping the destruction of music.
Xenakis before Xenakis..