If heaven had a horn solo...
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 26 ต.ค. 2022
- Original Video: • Strauss's Four Last So... (Hornsolos).
From "September" from Richard Strauss's "Four Last Songs"
Soprano: Diana Damrau
Horn: Eric Terwilliger
Conductor: Mariss Jansons
Orchestra: Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks - เพลง
The french horn is the mighty invisible ghost in orchestration, proven when it plays solo. Fantastic.
There’s a horn solo in Brahms’s 3rd symphony, 3rd movement that never fails to give me chills. Love the way the instrument sounds.
I think most arrangers dont know what to do with the horns making horns like phantoms of the orchestra
I always end up sitting behind them as a trumpet player with the way the orchestras are arranged here, it sure isn't a ghost to me tends to be so loud even on the quiet parts. Though when listening from the audience it feels so subtle yet once it's gone it's also super noticeable.
except when its mahler, they arent so invisible there
@@trombonebestinstrument heehee!
th-cam.com/video/dRPVN4b77I4/w-d-xo.html
The story goes, that Strauss, as a baby, would smile when he heard the horn, and cry when he heard the violin.
That’s because his father was a horn player
This is not just a wonderful piece of music. It is, I believe, at the same time as the foreboding of the approaching end, the composer's loving farewell to the memory of his father, the horn player, and thus perhaps to music itself, which he had learned to love through his father.
Look at Ravi Shankar's last raga, knowing there was no more. The test of the man is to look ahead, not behind. I knew when I completed a major piece of work there was only one more to be asked of me, and then my work was done, I could retire, resting easy, although in fact another one yet lay ahead, and I'm told it may only end when I do. With leisure to consider the how, I know that my greatest test was at the start, pre-conditioning me to alignment with the Great Inspiration of humanity.
The second movement, this movement, is easy to make a beautiful sound and Eric does this wonderfully. But for a 1st horn, the Four Last Songs is all about getting through the 3rd mvmt - that is the hardest 7 minutes I have ever and will ever endure as a horn player. Stunningly beautiful, daunting, harrowing and technically so taxxing, the accuracy, the intonation while holding a long high note .... the heart beats a little quicker let me be honest!
Oh, don't I know. I've only done it once. One of the most beautiful parts ever.
Richard Strauss' father was one of the great horn players of his era and the love of that horn sound has always shined through in his writing.
Eric Terwilliger is fantastic in this but then again, he always was. While it's sad that he has retired, his work as a teacher will hopefully see a new generation of wonderful musicians develop under his guidance.
I love the horn, obviously, but Diana is heaven's choirmaster
Why say but? Just say you love both. Saying but makes it seem like you’re comparing them
@@fartman7470I think you've misread my disjunction here. English does not distinguish between 'but"-the following statement fundamentally contravenes the one I just made-and "but"-the following statement is of slight relation and certainly a different topic than the one I previously made. I came for the horn. I stayed for Frau Damrau, because she sends me.
Of all the great Strauss Horn solos (not to mention a couple of great Concertos), this has to be my favorite.
The finest brass instrument to ever grace the ear drums of humanity. ❤
The four last songs are absolutely gorgeous. There aren’t too many things that come close imo.
I had to stop playing French horn twenty-two years ago, but still remember everything I learned in those thirty years... I have sometimes wondered what Mozart's thoughts might be if he could have heard (and seen) the opening passage of Strauss's second horn concerto, how the fully chromatic instrument takes a phrase which is made up of natural harmonics flowing through different keys.
and the Adagio to the strauss 2nd!!!
@@vincentlombardo9797 Strauss's second horn concerto is, for me, one of the most perfect pieces of music. I think I read, many years ago, that the recording by Dennis Brain with the Philharmonia orchestra conducted by Wolfgang Sawallisch was made in one take. If true, it says much for the whole orchestra... can anyone confirm this?
Whenever I hear this beautiful Strauss music, I must remember the beloved Jessye Norman's performance of his immortal lieder.
If you must.
Personal choice, of course, but I find Norman's rendering blowsy and unfocussed, with terrible diction. Try Gundula Janowitz with Karajan and see the difference.
@@VernonStradling Yes, this recording is also my absolute favourite.
Gundula Janowitz's voice is unearthly beautiful.
Clear and pure.
That horn sounds like heaven and Diana sounds like an actual angel
Eric Terwilliger...such a legend.
I want to thank you, Will, for showing me this beautiful piece. It has quickly become one of my favorite classical pieces ever.
I think the horn solo from Mondscheinmusik for his opera Capriccio is even more sublime.
RIP, maestro!
I will miss your Berlioz Symphony performed in Moscow..... 🙏and many many of greatest Performances...
Heaven has a bunch of horn solos, of which this is one. Beautiful.
This really gives me a feel of a love story that is based during times of war and its either a love at first sight or the end of the war after the soldier comes home to his lover and they see eachother for the first time in like acouple years
It’s amazing how music can conjure in us so much emotion and imagination.
That seems fitting since its from 1948.
Eric Terwilliger ❤ best horn player
Really love that warm and thick color
I thought William T. Riker played the trombone.
From the time my music teacher Lt. Col. Sam Rhodes retd. introduced me to the Mozart horn concertos back in the early 1960s, I was hooked. I dearly wanted to play the French horn, but my parents couldn't afford the instrument or the lessons - back then you couldn't hire an instrument, and the school had none. It never happened, but I still love the instrument.
Beautiful.
My favorite moment in the Four Last Songs. ❤
Professor Eric! beautiful playing!
One of my favorite moments in the Four Last Songs.
Nothing inthe classical repertoire can compare with Strauss’s horn solos for closing scenes: Alpinesymphony, Heldenleben💥💥
which movement of alpine symphony?
Heldenleben is one of the only works that has ever brought a sort of spiritual dawn feeling for me.
If I recall.. Strauss' father was Wagner's first horn .. and travelled with Wagner, too.
Aukslang @@hello-rq8kf
💯%
I was having a good time looking up and listening to fun trumpet solos, and in general just enjoying some brass music. Randomly I decided to look up a fun horn solo.
I played horn through middle and high school. I’m about to finish freshman year of college, and I swear the pure wave of emotion and nostalgia from the tone of this horn has single handedly made me want to try and pick horn back up.
Such greatness and skill in playing this instrument, congratulations!
Thank you, Will Parker! Man of taste! Godspeed!
Lovely!❤
Beautiful all around. Strauss can be trusted to lean on the horn players.
the whole of vier lezte lieder is a glimpse of heaven.
“Heaven had a horn solo” straight away thought of 4 last songs 🌅💕😩 beautiful!
Takes skill and musicianship,to play those few bars so eloquently. Thanks.
That cutoff at the end is quite satisfying.
That solo must feel so good to play.
Meraviglioso!!!! ❤❤❤
Somehow I was intrigued by his breathing. He almost propelles the air inwards and relaxes just enough to let it trough. But his mouth is already preparing for the next note. Fascinating.
Wow. Love the idea. Great stuff.
Fantastic! Thank you.
So romantic ❤
So powerful 😢
wow, the last song of the 4last songs, beautiful
that was beautiful Will.
4 last songs are so elegant in their beauty. Not much of that going around these days.
Wonderful
The horn solo is beautiful, but Diana Damrau’s singing is exquisite! Such amazing breath control, and _pianissimo,_ too! She’s extraordinary!
Funny, I always felt that this is one of the most beautiful moments in classical music. And now I see that others think the same way...
Oui ce solo est une splendeur !
Beautiful
The French horn brings a sound so heavenly it’s if Angel Gabriel is the player himself
Yep, l'd go along with that.
There are some great horn players out there, but when I think of how a horn should sound, the 1st hornist I think of is Mr. Eric Terwilliger, followed by the late great Mr. Jerome Ashby. What a wonderful sound!
Almost like a warm echo returning to soothe you.
Last Songs indeed. Strauss must've been pretty damn chuffed with these last ones.What a glorious goodbye.
The first g sharp is really special.
Good to see Will Riker has expanded his skills from jazz trombone to classical horn. I'm glad he "made it so".
Straus French horn solos are sublime Bravo 👏 Bravo 👏
Soprano, and a French horn: gotta be Richard Strauss.
The french horn has that intentional distant brooding sound that evokes so much emotion in the listener.
how sweet
Diana!
French horns and mellos have such clean and majestic sounds
such a beautiful performance by steven spielberg
It is truly a mighty horn as are the other big horns I studied trombone for a number of years one the directors of one the orchestra I played with made this statement "when the big horns speak all ears hear" dr. Swoboda Portland State University.
Fabulous - thank you - but what about that first movement theme in the Dvorak 'cello concerto - the performance of the Frankfurt Radio S.O.'s principal horn does bring me to tears... every time! (The Gautier Capucon recording).
R. Strauss's father was a horn player.
This hornist's tone is poetic. Whether rendered in solo, such as here, or in Ravel's "" Pavane..", this instrument's employment is always welcomed. When used to fill out the mid tonal range of the Orchestra, the Horn adds fullness and body, which is almost taken for granted. No other instrument sounds as noble, played fortissimo and in unison--(R. Strauss' "At the Summit" from his Eine Alpensinfonie Op. 64). The segue the Horn provides between Winds and Brass is notable, (no pun intended), as most orchestral offerings showcase. The Horn's highest register is second--only to the English Horn--in conveying loneliness and and a melancholic quality. As an orchestral wind player, I hold the honor of being seated in front of this magical instrument. This Horn is simply invaluable.
The best song writer in history.
Longas sublimes!
I remember the first time I played it. The world stopped when the horn solo came.
This reminds me of Mahler a lot. It sounds akin to the symphony 3 finale, harmonies wise.
To what part? I can’t hear the resemblance.
@@Dan474834 It’s the voicing and stepwise motion of the strings, the chords and the suspension. Plus, it’s in the same key!
Listen to only the strings in the first minute or so of Mahler 3’s finale (th-cam.com/video/sJw0slhUWek/w-d-xo.html ). The instrumentation, voicing and cadence of the strings is incredibly similar to that of this excerpt, with the only major difference being some slight dissonance at 0:39, but quickly resolves back into the same chord used in Mahler 3. Also, leading into the solo sounds a lot like 12:16 of the finale, even starting the solo on the same horn note.
Imo nothing compares to Bruckner 2, slow movement. Best horn solo ever
Indeed, Divine Richard Strauss ... the last breaths of longing for a world today even more distant. In death's parting, the beauty of what was sad in life. Respectful, ever-lasting gratitude to my French horn teachers of the past: Rudolph Puletz (first horn - Cleveland Orchestra / A. Rodziński) and Arthur Berv (first horn - NBC Symphony / A. Toscanini).
❤Faszinuerend🎉😊❤
well, that was short for the heaven horn.
And after all this time I thought Commander Riker only played the trombone….
An that on Bavarian television. Bavaria is the best place,
Soprano and horn ya has to be strauss
❤
I played the French horn from 6th through 12th grades. I was always envious of the girls who played flute since the flute is so much easier to carry and the case doesn't bang against your knee! I took up playing a flute for a while when I was in college, but never became proficient.
This reminds me so much of Lord of the Rings Soundtracks
Der Vorhalt....
I would argue the 2nd mvmnt of Cappricio Español is the heavenly horn solo....
💎
i liked the singer
Placido domingo is a good horn player! 🤣
Nobody:
Not a single soul
classical legends like Dvorak composing for French horn:
The horn solo orchestration gives me a john williams feel for some reason.
Of course, Heaven does have a horn solo, but it isn't this. It's the Nocturne from Mendelssohn's Midsummer Night's Dream music. Strauss wrote some very good horn solos, though.
I remember this really old joke I read when I was in high school band: Why is the French Horn a sacred instrument? Because humans blow into it, but only God knows what comes out the other side.
I'm still learning. Composer and details please. Very beautiful music
0:25
Pardon my ignorance (or my bad eyesight...?) but what is the work being performed?
September from Strauss’s Four Last Songs
😩
French horn❤
I was surprised and distracted that the last note did not have a coordinated entry. The rest of it was magnificent, but the last note was comparatively jarring
I always thought Jonathan Frakes was playing the trombone?! ... 🤔😉
It's so incredibly simple but Ab to F# will just never not sound good on a horn.