The system is called COUNTERPOINT!!! It is INCREDIBLE, isn't it!?!?!? It's called Musical Counterpoint, just as an FYI teaching point. :) It is incredible, and is used in most types of music actually, piano, classical guitar, harpsichord, and symphonic/orchestral arrangements of course also including full orchestral pieces and also duet/trio/quartet/quintet arrangements of many pieces over history. Counterpoint was the true essence of music theory's greatness, basically one voice (ie the upper) travels one direction, for example UP, while the bottom voice in that particular case would travel downward musically, in that precise example I just made up.
Che allegria e serenità! Scarlatti ineguagliabile e ineguagliato. Il genio napoletano al massimo delle sue composizioni per clavicembalo. Ottima l'esecuzione
Che bel brano!!!,e bravo Giuseppe Domenico!!!,ora appartieni al Mondo come tutti gli altri compositori!!!,perché con il Vostro Talento Rendete noi Migliori ed il Mondo Più Bello!!!!Viva la Musica e Viva Il Mondo!!!!🌏🌍🌎😊
Sometimes I imagine time traveling & being able to sit in the chamber & witness this piece being performed for the first time. To have met Scarlatti In person & shouted Bravo!
Gloria L Hacker If you are going to shout bravo they will see you as a weirdo because bravo is Italian , Scarletti too was Italian, bravo was pronunced differently and so were the million dialects of Italian
Yes. If I had a TARDIS (reference to Doctor Who), I would visit the times of so many composers and artists... Scarlatti is one of those Master I'd visit.
Not really overlooked -his biographer and cataloguer Fitzpatrick several decades ago declared he was the greatest keyboard composer of the eighteenth century - one complicating factor was that his father Alessandro was a major opera composer and just as significant as his son.
SURREAL INCREDIBLE BREATHTAKING ETHEREAL MOVING AND HEARTFELT This piece is a prime example of why for me, as a classical, flamenco and neoclassical metal guitarist for 23+ years, Domenico Scarlatti as well as Alessandro are always and will be two of the most influential, GREATEST, most supreme composers who ever walked the earth. My highest praise and laud to the performer harpsichordist, also, who performed this piece FLAWLESSLY with passion, style, flair and dynamics. AWESOME, EPIC PERFORMANCE of one of Domenico's GREATEST WORKS!!! Baroque FOREVER!!!! \m/
Realmente Excelente del gran maestro Scarlatti. Lastima que toda la musica hispana de la epoca: jacaras, españoletas, canarios, folias, fandangos, etc, se encuentren olvidados a nivel general tanto en España como en el mundo. Es una pena y una triste perdida cultural. Saludos.
EULOGIO LACALLE RODRIGUEZ Habria que tratar de subir mas vídeos sobre jaracas ,españoletas ,canarios , folias y fandangos , en este sitio somos muchos los que apreciamos ese tipo de cosas que ojala nunca desaparezcan .
Es bueno escuchar de esta musica. Como venezolano siempre me pregunte cual era la raiz del Joropo (Musica folklorica de venezuela) y al escuchar esto quede iluminado.
Domenico Scarlatti, hijo de Alessandro, gran compositor de óperas y cantatas, escribió esta obra, el primer Fandango español para clavicémbalo. Su alumno Antonio Soler escribirá también un gran Fandango para el mismo instrumento musical. Grandes obras maestras que inician el nacionalismo musical español del siglo XVIII. Viva por estos grandes maestros de la música.
+Simply Darius I agree. Scarlatti is one of my favorite composers (definitely in the top 3). I've loved his sonatas forever -- who doesn't? -- but I only heard this fandango for the first time about 2 years ago and cannot stop listening to it.
This is an enchanting melody that will take me into a comfortable dream , and full of unlimited admiration and deep emotion , and feel comfort From Tokyo of the Land of the Rising Sun 🇯🇵
yes we all imagine ourselves in a court, yet the mayority of the people in this history period were peasants or slaves that could spent their entire life without even hearing a harpsichord (let alone an orchestra). We´re so lucky to be in this era!
Una pequeña obra maestra notable por la expresividad del sonido del clavecín.Una síntesis brillante de música popular y culta. Se agradece su inclusión
Real house music stirring up unbelievable! And this as Bach's time constraint Very ecstatic music! Scarlatti was as contemporary of Bach; ahead of its time
I was listening seriously to the fandango, scrolled down, read your comment and laughed aloud! So true. But now I can't hear it without imagining 2D Bats and Vampires moving around on a conveyor belt background......
Magnífico para sentir esos delirios aristocráticos. Sólo falta ser mayor de edad para escuchar esta pieza con una buena copa de vino y los auriculares a todo volumen
Scarlatti greandioso compositore immenso superlativo fantastico meraviglioso stupendo indimenticabile questo non è nulla su quello che ancora si dovrebbe dire grazie Scarlatti il nostro Scarlatti è davvero un grande compositore
Que interesante la influencia de esta música en lo que hoy es conocido localmente en los Valles del Tuy en Venezuela y el llamado Joropo tuyero, donde se percibe cierto aire en los ritmos de esta música, que seguramente llegó a ser sincretizada a través de los fandangos en la época hispana para darle personalidad a este género musical venezolano que hoy se ejecuta con arpa, maraca y un cantante...
Hasta donde tengo entendido según mis clases de Historia de la Música, efectivamente el joropo viene del fandango 😊 Los instrumentos e interpretación variaron acá en Venezuela pero armónica y rítmicamente es muy parecido
Quanto si sentono in certi passaggi le melodie della musica popolare del Sud, Napoli etc. Meraviglia You can hear in certain parts properly the melodies from the South Italy, Naples etc. Wonderful
Con estas mimbres ,el talento de Scarlatti no se podía quedar atrás a la hora de plasmar la belleza del fandango ,acrecentada en este caso por la magnífica interpretación que se nos presenta. Gracias.
The fandango arrived in Veracruz (Mexico) in the 15th century, called Son Jarocho, influenced by Andalusian music and fused with African and indigenous rhythms. Although it is played with harp, jaranas, donkey jaw, violins and marimbol, but with a rhythm similar to Spanish.
It is said to have actually originated in Veracruz and then traveled to Spain, arriving in Southern Spain that had a monopoly on access to Spanish America. th-cam.com/video/w-ch3s2666c/w-d-xo.html Minute 29:00 (onward) of this video in the link above
Man this music is excellent. Really makes me feel like taking up my family's prized heirloom that just so happens to be a whip and breaking into a castle to whip the undead.
@@t.f.5265 I agree, an Italian compelled to live in a place far from his own earth, among unknown people, who didn't understand neither music, neither any form of art. I can only imagine his nostalgy
@@mariomaimone6973 Come già detto in altro commento, Tiziano visse presso le corti di Francia e di Spagna. Allora è da considerarsi metà francese e metà spagnolo? O forse è italiano per un terzo?
Wow, listen to that, the late 17th/early 18th centuries were fascinating times: Composers, artists, poets, sculptors, architects, astronomers, explorers, writers, alchemists, pirates, highwaymen and other outlaws, now, instead of composers...we just have posers.
El fandango tocado en cémbalo o clavecín del siglo XVIII español, dió origen en Venezuela al joropo o golpe central en la que el arpa imita el sonido del clavecín, la diferencia es que los campesinos introdujeron un cantante y maracas. Aunque el ritmo es más acelerado en el joropo, se puede apreciar la similitud . Realmente muy hermoso y relajante.
Whoever it was written for probably didn't expect it to be dramatically different from anything else Scarlatti wrote. I doubt it was really intended to be used in a simple dance.
@@thomasblanchetdhuismes666 He was seen as among the greatest virtuosos of his age. It is certain anyone who commissioned a work from him knew exactly what to expect.
Raphael Henrique. Eu não sei lhe dizer. Na verdade, eu não saberia responder o gosto musical dele. Todavia, eu gosto do Tesla, como também da música erudita e, por acaso, Scarlatti é um dos meus compositores barrocos favorito.
Já li muita coisa sobre Tesla e, ao que me parece, ele não era a mais musical das pessoas. Acho que isso se dava até porque ele possuía uma hipersensibilidade para sons.
Same general tradition of improvisation with stringed instruments. Harpsichord itself came from a simple box covered with strings that poor people made to play, and was fitted with a keyboard for easier playing in the continuo section which was wild and almost uncontrollable. The harpsichord had no music written for it at first but would read other people's music and imitate what other stringed instruments did and improvise like crazy. Scarlatti himself was influenced by Spanish guitar music heavily. The first book of harpsichord music was the Fitzwilliam virginal book and it is good I have a copy of it.
Es cuestiòn de juntarse hacer fuerza todos juntos por la cultura y por lo que nos gusta , yo en pandemia hasta cree un canal que no sabia si alguien lo miraria ,arte y antigúedades y ya van 230 000 que lo miran , arte y antigüedades cosa que hoy ya no es moda .......
@@seifer010 Scarlatti spoke Italian, his family was Italian and the main language of the Kingdom of Naples was the Italian P.S. At that time it was called "Italian Peninsula" but it was only a geographical expression.
Today is the birthday of this great composer born on 26 October 1685. Happy birthday Domenico and thank you for the wonderful music you have given us.
I was born on the 24th! OH GOD
The underlying lower harpsichord that accompanies the dominant sound is just fantastic to hear. Sound quality is so good here, love it
The system is called COUNTERPOINT!!!
It is INCREDIBLE, isn't it!?!?!?
It's called Musical Counterpoint, just as an FYI teaching point. :) It is incredible, and is used in most types of music actually, piano, classical guitar, harpsichord, and symphonic/orchestral arrangements of course also including full orchestral pieces and also duet/trio/quartet/quintet arrangements of many pieces over history. Counterpoint was the true essence of music theory's greatness, basically one voice (ie the upper) travels one direction, for example UP, while the bottom voice in that particular case would travel downward musically, in that precise example I just made up.
I can't believe, on this planet there are 269 people who don't like this?!?!?!?!?!
Está usted en lo cierto. Si hubiera 269 "persones", deben de ser extraterrestres. Tal vez seria un buen test para descubrirlos. 😅
The sound quality is soo nice, a real pleasure for ears ❤👂
Che allegria e serenità! Scarlatti ineguagliabile e ineguagliato. Il genio napoletano al massimo delle sue composizioni per clavicembalo. Ottima l'esecuzione
Scarlatti really knew how to take the best contemporary Spanish music and rock. The pinnacle of father Alessandro's formidable legacy, in a way!
Che bel brano!!!,e bravo Giuseppe Domenico!!!,ora appartieni al Mondo come tutti gli altri compositori!!!,perché con il Vostro Talento Rendete noi Migliori ed il Mondo Più Bello!!!!Viva la Musica e Viva Il Mondo!!!!🌏🌍🌎😊
Sometimes I imagine time traveling & being able to sit in the chamber & witness this piece being performed for the first time. To have met Scarlatti In person & shouted Bravo!
Gloria L Hacker I have likewise wanted to meet Scarlatti! This guy was a true rockstar!
Gloria L Hacker If you are going to shout bravo they will see you as a weirdo because bravo is Italian , Scarletti too was Italian, bravo was pronunced differently and so were the million dialects of Italian
Scarlatti was from Naples
Me too!
Yes. If I had a TARDIS (reference to Doctor Who), I would visit the times of so many composers and artists... Scarlatti is one of those Master I'd visit.
The harpsichord in all its glory.
You get it.
@@sophiacecilia9009 no
Ludwig Van Beethoven 안녕 Beethoven^^
Puedo escuchar al final, un gran "Olé!"
Andrewplaysthepiano Beat Hovin
C'est vieux, c'est même vieilli, et c'est peut-être même vieillot. Mais c'est tellement jeune et frais!
Quite possibly one of the most overlooked/underrated composers in history.
Indeed is
Frank Martin.
Not really overlooked -his biographer and cataloguer Fitzpatrick several decades ago declared he was the greatest keyboard composer of the eighteenth century - one complicating factor was that his father Alessandro was a major opera composer and just as significant as his son.
no he hold his place very well;only those who know little about the matter think so...amigou.
@@GalicianFromLemberg rameu
SURREAL
INCREDIBLE
BREATHTAKING
ETHEREAL
MOVING AND HEARTFELT
This piece is a prime example of why for me, as a classical, flamenco and neoclassical metal guitarist for 23+ years, Domenico Scarlatti as well as Alessandro are always and will be two of the most influential, GREATEST, most supreme composers who ever walked the earth.
My highest praise and laud to the performer harpsichordist, also, who performed this piece FLAWLESSLY with passion, style, flair and dynamics.
AWESOME, EPIC PERFORMANCE of one of Domenico's GREATEST WORKS!!! Baroque FOREVER!!!! \m/
Been listening to this piece incessantly since yesterday.
İt is so addictive....
I will be called upon the battle of thedeath ray
Ха ха). Я также, раза по три слушаю вместо зарядки, во время работы, что настроиться на гармоничный лад
Tried to listen to this piece with others, but they feel rushy.
This is just the right tempo.
I agree. This is perfect!
what a vision he had making this piece.
Realmente Excelente del gran maestro Scarlatti. Lastima que toda la musica hispana de la epoca: jacaras, españoletas, canarios, folias, fandangos, etc, se encuentren olvidados a nivel general tanto en España como en el mundo. Es una pena y una triste perdida cultural. Saludos.
EULOGIO LACALLE RODRIGUEZ Habria que tratar de subir mas vídeos sobre jaracas ,españoletas ,canarios , folias y fandangos , en este sitio somos muchos los que apreciamos ese tipo de cosas que ojala nunca desaparezcan .
Es verdad! 300 anos y mas
Es bueno escuchar de esta musica. Como venezolano siempre me pregunte cual era la raiz del Joropo (Musica folklorica de venezuela) y al escuchar esto quede iluminado.
Me paso exactamente lo mismo
Olvidado de qué? Esta música se estudia en los conservatorios nacionales de toda España.
Scarlatti would’ve loved the electric guitar.
electric guitars love Scarlatti
Domenico Scarlatti, hijo de Alessandro, gran compositor de óperas y cantatas, escribió esta obra, el primer Fandango español para clavicémbalo. Su alumno Antonio Soler escribirá también un gran Fandango para el mismo instrumento musical. Grandes obras maestras que inician el nacionalismo musical español del siglo XVIII. Viva por estos grandes maestros de la música.
🌬️🙏🏻🕊️🤳🏻🚭☮️😔A l'heure de l'intelligence artificielle, c'est faire le discernement du vrai (la vérité vous rendre libre) et le faux..🤔
The Perfection in music accomplished with an exquisite sense of humour!!! Deepest gratitude!
Очень хорошая, красивая музыка -нравится однозначно!!!!😮❤❤❤❤❤😊 Александр Одессит
This man was a genius...
+Simply Darius I agree. Scarlatti is one of my favorite composers (definitely in the top 3). I've loved his sonatas forever -- who doesn't? -- but I only heard this fandango for the first time about 2 years ago and cannot stop listening to it.
+veryangrystorks To which Scarlatti do you refer? there were two of them, father and son both top notch composers
+Jack Fletcher Aah! I meant Domenico Scarlatti. I should be careful about this.
Actually there was a whole dynasty of composers called Scarlatti -of Sicilian origin.
Jack Fletcher I like more Alessandro Scarlatti (father of Domenico)
What can I say?
Beautiful, wonderful, amazing!
Italian musical genius.
My best greetings to the clavi player also.
Bellezza italiana incomparabile!
@@mario4798 Che dirti? In tre parole hai detto tutto, e chi non è d'accordo non ama né la musica né l:Italia
Utterly stunning sound. Awesome performance.
Piacevolissimo fandango che fa bene allo spirito in questi ggiorni nebbiosi d'inverno.E' perenne primavera pe la musica bella.
Carmelo Bonifacio Malandrino. D'accordo con te, questo è bellisimo, anche stiamo quasi in primavera!! 😀
Ah malandrino
This is an enchanting melody that will take me into a comfortable dream , and full of unlimited admiration and deep emotion , and feel comfort
From
Tokyo of the Land of the Rising Sun 🇯🇵
Wooooooow !
This is music.
Thank you!
So much intensity.. The music is wild and refined at the same time..wonderful!
I love it, I imagine myself listening to this at Madrid's court.
Better in the Aranjuez's palace.
Yes, excellent thought, lovely.
Im Spanish
yes we all imagine ourselves in a court, yet the mayority of the people in this history period were peasants or slaves that could spent their entire life without even hearing a harpsichord (let alone an orchestra).
We´re so lucky to be in this era!
@@petrus7977 They coped
Una pequeña obra maestra notable por la expresividad del sonido del clavecín.Una síntesis brillante de música popular y culta. Se agradece su inclusión
Guy in lower right corner is using a digital camera... LoL
Daniel Renteria omg I know I'm late but yea he is
You nutter! Lol.
Taking a selfie lol!
It looks more like a Samsung S9 to me... Wait, or is it an iPhone?
Or may be a tablet
Real house music stirring up unbelievable!
And this as Bach's time constraint
Very ecstatic music!
Scarlatti was as contemporary of Bach; ahead of its time
Much gratitude for this performer interpretation...completely at one in the allure of the painting's poetry.
This reminds me of the old 8-bit computer games. So much so that it could be a sound track for a Dracula style game.
Yes, a pixeled game on Commodore64
this could have been a perfect track for Mad Doctor.
I was listening seriously to the fandango, scrolled down, read your comment and laughed aloud! So true.
But now I can't hear it without imagining 2D Bats and Vampires moving around on a conveyor belt background......
Felt the same. 8 bit & harpischord have a story. Member early video games ?
Ubermo1 2D bats and vampires! Truly the stuff of nightmares
Una bellissima composizione del genio napoletano della musica Domenico Scarlatti
escusi; del genio espanol, por si acaso.
@@paquirri1828 Scarlatti es italiano igual que Boccherini los mejores musicos que tuvo Espana.
@@salvatorefellino2158
A proposito di genio
"napoletano" Scarlatti è d'origine SICILIANA !
Magnífico para sentir esos delirios aristocráticos. Sólo falta ser mayor de edad para escuchar esta pieza con una buena copa de vino y los auriculares a todo volumen
Ma suggestion pour le vin: Amarone Masi ou Conati
Que buenos gustos, la verdad. Saludos.
Yo no soy vieja 😂😂😂😂😂 y me encanta
Scarlatti greandioso compositore immenso superlativo fantastico meraviglioso stupendo indimenticabile questo non è nulla su quello che ancora si dovrebbe dire grazie Scarlatti il nostro Scarlatti è davvero un grande compositore
Que interesante la influencia de esta música en lo que hoy es conocido localmente en los Valles del Tuy en Venezuela y el llamado Joropo tuyero, donde se percibe cierto aire en los ritmos de esta música, que seguramente llegó a ser sincretizada a través de los fandangos en la época hispana para darle personalidad a este género musical venezolano que hoy se ejecuta con arpa, maraca y un cantante...
Hasta donde tengo entendido según mis clases de Historia de la Música, efectivamente el joropo viene del fandango 😊 Los instrumentos e interpretación variaron acá en Venezuela pero armónica y rítmicamente es muy parecido
Coincido diametralmente, gracias España🇪🇦gracias 🇻🇪
El joropo tiene base barroca, Sino escucha los acordes y verán los parecidos del golpe tuyero en el cuatro, un clavicordio criollo de cuerdas!!!!!
@@planetamasbello54 totalmente, es que uno escucha esto y te lleva directamente al joropo
Efectivamente, esto es un joropo donde lo pongan.
Non l'avevo mai sentito. Straordinario.
Quanto si sentono in certi passaggi le melodie della musica popolare del Sud, Napoli etc. Meraviglia You can hear in certain parts properly the melodies from the South Italy, Naples etc. Wonderful
En realidad es música típica española XD
Jajaja ridículo
Thanks for sharing! Great job 👍👏 Bravissimo!
Splendid musical performance of very brilliant and inspirational Masterpiecies! 👌
Sono un estimatore di D. Scarlatti; non conoscevo questo Fandango. Complimenti per questa ispirata esecuzione.
I can't describe how beautiful this music is
Con estas mimbres ,el talento de Scarlatti no se podía quedar atrás a la hora de plasmar la belleza del fandango ,acrecentada en este caso por la magnífica interpretación que se nos presenta. Gracias.
The fandango arrived in Veracruz (Mexico) in the 15th century, called Son Jarocho, influenced by Andalusian music and fused with African and indigenous rhythms. Although it is played with harp, jaranas, donkey jaw, violins and marimbol, but with a rhythm similar to Spanish.
.....y aún está vivo hoy!!
La bamba my friend....
It is said to have actually originated in Veracruz and then traveled to Spain, arriving in Southern Spain that had a monopoly on access to Spanish America.
th-cam.com/video/w-ch3s2666c/w-d-xo.html
Minute 29:00 (onward) of this video in the link above
Fandango is a traditional music in Portugal, where Domenico also worked
Fantastic! Adorable performance. Thank you
Absolument magnifique !
L'allegria in musica ,capolavoro
Jukka Tiensuu did another great performance of this fandango. I love them both. Thank you ❤
Sencillamente una gran musica con el instrumento de la epoca , y muy bien tocada , me ha encantado. Gracias
Great composition, great piece of music.
🌵🪵🐸
Man this music is excellent. Really makes me feel like taking up my family's prized heirloom that just so happens to be a whip and breaking into a castle to whip the undead.
Underrated comment or what 😂
What
Yeah dude, castlevania.
Castlevania lol
Scarlatti was one of the many famous Italian artists,composers, singers etc who found fame and fortune at the Spanish and Portuguese royal courts.
ITALIA NO EXISTÍA EN EL S. XVIII. ERA NAPOLITANO DEL REINO DE NÁPOLES SÚBDITO DE SU CATÓLICA MAJESTAD EL REY DE ESPAÑA.
@@unespanol9094Your culture is inversely proportional to your arrogance.
Alessandro Scarlatti was ITALIAN.
LIKE IT OR NOT.
@@unespanol9094 pure TIZIANO, TINTORETTO, LUCA GIORDANO erano spagnoli...........ma và ..........
@@t.f.5265 I agree, an Italian compelled to live in a place far from his own earth, among unknown people, who didn't understand neither music, neither any form of art. I can only imagine his nostalgy
@@mariomaimone6973 Come già detto in altro commento, Tiziano visse presso le corti di Francia e di Spagna. Allora è da considerarsi metà francese e metà spagnolo? O forse è italiano per un terzo?
Música Classica é outro Nível Senhores! Se Tivesse mais Cultura E Música de Qualidade o Brasil Séria outro Ao longo da história,Tenho certeza.
Fabuloso, exquisito. Bravo, bravisimo. Me recontra encanto. Tks
Good old days I remember pulling up on some guys to fight in the hood in the late 1700s on my horse carriage jamming to this song
lol :)
One of my favourite pieces - just so beautiful.
The Marriage of Figaro (1786) includes a crucial dance scene in which Susanna passes a feigned love note to Count Almaviva during a fandango.
This piece is really beautiful and I'm having a great time listening to it and playing it on my keyboard :)
can write the catalogue number or post the sheets.
@@suleymankucuk6110 www.free-scores.com/download-sheet-music.php?pdf=77076#
Brilliant! Excellent sound and performance.
Pazzesco questo gioco di suoni.... Si è proprio divertito a comporre questo brano.... Fantastico!!
Sempre sublime Domenico... e bellissima interpretazione. :-)
What a wonderful piece ❤
Wow, listen to that, the late 17th/early 18th centuries were fascinating times: Composers, artists, poets, sculptors, architects, astronomers, explorers, writers, alchemists, pirates, highwaymen and other outlaws, now, instead of composers...we just have posers.
And no medicine
Αντί συνθετών έχομε αποσυνθέτες ... instead of composers we have decomposers ...
Lit
@@areopolitis1 there you go! th-cam.com/video/yILTEayQmj0/w-d-xo.html
We have more composers today than ever before. You're just not even willing to find out and decided to whine instead.
Heard this for first time today, this is musics of power
Music of power? Did you hear it on bap show? :P
Yes, I see, I say- musics of power for men of power
@@janschaff3861 yes
"Lol, this will look quite grand on my instagram."
@@menialharpsichordist553 a quite disrespectful and inconsiderate remark. Also, unnecessary
Stately, elegant and devilishly sensual! So sorry it has to end....
TIMELESS TREASURES everything ends
Not everything Petter, Beauty will survive us
Truth and Beauty ;-)
Well said
You are right...devilish sensual and sometimes chilling, I don't know why...
El fandango tocado en cémbalo o clavecín del siglo XVIII español, dió origen en Venezuela al joropo o golpe central en la que el arpa imita el sonido del clavecín, la diferencia es que los campesinos introdujeron un cantante y maracas. Aunque el ritmo es más acelerado en el joropo, se puede apreciar la similitud . Realmente muy hermoso y relajante.
Eso es correcto, y particularmente este fandango tiene mucha similitud.
Gracias por este comentario, son estos los comentarios que me inspiran a seguir estudiando música, saludos desde Venezuela
I desperately want this on spotify! 😩
Scarlatti! Come to Texas! We love you here!
This sounds so modern...heavy metal !!!!
Im still amazed how modern it sound and how unusual for its time. Was it intended to be play so vigorously?
Whoever it was written for probably didn't expect it to be dramatically different from anything else Scarlatti wrote. I doubt it was really intended to be used in a simple dance.
I guess many of his time though he is a junky.
@@thomasblanchetdhuismes666 He was seen as among the greatest virtuosos of his age. It is certain anyone who commissioned a work from him knew exactly what to expect.
One of Scarlatti's greatest pieces ♥
Whats that instrument called at the beginning of the song
je découvre, sublime ,exaltant, j'aime!!!
Esto es realmente hermoso!! Música para el alma.
I love this music and that is the last thing I want to think of, to put it bluntly. This music is timeless to me.
Just beautiful! The best one...
Que precioso ojala viviera en la época de esa música.
Não sei se alguém aqui fala português, mas a música erudita é outro nível!!!
Sir Kauan Angelotti Tesla gostava de Scarlatti?
Raphael Henrique.
Eu não sei lhe dizer. Na verdade, eu não saberia responder o gosto musical dele. Todavia, eu gosto do Tesla, como também da música erudita e, por acaso, Scarlatti é um dos meus compositores barrocos favorito.
Já li muita coisa sobre Tesla e, ao que me parece, ele não era a mais musical das pessoas. Acho que isso se dava até porque ele possuía uma hipersensibilidade para sons.
frankstrawnation.
O Tesla era viciado em trabalho, ele achava que as outras coisas eram perda de tempo. Mas você está certo.
Scarlatti! Do pouco que ouço na internet já me encanto! Com cravo principalmente
this is a heavy metal solo before electric
No this is not heavy metal. No.
@@markusrotzer735 just play it on a guitar and see how metal it really is
I used to think the same bro, but nothing beats classical sorry…
Same general tradition of improvisation with stringed instruments. Harpsichord itself came from a simple box covered with strings that poor people made to play, and was fitted with a keyboard for easier playing in the continuo section which was wild and almost uncontrollable. The harpsichord had no music written for it at first but would read other people's music and imitate what other stringed instruments did and improvise like crazy. Scarlatti himself was influenced by Spanish guitar music heavily. The first book of harpsichord music was the Fitzwilliam virginal book and it is good I have a copy of it.
De donde crees que viene
And again I'm enchanted.
Eu amo esse fandango, desde a primeira vez que o ouvi.
Bravissimo DOMENIKO !!!!!!!
Grande.... Grazie 🌹 🌹 🌹 🌹 🌹 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Nothing quite like some good old fashioned 18th Century MIDI music 🤗
Ah, indeed
@@erezsolomon3838 thanks for bringing me back to this 😀😀😀.
@@georginathompson3788 you're welcome
16th to 17th century I believe ❤
I love the sound of the harpsichord.
Superbe interprétation
Ah...Scarlatti for the ages, when time robs you of youth, Scarlatti beauty in truth.
Ha! So Boccherini wrote his Fandango Quintet masterpiece for guitar based on on Scarlatti's Fandango. I love it!
Scarlatti sonata D-major
Rather than a Fandango it sounds like a variation la the Follia. A masterpiece anyway.
Yes, I thought that as well!
Le tecniche di variazione sono identiche: Fandango, Follia, Passacaglia, Ciaccona. Differiscono solo per l'impianto armonico del basso ostinato.
@@nicolagallino1808 An excellent comment and enlightening. Thank you!
Me encanta gracias por compartir
Love the powerful energy
Es cuestiòn de juntarse hacer fuerza todos juntos por la cultura y por lo que nos gusta , yo en pandemia hasta cree un canal que no sabia si alguien lo miraria ,arte y antigúedades y ya van 230 000 que lo miran , arte y antigüedades cosa que hoy ya no es moda .......
For some reason I find this tune quite chilling.
Like the soundtrack of some gothic horror movie...🦇
Uma obra lindíssima.
It´s fantastic.
Sorry, never heard of this marvelous componist.
Como a musica é grandiosa, eu gosto tanto da musica erudita !!
Essa em especial.
This piece is only "ascribed" to Domenico but his authorship isn't absolutely proved.
The harpsichordist Genoveva Galvez was a pupil of Rafael Puyana.
I see. Do you know more about its origins/discovery?
scaramouche scaramouche will you do the fandango
Una musica ipnotica uscita dal genio della musica napoletana Domenico Scarlatti
Ipnotica e la parola giusta..a volte inquietante non so perché..
Adoro o som do cravo magnífico ❤
majestoso😁
Simplemente maravilloso
... Que gracia, que estilo,
Italia en España, un encanto ...
ANS HISPANO Scarlatti is Italian, genius...
@@claudiopomponio7671 Neapolitan, Genius....
@@sangueazzurro2000 Comunque seguendo il tuo ragionamento anche Vivaldi,Rossini,Bellini,Donizetti e Verdi non sono Italiani...
in 1700's age italian was part of Spain
@@seifer010 Scarlatti spoke Italian, his family was Italian and the main language of the Kingdom of Naples was the Italian P.S. At that time it was called "Italian Peninsula" but it was only a geographical expression.