7 of the Most Epic Symphony Endings in Classical Music History
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 29 เม.ย. 2024
- DISCLAIMER:
The symphonies in this video are not listed in a specific order, and this list is VERY subjective. These are some of our favourite symphony finales, please comment your favourite!
A version of this video with no voiceover is available here
• NO VOICEOVER | 7 of th...
Chapters:
00:00 - Introduction
00:42 - 7. Shostakovich Symphony No. 10
01:59 - 6. Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 4
03:14 - 5. Dvořák Symphony No. 9
05:05 - 4. Prokofiev Symphony No. 5
06:53 - 3. Bruckner Symphony No. 4 "Romantic"
09:31 - 2. Shostakovich Symphony No. 11 "The Year 1905"
11:04 - 1. Mahler Symphony No. 2 "Resurrection"
14:59 - Conclusion
All performances in this video are used under fair use and great appreciation. Please do check them out!
7. Shostakovich 10 - Stanisław Skrowaczewski, HR Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra
• Schostakowitsch: 10. S...
6. Tchaikovsky 4 - Vasily Petrenko, Oslo Philharmonic
• Symphony No. 4 / Pyotr...
5. Dvořák 9 - Andrés Orozco-Estrada, HR Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra
• Dvořák: 9. Sinfonie (»...
4. Prokofiev 5 - Aziz Shokhakimov, HR Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra
• Prokofjew: 5. Sinfonie...
3. Bruckner 4 - Herbert Blomstedt, Vienna Philharmonic
• Final chords of Bruckn...
For a full version, we recommend • Bruckner: 4. Sinfonie ...
2. Shostakovich 11 - Jukka-Pekka Saraste, WDR Symphony Orchestra
• Dmitrij Schostakowitsc...
1. Mahler 2 - Alondra de la Parra, London Philharmonic
• Mahler: Symphony No. 2...
For a full version, we recommend • Gustav Mahler - Sympho...
The image of Alexander Kordzaia used in this thumbnail is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 DEED
creativecommons.org/licenses/...
The music used in the introduction and conclusion are from our very own work-in-progress first Symphony! Subscribe and you might just get to hear the whole thing someday... - เพลง
The title of this video has recently been renamed from “7 Greatest Symphony Endings…” to “7 of the Most Epic Symphony Endings…”. As the disclaimer in the description states, this list is highly subjective and open-to-suggestions; we never intended the video to be a definitive “Greatest of All Time” list. Instead, the original purpose was always to introduce potential new audiences to the great and wonderful world of classical music, so we included some lesser-known symphonies for a general audience. Also, please remember, no one has time to make an entire hour of all good symphony endings, so please understand if your favorite ending wasn't included.
As you may have picked up from some of our comments, we will be making a second (and possibly a third!) video with more amazing symphony finales, so if you have any suggestions, please kindly comment them!
We recently uploaded another version of this video with no voiceover that you can find here: th-cam.com/video/QsKYqLEJbnE/w-d-xo.htmlsi=XDivJEy7m6dXI8wY
Yes Beethoven 9 will be in the next video!!!
No-one has time? I have time 😂
@@stnicolastaplow4096Oh, great! We would love to see your choices if you decide to make a video yourself!
Where is Beethoven?
@@Flaric99 He will be first in the next video! I have already started making it and I have found a great recording for Beethoven 9. Stay tuned!
No Beethoven?
Wow... What a list...
The first time you hear Mahler’s second is a lifetime experience. It’s unforgettable.
Truly. Also try singing in it as part of the choir. I've done it twice and each time I've had to fight back tears.
Also, I love Alondra de la Parra. She was the conductor of our state orchestra for two years. The first major work she performed at the start of her contracted term was the Mahler second symphony. I, unfortunately was not in the choir for that performance and that is one of my life's greatest regrets. She's an incredible conductor, meticulous in rehearsal and exciting and dynamic in performance.
@creslinwest9243 totally agree! I sang it in 2005 when I was in college and it was an incredible experience!
Not to be crude, but I listened to it the first time I ever smoked pot and I swear I flew to another world. It was incredible
@@patrickmcisaac3142 nothing wrong with that haha. Little smoke sesh right before watching something like that live makes you notice and appreciate and love all the nuances of it that make it so special
Divine hope..........
Irony: you could do an entire video of just Mahler symphony endings and it would almost be perfect in and of itself.
I was thinking the same. The endings of 1st and the 5th are also epic.
We're planning to make an entire video dedicated to the life of Mahler, with all his symphonies!
Mahler 6 ending: I know it's coming every time, but every time, with the quiet lead up to the end, but I almost jump out of my skin on the sudden explosion from the orchestra in the last few bars.
Mahler 9 ending: amazing question posed by the violas at the end - what is to be, they are asking
Mahler 10 ending: the glissando rise at the end, followed by the descent. So spooky.
Except the first.
@@tannhaeuserx464 uh what? The coda to 1 is outstanding
Imagine you go to a Mahler 2 live concert with a good orchestra/choir the first time and you never listened it on CD/youtube, etc before...How overwhelmed by sheer emotions, epicness, loudness you would be? Always when I go to a Mahler 2 live concert I get completely blown away by a hurricane of this epic soundwall with its heartbreaking harmonies and lyrics, leaving me in tears. There was never a symphonic work comparable and there will never be one that could reach Mahler 2...a lonesome monument.
It is purely amazing! I rarely get to listen to live concerts, I would love to go to a live concert of Mahler 2!
@@obsidianmusic303If you can get a ticket for the frontrows or best: sitting at the same hight like the choir on the balcony, I bet that you won't forget it in your whole life. But choose a very good orchestra with a professional choir.
I always think I have no patience for Mahler, but after reading this, I think I will just try Mahler 2 out in concert
@@obsidianmusic303 Go for it! But its a long journey to the finale and you might be dissapointed by some movements.
I always heard that Mahler was this great composer, but I never could get into his music. I stayed curious as to why people found him so great though. So when dutch television was going to live broadcast Mahler's 2nd conducted by Bernhard Haitink as a 50 year commemoration of the bombing of Rotterdam, I thought let's try again. Well, wow. Starting with this violent 1st movement, the staccato opening theme and those hammering chords in the middle you could envision the destruction of the city. Then you get taken on this hour long musical journey culminating in this glorious celebration of the resurrection of the city at the end. I was speechless. I have been a Mahler fan ever since and the 2nd has been my favourite.
The great thing about the internet is that I can still find that performance right here on TH-cam. O and as far as live concerts go: I had a balcony seat when the local orchestra played the 2nd. Turned out it was the place where the alto was going to sing from. I spent the finale a few feet away from the soloist!
Finale of Shostakovich's fifth symphony is not a movement. It's a revolution!
The shosty 5 is incredible but if you have the patience to sit through his 7th, you will lose your breath and your heart will race like never before
@@hillcresthiker I like them both. However, the story in his 5th receives more empathy from me.
@@Fangvu really? I would think the one written for the people suffering during the siege of Leningrad would be more apt to inspire empathy than 'A Soviet Artist's Reply to Just Criticism'. They're both great symphonies though.
The ending of Brahms' 2nd symphony is one of the most glorious in the whole symphonic repertoire and deserved a place on this list.
While the list to the second video has already been completed, Brahms 2 will be in the third video!
I used to be a professional violinist before I had a Stroke and became paralyzed. I got EXTREMELY burned out during college and auditions. Mahler 2 and Strauss’ Alpine Symphony resurrected my love for music.
The coda to Bruckner’s 5th and 8th symphonies define the word ‘epic’, especially when they are taken at a steady, measured pace.
Completely agree! Bruckner’s 8th will be the final ending in the next video!
What recordings do you recommend?
@@user-ox1cn9pn3kThere are some great recordings of Bruckner’s 8th, here are some of our favourites:
If you don’t mind a slightly older recording, Herbert von Karajan’s with the Vienna Philharmonic recorded in 1979 is an amazing one.
th-cam.com/video/asJf3KmAg08/w-d-xo.htmlsi=Z3kbx25KNBqizXzX
Many people recommend Celibidache’s recordings with the Münchner Philharmoniker for both Bruckner’s 5th and 8th. His interpretations are much slower than many others.
th-cam.com/video/iOTzCgMxy_o/w-d-xo.htmlsi=QfenVx7QKThcAK6w
th-cam.com/video/elVHvTrEM34/w-d-xo.htmlsi=SnKfBHg8ZeU-kn9W
A faster recording of Bruckner 8, and the first recording I personally discovered, Paavo Järvi with the HR Symphony Orchestra in Frankfurt
th-cam.com/video/qDkj1t5wF1U/w-d-xo.htmlsi=-2nARHzk_YJ7xLhT
And finally, the recording we will use in the next video, Honeck with the WDR Symphony Orchestra. It’s more well rounded in rich tone and balance, as well as a steady tempo.
th-cam.com/video/_BFiplRJEMU/w-d-xo.htmlsi=KnURB1fPAl25Ov37
Remember to keep in mind, as with most of Bruckner’s works, there exist multiple versions of both symphonies, as he revised them multiple times, so there will be variations between recordings. Hope this helps!
Thanks a lot!
Agreed. As much as I love Bruckner 4, the ending pales in comparison to 8.
I’m a bit surprised that Beethoven didn’t make the list. The endings of the 7th and the 9th are pretty spectacular.
I was thinking the 9th, personally.
And the 3rd and 5th. The 5th does hammer you in the ears with those loud chords at the end, but there's no doubt about his sense of drama. The ending of the 3rd is completely unexpected.
Any list omitting Beethoven is highly suspect.
@@utha2665 I thought for sure the ending of the 9th would top the list. Very surprised.
I think either the 5th, 7th and 9th are all good choices but the 5th is my personal favorite. How he prolongs the ending just by going back and forth between the dominant and tonic chords with multiple instances where you think that's it but he changes it and keeps going.
The entirety of Dvorak's 9th is classic and the finale is epic!
No finale of Mahlers first symphony? The last three minutes are so triumphant and fantastic, i always get goosebumps.
It is on theme, you do not have be a music major to enjoy it, it has an operettic feel, it is not just going frantic which is easy to do.
@@mykofreder1682i don't really understand what you wrote
I agree, Mahler s Symphony No. 1 is Thee Best Finale of All Time, PERIOD !!!!!!!!!!!
Unfortunately, the list for the next video has already been complete. However, we’ll definitely include this in the third video! Saving the best for last.
Mahler’s symphonies are a treasure trove of epic moments - the underlying theme almost always depicting triumph over adversity. The finales of symphonies 5, 7 and 8 could also be considered. No 6, too, except it ends in terrifying defeat and absolute nihility. That whole finale is epic to the nth degree.
That of the 3rd comes closest to being the transcending epic culmination of what went before:
I-Pan Awakes, Summer Marches In"
II- "What the Flowers in the Meadow Tell Me"
III- "What the Animals in the Forest Tell Me"
IV-"What Man Tells Me"
V-«What the Angels Tell Me"
VI "What Love Tells
That was Mahler’s intent, but did overreach ? Those final D major paragraphs come at the end of a 100 minute work. Worth waiting for surely, but choosing the end of the 2nd was probably the right choice.
@@obsidianmusic303
The end of Shostakovich 7 is as epic as it gets. Bernstein's recorded performance with the Chicago Symphony shook dust out of the rafters all the way from Milwaukee to Gary Indiana.
Those final timpani are earth shattering
Finale to Shostakovich's 7 was just, pure victory for me..
Yeah, me too !!! Thought they would represent it here, but what they chose wasn't all that bad. I always get goose bumps when listening to the ending of the Shostakovich 7th, especially when the opening theme comes back in the brass and that final chord waiting for the symphony to stop.
Yes, that one is even more epic than the one from the 10th symphony in my opinion.
YES INDEED !!!
The quietness of Vaughan Williams’ ending to his Symphony No. 5 is nothing short of magnificent.
The Vaughan Williams 3rd and 5th are masterpieces.
The VW 5th is one of the most lyrical, mystical and beautiful musical compositions ever written and as much as I love it, I could not call its ending triumphant
The end of Sibelius’ Symphony No. 7 - that astonishing resolution of the B natural into C.
the resolution itself is nothing astonishing, what is astonishing about B natural resolving to C in the key of C major? what is atonishing is that B natural itself comes out of no where.
The way Sibelius builds the tension, it’s absolutely amazing! Another symphony finale to go in our next video!
@@haomingli6175that’s exactly what’s so impressive about it, is that he manages to make it sound so extraordinarily novel and exciting in the way he orchestrates and contextualizes it
Yessss! And the 2nd, or 3rd... I could play the last 15 seconds of each over and over and never lose the nostalgic feeling they leave
Such a beautiful, wild ride. Thank you. Although choices are always subjective, you chose well, and your descriptions helped newcomers understand what they were experiencing. Bravo.
Thank you so much!
It is not technically called a "symphony", but Janacek's Sinfonietta has a killer ending.
Oo cool, I feel like that qualifies! That will be in the next video!
Yes!!!!’n
Well, technically it IS called a symphony. Sinfonietta. Small symphony.
Mahler 8 as well... epic
I finally completed my quest to see every mahler symphony live, a quest that began a few years ago when i had the chance to actually discover the 2nd live without any prior listening. This is actually the only time i ever cried listening to music, as I was in a bad place at the moment and I felt that symphony resonating with my very soul.
The finale is the greatest piece of music I have ever heard, not only great by itself, but also perfectly resolving 80 minutes of tension and buildup both musically and metaphorically.
If angels sang at one's arrival in heaven, this is what you would hear.
Mahler was a genius.
That is absolutely amazing, as many people have pointed out, the first time you hear the symphony is one of the greatest feelings you will ever feel, and again the first time you listen to it live. You are incredibly lucky, I wish I will someday be able to hear the symphony live!
Excellent list... I've seven more and seven more after that ... Classical music never ceases to give...
Indeed… that’s what makes the genre so great!
I love the transition into Tchaikovskys 4.
THE END OF R.V.W. s 4th SYMPHONY IS STUNNING.
Thank you so much for remember me how great, and glorious it is these pieces, and give me some motivation to write something here, thanks guys for this incredible work!!
Thank YOU so much for watching!
shostakovich's 11th symphony is a masterpiece beginning to end. listen to it if you haven't. Very worth your time.
It’s absolutely amazing! In fact it’s been dubbed by many “a film without the pictures”
Great sampling of epic moments in symphonic music. As a fan of symphonic movie scores, this was like a greatest hits album! Thanks for your work.
Thank you for watching! Orchestral symphonic music is the best!
These composers were absolute GIANTS of their time! These works are just colossal! Awesome video! :)
Thanks for watching! These composers really are great!
NJI've had the great privilege of hearing Sibelius' 7th for the first time ever, live in New York. I was sobbing in the second movement and by the end was so emotionally moved, my best friend at the time asked if i needed to leave. Needless to say i loved it. Bruckner's 4th is also a wonderful piece with a fantastic ending (when not taken too slowly imo) that one can easily be stretched far too long to me. Blomstedt's rendition is one of my favorites
Sibelius 7th doesn't have a second movement
All I can say is that these are nice, in a bombastic way. For subtle and thought provoking I myself like the ending of Mussorgsky's Night on Bald Mountain. For bombastic, I still like Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture. Something so soft and gentle about ending a piece of music with the gentle notes of a battery of cannon.
Okay but Prokofiev's fifth's ending hit me like a bus the first time I heard it. It had the same effect on me as did The Rite of Spring's final chord- it scared the bejeezus outta me 😂
Me too! It's such a different and shocking ending, but epic nonetheless!
Thanks for explaining why the pieces are so epiiic! I really wouldn't have gotten it otherwise. Really helpful!
Thanks for watching, glad we could help!
Fantastic, thank you. I just subscribed. I'm a bit of a fan of the finale of the Tchaikovsky 5th, the Shostakovich 5th and Saint Saens 3rd
Thank you so much! Tchaikovsky 5 and Saint-Saens 3 will be in the next video!
All of those symphonies have magnificent triumphant endings
This is not just a video, it is a work of art! Bravo!
Thank you so much!
Fantastic video guys! Keep at it, looking forward to more classical music education. There's so many to choose from, Jupiter and William Tell are a couple of my faves. Love all of these too, particularly Dvorak 9. 🙌
Thank you so much! We hope you enjoyed watching just as much as we enjoyed making the video! Dvorak 9 is a really great symphony, isn’t it? Also, our second video on more symphony endings will premiere tomorrow, if you are interested.
Excellent work!... Thank you!
Thank you for watching and supporting us!
In that clip of Mahler's 2nd, is Alondra de la Parra conducting, proudly mexican. I got the chance to be in two amazing performances of her conducting Mahler's 5th and 2th with the Jalisco Philharmonic at Guadalajara. Such an amazing conductor. Clap, clap, clap.
Shes a good conductor and also looks pretty hot in that black suit as she mouths "Aufersthen"
Very nice list. One of my favorites is Sibelius' 2nd. Very triumphant.
Thanks for the suggestion, that will definitely be in the third video!
The Mahler 2nd and the Bruckner 4th are two of my favorite.
They really are great!
Before anyone comments "stop talking over the music", we have a version without the voiceover here!
th-cam.com/video/QsKYqLEJbnE/w-d-xo.htmlsi=UPrJyiW3VcuUUdjn
I would highly suggest that you write this in the description (if possible)
Saint Saens' 3rd is also worth checking out.
Enjoyable. Good selection.
I miss the end of the Berlioz's Symphonie Fantastique.
That’s a great one, it will be in the third video!
If you consider Berlioz's "Harold in Italy" a symphony, that has a wild ending too. It's like purposely over the top and insane... and I love it
This is really a tough one, because there are so many symphonies in the repertoire, and so many great things to discover.
Some quiet endings are great, some raucus endings are great.
Let me think of a few that come to mind on the top of my head. I'm sure on another day I would come up with different ones, I know so many:
Haydn: No. 104
Just a great bookend to his gigantic symphonic body of work. The entire finale is just so much fun.
Beethoven: No. 7
If that one doesn't send you dancing off into the night, then something is either wrong with the performance or you.
Schubert: Great C Major (however you want to Number it. 8 is probably correct, 7 if you only count the finished ones).
The Coda has to be one of the greatest things ever.
Berlioz: Symphony fantastique
The composer never reached that kind of intensity again.
Schumann: No. 2
What a triumph after all that turmoil saying: "Music saved my life".
Mahler: No. 6
Staring down the abyss in total defeat.
Stanford: No. 5
A perfect illustration of the text that inspired it: "There let the pealing organ blow [...] dissolve me into exctasies and bring all Heaven before mine eyes."
Gliere: No. 3
Another illustrative piece that ends with the hero of the story being petrified and his life flashing before his eyes until he finally is completely stone, unable to move just as at the start of the Symphony. And so the music recaps all movements over an organ point that symbolizes the petrification and ends with the music that opened the symphony.
Bruckner: No. 5
The Finale itself is a tough nut to crack, but the Coda, if done right, just soars with an exctasy that Bruckner never reached again.
Saint-Saens: No. 3
Quite literally pulling out all the stops.
That's 10 for starters and one as a bonus:
The Shostakovich ones you picked would also have been my picks, but I will add No. 4 as an example of false triumph ending in nothing but doubt and fear.
Woah, amazing set of recommendations there. I'll try them out and come back here when I'm done! (within 3-300 business days)
Impressive suggestions! We will include these in the next video. Thank you for your contribution! Organ symphony and pulling out all the stops 😂
And @ulysse_ hopefully the next video won’t take quite as long as 300 business days…
@@ulysse__ 😂
Symphonie Fantastique has such an epic tuba part at the end
Nice lineup! My personal favorites would also include the finales of Shostakovich's 5th and Kalinnikov's 1st
It is refreshing that you didn't include Beethoven's 9th. Arguably it is the most epic, but it has already won enough glory.
I just love the silent finish of Schubert's eighth symphony..
I once played the finale to mahlers symphony 2 with nearly 100 low brass (mostly trombone). The video is on yiutube if you search penn state trombone mahler. It may sincerely be the most epic thing ive been a part of
Whoah, that’s amazing! I play trombone, so I wish I will one day be able to play with nearly as many low brass players!
The conclusion of Turangalila Symphony has always and WILL always be one of my favorite climaxes to a piece. Just off of the sheer sound of what you hear and the color of what Messiaen puts on display with unusual sounds is amazing to me.
It's one of my new favorites after researching for the next video!
Thank you!
My first hearing of Mahler's second was the epic recording by the Utah Symphony on Cardinal records. It became the demo recording for high end audio equipment of the day. It is an ethereal experience.
In tears. So glorious. Joyful! Soul stirring.
Thank you so much! The music is amazing!
I have always loved the sheer, unadulterated wildness at the end of Prokofiev’s 5th….
I've performed most of these in the past year. Absolutely magnificent symphonies. I hope to play shostakovich 10 soon. I've never heard his 11th, but it shounds amazing!
Wow, that's amazing! You are very lucky! What instrument do you play?
It's a need to have the second part of this compilation of the best symphonies
Of course! It is already in the making, stay tuned!
Thank you everyone for engaging with this video! I am currently working on the list for the next few videos, it's looking very long! I have compiled all of your suggestions from the comments, and here it is:
Atterberg Symphony No 3
Beethoven Symphony No 7
Beethoven Symphony No 9 (very popular!)
Berlioz Symphony Fantastique
Brahms Symphony No 1
Bruckner Symphony No 5
Bruckner Symphony No 8
Copland Symphony No 3
Gliere Symphony No 3
Haydn Symphony No 104
Janacek Sinfonietta
Kalinnikov Symphony No 1
Mahler Symphony No 3
Mahler Symphony No 6
Mahler Symphony No 8
Mozart Symphony No 41
Nielsen Symphony No 4
Rachmaninoff Symphony No 2
Saint-Saens Symphony No 3
Schubert Great C Major Symphony (8/7)
Schumann Symphony No 2
Shostakovich Symphony No 4
Shostakovich Symphony No 5
Sibelius Symphony No 2
Sibelius Symphony No 5
Stanford Symphony No 5
Tchaikovsky Symphony No 5
Vaughan Williams Symphony No 5
Have I forgotten any? Or does anyone have any more suggestions? Or suggestions for your favourite recordings?
Also, one of my own recommendations, Reinecke 3, which will be in the video, go check it out if you are interested!
The final shortlist for the second video is as follows:
Atterberg Symphony No 3 “Pictures of the West Coast”
Beethoven Symphony No 9 Op. 125
Brahms Symphony No 1 Op. 68
Bruckner Symphony No 8 “The Apocalyptic” WAB 108
Copland Symphony No 3
Glière Symphony No 5 “Ilia Mourometz” Op. 42
Mahler Symphony No 8 “Symphony of a Thousand”
Messiaen Turangalîla-Symphonie
Rachmaninoff Symphony No 2 Op. 18
Saint-Saëns Symphony No 3 Op. 78
Schumann Symphony No 2 Op. 61
Tchaikovsky Symphony No 5 Op. 64
Tchaikovsky Symphony No 6 Op. 74
We had to shorten the original list to 13 endings, but if your suggestion is not here yet, fear not! The list for the third video is already in progress, where Shosty will make a return, you'll get to see Mahler 6's famous hammer, and more!
@@obsidianmusic303two suggestions that involve two quiet yet utterly magical endings, and curiously both symphonies in C-sharp minor: Ernest Bloch's Symphony in C-sharp minor and Albéric Magnard's Symphony No. 4.
William Schumann Symphony no 5 and Shostakovich 7 to name a few
@@obsidianmusic303 Have to put in a vote for Shostakovich 6
A few more to add - William Grant Still's Afro-American (No. 1) and Authocthonous (No. 4) symphonies, Dvorak's sixth and seventh symphonies, Walton's first symphony, Bernard Herrmann's symphony, Bartok's Concerto for Orchestra (not a symphony in the textbook definitiion, but...) and Gliere's Ilya Murometz.
You have a similar taste of epicness as I do ^^ Love it!
Great so see someone else agrees with us! Thanks for watching!
I would mention Beethoven's 5th for the number of endings that are done one after the other.
I agree with that magnificent work- but if you really want to hear an ending that never really lets you know when the end is coming, try listening to Mahlers Third symphony. If you are not in tears, you will be wondering which ending is the real ending. When the last chord finally comes, you will feel at peace and know what love feels like.
@@hillcresthiker I'll give it a try.
The ending of the first movement of Tchaikovsky's 4th Symphony should have taken first place on this list. That ending actually makes the de jure ending of the work anticlimactic. The performance by Bernstein and the NYP, parenthetically, is the epitome of everything inspirational about classical music, in my view. A very interesting topic, thanks for posting!
Thanks for the suggestion!
Definitely
I'm happy that this ends with the Resurrection because it is beyond comparison to ANY orchestral piece ever composed! It surpasses all other music in it's passion, fear, love, compassion and sheer beauty! I wish I had attended the Saratoga-Potsdam Choral Institute in 1971 when this was performed with the Philadelphia Orchestra in Saratoga Springs during their summer season at SPAC. I was only 21 so it wouldn't have hit me then the way it does now but I know I would have connected with it on a deep emotional level just the same. I always tear up at the end without fail! ♥♥♥
It is an absolutely amazing piece! I wish I will have the chance to hear it performed live someday... Thanks for watching!
I'd also nominate Sibelius 2, Nielsen 4, Kalinnikov 1, and Bruckner 5.
Ooo these will definitely go in the next video!
@@obsidianmusic303what about Sibelius 5?!
@@youtubeyoutube3409 Already on the list!
Yes indeed - Nielson's 4,5,6 symphonies.
Oh man, Sibelius 2 is such a fun ending for the trombones
Good selection!
Sorry but Mahlers 8th Symphony's finale tops everything!
Not many codas of RVW are triumphant but the ending of the Fifth with glistening strings and total serenity is in its own way triumphant.
Those were quite good.
Mahler using all those diminished chords was invigorating, inspiring.
They make the climax even more amazing! Thanks for watching.
When I saw the title of this video from this new-to-me channel that I just found in in my TH-cam recommendations, I thought the winner has got to be Mahler’s Second: and there it was! The most amazing thing about that work is for me that the last five minutes gives the illusion of being an impossible, continuous ascent of the musical scale, which it actually cannot be, to a greater and greater crescendo of sound, which is also impossible: yet that’s the impression it gives. The recording I most love and always listen to is the 1980 performance by the Chicago Symphony under Sir Georg Solti. I can't imagine it being improved upon.
Thanks for watching! Mahler 2 really is incredible isn't it? And thanks for the recording suggestion, I will check it out!
Dvorak's 9th is spectacular!
The Bruckner 4 ending does something unique - it builds to a terrific, grand climax while for much of the time retaining a hushed, mystical ambience.
Indeed, I've never heard anything else like it!
The selected reading of the Bruckner 4 seems weak
@@denebutube Possibly, but there are limited options for video performances. Generally I would recommend Jochum, particularly with the Statskapelle Dresden.
All your choices are loud, grand, and bombastic. That's not the only way to end a symphony. Two symphonies with equally great, but very different, endings are Mozart's Jupiter symphony and Vaughan Williams's 5th. The Mozart ends in a coda in which 5 themes from movement are played on top of each other in an amazing display of mastery of counterpoint. The Vaughan Williams ends in a coda that has a paradoxical feeling of ecstatic calm, the complete antithesis of the loud and bombastic endings in this video.
Great choices, I agree this is an oversight that we didn’t include the full spectrum of symphony endings. We will definitely include more calm endings in the next video!
Shostakovich 8!
Yeah, and then to have the audacity to call it the “greatest symphony endings in classical music history”, gimme a break.
the most unusual ending could be sibelius 4. it is neither a bang nor a whimper, but a mezzoforte on repeated notes/chords marked dolce.
Not the only way to end a symphony, but your examples not what I would call ‘epic’ - which is what this video is about. The Mozart is exultant, the VW cathartic. But not epic. Epic refers to a long, grand, rousing story. IMO the symphonies that qualify as having an epic ending must have these qualities of length, grandeur and final triumph.
How can you leave out Saint-Saen’s 3rd symphony? Cymbals, trumpet, percussion and organ full blast?
4:26 I've always loved this bit in Dvorak's 9th. If memory serves me right it's a DM7b5-Dm7b5 transition over a pedal of E. Such a great variation of the main theme with just the right amount of tension!
Not really a symphony piece but Elsa's Procession to the Cathedral to me has one of the best climaxes and ending to any concert piece that I've heard. Absolutely beautiful.
A superb piece of music - if it lasts less than 7 min, its too fast!
I've played violin for the past 20 years of my life (I am 26). This was a certified sob-fest. Some of the greatest 15 minutes of my life, and now I have hours more of music to listen to. Thank you.
Thank you so much! We are so lucky to have this great music in our lives.
Ooooooo I’ve never heard the end of Tchaikovsky 4 with the accelerando. Very cool.
It wasn’t the first recording we considered, so we were surprised when we first listen to this one, as it was the only one with an accelerando. It is indeed a cool interpretation! Thank you for watching!
Interestingly, the accelerando is not written in the score, it's an interpretation.
It’s an interpretation just as adding cymbals and bass drum to the final measure is an interpretation. Neither was requested by the composer.
Dvořák's serenade for strings finale has to be one of my favorites
Berlioz' "Symphonie Fantastique's" finale missing here? Never thought that could be possible.
But I agree with all the picks you put in here eitherway.
Thanks, Berlioz Symphonie Fantastique will be in the third video; saving the best for later ;)
Loved this video, editing, narrators, music, everything ❤️
Wow, thank you so much! We are making another one of these videos, hope you are looking forward to it as much as we are! ❤
My favorite is definitely Shostakovich Symphony 7
Ooh the Leningrad Symphony is amazing; great choice! It will feature in the third video.
May I suggest one more? There is (or was) not a very famous composer called Beethoven, who wrote not a very famous symphony called "Coral" (his ninth symphony) that could have occupied a modest place on this "very personal youtuber selection" . Plus Schubert's "The Great", Mendelssohn, Schumann, Brahms, etc. Anyway, a nice try. Thanks. Adrian K. (69) Argentina.
Haha, I’ve never heard of this “Beethoven” before, nor his “Coral” symphony!
But in all seriousness, Beethoven 9, Schumann 2 and Brahms 1 will be in the next video!
Best regards.@@obsidianmusic303
I was surprised that Beethoven 9th was missing also. But I figured, of course, that's the symphony that DEFINES "epic." It holds a special place in the pantheon.
@@paulerickson5804 Yes, it is the father symphony 😊. Oh wait that’s Haydn…
Excellent analysis.
In the next several videos, perhaps we can have Brahms' 4th Symphony, Bruckner's 9th, Mozart's 41st Symphony (of course) and Britten's Spring Symphony? How about Elgar's 1st and 2nd Symphonies? The English can occasionally write music! Whereas Arnold Bax is Celtic, and his 2nd and 3rd symphonies are astonishing combinations of Mahlerian orchestral complexity and wild Irish Atlantic emotional and spiritual dramas!
Reading the comments here, I'm sure you would have an audience for life if you devoted a video just to Mahler - his 1, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9.
No doubt your Parisian audience would delight in Honegger (Symphonie Liturgique) and Messiaen (Turangalila).
Also I wouldn't restrict yourselves to final movements, but instead to any compete component. The closing passages of Brahms' 4th, first movement, for instance, are of supreme formal control and emotional power and complexity.
Perhaps also symphonic compositions not necessarily in the so-called classical format?
That way we can consider tone poems (hence Richard Strauss, Schoenberg, Debussy, Ravel, Respighi); ballet scores (Rimsky, Stravinsky, Copeland are obvious and foremost choices); and the scores of great opera.
After all, parts of Puccini's La Boheme, Manon, Tosca and Turandot, and, of course, hours and hours of Wagner's Ring cycle and Tristan und Isolde and Parsifal and Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, are at the absolute pinnacle of writing for full orchestra.
It is impossible to understand any music written (and indeed any western art form) after the Magician of Bayreuth, without studying his works.
Film music! Where would contemporary, popular, high art, "film-music-dramas" (Wagner's children so to speak) be without Korngold, Bernard Herrmann, Elmer Bernstein, Miklós Rózsa, Leonard Bernstein, Goldsmith, Malcolm Arnold, that scandalous borrower John Williams, Alexandre Desplat, Hans Zimmer, etc, etc?
More thanks and much love,
Andrea the music fanatic.
Thank you so much, Andrea the music fanatic! These are some excellent choices, and as you said, much of our audience will probably enjoy your suggestions. After this series, perhaps we will remove some more specific limitations, such as the symphonic form, and include endings of a much wider variety of forms. Tone poems are always great! And thank you for reading previous comments before commenting yourself, it does seem that we need to make an entire video just dedicated to Mahler. Messiaen’s Turangalila will be in the next video as well.
Thank you so much ❤,
ObsidianMusic
Those trombones to end the Brahms 2nd are hair raising!! And the end of the Schubert 9 is also fantastic!!
Brava. Lady conductor! 🎉
Sibelius 5
Another great suggestion to add to the list for our next video!
Yes, the last version of the symphony with the big silences between the big chords. Utterly unique.
4:50 Dvorak 9 ends with a quiet, sustained woodwind chord. I once, on the way out from a performance, realized why he wrote it that way.
At that time, Wagner's music was in the air, and Dvorak's music shows onfluences. The New World finale is a tip of the hat to the quiet, sustained chord at the very end of Goetterdaemmerung.
Nothing but Mahler's 2!!!! Everytime I listen this symphony I cry at the end...is just epic!!! Like being with god!!!
Good job!
Thank you!
The finale of Shostakovich's No.11 makes my hair stand on end.
Awesome list! You should make a separate list for solemn endings.
If you have any suggestions for more solemn endings, we will try to include them in the next video!
@@obsidianmusic303 I'd say that Tchaikovsky's 6th easily deserves the number 1 spot in that list.
@@mostafa12890 Yes, that will be on the list of the next video! One of the best solemn endings ever written
I can't see how one can refer to epic Symphony endings and not mention Sibelius 5.
Will definitely be in the third video!
Definitely one of the most epic
The ending of Mahler s 3rd Symphony is like ascending upwards into Heaven!!!
That’s such a great way to describe it! Mahler 3 will definitely be in the next video!
Yea, with plenty of weights attached.
@@obsidianmusic303 One which I most certainly won’t be watching!
The Russian guys lorded it over the list. I don't blame them, they were phenomenal composers.
However, my own list includes the magnificent (and often loud) endings of these symphonies:
Beethoven: 5, 7 and 9
Mendelssohn: 3
Brahms: 4
Nielsen: 3, 4 and 5
Sibelius: 1 and 2
Vaughan Williams: 4
Casella: 2
Atterberg: 2 and 3
Langgaard: 1 and 6 (the latter in a similar pacing like on the Chandos recording with Neeme Järvi)
Hindemith: Mathis der Maler Symphony and Die Harmonie der Welt Symphony
Walton: 1
Shostakovich: 7
Popov: 1
Holmboe: 8
Braga Santos: 4
Great list, many of these will be in future videos! And Atterberg was mentioned again!
👍🏼Sibelius Symph #2 d min.
Thanks. Copland's Third Symphony.
Mozart’s 41
Haydn’s 49
Haydn’s 104
Beethoven’s 5, 7 & 9
Schumann’s 4
Berlioz’s fantastic sphny.
Brahm’s 1 & 2
Schubert’s 9
Rimski korsakov’ Scherezade
Mahler's 2nd Symphony is a whole journey with the most epic majestic ending.
I tend to split musical endings into two groups. Those like Beethoven 9 and Mahler 2 to which the audience reaction is to roar its acclamation. Then you have something like Tchaikovsky 6 which ends quietly and hopefully the entire audience is still and silent. It is spine chilling to have 2,000 people not making a sound until the conductor lowers the baton.
1:13 For those who like historic trivia like that, the DSCH motif is the "signature" of the composer, read "Dmitri SCHostakovich". He used it in various guises in several of his renowned works.
Indeed! S is German for Eb and H is their B natural. It is similar to the BACH motif, which uses Bb, A, C, B natural. Thanks for sharing!
Adding an update: the final climactic minutes of George Lloyd's magisterial 11th Symphony ("The light at the end
of the tunnel we all hope to see" - wrote the composer). It never fails to send a shiver through my spine.
Ooo that’s a good one! We’ll definitely include that in the third video.
Great video! For me, the ending to Brahms 1 is one of the greatest endings in symphonic history.
Thank you! Brahms did write some great ones, thank you for the suggestion as well!
Shostakovich could really belt out a finale. A couple of equally "epic" ones are the quiet, exhausted ones of the 8th and 15th. Finally, rest.
I really think Shostakovich's 15th should be added to the list. After such stirring music, he ends with a very quiet, almost child-like construction that takes us out of this world.
Thanks to this video, I discovered the gem that is Alondra de la Parra.
She is fantastic.
She is a great conductor! Thank you for watching!
Prokofiev is terrifying? Common now!
Great video!, I have to say I prefer Tchaikovsky 4 without the final cymbal, but this conductor's interpretation is still nice.
Yes, in some versions, it’s just a triangle strike! Thanks for watching!
The cymbal crash is not written, but many conductors like to add it. Some view its absence as a typo by an early copyist.
By coincidence, I used that recording of Tchaikovsky's 4th in my own video on that symphony.
It’s a great recording!