In my college years I had a wonderful music theory professor. One day he brought to class his violin and a cassette tape recorder. He explained to the class that he going to demonstrate Mozart’s,”table music” Mozart had written pieces that two musicians could sit opposite of each other and play syncopated. One musicians left to right top to bottom was the others opposite score. My professor started the recorder, played the score, finished it, rewound the tape recorder, flipped the music sheet, pressed play, and played on his violin the,”upside down” score. It was just spectacular! Mozart was an absolute genius.
I always wanted to play the flute and fortunately was landed with a clarinet, my teacher said it was one of mozarts favourite instruments, I played the table piece with my music teacher, it blew my mind, such a talent best wishes, we have both been introduced to the magical talent
I was 17 when I first saw that movie in a cinema. It was an experience that literally changed my life forever, because it was the one movie that turned me into a cinema addict. A perfect cast, a perfect script, perfect costumes, perfect music - and, most of all, a perfect connection between all this, as it can be seen in this clip. The way Mozart's music interacts with Salieri as if the music itself was a living being is so, so beautiful.
This movie still moves me so much! My wife and I spent several nights in the Don Giovanni hotel where much of it was recorded. A really out of this world experience!
"On the page it looked nothing". "The beginning simple - almost comic". "Just a pulse". "Bassoons - Bassett horns". "Like a rusty squeeze box". "And then high above it - an oboe - a single note hanging there unwavering until a clarinet took it over".
Wow it's rare to see people thank God for bringing talented people. Keep it up dude! God always wants us to thank him for the good things he's done for us. ❤
Hola toda obra o película o guion teatral es fantasía basada en hechos reales en si nadie sabe cómo fue la real historia porque no hay ser viviente de esa época que viva hasta el momento saludos 😅
@@Luchin1203Me too. I’m 72 and in college I was blessed with a music professor and Wind Ensemble director who picked a small group of us to rehearse and play this Mozart Grand Serenade for 13 winds IRL several times. Thank you John (and Wolfgang) from the bottom of my heart. Unforgettable. 🎼🎵🎶❤️
This depiction of Salieri, for which F Murray Abraham thoroughly deserved the Oscar, was almost certainly fictional. From what I know, Mozart and Salieri admired each other, and the portrayal of Salieri as jealous and bitter seems to date from a work by the Russian writer Pushkin.
You are right. The director explained that he was not interested in making a biography as such, but rather he was looking for something that symbolized Mozart's life and was interesting to watch. For this reason, they based the film on a literary work that tells the urban legend that was always told about Salieri having Mozart murdered.
Salieri envious was just fiction, actually probably was true the opposite, as Mozart died in anonymity, poor and consumed by cirrhosis, whether Salieri was literally the best of the best of his times, rich, renowned and famous. Also Mozart in one of his letters said that learned a lot from Salieri's music. Salieri also taught Beethoven, Schubert, Liszt...
Everyone already knows this. It's literally always the first thing someone says literally whenever the film/play is brought up, about how it's all fictional. Nobody thinks it's real, that events happened this way. Absolutely everyone who watches it these days knows it's fictional because they immediately look up the film on Wikipedia and other places because it's an astoundingly good film and so they want to know more about it, and so of course they learn that it's a work of fiction. So you don't need to tell anyone this. Everyone already knows that Salieri didn't hate Mozart like this. What you've done is like watching a Superman movie and then making a comment going "did you know, Superman and Clark Kent are the same person? Clark Kent is just superman's disguise!“. Like, no shit sherlock.
Rock solid movie. What the character saleri missed in his jealousy was that he was given the gift from god to truly appreciate the greatness of Mozart when everyone else couldn’t because they didn’t have the ability to. He had the gift nobody had and missed it.
Salieri is the embodiment of the music critics, who understand and talk about art like no one but yet are tragically unable to achieve a fraction of the real musical genius playing like kids on the stage in front of them. For me this story is very near of Forrest Gump, the narrative arc between Jenny and Forrest is quite similar. She fails to achieve success with his intelligence and beauty, while Forrest has a true and effortless impact on the world. Those pictures manage to show us the true and unfair definition of talent.
The use of music in this marvellous film is absolutely masterful- unfortunately the stage play was complete pants, so thank goodness we have this moving, sad and wonderful version.
It was such a shame that the director chose to depict Salieri as a ridiculous caricature, by showing Abraham mugging absurdly in close-up, just so the dullest member of the audience would be able to GET IT.
@@RadagonTheRed : He played him as a caricature, exaggerated to the point of absurdity. And in close-up yet. It was painful to see his expressions. They may as well had it flash across the screen: "SALIERI JEALOUS!!" "SALIERI AMAZED!!" "SALIERI SUSPICIOUS!!" Of course, if there was any subtlety, a large chunk of the audience wouldn't have understood, because they need to have things spelled out in great big letters and pushed in their faces. That the "Academy" awarded such shameless mugging is one of the ways we know they don't know their asses from their elbows.
@@stevecarson4162 I don’t agree, and I think you’ll find that the majority of people enjoying the film won’t agree with you either. Of course, you’re clearly a highly intellectual film buff so you’d consider that majority beneath you judging by your comments so far. But I think F. Murray Abraham did a fine job of portraying Salieri. I don’t think it was overacted or inappropriate for the general tone of the film.
@@RadagonTheRed : If the majority of people are so dense that they wouldn't get it if it wasn't spelled out in great big letters and pushed in their faces, that doesn't say much for them. To see Abraham in close-up with such absurdly exaggerated expressions was almost insulting. But then, when Miloš Forman was aiming for the U.S. market, he knew that any SUBTLETY would be wasted on them. My niece often refers to "the American line" in a TV show, by which she means the part where someone will explain for the audience exactly what just happened, so that even the dullest viewer will be up to speed. British or European directors tend to give their audiences more credit for intelligence.
The "Oscar" should have been for "most shameless mugging for the camera". But otherwise, none of the dimwits in the audience would have known what he was feeling. It's pathetic that they need to have it pushed in their face or spelled out in great big letters. Any subtlety at all is just wasted on audiences in the U.S.
@@bimopi : My PROBLEM is seeing grotesquely exaggerated caricatures like Abraham's "performance" winning praise, while REAL acting talent is ignored. The "Academy" doesn't know its ass from its elbow -- which is why it keeps awarding stupid popular GARBAGE, while classics that will live forever are being shunned.
What was "extraordinary" was that they all thought the audience was so stupid that they needed to see Abraham mugging so exaggeratedly in CLOSE-UP to tell what he was feeling? But of course, any subtlety at all is wasted on an audience in the U.S. They just won't GET IT.....
Plantea la lucha entre un buen músico y un genio musical, definitivamente de polo a polo. Los fragmentos del Requiem son enternecedores. Por ningún lado muestra el síndrome de touret del genio. Sólo trata su vida disipada y su mala administración de sus bienes.
¿Te refieres a la actuación ridículamente EXAGERADA para que incluso la persona más tonta del público pudiera decir lo que estaba sintiendo? Fue patético.
@@richardjohnson455 : Abraham is the one who won "Best Actor" thanks to the dumbass voters in the Academy who somehow think "good acting" involves mugging so outrageously in close-up that even the dullest audience member won't be able to miss what's going on. They may as well have had it flash across the screen in great big letters : "SALIERI JEALOUS! SALIERI SUSPICIOUS! SALIERI INSECURE! etc. etc. It was pathetic. And if you notice, those idiots almost always award an actor doing an impersonation of a famous person that they can recognize. (Look at past "winners' and you'll see what I mean.) That's not ACTING -- it's mimicry.
One aspect of the plot that strikes me as somewhat implausible - not only in the context of the movie but also in the broader myth of Salieri's intense jealousy toward Mozart - is Salieri's almost fetishistic admiration for Mozart's compositions. While it's undeniable that Mozart's music was remarkably beautiful and brimming with innovative and fresh ideas, it seems improbable to me that Salieri, himself a prolific composer of his era with a portfolio of 40 operas, would be so obsessed about Mozart's composing techniques, most of which must have surely been known to Salieri even before he met Mozart.
What is crazy is that since then, we've had multiple, possibly 100, people with the same inner talent as Mozart born into this world, but because they were not born in the same environment, they never developed the same skills and never went into creating classical music.
Современные авторы к сожалению не в состоянии сделать такие шедевры . "Вальс Энтони Хопкинса" - очередная попытка ,нашего современного автора, приблизится к уровню гения. RUS❤
Really? Then he should have told Abraham to dial it back a whole lot, because his close-up mugging was embarrassing to see. But of course, Americans, including the dumbass "Academy" thought he was wonderful because that way even THEY could tell what he was feeling.
I have to come back here, often to, watch , admire the wonderful music and exceptional actors, my God ! They really made a great masterpiece of this movie,, ❤what talented musicians ! With great acting by F, Murray,,❤, making us want to go back in time and listen and appreciate the talent of a young man who died way too soon, !
It surprises me that nobody seems to realise (or at least comment upon) that the essence of this music comes from Albinoni's cello concert 9:2, second movement (performed with particular fervour by by Louis Jullien orchestra 1981). And there the oboe is even more penetrating into your body and soul than Mozart's more bland version.
You must have liostened to a huge amount of music to be able to make that comment. Often pieces were 'borrowed' in these times. The second movement in Beethoven's first symphony was taken from Haydn's clock symphony.
yes, of course, and the oboe is played very differently in different versions. In the 1981 version I mention, there is no ornamentation and the single note is played out for an exciting long time and "takes you to heaven" as Mitsuko Ushida says about the middle movements in Mozart's piano concertos.@@andresa.2360
He keeps the time and "directs" when the other instruments come in and how loud. If you sit inside the orchestra- it's hard to hear the tones the audience is hearing. Like a engineer on a sound board in a music studio
the thing with this piece tho is that the ensemble mozart is conducting in this scene consisted of 13 instrumentalists, with either requires them playing by themselves or with a conductor (the music mozart was conducting was know as harmoniemusik, which would be expected to be played by 5-8 players, but in the case of this piece it's 13, which might also be a reason of a need for a conductor)
the music of the wolfgang the mozart is so full of the goodness theit floweth over from the source of theit into the earnesses theour giving the forementioned such pleasure theit cannot be filled theremeaning is always room for more
Beethoven actually took lessons from Salieri for a period of time but Hayden was Beethoven's best and most accomplished teacher.If you know the different eras of classical music baroque,Romantic etc.Hayden pretty much created the classical style of the classical period or era in music .
No creo que se lo retrate como un inútil. De hecho, se deja en claro que en su época fue un hombre con una fama sinigual. Lo que, a mi modo de ver, la película busca transmitir es cómo Salieri se sentía un mediocre frente a, quizás, el mayor genio musical que ha existido. Es como si un jugador del RM de gran calibre comparte equipo con CR7 y queda entre embelasado y herido en orgullo por ver la excepcionalidad de tal genio.
SALIERI: "This was the single most enchanting music I had ever heard... it was like the voice of God himself had come down to sing to us." MOZARTl: "Ugh, no, don't read that. It's crap. Unfinished, unmitigated CRAP!"
In my college years I had a wonderful music theory professor. One day he brought to class his violin and a cassette tape recorder. He explained to the class that he going to demonstrate Mozart’s,”table music” Mozart had written pieces that two musicians could sit opposite of each other and play syncopated. One musicians left to right top to bottom was the others opposite score. My professor started the recorder, played the score, finished it, rewound the tape recorder, flipped the music sheet, pressed play, and played on his violin the,”upside down” score. It was just spectacular! Mozart was an absolute genius.
any idea what it was called?
It's called table music by Mozart
that's "the Mirror Duet" or "Der Spiegel" by Mozart
I always wanted to play the flute and fortunately was landed with a clarinet, my teacher said it was one of mozarts favourite instruments, I played the table piece with my music teacher, it blew my mind, such a talent best wishes, we have both been introduced to the magical talent
Didn't know this. Thanks. And Mozart is truly a gift to mankind.
Murray Abraham´s Salieri composition deserved a waterfall of Oscars....
Se lo curro 😮aprendió música para la peli 😮
Yes, I must agree.... I love how he describes the music.... it is like describing the taste of wine
Yes and the story Abraham tells at his Oscar acceptance speech is wonderful.
@@fletcheranderson9277 no!!!
Oh couldn't agree more, he was marvellous.
I was 17 when I first saw that movie in a cinema. It was an experience that literally changed my life forever, because it was the one movie that turned me into a cinema addict. A perfect cast, a perfect script, perfect costumes, perfect music - and, most of all, a perfect connection between all this, as it can be seen in this clip. The way Mozart's music interacts with Salieri as if the music itself was a living being is so, so beautiful.
Tom hulce
He looks so distraught when Mozart grabs the pages, like he wants to shout, "hey I was listening to that!"
Yeah..that was my take aswell 😂
One of my favorite acting performances of all times. and with the music background elevated to perfection.
You mean his mugging was so exaggerated that even YOU could tell what was going on? I found it CRINGEWORTHY.
This movie still moves me so much!
My wife and I spent several nights in the Don Giovanni hotel where much of it was recorded. A really out of this world experience!
kde to bylo ?
Prague @@magdalenapotuckova9213
one of the truly great acting performances of all time...
You mean his mugging was so exaggerated that even YOU could tell what was going on? I found it CRINGEWORTHY.
Both Abraham and Hulce. I wish they had tied for the Oscar.
"On the page it looked nothing". "The beginning simple - almost comic". "Just a pulse". "Bassoons - Bassett horns". "Like a rusty squeeze box". "And then high above it - an oboe - a single note hanging there unwavering until a clarinet took it over".
That......was Mozart☝️!💫
Mozart, Vivaldi, Paganini, Strauss, Bach , Hayden, Chopin, Bethoven, Litsz, Verdi , Rossini , Ravel , Gerghuin, Rodrigo , Villa- lobos . . . . . ! Dios todopoderoso, gracias por poner a tales genios en este mundo !
Wow it's rare to see people thank God for bringing talented people.
Keep it up dude! God always wants us to thank him for the good things he's done for us. ❤
& Peter White, Ottmar Liebert, Boney James, Kenny G, Carlos Santana, Paco de Lucia, & much more!
@@AllaboutDale Querrá que también le reprochemos las malas?
GENIUS to the two guys who locked themselves away for months to write this brilliant film
Mozart todos sabemos fue un genio....y llevar a la pantalla un poco de su vida fue magnífico ....su música está en un nivel muy muy alto
Bien dijiste "Un poco de su vida", porque el 90 % de esta palícula es novela y fantasía. Aún así, es muy buena.
I second that motion!!!
llevar a la pantalla un poco de su vida fue magnífico . Y con semejante reparto. El del casting era un genio.
llevar a la pantalla un poco de su vida fue magnífico . Y con semejante reparto. El del casting era un genio.
Tres Buenos
Serenata n.º 10 para viento en si bemol mayor, K. 361 «Gran Partita» Adagio
Famos
Gracias..!
Maravillosa película, la ví montones de veces. Mozart era un genio, el más grande músico de la historia🌹
goosebumps from this actor's play!
Esa película marcó mi vida desde niño. Gracias Mozart por tu música
La película es una fantasía pero la música de Mozart y sobre todo las actuaciones de Murray Abraham y Tom Hulce justifican verla más de una vez
No seas 🌽
Totalmente de acuerdo. Ya perdí la cuenta de las veces que la he visto
Exceptional indeed....❤
Hola toda obra o película o guion teatral es fantasía basada en hechos reales en si nadie sabe cómo fue la real historia porque no hay ser viviente de esa época que viva hasta el momento saludos 😅
@@Luchin1203Me too. I’m 72 and in college I was blessed with a music professor and Wind Ensemble director who picked a small group of us to rehearse and play this Mozart Grand Serenade for 13 winds IRL several times. Thank you John (and Wolfgang) from the bottom of my heart. Unforgettable. 🎼🎵🎶❤️
Один из моих самых любимых фильмов. Смотрела более 30 лет назад, пересматривать не могу, мне тяжело, но помню его всю жизнь.
This is my favorite scene of the whole film. When Salieri is standing there reading the music, and it's conjuring such emotion in him.
This depiction of Salieri, for which F Murray Abraham thoroughly deserved the Oscar, was almost certainly fictional. From what I know, Mozart and Salieri admired each other, and the portrayal of Salieri as jealous and bitter seems to date from a work by the Russian writer Pushkin.
You are right. The director explained that he was not interested in making a biography as such, but rather he was looking for something that symbolized Mozart's life and was interesting to watch. For this reason, they based the film on a literary work that tells the urban legend that was always told about Salieri having Mozart murdered.
Salieri envious was just fiction, actually probably was true the opposite, as Mozart died in anonymity, poor and consumed by cirrhosis, whether Salieri was literally the best of the best of his times, rich, renowned and famous.
Also Mozart in one of his letters said that learned a lot from Salieri's music.
Salieri also taught Beethoven, Schubert, Liszt...
Everyone already knows this. It's literally always the first thing someone says literally whenever the film/play is brought up, about how it's all fictional. Nobody thinks it's real, that events happened this way. Absolutely everyone who watches it these days knows it's fictional because they immediately look up the film on Wikipedia and other places because it's an astoundingly good film and so they want to know more about it, and so of course they learn that it's a work of fiction.
So you don't need to tell anyone this. Everyone already knows that Salieri didn't hate Mozart like this. What you've done is like watching a Superman movie and then making a comment going "did you know, Superman and Clark Kent are the same person? Clark Kent is just superman's disguise!“. Like, no shit sherlock.
@@duffman18 It’s more accurate to say everybody who’s read about this knows.
@@duffman18 You're overestimating people and people's intelligence. If you read most of the comments they actually say the opposite.
Rock solid movie. What the character saleri missed in his jealousy was that he was given the gift from god to truly appreciate the greatness of Mozart when everyone else couldn’t because they didn’t have the ability to. He had the gift nobody had and missed it.
No that’s a great theory Ology
I thought the idea was that Salieri thought he was cursed by God because he could see the genius in Mozart but not understand how to create the music.
F.murray.. que buena interpretacion... Tu emocion por la musica de mozart traspasaba la pantalla...que buena peli
Assisti no cinema o filme AMADEUS 05 vezes. E todo vez saía como um novo encanto.
Mozart. Simplesmente magnífico!
Mozart lo máximo...no hay más que decir... Solo, UN GENIO.
Salieri is the embodiment of the music critics, who understand and talk about art like no one but yet are tragically unable to achieve a fraction of the real musical genius playing like kids on the stage in front of them.
For me this story is very near of Forrest Gump, the narrative arc between Jenny and Forrest is quite similar. She fails to achieve success with his intelligence and beauty, while Forrest has a true and effortless impact on the world.
Those pictures manage to show us the true and unfair definition of talent.
The use of music in this marvellous film is absolutely masterful- unfortunately the stage play was complete pants, so thank goodness we have this moving, sad and wonderful version.
It would have been hard to portray Mozart’s life without resorting to cliches, but Amadeus did it masterfully. What a film!
It was such a shame that the director chose to depict Salieri as a ridiculous caricature, by showing Abraham mugging absurdly in close-up, just so the dullest member of the audience would be able to GET IT.
@@stevecarson4162 I know what you’re saying but I felt the Abraham did a grand job of playing Salieri.
@@RadagonTheRed : He played him as a caricature, exaggerated to the point of absurdity. And in close-up yet. It was painful to see his expressions.
They may as well had it flash across the screen: "SALIERI JEALOUS!!" "SALIERI AMAZED!!" "SALIERI SUSPICIOUS!!" Of course, if there was any subtlety, a large chunk of the audience wouldn't have understood, because they need to have things spelled out in great big letters and pushed in their faces.
That the "Academy" awarded such shameless mugging is one of the ways we know they don't know their asses from their elbows.
@@stevecarson4162 I don’t agree, and I think you’ll find that the majority of people enjoying the film won’t agree with you either. Of course, you’re clearly a highly intellectual film buff so you’d consider that majority beneath you judging by your comments so far.
But I think F. Murray Abraham did a fine job of portraying Salieri. I don’t think it was overacted or inappropriate for the general tone of the film.
@@RadagonTheRed : If the majority of people are so dense that they wouldn't get it if it wasn't spelled out in great big letters and pushed in their faces, that doesn't say much for them. To see Abraham in close-up with such absurdly exaggerated expressions was almost insulting.
But then, when Miloš Forman was aiming for the U.S. market, he knew that any SUBTLETY would be wasted on them. My niece often refers to "the American line" in a TV show, by which she means the part where someone will explain for the audience exactly what just happened, so that even the dullest viewer will be up to speed. British or European directors tend to give their audiences more credit for intelligence.
Murray Abraham got one of most well deserved Oscars ever!
The "Oscar" should have been for "most shameless mugging for the camera". But otherwise, none of the dimwits in the audience would have known what he was feeling. It's pathetic that they need to have it pushed in their face or spelled out in great big letters.
Any subtlety at all is just wasted on audiences in the U.S.
@@stevecarson4162 do you have a problem out of "nothing"???
@@bimopi : My PROBLEM is seeing grotesquely exaggerated caricatures like Abraham's "performance" winning praise, while REAL acting talent is ignored. The "Academy" doesn't know its ass from its elbow -- which is why it keeps awarding stupid popular GARBAGE, while classics that will live forever are being shunned.
@@stevecarson4162 you need to relax! !!! also watch this movie, will enlighten you a lot
@@stevecarson4162get over yourself
What an extraordinary performance
What was "extraordinary" was that they all thought the audience was so stupid that they needed to see Abraham mugging so exaggeratedly in CLOSE-UP to tell what he was feeling? But of course, any subtlety at all is wasted on an audience in the U.S. They just won't GET IT.....
M. Abraham has such beautiful hands. Perfect Salieri.
Mozart es brillante porque es admirado incluso por sus enemigos, de hecho, principalmente por ellos...
Still my favorite movie ever
Glória e Honra eternas, aos feitos e à memória imortal dos grandes génios musicais europeus do passado!
Plantea la lucha entre un buen músico y un genio musical, definitivamente de polo a polo. Los fragmentos del Requiem son enternecedores. Por ningún lado muestra el síndrome de touret del genio. Sólo trata su vida disipada y su mala administración de sus bienes.
esta es la pelicula mas entretenida q he visto, no me canso de repetirmela
Increíble 👏 👏 👏 👏 👏 la actuación de Murray Abraham
Oscar!
¿Te refieres a la actuación ridículamente EXAGERADA para que incluso la persona más tonta del público pudiera decir lo que estaba sintiendo? Fue patético.
@@stevecarson4162Explain? You mean that only for Abraham?
@@richardjohnson455 : Abraham is the one who won "Best Actor" thanks to the dumbass voters in the Academy who somehow think "good acting" involves mugging so outrageously in close-up that even the dullest audience member won't be able to miss what's going on.
They may as well have had it flash across the screen in great big letters : "SALIERI JEALOUS! SALIERI SUSPICIOUS! SALIERI INSECURE! etc. etc. It was pathetic.
And if you notice, those idiots almost always award an actor doing an impersonation of a famous person that they can recognize. (Look at past "winners' and you'll see what I mean.) That's not ACTING -- it's mimicry.
Amadeus es una de mis películas favoritas de todos los tiempos.
One aspect of the plot that strikes me as somewhat implausible - not only in the context of the movie but also in the broader myth of Salieri's intense jealousy toward Mozart - is Salieri's almost fetishistic admiration for Mozart's compositions. While it's undeniable that Mozart's music was remarkably beautiful and brimming with innovative and fresh ideas, it seems improbable to me that Salieri, himself a prolific composer of his era with a portfolio of 40 operas, would be so obsessed about Mozart's composing techniques, most of which must have surely been known to Salieri even before he met Mozart.
It is implausible, but for the film it is just a technique to elevate Mozart's genius to the audience.
A wonderful, inspiring movie. Wish degenerate Hollywood could regain its focus on the beauty we have inherited in this amazing world...
Impossible. Mozart was a man and a Christian, not an inspiration for the marxist trash that currently owns and controls the film industry
If they made this today they'd probably make Mozart a black transsexual.
What is crazy is that since then, we've had multiple, possibly 100, people with the same inner talent as Mozart born into this world, but because they were not born in the same environment, they never developed the same skills and never went into creating classical music.
Современные авторы к сожалению не в состоянии сделать такие шедевры . "Вальс Энтони Хопкинса" - очередная попытка ,нашего современного автора, приблизится к уровню гения. RUS❤
Oh, I love this piece.
Considero esse o melhor corte do filme!
Emocionante!
Espetacular!
brilliant film. acting was excellent.
Un film magnifique inoubliable ❤❤❤
Mozart's messed up wig in this scene always cracks me up.
モーツァルトが大好き❤になったのはこの曲でした🎶
- Sere grosero, pero ten por seguro que mi música no es así - Wolgang Amadeus Mozart
A quotation from the movie?
Insuperable❤
Milos Forman is a genius!
🍻
Really? Then he should have told Abraham to dial it back a whole lot, because his close-up mugging was embarrassing to see. But of course, Americans, including the dumbass "Academy" thought he was wonderful because that way even THEY could tell what he was feeling.
Describes perfectly how i feel hearing anything on the first seven Iron Maiden albums!
Wonderful movie
this scene allways make me cry
Voy a repetir hasta el final de mis días que esta es la mejor película de todos los tiempos.
"...Y hay algunos entre ustedes que todavía no creen..."
amadeus mozart saved my mental life 🎶
music with no lyrics
filled my brain all the way up until there was room for nothing else.
I have to come back here, often to, watch , admire the wonderful music and exceptional actors, my God ! They really made a great masterpiece of this movie,, ❤what talented musicians ! With great acting by F, Murray,,❤, making us want to go back in time and listen and appreciate the talent of a young man who died way too soon, !
There is a huge difference between talent and genious... So many TALENTS in every generations BUT only a few GENIOUSES..
It surprises me that nobody seems to realise (or at least comment upon) that the essence of this music comes from Albinoni's cello concert 9:2, second movement (performed with particular fervour by by Louis Jullien orchestra 1981). And there the oboe is even more penetrating into your body and soul than Mozart's more bland version.
You must have liostened to a huge amount of music to be able to make that comment. Often pieces were 'borrowed' in these times. The second movement in Beethoven's first symphony was taken from Haydn's clock symphony.
You mean oboe concerto op 9 2 ?
yes, of course, and the oboe is played very differently in different versions. In the 1981 version I mention, there is no ornamentation and the single note is played out for an exciting long time and "takes you to heaven" as Mitsuko Ushida says about the middle movements in Mozart's piano concertos.@@andresa.2360
I watch this movie while visiting japan.
Apesar de ser muito romantizado, o filme mostra uma atuação fenomenal de F. Murray Abraham e Tom Hulce valeu muito! Amei o filme!!!
The man who played Amadeus was soooo good.
Mozart with an American accent? I didn't like too much.
Hermoso❤
"Beethoven e' il piu' grande musicista, ma Mozart e' la musica" (Berlioz)
0:41 I've never understood the need for a conductor.
He keeps the time and "directs" when the other instruments come in and how loud. If you sit inside the orchestra- it's hard to hear the tones the audience is hearing. Like a engineer on a sound board in a music studio
the thing with this piece tho is that the ensemble mozart is conducting in this scene consisted of 13 instrumentalists, with either requires them playing by themselves or with a conductor (the music mozart was conducting was know as harmoniemusik, which would be expected to be played by 5-8 players, but in the case of this piece it's 13, which might also be a reason of a need for a conductor)
the music of the wolfgang the mozart is so full of the goodness theit floweth over from the source of theit into the earnesses theour giving the forementioned such pleasure theit cannot be filled
theremeaning is always room for more
Beautiful,
My favorite part was when he said that was Mozart
Exelente
The oboe description by old Salieri, Was already create (And better) In BWC51 By S. Bach !!!!!!!!
That's MY RUSTY SQUEEZE BOX🩷🌷🐥🐦⬛🐦
Could someone tell me the musics name please?
"perdón por el retraso" literal xd
anybody know what song this is?
where is the movie in good definition? en youtube es very low
Pascal n'est pas un scientifique ni un mathématicien ! Pascal est un saint ! Courage mon Cédric ! Dit le lentement Blaise est un saint !
Movie beatiful
Mozart el eterno❤
In the film Salieri was portrayed as a useless musician, but he wasn't. Not at Mozart's level...but he was a good musician too.
Beethoven actually took lessons from Salieri for a period of time but Hayden was Beethoven's best and most accomplished teacher.If you know the different eras of classical music baroque,Romantic etc.Hayden pretty much created the classical style of the classical period or era in music .
No creo que se lo retrate como un inútil.
De hecho, se deja en claro que en su época fue un hombre con una fama sinigual. Lo que, a mi modo de ver, la película busca transmitir es cómo Salieri se sentía un mediocre frente a, quizás, el mayor genio musical que ha existido.
Es como si un jugador del RM de gran calibre comparte equipo con CR7 y queda entre embelasado y herido en orgullo por ver la excepcionalidad de tal genio.
the voice of God... from such a rude little man.
Muito bom, amei
Siempre Mozart!!!
Любимый фильм
Y murió pobre , enterrado en una fosa común de Viena
What song was being played at the end?
Serenade No. 10 in B Flat for 13 Wind Instruments, K. 361
Is that Omar from Scarface
모짜르트의 절대 음감은 어쩌면 작곡가 겸 지휘자가 가장 어울리지 않았을까?
When the acid hits.....
Mrs puff maybe. You know lA.
Fragmento o Italiano
Serenade for Winds, K 361, 3rd Movement
Salieri foi professor de Beethoven, não era simplório!
❤
mozart era del 1600 abundaba el bajo continuo
Nein! 1756 en adelante para ser exactos. Siglo XVIII my friend.
@@MatiasSepulveda-ej3moRight. Jan 1756 - Dec 1791. Tragically died at 35, not quite 36. What a loss. 😢
sempre
ten
un
invwszoso
¿Quién sería tan amable de decirme el nombre de la película por favor?
Amadeus de Milos Forman
This movie has nothing to do with Mozart....his name wasn't even Amadeus for crying out loud
Yes, rather curious that. Why not ''Wolfgang''.
@francisheperi4180 more like Gottlieb
:)🔱....the voice of god
泣いちゃってるじゃないの、サリエリさん。
SALIERI: "This was the single most enchanting music I had ever heard... it was like the voice of God himself had come down to sing to us."
MOZARTl: "Ugh, no, don't read that. It's crap. Unfinished, unmitigated CRAP!"
I like f. Murray Abraham best.
Show the movie already enough of these short clips 😅
Hola. Esto es una película o una serie? Quien me dice como se llama y dónde la puedo encontrar.
Una película
Amadeus de Milos Forman
De 1984