Hey, Rick, I’m Ken Brown’s older daughter! I’m a studio violinist in Nashville now :) Thank you so much for your shoutouts to my dad and Fairport! Means so much coming from you!
Bless your dad Rachel. You can measure the impact he had with higher profile musical spawns like Rick but I’m willing to bet money that his collective impact was far greater. I go on a Bach binge twice a year fro about a week, minimum. I don’t know why aside from the fact that I love him but I think it’s me going back to the source to find an original approach to expressing myself musically. Every good wish to you and the family.
@@RickBeato Can you do a breakdown and comparison on the two pipe organ masterpieces from Bach & Boston , ”Toccata and Fuegue” and how it inspired and influenced “Foreplay (/Long Time)”? Please and Thank You!
"Music is an agreeable harmony for the honor of God and the permissible delights of the soul. I play the notes as they are written, but it is God who makes the music. The final aim and reason of all music is nothing other than the glorification of God and the refreshment of the spirit" - Bach
Truly an amazing story. You may never see this comment, but I am Ken Brown’s son (I played in that same chamber orchestra at Minerva growing up) and he just sent me this video. I always considered my father to be an amazing person and I count myself fortunate to be his son. Your story was very touching to listen to, and makes me even more proud to know him as my dad.
Rick, thank you for this incredible tribute to my father in law, Ken Brown. He is so very proud to have been your teacher, and the teacher of so many others.
Rick, everything you share is rich and beyond price. Your knowledge. Your rapture and enthusiasm over music you share. The stories of your family of origin, your extended family, and your family you have at home. You share deeply, without pretense or embarrassment. You speak to us all as friends, and that is the reason this venture has the breadth and depth of following it does. You are a blessing
@@RickBeato For real. Your content has taught me so much, not even just about production and theory. It's helped guide me along the path of my musical adventure. Thank you a million times for helping me to see what it looks like to be a musician. Hope to meet you one day!
Right! If kids find passion in something, we have to support them. It could be something for life and make them happy. ...and sometimes such a kid (grown up meanwhile 😏) remembers to his story and tells it to parents and kids to support them. Besides: Before I start the day, I listen this music, because it makes me happy. It's like Pop Music 😊
Rick Beato is a true musician! He gets goosebumps from Bach's Brandenburg Concertos just as he gets a happy smile on his face from a good old 90s 4-chords-punk-song.
My cathartic moment came in 1968 when I was in the 7th grade. I was in Mr. Morris' music class at Island Trees High School in Levittown, New York. He played us Bach's Fugue in G minor and I was mesmerized. Another piece he played that moved me greatly was "Die Moldau" by Bedrich Smetana. I'm listening to it as I'm typing this comment.
Rick, you are inspirational! I started playing bass guitar at 60 years old. I am now 66. At 13 years old I had a neighborhood friend that took drum lessons and he got me behind his kit for a try. He was playing old Beatles tunes and I wished I could do that. I was so close. Fast forward several decades all the while loving music and so appreciating the talent it takes to create it. I took the plunge and bought a bass and started learning online. Progress for me is slow but steady in my retirement. I often wondered where I might be if I took the music route instead of becoming an engineering technician. My thoughts are summed up in a quote by Harry Chapin....'Half thinking what might have been, but half thinking Just as well......' I have a comfortable retirement now but I still will keep learning bass! Keep up your great work!
Apart from showcasing one of our best, if not THE best across all conceivable criteria, this also reminds us of how important good, free music education in public schools is. It's not about learning the circle of fifth, important as that undoubtedly is. It's about inspiring kids and waking their passion for something. Greetings from Germany!
This is what makes Rick "The Man" when it comes to music. This guy can go from Bach 3rd Brandenburg to Korn with equal passion and enthusiasm. From Steely Dan to Billy Joel. From Taylor Swift to Aerosmith. He has no prejudices when it comes to music. The guy is a phenom.
In the ‘60’s in Atlanta, members of the Atlanta Symphony were band directors (and orchestra conductors) in the public elementary schools. I got recruited by the bass clarinetist who was the band director at my school. Fast forward to high school, I took flute lessons from the principal flutist, and got a partial scholarship to college. My flute teacher encouraged me to pick up the cello as an add on, so I also took lessons from a cellist in the symphony. My high school band director in Cobb County had us playing Tchaikovsky and Shostakovich, Japanese music, Sousa marches, and American band classic repertoire. It was astonishing to think about all the music we were experiencing. I got a music ed degree and will never regret any of the life changing experiences music afforded me. Although I don’t play at the moment, I’ve never stopped being a musician. If you know, you know.
Rick, your LOVE of music...is shared by many, especially me. My wife and I have a 100% disabled child...but he LOVES music...and because of you, my passion for guitar playing (picking up where I left off 30 years ago) through learning from your videos has been...well...nothing short of a miracle. I thank God for men like you who sharpen us all...and give us a glimpse into the heart of the Infinite Artist. You are a joy, friend. Thank you for making our world a little more beautiful through your eyes. 🙂
I'm glad you chose the Netherlands Bach Society version of this. They are doing wonderful things with Bach. It doesn't get any better than that. And yes, many people who first really hear Bach for the first time experience revelations that change lives.
All Bach lovers owe thanks to the Netherlands Bach Society for their dedication to recording on video as many of his works as possible. It’s my go to site when I want to listen to Bach
Wat een mooie reactie :) Are you from the Netherlands? I am, and my father was a member of "Bachkoor Holland" De uitvoering van de Matthäus Passion in Delft heb ik 1x mogen meemaken omdat hij in het koor zat..
@@OneOfTheRobs no I’m not from the Netherlands but I appreciate all the effort the society has put into preserving these works and making them available on TH-cam for the entire world to hear and watch
Rick, you’re a tremendous inspiration! I’m a retired music educator and a big fan of yours. Bach’s music has transformed lives for centuries, and with good reason. It amazes me to this day that the Brandenburg Concertos were never played during Bach’s life because he had sent them as a gift to the Margrave of Brandenburg - who never opened the gift! Thank God the music was not lost forever because it is so very wonderful!
Johann Sebastian Bach: changing lives since 1685! Love this concerto, I conducted it some times a few years ago. Thank you for sharing these beautiful memories.
We didnt have a music program, but things have changed, you are the music program for those who cant afford lessons. Please continue to inspire.. your life's work will carry on for generations.
Rick, I know you don't look at these comments. But you and your channel ARE national treasures. I just hope that the world that's about to explode can keep it's part of that, which keeps humanity, worth a damn. Creative endeavors and especially for me, music. Thank you for your profound efforts to keep us holding on to those precious realities.
Rick, we are about the same age and I teach music in Decatur. I know exactly what you mean by the importance of the public library record collection, for me in Stoughton, MA. That is where I found Wes, Joe Pass, Julian Bream, Segovia. It really was life changing.
Hell, yeah, Rick! Shout out to the Public Libraries for all they offer. I have been getting into classical music and jazz lately and my local library is indispensable for exploring what I like and don't like (since I am no expert in either genre). It's a valuable resource. Use it!
Thanks Rick, great story. I cut my teeth on an Andre Segovia record my maternal grandmother gave me. I started guitar at 8 and she thought it would inspire me, which it did. His mastery of the instrument floored me. It made me knuckle down and take charge and now, 70 years later, I still think of her when I play my instrument. So sad that schools today don't see the importance of music in a child's life.
It’s not schools that don’t see the importance of music. Teachers know that students involved in music classes develop better focus, concentration, memory, and interest in the pursuit of excellence. It’s the parents and the general population who see supporting music programs with their taxes as a waste of money. They keep voting against money for schools that would fund music programs. Short sighted.
Fantastic story, short but very layered. And your statement at the end-yes, let's bow to the teachers who saw what they did and not only showed us their vision but their support-and encouragement to families, that's priceless. Thank you again for sharing.
Rick, I appreciate this story so much. The thing that set my interest in music was learning and playing a recital of Mozart's Sonata in C Major when I was a kid. The back story is that when I was around 10 years old, my parents somehow managed to gather enough money to actually buy an upright piano for me and my sister (around 1984). My parents didn't learn any instruments growing up, but they believed in a classical education of liberal arts and sciences and that included music and a lot of time on hikes exploring nature. I had a wonderful piano teacher, Mrs. Liz Dusenbery who taught me to read music very well. Shortly after the piano purchase, my dad got laid off work and we ended up living on food stamps of food programs for about a year and half. They insisted on keeping the piano and my Mrs. Dusenbery offered me free piano lessons for the entirety of the time my dad was on strike (she refused to let him pay her, even though he offered he money after each lesson). Among a handful of other songs that I was learning from Mrs. Dusenbery's classes was Mozart's Sonata in C Major. I spend the entire year and half that she was offering me those free lessons memorizing the entire Sonata and in two played that piece at the recital after working on it with her for 2 years. I never pursued a music career, in fact I'm an entomology professor. However, music is so important to me and I often share with others how important music (and having played in bands, symphony, jazz combos, and rock bands) has been in my understanding of communication, teamwork, creativity, empathy, and innovation. It's no exaggeration to say that music has made me a better scientist. I doubt that Mrs. Dusenbery had those outcomes in mind when she was teaching me how to sight read Mozart, but maybe she did.
What an absolutely wonderful story! I love how when Rick played those first few bites of the concerto, you could just see his whole spirit light up just like it did a half-century ago; the passion still burns brightly.
Rick, I’m a classical bassist and I started when I was 12 too. I played Brandenburg 3 in 9th grade and fell in love it. Like you, I always sing along with the bass line. I have always loved your videos but to know about your background as a classical bassist just makes me appreciate you more! Thank you for sharing.
Congratulations on living your passion, Rick. And from Fairport! This is a discovery each person needs, though I suspect most don't. Mine was to become a physician, now a psychiatrist, and I am grateful. I am glad you live your vocation in teaching, too. You've helped this amateur musician. Greetings from Mendon, New York!
I was born in Fairport NY too, a couple years later, but we moved to Syracuse for my pop's job. For me it was classical piano, then rock (and punk) guitar. And the piece that turned me into a musician for life was Comfortably Numb.
We really couldn't afford an instrument, but we came to America from Italy in 1951, and my dad brought along his accordian. Fast forward to me taking lessons, learning some classical, until my new teacher gives me a 13 page xerox copy of "It's A Raggy Waltz" by Brubeck. Boy did my mind open up to almost every genre of music. Keep up the good work, Rick...you , in my opinion, are doing everyone a worthy service.
Rick is the musician father figure I've never had growing up.. an absolute gem to the music community 💎 .. thank you for being one of the best music content creator.. your videos are always a treat
Rick, you never fail to amaze me. I’m 1 year older and have said to myself and my bride of 39 years, “I don’t know who I want to be when I grow up.” +24 years in the USCG rising from E1 to a Commissioned Officer, I took everything in stride not “knowing” who I wanted to be. Mad respect to you recognizing your dreams and fulfilling them. Hats off to my wife for supporting me in my indecisions. Today, 3 girls and 4 grandsons later, I have no regrets. I will continue to follow you. Please keep it going! Respectfully, D
I've been a professional guitar player for 40 years. I learned violin as a kid in the 4th grade. My teacher was Bert Skakoon. He looked like and embodied a violin teacher. He taught me to be a disciplined musician. My ear training along with my vibrato allowed me to have an incredible career as a guitar player. Early childhood development is most crucial in developing a well rounded musician.
I have a similar story when my guitar teacher showed me the bouree in e minor from the lute suites. I was blown away by its complexity and beauty. It was out my skill level but I spent the next few weeks learning and eventually memorizing the piece. That started my life long love of Bach.
Classical music is the font from which almost all modern music springs. Last week, I took my daughter and her friends, all high school musicians, to see The Piano Guys. It's delightful to see them combine popular music with classical pieces. Supporting the arts, especially school music programs, is so important.
So inspirational Rick. I’m a high school physics teacher and I love being able to make these types of connections with my students. I hope my kids look back and think of me as a help to their endeavors.
I grew up learning Classical music with violin via Suzuki method. My father was a college professor, scientist, and he played his Steinway every morning before work. I remember him saying “Shut that racket off!” whenever we played The Beatles records. Thank you for sharing your love of music and great skill at teaching. Music is a miracle, isn’t it? ❤
I'm so glad I had an expierence like this. Bach was such a profound composer. Listening to his music just unlocks something in musicians that can appreciate this level of complex composition.
Rick, this is such an amazing story. It's truly incredible that you were to get to play one of Bach's Brandenburg Concertos when you were 12 years old. Bach's Brandenburg Concertos are among the best pieces that anyone has ever written. They're pieces that everyone ought to have the chance to hear at least once in their lifetimes; and that as many people as possible who play one of the instruments featured in these works should get a chance to play. P.S. I find that it's videos such as this or others that are either putting more of yourself into them, or are highlighting incredibly amazing music and performances, that continue to make it worthwhile to be subscribed to your channel and pay attention to what videos you're putting out.
Mr. George Kramer.... Sacred Heart... grade 7.... every Friday afternoon.... one LP of classical music.... Truly a teacher who influenced and changed my life... for the better.... thank you for gracing me with new musical experiences....RIP.... you are... and always will be... remembered...
This is why I’m here. This is one of the most informative, authentic and inspirational outlets in all of media. Rick, what you do here transcends music. Thank you.
Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring was the thing that completely mesmerized me about classical music early on due to how the melody builds throughout the piece getting thicker as it it goes. I was 10 when I first performed it 1st seat, 1st alto sax.
Rick I loved this video. A BIG factor in this is whether or not your parents are supportive. If they don't support you trying something then it's really hard. My parents didn't and I had no outlet to pursue my interest in music. I wonder what my life would have been had they been willing to help me.
Mr. Beato especially in these weird times of conflicts everywhere your channel shows what is beautiful in human nature. It always gives me goosebumps when you talk about Bach because I feel the same way too. Keep on doing what you're doing it is nothing less than the most profound legacy of the art of music and humanity.
Rick - I am really glad you shared this. I had an epiphany similar to this as a lad when my 7th grade band teacher took me to a San Kenton concert (1957-ish). Basically I probably thought "I don't know what that is, but that's for me!" and that's when - to do a riff off of Ellington...music became my mistress.......
My favorite of the Brandenburg Concertos as well -- in fact, my ring tone is the bold, optimistic opening of the Allegro (first movement) of the Third Brandenburg. J. S. Bach gives life, no question -- and as a wise piano-playing buddy from my high-school days hipped me, "Bach swings like a mofo if you play him right."
@@semperfi818 your comment reminds me of Bud Powell’s Compete Blue Note Volumes. That dude loved Bach it’s obvious in his playing and he swung like mofo 😉
Rick, thank you for this fantastic story. I’m a high school orchestra director myself in my 30th year of teaching. It’s stories and testimonials, from students and former students, like yours that mean the world to a music educator such myself.
I follow Hawkeye Pierce's advice to Radar O' Reilly when someone brings up Bach in a conversation, just say "Ah Bach!. I love the Brandenburg Concertos! At Penn State my Music 101 teacher made me realize that I've been listening to and enjoying Bach my whole life without knowing it. Thank you for doing what you do! You have exposed or "re-exposed" me to music I didn't know about or haven't thought about in a long time!
Thank you for sharing! Honestly, it's these evocative, atmospheric little talks that I find the most inspiring... they remind me that we're not alone in a world of power chords and electronic noises.
Had a similar experience, as a teenager, the first time I heard Bach's 4th movement of the Italian Concerto. That opening melody line and left-hand bass counterpoint grabbed me. I had to learn it. It still delivers much joy at 69 years old.
I got into Bach just like you Rick! I also took out Brandenburg Concertos from the library as a middle schooler. It was a 2 record set in a worn out box. More than 40 years later, I still have it on vinyl and CD. A must-own for anyone even if you don't like classical music!
So fortunate to have had Mr Ken Brown there to recognize your budding talent and passion, and to lift you up into that situation. To have the Bach Brandenburg Concertos as your 'gateway drug' into the Classical music world was luck beyond measure; I'm sure there was no turning back after that summer...
As a student playing Double Bass in school, stories like this really inspire me. Music is my passion and I REALLY want to do it as a career (if possible). Thank you for being a sort of grandfather of the internet music scene Rick!
I only started learning how to play the guitar 6 weeks ago & I'm documenting my entire learning journey on here so this was super motivational! Rick bringing the best.
Part of the reason I didn't become a career violinist was because I'd have to play all the 𝘰𝘵𝘩𝘦𝘳 composers. Hearing this story of the first time ever you heard Bach, I was right there with you, stunned, transported ~ Was there also incredible joy? There was for me! Thank you for putting this out there ❣ However different we may be from each other in other ways, in this we are kindred spirits!
Yes I had that recording too - c. 1969 - my first exposure to the Brandenburgs was "synthesized!"! I just about wore that track out, playing it over and over. Hearing the actual orchestra version a few months later, I was absolutely blown away.
Bach is the best. What a great concerto to begin with - remember it from Die Hard. It’s amazing how seeds planted early in life grow into a life’s passion.
I was 5 when I heard the 'Brandenburg' Concerto no. 3 as well as other pieces by Bach on Wendy Carlos' Switched on Bach. I still like to play Bach on my synthesizers to this day... All 6 of the concertos are amongst the greatest pieces of music of all times, though I can almost say that about any 6 randomly picked pieces by Bach... Libraries and good teachers - two of the world's greatest yet most under valued resources :)
"Find what makes your heart sing, then follow your heart". This was how it was summed up to me. I don't remember who said it but it impacted me. Brandenburg Concerto is an enduring chilhood memory for me, I first heard it in 1968 on a synth album called "Switched on Bach" where the brand new Moog synth was used to do chamber orchestral stuff. Cheers Rick!
Teachers play a pivotal role in spotting talent and potential in kids. In my case, I was fortunate to grow up in a house where music, mostly jazz and folk, was pouring from the speakers in the family room constantly. My moment came when I was 14 and at a fair. The sound of an Appalachian dulcimer hit my ears, mesmerizing me. I followed the sound to a booth selling dulcimers. I bought my first dulcimer there. That was 50 years ago. There is just something about the steel strings and the drone that reaches straight into my heart. Thanks for the memory, Rick. 💜🦋
I wish I had discovered classical music as a young person. But better late than never. I sincerely feel it has improved me in ways I don't fully understand.
You're a good lad, Rick. Watching you enthuse transports me back to a time when my daydreaming friends and I would listen to and minutely dissect all kinds of music with huge excitement. We've long since scattered, with different lives and different priorities, but your videos give me a chance to revisit those moments when music was absolutely everything. Thank you.
I bet the drummers you interview could fit a very cool groove in the Brandenburg! Bach is the great organic arpeggiator. An S&H Greenstamps electric guitar ruined my sports career. In Hiigh school, I pitched with Larry Andersen, who went on to pitch in the majors, and appeared in World Series games. But I'm happiest when making music.
I grew up with that piece, glorious, my mum was a violinist and classical music was everything in my house 😍 Lying in bed as a child waking up to it. Wonderful story, Rick 😊
First I need to say "YES" . I envy the support you received for YOUR passion. I want to share something you may have experienced. In the home of a classmate in grammar school, I saw a guitar his uncle left in the house . Never having held a guitar I asked to pick it up. Granted. One strum across the strings and I thought I had been hit by lightning . I was both stunned and felt unworthy of daring to bring into the world that gorgeous sound. Affected for life. Jo-Jo
Bach is a musical freak. How such complex and beautiful music flowed out of his mind into his hands and instrument and onto paper is my mind boggling and beyond comprehension. A true musical anomaly.
Chills indeed. Yup, it'll do that to you. Some may think I'm a sort of heathen for mentioning Walter (Wendy) Carlos' "Switched On Bach" but that really was a triumph and a "mind-blown" moment for me in my musical journey when I "borrowed" the LP from my Dad. Of course, Wendy just happened to choose the most amazing piece of music to start with. I was fortunate enough to have a musical upbringing, parents who encouraged it and a local music service to provide instruments. Thankyou Rick for reminding me how fortunate I've been.
I believe that Bach would have approved of Walter/Wendy's work. In fact I believe that if Bach had access to that equipment in his day he would have used it himself. Unfortunately the owners of that performance have done a very thorough job of keeping it off TH-cam and any other free sources. There are many recreations/tributes to the work of Carlos but none of them sound as rich, deep and incredible as the original 1968 album. Don't be fooled as they are getting clicks from her name but playing their own midi versions. Good news to lovers of this work. On her official web page the original multi-track masters have been remixed into a surround sound re-release. He/She was experimenting with 4 track surround sound in 1968 so these are taken from those masters. If anyone reading this has never heard "Switched On Bach" look for it. You will not be disappointed. The original album will be by Walter Carlos. The CD of the same album will be titled by Wendy Carlos. She transitioned between releases but it is the same performance.
when music hits you so profoundly at an early age and some times later, it really stays with you. I,m no way half as experienced as you Rick ,but it hit me the same way when I was fifteen, and I always loved music as a small child anyhow. Now i'm fifty five and my love and passion for it have grown even stronger. That shows you how much of a powerful and spiritual impact it can have when you learn to play an instrument or sing which is the same thing ,from early age . Ive never made much money from it but thats not the point. The pleasure I get from it and seeing what other people get from it is incomparable. All the those that rely on a computer to do all the work for them ,are missing out on something that is ,yes hard work but so fulfilling when you learn your first notes or song or piece. Your enthusiasm is inspirational. Thanks for everything you do Rick.
Great share, Rick! Music moves me in ways that other art forms do not. I remember an accordionist would come in to my kindergarten class and play slow, sleepy music. In first-fourth grade, the nuns would allow my class and I to sit in the pews while the organist practiced. I learned that music can alter my mood by 4th grade, and soon after I was making my own music; my dad had a guitar, and he let me play it. I have never needed substances to alter my mood. Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Scott Joplin, John Coltrane, Miles Davis, the Beatles, ELP, Jethro Tull, Rush, and R.E.M. do a fine job of altering my mood as I desire.
I am learning so much about the genius of Bach after watching your channel as well as Alan Mearns. You two guys are filling in my music educational gaps with all that you have done for us. Thank you to both of you for completely slaying each day. You add so much value to our lives. Cheers! ✌🏽
This will undoubtably be one of your most important and impacting videos. It’s all about where you came from and your nod to classical music will go a long way due to your platform. Well done!
Wonderful video, Rick, and I heartily concur. I fell in love with music at a ridiculously early age and loved orchestral music in particular. I started learning guitar on my 7th birthday (an old Kay acoustic with transatlantic cables for strings, the action so high you could walk under the strings). And quite early on I began to transcribe cats like Hendrix, Beatles, even some 'easier' Coltrane. But the magic really happened when I was about 12 and heard the 3rd Brandenburg for the first time, as well as the 2nd harpsichord concerto in E major. I was completely gobsmacked. That eventually led to my studying conducting (while playing lots of guitar), having realised I needed to be doing this music thing for the rest of my life. I do also agree that the most important thing we can do for young people is teach them how to think, and expose them to the finest things humans are capable of (e.g. Bach), so they can find their passion and be the best people they can be. Most everything else is just diversion. Cheers!
I listen to all the same music you do, love the channel. Bburg 3 had me fired up to play cello at the same age you did. Now I teach the piece to students that age. Keep up the great work sharing your perspective and expertise.
Rick, I get it. I was in 3rd grade. A music teacher played Mozarts K622, Clarinet concerto in A major. I was hooked. Told my mom I wanted to play clarinet. By 6th grade was playing clarinet and sax, by 9th had added flute and double reeds. To this day 50 Years later when I'm stressed I break out my library of the masters and listen to remember how they altered my life
Oh, wow! K622, especially the Adagio section, is my favorite piece of classical music, too. To this day it brings tears to my eyes and this is coming from a guy who is a Hendrix disciple.
Do you listen or do you play while listening. I feel one of the greatest loses most people have in life is the silence of our instruments when we finish school. Your never too old to play again or learn a new instrument. Do it.
I had my magical moment while listening to Glenn Gould's rendition of The Well Tempered Clavier, following the score. When i turned the last page, i just couldn't say a word.
The Brandenburg Concertos are some of my favorite music. Especially No. 4 in G -- II. Andante. Timeless inspiration! Thanks for what you do for music Rick!
Bach is truly special. I've been playing piano for 15 years but hardly take the instrument seriously anymore. Still, I always come back to playing my Bach Partitas because there's joy in every note written on the page, and they never fail to give me joy while playing.
Great Rick. When my 3 kids were very small, in fact from a really early age, they were woken up on Sundays to Vivaldi's L'Estro Armonico, coinciding with me starting to make the pancakes. On hearing the music, the response from the kids became Pavlovian and before long Vivaldi, the Brandenburgs and others of this genre became known as Pankie Music. Now they haven't reached the musical heights that you have, although the youngest still aspires to be good, but they all have an great appreciation of music in all its forms. So I echo your closing comments addressed to parents.
Hey, Rick, I’m Ken Brown’s older daughter! I’m a studio violinist in Nashville now :) Thank you so much for your shoutouts to my dad and Fairport! Means so much coming from you!
🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻 your dad was the best teacher!
@@RickBeato hearing the piano, I could totally see you doing a breakdown video of the stranglers "Golden Brown"
Bless your dad Rachel. You can measure the impact he had with higher profile musical spawns like Rick but I’m willing to bet money that his collective impact was far greater. I go on a Bach binge twice a year fro about a week, minimum. I don’t know why aside from the fact that I love him but I think it’s me going back to the source to find an original approach to expressing myself musically. Every good wish to you and the family.
@@RickBeato Can you do a breakdown and comparison on the two pipe organ masterpieces from Bach & Boston , ”Toccata and Fuegue” and how it inspired and influenced “Foreplay (/Long Time)”?
Please and Thank You!
"Music is an agreeable harmony for the honor of God and the permissible delights of the soul. I play the notes as they are written, but it is God who makes the music. The final aim and reason of all music is nothing other than the glorification of God and the refreshment of the spirit" - Bach
What a lovely tribute to not only JS Bach, but also music teacher and public libraries.
Truly an amazing story. You may never see this comment, but I am Ken Brown’s son (I played in that same chamber orchestra at Minerva growing up) and he just sent me this video. I always considered my father to be an amazing person and I count myself fortunate to be his son. Your story was very touching to listen to, and makes me even more proud to know him as my dad.
I am glad your father say this!
Well many many of Rick’s fans would surely give your father a standing ovation….express our gratitude and give him a big hug 👏👏👏🥂
Wow, i really hope @RickBeato gets to see your comment here!
I meant saw not say. Your father is a great teacher!
Rick should feature him on the channel as a guest sometime. I’d love to hear a child’s music teachers’ taste in music.
Bach = Greatest musician of all time. Change my mind.
There is something so authentic about Rick. He bares his soul, and it's refreshing.
🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
Rick, thank you for this incredible tribute to my father in law, Ken Brown. He is so very proud to have been your teacher, and the teacher of so many others.
Please say hello to him for me!
How wonderful! I was going to leave a comment asking if Rick knew whether Mr. Brown was still alive. A pivotal educator needs to hear his kudos.
@@1957DLT he is alive and thriving!
Wow how wonderful
@@RickBeato- it would be so beautifully apposite if you were to be able to interview him for your channel!!
Rick, everything you share is rich and beyond price. Your knowledge. Your rapture and enthusiasm over music you share. The stories of your family of origin, your extended family, and your family you have at home. You share deeply, without pretense or embarrassment. You speak to us all as friends, and that is the reason this venture has the breadth and depth of following it does. You are a blessing
Thank you 🙏🏻 for the very kind words.
@@RickBeato For real. Your content has taught me so much, not even just about production and theory. It's helped guide me along the path of my musical adventure. Thank you a million times for helping me to see what it looks like to be a musician. Hope to meet you one day!
Right! If kids find passion in something, we have to support them. It could be something for life and make them happy. ...and sometimes such a kid (grown up meanwhile 😏) remembers to his story and tells it to parents and kids to support them.
Besides: Before I start the day, I listen this music, because it makes me happy. It's like Pop Music 😊
What a great comment about Rick and his channel. So true.
Rick Beato is a true musician! He gets goosebumps from Bach's Brandenburg Concertos just as he gets a happy smile on his face from a good old 90s 4-chords-punk-song.
Tears in my eyes watching this - the music of Bach touches my soul.
The torch has been passed. Rick Beato will be the one that inspires young people to pursue music
My cathartic moment came in 1968 when I was in the 7th grade. I was in Mr. Morris' music class at Island Trees High School in Levittown, New York. He played us Bach's Fugue in G minor and I was mesmerized. Another piece he played that moved me greatly was "Die Moldau" by Bedrich Smetana. I'm listening to it as I'm typing this comment.
Rick, you are inspirational! I started playing bass guitar at 60 years old. I am now 66. At 13 years old I had a neighborhood friend that took drum lessons and he got me behind his kit for a try. He was playing old Beatles tunes and I wished I could do that. I was so close. Fast forward several decades all the while loving music and so appreciating the talent it takes to create it. I took the plunge and bought a bass and started learning online. Progress for me is slow but steady in my retirement. I often wondered where I might be if I took the music route instead of becoming an engineering technician. My thoughts are summed up in a quote by Harry Chapin....'Half thinking what might have been, but half thinking Just as well......' I have a comfortable retirement now but I still will keep learning bass! Keep up your great work!
I admire you my friend! Keep it up. Lol, I was gonna learn to fly, but never made the time.
Apart from showcasing one of our best, if not THE best across all conceivable criteria, this also reminds us of how important good, free music education in public schools is. It's not about learning the circle of fifth, important as that undoubtedly is. It's about inspiring kids and waking their passion for something.
Greetings from Germany!
This is what makes Rick "The Man" when it comes to music. This guy can go from Bach 3rd Brandenburg to Korn with equal passion and enthusiasm. From Steely Dan to Billy Joel. From Taylor Swift to Aerosmith. He has no prejudices when it comes to music. The guy is a phenom.
Hear hear, valuedhuman!
Agreed!
I have way less knowledge and skill making music but I’m the exact same way.
Same here - the genre is not the thing - it is whether the music is Good and that it reaches the Soul.
I’ve been like that since I was a child. Music is music is music
In the ‘60’s in Atlanta, members of the Atlanta Symphony were band directors (and orchestra conductors) in the public elementary schools. I got recruited by the bass clarinetist who was the band director at my school. Fast forward to high school, I took flute lessons from the principal flutist, and got a partial scholarship to college. My flute teacher encouraged me to pick up the cello as an add on, so I also took lessons from a cellist in the symphony. My high school band director in Cobb County had us playing Tchaikovsky and Shostakovich, Japanese music, Sousa marches, and American band classic repertoire. It was astonishing to think about all the music we were experiencing. I got a music ed degree and will never regret any of the life changing experiences music afforded me. Although I don’t play at the moment, I’ve never stopped being a musician. If you know, you know.
Rick, your LOVE of music...is shared by many, especially me. My wife and I have a 100% disabled child...but he LOVES music...and because of you, my passion for guitar playing (picking up where I left off 30 years ago) through learning from your videos has been...well...nothing short of a miracle. I thank God for men like you who sharpen us all...and give us a glimpse into the heart of the Infinite Artist. You are a joy, friend. Thank you for making our world a little more beautiful through your eyes. 🙂
I'm glad you chose the Netherlands Bach Society version of this. They are doing wonderful things with Bach. It doesn't get any better than that. And yes, many people who first really hear Bach for the first time experience revelations that change lives.
All Bach lovers owe thanks to the Netherlands Bach Society for their dedication to recording on video as many of his works as possible. It’s my go to site when I want to listen to Bach
Wat een mooie reactie :) Are you from the Netherlands? I am, and my father was a member of "Bachkoor Holland" De uitvoering van de Matthäus Passion in Delft heb ik 1x mogen meemaken omdat hij in het koor zat..
@@OneOfTheRobs no I’m not from the Netherlands but I appreciate all the effort the society has put into preserving these works and making them available on TH-cam for the entire world to hear and watch
Let’s not forget our Swiss friends at the Bach Stiftung. I also listen to them endlessly. They also do a great job!
Rick, you’re a tremendous inspiration! I’m a retired music educator and a big fan of yours. Bach’s music has transformed lives for centuries, and with good reason. It amazes me to this day that the Brandenburg Concertos were never played during Bach’s life because he had sent them as a gift to the Margrave of Brandenburg - who never opened the gift! Thank God the music was not lost forever because it is so very wonderful!
Johann Sebastian Bach: changing lives since 1685! Love this concerto, I conducted it some times a few years ago. Thank you for sharing these beautiful memories.
Music is magic. Where would we be without it? 🎶
Not just a fantastic musician, but what an incredible educator Rick is… Hats off!!
We didnt have a music program, but things have changed, you are the music program for those who cant afford lessons. Please continue to inspire.. your life's work will carry on for generations.
Rick, I know you don't look at these comments. But you and your channel ARE national treasures. I just hope that the world that's about to explode can keep it's part of that, which keeps humanity, worth a damn. Creative endeavors and especially for me, music. Thank you for your profound efforts to keep us holding on to those precious realities.
Spotting you for the bass positions was an example of what exceptional teachers can do.
Rick, we are about the same age and I teach music in Decatur. I know exactly what you mean by the importance of the public library record collection, for me in Stoughton, MA. That is where I found Wes, Joe Pass, Julian Bream, Segovia. It really was life changing.
Hell, yeah, Rick!
Shout out to the Public Libraries for all they offer.
I have been getting into classical music and jazz lately and my local library is indispensable for exploring what I like and don't like (since I am no expert in either genre).
It's a valuable resource.
Use it!
Thanks Rick, great story. I cut my teeth on an Andre Segovia record my maternal grandmother gave me. I started guitar at 8 and she thought it would inspire me, which it did. His mastery of the instrument floored me. It made me knuckle down and take charge and now, 70 years later, I still think of her when I play my instrument. So sad that schools today don't see the importance of music in a child's life.
It’s not schools that don’t see the importance of music. Teachers know that students involved in music classes develop better focus, concentration, memory, and interest in the pursuit of excellence. It’s the parents and the general population who see supporting music programs with their taxes as a waste of money. They keep voting against money for schools that would fund music programs. Short sighted.
Fantastic story, short but very layered. And your statement at the end-yes, let's bow to the teachers who saw what they did and not only showed us their vision but their support-and encouragement to families, that's priceless. Thank you again for sharing.
Rick, I appreciate this story so much. The thing that set my interest in music was learning and playing a recital of Mozart's Sonata in C Major when I was a kid. The back story is that when I was around 10 years old, my parents somehow managed to gather enough money to actually buy an upright piano for me and my sister (around 1984). My parents didn't learn any instruments growing up, but they believed in a classical education of liberal arts and sciences and that included music and a lot of time on hikes exploring nature. I had a wonderful piano teacher, Mrs. Liz Dusenbery who taught me to read music very well. Shortly after the piano purchase, my dad got laid off work and we ended up living on food stamps of food programs for about a year and half. They insisted on keeping the piano and my Mrs. Dusenbery offered me free piano lessons for the entirety of the time my dad was on strike (she refused to let him pay her, even though he offered he money after each lesson). Among a handful of other songs that I was learning from Mrs. Dusenbery's classes was Mozart's Sonata in C Major. I spend the entire year and half that she was offering me those free lessons memorizing the entire Sonata and in two played that piece at the recital after working on it with her for 2 years. I never pursued a music career, in fact I'm an entomology professor. However, music is so important to me and I often share with others how important music (and having played in bands, symphony, jazz combos, and rock bands) has been in my understanding of communication, teamwork, creativity, empathy, and innovation. It's no exaggeration to say that music has made me a better scientist. I doubt that Mrs. Dusenbery had those outcomes in mind when she was teaching me how to sight read Mozart, but maybe she did.
What an absolutely wonderful story! I love how when Rick played those first few bites of the concerto, you could just see his whole spirit light up just like it did a half-century ago; the passion still burns brightly.
Rick, I’m a classical bassist and I started when I was 12 too. I played Brandenburg 3 in 9th grade and fell in love it. Like you, I always sing along with the bass line. I have always loved your videos but to know about your background as a classical bassist just makes me appreciate you more! Thank you for sharing.
Congratulations on living your passion, Rick. And from Fairport!
This is a discovery each person needs, though I suspect most don't. Mine was to become a physician, now a psychiatrist, and I am grateful.
I am glad you live your vocation in teaching, too. You've helped this amateur musician. Greetings from Mendon, New York!
Hi from Victor 👋
I was born in Fairport NY too, a couple years later, but we moved to Syracuse for my pop's job. For me it was classical piano, then rock (and punk) guitar. And the piece that turned me into a musician for life was Comfortably Numb.
We really couldn't afford an instrument, but we came to America from Italy in 1951, and my dad brought along his accordian. Fast forward to me taking lessons, learning some classical, until my new teacher gives me a 13 page xerox copy of "It's A Raggy Waltz" by Brubeck. Boy did my mind open up to almost every genre of music. Keep up the good work, Rick...you , in my opinion, are doing everyone a worthy service.
Rick is the musician father figure I've never had growing up.. an absolute gem to the music community 💎 .. thank you for being one of the best music content creator.. your videos are always a treat
Rick, you never fail to amaze me. I’m 1 year older and have said to myself and my bride of 39 years, “I don’t know who I want to be when I grow up.” +24 years in the USCG rising from E1 to a Commissioned Officer, I took everything in stride not “knowing” who I wanted to be. Mad respect to you recognizing your dreams and fulfilling them. Hats off to my wife for supporting me in my indecisions. Today, 3 girls and 4 grandsons later, I have no regrets. I will continue to follow you. Please keep it going!
Respectfully,
D
49 years, and the fingerings never went away. It's so cool watching the sparkle in your eyes when you are going along with the music.
Bach was pure musical genius. Many of us got hooked through Bach
I've been a professional guitar player for 40 years. I learned violin as a kid in the 4th grade. My teacher was Bert Skakoon. He looked like and embodied a violin teacher. He taught me to be a disciplined musician. My ear training along with my vibrato allowed me to have an incredible career as a guitar player. Early childhood development is most crucial in developing a well rounded musician.
I have a similar story when my guitar teacher showed me the bouree in e minor from the lute suites. I was blown away by its complexity and beauty. It was out my skill level but I spent the next few weeks learning and eventually memorizing the piece. That started my life long love of Bach.
Classical music is the font from which almost all modern music springs. Last week, I took my daughter and her friends, all high school musicians, to see The Piano Guys. It's delightful to see them combine popular music with classical pieces. Supporting the arts, especially school music programs, is so important.
So inspirational Rick. I’m a high school physics teacher and I love being able to make these types of connections with my students. I hope my kids look back and think of me as a help to their endeavors.
I grew up learning Classical music with violin via Suzuki method. My father was a college professor, scientist, and he played his Steinway every morning before work. I remember him saying “Shut that racket off!” whenever we played The Beatles records. Thank you for sharing your love of music and great skill at teaching. Music is a miracle, isn’t it? ❤
i luv this guy. he needs to get on tv and preach about music. 800 stations and not one dedicated to music or music news.
It’s fine and fantastic as is that Rick is available free to anyone with a phone that gets internet!
I'm so glad I had an expierence like this. Bach was such a profound composer. Listening to his music just unlocks something in musicians that can appreciate this level of complex composition.
Rick, this is such an amazing story. It's truly incredible that you were to get to play one of Bach's Brandenburg Concertos when you were 12 years old. Bach's Brandenburg Concertos are among the best pieces that anyone has ever written. They're pieces that everyone ought to have the chance to hear at least once in their lifetimes; and that as many people as possible who play one of the instruments featured in these works should get a chance to play.
P.S. I find that it's videos such as this or others that are either putting more of yourself into them, or are highlighting incredibly amazing music and performances, that continue to make it worthwhile to be subscribed to your channel and pay attention to what videos you're putting out.
Mr. George Kramer.... Sacred Heart... grade 7.... every Friday afternoon.... one LP of classical music....
Truly a teacher who influenced and changed my life... for the better.... thank you for gracing me with new musical experiences....RIP.... you are... and always will be... remembered...
There’s so many musical geniuses. But Bach is from another planet.
No he was German.
@@blakesorenson8766ah yes - Bach, Beethoven, and Bruno Mars.
People look up to musical geniuses. Musical geniuses look up to Bach.
Another planet, that’s funny!
@@eyvithorgeirsson6028well said
This is why I’m here. This is one of the most informative, authentic and inspirational outlets in all of media. Rick, what you do here transcends music. Thank you.
I am a public library librarian, adore Rick and worship J.S. Bach.
Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring was the thing that completely mesmerized me about classical music early on due to how the melody builds throughout the piece getting thicker as it it goes. I was 10 when I first performed it 1st seat, 1st alto sax.
Rick I loved this video. A BIG factor in this is whether or not your parents are supportive. If they don't support you trying something then it's really hard. My parents didn't and I had no outlet to pursue my interest in music. I wonder what my life would have been had they been willing to help me.
Mr. Beato especially in these weird times of conflicts everywhere your channel shows what is beautiful in human nature. It always gives me goosebumps when you talk about Bach because I feel the same way too. Keep on doing what you're doing it is nothing less than the most profound legacy of the art of music and humanity.
Rick - I am really glad you shared this. I had an epiphany similar to this as a lad when my 7th grade band teacher took me to a San Kenton concert (1957-ish). Basically I probably thought "I don't know what that is, but that's for me!" and that's when - to do a riff off of Ellington...music became my mistress.......
J.S. Bach is incredible. Truly a master of composition. He put his heart into his pieces
Oh this is far and away my favorite concerto. So, so powerful. I get chills every single time.
My favorite of the Brandenburg Concertos as well -- in fact, my ring tone is the bold, optimistic opening of the Allegro (first movement) of the Third Brandenburg.
J. S. Bach gives life, no question -- and as a wise piano-playing buddy from my high-school days hipped me, "Bach swings like a mofo if you play him right."
On my local classical radio station, WMHT-FM, an overnight dj simply called Bach the greatest keyboard player ever.
No arguments.
@@semperfi818 your comment reminds me of Bud Powell’s Compete Blue Note Volumes. That dude loved Bach it’s obvious in his playing and he swung like mofo 😉
Rick, thank you for this fantastic story. I’m a high school orchestra director myself in my 30th year of teaching. It’s stories and testimonials, from students and former students, like yours that mean the world to a music educator such myself.
Rick Beato is music teacher to the world
I follow Hawkeye Pierce's advice to Radar O' Reilly when someone brings up Bach in a conversation, just say "Ah Bach!. I love the Brandenburg Concertos! At Penn State my Music 101 teacher made me realize that I've been listening to and enjoying Bach my whole life without knowing it. Thank you for doing what you do! You have exposed or "re-exposed" me to music I didn't know about or haven't thought about in a long time!
Thank you for sharing! Honestly, it's these evocative, atmospheric little talks that I find the most inspiring... they remind me that we're not alone in a world of power chords and electronic noises.
Had a similar experience, as a teenager, the first time I heard Bach's 4th movement of the Italian Concerto. That opening melody line and left-hand bass counterpoint grabbed me. I had to learn it. It still delivers much joy at 69 years old.
Brandenburg conciertos are amazing. No. 5 with the harpsichord solo is amaaaaazing.
I got into Bach just like you Rick! I also took out Brandenburg Concertos from the library as a middle schooler. It was a 2 record set in a worn out box. More than 40 years later, I still have it on vinyl and CD. A must-own for anyone even if you don't like classical music!
So fortunate to have had Mr Ken Brown there to recognize your budding talent and passion, and to lift you up into that situation. To have the Bach Brandenburg Concertos as your 'gateway drug' into the Classical music world was luck beyond measure; I'm sure there was no turning back after that summer...
As a student playing Double Bass in school, stories like this really inspire me. Music is my passion and I REALLY want to do it as a career (if possible). Thank you for being a sort of grandfather of the internet music scene Rick!
The amazing thing about Bach’s music is that it sound amazing on any instrument. Even a ringtone.
Brandenburg #3, 1st movement is my ringtone.
As a proud phone soloist in the Ringtone Symphony Orchestra, I forbid you all to look condescendly at us ringtone players.
I only started learning how to play the guitar 6 weeks ago & I'm documenting my entire learning journey on here so this was super motivational! Rick bringing the best.
Part of the reason I didn't become a career violinist was because I'd have to play all the 𝘰𝘵𝘩𝘦𝘳 composers. Hearing this story of the first time ever you heard Bach, I was right there with you, stunned, transported ~ Was there also incredible joy? There was for me! Thank you for putting this out there ❣ However different we may be from each other in other ways, in this we are kindred spirits!
Fantastic! By the say, Listening to Bach's Brandenburg Concerto no. 3 was my musical awakening too, but by Wendy Carlos on Switched-on-Bach
Yes I had that recording too - c. 1969 - my first exposure to the Brandenburgs was "synthesized!"! I just about wore that track out, playing it over and over. Hearing the actual orchestra version a few months later, I was absolutely blown away.
Bach is the best. What a great concerto to begin with - remember it from Die Hard. It’s amazing how seeds planted early in life grow into a life’s passion.
I was 5 when I heard the 'Brandenburg' Concerto no. 3 as well as other pieces by Bach on Wendy Carlos' Switched on Bach. I still like to play Bach on my synthesizers to this day... All 6 of the concertos are amongst the greatest pieces of music of all times, though I can almost say that about any 6 randomly picked pieces by Bach...
Libraries and good teachers - two of the world's greatest yet most under valued resources :)
"Find what makes your heart sing, then follow your heart". This was how it was summed up to me. I don't remember who said it but it impacted me. Brandenburg Concerto is an enduring chilhood memory for me, I first heard it in 1968 on a synth album called "Switched on Bach" where the brand new Moog synth was used to do chamber orchestral stuff. Cheers Rick!
Thank goodness for public libraries and public tv! I was exposed to so many wonderful pieces in the station id segments between shows
Rick, Thank you for the support of public school music educators. Great to hear about the the Fairport library and your teacher Ken.
Teachers play a pivotal role in spotting talent and potential in kids.
In my case, I was fortunate to grow up in a house where music, mostly jazz and folk, was pouring from the speakers in the family room constantly. My moment came when I was 14 and at a fair. The sound of an Appalachian dulcimer hit my ears, mesmerizing me. I followed the sound to a booth selling dulcimers. I bought my first dulcimer there. That was 50 years ago. There is just something about the steel strings and the drone that reaches straight into my heart. Thanks for the memory, Rick. 💜🦋
I wish I had discovered classical music as a young person. But better late than never. I sincerely feel it has improved me in ways I don't fully understand.
You're a good lad, Rick. Watching you enthuse transports me back to a time when my daydreaming friends and I would listen to and minutely dissect all kinds of music with huge excitement. We've long since scattered, with different lives and different priorities, but your videos give me a chance to revisit those moments when music was absolutely everything. Thank you.
I bet the drummers you interview could fit a very cool groove in the Brandenburg! Bach is the great organic arpeggiator. An S&H Greenstamps electric guitar ruined my sports career. In Hiigh school, I pitched with Larry Andersen, who went on to pitch in the majors, and appeared in World Series games. But I'm happiest when making music.
I grew up with that piece, glorious, my mum was a violinist and classical music was everything in my house 😍 Lying in bed as a child waking up to it. Wonderful story, Rick 😊
Love that piece also......doesn't it have a "sea shanty" feel?
First I need to say "YES" . I envy the support you received for YOUR passion.
I want to share something you may have experienced.
In the home of a classmate in grammar school, I saw a guitar his uncle left in the house . Never having held a guitar I asked to pick it up. Granted. One strum across the strings and I thought I had been hit by lightning . I was both stunned and felt unworthy of daring to bring into the world that gorgeous sound. Affected for life.
Jo-Jo
Bach is a musical freak. How such complex and beautiful music flowed out of his mind into his hands and instrument and onto paper is my mind boggling and beyond comprehension. A true musical anomaly.
Chills indeed. Yup, it'll do that to you. Some may think I'm a sort of heathen for mentioning Walter (Wendy) Carlos' "Switched On Bach" but that really was a triumph and a "mind-blown" moment for me in my musical journey when I "borrowed" the LP from my Dad. Of course, Wendy just happened to choose the most amazing piece of music to start with. I was fortunate enough to have a musical upbringing, parents who encouraged it and a local music service to provide instruments. Thankyou Rick for reminding me how fortunate I've been.
I believe that Bach would have approved of Walter/Wendy's work. In fact I believe that if Bach had access to that equipment in his day he would have used it himself. Unfortunately the owners of that performance have done a very thorough job of keeping it off TH-cam and any other free sources. There are many recreations/tributes to the work of Carlos but none of them sound as rich, deep and incredible as the original 1968 album. Don't be fooled as they are getting clicks from her name but playing their own midi versions. Good news to lovers of this work. On her official web page the original multi-track masters have been remixed into a surround sound re-release. He/She was experimenting with 4 track surround sound in 1968 so these are taken from those masters. If anyone reading this has never heard "Switched On Bach" look for it. You will not be disappointed. The original album will be by Walter Carlos. The CD of the same album will be titled by Wendy Carlos. She transitioned between releases but it is the same performance.
when music hits you so profoundly at an early age and some times later, it really stays with you. I,m no way half as experienced as you Rick ,but it hit me the same way when I was fifteen, and I always loved music as a small child anyhow. Now i'm fifty five and my love and passion for it have grown even stronger. That shows you how much of a powerful and spiritual impact it can have when you learn to play an instrument or sing which is the same thing ,from early age . Ive never made much money from it but thats not the point. The pleasure I get from it and seeing what other people get from it is incomparable. All the those that rely on a computer to do all the work for them ,are missing out on something that is ,yes hard work but so fulfilling when you learn your first notes or song or piece. Your enthusiasm is inspirational. Thanks for everything you do Rick.
Great share, Rick! Music moves me in ways that other art forms do not. I remember an accordionist would come in to my kindergarten class and play slow, sleepy music. In first-fourth grade, the nuns would allow my class and I to sit in the pews while the organist practiced. I learned that music can alter my mood by 4th grade, and soon after I was making my own music; my dad had a guitar, and he let me play it. I have never needed substances to alter my mood. Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Scott Joplin, John Coltrane, Miles Davis, the Beatles, ELP, Jethro Tull, Rush, and R.E.M. do a fine job of altering my mood as I desire.
great story....as told by the internet's best musical guru....gotta love Rick
I am learning so much about the genius of Bach after watching your channel as well as Alan Mearns. You two guys are filling in my music educational gaps with all that you have done for us. Thank you to both of you for completely slaying each day. You add so much value to our lives. Cheers! ✌🏽
This will undoubtably be one of your most important and impacting videos. It’s all about where you came from and your nod to classical music will go a long way due to your platform. Well done!
Beautiful tribute on so many levels and you Sir continue to inspire us all. Bravo
Got introduced to the Brandenburg Concerto III via Carlos' Switched On Bach around 8th grade 1971 or so.
I was hooked!
I love the cello and love Bach. Wished I had the exposure to music education that you had growing up.
Wonderful video, Rick, and I heartily concur. I fell in love with music at a ridiculously early age and loved orchestral music in particular. I started learning guitar on my 7th birthday (an old Kay acoustic with transatlantic cables for strings, the action so high you could walk under the strings). And quite early on I began to transcribe cats like Hendrix, Beatles, even some 'easier' Coltrane. But the magic really happened when I was about 12 and heard the 3rd Brandenburg for the first time, as well as the 2nd harpsichord concerto in E major. I was completely gobsmacked. That eventually led to my studying conducting (while playing lots of guitar), having realised I needed to be doing this music thing for the rest of my life. I do also agree that the most important thing we can do for young people is teach them how to think, and expose them to the finest things humans are capable of (e.g. Bach), so they can find their passion and be the best people they can be. Most everything else is just diversion. Cheers!
I listen to all the same music you do, love the channel. Bburg 3 had me fired up to play cello at the same age you did. Now I teach the piece to students that age. Keep up the great work sharing your perspective and expertise.
I was the only trumpet player in junior band. I know exactly where you’re coming from. I loved it because I knew my parts.
Rick, I get it. I was in 3rd grade. A music teacher played Mozarts K622, Clarinet concerto in A major. I was hooked. Told my mom I wanted to play clarinet. By 6th grade was playing clarinet and sax, by 9th had added flute and double reeds. To this day 50 Years later when I'm stressed I break out my library of the masters and listen to remember how they altered my life
Oh, wow! K622, especially the Adagio section, is my favorite piece of classical music, too. To this day it brings tears to my eyes and this is coming from a guy who is a Hendrix disciple.
Clarinet was Mozart's favorite instrument
Do you listen or do you play while listening. I feel one of the greatest loses most people have in life is the silence of our instruments when we finish school. Your never too old to play again or learn a new instrument. Do it.
I had my magical moment while listening to Glenn Gould's rendition of The Well Tempered Clavier, following the score. When i turned the last page, i just couldn't say a word.
The Brandenburg Concertos are some of my favorite music. Especially No. 4 in G -- II. Andante. Timeless inspiration! Thanks for what you do for music Rick!
Bach is truly special. I've been playing piano for 15 years but hardly take the instrument seriously anymore. Still, I always come back to playing my Bach Partitas because there's joy in every note written on the page, and they never fail to give me joy while playing.
Great Rick. When my 3 kids were very small, in fact from a really early age, they were woken up on Sundays to Vivaldi's L'Estro Armonico, coinciding with me starting to make the pancakes. On hearing the music, the response from the kids became Pavlovian and before long Vivaldi, the Brandenburgs and others of this genre became known as Pankie Music. Now they haven't reached the musical heights that you have, although the youngest still aspires to be good, but they all have an great appreciation of music in all its forms. So I echo your closing comments addressed to parents.
I fell in love with music in the womb. The rythm of the heart... it's universal.😊