I was five or six years old when I first heard this piece on television. It was the theme song from "The Onedin Line“. The music uplifted me and I was moved to tears. I had never heard anything like this before. I was falling in love. But I didn't know the name of the piece or the composer. I only knew: it’s this song from that „TV series with the sailing ships.“ For years I searched for the song, asked my grandparents, parents, aunts and uncles. Nobody knew it. There was no internet and no google to ask back then. Years went by. When I was 30 years old, I was in Speyer, Germany. All of a sudden I heard some music from a distance. There was a violinist at the cathedral. And he played that piece! I could not believe what I was hearing. I rushed towards the violinist. Talked to him. He told me the name of the piece and the composer. And played it again. Just for me. I felt like I had finally met the love of my life again - after losing her. And I could finally take her in my arms. After years of separation. And this is exactly what Spartacus & Phrygia is about. With one exception: i didn’t die.
Thank you for your wonderful narrative. Just like you, I first heard the deeply touching melody in the English vessel series "The Onedin Line" in the 1980s and did not know which composer wrote this wonderful piece. It was only a few years later, by chance, that I bought a cassette of works by Khatchaturian and recognized the lyrical and dramatic Adagio of Spartacus and Phrygia. It is one of my favorite pieces by Khatcharturian, whom I love very much for his Caucasian and exuberant color. I also played a few easier piano pieces by Khatchaturian, who is technically very demanding, of course not really manageable for an amateur piano player.
Bonjour, j'ai exactement connu la même anecdote, le générique de fin de ce feuilleton qui se passait sur un magnifique trois mats le "Charlotte Ross", moi non plus je ne savais pas qui avait composé ce déchirant adagio ! Je l'ai découvert plus de trente ans après en écoutant par hasard une station de radio qui passe du classique : France Musique ! Cela a été une révélation ! Je pleure comme une madeleine en l'écoutant... C'est juste sublime.
How beautifully written, out of a beautiful emotional world. I have heard the piece for the first time in the same series, 'Onedin line' a long time ago, and just like you, love the piece to this day.
The feeling when listening to the Adagio is that A. katchaturian had either been snatched up to Heaven for a few moments, or that an angel inspired him.
EXACTLY! They're all heartless abject wretches, the scum of the earth and a stain upon the heavently firmament and choirs of archangels and seraphim......GodBless......from Acapulco.
It’s definitely up there. I also think the last 2.5 minutes of Rachmaninov’s Third piano concerto and the first minute or two of his Second symphony Adagio movement are just beautiful.
@@paulsalter4949 I used to watch that when I was a young girl and loved the series and Peter Gilmore. This and Nimrod are my favourite pieces of music, although I do love the Strauss waltzes as well.
His name is big enough. His name recognition may not be as big but it is our fault, not a fault of those who worked with him or those who covered his work.
He is one of those rare musicians who enjoyed great fame and respect throughout his lifetime, and that without internet. He has been honorary guest in royal palaces, residents of influential politicians and aristocrats. He was invited to give concert from every part of the world. From Eastern Asia to Australia to South America. I was at his house museum recently, a truly honorable man that makes us, Armenians proud!
He is one of those rare musicians who enjoyed great fame and respect throughout his lifetime, and that without internet. He has been honorary guest in royal palaces, residents of influential politicians and aristocrats. He was invited to give concert from every part of the world. From Eastern Asia to Australia to South America. I was at his house museum recently, a truly honorable man that makes us, Armenians proud!
Several people commented that this music made them cry. For good reason, it is from the touching parting scene of the lovers Spartacus and Phrygia. This scene from the Bolshoi Ballet version of Spartacus is incredibly beautiful and moving also.
Me too Tania. My mum loved the tv program that used this piece, I just loved the music. Has been my favourite classical piece since childhood. I have explored lots of classical music since then but Khachaturian has remained my all time favourite, this just makes me cry every time, its so emotive, I love it
@@Sirius-me5zy A few suggestions for you: 1) Aaron Copland - Appalachian Spring; Rodeo; Billy the Kid 2) Alan Hovhaness - Symphony No. 2 "Mysterious Mountain" 3) Antonin Dvorak - Symphony No. 9 "From the New World"; Serenade for Strings 4) Samuel Barber - Adagio for Strings 5) Gustav Holst - The Planets 6) Ottorino Respighi - The Pines of Rome 7) William Alwyn - Symphony No. 3
In my 14 years of living, I’ve genuinely never been so captivated by music before. I heard this somewhere and had been searching for it for a whole week straight, and I’m absolutely awestruck. Goose bumps.
I don’t remember myself without his music. Every single time I would hear this pet of ballet I would cry… Every time I would hear this piece I would want to hear it in its entirety. I can’t imagine myself without Khachaturian’s music. It’s part of me, part of us.
I was lucky to see the ballet Spartacus years ago . Aram Khachaturian was very talented . Once you listen to his music , you want to hear more . I think this is the best of what I heard . It is very dramatic and yet very elegant . Thanks . Spasibo .
Why "Spasibo"? He was Armenian and was really proud of being a part of Armenian rich culture and history. But Unfortunately in those times, Armenia was a part of USSR. 🇦🇲🫂
I just "stumbled" upon this while searching for ballett videos and I cant stop repeating this video. I literally watching with my mouth open and a single tear rolling down my cheek.
As a teenager growing up in the UK in the 1970's, Sunday evenings, BBC1 The Onedin Line with its beautiful theme - Khachaturian's "Adagio of Spartacus and Phrygia".
The music so fits the story of Spartacus and the slaves and their courageous yet ultimately doomed fight for freedom. It's still relevant to injustice today, and is eternally beautiful.
One of the GENIUSES of modern classical music...❤️ Than crescendo is EPIC..I always lift my arms say WOW with full emotion at that moment..Can't not react..
A celestial master performance of Khatchaturian's famous master piece. Thank you so much, dear Moscow State Symphony Orchestra and Azim Karimov. May humanity come together as one united in music, the most celestial form of art, reminding us of the true meaning of life, which is to praise the beauty of god's creation.
This piece epitomizes tragic romance; first, romanticizing the death of Spartacus, and secondly, Phrygia’s heartbreak for the loss of her beloved Spartacus.
I discovered this a couple of months ago by accident and immediately fell in love with it. Never heard of the composer before. Now I have 3 ways to listen to it: while watching the orchestra, while watching the ballet or by watching alone with eyes closed. Each way it is a totally different experience for me. Love it!
This piece is hypnotic and beautiful. It brings out many emotions. This music from Khatchaturian speaks to us and I am grateful to the composer, the conductor and those very talented musicians for the magic felt by listeners around the world.
A sublime piece of music. The strings, woodwinds, harp, brass, and percussion weave their seamless tapestry as they guide us through the struggle of Spartacus.
I keep playing this piece of heaven and harmony repeatedly The pathos in the interpretation is marvelous and conveys the feelings of Spartacus and his “wife” You can hear the love and sadness of their feelings through this performance of the brilliant orchestration and the MUSICIANS!
I have grown up around the Classics of some of the most influential composers from this beautiful planet. This piece, along with many others draws me back to my childhood and soothes my tempered soul. Beautiful.
Einfach nur schön. Was für ein gefühlvoller, toller Komponist.Ich liebe ihn schon seit der Schulzeit.❤ Simply beautiful. What a sensitive, stunning composer he was. I' ve loved him since my time at school. Always.
This was the theme music to the British series, Poldark, when i was a kid - '70s. IMO the best piece of music ever written. And I think this is the best performance of it I have heard.
Did you send me this recording, my favorite. I searched for a recording of this for years in the '60s. Finally found it on Columbia by the Philadelphia Philharmonic. I always play it for my Armenian friends.
I first heard it when I was a kid in a foreign movie series, It hit me so hard in my heart, that I followed each series from beginning to end, even though I did not understand a word, only to capture even 30 seconds of music.
This song reminds me of the Spring time and the awakening of Nature. I imagine beautiful gardens and green pastures, flowing rivers and gurgling brooks. Fields with flowers and plants, trees.
I first heard this during a pre-show mix at a theater where I was doing summer stock. I asked the stage manager what it was and he said 'Spartacus.' When I got home I looked up the soundtrack to the movie and thought, 'Hmmm... it's not hitting the same way.' It wasn't until I saw 'The Hudsucker Proxy' and recognized this in the opening sequence that I did a different search. This is such a fantastically beautiful, haunting, poignant, compelling piece. (And it works perfectly in the opening sequence of 'The Hudsucker Proxy.')
Armenian. Kachaturian is an armenian composer, but for those years Armenia was part of the URSS. Stop war in every part of the world. Stop Azerbaiyans agression over armenians in Nagorno Garapagh. Dont forget them
You mixed up the channels. Go to your aliyev’s bunker and continue creating mis info! You have nothing to do on the music chat as you have other agenda! Poor lost creature!
Me too I remember hearing it a long time ago with a TV show, loved it ! Still do ! Never knew he composed it ! Wow ! Beautiful ! Listen to his Masquerade suite si beautiful as well ! My favourite Waltz!
Alla creatività di Khachaturian avrà certamente contribuito il fatto di essere "anche" sovietico. Cioè di sentirsi partecipe di un mondo musicale che aveva espresso geni del calibro di Prokofiev e Shostakovic!
I wasn't sure about Classical music, I knew it was good because of the performance put in to it, but then I heard this and thought Wow The Onedin line theme! listened to it again and again and thought Wow this is beautiful and so much more!!
Woooow - ....ist das nicht der Wahnsinn ...🌪.... wenn und wie die Musik aufgeht💥 !!!? ....immer wieder Gänsehaut und "Arme auseinander zum Himmel gestreckt" ! Also, wenn einer verstanden hat was das LEBEN IST - was ein Herzschlag bedeutet - 💓 dann dieser Komponist!
So glad to have found this! The opening section was used in the film "The Hudsucker Proxy," but without attribution. I've searched for almost two hours to find the original influence. Now I can happily move along to something new.
I was five or six years old when I first heard this piece on television. It was the theme song from "The Onedin Line“. The music uplifted me and I was moved to tears. I had never heard anything like this before. I was falling in love.
But I didn't know the name of the piece or the composer. I only knew: it’s this song from that „TV series with the sailing ships.“ For years I searched for the song, asked my grandparents, parents, aunts and uncles. Nobody knew it. There was no internet and no google to ask back then.
Years went by. When I was 30 years old, I was in Speyer, Germany. All of a sudden I heard some music from a distance. There was a violinist at the cathedral. And he played that piece! I could not believe what I was hearing. I rushed towards the violinist. Talked to him. He told me the name of the piece and the composer. And played it again. Just for me.
I felt like I had finally met the love of my life again - after losing her. And I could finally take her in my arms. After years of separation.
And this is exactly what Spartacus & Phrygia is about.
With one exception: i didn’t die.
Thank you for your wonderful narrative. Just like you, I first heard the deeply touching melody in the English vessel series "The Onedin Line" in the 1980s and did not know which composer wrote this wonderful piece. It was only a few years later, by chance, that I bought a cassette of works by Khatchaturian and recognized the lyrical and dramatic Adagio of Spartacus and Phrygia. It is one of my favorite pieces by Khatcharturian, whom I love very much for his Caucasian and exuberant color. I also played a few easier piano pieces by Khatchaturian, who is technically very demanding, of course not really manageable for an amateur piano player.
You must write and publish. It is a light in your words.
Hermosa historia de amor...🎼❤️
Bonjour, j'ai exactement connu la même anecdote, le générique de fin de ce feuilleton qui se passait sur un magnifique trois mats le "Charlotte Ross", moi non plus je ne savais pas qui avait composé ce déchirant adagio ! Je l'ai découvert plus de trente ans après en écoutant par hasard une station de radio qui passe du classique : France Musique ! Cela a été une révélation ! Je pleure comme une madeleine en l'écoutant... C'est juste sublime.
How beautifully written, out of a beautiful emotional world. I have heard the piece for the first time in the same series, 'Onedin line' a long time ago, and just like you, love the piece to this day.
This is what “ Falling In Love” sounds like .
❤
😊❤What a loverly way to describe this hauntingly beautiful piece of music.
@BebtelovimabSpecifically, the 44th floor of the Hudsucker Building, not counting the mezzanine.
@@mark11727Sure, sure...
Nope, that sounds like this th-cam.com/video/0Af7ayYIJ9w/w-d-xo.htmlsi=IxhgorkocD-_sBX3
The feeling when listening to the Adagio is that A. katchaturian had either been snatched up to Heaven for a few moments, or that an angel inspired him.
He always have been in heaven
очень может быть
I believe some composers are channelling music from above.
When you are feeling down and out, just listen to this, and you will be transported to a better place..
When the main theme starts full force it feels like all walls have dropped and you're finally free...
If this doesn't give you goosebumps, then you truly have no soul.
EXACTLY! They're all heartless abject wretches, the scum of the earth and a stain upon the heavently firmament and choirs of archangels and seraphim......GodBless......from Acapulco.
In my opinion this is the single most beautiful piece of music ever created.
It’s definitely up there. I also think the last 2.5 minutes of Rachmaninov’s Third piano concerto and the first minute or two of his Second symphony Adagio movement are just beautiful.
It was from the Onedon Line series
@@paulsalter4949 I used to watch that when I was a young girl and loved the series and Peter Gilmore. This and Nimrod are my favourite pieces of music, although I do love the Strauss waltzes as well.
Debussy's 'Prelude to the afternoon of a faun' must surely take that honor.
..and Samuel Barber- Adagio for strings 😊
We need this music to day….Khachaturian have deservd a much bigger name in the music world!!!
His name is big enough. His name recognition may not be as big but it is our fault, not a fault of those who worked with him or those who covered his work.
he does have a big name.
He is one of those rare musicians who enjoyed great fame and respect throughout his lifetime, and that without internet. He has been honorary guest in royal palaces, residents of influential politicians and aristocrats. He was invited to give concert from every part of the world. From Eastern Asia to Australia to South America. I was at his house museum recently, a truly honorable man that makes us, Armenians proud!
He is one of those rare musicians who enjoyed great fame and respect throughout his lifetime, and that without internet. He has been honorary guest in royal palaces, residents of influential politicians and aristocrats. He was invited to give concert from every part of the world. From Eastern Asia to Australia to South America. I was at his house museum recently, a truly honorable man that makes us, Armenians proud!
@@annamisakianСоветский композитор, с московской музыкальной школой обучения, воспитанный той эпохой...
Several people commented that this music made them cry. For good reason, it is from the touching parting scene of the lovers Spartacus and Phrygia. This scene from the Bolshoi Ballet version of Spartacus is incredibly beautiful and moving also.
Thanks
Brilliant! Absolutely brilliant! The climax at c. 6.32 is perfect and so emotional
Shiver down the spine wonderful. Imagine the extra oomph when sitting in the audience.
This piece introduced me to classical music and opened my heart to the love of beautiful music ever since I was a child.
Lucky you.
Welcome to the world of music lovers because it is exhilarating to make comments. *Lucien*
Me too Tania. My mum loved the tv program that used this piece, I just loved the music. Has been my favourite classical piece since childhood. I have explored lots of classical music since then but Khachaturian has remained my all time favourite, this just makes me cry every time, its so emotive, I love it
I'm 47,just started, never too late to real appreciate classical
@@Sirius-me5zy A few suggestions for you:
1) Aaron Copland - Appalachian Spring; Rodeo; Billy the Kid
2) Alan Hovhaness - Symphony No. 2 "Mysterious Mountain"
3) Antonin Dvorak - Symphony No. 9 "From the New World"; Serenade for Strings
4) Samuel Barber - Adagio for Strings
5) Gustav Holst - The Planets
6) Ottorino Respighi - The Pines of Rome
7) William Alwyn - Symphony No. 3
In my 14 years of living, I’ve genuinely never been so captivated by music before. I heard this somewhere and had been searching for it for a whole week straight, and I’m absolutely awestruck. Goose bumps.
Lol, did you hear this in the movie IF, because that’s where I heard it from.
@@PyroRaven57 yeah 😭, what’s funny is I was going to go see the planet of the apes movie, but it was sold out so I saw IF instead.
That means you will love Armenian classical music
That means you will love Armenian classical music
Հրաշք, հրաշք, հրաշք։ Կարծես հոգիս սավառնում է տիեզերքում։Բրավո մեծ վարպետ Արամ Խաչատրյանին
есть такое!
The Armenian vibes of Aram Khachaturian❤️
что есть - то есть)
I don’t remember myself without his music.
Every single time I would hear this pet of ballet I would cry…
Every time I would hear this piece I would want to hear it in its entirety.
I can’t imagine myself without Khachaturian’s music.
It’s part of me, part of us.
If they play this in heaven, eternity can never be long enough......
This piece is the definition of the beauty of classical music.
ur talking about romantic or modern era classical music.
Cause u won't hear anything like it in let's say the baroque era.
I was lucky to see the ballet Spartacus years ago . Aram Khachaturian was very talented . Once you listen to his music , you want to hear more . I think this is the best of what I heard . It is very dramatic and yet very elegant . Thanks . Spasibo .
Why "Spasibo"? He was Armenian and was really proud of being a part of Armenian rich culture and history. But Unfortunately in those times, Armenia was a part of USSR.
🇦🇲🫂
I just "stumbled" upon this while searching for ballett videos and I cant stop repeating this video.
I literally watching with my mouth open and a single tear rolling down my cheek.
🇦🇲🙏💋Արամ Խաչատրյան հայ մեծ հսկա, թող քո հոգին լույսերի մեջ լինի։
Русский он 😂
Если бы не советская власть и не московская музыкальная школа то не было б от вашей республики такой личности 😂
Не позорься . Армянские гены дали музыкантов пер капита гораздо больше чем все другие нации .
@@nonam3093 ваши «гены» без систематического образования ничего значат.
@@mikhailvartik9616ՀԱՅԵՐԸ ԱՆՀԱՏԱԿԱՆՈՒԹՅՈՒՆՆԵՐ ՄԻՇՏ ԷԼ ՈՒՆԵՑԵԼ ԵՆ։
Советский композитор
As a teenager growing up in the UK in the 1970's, Sunday evenings, BBC1 The Onedin Line with its beautiful theme - Khachaturian's "Adagio of Spartacus and Phrygia".
Happy happy days .reminds me of my parents.
Captn' Baines
I remember seeing the Onedin Line on TV in Australia and being blown away by the use of this music as its theme.
ethereal, heavenly, transcending, mesmerizing - one of my favorite orchestral pieces
The music so fits the story of Spartacus and the slaves and their courageous yet ultimately doomed fight for freedom. It's still relevant to injustice today, and is eternally beautiful.
Eternally beautiful.....
The nature of man has been like this done since the dawn of time. *Lucien*
One of the GENIUSES of modern classical music...❤️ Than crescendo is EPIC..I always lift my arms say WOW with full emotion at that moment..Can't not react..
Music from heaven.
Maestro Azim leads this ensemble extremely well!!
A celestial master performance of Khatchaturian's famous master piece. Thank you so much, dear Moscow State Symphony Orchestra and Azim Karimov. May humanity come together as one united in music, the most celestial form of art, reminding us of the true meaning of life, which is to praise the beauty of god's creation.
Incredibly talented Aram Khachaturian and one of his masterpieces!
Pride of Armenia and Armenian nation 🇦🇲🫶🏻
This piece epitomizes tragic romance; first, romanticizing the death of Spartacus, and secondly, Phrygia’s heartbreak for the loss of her beloved Spartacus.
Мой брат играл мне всегда 'Танец сабли ' и полюбила Хачатуряна навсегда . Великий композитор .Спасибо.
I first heard this back in the mid seventies, it was the music to the program Onedin Line. I was only a young boy and even loved it then.
I discovered this a couple of months ago by accident and immediately fell in love with it. Never heard of the composer before. Now I have 3 ways to listen to it: while watching the orchestra, while watching the ballet or by watching alone with eyes closed. Each way it is a totally different experience for me. Love it!
This Armenien piece of Music is womderful and played equilly wonderful
Absolutely beautiful, powerful, emotional perfection.
The world of Classical Music is a wonderland filled with a lifetime of great, thrilling and touching experiences.
Magnificent. Thank you so much for posting this Mr Karimov!
This piece is hypnotic and beautiful. It brings out many emotions. This music from Khatchaturian speaks to us and I am grateful to the composer, the conductor and those very talented musicians for the magic felt by listeners around the world.
Magnifique interprétation d’une magnifique composition!
A sublime piece of music. The strings, woodwinds, harp, brass, and percussion weave their seamless tapestry as they guide us through the struggle of Spartacus.
Let only music rule the world fans, let it just sound this good, what a heavenly delight this track yeah, the legendary Spartacus fate fans
U Tube
Please stop interrupting beautiful pieces of such emotional music
You are breaking the composer’s mood and the mood of the listeners!
Musik 🎶 is the way over all Limits, all borders, all nations
🕊🕊🕊
Thank you all so much for this perfect adagio ❤
I keep playing this over and over..... Love it!!!!
Same here
I keep playing this piece of heaven and harmony repeatedly
The pathos in the interpretation is marvelous and conveys the feelings of Spartacus and his “wife”
You can hear the love and sadness of their feelings through this performance of the brilliant orchestration and the MUSICIANS!
Our great Kachatrian 🇦🇲
I have grown up around the Classics of some of the most influential composers from this beautiful planet. This piece, along with many others draws me back to my childhood and soothes my tempered soul. Beautiful.
This piece of music is endlessly beautiful and this is one of the best performance I've ever heard. Many thanks!
Thank you very much! It’s very kind of you)
Einfach nur schön. Was für ein gefühlvoller, toller Komponist.Ich liebe ihn schon seit der Schulzeit.❤ Simply beautiful. What a sensitive, stunning composer he was. I' ve loved him since my time at school. Always.
Ձեր ցա'վը տանեմ ❤️...
Շնորհակալ եմ 🙏...
Si esto fuera lo único valioso compuesto por Khachaturian ya le alcanzaría para quedar como un genio en la historia de la música
А скрипичный концерт?
It is incredible that a slave who tried to be free gave birth to such beautiful music. Obviously Spartacus won, the Romans disappeared.
Какое великолепие! Спасибо! Балет Спартак, музыка Хачатуряна, память из детства.
Ochin.
This was the theme music to the British series, Poldark, when i was a kid - '70s. IMO the best piece of music ever written. And I think this is the best performance of it I have heard.
It was actually the theme for Onedin Maritime Line series in the 70' s
@@christietheo2168 and it was the music played over the opening credits of the movie 'The Hudsucker Proxy' by the Coen brothers no less!
Hello Christie
Did you send me this recording, my favorite. I searched for a recording of this for years in the '60s. Finally found it on Columbia by the Philadelphia Philharmonic. I always play it for my Armenian friends.
and also the opening of "CALIGULA".
(the one with Peter O'Toole and Hellen Mirren)
Moscow the place to be for wonderful Khachaturian Music by great Orchestra's............✅☘🍀
Гениальная Музыка! Шедевр мирового музыкального искусства! Прекрасное, вдохновенное исполнение!
I get goosebumps sooo beautiful and haunting at the same time💖🌸👏👏
You obviously have a soul. Trust it.
Same here. Stunning music. Musicians interpret it so beautifully.
I first heard it when I was a kid in a foreign movie series,
It hit me so hard in my heart, that I followed each series from beginning to end, even though I did not understand a word, only to capture even 30 seconds of music.
This song reminds me of the Spring time and the awakening of Nature. I imagine beautiful gardens and green pastures, flowing rivers and gurgling brooks. Fields with flowers and plants, trees.
Какая любовь жила в душе автора!
I have loved this ever since I heard it originally on a PBS series. The Onedin Line.
I imagine this is what heaven sounds like 👍🏼
Aram Khachaturian, Glorious Name
μουσική που μιλά στη ψυχή … τέλειο!
What must it be like to play such wonderful music ?!!!!!❤❤❤❤❤
It is more than music! 👏🏼
It is heart.
Reminds me of my childhood and watching the Onedin Line.
Yes mee too
O love or ❤
Музыка на все времена! Потрясающе!!!
Per me è la rinascita ... l'alba...il nuovi inizio..
Aram, l'orgoglio armeno.
Magnifique musique.
BRAVO ! BRAVO ! BRAVO !
MERCI mon chér compositeur Armenien.
Brilliant
Food for soul ....
I come listen every couple of days to this. It is such a beautiful piece of music.
Yeah well i'm in tears...i thank God He gave me the gift of being struck by such music...if only one to share with...
one of the most beautiful pieces of music, A must for all classical music lovers,
Just gorgeous........ gasp!
Absolutely takes my breath away ~
Это океан ласкающий душу ! Гениально!👏👏👏
Yes, I thoroughly agree with you. Now please tell the Russians to stop killing innocent Ukrainians!!!!!
And your comment is poetry!
I first heard this during a pre-show mix at a theater where I was doing summer stock. I asked the stage manager what it was and he said 'Spartacus.' When I got home I looked up the soundtrack to the movie and thought, 'Hmmm... it's not hitting the same way.' It wasn't until I saw 'The Hudsucker Proxy' and recognized this in the opening sequence that I did a different search. This is such a fantastically beautiful, haunting, poignant, compelling piece. (And it works perfectly in the opening sequence of 'The Hudsucker Proxy.')
insanın ruhunu okşaya nadir melodilerden biri ve çok iyi performe eden bir orkestra...nefis...
THE GREATEST PIECE OF MUSIC EVER WRITTEN, TO ME
Согласна. Только если ещё Рахманинов и Чайковский
Но красивее Адажио я ничего не слышала...каждый раз до слез и мурашек с комом в горле❤
Totally breathtaking. Thanks very much, bolshoye spasibo!
Armenian. Kachaturian is an armenian composer, but for those years Armenia was part of the URSS. Stop war in every part of the world. Stop Azerbaiyans agression over armenians in Nagorno Garapagh. Dont forget them
You mixed up the channels. Go to your aliyev’s bunker and continue creating mis info! You have nothing to do on the music chat as you have other agenda! Poor lost creature!
You are lost in channels. Go home!
You are confused. Your place is in aliyev’s bunker to create fake news
Thanks for posting this video . I can listen to this Adagio from Spatacus all day . Spasibo vam Azim Karimov .
Гениальный Хачатурян и великолепная трактовка!
What a wonderful piece of music. Thank you!
Me too I remember hearing it a long time ago with a TV show, loved it ! Still do ! Never knew he composed it ! Wow ! Beautiful !
Listen to his Masquerade suite si beautiful as well ! My favourite Waltz!
My favorite classical piece ever
Alla creatività di Khachaturian avrà certamente contribuito il fatto di essere "anche" sovietico. Cioè di sentirsi partecipe di un mondo musicale che aveva espresso geni del calibro di Prokofiev e Shostakovic!
And Ballet was also to die for ❤
Highly recommend 🙏
What a wonderful passage in this musical work! I'd love to take it with me to a desert island!
I wasn't sure about Classical music, I knew it was good because of the performance put in to it, but then I heard this and thought Wow The Onedin line theme! listened to it again and again and thought Wow this is beautiful and so much more!!
I am so glad some one else remembers The Onedin Line.
Wings for mind and soul
Thanks a lot..🕊
we're human beings, we fall in love, this is what it sounds like
Wonderful! What a lovely performance....
Woooow - ....ist das nicht der Wahnsinn ...🌪.... wenn und wie die Musik aufgeht💥 !!!?
....immer wieder Gänsehaut und "Arme auseinander zum Himmel gestreckt" !
Also, wenn einer verstanden hat was das LEBEN IST - was ein Herzschlag bedeutet - 💓 dann dieser Komponist!
И композитор, и художник, и поэт! Люди, создающие прекрасное, остаются в веках...
Beautiful music!!!
Absolutely gorgeous! The intro--stunning in beauty. Great performance.
It is simply sublime
Always brings tears....
So glad to have found this! The opening section was used in the film "The Hudsucker Proxy," but without attribution. I've searched for almost two hours to find the original influence. Now I can happily move along to something new.
Thank You !
Just phenomenal! Great arrangements. Amazing job everyone!