I get so tired of watching people on here argue over who was more genius. I, for one, am self taught and am on going into composition and have actually composed a few pieces based on the actual structures of the Baroque, Classical, and Romantic eras, and I firmly believe that unless you're a master of music and have written pieces that have been played for centuries you have no room to compare or judge composers! I do however believe this is one of the most ingenious pieces ever written though!
the first antecedent and consequent phrases are just beautiful, amazing, and when it changes to B♭ ... the contrast is just awesome. Why are there not musicians like that today?
I grew up with this musik and those pictures: Every Sunday morning the Austrian TV brought a concert like this syncronized with the radio broadcast. And I as a little hyperactive boy sat quietly there for two hours to the smell of a delicious lunch to come and the rustling of my father's newspaper. This music is an essential part of Austria - and of my life.
before today, i heard a little bit of this symphony here & there & never gave it much attention. then i bought an album of mozart's 38th symphony off of itunes, which also included his 41st & now i can't stop listening to it! i'm a huge fan of classical music & one important thing that i've learned in my 12+ years (i'm 23) of listening to classical music is that you may not like certain works @ first, but the more you listen to it, the more it'll grow on you & the more you'll like it!
Well put, I totally agree with you. With Mozart you can't get by just playing the notes which I tell my students, its bringing out the underlying beauty that can make Mozart most difficult.
I like subtential string section, yet vibrant and up to command, this would be the most likely what Mozart would approve, in fact be exuberant to hear!!!
@EternaNoche concuerdo contigo con que ambos compositores fueron de lo mejor y no se deben comparar, seria insultante compararlos..Y por cierto, mis composiciones favoritas de Mozart son el Concierto para Piano No.20 y Ave Verym Corpus.
I wish technology was evolved to the point in the eighteenth century where there was at least a crude video of Mozart writing this piece with pen and paper in 14 days, as he did.It would be one of the most incredible things to behold.Especially the speed at which he laid the notes down for the finale of the fourth movement.The most amazing five melody contrapuntal scheme ever written.It would be amazing to watch.He could write it by hand faster than someone using Sibelius computer software.
@thesir27 This is very, very true. As you might know, Mozart was a Franc-maçon, an institution that was very involved with the age of enlightenment and a person who wanted to prove his own worth. However, one cannot deny, by the simple fact of the name of this symphony, the fact that he did not discard religion in any way. It was a source of inspiration for him: that is what everyone needs, something to look up to.
It's interesting that in this movement and the fourth one Bohm cuts out the repeat from the start that comes after the first few minutes. Incredible symphony though, I'm currently obsessed with it hehe. If only we could all write music like this!
I can't say i like this,(I don't) BUT I have to give respect where respect is due,and this is classical,better than most music today that is leading around the youth like a cattle of sheep.
it sounds to me like there r 2 characters on this music. one is like the strong, dominant authority 0:08 to 0:10 and the other one answer him 0:11 to 0:14 kind of shy, and then starts a dialogue between them, and other things happens and in 1:06 the 1st one is back again but now the 2nd is no longer shy, and answer him 1:09 like if he (the 2nd) would have the authority now or angry or whatever you want.I don't know the word.. "rebeling" him? being rebel with the other, just like father and son
It is uncanny how much my dad resembled Bohm, though he was not even close to being a conductor. I think if he had been, he might have conducted like this. Nice.
@batnomercy yeah in his time pretty much all composers DID attribute their music to a higher power. the symphony was not named "Jupiter" by Mozart though, someone named it that many years later (which i think is a stupid thing to do).
I have to play this song for a symphony I'm in and this is one of our seating peices.. its WAAAYYYY hard.. expecially without any help : ( HARDNESS. its a great music though.
@Khriztie87 Las mejores composiciones de Mozart fueron las ultimas que hizo, su Requiem, sinfonia no.40 y 41, Don Giovanni, La flauta magica, clarinet quintet, imagina si hubiera vivido mas tiempo, hubiera muy probablemente alcanzado a Beethoven en cuanto a genialidad
@violinhunter2 I'm not sure what part of my comment you're responding to, but i think that inspiration is not something that's hard to come by, even though you are correct that it cannot be taught. if anything, it was Mozart who lived in a period that lacked inspiration cause people were writing music simply for light entertainment, nothing more. Mozart indeed had great inspiration but i dont think that was the key. his greatest talent was creating a perfect balance between form and expression.
If you want to hear great interpretations of Mozart find as many recordings as you can of Sir Neville Marriner and the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields orchestra. Absolute authority on the performance of Mozart's music and music in general from the Baroque and Classical Period
He is challenging and includes some brilliant stuff confirming he is a genius. Although, i prefer music that pushed further on, whilst still appreciating Mozart.
@thesir27 That's what the philosopher Dan Dennett calls the "trickle down theory of goodness". Surely something a human created can't really be this great unless it was *actually* created by someone still greater! I think what lies at the heart of this sentiment is envy, much as when someone says (incorrectly) "You shouldn't worry about how good you are at something, 'cause there's always someone better". No, there isn't.
@davlor86 Seres em corpos humanos mas de consciência Divina. seres especiais de um mundo de Deuses habitando a face da terra e nos trazendo Obras lá do seu Mundo para os Humanos Seres. É assim que eu vejo...
@Morbidous Pues si, Mozart fue un gran compositor, de eso no hay ninguna duda, lo admiro y le respeto muchisimo pero Igual la Sinfonia No.9 de Beethoven, parece ser de "otro planeta" como dices, para mi es un trabajo musical insuperable, me cuesta creer que haya sida escrita por un ser humano....y mas aun siendo sordo!
The Occult, Mesmerism, Astrology, Numerology, and a fathers drive to make up for his own shortcomings. Did Mozart ever have a chance at a normal life?; No, but an extraordinary one out of his own control? He was an entity, a pawn of forces in his creation and nurturing, the spirit of genius trumps all but dies without the consent of one's innate true will.
@MatchbookD70 i'm not saying there is no divine sound in his music, cause i am well aware that he & most composers in the day were deeply inspired by religion. im just saying that i believe Mozart's talent came from within, even if the man himself didn't give himself that much credit. its sort of like how Bach considered himself to be an artisan, like a blacksmith or carpenter, but today we all know he was actually a brilliant artist
@phantomofthedrivein The conductor can change tempo and dynamics and will do so but usually it's a very slight alteration. The conductor will usually try and portray what the composer would have wanted based on the stylistic period to there best ability...unless the conductor has a big ego and thinks his ideas are better then the composers which will happen every now and again
@thesir27 It's hardly "demeaning" to the composer to imply that his work seems divine. In any case, the original comment is that of fellow atheist, Woody Allen--it's a little piece of well-intended hyperbole that you needn't get your knickers into a bind over.
@thesir27 That's a stupidity. Is not strange that a sensitive person that carefully listens to Mozart feels there's a God blazing on heaven and bringing light to the ominous world in which we live. In the other hand, noone but Mozart could do what he did. Working is needed, but there's so much more.
@davlor86 "Hubiese alcanzado a Beethoven" jaja de qué hablas????...Ludwig Van es probablemente el más grande compositor que ha conocido el mundo, pero Mozart.... era de otro planeta.
@paulmst3k once again someone misunderstood my comment. i know that he was inspired by religion and i know his music inspires divine feelings for some, theres nothing wrong with that, but what i was responding to is the comments that are basically saying "There must be a God because how is it possible for someone to write this music otherwise?". But ironically that IS what people thought in Mozart's time including himself, and its a shame. I think his talent belongs to himself and no one else
The arguments about who is best...Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms, would be amusing if it were not for the sad truth...we now live in a time and in a nation where many young people cannot join the discussion because they have heard of none of these great composers...we should all join together to make sure live performance of these great works of art survive and are played....go to the symphony, support the arts...conserve the remnants of our culture...and get your kids to listen...
I get so tired of watching people on here argue over who was more genius. I, for one, am self taught and am on going into composition and have actually composed a few pieces based on the actual structures of the Baroque, Classical, and Romantic eras, and I firmly believe that unless you're a master of music and have written pieces that have been played for centuries you have no room to compare or judge composers! I do however believe this is one of the most ingenious pieces ever written though!
the first antecedent and consequent phrases are just beautiful, amazing, and when it changes to B♭ ... the contrast is just awesome. Why are there not musicians like that today?
Mozart is the most great miracle of music
Mozart el más grande milagro de la música
Mozart: o mais grande milagro da musica
Excelent music!! Celestic!!! JOY, greatness and endurnce!
por supuesto esta música es la mejor que existe
Una de mis piezas mas amadas de Mozart. Sublime ¡¡¡
I grew up with this musik and those pictures: Every Sunday morning the Austrian TV brought a concert like this syncronized with the radio broadcast. And I as a little hyperactive boy sat quietly there for two hours to the smell of a delicious lunch to come and the rustling of my father's newspaper. This music is an essential part of Austria - and of my life.
A splendid rendition.
¡Espléndida! los glizzandos... el fraseo... excelente interpretación.
before today, i heard a little bit of this symphony here & there & never gave it much attention. then i bought an album of mozart's 38th symphony off of itunes, which also included his 41st & now i can't stop listening to it! i'm a huge fan of classical music & one important thing that i've learned in my 12+ years (i'm 23) of listening to classical music is that you may not like certain works @ first, but the more you listen to it, the more it'll grow on you & the more you'll like it!
bello bello!!!
It's so fantastic I feel the urge to cry in front of such a greatness.
This is so beautiful I almost feel like crying out of pure joy
esto es de lo mejor que he escuchado!
No human words to discribe it. Heaven is talking.
Grandioso.
Verdaderamente brillante...
semplicemente Mozart....Grazie Wolfgang
one of the most powerful movements of any symphony ever composed.
sergiobyt
The sensitivity and control in the formal way of constrocting a symphony was overwhelming within that genious of Salzburg. Great!!!
con esta sinfonia me enamore de la musica clasica!!!
Bellissimo!
The conductor looks badass. This piece as well. Beautiful
Well put, I totally agree with you. With Mozart you can't get by just playing the notes which I tell my students, its bringing out the underlying beauty that can make Mozart most difficult.
The God of music "Mozart"
My favorite piece of art by Mozart.
tosi kaunista kuunneltavaa,hermot lauhtuu
I like subtential string section, yet vibrant and up to command, this would be the most likely what Mozart would approve, in fact be exuberant to hear!!!
Happy Birthday to Mozart!
beautiful and perfect
For me, Mozart`s 41th Symphony and Beethoven`s 9th Symphony proves the existence of God. Best pieces of music ever made.
@EternaNoche concuerdo contigo con que ambos compositores fueron de lo mejor y no se deben comparar, seria insultante compararlos..Y por cierto, mis composiciones favoritas de Mozart son el Concierto para Piano No.20 y Ave Verym Corpus.
Proficiat.tres tres belle musique.Merci.
Magnifico
I wish technology was evolved to the point in the eighteenth century where there was at least a crude video of Mozart writing this piece with pen and paper in 14 days, as he did.It would be one of the most incredible things to behold.Especially the speed at which he laid the notes down for the finale of the fourth movement.The most amazing five melody contrapuntal scheme ever written.It would be amazing to watch.He could write it by hand faster than someone using Sibelius computer software.
@thesir27 This is very, very true. As you might know, Mozart was a Franc-maçon, an institution that was very involved with the age of enlightenment and a person who wanted to prove his own worth. However, one cannot deny, by the simple fact of the name of this symphony, the fact that he did not discard religion in any way. It was a source of inspiration for him: that is what everyone needs, something to look up to.
It's interesting that in this movement and the fourth one Bohm cuts out the repeat from the start that comes after the first few minutes. Incredible symphony though, I'm currently obsessed with it hehe. If only we could all write music like this!
I can't say i like this,(I don't) BUT I have to give respect where respect is due,and this is classical,better than most music today that is leading around the youth like a cattle of sheep.
Bohm is one of the best conductor.
grandioso sentir la bella musica
ohh Mozart´s 41, wonderful!
great songs!!
I like Mozart.
I think this was the best state of Wiener Philharmoniker ever - when the played Mozart with Maestro Böhm.
This is so optemistic symphony. so open and heavenly, suits perfectly to Jupiter as roman god or a star, which are the same
wonderful
NICE! Wonderful
melodias del reino , busquen asi y saldran hermosas melodias !
beautiful !!!!!!
Great piece!!!
it sounds to me like there r 2 characters on this music. one is like the strong, dominant authority 0:08 to 0:10 and the other one answer him 0:11 to 0:14 kind of shy, and then starts a dialogue between them, and other things happens and in 1:06 the 1st one is back again but now the 2nd is no longer shy, and answer him 1:09 like if he (the 2nd) would have the authority now or angry or whatever you want.I don't know the word.. "rebeling" him? being rebel with the other, just like father and son
Mozart: No other equal: Thanks.
si les gusta este video y la musica clasica.. es que estan apreciando el arte.. felicitaciones
esto es magia.
@toni4branti true, that's mozart, and what all classical composers desired to achieve.
@Justin95386 This was recorded in 1979.
i love mozart! i love this masterpiece! i do think mozart was inspired by god. he was the greater genious of humanity.
that is extraordinary
Muy bueno
Mozart was shine like sun still the end of his life like this music.
i found this better than Symphony No.40
@PhysicalsimForever
Wow, a fellow Haydn lover! I do too. Love Amadeus, but the London Symphony is so good.
Thanks
It is uncanny how much my dad resembled Bohm, though he was not even close to being a conductor. I think if he had been, he might have conducted like this. Nice.
Mocart gott. Viva zalzburg.
love it
Mozart: das größte Wunder der Musik ¡¡¡¡¡
very good mozart
GRAN SINFONIA
@DiazdelVivar a lot of baroque music is written that way =]
Mozart was a damn genius
@batnomercy yeah in his time pretty much all composers DID attribute their music to a higher power. the symphony was not named "Jupiter" by Mozart though, someone named it that many years later (which i think is a stupid thing to do).
llegue a interesarme en la obra de mozart despues de haber visto la pelicula amadeus. es genial esta sinfonia, pone la piel de gallina
Mozart siempre Unico
I have to play this song for a symphony I'm in and this is one of our seating peices.. its WAAAYYYY hard.. expecially without any help : ( HARDNESS. its a great music though.
gradissimo, batraquio, retumbante, RÉLPIS, ótimo kkk ^^
Perfection does not exist,remember.Anyway the record is very old and for that.These have made the model for generations and is important
@Khriztie87 Las mejores composiciones de Mozart fueron las ultimas que hizo, su Requiem, sinfonia no.40 y 41, Don Giovanni, La flauta magica, clarinet quintet, imagina si hubiera vivido mas tiempo, hubiera muy probablemente alcanzado a Beethoven en cuanto a genialidad
IB music kids of australia, did they use this movement in the SL IB music test
?!?!?
@violinhunter2 I'm not sure what part of my comment you're responding to, but i think that inspiration is not something that's hard to come by, even though you are correct that it cannot be taught. if anything, it was Mozart who lived in a period that lacked inspiration cause people were writing music simply for light entertainment, nothing more. Mozart indeed had great inspiration but i dont think that was the key. his greatest talent was creating a perfect balance between form and expression.
If you want to hear great interpretations of Mozart find as many recordings as you can of Sir Neville Marriner and the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields orchestra. Absolute authority on the performance of Mozart's music and music in general from the Baroque and Classical Period
He is challenging and includes some brilliant stuff confirming he is a genius. Although, i prefer music that pushed further on, whilst still appreciating Mozart.
@thesir27
That's what the philosopher Dan Dennett calls the "trickle down theory of goodness".
Surely something a human created can't really be this great unless it was *actually* created by someone still greater!
I think what lies at the heart of this sentiment is envy, much as when someone says (incorrectly) "You shouldn't worry about how good you are at something, 'cause there's always someone better".
No, there isn't.
does anyone know when this was recorded?
Having only studied this piece so far, I forgot how small classical orchestras looked
right channel and left one is reverse
2:54
@davlor86 Beethoven era el fan #1 de Mozart... de hecho se conocieron en vida
why yes....
yes it is.
actually I only listen to metal but mozart ROCKS xD
@davlor86 Seres em corpos humanos mas de consciência Divina. seres especiais de um mundo de Deuses habitando a face da terra e nos trazendo Obras lá do seu Mundo para os Humanos Seres. É assim que eu vejo...
Ai de mim,sem Mozart
numa escalada de Sísifo
- na brava juventude.
@Morbidous Pues si, Mozart fue un gran compositor, de eso no hay ninguna duda, lo admiro y le respeto muchisimo pero Igual la Sinfonia No.9 de Beethoven, parece ser de "otro planeta" como dices, para mi es un trabajo musical insuperable, me cuesta creer que haya sida escrita por un ser humano....y mas aun siendo sordo!
The Occult, Mesmerism, Astrology, Numerology, and a fathers drive to make up for his own shortcomings. Did Mozart ever have a chance at a normal life?; No, but an extraordinary one out of his own control? He was an entity, a pawn of forces in his creation and nurturing, the spirit of genius trumps all but dies without the consent of one's innate true will.
Chido :P
@MatchbookD70 i'm not saying there is no divine sound in his music, cause i am well aware that he & most composers in the day were deeply inspired by religion. im just saying that i believe Mozart's talent came from within, even if the man himself didn't give himself that much credit. its sort of like how Bach considered himself to be an artisan, like a blacksmith or carpenter, but today we all know he was actually a brilliant artist
@phantomofthedrivein The conductor can change tempo and dynamics and will do so but usually it's a very slight alteration. The conductor will usually try and portray what the composer would have wanted based on the stylistic period to there best ability...unless the conductor has a big ego and thinks his ideas are better then the composers which will happen every now and again
what is it then?
@thesir27 It's hardly "demeaning" to the composer to imply that his work seems divine. In any case, the original comment is that of fellow atheist, Woody Allen--it's a little piece of well-intended hyperbole that you needn't get your knickers into a bind over.
@verdi0381 its not o mais grande because mais grande is the more big
its o maior
@thesir27 That's a stupidity. Is not strange that a sensitive person that carefully listens to Mozart feels there's a God blazing on heaven and bringing light to the ominous world in which we live.
In the other hand, noone but Mozart could do what he did. Working is needed, but there's so much more.
@davlor86 "Hubiese alcanzado a Beethoven" jaja de qué hablas????...Ludwig Van es probablemente el más grande compositor que ha conocido el mundo, pero Mozart.... era de otro planeta.
@paulmst3k once again someone misunderstood my comment. i know that he was inspired by religion and i know his music inspires divine feelings for some, theres nothing wrong with that, but what i was responding to is the comments that are basically saying "There must be a God because how is it possible for someone to write this music otherwise?". But ironically that IS what people thought in Mozart's time including himself, and its a shame. I think his talent belongs to himself and no one else
The arguments about who is best...Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms, would be amusing if it were not for the sad truth...we now live in a time and in a nation where many young people cannot join the discussion because they have heard of none of these great composers...we should all join together to make sure live performance of these great works of art survive and are played....go to the symphony, support the arts...conserve the remnants of our culture...and get your kids to listen...