Inside the Score
Inside the Score
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How She Fills Concert Halls Around the World - Aubrey Bergauer
Check out Aubrey's new book, 'Run It Like A Business', which is a fascinating look into her work and findings about building both the numbers, and the strength, of audiences in art industries!
www.aubreybergauer.com/book
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Your journey towards musical mastery begins here... 🛤️
🎻 Where to Start with Classical Music? - www.insidethescore.com/14-pieces
🎼 The Training Ground for Next-Level Musicianship - www.insidethescore.com/musicality
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Відео

How to Save Classical Music
Переглядів 86 тис.3 місяці тому
My personal thoughts on the state of classical music, and what could be done. 🎁 FREE Accelerate your ear training, sight reading, and musicianship skills with this free mini-course: www.insidethescore.com/fast-track Your journey towards musical mastery begins here... 🛤️ 🎻 Where to Start with Classical Music? - www.insidethescore.com/14-pieces 🎼 The Training Ground for Next-Level Musicianship - ...
We Tried to Create the Most Epic Christmas Song Possible...
Переглядів 6 тис.6 місяців тому
Our Epic Christmas Carol is now LIVE on all major streaming services - look for: Cameron Owen - O Holy Night I've started a new Instagram account to document my journey in music production, for the years to come. I'm really excited to share this journey with you. You can find me on Instagram at: oscarosicki And you can find Cameron on Instagram at: cameronorichardso...
What Makes Stravinsky's Music Revolutionary?
Переглядів 48 тис.7 місяців тому
A deep look into Stravinsky's life, his major works, and his major musical periods, including his "Russian period", experiments with Musical Primitivism, his Neoclassical period, and his Serialist period, and the impat he made on music. 🎁 FREE Where to Start with Your Music Career? www.insidethescore.com/career Build a successful music career, the right way... 🛤️ 🎼 The Training Ground for Next-...
What Are Modes? A Guide to Composers' Techniques
Переглядів 34 тис.9 місяців тому
A guide to modes and how composers use them, in great music from Vaughan Williams to Hans Zimmer and beyond. 🎁 FREE Accelerate your ear training, sight reading, and musicianship skills with this free mini-course: www.insidethescore.com/fast-track Your journey towards musical mastery begins here... 🛤️ 🎼 The Training Ground for Next-Level Musicianship - www.insidethescore.com/musicality 🎻 Where t...
Why The Organ Is The Future of Music
Переглядів 171 тис.11 місяців тому
Discover Great Organ Music with Apple Music Classical: apple.co/InsideTheScore New members get a free trial Written by James Mitchell Narrated by Oscar Osicki Edited by Ricardo Santos 🎁 FREE Accelerate your ear training, sight reading, and musicianship skills with this free mini-course: www.insidethescore.com/fast-track Your journey towards musical mastery begins here... 🛤️ 🎼 The Training Groun...
Why Listen to Bruckner?
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On the life, epic music, and strangeness of Anton Bruckner. Including excerpts from his Te Deum, Mass in F minor, Symphonies nos. 4, 8, and 9, and more! 🎁 Free Musicianship Training - The Musician's Fast-Track 🎁 Accelerate your ear training, sight reading, and musicianship skills with this free mini-course: www.insidethescore.com/fast-track Your journey towards musical mastery begins here... 🛤️...
The Truth About Vivaldi's Four Seasons
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Download Apple Music Classical Today: apple.co/InsideTheScore Free trial available for new subscribers to Apple Music This video shows how Vivaldi's Four Seasons *actually* function - they're not straightforward pieces of music, but actually follow a very carefully written narrative, telling stories and following poetry. Learn more about Vivaldi's Four Seasons in this video. 🎁 FREE Accelerate y...
Does This App Revolutionize the Classical Experience?
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Looking deep into a brand new app designed to enhance your experience discovering and listening to classical music. Here is the link - get one month for free if you are new to Apple Music: apple.co/InsideTheScore 0:00 - Why Your Experience Matters 1:09 - Expertly Created Playlists 2:57 - How to Explore More Deeply 4:26 - Streamlined Browsing 5:05 - Smart Searching for Music 6:00 - Spatial Audio...
Shostakovich: How to Compose a Massacre
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On Shostakovich's 11th Symphony (subtitled 'The Year 1905'), and how art can be used to process trauma and atrocities. Script by Emmanuel Clement Edit by Eddie Muniz Support this Channel - www.patreon.com/insidethescore 🎁 FREE Accelerate your ear training, sight reading, and musicianship skills with this free mini-course: www.insidethescore.com/fast-track Your journey towards musical mastery be...
Why Listen to Rachmaninoff?
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Download Apple Music Classical Today: apple.co/InsideTheScore A dive into the life and music of one of the great late-Romantic pianist composers, Sergei Rachmaninoff. Script by Ricardo Santos Narrated by Oscar Osicki 🎁 FREE Accelerate your ear training, sight reading, and musicianship skills with this free mini-course: www.insidethescore.com/fast-track Your journey towards musical mastery begin...
How Composers Use Synesthesia
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How Composers Use Synesthesia
How L'Orfeo Changed Opera Forever
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How L'Orfeo Changed Opera Forever
How Beethoven Revolutionized the Symphony
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How Beethoven Revolutionized the Symphony
The Celesta - The Sound of Heaven?
Переглядів 110 тис.Рік тому
The Celesta - The Sound of Heaven?
How Mozart Changed Opera Forever
Переглядів 69 тис.Рік тому
How Mozart Changed Opera Forever
Russia's Most Influential Composer...
Переглядів 220 тис.Рік тому
Russia's Most Influential Composer...
Why Is This Music So Memorable? How to Train Your Dragon
Переглядів 612 тис.Рік тому
Why Is This Music So Memorable? How to Train Your Dragon
Opera and Ballet: How We Missed the Point Entirely
Переглядів 53 тис.Рік тому
Opera and Ballet: How We Missed the Point Entirely
Why Listen to Liszt?
Переглядів 492 тис.Рік тому
Why Listen to Liszt?
Why Ravel Wrote a Concerto... For Only One Hand??
Переглядів 216 тис.Рік тому
Why Ravel Wrote a Concerto... For Only One Hand??
Grand Budapest Hotel: How to Write Music for a Fake Country
Переглядів 99 тис.Рік тому
Grand Budapest Hotel: How to Write Music for a Fake Country
Why Listen to Haydn? His Life and Music
Переглядів 118 тис.Рік тому
Why Listen to Haydn? His Life and Music
Grieg's Peer Gynt - How to Create a World in 4 Bars
Переглядів 50 тис.Рік тому
Grieg's Peer Gynt - How to Create a World in 4 Bars
Satie's Furniture Music: Designed to be Ignored?
Переглядів 53 тис.Рік тому
Satie's Furniture Music: Designed to be Ignored?
Music's Greatest Loss: Why Listen to Lili Boulanger
Переглядів 263 тис.2 роки тому
Music's Greatest Loss: Why Listen to Lili Boulanger
How Nadia Boulanger Raised a Generation of Composers
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How Nadia Boulanger Raised a Generation of Composers
Why Listen to Mahler?
Переглядів 634 тис.2 роки тому
Why Listen to Mahler?
How Much Music Theory Do We Really Need?
Переглядів 40 тис.2 роки тому
How Much Music Theory Do We Really Need?

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @silviermotova
    @silviermotova 2 години тому

    really great video. thank you i will definatly buy book and use some things that ve been said. thank you!

  • @AndyWitmyer
    @AndyWitmyer 23 години тому

    The Simpsons theme is NOT Lydian, but is in Lydian Dominant, which has #4 AND a b7. A far more accurate cartoon example of straight Lydian be heard in the Jetsons opening theme.

  • @rustygazes256
    @rustygazes256 2 дні тому

    Queen of the night is my favorite.

  • @edwillard1790
    @edwillard1790 2 дні тому

    Please spell check your videos. I gave up after 10 minutes of your faulty captions.

  • @thomasmrf.brunner
    @thomasmrf.brunner 3 дні тому

    Egberto Gismonti also studied with her ...

  • @janwilson9485
    @janwilson9485 4 дні тому

    What about cosi fan tutte? Wonderful opera with da ponte - intelligent and sublime!

  • @robcat2075
    @robcat2075 5 днів тому

    Too much talking over the music, too much stock footage stuck behind it. It's for clicks.

  • @younannagy7479
    @younannagy7479 5 днів тому

    Beauty exists only for the people who recognize it. I guess that’s the problem, some musicians thinks that beauty can exist without audience that can understand and recognize it.

  • @mozartjpn137
    @mozartjpn137 6 днів тому

    Cosí fan tutte is another masterpiece.

  • @mozartjpn137
    @mozartjpn137 6 днів тому

    Eighty percent of the music I listen to is Mozart. Ninety percent of that is his operas.

  • @bowserbreaker2515
    @bowserbreaker2515 6 днів тому

    John Williams, Hans Zimmer, and John Powell are easily the 3 greatest film composers of all time.

  • @lauriemartinez9596
    @lauriemartinez9596 6 днів тому

    Bravo! A passionate & excellent synopsis.

  • @philosophers_stone_ish
    @philosophers_stone_ish 7 днів тому

    I'm with you about your concern but, the problem is quite different. short patient of most of us. and there's more

  • @alexeykulikov2739
    @alexeykulikov2739 7 днів тому

    When there a talk of someone being underrated i want scream and break furniture.

  • @opietaylorpiano
    @opietaylorpiano 7 днів тому

    The younger people that would enjoy classical music listen to video game music. For some reason the classical community treats it like a black sheep.

  • @alexandrasousa13
    @alexandrasousa13 7 днів тому

    Love them all 🎶✨ Mahler my favourite composer 💕

  • @alexeykulikov2739
    @alexeykulikov2739 7 днів тому

    All that happened when there was no hot water, electricity, medicine, police and even iPhone 1.

  • @MBL2210
    @MBL2210 8 днів тому

    Where are we 😂

  • @thorstentopp3824
    @thorstentopp3824 8 днів тому

    Oberflächlicher Blödsinn. Wer Bruckner erleben möchte, hört sich Günter Wand an. Und, ja, man sollte Bruckner heute noch hören und erleben und immer wieder studieren. Warum kann ich gern erklären, das Video trägt aber nichts dazu bei.

  • @PunctualPigeon
    @PunctualPigeon 8 днів тому

    2:08 which country are those soldiers from?

  • @ItzTiger1217
    @ItzTiger1217 9 днів тому

    I just love his capriccio espagnol and scheherazade soooo much!

  • @frankysoh
    @frankysoh 9 днів тому

    Where is Mozart's Kv 588 Cosi fan tutte? Le nozze di Figaro, Don Giovanni and Cosi fan tutte are like Father, Son and Holy Ghost of the all operas. You certainly missed the Eiffel Tower in Paris!

  • @belgarathmth
    @belgarathmth 9 днів тому

    My college theory teacher used the second movement as an example of a musical mystery - Beethoven begins it with a second inversion tonic chord, almost unheard of before. Why did he do that? I wish you had addressed this issue. I love your videos, but I feel you spend far too little time discussing this monumental work, which was my second love after the Fifth. I can only conclude that the Seventh is not one of your favorites, for whatever reason. Interesting, isn't it, as you mention in your "the Ninth" video, that once a Beethoven context is established, we can speak with simple ordinal numbers, and every reader knows exactly what we're talking about.

  • @odellwood2711
    @odellwood2711 9 днів тому

    I know he wishes he got his royalties before hand

  • @Evangelion0189
    @Evangelion0189 9 днів тому

    Bruckner is probably the most underrated, greatest composer ever. Thirteen years after stumbling upon his music for the first time, at 22 years of age), I can say I could no longer, nor would want to imagine my life without knowing and loving his music.

  • @mrbrianjhewitt
    @mrbrianjhewitt 10 днів тому

    A few weeks ago while attending a Detroit Symphony concert I started wondering how many miles everyone in the concert hall drove (including the musicians) just to get there. Probably in the thousands. For us, it's an hour to the concert hall and an hour back. Same with most people as most live in the suburbs. And... with the concerts starting at 8pm when most are getting ready for bed it's easy to pass on many concerts.

  • @amirrotem
    @amirrotem 11 днів тому

    What a genius. Great documentary!

  • @kingsleyperera9655
    @kingsleyperera9655 15 днів тому

    Geniusses are born !.Mozart/Beethoven/Shakespeare/Einstein/Bach/Napoleon/Mao/Karl Marx/Genghis Khan/Alexander & Peter the great etc. & even Hitler, an unknown petty corporal almost conquered the World !!!

  • @miritallstag336
    @miritallstag336 15 днів тому

    Leitmotifs rule. Most of the songs come back in some way, shape, or form. Prologue? Ensemble comes back as Look Down and duet part comes back in the Confrontation. The bishop's part? Empty Chairs at Empty Tables. What Have I Done? Obvious. Javert's Suicide. That one isn't even just the music, they're both going through an existential crisis over being shown kindness they don't feel they deserve. Fantine's death? Both On My Own AND Valjean's death. Stars? The instrumental bit at the end of Javert's Suicide. Master of the House? Beggars at the Feast. Do You Hear the People Sing is the most obvious, it's the finale. A lot of things come back out get started in One Day More. As for themes rather than music, there's a few similarities between songs. In the Confrontation, Valjean is singing what was Javert's part in the prologue and vice versa. What Have I Done and Javert's Suicide both feature existential crises, as previously mentioned, but with very different outcomes. Javert's Suicide is formed in part by Stars, which does a great job of laying out his ideals, his belief that justice and mercy are mutually exclusive, etc. Who Am I is another existential crisis song, but to my knowledge it doesn't share musical similarities with any others. All the Thenardier songs show what horrible people they are since we don't have 60 pages of Waterloo like there are in the book. There aren't too many thematic similarities between Empty Chairs and the bishop's song, or Fantine's Death and On My Own, but Valjean's death has pretty much the same thing happen as Fantine's. The finale is basically a reprise of Do You Hear the People Sing.

  • @TheGratefulDeadhead
    @TheGratefulDeadhead 15 днів тому

    Idk about y'all but I love listening to complete operas lol. I listen to opera all the time. I love the music the text honestly doesn't matter for me too much I find it distracting when following along with the opera.

  • @robgrune3284
    @robgrune3284 16 днів тому

    yes, Mozart was genius for all the points you mention. But his real genius you do not mention. Listen to all his music. In all, he created a pulse, either heard or felt. And he did it without percussion; which nobody since has been able to achieve. The pulse gives his music a life, like something alive.

  • @starfoxmccloud64
    @starfoxmccloud64 16 днів тому

    My solution to this problem is Peter Schickele 's Beethoven's 5th Symphony Sportscast.

  • @danielboschetti7594
    @danielboschetti7594 16 днів тому

    In which form is written the 4th movement?

  • @legochickenguy4938
    @legochickenguy4938 16 днів тому

    most underrated composer ever. more people need to listen to him!

  • @themiddle8
    @themiddle8 16 днів тому

    One suspects that he perceives his voice is the sound of heaven.

  • @TchaikovskyListener
    @TchaikovskyListener 17 днів тому

    Love how instead of showing Cyrillic with Tchaikovsky’s letter, you show Arabic (or Farsi…if it’s either). Lol

  • @erliLila
    @erliLila 17 днів тому

    A herculian task to say the least Best of luck to us I guess Awesome video

  • @BEZAHNO
    @BEZAHNO 17 днів тому

    but you should learn to pronounce “Rachmaninoff” correctly, it's a shame.

  • @anemonenova8694
    @anemonenova8694 18 днів тому

    When pronouncing 'Desplat', the s and t are silent.

  • @symfonik-pl
    @symfonik-pl 18 днів тому

    Like Amadeus from movie ♥

  • @chagkruzart7695
    @chagkruzart7695 18 днів тому

    You absolutely ignore the fact that in 1871 Mussorgsky wrote "experimental" piece "The Seamstress" with sudden modulations. His Pictures at an exhibition also was ahead of time. Both Debussy and Satie knew these little-known works and developed ideas from

  • @Eltopo1368
    @Eltopo1368 18 днів тому

    Thank you so much for helping me to discover and understand Mr. Mahler. Although my time is short, my life is forever changed because you have introduced me to something so beautiful.

  • @SquareyCircley
    @SquareyCircley 19 днів тому

    Your solutions all ring true with me. I'm just a normal guy who buys a few CDs and attends a few concerts a year. It was educational content like yours helping me know what to listen for that got me started listening and enjoying. And it was social media 'celebrity' soloists giving me a connection that first got me to the concert hall. And yeah, I looked up clothing and stuff before I went cus I had the same (wrong) expectations you mentioned.

  • @syrachify
    @syrachify 19 днів тому

    As an example of beautiful melodies in modern music (while still preserving the modern qualities), check out the doom metal genre. It might be unexpected, but it might be surprising how deep, expressive, evocative and beautiful this genre can be when done by competent bands. However, in this genre generally the melody won't come from the voice, but from the guitars, keyboards or other instruments. For example: Officium Triste - "Your Fall from Grace". Or Draconian - "The Marriage of Attaris" (this one also has beautiful female vocals and a ravishing interlude)

  • @Cafl_Music
    @Cafl_Music 19 днів тому

    The HTTYD OST is what happens when artist are allowed to work freely

  • @LinusFeynstein
    @LinusFeynstein 19 днів тому

    It is not „prima nocta“ but „ius primae noctis“, the right of the first night. The Latin word for night is not, „noctis“ is the Genitiv meaning „of the night“.

  • @charlesmcu9294
    @charlesmcu9294 19 днів тому

    this is amazing! very inspiring!!

  • @c0ronariu5
    @c0ronariu5 20 днів тому

    Commenting on every HTTYD vid. Plus god, the score is incredible. Test Drive makes my heart swoop and soar in equal measure.

  • @JD..........
    @JD.......... 20 днів тому

    Great video, ill be sharing! Please tell me she talks demographics in the book... Boomer population decline will have huge implications.

  • @baguettegott3409
    @baguettegott3409 20 днів тому

    As somebody who is relatively young and does not ever go to concerts, I'm just gonne leave some thoughts here that I had while watching the video. 1. Agree completely, if I can't navigate your website and it doesn't tell me how long things will last, how it's structured, when there are breaks etc, I'm definitely not coming. That applies to any event, for anything. 2. Also agree on the technical language. I know more terminology than anybody in my circle who _doesn't_ listen to classical music, but it's still not nearly enough, and that makes it feel a bit hopeless. Just having a glossary would even help, then you don't have to "dumb down" the main text and offend the people who would indeed know what everything means. 3. Education really is key. I don't listen to Mozart, ever, but I don't know a single person who doesn't get super hyped at the end of 'Amadeus' where we see them build up the "confutatis" bit of the requiem piece by piece, and then after understanding it hearing it all assembled... it's exciting, listening to it with all that perspective makes for a completely different experience and it's wonderful. 4. I'm from Germany, and I don't know how our music education compares to that in the US or UK, but mine was pretty bad. In the last two years we basically only watched movies. But it still was the one occasion in my life where I actually got to hear some classical music without actively seeking it out, and that still did something. I was bored to death by art songs, and then one by Schumann came along that I randomly fell in love with and listen to and cherish to this day. 5. I will say, the elitist impression for me does mostly come from uhh... the people I've met who are into classical music. This comment section included btw. There are a lot of _really_ snobbish, condescending people out there, and maybe they're just the loudest ones, but they are very loud. I completely stopped telling people what music I listen to because of bad experiences with classical music enthusiasts (and heavy metal fans, to be fair, they were also occasionally quite mean about it!). Now that I'm thinking about it, I kinda had bad experiences across the board. Every time I did discover a classical piece that I liked, and mentioned it to people who were into classical music, they would deride my taste for being basic. Which yes, it is, go figure, I enjoy summer by Vivaldi, haha, but it doesn't feel particularly good to be laughed at for that.