Sibelius - The Swan of Tuonela (Tuonelan Joutsen) descargar videos gratis


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Duración: 07:24
Subido: 2010/03/13

"The Swan of Tuonela"

2nd movement from "Four Legends from the Kalevala"

Orchestre de la Suisse Romande - Horst Stein

(Dedicated to Theodor W. Adorno, whose narrow minded, fascist and German-centered theories on "musical sociology" and numerous insults about Sibelius's music didn't prevent the value of this Finnish artist from being appreciated everywhere in the world!)

Comentarios

10 years ago

Hakon of Finland

The Suomenusko's afterlife isn't a eternal sleep on a galley in Tuonela?

10 years ago

Olga Novakauskiene

Sibelius -*The Swan of TuonelaKarelian to Finnish epic *Kalevala*Thank you beautiful

11 years ago

MrOrbion

Tuonela = Manala = Hell/Heaven (the place where you go after you die)In ancient Finland they didn't separate heaven/hell.

11 years ago

laelamarie1

...that's what I enjoy about you, your ability and appreciation of music...among other things.

11 years ago

ralphyboy25

Compelling because as I listen to the music, and look at it with a loose rather than intent gaze, I get the real sense that there is rippling of the waters. A sort of visual trick, or mental artifact. Watched the video again, paying close attention to whether there was any panning or zooming in and out that was causing this perception. Finding none, I have to assume that the combination of the photo and music have 'moved' me. Or at least my sense of reality for 7 minutes and 24 seconds.

11 years ago

laelamarie1

As with everyone here - incredibly beautiful and moving - most useful information would be the "photograph" vs painting which make it even more compelling

11 years ago

Eneri Giilaan

Tuonelan tytti (Maid of Death) by Vertti Teräsvuori (1997). Teräsvuori is a photographic artist, nd so this is not a painting but a photograph - hard to believe at first sight!

12 years ago

Jenswater

Beautiful, beautiful! This is mentioned in the new book "The Afterlife of Billy Fingers", that's how I learned of this piece ...

12 years ago

Amberr0307

This is majestic...magnificent....takes you away. So beautiful you don't want to return.

12 years ago

Reiska Raimonen

I can't help it: THE BEAUTY!!!!!!!!!!

12 years ago

remixi1

Tuonen tytti

12 years ago

Ryan Tan Jit Ming

Beautiful painting! May I know what it is?

13 years ago

KingamonmenVII

@MarcheseCadmio88 Thanks for clarification.

13 years ago

MarcheseCadmio88

@KingamonmenVII If we talk about politics and philosophy, yes, he was left-winged and liberal-minded (and I like this). But in his essays about music he always glorifies the German tradition and serialism, labeling the other composers (Stravinsky, Bartók!) as rubbish from peripheral areas of Europe. And all this without any reasonable argumentation: just imposing his granitic way of thinking and mistaking musical art with easy sociology.

13 years ago

KingamonmenVII

I really don't understand your "dedication text" , is that supposed to be sarcastic? Theodor wasn't German-centrist......quite the opposite, he was a marxist Jew.

13 years ago

MarcheseCadmio88

@123must Mio dovere e mio piacere!

13 years ago

gian paolo Puglisi

MarcheseCadmio , un abbraccio per il riferimento a quel pallone gonfiato ( anche ) di Adorno ! Grazie di cuore

13 years ago

MarcheseCadmio88

@TheVaughan5 Here you are

13 years ago

cameronpaul

Could we have the artists details please? This a fine recording.

13 years ago

Stanley Udall

I don't know that any other instrument could have played it with such longing and grief. This was obviously the right choice, but I would love to hear it done by the French Horn too.

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