Lully - Fanfare pour le Carrousel Royal video free download


1,083,299
Duration: 03:13
Uploaded: 2010/04/27

Air Premier de Trompettes, Timbales et Hautbois de Jean Baptiste Lully (1632 - 1687)

Comments

9 years ago

Isabelle M

Jean Baptiste Lully - Fanfare pour le Carrousel Royal

9 years ago

rien802

may i know from what this picture is from ?

9 years ago

Jean-Charles Bancal

L'auteur de cette vidéo pourrait il me donner le nom du tableau et son auteur. Merci 

9 years ago

Claudio Pellegrini

Veramente stupendo.

9 years ago

Constantin Paun

Great!

9 years ago

MrKoolkat333

Que Dieu sauve la France et sa Religion !!!! VIVE LE ROI !!!! Vive la Monarchie!!!!

9 years ago

Steffen Kummer

Da wünschnt man sicj bei der Musik eien Zeitreise zurück in's 16 Jahrhundert

9 years ago

Alexander Brown

In reply to both Wankawika1 and franchiecocorico1, it is well to remember the words of a famous English lawyer, judge and author: "All power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely". All monarchies with absolute power have ultimately been overthrown (including the Roman empire). We still have such rulers in modern times, however (the ruler of North Korea is an example) - let us hope that they too will be consigned to the dust of history....

9 years ago

Louis Napoleon

Vive La Bourbon Monarchie

9 years ago

puzon

hołd oddany Ludwikowi XIV przez wielkiego Kondeusza :-)

9 years ago

Andreja JUREČIČ

W O N D E R F U L !!!

9 years ago

Guilherme Atanasov

We can hear the Te Deum theme here...

9 years ago

Andreas Chaniotakis

hang all the kings.

9 years ago

Arnaud Van den Bosch

Comme Mouret et voilà Lully ce sont des fanfares que j’apprécie. 

9 years ago

Jean-José SANCHEZ

vive lulli

9 years ago

johannesnicolaas

Can there be such joy? YES !!!

9 years ago

XALPICILLI

Beautiful piece of music, want to know the title of the painting and of course the author of the same

10 years ago

Harry Hagan

Very persuasive music! But wasn't Lully born Lulli? Great stuff in any sace!

10 years ago

Irish Druid

The men lining the stairs in grey seem to be Swiss guards. Before the switched to red coats they wore grey coats around 1660.

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