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Beethoven, 5th Symphony

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"Download?" and other FAQ for Ludwig van Beethoven's 5th Symphony 5, First mvt., accompanied by a scrolling bar-graph score. Q: Where can I download this video for my iPhone/iPod/iPad/computer/etc.? A: You can get it here: http://musanim.cerizmo.com Q: Where can I get free sheet music for this piece? A: Here: http://tinyurl.com/beetop67 Q: What do the colors in the bar-graph score mean? A: The colors show which instruments are playing. Here's a chart: http://www.musanim.com/pdf/Ins... Q: Please tell me more about the composer. A: You can read about Beethoven here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B... Q: Who is playing this? A: I licensed this recording from http://www.royalty-free-classi... It is performed by the Royalty Free Classical Music Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Dr. Keith J. Salmon. I don't know anything beyond that about the recording (like, whether it is a real orchestra or synthetic, who are its members, when and where was the recording made, etc.) Q: Is there a way I could make bar-graph scores like this myself? A: The Music Animation Machine MIDI file player will generate this display; you can get the (Windows) software here: http://www.musanim.com/player/... There are lots of places on the web where you can get MIDI files; I usually go to the Classical Archives site first: http://www.classicalarchives.c... Q: Could you please do a MAM video of _________? A: Please read this page: http://www.musanim.com/all/MAM... Q: How did you make this video? A: There were a lot of steps; here's a short summary. I found a recording I could license and made the arrangements to use it. I found a MIDI file that was fairly complete, and imported that into the notation program Sibelius. I compared it to a printed copy of the score from my library and fixed things that were wrong (b5_fullscore.pdf is a snapshot taken during this process; note that there was a piano part in the MIDI file --- not something in the real score). Then, I listened to the recording and compared that to the score, and modified the score so that the timings were more like what the orchestra was actually playing (see b5_timings_adjusted.pdf). I exported this as a MIDI file and ran it through my custom frame-rendering software. Then, I made a "reduction" of the score (b5_reduction.pdf) and colored it to match the colors I was planning to use in the bar-graph score (b5_reduction_color.pdf). Unfortunately, when I squished the bar-graph score enough to make room for the notation score, too much detail was lost, so I ended up deciding not to use the notation. Then I put all the pieces (rendered frames, audio, titles) together in Adobe Premiere and exported the movie as a QuickTime file. Then, I used On2 Flix to convert the final file into Flash format (so that YouTube's conversion to their Flash format wouldn't change it in unpredictable ways), and uploaded the result. The PDFs mentioned in this description are in this ZIP file: http://www.musanim.com/pdf/b5_... .

Channel: Music
Uploaded: November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am
Author: smalin

Length: 07:38
Rating: 4.949367
Views: 3081922

Tags: beethoven  5th  symphony  scrolling  orchestra  animation  famous  allegro  con  brio  

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Video Comments

arbiter11171 (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
@smalin What he did was saw off the legs of his piano and put his head on the ground to feel the vibrations. His inner ear still picked up the vibrations as music, just as they do in our inner ear.
mirrorman478 (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
Like Beethoven? Want to see a future film about his works? Future Film LUDWIG is now in production and asking for donations to help fund it. indiegogo . com/Ludwig-1?a=438680
T16Akatsuki (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
@fiffylord827 he wrote his 9th symphony when he was deaf, and by that time, he had already written 8 masterpieces that are regarded as the best works of music ever written. he was a man that lived, and breathed music. he understood modes, chords, keys and all matter of musical form. he was a genious and being deaf proved to be nothing for him. the only part about being deaf that hindered him was not being able to hear applause for when his 9th symphony was played in concert
mmaderia (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
I absolutely love what you do with these videos. Tracking the indivudual instruments along these lines gives a real sense of the complexity and brilliance of the music. I"ve listened to the 9th a lot; in fact I'm writing a book on it, and it truly helps to see the music in this way. Thank you!
demon5491 (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
he is my idle
marchinggeek3 (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
@fiffylord827 he had memorized the feeling of the vibration of each note, and could Identify the pitch by the vibration. Imagine.. how long it would take to write music like that though O.O
radicalhacker (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
@fiffylord827 Just stik something in your ears so that you coudl not hear anything that is near you, and then think of a song. The way you "hear" that sogn in your "mind" thats how Beethoven was able to compose. (Alsow his last compositions war not so "musical" but from my experience they ware bright indeed. I played 2 of them for personal enterteinmant and my friends ware like WTF:X )
radicalhacker (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
@smalin Yes you can
leoandrexx (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
@Bloodfury96 then he became completely deaf


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