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فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات

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Transcript
00:00And the agent is correct.
00:03Why is it delaying things by providing them?
00:05I have something that is contained, meaning
00:07The rest removes what Your Majesty owes for the delay
00:08But I didn't hear him warn me
00:10No, no, it doesn't matter to you.
00:11Today is my daughter Princess's wedding day
00:12She ふe
00:13What will you play for us today?
00:14I was thinking about this symphony
00:24What do you think?
00:25He is Aleppo and strong
00:27great
00:28For my daughter's funeral
00:29I'm telling you joy, joy, happiness
00:32Huh? Haven't you experienced joy before?
00:33Unfortunately, I lived a life of hardship.
00:35So you've never been happy before?
00:37Maybe there was a moment like that
00:39Oh God, this is the moment
00:40Let's play a song for Lalla Bakhtoun.
00:41Just a second, get ready
00:44Help yourself
00:51Is this correct?
00:54Hayel, you're messing with your brain
00:57awesome
00:59Professor Mahmoud El-Assily?
01:01empty?
01:03And she hasn't even been born yet?
01:13Dear viewers, please watch the correct version of the program and welcome to a new episode of Al-Daheeh's programs.
01:15In the spring of 1941
01:17And during the countries
01:19The worst Nazi bombing of London
01:21The English were also responding with pottery and lead.
01:23Not only that, the English too
01:25They were playing Beethoven's Fifth Symphony
01:27Everywhere
01:28No, this is music time, Abu Hamad
01:30Don't let people get caught up in the war.
01:31The truth, my dear
01:32This means the English saw it as a form of resistance.
01:34Ta 340
01:36Shlash Al-Raf'a, the famous text symbol
01:38Why this?
01:39And he declared with this sign that England would rather fight until it won.
01:42After that, the letter "F" spread everywhere in Europe.
01:45Especially in the countries that surrendered to the Germans
01:47They were signaling that we would still resist
01:49What's wrong, Abu Hamad? The topics you want to discuss are ridiculous, especially those related to global events.
01:52My dear, let me explain.
01:53What does Beethoven's poetry have to do with the topic we're discussing?
01:55I'll tell you, my dear
01:56Editorial
01:57Beethoven's Fifth Symphony
01:58A famous motif says
02:00The initial motif is three notes and an extended crack
02:14These three tones are the same as the phonetic translation of the letter F in Morse code.
02:19Allied soldiers used this code in the war.
02:22Simply sending the letter "V" was a message of support for the troops.
02:25This was my dear friend's sticker, encouraging me, and not just the English.
02:27And not just the English
02:28The French too
02:29They transformed the famous symphony moment
02:31For a song
02:31La Chanson de Ville
02:33This is a song that will be broadcast on Radio London.
02:341944
02:36like that, France
02:37To prepare for the final assault
02:39To liberate Europe
02:40Wow
02:40We will support some Ringtones
02:42I'm bringing weapons
02:43This advertisement was written to be the ultimate advertisement
02:45They were subjected to it by the Nazis during the war.
02:47What hurt, my dear, in this advertisement
02:48Beethoven is not just a German
02:50Not every German is like that, Maadi
02:52This man was a source of pride for any Nazi
02:54German legend
02:55Inspiring to many generations of Germans
02:56genius man
02:57You take our code
02:58It is used to create a tune for resisting the Germans.
03:00So you can say a letter
03:01He worked with his finger
03:02The leader is your Shalshal
03:04Regarding
03:04Come on, my dear, now that I've caught your attention.
03:06Speaking of World War II
03:07Let me take advantage of this attention
03:09In that I tell you the story of this man
03:10The complete story of Beethoven
03:12But my dear, this episode is going to be a bit more varied.
03:15A little different
03:15We set melodies because there are no copyrights.
03:18In this episode
03:18I'm making a musical episode
03:19Not very musical, either.
03:21Your ambitions are not high
03:21In December 1770
03:24Beethoven's Piton in Bonn, Germany
03:26To a family with a long musical tradition
03:28His grandfather, Ludwick, was the most famous musician in Bonn.
03:30And the source of her pride
03:31But Johan's parents
03:32He was a musician, meaning he was just getting by.
03:34But that, my dear, is not a problem for Beethoven.
03:36It's okay, not a minor problem.
03:38The worst part was that it was a death from alcohol.
03:39Johan failed to continue the legacy of his grandfather Ludwick.
03:42He just told you
03:43It seems I failed in my mission
03:45My son is the one who will make up for it.
03:46This son of mine, I will make him my new shrine.
03:48My shrine
03:48A musician who composes clips
03:52From when he was five years old
03:53And then he started showing off and throwing parties.
03:56He is six years old
03:57And during the 35 years he lived
03:59He presented the world with 600 musical pieces.
04:01This is of course a very nice thing
04:03If only my son Beethoven could bring him to me
04:04But the most important thing is what Budser offers
04:06Not just 600, humanity is cut off.
04:08But also a great source of pride
04:10And money without limit for his family
04:11Johann decided that Beethoven would be the future of the family.
04:13He will spend on her from his talent
04:15And in this way, he can make history the family's musical legacy.
04:17Johan's failure
04:18There was, my dear, a small problem
04:20Beethoven, on whom we placed all these hopes
04:22At 4 years old
04:23According to Professor Michael White
04:25Beethoven was exposed to every possible pleasure
04:27He was deprived of sleep
04:28Abu was pulling him off the bed in the freezing cold
04:31So that the day will pass
04:31The slightest mistake in the pitch is a mistake.
04:33Abu used to lock him in the dormitory for hours.
04:35His neighbors let him cry every night
04:37Abu used to stand him on the piano chair
04:39Until he masters what he plays
04:41He, my dear, used to stand on the piano chair
04:43I found him unable to reach the piano.
04:44Family, 4 years old
04:45Destiny, my dear
04:46Despite this childhood trauma
04:48Beethoven loved music
04:50Or, to put it another way, her love because she reciprocated his love.
04:52Music is what gave love
04:54The one who was killed by his father and his mother
04:55The one who didn't do anything
04:56To stop what his father was doing to him
04:58the truth
04:59Beethoven, when he loved music, mastered it.
05:01And when he mastered it
05:02The man broke all the rules while he was still a child.
05:05Bertage the musician was new
05:06According to musicologist John Wilson
05:08The father sometimes felt jealous
05:10When he finds his son, he waits for him.
05:11What was he saying?
05:12What are you doing?
05:13Listen to what the text says
05:14Play as written
05:15We don't know, my dear
05:16Did the father not understand?
05:17This talent is a gift and a good thing.
05:19Nor was he jealous of his son
05:21Because he was the same one day
05:22He still has the talent.
05:23On March 26, 1778
05:26Johan will announce his son Beethoven's first concert
05:29Although Beethoven was seven years old
05:31Her father will introduce him
05:32As my little son of six years
05:35My young son is six years old.
05:36Yasta has seven
05:37My group is this year
05:38When I'm this year
05:39Let time remain a genius
05:40An idea, my dear
05:41The father is more likely to fall ill if the tooth is broken.
05:42Because he was the same age as Mozard
05:44When he advanced to Europe
05:45Johan was telling the world
05:47My son, Khalifa Mozard
05:48And he's following a mistake
05:49Days pass
05:49Beethoven reaches the age of ten
05:51Johan's father decides to take his son out of school
05:54To make his life
05:55fully dedicated to music only
05:57Nothing else
05:58Don't mention
05:58Learn music
05:59Be smart
06:00Indeed, my dear
06:01Beethoven doesn't wait long
06:02Until he releases the first piece
06:05By him
06:05Just two years after Saibana went to school
06:07In his book
06:08Beethoven Angusch an Triumph
06:09Suffering and Victory
06:11The writer Jean Suifon says
06:12Beethoven was at that age
06:14He was a genius
06:15Very smart
06:16He's talented and makes amazing music.
06:17But it also
06:18Neutral
06:19Without friends
06:20Without school
06:21Without love
06:21Beethoven was a child immersed in his own world.
06:23To realize that anyone who sees it
06:25He found his clothes disheveled
06:26His hair is disheveled
06:26They thought he was a beggar
06:28Because he lived the life of a monk
06:30For music only
06:31Because every moment of his day
06:32It was just for music
06:33In the year 1787
06:35Will Beethoven's mother die?
06:36Here, Beethoven's unit will be tested.
06:38He will mourn his mother with a very tender sentence.
06:40He says
06:43Beethoven, my dear
06:44His childhood will end at this moment.
06:45Ben is 16
06:46He will become the head of the family
06:48He will provide for his father and siblings
06:49From his musical performances
06:50Psychoanalyst
06:51Bettina Ritter
06:52The one who was analyzing Beethoven's life
06:53She says that a harsh childhood
06:55I made it two people
06:56You still have someone
06:56Narcissistic and scary
06:58But still
06:58An anxious and tense person
07:00Imagine, my dear
07:01When you were little
07:02He tells you that you are a genius
07:03You're a fool
07:03The whole world is waiting for you
07:05Just be careful
07:05The moment you make a mistake in one tone
07:07You will be thrown into the dark basement
07:08You too
07:09Making love
07:10I was deprived of friends
07:11I was deprived of school
07:12Freedom and management
07:14The one who has been with you all your life
07:15You strive to have them
07:16They don't follow them
07:17Change in music
07:181791
07:20Mozart dies
07:21At that time, the famous musician Bayard
07:23Joseph Haydn
07:24On Beethoven
07:24He's coming to Vienna
07:25It was my dear time
07:26Vienna, the capital of music
07:27Haydn saw in Beethoven
07:29What can be described
07:30It is the successor to Mozart
07:31Of course Beethoven
07:32He hears this.
07:33He agrees
07:33Beethoven
07:34He doesn't help and he runs away
07:35But it still continues
07:36In supporting his family
07:37He's walking from here, my dear
07:38And he decides he's not coming back
07:39Bondi Tani Abadan
07:41until
07:41Listen to this
07:42To attend his father's funeral
07:43mother
07:44The one who will die after one year
07:45From his travels
07:46Although this man is dear to me
07:47He has a great favor
07:48In that he was alone with Beethoven
07:49In the form it is today
07:50However, his cruelty
07:51Beethoven
07:52He will not have mercy on him
07:53In the year 1792
07:55Europe began the Age of Enlightenment
07:57Science discovers kinetic energy
07:59Medicine is discovering vaccines
08:00Physics applies Newton's laws
08:02We still have a scientific age.
08:03He says that everything now has rules.
08:05She has a job
08:06Even music
08:07In this era
08:07Music was its function
08:09Celebrations in churches
08:10or
08:10Light Entertainment
08:12Music
08:12It is played in the waists of nobles for entertainment.
08:14There was a feeling
08:15That music is also
08:16She needs it.
08:17Easy science, laws, and rules
08:19And it shouldn't be in it
08:20spontaneous emotions
08:21strong emotions
08:22And don't be a jerk
08:23Nazem, there's a geometric shape in it.
08:24We are in the age of steam engines
08:25In the same year
08:26The French Revolution
08:27It will issue its revolutionary rules
08:29For all of Europe
08:29She says that this enlightenment is lacking
08:31Liberty, fraternity, and equality
08:33And ending the rule of kings
08:34and the nobles
08:35Petufen, the first thing he did when he arrived in Austria
08:36I was surprised by the class differences.
08:38Although he has a tremendous talent
08:39He is here, no need
08:40Because
08:41By the Prophet's bald head
08:42Neither noble nor rich
08:43And here is Btufen
08:44Those who love suffer
08:45He felt he was free from his father's dominance
08:47His control over his personality and his character
08:48He'll be surprised to find him here.
08:50He is forced to live again under the protection of the nobles.
08:52and the rich
08:53Because
08:54He has to keep begging them
08:55Because of this, you silly girl
08:56On the other hand
08:57He needs to write and compose the music.
08:59Those who love her
09:00Nahli without money from these people
09:01You wouldn't have been able to get the machines
09:02Or work Concertos
09:03Or storms
09:04There were no cables
09:05To resolve one of the studies
09:07This is one of the reasons
09:07The one who will make Betoffen
09:09He sides with the French Revolution
09:11Because it is against the rule of the nobles
09:12I'm not someone who can control me.
09:13He will decide here
09:14It works for the music
09:15What the revolution did for society
09:16Just like the revolution
09:17Europe's liberation
09:18From the wisdom of the nobles
09:19He also decided
09:20It liberates music from the constraints of nobility.
09:22What should we do?
09:23I'm going to work at the jumping auction in Germany.
09:24So, should I start talking about rules and etiquette in music?
09:27no
09:28I'm going to make sabaaniyat
09:29I'm going to do a slingshot
09:30I'm going to create a violent feeling
09:31I'll compose a symphony of betrayal by friends.
09:39Beethoven
09:40He wanted to express the plight of the poor
09:41Where thought
09:42He is expressing to you a version of Beethoven
09:45It is the refined version
09:46The one who excels in music
09:48As a revolutionary force that brings about change in society
09:50A means of liberation from anyone who occupies it
09:52And he imposes his taste on her
09:53But at the same time, the narcissistic personality's marriage was what worried us all the time.
09:56Because it could lose its position through revolutionary choices
09:58A personality hungry for acceptance
10:00If we don't urinate, then society...
10:01Here, my dear, we have a complex at Beethoven.
10:04on the one hand
10:04He lives to be free and makes music, which is his sense of it.
10:06But on the other hand
10:07He also wants to create a platform
10:10We photograph
10:10But we still make money, spread the word, and become awesome.
10:14People respect us and give us a sense of glory
10:16Share, like, subscribe, and tap
10:18In the beginning, my dear
10:20The narcissistic personality that wins first
10:24He will try to get closer to the nobles.
10:26Here, my dear Beethoven, his title will change to Van
10:28He feels that he should be like them
10:30He has a name like theirs
10:33He feels that he too is of noble origin.
10:35According to the musician Martin Hazelböck
10:37Beethoven will play the music that the nobility love.
10:40He'll make them, my dear, hold the A and X.
10:42In contrast to physical vision
10:43He will begin to get closer to the musicians' friends.
10:45To teach him how to write to machines
10:47And that's what you hit her with.
10:48For example, his close friend Nicholas Musical
10:50The cello player was a fighter
10:52Beethoven promised him that he would play in his concert
10:54But despite his promise
10:56The first thing he did was find someone better than him
10:58His friend who promised him remained
10:59And I loved the art of leaving the friends
11:01Anyone who tells you they want someone like Beethoven never got anything out of it
11:03Like musicians, for example, or people who learn from him
11:05He treated them harshly.
11:06Just like his father treated her
11:07I'm going to do it to you
11:08Beethoven, with his dervishness, would transform everything around him into instruments.
11:12Tols, so he can climb
11:13They are all steps on a ladder
11:14Leave the old thing alone, it's not about turning it into a tool to achieve his goals.
11:18But despite that
11:19We see Beethoven's personality as someone who loves music as art.
11:21He expresses his feelings in it
11:22It appears in musical pieces
11:23I was arrested at that time
11:24This is especially true in these stages of his romantic relationships.
11:271795
11:28Beethoven would love the singer Magdalena Wilmer
11:31His municipalities are from Bonn
11:32He will write music for her known in Adelaide
11:35A song that Ruba will remember to this day
11:36Of course, my dear, I love enthusiasm.
11:38A song that will live on in history
11:40He will propose to her, but she will reject him.
11:41What? No, Abu Hamid
11:42Because, my dear, I need to remind you
11:44Not Nabil
11:45The truth, my dear, is that Magdalene
11:46You will only see an ugly person in Beethoven
11:48and crazy
11:49He has no social skills in dealing with people.
11:51They save the Cassies from the Emotion Intelligence
11:54Don't worry, my dear, we're talking about a person here.
11:55His entire childhood was spent in front of the piano.
11:58There is no school
11:58No friends
11:59There's nothing else; it's his only way to communicate.
12:01It's the music
12:01It means, my dear, literally and meaningfully
12:03He never sees a crow or a black man in his life
12:05Piano Opener
12:05The truth, my dear, is that this won't be the last love of his life.
12:07Beethoven will not despair
12:08Hey ladies, I'm coming for you!
12:10In truth, my dear, Beethoven, after his fame
12:12He will love one of the nobles
12:13Anthony Brentano
12:14She, my dear, is on her sickbed
12:16He will go and spend time with her and play music for her until she recovers.
12:19But you'll still reject it, my dear.
12:21Do you know why, my dear?
12:22Because he is not of noble origin
12:23God
12:24Exit
12:25Dear Aziz, I don't want to ruin your Beethoven relationships.
12:27But almost all of his relationships will end in failure.
12:29for him?
12:29Because of his personality, he is unable to communicate.
12:32The most important reason was that he was not of noble birth.
12:34Oh love, you repeat it because of his excessive attachment to his senses.
12:36And his love for them
12:37And I said he was unable to express his love for them
12:40He creates timeless pieces for them.
12:42Among them, my dear, is the Moonlight piece.
12:43Moonlight Sonata
12:44Which is, my dear, her third movement
12:51And another famous piece
12:52It may be the most famous piano piece in the world
12:55Fair Ellis
12:56Which is
13:02This is my dear, it's music because of its immense popularity
13:03You put it on the cars when they come back behind them
13:05My friend sold an Arab woman
13:06Transfer
13:07You come back
13:07And its operators are Fair Ellis
13:08Jana's turn, my dear
13:09For the great one, Beethoven remains
13:11We will find that he is achieving great fame
13:13And he preaches in the name of God
13:14Sponsored by the nobles
13:15Ellis Bonsers began
13:16He presents two symphonies
13:18They were influenced by his teacher
13:19Haydn and Monsert
13:20Beethoven plays by the rules of his time
13:21And Pixbie
13:22And he suppresses what's inside
13:23He is liberating Europe with a new messiah.
13:25He still wants to play by the rules
13:26To get sponsorship from the song
13:28But I want to make a new mask
13:29I want to create a color scheme
13:30In rap slang, it means
13:31And it began, my dear
13:32He is freed from the husbands of nobles
13:33Those who do not understand the situation in Masdika
13:35Pitovne is trying to be one of them
13:36He plays whatever he likes.
13:39That's all for now, my dear.
13:40Everything is going well
13:41Of course, women's relationships
13:43And with us means
13:44But, my dear
13:45I was plotting a twist
13:46Plot Twist doesn't start
13:47Neither in image nor in war
13:48But Buzn
13:50Ringing in his ear
13:51It doesn't stop
13:52in the beginning
13:52He will consider it temporary
13:54The man plays music all the time
13:56And he deals with minds all the time
13:57What's the problem?
13:58Shawat Tanin
13:58He will try to stop this buzzing
14:00That he
14:00The dowry of the dunum is lowered
14:02He goes down to swim a little
14:03It is possible that Shawat Mahr Hayl
14:04And she fears
14:04The world is on the right path
14:05Listen again
14:06And the tanning goes
14:07Betoffen
14:07No one could hear
14:08High frequencies
14:09Nor the soothing voices
14:10And he still can't stand it.
14:11loud noises
14:12It means the lowlife doesn't listen
14:13And he can't handle the high
14:14and certain voices
14:15specific frequencies
14:16He doesn't hear her
14:17This is explained by one of the doctors
14:18Balsensory Herren Los
14:20Why, my dear?
14:20infection
14:21When it happens to an ordinary person
14:22By making him withdraw from the talks
14:24But when it happens to a musician
14:25It would be a disaster
14:27He's explaining like that
14:27The sound of many machines
14:28For example
14:29flute
14:30And the two
14:30Violin
14:31Even the voices that reach him
14:32The sounds will be distorted.
14:33If I could imagine, my dear
14:34You remain a musician
14:36What sets you apart is your reputation and your craft.
14:38If you make sweet sounds
14:39I'm tired of hearing.
14:40Even the voices that come to him
14:41It will be distorted
14:42They died during this period
14:43He will try to help with the tools
14:45Even if it hurts
14:46To help him hear
14:47Like the one in the picture
14:47With time, too
14:48Heban in public performances
14:50He misses the notes
14:51And its storm became even more vicious.
14:52And it sometimes starts
14:53He's crazy
14:54It's very, very stormy.
14:55To the point that he cuts pianos
14:57The one who plays it
14:57Yes, imagine, my dear
14:58You're a child, live your whole life alone.
15:00Neither love from a father nor love from a mother
15:01No school, no friends
15:03This is the only thing you know how to do.
15:05After achieving fame, success and widespread recognition
15:07You're not listening.
15:08Your hearing is going
15:09Your skill as a piano player
15:10You go
15:11What makes you unique as a person
15:12fades away
15:13Beethoven's only friend
15:15Music betrayed me
15:16And after times, my dear
15:17You would find Beethoven practicing on the miano
15:19People see this and think he's crazy.
15:21But with this technique
15:22He's trying to figure out whether it turned out to be right or wrong.
15:24Beethoven will begin to feel that people see him as strange.
15:27So it begins, meaning more isolation and more
15:29Unfortunately, with time, he will admit the truth.
15:31Hexf admits that his ear isn't working
15:33During his treatment in 1882
15:35He will be surprised when his friend asks him for his opinion on the flute blast.
15:38Here Beethoven will be surprised because he didn't hear anything being played.
15:41It's not just if the sound is low or there's a problem, and he hears that the volume is too low.
15:44I didn't hear anything at all.
15:45There was a shepherd playing music next to them the whole time
15:48But Beethoven didn't notice
15:49He couldn't hear at all.
15:51According to the author Jones and Ford
15:52This is the moment Beethoven realized he would suffer from complete deafness.
15:56I'm going to go completely deaf
15:57In a famous speech, Beethoven said that it would be better for him to end his life.
16:00Nor does anyone near him sense his illness.
16:02Because, as he put it, he considered it
16:05Gather something in it
16:07This is the only complete part in it
16:09He will express his sadness in this speech
16:10Because people were absent from the public eye.
16:12It is arrogance, burial, and madness
16:14Beethoven's greatness will not only make him a lover of his reed pipe
16:16But even this letter that was supposed to be sent to his sisters
16:19So that they would stand by him, he wouldn't send him.
16:20This is a published answer
16:21This letter will be discovered in his office years after his death.
16:25According to some sources, this speech was a Swasidl Note
16:27Anyone who solves this letter should expect the death of its author.
16:30But, my dear, at the end of the speech, ironically
16:33Beethoven will write a sentence that will change his life, and the music will be for his daughter.
16:37He couldn't leave this world without letting out everything inside him.
16:44Beethoven will decide, since he is the first delusional person in history.
16:47His talent has an expiration date.
16:50He uses what's left of his listening comprehension to write melodies.
16:53I hope that one day he will write it
16:55The melodies that were similar to it
16:56Not like the nobles, music for the paragraph
16:58Dreams of freedom and equality
17:00And the revolution that was taking over Europe
17:01This goal will transform all of Beethoven's music
17:04To a story of resistance and victory
17:06Let me explain this to you musically, my dear.
17:08Look, my dear, a symphony has four parts.
17:10Four Movements
17:11I am your nightingale, Omar Khair
17:12Beethoven's symphonies begin in the first movement with a motif of ordinary notes.
17:20In the second part, this motif weakens
17:22And she remains sad and becomes disfigured
17:23It gets desonance
17:29The part is gone, but it's back to how it was before.
17:31But with a little more interaction
17:33In the fourth and final part
17:39It brings back the exact same motif as the first part.
17:46But it involves more interaction and victory.
17:50Boutoffen through this symphony
17:52This narrative form
17:53It teaches Europe that music can speak its own language.
17:55It starts with weakness and deformity
17:57He achieved resistance and victory.
17:58And this, my dear, began with the Third Symphony.
18:00At that time, my dear, Napoleon became famous
18:02Bonaparte as the liberator of Europe
18:04And the one who carries the torch of revolution to all countries
18:06According to music professor Barry Cooper
18:08Pettov saw himself as Napoleon and Azi
18:10Napoleon, who came, liberated music from the taste of the nobility.
18:12Büven loved Napoleon because he felt he resembled him.
18:14Not just because their message is liberation
18:16He felt that he resembled him
18:18He is also a self-made man
18:20A self-made man
18:22Petufen wasn't born a nobleman, but he conquered the nobility with his talent.
18:24Tuffin will write the Third Symphony
18:26And he will call it Bonaparte
18:28Love of Baloot and West, the second Napoleon
18:30Bury has the other side
18:32You recognized me as an editor? Welcome! You mentioned mine.
18:34Napoleon Bonaparte, Emperor
18:36Napoleon might be liberating right next to you.
18:38But ultimately, he still has personal glory.
18:40He wants to preserve it and he wants to build it.
18:42At that moment, Betov felt angry.
18:44He feels like he's being laughed at in Napoleon
18:46He will say that he will now trample on all human rights.
18:48And it will serve his personal ambitions
18:50He'll keep commenting and commenting and commenting
18:52Until he transforms and becomes a tyrant
18:54Not a liberation project
18:56Buttov, my dear, will decide to punish Napoleon Bonaparte
18:58His name is derived from the name of the symphony.
19:00And what a fate for you, Napoleon Bonaparte!
19:02I'll name her Rock after my aunt.
19:04No, no, no, no
19:06No no
19:08Tantantantn no
19:10square
19:12According to the professor
19:14Brigitte Loudos was the first to compose this symphony.
19:16He has a calamity that they will feel.
19:18Loud music assaults their bodies
19:20And loud and shrill, not like Mozart
19:22Or anything they heard that resembled it, that you attend
19:24A rock party, but in the Qura 19
19:26He tells the composer Hector Berlioz
19:28The symphony, the moment it was played, opened eyes
19:30Europe has unlimited potential in music.
19:32Di Yazizi was new music
19:34Some people were interpreting it as calling on all the inhabitants of Vienna to revolt.
19:39At that moment, Beethoven would transform from a favorite of the nobility to someone the Austrian emperor constantly demanded police reports about.
19:47Regarding his activities as a revolutionary member, what he did was music without voices, without words.
19:52After our conquest of Lyon, Austria, and during Beethoven's visit to one of his noble patrons
19:56Beethoven would be surprised to learn that this nobleman had hosted French soldiers.
20:00Then they will say to him, "Why don't you play us something? Let us hear something!" So Beethoven will say to them, "I will not play my country's enemy for her."
20:06This nobleman will decide it because he controls a third of Beethoven's annual salary.
20:10Beethoven will reply to him, saying, "You are a noble prince. There are many noble people like you, but there is only one: Beethoven, and you and I know him well."
20:18Who? Hey, you, you, number ring of the mansika
20:21The situation is that this story isn't confirmed, but based on our knowledge of Beethoven and his somewhat narcissistic self-image...
20:26We can say that what might have happened was that in 1808, he was sitting there, and it was leaking from him, I could hear it.
20:32He no longer hears anything but beats, especially four beats; the Five Symphonies will descend upon him.
20:37Ta ta ta ta ta ta ta ta ta ta
20:40The symphony with which we began our episodes, according to Anton Schindler, this motif is Fate.
20:45The pot that knocks on the door to take the last of what's left of the seven is being sarcastic. Four knocks, ta ta ta ta ta
20:52Beethoven will perform a complete symphony for the first time
20:54It relies on this simple motif only
20:56The one that starts strong and then weakens and gets burned
20:59And then you'll come back stronger than before.
21:01It's as if Beethoven is in dialogue with fate, which is defeating him.
21:03He declares his victory with music, even if the sounds he hears are just drums.
21:08That's why, my dear, this could be the music of the resistance.
21:10Which the English used against the Germans
21:12In a documentary titled The World Without Beethoven
21:15The pianist Sarah Wells will consider the notes simple yet powerfully prepared, as happens in the Fifth Symphony.
21:21It will be the foundation of all rock music to this day.
21:24The four beats without that, and that's not all.
21:25In 1977, NASA launched Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 into space.
21:30Countries, my dear, were left in space like that.
21:32They walk and swim with the feeling that they are carrying things from human heritage.
21:36Which alien civilization might receive them?
21:38NASA decided that we're going to build a ship
21:41We will put things that represent humanity on this ship and launch it into space.
21:45I feel like there's an Alliance
21:46They found this ship, seized it, and looked inside it to discover that there was a civilization on Earth.
21:51One of the most important things that was on this ship, which represents human heritage
21:55Beethoven's Fifth Symphony
21:56There's a beautiful symbolism here, my dear.
21:58These are four beats
21:59Human heartbeats generally represent other quarks
22:03Other worlds
22:04Where do you know?
22:05Other creatures
22:06In 1888, Beethoven composed his Sixth Symphony, Pastoral.
22:11At that time, Beethoven was hearing the sounds of birds, nature, rain, and terror.
22:15Most likely, my dear, for the last time
22:17Who knows, maybe he'll wake up tomorrow and not hear them again.
22:19That's why he insisted on immortalizing these sounds in a magical way known as
22:22Beethoven would challenge his listeners to see the music
22:27They won't just hear it, they'll see it.
22:28If only my dear would close his eyes and listen to this symphony
22:30You will see someone wandering in the countryside
22:32After that, the machines will take you as a force.
22:34A ship facing the storm and terror
22:35Until her joy spreads and reaches
22:38On the good words of the musician Isaac Steer
22:39For the first time, sound will tell a musical picture as if it were a film score.
22:44Suntrack
22:44What can I say, my dear?
22:45During the thirties
22:46Why are many musicians migrating from Europe to America?
22:49These musicians will enter Hollywood
22:51They will enter Hollywood with Beethoven's Sixth Symphony
22:54And suddenly we find it in films like Fantasia 1940
22:56Legendary musician John Williams
22:58The one who made the music of the pair
23:00Jurassic Park
23:01Harry Potter
23:02He will say that Beethoven was the first musician to make music organize itself.
23:06To express its forms with pictures
23:07Is that all, my dear?
23:08Beethoven's symphonies don't shut anyone up here.
23:10His revolutionary spirit doesn't shut anyone down here.
23:11In the Seventh Symphony of 1813
23:13Beethoven will become a legendary hero
23:16Because the soldiers who were gathered from the wars with Napoleon
23:18They didn't need the old classical music as a gift.
23:20We need energetic music
23:22My dear personal musician is fighting deafness in every way possible.
23:25With all the fervor and energy possible
23:27Exactly like their feeling
23:28And they are fighting and battling the deafening silence of the cannons
23:31Europe will glorify the Seven Symphonies
23:33Because it allowed her soldiers to regain their enthusiasm and achieve victory.
23:35On Napoleon's armies in the battles of Vittoria
23:37When the Congress of Vienna begins
23:39The one who will determine the fate of Europe after Napoleon's defeat
23:41Beethoven's music will be present in every European city.
23:44Beethoven used to say that he wasn't just the youngest in Europe.
23:46Like Napoleon's attempt
23:47But his music triumphed and imposed its style.
23:49Unlike Napoleon's soldiers who lost
23:51And the person who started the musical career
23:53By humiliating the nobles and leaving them to their fate
23:55He will be the first musician in history
23:57The nobles grant him an annual salary for life.
24:004000 Florence
24:01This is money he used to take, whether he composed a song or not.
24:04In the year 1814
24:06After his Eighth Symphony
24:07The horror Beethoven awaited will come to pass.
24:09He tried to fight him with his music for years
24:11Beethoven will become completely deaf
24:13The great composer Beethoven's relationship with sounds ended
24:16While he still saw that his music
24:18Europe didn't heat up
24:19Europe is still ruled by nobles and songs
24:21Even when they started to like his music
24:22In 1815, his brother Casper died.
24:25Suddenly, Beethoven finds himself embroiled in a fierce legal battle.
24:28With his brother's wife
24:29The woman he described in the most vile terms
24:31Which of course cannot be mentioned in this respectable program
24:34In order to take custody of his nephew in Farles
24:35And I love you, Hani, we're talking about music.
24:37What brought us into family disputes?
24:39The truth is, as I told you
24:40Beethoven always had two personalities
24:41A character trying to deprive herself and the world of music
24:44A narcissistic personality whose only concern is the dark basement
24:47The place you'll be thrown if you fail at music
24:49By reaching complete deafness
24:50His narcissistic personality returns
24:51His anxiety returns
24:52He starts to feel like without music
24:54It has no value.
24:55Beethoven believed that anything he did outside of music
24:57It is a bad and gloomy thing
24:58According to him, it's psychologically permissible.
25:00Bettina Rutter
25:01Beethoven will recreate his father's dream
25:03The one who was his victim
25:04He will try to create a successor for himself.
25:05The music completes its arrangement
25:06That's why
25:07He will revert to his narcissistic personality.
25:08He uses all his connections with the nobility
25:10So that he can take custody
25:11Karl's nephew's custody
25:12At that time, my dear Beethoven was also
25:14I can't believe it
25:14Why is the mother defending custody of her son?
25:17His memories of the mother's role
25:18She's not doing anything
25:19When his father scolds him
25:20Even though he knows his mother really loves him
25:22But she wasn't fighting because of him
25:24God
25:24What a strange mother!
25:25The one who's fighting so her son doesn't go...
25:27He told him
25:27The truth, my dear
25:28Beethoven will win custody of his nephew
25:30And he will pressure Karl in every way possible
25:32To learn music
25:33But on Beethoven's X
25:34Karl Hecker Music
25:35He rebelled against his uncle in every way.
25:37Beethoven didn't see that he had taken the child from his mother in anger.
25:40He forced him to do something he didn't like.
25:42Hader couldn't believe how much Karl hated him.
25:44I'm teaching you music, no way!
25:45I'm the role model, no way!
25:46I am the symbol of revolution and liberation, no way!
25:49I am Beethoven
25:49Music is the most important thing in life.
25:51Learn to become great
25:53So that we can spend on ourselves when we transfer our pension
25:55According to Professor Barry Cooper
25:57Beethoven's problem was in his childhood
25:58Be like that, a normal childhood experience, just like us.
26:00He went to school and got to know the boys
26:02He engaged in social activities
26:03His family doesn't know his length, the communication is back for the music
26:06This makes him a scary person outside of it.
26:08While in reality it's not like that
26:09Why did the student lose her child?
26:11The one who is three years old
26:12Her teacher was Beethoven
26:13All he did was play the piano for her.
26:15Although Beethoven didn't know how to speak or express his feelings
26:18However, she was saying that Beethoven's music
26:20She was saying everything
26:21She says that his music made her feel like she was seeing her child.
26:25And the angels will lead him to Paradise.
26:27Beethoven finished the piece and patted her hand.
26:29He walked away without saying a word.
26:30Beethoven, my dear, is a person
26:31Music is his language for expressing love.
26:34Revolution and human communication
26:36Unfortunately, if the person in front of him doesn't understand his love language.
26:38He will hate the son
26:39He will see him as cruel, crazy, and narcissistic.
26:41And that's what happened in most of his romantic relationships.
26:43And it also happened with his nephew.
26:44The beautiful pianist Boris Gilberg
26:46Beethoven was described as a person who, through his art, loved all of humanity.
26:50But maybe his personality doesn't allow him to love just one person.
26:52Beethoven would have no choice but to continue on his own.
26:55Even if he were to make music while he was completely deaf
26:58According to the study of Beethoven's revolution
27:00Beethoven's childhood as someone who practiced music
27:02At the age of four
27:03This will enable it to memorize sounds and results without any reference.
27:06Beethoven says that whenever he comes to compose a musical piece
27:08He imagines a picture and walks along its lines.
27:11It's like he's persuading her with his music
27:13And over time, the people around her will begin to consider her old.
27:16He was crazy and it's all over for him.
27:18He hasn't composed a new symphony in over ten years.
27:21Beethoven would surprise the world in 1824
27:24He will compose the Nine Symphonies
27:26Do you see the ups and downs, my dear? Do you see the suffering?
27:34Beethoven, my dear, in this piece he will present an imaginative melody for the message
27:38The one who lived for her all that time
27:39Music is the magic of the solitary human.
27:41They are all originally equal
27:43Paragraph and Nobles
27:44Beethoven, my dear, will finish the symphony, and who will purify himself for the audience?
27:47Why? Because he's terrified.
27:49From what? Because he played something we don't hear.
27:51You're being unreasonable, my dear, after ten years.
27:53Don't play games; your life is full of constant failure.
27:56The people you love disappear and fade away from your life.
27:59Nobody can stand you, people see you as crazy and arrogant
28:01And ten years later you will be playing a symphony that will have faded into history, and you will be its listener.
28:06The problem, my dear, is that you're not just a listener to the symphony.
28:09You're a listener too.
28:10I wonder if people are being sarcastic or happy.
28:12I wonder if people were humming music and people were crowding
28:14He remains standing, my dear, with his back to the audience, until a car comes and makes him turn around.
28:18So that, my dear, at this moment he will see a roofing he has never seen in his life.
28:22The silencing, my dear, will continue to the point where the police have to come in to shut the audience up.
28:27Jean Souvard would describe this moment as the most magnificent moment
28:30The greatest moment in Beethoven's career
28:33Because he triumphed over his vow, over his deafness
28:35And my dear, from this moment on, a moment of victory, it is a moment of defeat.
28:38It was the saddest moment
28:40Because, my dear, I don't listen to his speech and I don't listen to what people are saying.
28:43I didn't hear any sound from what happened.
28:45The Ninth Symphony, my dear, some musicians will call it
28:47It is the symphony that concludes all symphonies.
28:51Beethoven died two years after this symphony.
28:53He'll leave his whole car as if he's apologizing to me
28:56He'll die before he sees the world change because of his music.
28:58It's possible, my dear, that Beethoven's life has ended, but his music hasn't.
29:02It wasn't just the Germans who played it, but also the Germans' enemies.
29:06As we saw in World War II
29:07The Ninth Symphony, my dear, will be chosen by the Council of Europe.
29:10It was composed in 1972 as a symbol of the desired unity.
29:14And at the most important moment of European unity in 1989
29:17The time of the fall of the Berlin Wall, which separated East and West Germany
29:20My dear, it will be the first celebration of unity.
29:22When composer Lennard Bernstein deletes the Ninth Symphony, which Germans are hearing for the first time together
29:27They feel, God willing, one country, not two.
29:29And the European Union will then adopt it as its anthem.
29:31But Beethoven's diction will convey the same message to the whole world.
29:34After the Chinese Communist Party bans it
29:36The Chinese people will celebrate this music as the end of the bloody Cultural Revolution.
29:41The Ninth Symphony will travel to many protests all over the world
29:44From the first Chinese protests in Tainamun Square in 1989
29:48Chilean Revolution in South America
29:49Each country will play its own horns, Beethoven's message nine
29:52The one who says that all humans are equal
29:55According to the study of Beethoven's revolution
29:57Live Beethoven's music forever
29:58Because it requires change all the time
30:00While all the music before it adhered to the rules
30:03If you thought about something like rock right now
30:05You'll find it emerged from the Fifth Symphony
30:06Those who have tried it can turn beats into a complete musical piece.
30:09If you thought about something like jazz
30:11You'll find it came out of a piano Sonata 32
30:13The person who thought of it was that it would affect the notes and disrupt the melody.
30:16In the language of the musicians
30:17Maybe, my dear, Beethoven's music sounds old.
30:20But most current types of music
30:22It started with this music, it started with a person
30:24He broke all the rules of his time in order to experiment
30:26Haydn wrote 104 symphonies
30:28Mozart is forty-one
30:29While Beethoven worked on nine projects
30:31But nine are not calm
30:32Nine men who changed the world
30:34According to Maestro Ivan Fischer
30:35Beethoven's childhood and deafness created a frightening figure.
30:38No one would want to do it
30:40But they also managed to create someone capable of using music.
30:43As the sole language of communication, revolution, and love
30:45Because he has no debt to her
30:47Music, my dear, is the only thing that freed Beethoven from his psychological flaws.
30:50And among his physical defects
30:52He decided that just as he had freed himself, he would free the whole world.
30:55And this, my dear, is the most important gift that human beings have given.
30:57That's all, my dear.
30:58Finally, and not least
30:58But you see the lives that have passed
30:59See the lives to come
31:00Don't forget to look at the sources
31:01If we're on YouTube, we should subscribe to the channel.
31:12I'll make you happy, my dear Moon Lay Sanata

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