10,000 Japanese Singing Ode to Joy Open Thread

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=paH0V6JLxSI[/youtube]

We haven’t had an open thread in a while and I needed an excuse to post the above video.  As always be charitable, be concise and be amusing.

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Anzlyne
Anzlyne
Wednesday, May 16, AD 2012 10:43pm

What a joy! Always a joy.
Think of all those phalanxes of guardian angels crowded in there singing along!

PM
PM
Wednesday, May 16, AD 2012 11:17pm

Thank you for this masterpiece and music – a breath of fresh air.
Isn’t this what the height of civilisation and culture is meant to achieve?
Anyway, happy springtime and renewal.

Cannot resist saying that this is a moment of in with the good and out with the bad – air … . Joy and sorrow need one another. It’s even on the conductor’s face.

Joe Green
Joe Green
Thursday, May 17, AD 2012 7:54am

Greatest piece of music ever written. Hope it’s performed in Heaven.

Denise M
Denise M
Thursday, May 17, AD 2012 9:32am

Finally…multiculturalism has a positive message!

Christine
Christine
Thursday, May 17, AD 2012 12:59pm

This is truly SO very beautiful!! I wish I had the soundtrack for this so I could save it into my music library:)

Valentin
Valentin
Thursday, May 17, AD 2012 9:27pm

Considering how disjointed the Japanese culture is this is probably good for the Japanese people to listen to.

dale rempe
dale rempe
Thursday, May 17, AD 2012 10:50pm

What a joy to see and listen to that. Like Christine, I wish I had the sound track but now that I know where I can find it, I’ll be back.

By the way, I found this by searching for Kipling’s “the ‘eathen” and happened upon ‘The American Catholic’ and was drawn to the explanation of the poem as much as to the poem itself (I first read a snippet of that great poem in Heinlein’s “Starship Trooper” some decades ago).

I’ve a question related to ‘the eathen’, that being the phrase “‘e draf’s from Gawd knows where”. What does Kipling mean by that?

Thanks much for this Mr. McClarey.

Dante alighieri
Admin
Thursday, May 17, AD 2012 10:57pm

To me the 9th is simply the greatest piece of music ever composed, and there’s not really anything in its proximity. If you expand on the youtube video there is a link to the great scene in Immortal Beloved featuring the Ode to Joy, and it was watching that scene some 16 years ago late on a summer night that turned me onto that piece.

T. Shaw
T. Shaw
Friday, May 18, AD 2012 5:58am

My father (RIP) had a book named “Kipling’s Army.” Next time I go over the house, I’ll look it up. Years ago, I skimmed some of it. Before the reforms (I think) the Saxon’s army was put together of regiments raised locally by the local peerages. Sounds kind of feudal (90 days batchelor service). In those days, I guess the crown reimbursed them for expenses that they couldn’t defray by looting and rapine.

PS: Number-2 Son is stationed in Japan with the US Army. Big, blond, blue-eyed Adonis kind of sticks out over there. He plays prop on a rugger team of foreigners “downtown.”

No Godzilla sighting, yet.

Jane
Jane
Friday, May 18, AD 2012 10:31pm

THank you so much for sharing this! I discovered this piece in college over 30 years ago–it is so lovely to hear it again.

Don the Kiwi
Don the Kiwi
Friday, May 18, AD 2012 11:30pm

T.Shaw
In those days, I guess the crown reimbursed them for expenses that they couldn’t defray by looting and rapine.

I wonder what sort of reimbursement they got from rapine – the mind boggles. 😆

Your No. 2 son in Japan playing rugby there may well have run into a few kiwis there playing rugby. There are quite a number of pro. rugby players there, some maybe not good enough for the All Blacks, or retired from the AllBlacks, or provincial players from the franchise teams, playing out their rugby days in Japan because the money is so good – huge in relation to what they earn here.

dale rempe
dale rempe
Wednesday, May 23, AD 2012 8:28pm

Thanks, Donald for your response to my question above. I’m surprised, though perhaps I shouldn’t be, that my comment spurred a bit of a discussion on Kipling here. I plan (and I hope the others will as well) to explore your first three examinations of Kiplings poetry.

Dale

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