Genre not found
Artist not found
Album not found
Song not found

Invitation To The Dance
Carl Maria von Weber Lyrics


We have lyrics for these tracks by Carl Maria von Weber:


Aufforderung Zum Tanz Op. 65 Molo boi do boru batak naro Pinarsitta rohami ale dongan Asa…


The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
Comments from YouTube:

@ThuLe-eh1xe

We hardly hear the drums. The drumming will give more life, more joy to the music.
Besides this, it was good video.
I can hear the river running swiftly, the birds singing, flying joyfully from tree to tree. I can see chipmunks, squirrels, bunnies playing together. I can feel green branches swaying as the breeze pass by...
Everything in nature is celebrating the joy of life.
Thank you for the music.

@susangrossman8431

This was used in a wonderful Bette Davis movie from the 1940s called All This and Heaven, Too.

@imapaine-diaz4451

One doesn't often hear the final conclusion of the piece performed. this is a fine performance, and the final coda gives an grateful and appropriate "thank you for the dance".

@imapaine-diaz4451

the piece has three parts. the invitation to the lady to dance, the dancing itself, and the concluding coda.The piece is not complete without the coda. No one knows these days about dancing as practiced when this piece was written. One did not just abandon your partner on the floor after the dance was finished! One escorted her back to her seat and thanked her for the dance! So much more civilized, not to say romantic!

@joshuarosen6242

It is certainly incomplete without it but it tends to catch audiences out though. At least the cellist smiled rather than glaring at the audience as I once saw Sir Simon Rattle do when someone clapped too early.

@lindavies7969

What a wonderful performance! Maestro So obviously enjoying his orchestra and they performing at their peak. Excellent, loved it.

@Nigelsmom2136

Beautiful. ❤

@secretofsuzanne

what a splendid sound very articulated I can hear every note, every phrase played without rushing as many versions are. Thank you rodney2marsh, I'll listen again.

@ilovehifi

fantastic version, pleasantly slow, I hear a lot more details! Congratulations, Maestro! And, the first Cellist, great, GREAT!

@helened6896

Bravo! I'm just now studying classical music and waltzes. This is my first time to hear this piece and it's glorious. Thank you!

More Comments

More Versions