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Rákóczy March
Hector Berlioz Lyrics


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Most interesting comment from YouTube:

@retromograph3893

Now the Hungarians are nothing if not patriotic. In every shop window things are ticketed hony (national) and, by the advice of an amateur in Vienna, who had brought me a volume of Hungarian national airs, I chose the Rakoczy March and arranged it as it now stands as finale to the first part of my Faust.

No sooner did the rumour spread that I had written hony music than Pesth began to ferment.

How had I treated it? They feared profanation of that idolised melody, which for so many years had made their hearts beat with lust of glory and battle and liberty; all kinds of stories were rife, and at last there came to me M. Horwath, editor of a Hungarian paper—who, unable to curb his curiosity, had gone to inspect my march at the copyist’s.

“I have seen your Rakoczy score,” he said, uneasily.

“Well?”

“Well; I feel horribly nervous about it.”

“Bah! why?”

“Your motif is introduced piano, and we are used to hearing it started fortissimo.”

“Yes, by the gipsies. Is that all? Don’t be alarmed. You shall have such a forte as you never heard in your life. You can’t have read the score carefully; remember the end is everything.”

All the same, when the day came my throat{198} tightened, as it did in times of great excitement, when this devil of a thing came on. First the trumpets gave out the rhythm, then the flutes and clarinets, with a pizzicato accompaniment of strings—softly outlining the air—the audience remaining calm and judicial. Then, as there came a long crescendo, broken by the dull beats of the big drum (as of distant cannon) a strange restless movement was perceptible among them—and, as the orchestra let itself go in a cataclysm of sweeping fury and thunder, they could contain themselves no longer.

Their overcharged souls burst with a tremendous explosion of feeling that raised my hair with terror.

I lost all hope of making the end audible,[22] and in the encore it was no better; hardly could they contain themselves long enough to hear a portion of the coda.

Horwath, in his box, was like one possessed, and I could not resist a smiling glance at him to ask—

“Are you still afraid or are you content with your forte?”

It was lucky that this was the end of the programme, for certainly these excitable people would have listened to nothing more.

As I mopped my face in the little room set apart for me, a poorly dressed man slipped quietly in. He threw himself upon me, his eyes full of tears, and stammered out:

“Ah, monsieur—the Hungarian—poor man—not speak French—Forgive, excited—understood your cannon—Yes, big battle—Dogs of Germans!” Striking his chest vehemently—“In heart of me you stay—ah, French—Republican—know to make music of Revolution!”

I cannot describe his frenzy; it was almost sublime.{199}

After that, of course, the Rakoczy ended every concert, and on leaving I had to present the town with my MS.



All comments from YouTube:

@gavinrakoczy2403

It's great that my family is remembered in such a way

@ryanstrawn3387

My mother’s side of my family were the Slovak “Rakovskys”. I believe there was some sort of connection that the Hungarian line originated from the same place in current Slovakia.

@peternagy5914

There is no connection between the Rakovszky and the Rákóczi family. The Rakovszky family descend from the then part of Hungary Felvidek region (today it is part of Slovakia). The Rákóczi family is from Transyilvania. By the way the Rakovszky family is not slovak, but of the hungarian nobility. Slovakia didn't exist before the 20th century. The family did.

@zodiacthefirst3781

The Hungarian soul in the language of music, full of energy still elegant.

@ildar.berchimbaev4142

Kazachstan мне эта музыка помнится из фильма Большая прогулка. 1966 🇰🇿( Russian)

@zodiacthefirst3781

This and Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 are the musical manifestation of the Hungarian soul and spirit.

@Joshua-bu4mv

There are other Hungarian Rhapsodies better than the second one

@Boccaccio1811

@@Joshua-bu4mv- False.
But I will admit that there are other Hungarian rhapsodies which are really good and embody the Hungarian spirit just as well

@exstazius

You really hear the hungarian soul in it. It is beautiful ❤

@MadMax-cf9uu

My amazon parrots love this tune!!!!!!

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