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The Key of Life
Germany
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 27 เม.ย. 2021
วีดีโอ
Scarlatti's Calmest Sonatas (30+ minutes)
มุมมอง 898ปีที่แล้ว
Sometimes, we are in a place where we need music to lift us up. Music is literally a drug. It stimulates the release of norepinephrine, a happiness hormone. I have used the music here to uplift myself, and if you need that, I hope it works for you too.
Domenico Scarlatti - Early Intermediate Sonatas
มุมมอง 1.7Kปีที่แล้ว
Domenico Scarlatti - Early Intermediate Sonatas
Endless Repeated Notes (Scarlatti Sonata K. 435)
มุมมอง 2.6Kปีที่แล้ว
Pianist: Claire Huangci Piece: Scarlatti Sonata K. 435 Watch her perform live: clairehuangci.com/en/schedule/ Original Video: th-cam.com/video/ItY3EefouTg/w-d-xo.html
Czerny's Most Beautiful Etude (op. 740 no. 45)
มุมมอง 108Kปีที่แล้ว
Pianist: Xiaotang Tan, Central Conservatory of Music (China) Piece: Czerny op. 740 no. 45
When you play it at Czerny's tempo (on an old piano)
มุมมอง 11Kปีที่แล้ว
Pianist: @minkyukim0204 Piece: Czerny op. 299 no. 2
This is NOT Scarlatti (but I was fooled)
มุมมอง 11Kปีที่แล้ว
Bach Fantasia BWV 906 Pianist: Rosalyn Tureck
Scarlatti's most Exhilarating Sonata (K. 517)
มุมมอง 19Kปีที่แล้ว
Original video: th-cam.com/video/_PLbWlFHftI/w-d-xo.html Pianist: Sean Yeh
The First Piano Piece (on the Oldest Piano)
มุมมอง 149Kปีที่แล้ว
Original video: th-cam.com/video/S1qDC1cjm4E/w-d-xo.html The piano: 1720 Cristofori Composer: Ludovico Giustini Gigue from Sonata no. 6 Pianist: Dongsok Shin
Is this Scarlatti's worst Sonata? (K. 11)
มุมมอง 3.4Kปีที่แล้ว
Original Video: th-cam.com/video/kFWMjvihJoc/w-d-xo.html Guitarist: Dominika Dawidowska Support the Artist! www.youtube.com/@DominikaDawidowska/videos royalphilharmonicsociety.org.uk/performers/instrumentalists/instrument-purchase/recent-instrument-purchase/dominika-dawidowska
Scarlatti's Most Evocative Sonata (K. 119)
มุมมอง 33Kปีที่แล้ว
Scarlatti Sonata K. 119 Player: Irena Koblar
1700's Stride piano (Scarlatti sonata K. 299)
มุมมอง 9Kปีที่แล้ว
1700's Stride piano (Scarlatti sonata K. 299)
Wendelen Bitzan - Mouse Ballet (for solo Piano)
มุมมอง 2.4K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Wendelen Bitzan - Mouse Ballet (for solo Piano)
Wow
이렇게 추운날 이 어린애들을 꼭 실외에서 시켜야 했나요? 그러다 손 망가지면 책임지실건가요? 벌써 손이 곱고 힘든거 다 보이거든요. 한명의 천재는 조직에 속한 사람들보다 훨씬 섬세한 관리가 필요합니다. 하여간 한심한 한국 방송들.
Impressive speed. Zero attention to some note details. As fast as possible “without ignoring dynamics is what I’m sure the composer had in mind. Pum-pum pararum and not pararararum.
I've listened to music for decades, but this might be my first time hearing anything by Czerny . . . and I quite liked it! I don't give a rat's gluteus maximus what critics and perfectionists have to say . . . I take each work on its own merits, and to me, this little etude has merit. If you didn't know who wrote it, would you still hate it? If you don't like, don't listen!
Más bien eso refuerza lo que Wim dice. Scarlatti da la indicación "lo más rápido posible", si otros compositores pusieran sus marcas como "metas" mejor pondrían esa indicación :b
Wait a second. Is that a piano...or a harpsichord?
Didn't Bach improvise and write down a ricercare in three voices before this piece? Or dod this composition come first?
Красивая музыка, свободное и выразительное исполнение, спасибо!
WERE MAKING BANGERS WITH THIS ONE 🗣️🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Nice!
It's super incredible how a person can manage to play Czerny and memorize one of his op. I am a pianist but I have not been able to memorize any of Czerny's scores.
I too hate the speed fetish. Showing off is showing off and music is music.
@johnharding9792. Written sources,, + - 200 years old tell of a competative mentality among pianists. That explains a lot of the «impossible» fast MM numbes. So we know that they cultivated the virtuosic, piano keys were their sports arena. But also note that the composers in their music give the pianists slow movements. Here the pianists had the opportunity to improvise details and emphasize the emotional in the slow movements. Criticism of the virtuoso often betrays a lack of musical experience. The pianists were not only artists who were supposed to express the emptional, but they were practical professional practitioners as well. If they had a virtuoso level of playing technique, it was easier for them to deal with practical challenges, such as when a colleague fell ill and another had to substitute at short notice. Or that a violinist, singer, flutist etc changes his mind and at short notice would rather perform something else. Then the pianist who has a virtuoso technique succeeds better. A virtuoso level also made it much easier to become goos at sight reading. (prima vista) Being able to play compositions for the first time in tempo was a practical and therefore important quality in the pianists daily work as professional musicians. Moreover - the human emotional register is wide. It is too narrow to believe that all musical expressions work best in slow pieces. Emotions such as rage and indescribable joy work best in virtuoso tempo.
大変良く出来ました。これは名作です😊👏👏👏
This guy is very precise but he types it all out without a shred of musical feeling. If this is Czerny at his best, it wasn't given much of a chance.
"gayement" literally "gay-ly"
Que belleza! La tengo que tocaaar 😍🥰
0:31 chopin's opus 9 no 2 nocturne lmfao
wow!
Indeed!
U2slow 'cause u play the wrong instrument!
Poor Scarlatti.
Scarlatti would be happy
Thats a gay theme
The opening piece for a chapter of the music history: "The greatest instrument"
I’m sure this sonata hates W i m W i n t e r s as well.
He would say something like: "As fast as possible meant a different thing back in the baroque era because musicians weren't so good and instruments weren't so advanced as they are today..." Or he would pull something like: "Eight notes don't sound like eight notes" or something... As fast as possible means as fast as possible just like 80 bpm means 80 bpm. It's really as simple as that!
And it is the truth, you have just not read and seen as many historical facts as him. Facts. That's why you believe those absurd tempos as right. Althouth even they are not 100 percent as fast as the indication
davidalvarez. If you have some knowledge you should be able to discover errors and manipulations in some of Wim Winters’ videos. In other words, you don’t have the knowledge.
@geiryvindeskeland7208 😆😆😆ok
Single or Double Beat, for sure this is NOT how it is supposed to be played...
@orso4548. Kim play the exact tempo that Czerny marked, so then you have to tell us: what is he doing wrong?
Nah not really
0:30
This is of course not Czerny's most beautiful etude
Liszt- Dante sonata?
They did NOT need to go this hard for the first piano piece 💀💀💀
Pretty, pretty gay
A wide range of opinions in this thread, largely from listeners whose critical sense has apparently deserted them; this is thin gruel, and as such almost never appears in concert programmes for self-evident reasons. Czerny, like Hanon and a string of others, is largely mindless finger-twiddling exercises which, whilst teaching some of the *technique* necessary to play Beethoven for example, is otherwise *musically* almost worthless.
I just learned this. So fun to play!
Czerny brought Liszt to his highest level -- a flexible, cool teacher -- his music wasn't about theater -- it was about joy.
Великолепное исполнение❤
That was beautiful! the oldest piano sounds more like an harpsichord than a modern piano 🙂
I remember throwing away my Czerny book when I was a student and told my teacher that I lost it. And she got me a Hanon book the following week which I hated even more LMAO.
...I HATED those Czerny, Hannon & Duvernoy lessons, but wish I'd appreciated them...I'm 74 (75 in Nov)...started lessons @ 5 in early 1955...my biggest (and the one of which I was most proud of at the time) was being able to reach an octave...I was prolly about 7...the first time I EVER appreciated Bach's Inventions was when I listened to 'Switched On Bach' with my dad's Sennheiser headphones - and that started my journey into the organ music of Bach (and others)...now I'm back discovering what I missed almost 70 years ago...
😮
Well im actually doing hanon and i like it,i feel like I’m getting better whit my finger and having less tension (well i already did 10 exercices well at 80 bpm and that’s why I can now play them at 95) but it’s nice to really feel like your technique is getting better
Parallel 5ths were used as stylistic resource
If you cut out all the two bar repeats, the piece would be half as long.
It is certainly not a bad sonata, but it does fare better on guitar (in my opinion) than on piano or harpsichord, since there is more variety of timbre. Nice performance.
ショパン風で美しい曲❤❤❤
I'm glad you like it! Thanks for the upload.
I think either Op. 740 no. 24 or Op. 807 no. 67 are the most beautiful
Sounds even better on the instrument it was intended to be played on-the harpsichord!
Lovely
Bortolomeo?
Well, I think this is Carl Czerny at his best. When I was a little boy I had to play many of Czerny´s Etudes. Maybe sometimes it seemed to me a little bit boring. But now when I get older, I am over sixty now, I found his etudes very useful and never regret to play these pieces in the days of my youth. He had to be very good piano teacher!
I'm 14, and I'm aware that Czerny etudes are pretty fun to play. I'm trying to play his etudes from Op. 299, and I'm having fun playing them.
If Liszt composed the minute waltz:
are we not mentioning how the soundboard was replaced by the met in the 30s? most experts consider this piano no longer in any way representational of its original sound.