- 572
- 496 720
Redacted
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 16 ก.ค. 2008
Amateur Piano / Record Transfer / Remastering Tests
Alfred Brendel plays Donizetti-Liszt "Réminiscences de Lucia di Lammermoor" (1958)
Alfred Brendel plays Donizetti-Liszt "Réminiscences de Lucia di Lammermoor" (1958)
มุมมอง: 36
วีดีโอ
Alfred Brendel plays Bellini-Liszt "Réminiscences de Norma" (1958)
มุมมอง 422 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Alfred Brendel plays Bellini-Liszt "Réminiscences de Norma" (1958)
Alfred Brendel plays Wagner-Liszt Liebestod from Tristan and Isolde (1958)
มุมมอง 402 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Alfred Brendel plays Wagner-Liszt Liebestod from Tristan and Isolde (1958)
Louis Kentner plays Lyapunov Transcendental Etudes Op. 11 Complete (1972)
มุมมอง 614 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Louis Kentner plays Lyapunov Transcendental Etudes Op. 11 Complete (1972)
Victor Merzhanov plays Scriabin 4 Etudes from Op. 8 and Op. 42 (1955)
มุมมอง 474 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Victor Merzhanov plays Scriabin 4 Etudes from Op. 8 and Op. 42 (1955)
Michael Ponti plays Alkan "Symphony for Solo Piano" Op. 39 No. 4 - 7 (1962)
มุมมอง 469 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Michael Ponti plays Alkan "Symphony for Solo Piano" Op. 39 No. 4 - 7 (1962)
Gyorgy Cziffra plays Bach-Liszt Fantasy and Fugue on B-A-C-H (1962)
มุมมอง 7012 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Laser transfer with appropriate curve finally.
Charles Rosen plays Debussy Douze Etudes L. 136 Complete (1951)
มุมมอง 6714 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Different curve and cleaning method. A skip or two from damage but still performances worth hearing.
Michael Ponti plays Alkan Etude Op. 39 No. 12 "Le Festin d'Esope" (1962)
มุมมอง 4316 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Michael Ponti plays Alkan Etude Op. 39 No. 12 "Le Festin d'Esope" (1962)
Victor Merzhanov plays Scriabin Sonata No. 5 Op. 53 (1955)
มุมมอง 7316 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Victor Merzhanov plays Scriabin Sonata No. 5 Op. 53 (1955)
Simon Barere plays Liszt Paganini Etude No. 3 "La Campanella" (1951)
มุมมอง 7016 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
I cleaned this record with hydrochloric acid. : )
Sergei Rachmaninoff plays Humoresque Op. 10 No. 5 (1940) 78rpm
มุมมอง 71วันที่ผ่านมา
Sergei Rachmaninoff plays Humoresque Op. 10 No. 5 (1940) 78rpm
Alexander Borowsky plays Liszt Hungarian Rhapsody No. 3 (1937)
มุมมอง 62วันที่ผ่านมา
Alexander Borowsky plays Liszt Hungarian Rhapsody No. 3 (1937)
John Ogdon plays Liszt and Busoni Variations (1968)
มุมมอง 75วันที่ผ่านมา
John Ogdon plays Liszt and Busoni Variations (1968)
Vladimir Horowitz plays Mendelssohn "Variations Sérieuses" Op. 54 (1946)
มุมมอง 5214 วันที่ผ่านมา
Vladimir Horowitz plays Mendelssohn "Variations Sérieuses" Op. 54 (1946)
Vladimir Horowitz plays Czerny "Varations on a La Ricordanza" by Rode Op. 33 (1944)
มุมมอง 6414 วันที่ผ่านมา
Vladimir Horowitz plays Czerny "Varations on a La Ricordanza" by Rode Op. 33 (1944)
Vladimir Horowitz plays Rachmaninoff Concerto No. 3 Op. 30 Live Broadcast (1978)
มุมมอง 13714 วันที่ผ่านมา
Vladimir Horowitz plays Rachmaninoff Concerto No. 3 Op. 30 Live Broadcast (1978)
Ekaterina Novitskaya plays Mussorgsky "Pictures at an Exhibition" (1968)
มุมมอง 8421 วันที่ผ่านมา
Ekaterina Novitskaya plays Mussorgsky "Pictures at an Exhibition" (1968)
Simon Barere plays Balakirev "Islamey" Live (1947)
มุมมอง 63หลายเดือนก่อน
Simon Barere plays Balakirev "Islamey" Live (1947)
Simon Barere plays Rachmaninoff Prelude Op. 32 No. 12 Live (1947)
มุมมอง 48หลายเดือนก่อน
Simon Barere plays Rachmaninoff Prelude Op. 32 No. 12 Live (1947)
Simon Barere plays Behr-Rachmaninoff "Polka de W. R." Live (1947)
มุมมอง 37หลายเดือนก่อน
Simon Barere plays Behr-Rachmaninoff "Polka de W. R." Live (1947)
❤ Thank you
❤
My favourite alongside Lazar Berman's 1963 legendary recording, which you've also skillfully remastered.
Ooooooo yes
Sounds pretty good on my phone speaker. 😎
Perfect sound! 🙏
Thanks! I cleaned these record for 30 min straight, but result was worth it. Only imperfection is a slight scuff beginning of the 11th but otherwise things turned out great.
I've already listened to other versions of Cziffra but all with hiss...
irreplaceable performance
A suitable ending
@@lw7108 Truly!
❤
Совершенно гениально
❤❤❤ thank you
❤what a joy to hear Alcan's works and in such an interesting interpretation. Thank you very much from France
What an amazing historical record. Totally jaw-dropping. Thank you!
far better transfer to what I've heard before, but Ponti's sound was never the most subtle...
Personally I find him perfect for Alcan but I find it hard to imagine him playing Schmann, Schubert...
От этого исполнения не возможно оторваться ! Испытал озноб.❤❤❤❤❤
❤
beautiful
Sounds great. Did you re-equalize for the different curve? I find that a cut at about 1K and a slight bump up from 2K-5K often can help with 50s mono recordings that have an "auditorium" sound.
@ly776 Yes, I’d been using RIAA which sounded pretty dark. I used the AES cut up top here which helped a bit. I should caveat, for the last month or two I’ve been trying to get a modified laser turntable working. The “raw” output I had the manufacturer install behaves neither like a constant velocity or amplitude pickup. I still haven’t quite figured out how to lay a precise curve over what I’m seeing, hence all the tests and video pulls while I see what works better or worse. So, AESish : )
I forgot to mention. These are sounding nicer mainly because I started using Neil Antin’s cleaning method with HCl + Triton X instead of Citrinox for that step. The laser is highly sensitive to residues even on new records and this removes them better than anything I’d tried. It’s rather dangerous though, so use caution anybody trying it. For vinyl only, of course.
@@1fattyfatman Does the laser account for the super low vinyl hiss? I work with a pretty simple turntable and various cartridges, and process/equalize mostly in Audacity. My cleaning is also pretty simple with an old vacuum record cleaner.
@@ly776 You’ll notice the mono records are a lot more quiet. I use a plug-in called Tru mid/side from RJ studios. It allows you to more carefully remove / retain signal from each groove wall when summing a stereo transfer. It can introduce artifacts though, and so takes some tinkering. This actually has no noise reduction aside from that, click, and rumble removal - somewhat amazingly. I’ve caved and bought two tests discs to solve the mystery of the laser curve. They’ve arrived today!! Yay!
@@1fattyfatman I have also gone to focusing mainly on clicks and crackles. I have an ancient Magix program - that only runs on a cranky PC (I do everything on Apple otherwise.) It has a much better control on clicks and crackle than I have been able to get in audacity. But I guess with a regular cartridge I'm always going to have some hiss. I have about 20 hiss curves on Magix that I've created - but sometimes there is no way to remove it without creating artifacts or flattening everything out. When that happens, I just treat it like a 78...and hope the listeners will tune it out!
Excellent restoration!
He taught my teacher, very enlightening. Thank you for posting ❤️
Amazing pianist!
I really appreciate those who tackle ALKAN
Especially in 1962!
thank you so much
This is an excellent handle!
He was in fantastic form in 1942. Certainly surpasses the rejected 1935 take
Back when society had class and decorum
Now its Cardi B
Excellent transfer.
Thanks! I just tested Neil Antin’s cleaning methodology (worth googling) I’m seeing dramatic improvements in the laser transfers due to the lower residues left over after cleaning. The next transfers will knock your socks off!
One of my faves
Is interesting. Will do the 7th rhapsody on the other side now that I’ve swapped out for a newer cartridge.
Yesssss
Transfers of transfers yo…
Thanks!!
Tall zaddy shredding hard oh fuk yeah
Ogdon was one of the greatest pianists
Do you see he had plasters or bandage on his litte fingers And his play is great
和《義勇軍進行曲》完全是兩碼事!
The Piano Files with Mark Ainley "A glorious 1926 recording of the legendary Polish pianist Ignaz Friedman playing Chopin's Mazurka in B minor Op.33 No.4. The highly individual interpreter was largely ignored by recording companies after his death in 1948: Columbia never issued a single LP (or CD) containing any of several hours' worth of 78rpm discs he produced for the label. I first read about the artist in Harold C Schonberg's classic tome The Great Pianists in the mid-1980s, when I first got into historical recordings, and dreamed of finding the Nocturne in E-Flat Op.55 No.2 that he wrote so poetically about; I would have to wait until Schonberg himself gave a lecture in my home town of Montreal in 1988 and played the performance... and nothing was the same after that. Friedman's playing is not for the faint of heart, particularly as the conception of Romanticism these days is much more sanitized than things actually were during that era and those that immediately followed it. The Polish pianist's playing is bold and impetuous, quixotic and evocative, individual in a way that can be startling to some listeners today... but truly today's pianists are by and large individual in a much more self-centred way than was Friedman, despite the stated intention of respecting the score. When Friedman stretches a phrase, he is not just adjusting the timing but also the dynamic shading, tonal colour, and auric quality (via the pedal and touch), as well as its relationship with harmonic and other melodic elements - but modern ears tend to hear things along a single plane and not this multi-dimensional shift. Particularly remarkable are Friedman's legendary traversal of Chopin Mazurkas, which feature a rhythmic pulse and accenting that are completely different from the norm. Yet Friedman actually danced this folk song as a child in his native country, and Chopin was known to have insisted on particular accenting in mazurkas: Schonberg writes of an incident when Meyerbeer visited Chopin and the two ended up in a disagreement of the rhythmic element of his mazurkas, Meyerbeer saying he was playing it 2/4 and Chopin insisting it was 3/4. To those who find Friedman's readings unsettling, it is worth considering: is there any guarantee that if by some miracle a recording of Chopin was found that he would play as we imagine he would - and that we would like it? And if not, what does that suggest about our tastes and preferences, when musicians and music lovers today speak so strongly about the need to respect the composer's wishes and the score? Friedman recorded a dozen mazurkas for in 1930 but also recorded a few one-offs, and this 1926 account of one of these pieces that he included in his 1930 set is also very much worth hearing. As always with Friedman, we have that rich singing sound, incredible rhythmic bite and buoyancy, phrasing that alternates between sensual and playful, gorgeous legato lines, and intelligent use of articulation to provide dimension and shaping. A 3-minute master class by one of the all-time greats!"
Grande performance! After Etude no. 8 Wilde Jagd, the audience was stunning! No one moved; they needed a minute to realize it was the end. Boris presented this piece with such a powerful technique! It is one of the most difficult and well-known. Demonic power inside him! Bravo Boris!
liszt reincarnated
Great Three Remasters! This Czerny Variation is one of my favorite of Horowitz. I had uploaded the Sony's 2008 remaster of this recording, which they did a good job at reducing white-noises but the result is in a bad sonic. Also at the opening there is a small noise issue! th-cam.com/video/4o1l2ZpeuDk/w-d-xo.html
Yes, I'm surprised some of the earlier LP transfers are nicer than the digital ones which have been "remastered" many times over by the rights holders. I hope there is a serious reissue soon. Technology has come a long way. I can only imagine what they can do.
@@1fattyfatman They even makes private tapes into the great audios! At the 2013 issue of the 1968 December recital at Carnegie Hall, the encores was the private tape. But no one could recognize that! Even it is a 60s private, and that was remastered 11 years ago!
Horowitz is for shure among the world top pianists ever
Thanks for your great video! Could you do a remaster at the 1949 Liszt Sonata or the 1969 Boston Recital?
I looked at 1969 and had no luck. I have the raw 49 Liszt sonata I think. I’ll take a look at it.
@@1fattyfatman Thanks!! I loved your Liszt-Horowitz Hungarian Rhapsody No. 13 remaster, which felt that the complete recital will be a great job too.
오...신이시여...미국이여...부활하라...트럼앞길에 영광있으라..
un grande horovitz
This is what youtube is for. Preserving historical events
Горовиц великий пианист, но мне больше всего нравится, что он невозмутим и безэмоционален, он не дергается как многие пианисты, он просто передает эмоции по средствам самой музыки
"Les tringles des sisters tintaient..." There appear to be several versions of these incredible variations. Can you imagine Trump going anywhere near this kind of class? He'd probably lean on the piano cover, wolfing a MCBurger and throwing ketchup at the wals, belching, and asking Horowitz if he knows YMCA. Does Horo have a bandaid on his pinky?? Bizet: dead at, what?, 36 or so? What a loss.
plus cette horrible bande bleue..Enfin ! Quand je pense qu'une partie seulement de ses récitals de 65/66 ont été commercialisés en un seul dvd, et que la qualité de la vidéo était mauvaise, alors qu'Horowitz était au mieux de sa forme...
Rubinstein will always be the greatest for the Polonaise, but the Sonata more than made up for it
By far the best piano rendition of this waltz I have ever heard.
superb!
I wish you could remaster the whole recital at 1969 Boston. Or just the Chopin Ballade..
is there pedal