As much as I love and admire Rach 3's, I prefer the 'Bach like' other cadenza. My absolute favourite cadenza is Ravel's left-hand. A sublime masterpiece.
Not even a minute in and I'm already very impressed by the amount of effort put into making such a well-planned video! You definitely deserve way more views.
this is such an underrated video by such an underrated channel. everything about this video is perfect, and you put in way more effort than a lot of other channels. i hope your channel blows up because you really deserve it
What a brilliant video and great playing! Prokofiev 2nd gets my vote as most epic. 5-6 mins long, extraordinary piano writing, the colossale section is terrifying to play and then the sheer power when the orchestra resume. Even more scary is other parts of this concerto are (I think) even more difficult! Rach 3 is epic for sure - the chordal passage in the ossia is tough. Grieg's cadenza is much easier but very effective. I would add Ravel PC for Left Hand in the epic list.
Great comment! I agree that Prokofiev has even harder parts to play than the actual cadenza, for example the infamous whole 2nd movement, haha! The Cadenza is brilliantly written for the piano, it falls so nice under the fingers, and it's perfectly designed to sound BIG. Even if you play it mezzo-piano it still sounds powerful, that's how well it's written for its musical purpose. Ravel Left Hand Concerto is also amazing, I've never played it but it would be interesting to study it. Maybe next time! 😁
You have an incredibly intuitive way of explaining music. I learned something despite playing piano for 25 years and tackling the majority of these pieces! Keep up the good work, you got a new subscriber.
Yundi Li’s live version of Prokofiev 2nd concerto is just absolutely stunning, this candenza is so hard yet one of the most incredible music ever written in my opinion
I was approaching with a little skepticism to this video, but maaan what a a joy that was. The editing, your explanations, everything is on point. And you absolutely nailed the performance of that terrific cadenzas. You're an excellent pianist, sir. Now i wanna go practice, thank you for the inspiration! And wish you all the best.
THIS IS PHENOMENAL! Your explanation of Rach 3 (my pers. fav cadenza) is so clear, and precise! I am not a pianist(I’m a guitarist), however I felt like I understood everything, and I loved how you went back to the main theme before taking about the climax! Also you playing is absolutely amazing! Keep it up :)
I recently discovered the Prokofiev 2nd piano concerto and the candenza is amazing. Love the background on the piece you gave. Rach 3 still my all time favorite piece with another brilliant cadenza. Thanks for the video.
@Samuri_Jack_EnjoyerOf course. What an insult to them. Just because they dont have these in the Repertoire doesn't mean they cant play them. The creator plays good no doubt but you are comparing him to the best
The effort put into this video is incredible!! Absolutely not to diminish the effort of Manuel - but we need to take into consideration here he havent performed rest of pc before actual cadenza + hes playing in the safety of His home without any audience, having the possibility of retakes if things go wrong - these are all things professional pianists are stripped off once they have to step in front of the orchestra. Still incredible kudos to manuel for putting this jewel of piano together! 🎉
@@lucatran2809 Schiff can barely make his way through Chopin's 1st ballade. He also fakes much of what he plays, especially his Bartok. Now that I think of it Barenboim could probably give a decent performance of Rach 3. But would have to leave out a lot of notes on account of his small hands. I meant it as a compliment to this unheard of pianist who decided to make a really good TH-cam video, not to diminish your favorite pianist.
Wow! I was often disappointed from classical music analysis. But you are a professional, you have a good sense of entertaining and educating in one step! Great choice of pieces. I’ll startvto become a new fan right now! All the best from Germany
This video was EPIC!!!! The review of 2nd Prokofiev makes me sad I never heard André Watts perform this piece. I understand he did earlier in his career. Thank you for the analysis; you got into the weeds and I'm here for it!❤ P.S. You got yourself another subscriber.
Such a beautiful performance! The way you bring each note to life is truly captivating. Your piano skills are incredible, and the emotion you convey through the music really resonates. Great video with great editing, everything flows perfectly. You are a great communicator and player! This was a joy to watch. Thank you for sharing your talent with us!
great video, but lets not forget the cadenzas in ravel's left hand concertos, I know it just one hand but it sounds like two and is also pretty epic in my opinion...
I saw the thumbnail and instantly recognised what piece it was :D I love this piece, every time playing the cadenza feels like opening the gates of hell
What a wonderful explanation of the Prokofiev, not to mention your performance. The first time I heard this, I was on a flight to Seattle over the Rocky Mountains and when the orchestra came back in, I was just so overwhelmed and lost it. I will never forget that experience. Thank you for your work!
Beethoven 4 and Schumann PC cadenzas are also pretty monumental. Beethoven's 4 was one, if not the the first of those epic Romantic cadenzas lasting minutes on end. Also a pet peeve of mine when people refer to Mozart's concertos/music as "easy" and "light"... They contain unbridled drama and have made me more emotional than most of those big Romantic era concertos. You do not need triple fortissimo chords with the pedal held down on a massive piano to produce drama.
I’ll never forget a concert I attended in 1992. The first half was Grieg’s A minor concerto as you mentioned. The second half was Shostakovich’s ‘Hypothetically Murdered’. This includes a honky-tonk piano… and at one point there was a cadenza. It wandered over the piano and then built up to a majestic A minor chord. I spotted a few seconds before everyone else… that he was about to go to A G# E, recreating the beginning of the Grieg! Everyone laughed…
I can't help but be amazed when I listen to the cadenza in the first movement of Beethoven 4, even though it's one of the more modest cadenzas. One more is the one in Schumann's piano concerto. I know someone had already commented this but for whatever reason I share the same thoughts as them
06:42 "Mozart concerti are much easier to play than Romantic concerti" Ah, so many pianists would disagree 😂 I've heard many times that Mozart's music calls for a lot more refinement of every single note.
Really cool how you get through these cadenzas in an entertaining way while one can still learn something new/some interesting facts. Btw what do you think how many people who have touched a piano in their life can play Rach 3? ;) My Dad and I went to a concert where it was played and he was like "yea 0,02" which would be 1 in 5000. But later on, somewhere in the third movement he changed his mind🤣hearing it live, especially the final few minutes were quite fascinating (and head banging lol).
I'd say very little. But still it went from being "almost impossible to play" to being the concerto almost everyone chooses for final stages of piano competitions. That says a lot about the current level of piano playing in the world, there are wayyyy many more people in an elite level than there used to be 50-100 years ago. Oh yeah, the third movement makes the ossia cadenza feel easy in comparison. I've learned in the past, but if I was to play it with an orchestra at some point in the future, I'd need many months of practice before feeling 100% confident 😂
Speaking of Fazil Say, everyone do yourself a favor and listen to his cadenza for Beethoven's piano concerto No. 3, Op. 37. I love his take on the cadenza, I've honestly grown to almost prefer it more than Beethoven's own cadenza.
You forgot to remind people that for any piano cadenza to come out triumphant, you need above ALL, a great instrument that’s a sine qua non to fulfill the desired outcome which I’m sure any great soloist would have factored into before sitting down to play!!!
For me, it's Prokofiev The Destroyer -or- Loki. With Bach, Beethoven, Chopin and Rach burned into my brain, P comes along and transmogrifies these iconic forms into a new sensation, an itch, that now he scratches. That sole G# amongst all the white keys was intentional! I tell ya! For me, those that followed are creating nothing new, just rearranging the rubble left in his wake. All Hail Prokofiev!
Very good video. I will point out that Prokofiev made a point to use all 88 keys of the piano in the course of this cadenza. I noticed this when I learned it as a student because I saw that the lowest A and highest C were used. I went through the cadenza and confirmed that every key is used. I’m pretty confident this was an intentional goal he had in mind while composing it.
@ thank you for your inspiring and well played and researched video. I was especially happy that you included the Grieg. It is such a good cadenza and we take it for granted. It is just as colossal as Prokofiev and Rachmaninoff for its time period. I’m not certain about this but I think Grieg was the first one to bring back the second theme in the finale as a “big tune.” It was copied by Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninoff and even Prokofiev (especially in the 3rd Concerto). I’ll be playing Prokofiev 2 with orchestra in California in September. I’m happy that I own a set of the orchestra parts, too!
@danielgloverpiano7693 Wow, you're going to play Proko2 as a soloist, that's awesome! You have to come by the Discord and share it when it happens. I'd love to have you around! 🙌
Yes, it's absolutely worth listening to the other which starts as bubbling turmoil, boils over into a frenzied dance, which, at full speed, finally picks up the chordal power of the ossia version just in time for the climax. Argerich blows it out of the water.
Cuál es la versión en directo exacta utilizada del Concierto de Prokofiev? Es la misma que la del tutti posterior a la cadencia? Jamás he escuchado a la orquesta sonando así de mostruosa en este concierto, es impresionante... me encantaría oir esa versión al completo!
Concerning Mozart, one can almost sense Mozart giggling in some works…..so why not. I enjoy Fazil Say’s Artistry. So many sound worlds to explore & enjoy.
Jajajajajaja buenísima esa 😂 Yo creo que en inglés puedo llegar a más gente, de todas formas os cuido a los hispanohablantes poniendo subtítulos que traduzco yo con todo el cuidado y cariño, y estoy esperando también a que YT nos deje subir varias pistas de audio en distintos idiomas ❤️
Why would you feel scared? Feel mighty. Prokofiev doesn't want to scare. Be collosal like Samson. Music taps on your soul urging to conquer your own Demons. Essentially, if you give up you become scared and destroy your soul as his unfortunate friend did.
Hey Manuel, in the Rach 3 cadenza (by the way - well done!): is (part of, much of) the reason the final climactic arrival in that wonderful D major down to the fact that it is, at last, the resolution of the pedal note of A (and Mega-A)?
@@manuelcasarespiano Most people don’t know 2 & 3 exist, let alone this one haha I really like it. The crossover link to the fast section in the 2nd is ingenious!
@@michaelierace2317thanks for saying this. I edited the Dover edition of both Tchaikovsky 2 and 3, and wrote about it in the intro. The Concert Fantasy cadenza is eight minutes. I’ve had the opportunity to play the complete works of Tchaikovsky with orchestra over several seasons with a local orchestra. Sadly, I didn’t get any of those on video, only audio.
What is your favorite piano cadenza of all time? ⬇⬇⬇
Prokofiev 2 is the correct answer
id say rach 3, it just takes me somewhere else!!
As much as I love and admire Rach 3's, I prefer the 'Bach like' other cadenza.
My absolute favourite cadenza is Ravel's left-hand. A sublime masterpiece.
Beethoven piano concert 3, Ravel concert in G, Brahms piano concerto 1
Beethoven's 4th. His version.
That prok cadenza performance was UNREAL 🔥
Hi Octo
@ hi Mary James
I read "pork" cadenza ... lol
@ Sergei Porkofiev
As a music, messy, noisy and chaotic. Don't understand at all
Not even a minute in and I'm already very impressed by the amount of effort put into making such a well-planned video! You definitely deserve way more views.
Thank you 😊
I was speechless throughout the entire video, but the ending... The ending was unbeatable, there were so many feelings in that cadence!!!
I didn’t realize that about the Prokofiev when the theme from before comes back after the cadenza. Very cool
this is such an underrated video by such an underrated channel. everything about this video is perfect, and you put in way more effort than a lot of other channels. i hope your channel blows up because you really deserve it
You are SO correct!
All incandescently gorgeous, but the Bach is the only one that opens a window to a better world. Thank you!
What a brilliant video and great playing! Prokofiev 2nd gets my vote as most epic. 5-6 mins long, extraordinary piano writing, the colossale section is terrifying to play and then the sheer power when the orchestra resume. Even more scary is other parts of this concerto are (I think) even more difficult! Rach 3 is epic for sure - the chordal passage in the ossia is tough. Grieg's cadenza is much easier but very effective. I would add Ravel PC for Left Hand in the epic list.
Great comment! I agree that Prokofiev has even harder parts to play than the actual cadenza, for example the infamous whole 2nd movement, haha! The Cadenza is brilliantly written for the piano, it falls so nice under the fingers, and it's perfectly designed to sound BIG. Even if you play it mezzo-piano it still sounds powerful, that's how well it's written for its musical purpose.
Ravel Left Hand Concerto is also amazing, I've never played it but it would be interesting to study it. Maybe next time! 😁
You have an incredibly intuitive way of explaining music. I learned something despite playing piano for 25 years and tackling the majority of these pieces!
Keep up the good work, you got a new subscriber.
And thanks a million for introducing me to Fazil Say. Astonishing.
I knew right away that Prok 2’s cadenza was gonna be #1
Yundi Li’s live version of Prokofiev 2nd concerto is just absolutely stunning, this candenza is so hard yet one of the most incredible music ever written in my opinion
This is a great video! I love the Rach 3 cadenza it’s one of my favorites
It took me a year to learn the rach 3cadenza 20 years later I probably have to learn it again from scratch
I was approaching with a little skepticism to this video, but maaan what a a joy that was. The editing, your explanations, everything is on point. And you absolutely nailed the performance of that terrific cadenzas. You're an excellent pianist, sir. Now i wanna go practice, thank you for the inspiration! And wish you all the best.
THIS IS PHENOMENAL! Your explanation of Rach 3 (my pers. fav cadenza) is so clear, and precise! I am not a pianist(I’m a guitarist), however I felt like I understood everything, and I loved how you went back to the main theme before taking about the climax! Also you playing is absolutely amazing! Keep it up :)
I recently discovered the Prokofiev 2nd piano concerto and the candenza is amazing. Love the background on the piece you gave. Rach 3 still my all time favorite piece with another brilliant cadenza. Thanks for the video.
Wonderful video, Manuel! Muchas gracias!
I am so moved by the story of Prokofiev and his friend max… what an incredible composition
so impressive that you can play these cadenzas better than some famous concert pianists!
No he can't wtf?
@chrisoconnor9521 you think andrés Schiff could play the prokofiev cadenza as well as him? Or Barenboim the rach 3 cadenza?
@Samuri_Jack_EnjoyerOf course. What an insult to them. Just because they dont have these in the Repertoire doesn't mean they cant play them. The creator plays good no doubt but you are comparing him to the best
The effort put into this video is incredible!!
Absolutely not to diminish the effort of Manuel - but we need to take into consideration here he havent performed rest of pc before actual cadenza + hes playing in the safety of His home without any audience, having the possibility of retakes if things go wrong - these are all things professional pianists are stripped off once they have to step in front of the orchestra.
Still incredible kudos to manuel for putting this jewel of piano together! 🎉
@@lucatran2809 Schiff can barely make his way through Chopin's 1st ballade. He also fakes much of what he plays, especially his Bartok. Now that I think of it Barenboim could probably give a decent performance of Rach 3. But would have to leave out a lot of notes on account of his small hands. I meant it as a compliment to this unheard of pianist who decided to make a really good TH-cam video, not to diminish your favorite pianist.
Wow! I was often disappointed from classical music analysis.
But you are a professional, you have a good sense of entertaining and educating in one step! Great choice of pieces. I’ll startvto become a new fan right now! All the best from Germany
This video was EPIC!!!! The review of 2nd Prokofiev makes me sad I never heard André Watts perform this piece. I understand he did earlier in his career. Thank you for the analysis; you got into the weeds and I'm here for it!❤
P.S. You got yourself another subscriber.
No list of epic cadenzas will be complete without the inclusion of the monumental cadenza of Ravel's Left Hand Concerto.
The only reason I’d learned and performed the Ravel “left” was because my right hand suffered a great trauma with my 4th finger!!!
Wow, I could imagine lightning and thunder with Grieg, and your explanation of Prokofiev is colossal like the cadenza, thanks
Such a beautiful performance! The way you bring each note to life is truly captivating. Your piano skills are incredible, and the emotion you convey through the music really resonates. Great video with great editing, everything flows perfectly. You are a great communicator and player! This was a joy to watch. Thank you for sharing your talent with us!
great video, but lets not forget the cadenzas in ravel's left hand concertos, I know it just one hand but it sounds like two and is also pretty epic in my opinion...
Agree!
I saw the thumbnail and instantly recognised what piece it was :D I love this piece, every time playing the cadenza feels like opening the gates of hell
What a wonderful explanation of the Prokofiev, not to mention your performance. The first time I heard this, I was on a flight to Seattle over the Rocky Mountains and when the orchestra came back in, I was just so overwhelmed and lost it. I will never forget that experience. Thank you for your work!
You described the Prokofiev as insane, and maybe that's what he was trying to convey, his friend's personal anguish?
Yes, either his friend's anguish or his own desperate sadness of losing him. Or maybe both 🤷🏻♂️
Beethoven 4 and Schumann PC cadenzas are also pretty monumental. Beethoven's 4 was one, if not the the first of those epic Romantic cadenzas lasting minutes on end.
Also a pet peeve of mine when people refer to Mozart's concertos/music as "easy" and "light"... They contain unbridled drama and have made me more emotional than most of those big Romantic era concertos. You do not need triple fortissimo chords with the pedal held down on a massive piano to produce drama.
Very well-made video on classical music! It holds your attention better than any thriller!🎶
Dear Manuel, this is _(sfz)great_ !!!
lol this is a great idea how musicians can text each other
@ might be
I’ll never forget a concert I attended in 1992. The first half was Grieg’s A minor concerto as you mentioned. The second half was Shostakovich’s ‘Hypothetically Murdered’. This includes a honky-tonk piano… and at one point there was a cadenza. It wandered over the piano and then built up to a majestic A minor chord. I spotted a few seconds before everyone else… that he was about to go to A G# E, recreating the beginning of the Grieg! Everyone laughed…
I don’t play the piano, but I feel like I learned so much. Great video!
What a great video and wonderful playing! Thank you
I think Prokofiev invented horror music
With the context given for Prokofiev 2 and then hearing it, I got chillsssss!
This was very well played and very well spoken. Thoroughly enjoyed
Prokofiev must have gone thru some heavy s*** to write a cadenza like that. Holy smokes.
I very much enjoyed this segment. Thank you!
Great video man, hope you have much success!
Exceptional content!!! This channel will go very far 🙌🏿🔥🔥
Absolutely brilliant! Super bien hecho!
Excellent exposition
Brave man playing all this cadenzas 💪
Listen to Bronfman playing the Ossia in that huge stadium. Best interpretation I've ever heard.
I can't help but be amazed when I listen to the cadenza in the first movement of Beethoven 4, even though it's one of the more modest cadenzas. One more is the one in Schumann's piano concerto. I know someone had already commented this but for whatever reason I share the same thoughts as them
Splendid video! Marvelous! Thank you!
06:42 "Mozart concerti are much easier to play than Romantic concerti"
Ah, so many pianists would disagree 😂 I've heard many times that Mozart's music calls for a lot more refinement of every single note.
Many thanks for this video :)
I am gonna take this advice to heart when I compose my double bass concerto. Even if it is not a piano, I think I can make it work haha!
Mozart would definitely appreciate a good joke
Prokofiev 2 🔥🔥
after watching the video i thought you had like 200k subs but 3.8??? instant sub
The short cadenzas in Brahms n2 are also crazy
Thank you Mr Casarès for the unforgettable performance ❤
loved this (except the inclusion of the nonentity), played at these deliciously transparent tempi, so much is explained and revealed. Many thanks
Really cool how you get through these cadenzas in an entertaining way while one can still learn something new/some interesting facts. Btw what do you think how many people who have touched a piano in their life can play Rach 3? ;) My Dad and I went to a concert where it was played and he was like "yea 0,02" which would be 1 in 5000. But later on, somewhere in the third movement he changed his mind🤣hearing it live, especially the final few minutes were quite fascinating (and head banging lol).
I'd say very little. But still it went from being "almost impossible to play" to being the concerto almost everyone chooses for final stages of piano competitions. That says a lot about the current level of piano playing in the world, there are wayyyy many more people in an elite level than there used to be 50-100 years ago.
Oh yeah, the third movement makes the ossia cadenza feel easy in comparison. I've learned in the past, but if I was to play it with an orchestra at some point in the future, I'd need many months of practice before feeling 100% confident 😂
Great video man!!!
That's a very nice job! Subscribed)
Fascinating video, thank you !
Amazing ! Keep going this is so enntertaining !
Speaking of Fazil Say, everyone do yourself a favor and listen to his cadenza for Beethoven's piano concerto No. 3, Op. 37. I love his take on the cadenza, I've honestly grown to almost prefer it more than Beethoven's own cadenza.
I agree, it’s an original composition in its own. You may also know the infamous Alkan cadenza, which quotes from the Symphony No. 5?
Incredible video !!! brutal !!
You forgot to remind people that for any piano cadenza to come out triumphant, you need above ALL, a great instrument that’s a sine qua non to fulfill the desired outcome which I’m sure any great soloist would have factored into before sitting down to play!!!
For me, it's Prokofiev The Destroyer -or- Loki. With Bach, Beethoven, Chopin and Rach burned into my brain, P comes along and transmogrifies these iconic forms into a new sensation, an itch, that now he scratches. That sole G# amongst all the white keys was intentional! I tell ya! For me, those that followed are creating nothing new, just rearranging the rubble left in his wake. All Hail Prokofiev!
Very good video. I will point out that Prokofiev made a point to use all 88 keys of the piano in the course of this cadenza. I noticed this when I learned it as a student because I saw that the lowest A and highest C were used. I went through the cadenza and confirmed that every key is used. I’m pretty confident this was an intentional goal he had in mind while composing it.
Wow, that's something I wondered when I first saw that low A and top C, but I never made the effort to check. Amazing 😄
@ thank you for your inspiring and well played and researched video. I was especially happy that you included the Grieg. It is such a good cadenza and we take it for granted. It is just as colossal as Prokofiev and Rachmaninoff for its time period. I’m not certain about this but I think Grieg was the first one to bring back the second theme in the finale as a “big tune.” It was copied by Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninoff and even Prokofiev (especially in the 3rd Concerto). I’ll be playing Prokofiev 2 with orchestra in California in September. I’m happy that I own a set of the orchestra parts, too!
@danielgloverpiano7693 Wow, you're going to play Proko2 as a soloist, that's awesome! You have to come by the Discord and share it when it happens. I'd love to have you around! 🙌
Very good! Greetings from Argentina
You can play Colossale!
I guess i will listen to Prokofiev Concerto No.2 now
How does one become so good like this? Better not say "practice"😂😂
Subscribed
Fun fact: there's a hidden "Monster" theme in the middle of the cadenza, somewhere before the colossale
Great vid. Well-done. Great pianism of author
You forgot to mention the extraordinary and crazy cadenza from Ravel left hand concerto!!
Incredible video. Amazing information. Thank you very much!
Thank YOU for watching!
That Kawai sound pretty good too.
What a wonderful video!
The 2-note suspense builder: John Williams, Jaws.
Interesting video, thank you!
Very good work! I wish you success!
Worth mentioning "Ossia Cadenza" for Rach 3
You're right!
Yes, it's absolutely worth listening to the other which starts as bubbling turmoil, boils over into a frenzied dance, which, at full speed, finally picks up the chordal power of the ossia version just in time for the climax. Argerich blows it out of the water.
Cuál es la versión en directo exacta utilizada del Concierto de Prokofiev? Es la misma que la del tutti posterior a la cadencia? Jamás he escuchado a la orquesta sonando así de mostruosa en este concierto, es impresionante... me encantaría oir esa versión al completo!
Concerning Mozart, one can almost sense Mozart giggling in some works…..so why not. I enjoy Fazil Say’s Artistry. So many sound worlds to explore & enjoy.
you're technically a very good pianist.
I think that Rösel's prok 2 mvt 1 cadenza is the best far and a way, Petrov and Gutierrez are also good.
15:10 its the part right after staircase, happened twice in beginning and in beginning of cadenza
Could you please cover the Lipatti cadenzas for Mozart 21?
Excelent video!
good video
"lets call him max" lol thats literally his name
I love SES by Fazil Say, I worked on it with Professor Cionco
The Prokofiev second is for me the best cadenza ever written, so happy to see it in this video well explained!!
The Bach part really doesn't need any pedal or overly sustained notes.
How about the Barber piano concerto with an opening cadenza
¿Manuel, porqué en inglés? Eres más español que el aceite Virgen extra
Jajajajajaja buenísima esa 😂
Yo creo que en inglés puedo llegar a más gente, de todas formas os cuido a los hispanohablantes poniendo subtítulos que traduzco yo con todo el cuidado y cariño, y estoy esperando también a que YT nos deje subir varias pistas de audio en distintos idiomas ❤️
Why would you feel scared? Feel mighty. Prokofiev doesn't want to scare. Be collosal like Samson. Music taps on your soul urging to conquer your own Demons. Essentially, if you give up you become scared and destroy your soul as his unfortunate friend did.
Hey Manuel, in the Rach 3 cadenza (by the way - well done!): is (part of, much of) the reason the final climactic arrival in that wonderful D major down to the fact that it is, at last, the resolution of the pedal note of A (and Mega-A)?
Yessss!!
The Tchaikovsky Concert Fantasy you could definitely also include. I think it’s longer than the Prokofiev.
OMG, how did I not know this piece exists????
Thank you so much for your comment, I'm going to listen to it right now! 😮
@@manuelcasarespiano Most people don’t know 2 & 3 exist, let alone this one haha I really like it. The crossover link to the fast section in the 2nd is ingenious!
@@michaelierace2317thanks for saying this. I edited the Dover edition of both Tchaikovsky 2 and 3, and wrote about it in the intro. The Concert Fantasy cadenza is eight minutes. I’ve had the opportunity to play the complete works of Tchaikovsky with orchestra over several seasons with a local orchestra. Sadly, I didn’t get any of those on video, only audio.
I think I had an epileptic seizure listening to the Rach 3 cadenza….
I just realized chopin never wrote a cadenza in his concertos