Your teacher said that the breathing is VERY important. For the spianato, use only your nose to breath (slowly). It 'll give you all the serenity you need, and let the notes parfume your brain. BRAVO.
For those who (don’t) get the thumbnail reference, the F# in the right hand passage is meant to be played with left hand & he played with his nose instead. This is hinted by the drawing of face with nose pointing at the F#.
Thank you for that marvellous rendition. The complexity and tuneful beauty really brings home the exceptional talent of Frederic Francois Chopin who could not only play it but compose it.
@@kungfupepus1581 maybe (I hope) he refers to the fact that he didn't play it as fast as other pianists, but a bit slower (the andante spianato part), like Rubinstein used to do.
Oh wow, I totally didn't notice this, nor did my teacher! Oops! Uhh, let's just call it a feature instead of a wrong note, it sounds better this way ;)
I think the middle section is stylistically a bit harder than I thought (I'm not entirely happy with it in this recording), but technically it doesn't compare to the grande polonaise. I'd liken it to a Chopin Nocturne + Mazurka combined.
@@FlyingBanana ok thanks. In fact, I hesitate between learning andante spianato and noctune op 62 no 1. And I learn only through synthezia,but I will learn music theory soon...
@@themoroccanpianist8953 I think both pieces are beautiful, but do note that if you don't plan to learn the Grande Polonaise Brilliante and perform just the Andante Spianato, people will be pestering you about the missing Polonaise!
@@FlyingBanana man I don't care about what people think. I live in a country where only rich people have pianos in their houses and I don't play for anyone. I play only for myself.
Thank you, young man - you have opened the piece of the sky, where you can see GOD. "Fantastic technique" is far away. But this №22 "completely obeys" only few people in our world, so you are on the right road...:) Thanks.
I actually played on a piece of antique that allowed real vibrato recently, but for this recording you'll have to imagine that with my wrist movement ;)
ty good job, even there are 3 mistake , now learn to practice with dynamics ! if 2000 yundi li is 9.5/10 or 10/10 , this performance , is 7.5/10, practice hard , i believe u can go up to yundi li level in 2000 chopin competition
Among all the Chopin this this the most beautiful Chopin
This was great. I love this piece. More people should be playing this. The nose thing was hilarious lmao
this piece is too hard for most people😂
The andante is pretty approachable, but yeah the Polonaise is not
Bravo! Really fantastic technique, and your touch on those passages with lightning fast runs (e.g. 12:05) was really nice and gentle.
Your teacher said that the breathing is VERY important. For the spianato, use only your nose to breath (slowly). It 'll give you all the serenity you need, and let the notes parfume your brain. BRAVO.
Beautiful words! Chopin's Pices are like that👏👏👏👏🕊🎹🎼🎵🎶🎶🏞
@@MrRjcosta 😀
For those who (don’t) get the thumbnail reference, the F# in the right hand passage is meant to be played with left hand & he played with his nose instead. This is hinted by the drawing of face with nose pointing at the F#.
Thank you for that marvellous rendition. The complexity and tuneful beauty really brings home the exceptional talent of Frederic Francois Chopin who could not only play it but compose it.
Brilliant, goosebumps and great feelings of inadequacy all round.
ur nose is more accurate than my fingers wtf
Wspaniałe i ponadczasowe. Ta muzyka będzie zachwycać wiecznie. ❤️
Nice I love that piece as it just sounds so much like chopin
obrigado pela gentileza de postar esta sua maravilhosa execução!!!!adorei
Actually my favorite interpretation ever I love the speed!
then you must be new to music
@@kungfupepus1581 maybe (I hope) he refers to the fact that he didn't play it as fast as other pianists, but a bit slower (the andante spianato part), like Rubinstein used to do.
@@mariocavallo056 why do you "hope" lol
Thanks for the score on the piano, I liked very much. 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
around 00:32 he plays vibrato
I like the notes you have implemented into the video
11:56?????????
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Nose technique!!!
The performer’s stamina is amazing for that is a tremendous ending. Me; l think l need a lie down after just listening to it.
Absolutely CAPTIVATING!!!
I remember this during my wedding anniversary
BRAVO!! me encanta como la tocas, me encanta esta pieza de chopin...un abrazo.
11:58 Nose note!
So beautiful~~~~
Damn I forgot how bonkersly hard the polonaise was. Well done!!
Amazing 👏 👏 👏
Haha wtf was 11:58, with nose? Legend
Great!
great job man!! Btw! I think you missed a C# at 5:28, amazing job man
Oh wow, I totally didn't notice this, nor did my teacher! Oops!
Uhh, let's just call it a feature instead of a wrong note, it sounds better this way ;)
It was really good!😆👍
Είσαι πάρα πολύ καλός συγχαρητήρια από Ελλάδα🥇🥇🥇
Very Good!
5:16
nice heading!
imagine he screwed up the note with his nose. would be crying
Fantastic and beautiful! I was curious what kind of piano is that? It has a crisp brightness to it.
Thank you! It’s a Bechstein, they make the best uprights I’ve played :)
@@FlyingBanana That’s great! Thank you so much
How long did you train this piece?
13:37
13:53
great performance! which edition did you use?
Thanks! :D it's the Polish national edition - it comes with detailed performance notes!
@@FlyingBanana Is that the Jan Ekier version?
Noice also learning it.
Well played. How hard is the andante spianato?
I think the middle section is stylistically a bit harder than I thought (I'm not entirely happy with it in this recording), but technically it doesn't compare to the grande polonaise. I'd liken it to a Chopin Nocturne + Mazurka combined.
@@FlyingBanana ok thanks. In fact, I hesitate between learning andante spianato and noctune op 62 no 1. And I learn only through synthezia,but I will learn music theory soon...
@@themoroccanpianist8953 I think both pieces are beautiful, but do note that if you don't plan to learn the Grande Polonaise Brilliante and perform just the Andante Spianato, people will be pestering you about the missing Polonaise!
@@FlyingBanana man I don't care about what people think. I live in a country where only rich people have pianos in their houses and I don't play for anyone. I play only for myself.
What piano ru playing on Nice job btw
It's a Bechstein, Academy model
Is this a piano of feurich
A Bechstein, actually :P
Did anyone noticed he played with his nose ? xD hahaha !! amazing technic !! or maybe played with his tongue ..
Thank you, young man - you have opened the piece of the sky, where you can see GOD.
"Fantastic technique" is far away.
But this №22 "completely obeys" only few people in our world, so you are on the right road...:)
Thanks.
owowow
Vibrato
I actually played on a piece of antique that allowed real vibrato recently, but for this recording you'll have to imagine that with my wrist movement ;)
I am jealous
Stop being jealous and learn it instead lmao. I almost done with grande polonaise lol. Just andante spianato left.
ty good job, even there are 3 mistake , now learn to practice with dynamics ! if 2000 yundi li is 9.5/10 or 10/10 , this performance , is 7.5/10, practice hard , i believe u can go up to yundi li level in 2000 chopin competition
There are probably more than 3 mistakes but thank you for such a high rating! :)
nice...Academically
Very good. But if you sing the melody, it would be much better!
No singing voice written in this piece though.