You elucidated my struggling with the Chopin etudes all these years . Thx a lot. Your lectures are all delivered with such clarity that really help those who wants to master Chopin's repertoire.
This should be interesting. Here's a piece that's often thought of as easier, but I find it pretty rough to really master. Really wonderful performance. There's a wonderful lack of restraint that I don't generally associate with you.
@@Jack-l5f6e Thank you! I think I did Peace of the Woods a little while back, only I used the translation "Forest Stillness." It should be on my Grieg playlist
Whew! Great! For whatever reason I found myself thinking about one of my favorites, Op. 10 #10 in A-flat. Hope you get to that one sometime soon. Do you have any interest in Debussy's etudes? I would follow a series on those avidly.
@@joanlandkamer9439 great idea, I certainly would love to do the Debussy etudes. I have a few others planned before op 10 no 10 but I’ll try to move it up in the rotation :-)
Hello! I'm learning this etude right now, and I'm wondering, why do most pianists play the ending octaves (bar 83) in a straight way, losing the feeling of triplets? I feel like the rythm should be more pronounced, but I'm only a student so I'm not sure. On a side note, I love your videos, incredibly informative and thought invoking!
@@juliusgdsk that’s a great question. Frequently, it seems to me that people play the main body of the etude so rapidly that it’s very difficult to make the octaves sound like the same rhythm. They usually end up almost sounding like duples. My tempo is a little slower so maybe I managed better, I don’t know. I’m not sure how else to phrase them necessarily, beyond maintaining the rhythmic drive.
@@TheIndependentPianist The chosen tempo might very well affect it. Personally I find a slower approach to the octaves more musically coherent. After listening to a bunch more recordings, the ones which do pronounce the downbeats, seem to slow down a bit and play the octaves at half tempo, which I think is quite fitting. The other option of taking a slower tempo overall also let's you portray the triplet feel, while maintaining the tempo, main example would be Horowitz. I love how clear he makes the downbeats.
my least favourite etude. nice video as usual. ( I think he was inspired by Schubert's d899 / 3 for this one (as he was for the first etude of op 25 imo).
As ever, a fascinating commentary and a fabulous, virtuoso performance. Perfection! Bravo, Cole!
Outstanding video!
You elucidated my struggling with the Chopin etudes all these years . Thx a lot. Your lectures are all delivered with such clarity that really help those who wants to master Chopin's repertoire.
Wonderful!!!
Great video 👍
thank you very much for your lesson
Super virtuoso level
This should be interesting. Here's a piece that's often thought of as easier, but I find it pretty rough to really master.
Really wonderful performance. There's a wonderful lack of restraint that I don't generally associate with you.
@@MikeN275 well thank you very much!
wow. speechless otherwise. thanks.
have you tried doing the glizzando with the octaves at the end lol
I seem to remember that Moriz Rosenthal played the final octave passage glissando.
I'm too wimpy for black key glissandi. Find them quite uncomfortable.
@@stefanhaffner I know what you mean! This one is fairly innocent though (soft and short)
Have you done the impromptus or any of the rare pieces like any of the rondos the fantasie in f minor or the allegro de concert?
Pls do peace of the woods by Grieg. It’s one of my favourite pieces
Also great performance!
@@Jack-l5f6e Thank you! I think I did Peace of the Woods a little while back, only I used the translation "Forest Stillness." It should be on my Grieg playlist
Whew! Great!
For whatever reason I found myself thinking about one of my favorites, Op. 10 #10 in A-flat. Hope you get to that one sometime soon.
Do you have any interest in Debussy's etudes? I would follow a series on those avidly.
@@joanlandkamer9439 great idea, I certainly would love to do the Debussy etudes. I have a few others planned before op 10 no 10 but I’ll try to move it up in the rotation :-)
The Mendelssohn d-minor trio would suit you very well
Hello! I'm learning this etude right now, and I'm wondering, why do most pianists play the ending octaves (bar 83) in a straight way, losing the feeling of triplets? I feel like the rythm should be more pronounced, but I'm only a student so I'm not sure.
On a side note, I love your videos, incredibly informative and thought invoking!
Yeah I’m also learning it now and trying to play the octaves in triplets but all the recordings play them without phrasing
@@juliusgdsk that’s a great question. Frequently, it seems to me that people play the main body of the etude so rapidly that it’s very difficult to make the octaves sound like the same rhythm. They usually end up almost sounding like duples. My tempo is a little slower so maybe I managed better, I don’t know. I’m not sure how else to phrase them necessarily, beyond maintaining the rhythmic drive.
@@TheIndependentPianist The chosen tempo might very well affect it. Personally I find a slower approach to the octaves more musically coherent. After listening to a bunch more recordings, the ones which do pronounce the downbeats, seem to slow down a bit and play the octaves at half tempo, which I think is quite fitting.
The other option of taking a slower tempo overall also let's you portray the triplet feel, while maintaining the tempo, main example would be Horowitz. I love how clear he makes the downbeats.
my least favourite etude. nice video as usual. ( I think he was inspired by Schubert's d899 / 3 for this one (as he was for the first etude of op 25 imo).