Beautiful! I wished the would have used semi-polished bass strings. The squeaking of strings in this kind of piece is undesirable. Wonderful arrangement, too! 👏
«Бойтесь Бога и воздавайте ему славу, потому что настал час его суда! Поклонитесь Творцу неба, земли, моря и источников воды!»(Откровение 14:7,-Библия).😁🥰
There's a think I don't understand about "classical" (if that's the correct term) musicians. Why do they need to read the music sheet? I mean, sure it's a nice help, but if you need to read it all the time, you are either so good you don't even have to practise before or you are doing it for nothing. I'm talking from my experience with guitar, which is very different from them I'm sure.
The sheet helps you with a lot of stuff like dynamics, tempo, the note length, sharps naturals and flats, rests, also if you mess up on a note you can come back in that is why classical music needs that sheet of music
Good question! As a classical musician I could answer this question. Classical musicians don't always have to read the sheet music. There are plenty of concert pianists/soloists who can play from memory. However, playing by memory isn't a very practical way to do it unless you're a pro who's played for 40 years. The reason classical musicians use sheet music while they're playing is that sheet music can have a whole bunch of information on it besides melody, accompaniment, etc. Sometimes, rests will be put on the sheet music called multi-measure rests which have a number written above it that tells you how much measures to count, for example. Other times there are specific harmonies you have to play, for example.
I’m sure they are well-rehearsed and could go on stage and perform the piece from memory, but I think having the notation in front of them helps prevent mistakes. Especially in a piece like this that has a lot of sections that are similar with slight differences. It would be easy to forget which part you’re on and what comes next. Having it there is just a reminder. That, and its tradition. Never underestimate the power of tradition. They learn and practice from notation, so they perform with it in front of them as well.
Yeah, the tempo is brisk, much more so than the usual variations of it I've heard. The best non traditional version I heard was this piano player dude performing it on solo piano. However, the briskness fits the atmosphere or the mood of the listener at the time they are hearing it, in a way this changes the same piece even after hearing it 100 times.
What an awesome trio... Mozart is happy with you, I am sure
Love the harmonics
Bravo 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
wow..... just WOW!!! ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
Beautiful! I wished the would have used semi-polished bass strings. The squeaking of strings in this kind of piece is undesirable. Wonderful arrangement, too! 👏
Stunning performance!
I'm listening to a little music at night.
Nice!
Awesome.
Esto esta bueno felicitaciones!!!
Wow I love it . Thanks
Curioso, esta pieza la suelo relacionar con la noche pero la guitarra la hace pasar al día.
Wow!
Bonito demais violonista
Boa música 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
Anyone know where one can find the music for this??
👍✔
«Бойтесь Бога и воздавайте ему славу, потому что настал час его суда! Поклонитесь Творцу неба, земли, моря и источников воды!»(Откровение 14:7,-Библия).😁🥰
There's a think I don't understand about "classical" (if that's the correct term) musicians. Why do they need to read the music sheet? I mean, sure it's a nice help, but if you need to read it all the time, you are either so good you don't even have to practise before or you are doing it for nothing. I'm talking from my experience with guitar, which is very different from them I'm sure.
There may be parts that are difficult to remember so it's best to have the sheet just to keep it safe.
The sheet helps you with a lot of stuff like dynamics, tempo, the note length, sharps naturals and flats, rests, also if you mess up on a note you can come back in that is why classical music needs that sheet of music
Good question! As a classical musician I could answer this question. Classical musicians don't always have to read the sheet music. There are plenty of concert pianists/soloists who can play from memory. However, playing by memory isn't a very practical way to do it unless you're a pro who's played for 40 years.
The reason classical musicians use sheet music while they're playing is that sheet music can have a whole bunch of information on it besides melody, accompaniment, etc. Sometimes, rests will be put on the sheet music called multi-measure rests which have a number written above it that tells you how much measures to count, for example. Other times there are specific harmonies you have to play, for example.
I’m sure they are well-rehearsed and could go on stage and perform the piece from memory, but I think having the notation in front of them helps prevent mistakes. Especially in a piece like this that has a lot of sections that are similar with slight differences. It would be easy to forget which part you’re on and what comes next. Having it there is just a reminder. That, and its tradition. Never underestimate the power of tradition. They learn and practice from notation, so they perform with it in front of them as well.
it's not about playing the same "3 cowboy chords" in a couple of songs. classical music is much more complex.
They played it so fast. "Alright guys, let's get this over with." Haha
Yeah, the tempo is brisk, much more so than the usual variations of it I've heard. The best non traditional version I heard was this piano player dude performing it on solo piano. However, the briskness fits the atmosphere or the mood of the listener at the time they are hearing it, in a way this changes the same piece even after hearing it 100 times.
haben Sie die Notenseiten? Bitte
classtab.org
RIMBORSATI
Boa música 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷