@@cantthinkofausername6749 his friend went crazy trying to play this piece. He worked day and night for years but couldn’t get it. He quit piano for his own sanity and has since started playing the recorder.
Simulacreage I think so. I’m not a very skilled listener who can tell between an E and an e flat in the left hand but even I could notice this not so subtle mistake.
+Lorenzo Neri That glissando is possible to play it with the left hand by sliding an octave - it's all fingers 1 and 5. Ilya Rashkovskiy's performance of the piece shows it best at 12:25
ok thanks . It would be very nice if you could OISEUX TRISTES from my favourite componist Ravel because i can't find it in synthesia. Greetings from Germany
Oh my god what a soundfont,is there anywhere thats selling those soundfonts with cd's or USB?I can't buy that with credit card so..I can pay them the same money with real money.
14:29 I think Amanda Palmer took inspiration from this part in one of her songs that I can't remember the name of. (I think it was Amanda Palmer? My brain is fuzzy rn and it's late.) Edit: I originally thought it was Regina Spektor but insight from my sister changed that. Edit2: It's "Coin Operated Boy" by The Dresden Dolls
Pro QBr You’re saying Petrushka is harder, right? Bc I was trying to convey that if 4th Ballade, an easier piece than this, is given a 9, This also deserves a 9
It is fascinating to hear and see a version of this piece where all the notes are at the right place at the right time. It results in a terrible interpretation musically speaking, but it reveals how little pianists actually play this piece accurately. I think Pollini is one of the few.
And Sorabji, Ravel, Balakirev, Rachmanninov, Godowsky, Xenakis, Mereaux, Busoni, Boulez, and many others. Wow, you need to eliminate a lot before this could qualify as most difficult.
Even discounting Liszt and Alkan, there is still Mereaux, Rach, Boulez, Busoni, and Ravel to count as having more difficult pieces. Especially when you consider that Gaspard De La Nuit is not supposed to be played as three separate pieces, but each in succession.
Mereaux composed, therefore he counts as a composer, and at least he's not atonal or something like that. Rachmaninov is most certainly is a musician, and his third piano concerto makes this look like Chopsticks. Busoni's more experimental works are what I was referring to. And if you think playing Ondine-Gibet-Scarbo with no pause or breaks is easier than this, you've clearly never even attempted such.
Just Scarbo alone is considered the most difficult piece in the standard repertoire of piano music. Ravel wanted to make a piece even more difficult than Balakirev's Islamey, which was at one point thought to be impossible to play, and many pianists had broken fingers trying to play Islamey. Ondine is nearly as difficult, and though Le Gibet is much easier objectively, a full playing of Gaspard de la Nuit is virtually unheard of.
I think in order to fully appreciate how difficult the Petrushka piece is, you have to be looking at a concert performance of it. Have you seen this performance? th-cam.com/video/VKbwL_1YLTg/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=EuroArtsChannel
the 1838 version is so impossibly fast that it seems humanly impossible, there is a synthesia of it on a channel and it seems impossible because the jumps in it are huge and fast as hell because its written at presto
+PianoCzarX the only performance, petrov of the infamous 1838 etude is astonishing but at the most infamous and difficult part he has no choice but slowing way down.
I hate Stravinskys piano pieces. Stravinsky thought that the piano is nothing more than a percussion instrument, when in reality the piano can sing. It's sad that he thought so, he had the potential to create beautiful piano pieces.
Unlike chopin who wrote music only for right hand, stravinsky pushed the instruments limits. Could you even imagine such music if it wasn’t for stravinsky? We would be listening boring ascending and descending scales all the time which is what chopin did with the instrument.
"To Rachmaninoff I dedicate this etude for one hand."
*To Liszt
Yeah
Lol
You know how it works hehe ;)
To Rachmaninoff He had bigger hands I'm pretty sure
i have a friend learning the 3rd movement, absolutely hilarious to watch
Steef You should be admiring them.
how's the friend doing with Petrushka, and piano in general right now?
@@cantthinkofausername6749 his friend went crazy trying to play this piece. He worked day and night for years but couldn’t get it. He quit piano for his own sanity and has since started playing the recorder.
@@samuelrappaport6162 source?
@@erezsolomon3838James McBond
7:05 when you win the jackpot at the arcade
😂🤣
Lol
Imao
''tutorial''
sv all you need is five hands and your set
@@jasper8275 5 hands with 10 fingers on each
i am currently learning this piece and my brain is about to explode
There's a simplified version :)
@@CatkhosruShapurrjiFurabji Where's the fun in that?
@@ICanPickLocks there isn't any. This version is much better and more faithful to the orchestra.
😂🤣
Isn't there a mistake at 0:07? The second time that phrase repeats it should have an extra chord, not just the same thing twice
Simulacreage I think so. I’m not a very skilled listener who can tell between an E and an e flat in the left hand but even I could notice this not so subtle mistake.
yeah there shouldn't be a silence, it sounded odd
There are more mistakes in this recording, eg the very beginning is also not right.
O, but that is what you ment of course😂
But there are more mistakes.
*whips out third hand*
Ok, let’s do this
8:00 has to be one of the most beautiful things I've heard
Ikr, sounds so nostalgic
It’s gorgeous and majestic
I like it more at 9:05
The melody is so shy
idk why but i just love 1:18 so much
the left hand right?
Movement One 0:00
Movement Two 2:30
Movement Three 6:36.
thank
@@pleasecontactme4274 hi
@@AsrielKujo ih
@@pleasecontactme4274 i
H
10:44 WTF!?
10:48*
+Lorenzo Neri That glissando is possible to play it with the left hand by sliding an octave - it's all fingers 1 and 5. Ilya Rashkovskiy's performance of the piece shows it best at 12:25
PianoCzarX my fingers ignite when I do that and it makes me hate glissando :(
10:47
How is that a piano tutorial?!
ok thanks . It would be very nice if you could OISEUX TRISTES from my favourite componist Ravel because i can't find it in synthesia. Greetings from Germany
Why this isn't can't be downloaded?
Can you tell me the soundfont? I have a good mixture of some free soundfonts and its near 1GB but It doesnt fit some pieces.
This is Imperfect Samples Fazioli Complete, and it's nearly 40 GB
Oh my god what a soundfont,is there anywhere thats selling those soundfonts with cd's or USB?I can't buy that with credit card so..I can pay them the same money with real money.
Google is your best friend here :)
@@PianoCzarX anywhere to get it for free?
I would love to see Piemontesi's performance of Agosti's transcription of Stravinsky's Danse Infernale from the Firebird! (Lol that was hard)
I know green is right hand, and blue is left, what is orange?
Thanks
Nah orange is a third hand lmao.
Nah you got it wrong, orange is right, blue is left, and green is both...
14:29 I think Amanda Palmer took inspiration from this part in one of her songs that I can't remember the name of. (I think it was Amanda Palmer? My brain is fuzzy rn and it's late.) Edit: I originally thought it was Regina Spektor but insight from my sister changed that. Edit2: It's "Coin Operated Boy" by The Dresden Dolls
Where can you hear it in the coin song?
3:16 That's really Playable? 🧐
That’s the most playable part out of the 3 movement’s😂
Nico Suarez: Watch the video on TH-cam of Yuja Wang playing this live in concert at the Verbier Festival. It’s incredible! 😎🎹
stravinsky 3 staff flex! only seen the first movement's score. (if there is 4 staff, tell me please :))
Around 12:43
8:01 / 10:05 / 10:50 / 11:06
11:27 / 11:38 / 11:53 / 12:18
12:30 / 12:40 / 13:04
13:50 / 14:14 / 14:25
It's for three hands?
There's two voices in the left hand
No 5
da thumbnail in 9:25
ah yes: for 3 hands, (blue green and orange lol)
Guys? What is the henle level of the first movement?
bad
level: not-your-level
It’s a solid 9. If Chopin’s 4th Ballade is 9, then this is also 9
@@ifmondayhadaface9490 harder my dude
Pro QBr You’re saying Petrushka is harder, right? Bc I was trying to convey that if 4th Ballade, an easier piece than this, is given a 9, This also deserves a 9
What do the colours mean?
Schoenberg is my daddy *yes*
Voices
separate voices
blue is left hand
orange is right
green is both
The most beautiful technique part is 12:31! WTF..
It is fascinating to hear and see a version of this piece where all the notes are at the right place at the right time. It results in a terrible interpretation musically speaking, but it reveals how little pianists actually play this piece accurately.
I think Pollini is one of the few.
10:05
14:47 Really Playable?? 😒🧐
Yes Rachmaninoff could
Yes just chord tremolos
You need really great hand independence for it but it is possible
Yes it is, all you need is 2 hands and you are good to go (I think the green = both hands)
14:09
is this possible to play or is this just fore computers?
It's certainly possible all of it, apart from a couple chords. Check out Yuja Wang's performance, it's great.
* do
0:43-1:31 is just the easiest part I have heard
liszt: this is fine
@@sweetblis Yeah easy for me too!
@@charlesthomas5956 its even easier than la campanella
@@sweetblis Yep, The easiest part in the whole wide world
@@charlesthomas5956 sorry i meant its even easier than twinkle little star
9:05, 11:04
You have a VERY strange definition of "Most Difficult". I could probably think of ten pieces easily that are harder than this,
And Sorabji, Ravel, Balakirev, Rachmanninov, Godowsky, Xenakis, Mereaux, Busoni, Boulez, and many others. Wow, you need to eliminate a lot before this could qualify as most difficult.
He did finish it, but of all things, people generally believe Opus Clavicembalisticum to be his hardest.
Even discounting Liszt and Alkan, there is still Mereaux, Rach, Boulez, Busoni, and Ravel to count as having more difficult pieces. Especially when you consider that Gaspard De La Nuit is not supposed to be played as three separate pieces, but each in succession.
Mereaux composed, therefore he counts as a composer, and at least he's not atonal or something like that. Rachmaninov is most certainly is a musician, and his third piano concerto makes this look like Chopsticks. Busoni's more experimental works are what I was referring to. And if you think playing Ondine-Gibet-Scarbo with no pause or breaks is easier than this, you've clearly never even attempted such.
Just Scarbo alone is considered the most difficult piece in the standard repertoire of piano music. Ravel wanted to make a piece even more difficult than Balakirev's Islamey, which was at one point thought to be impossible to play, and many pianists had broken fingers trying to play Islamey.
Ondine is nearly as difficult, and though Le Gibet is much easier objectively, a full playing of Gaspard de la Nuit is virtually unheard of.
Not humanly possible unless a duet for the last one since we only have 5 fingers per hand
Please elaborate
Technically, in some parts, you have to bash your hand against the keyboard in order to play all the notes. It’s still beautiful, though.
Some parts remind me of the Simpson's theme song
Practice your octaves...
wont help
Is it wrong if I said I think this sounds horrible?
Of course it's not wrong to say that!
SgtGo You've heard an orchestra play it?
yes it's wrong
@Schoenberg is my daddy yes
@@pleasecontactme4274 h
it needs superman not a music player
Liszt you disappoint me
liszt's la clochette, and the 1838 pagaini etude he wrote make this song actually look like a walk in the park
I think in order to fully appreciate how difficult the Petrushka piece is, you have to be looking at a concert performance of it.
Have you seen this performance? th-cam.com/video/VKbwL_1YLTg/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=EuroArtsChannel
+eks dee What do you mean by "full speed"? Did Liszt include metronome markings?
the 1838 version is so impossibly fast that it seems humanly impossible, there is a synthesia of it on a channel and it seems impossible because the jumps in it are huge and fast as hell because its written at presto
+PianoCzarX the only performance, petrov of the infamous 1838 etude is astonishing but at the most infamous and difficult part he has no choice but slowing way down.
I better start with his Etude op.7 no.4 first before this lol
10:04 look the left hand;is literally impossible to do this
An octave glissando is playable
With one hand?
@@ruby_R53 yes, search it up lol
lol exists
@@ruby_R53 but hands dont exist anymore
Ok now who can play this
don´t create a acc named franz liszt and ask this u fool
You
I hate Stravinskys piano pieces. Stravinsky thought that the piano is nothing more than a percussion instrument, when in reality the piano can sing. It's sad that he thought so, he had the potential to create beautiful piano pieces.
Good news for you, this is a piece for an orchestra.
PianoCzarX Thank god :D Thank you for the clarification.
And as far as i know, technically the piano IS a Percussion Instrument
Unlike chopin who wrote music only for right hand, stravinsky pushed the instruments limits. Could you even imagine such music if it wasn’t for stravinsky? We would be listening boring ascending and descending scales all the time which is what chopin did with the instrument.
@@dierotewand3297 You can't say that Chopin is all about scales.
어떡해 기계가 사람보다 못치냐 감정표현 0이네 ㅋㅋㅋ
Buckethead meets the Piano: PeSHITSKA
the tune is really off
nah it's a soundfont and just some parts dont fit well. dont doubt the soundfont it's an expensive one
anyone can fucking play this? lol
Why this isn't can't be downloaded?
Ako C Tek You can find it on kunstderfuge.com or classicalarchives.com
9:51
The next part is so catchy!