@@hyperactiveofficial8096 This piece is not really scary. It's just long and shoved a lot of Chopin etudes into a single piece. This piece is laughable in the faces of pieces like Les Quatre Ages and Grosse Konzertfantasie uber Spanische Weisen. I find his Polonaises harder than his Ballades.
@@Paganini-Liszt I disagree. I think Chopin's writing is extremely lyrical, sensitive, and extremely powerful. I find Alkan brash, boorish, and without subtlety. You're talking pure technical abilities but what makes any Chopin Ballade intimidating is its pure scale musically.
@@hyperactiveofficial8096 You refuse to hear the entirety of Les Quatre Ages. I used to be like you, I thought Alkan was all about techniques only. After hearing pieces like his Les Quatre Ages, it changed my mind. As I've said before, the Ballades aren't scary. I will boldly assume that you haven't played any of his Polonaises before, you have no idea how hard it is to play with the "dancing tempo". If you ever know what that is.
@@Paganini-Liszt You mean to tell me that you think Chopin's Ballades are like a collection of etudes, but your counterargument is the Große Konzertfantasie, a piece that was literally made for the sake of showboating? ...I sense a bit of hypocrisy from Paganini-Liszt here.
This was started by Sayeedur123 but (if I remember correctly, I might be wrong on this) he converted to Salafi Islam (which prohibits instrumental music) and so he deleted every single one of his videos from his channel and hard drive. After some time had passed, he said he found a way to make classical music still fit into his life despite his religion but he can't make the videos come back unfortunately. He published a final animation of the Aria from Bach's Goldberg variations and officially retired.
I'm pretty sure this is not just "inspired by Sayeedur123" but a copy(I wonder if you have his authorization?) of his video, though I can't check since he seems to have removed his videos
It's not a copy, although a lot of the background color took inspiration, so I can see why you thought that. His version started with the pianissimo chords at bar 203. Mine starts a little earlier because I like the climax of the Db major section before that. Additionally, the software I used to create this animation (DaVinci Resolve) is free unlike his editing software, which is why mine is of a lower quality. Lastly, Sayeedur123 used Ivan Moravec's recording for his animation while I preferred Zimerman's recording.
@@wolowolowolowolowolowolowo2417 Hey man I truly wanna believe you but as someone who's also took inspiration from Sayeedur this is extremely suspiciously close to his videos. I say this especially because Sayeedur's videos are not visible anymore. And you gotta admit stuff like the blurring (I used the free version of DaVinci Resolve for my videos as well so I'm a bit sceptical about your explanation) and the black bar on the right at the end of the video makes it look like a reupload.
@@WhyLuminance The black bar at the end was because I didn't zoom in the final frame enough or add a white layer underneath, but I didn't think it was that noticeable so I just left it as is. My point about the quality issue with DaVinci is that the way I animated this was by making the sheet music frames and exporting them as PNGs (as I learned from his deleted tutorial). The quality was fine, however, when I stitched them together into compound clips, I noticed a significant decrease in quality (See 0:30, where the staff becomes much clearer, as I did not stitch the pianissimo chords as compound clips. At 0:43, the following tied chords takes a dip in quality, as I combined them into compound clips). The blurring was added as inspiration, however in hindsight, I might've relied too much on his patterns.
How in the hell did you make this?? Did you extract the notes and symbols from the sheet, then mask them in the software with the mask removing itself? And then the staff is a separate picture layer? Incredible work! Never seen anything like this.
In a nutshell, you take a score and edit one note off at a time as an image and stitch them together, with some extra effects. I could make a tutorial in the future if more people request one.
I had years ago been meaning to produce classical piano videos of my own performances in this style, but didn't have the time to work out the logistics for automating the animations. I suppose I didn't have something _this_ dramatic in mind.
Discusiones y polémicas absurdas! En lo personal, se han olvidado del más grande del siglo XX. Vladimir Horowitz! Es el único gran pianista, artista, músico que nadie puede superar. Su versión es antológica. Y llena el corazón de emoción! Viva Vladimir!
Incredible rendering ! Personally I dislike the wobbling as the music, as it is composed and interpreted, shakes the soul already. Great work nonetheless
This is absolutely incredible! For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son so whoever believes on Him should not perish but have everlasting life
@@Ludwingvanchopin Listen to Hofmann's Ballade no 4. The problem with Zimerman and modern pianists is that they completely ignore the original intentions of the composer. Zimerman plays this coda like a technical exercise, no rubato no emotion no nothing.
It is actually one of the greatest pieces of music ever composed for the piano alone, but ok… you may have a good knowledge in music to say that it is much to chaotic.
The fact that non-pianists wont understand how scared pianists are of this piece
Yeah, I always hear them going on about the 1st Ballade, but I chuckle a little knowing they've likely never heard this beast
@@hyperactiveofficial8096
This piece is not really scary. It's just long and shoved a lot of Chopin etudes into a single piece.
This piece is laughable in the faces of pieces like Les Quatre Ages and Grosse Konzertfantasie uber Spanische Weisen.
I find his Polonaises harder than his Ballades.
@@Paganini-Liszt I disagree. I think Chopin's writing is extremely lyrical, sensitive, and extremely powerful. I find Alkan brash, boorish, and without subtlety. You're talking pure technical abilities but what makes any Chopin Ballade intimidating is its pure scale musically.
@@hyperactiveofficial8096
You refuse to hear the entirety of Les Quatre Ages. I used to be like you, I thought Alkan was all about techniques only.
After hearing pieces like his Les Quatre Ages, it changed my mind. As I've said before, the Ballades aren't scary.
I will boldly assume that you haven't played any of his Polonaises before, you have no idea how hard it is to play with the "dancing tempo". If you ever know what that is.
@@Paganini-Liszt You mean to tell me that you think Chopin's Ballades are like a collection of etudes, but your counterargument is the Große Konzertfantasie, a piece that was literally made for the sake of showboating?
...I sense a bit of hypocrisy from Paganini-Liszt here.
Phenomenal. This is a new genre of video: making the score the main visual focus that is guided by the music.
Not exactly new. I've seen animations of jazz solos like this.
This was started by Sayeedur123 but (if I remember correctly, I might be wrong on this) he converted to Salafi Islam (which prohibits instrumental music) and so he deleted every single one of his videos from his channel and hard drive. After some time had passed, he said he found a way to make classical music still fit into his life despite his religion but he can't make the videos come back unfortunately. He published a final animation of the Aria from Bach's Goldberg variations and officially retired.
I like the background changes and dramatic camera movements 😂 great work!
thank you
I cannot describe how satisfying it is that the background colours align with my own synaesthesia
Incredible work that wonderfully captured the mood of the piece. Please make more animated sheet music!
Wow!!! Absolutely incredible how much emotional depth you’re able to pull out of it with this animation.
Great stuff man! Hope you make more stuff like this 😊
Love this and would love to see the entire piece animated like this :)
Chopin's Ballade is one of my favorite piece! Thanks:D
Really cool stuff! It’s a very creative idea to visualize the score
I'm glad someone else is making these videos, and I hope sayedurr starts posting them again.
0:04 - 0:13 it's, to me, the biggest transintion that chopin did
i need more stuff like this. so good
emotionally beautiful
Amazing work! Subscribed!👏👏👏👏👏
I love how dynamics are shown by using color, picture moves! It's genius
Damn good job on editing, I love videos like these
Thank you sir, for continuing @Sayeedur123's legacy
Amazing❤
Nice format, keep going.
Amazing work! I love the color changes, they add a lot! (synaesthesia fan here)
Esto es hermoso hermano ❤
More animated videos like these please!!! ❤
This was f*****g awesome.
Very good!
I respect you
this goes soo hard ughhhhh
What a wild ride
A zoom-out on the ocean-esque passage would've been appropriate.
wow amazing haha
Epic, i think you're gonna be his successor i suppose
there was another same video put out a long time back, i can't find it anymore
Awesome! I didn't realieze it wasn't Sayeedur
The worst thing about it is that it is much harder than it looks.
Hope you can do one for military polonaise
😊
i love you
beautiful job, why so little view
Is this a reupload? I love this animation.
Insane! How long did this take to make!?! 😅
too much
Wololoooooo
다른 클래식으로도 만들어주시면 재밌을거같아요
I'm pretty sure this is not just "inspired by Sayeedur123" but a copy(I wonder if you have his authorization?) of his video, though I can't check since he seems to have removed his videos
It's not a copy, although a lot of the background color took inspiration, so I can see why you thought that. His version started with the pianissimo chords at bar 203. Mine starts a little earlier because I like the climax of the Db major section before that. Additionally, the software I used to create this animation (DaVinci Resolve) is free unlike his editing software, which is why mine is of a lower quality. Lastly, Sayeedur123 used Ivan Moravec's recording for his animation while I preferred Zimerman's recording.
@@wolowolowolowolowolowolowo2417 In this case, full respect for you, seems like a painful process to make those videos
@@wolowolowolowolowolowolowo2417 Hey man I truly wanna believe you but as someone who's also took inspiration from Sayeedur this is extremely suspiciously close to his videos. I say this especially because Sayeedur's videos are not visible anymore. And you gotta admit stuff like the blurring (I used the free version of DaVinci Resolve for my videos as well so I'm a bit sceptical about your explanation) and the black bar on the right at the end of the video makes it look like a reupload.
@@WhyLuminance The black bar at the end was because I didn't zoom in the final frame enough or add a white layer underneath, but I didn't think it was that noticeable so I just left it as is. My point about the quality issue with DaVinci is that the way I animated this was by making the sheet music frames and exporting them as PNGs (as I learned from his deleted tutorial). The quality was fine, however, when I stitched them together into compound clips, I noticed a significant decrease in quality (See 0:30, where the staff becomes much clearer, as I did not stitch the pianissimo chords as compound clips. At 0:43, the following tied chords takes a dip in quality, as I combined them into compound clips). The blurring was added as inspiration, however in hindsight, I might've relied too much on his patterns.
How in the hell did you make this?? Did you extract the notes and symbols from the sheet, then mask them in the software with the mask removing itself? And then the staff is a separate picture layer? Incredible work! Never seen anything like this.
In a nutshell, you take a score and edit one note off at a time as an image and stitch them together, with some extra effects. I could make a tutorial in the future if more people request one.
@@wolowolowolowolowolowolowo2417 That's a lot of work 😨 I see now how it goes. Impressive! Definitely subscribing!
@@wolowolowolowolowolowolowo2417 yes tutorial pls
@@wolowolowolowolowolowolowo2417 please make tutorial please!
i want to make a lot of recordings into videos by this unique form!
@@wolowolowolowolowolowolowo2417and bty can i transport your video to a popular video platform in china? most of us chinese cant use youtube😢
hi how do you make these
👍
I had years ago been meaning to produce classical piano videos of my own performances in this style, but didn't have the time to work out the logistics for automating the animations. I suppose I didn't have something _this_ dramatic in mind.
Sayeedur deleted every video. Plz be his successor. Keep it up bro
NOO WHAT HAPPENED!
Devil music
Discusiones y polémicas absurdas! En lo personal, se han olvidado del más grande del siglo XX. Vladimir Horowitz! Es el único gran pianista, artista, músico que nadie puede superar. Su versión es antológica. Y llena el corazón de emoción! Viva Vladimir!
I thought you were sayeedur for a moment
0:52
F-moll - C-dur - F-moll
How does this have 23k views but 29k likes???
The 1st Ballade is like Für Elise compared to this titan of a work.
Incredible rendering ! Personally I dislike the wobbling as the music, as it is composed and interpreted, shakes the soul already. Great work nonetheless
I want to throw up looking at the score but it's such a beautiful song
This is absolutely incredible!
For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son so whoever believes on Him should not perish but have everlasting life
This reminds me of Sayeedur123's animations but Idk man I might be wrong
It was inspired
Watching this video gives me nausea.
Josef Hofmann’s recording is much better than the one you used here. In fact Hofmann’s Chopin Ballade 4 is the single best Chopin recording ever.
No way. Zimmerman is the god of Ballades
@@Ludwingvanchopin Have you ever listened to Hofmann? Or Cortot? Or Koczalski?
@@Ludwingvanchopin Listen to Hofmann's Ballade no 4. The problem with Zimerman and modern pianists is that they completely ignore the original intentions of the composer. Zimerman plays this coda like a technical exercise, no rubato no emotion no nothing.
@@sofronitskyscores Exactly! And Sofronitsky’s Ballade 4 is of course great.
@@Ludwingvanchopin Who else have you listened to in order to say this so confidently?
This is just noise dude
mb
@@wolowolowolowolowolowolowo2417 Is okay, I was just a bit shocked.
Do you enjoy this type of music? It's much to chaotic for my taste.
@@dezato9839yea
no
It is actually one of the greatest pieces of music ever composed for the piano alone, but ok… you may have a good knowledge in music to say that it is much to chaotic.