In conservatory I tricked my friend into thinking a Salieri piece was Mozart. He listened and said lovingly 'Ahhh Mozart'. When he learned the truth he was furious at me.
@@wolterzz3267 I base my opinion not on "Amadeus" but on the many music of him that is available in shops and markets, on CD or on TH-cam. If this would be "on of the best of his time", then it was a very bad time for musicians.
I have attended some of his work and he truly is a genius. He an Mozart have collaborated and there was no hatred between the two. In all of my reading I have yet to see anything about him and Mozart being enemies. Listen to this beautiful dialogue between the piano and the rest of the orchestra. Phenomenal.
António Salieri was born in Laegnago, Verona on August, 18, 1750. While studying in Vienna he met Gassman, former Emperor Kapellmeister, who took him to Vienna and taught him composition and introduced him to Matastasio. He was court composer and later Emperor Kapellmeister. He was Haydn’s friend and Shubert’s teacher. Some claim that although he was good and generous, he resorted to intrigue with the Emperor to ward off and eliminate his closest rival, Mozart. He composed opera, cantatas, oratories, motets, masses, etc. His most outstanding work being the Concerto for Violin, Oboe and Cello (Angelicum). He died in Vienna on May 7, 1825. Although it doesn’t present Mozart’s genius, Salieri’s music is full of grace, elegance and sentiment. The pianist is magnificent and amazing for the sensitivity in the interpretation and the sound she gets from the instrument. The orchestra and its direction are superb. Thanks for this great recording.
This concerto is simply amazing, it takes my breath away. I don't understand why this concerto didn't become more popular. I think it's time for Hollywood to dedicate a film for Salieri, after all the made up rubbish they threw at him in the Mozart film... In real life Salieri and Mozart were friends and obviously respected each other's work.
+My Uncle you know why this concert are not popular,simple,germans hate italians and always try to say bullshit again italians,this is a long history,ask italians about germans tourist,they go to italy on vacations and look like a superior men,italians don,t like germans¡¡¡¡¡
@@DressedForDrowningSaiieri was a great composer, he get a position like "Generalmusikdirektor" in the Vienna opera. Mozart and Salieri where equal in the quality of there music. Mozart and Salieri where friends not enemies ! The only difference was that Salieri gets the higher position at Vienna.
@@DressedForDrowning I and much others can not understand You. Salieris music ist wonderful, full of harmony and melody. The only differenz was that Salieri gets the position as a "Hofkapellmeister", but this two where no time enemies. Salieri is great and Mozart is great.
After having watched Amedeus, I had to do some research on Antonio Salieri. I read his wiki biography and several other articles about him and was saddened to know his music was practically forgotten until around the 20th century. While I understand that Mozart, Beethoven and the likes are popular because of their innovation and extraordinary brilliance, I wish others would be given a chance to have their music heard to the masses. This concerto is now among my personal top favourites; listing above some of Mozart's pieces. Bravo to the chamber orchestra as well. Great performance.
I personally find Salieri's music boring regardless of his fictional appearance in _Amadeus._ Then, again, I'm not a great fan of Classicism, Beethoven excluded. Just listen to this piece. It has no drama, the melodies aren't catchy, there is no indication of counterpoint, no interesting harmonies; nothing. It's bland - even for Classicism standards.
If the uploader tricked people by writing not Salieri but Mozart to the title, everyone here would comment on how genius Mozart was... This is a beautiful piece of music, and Salieri was not such a bad guy as he was depicted in some films and some books.
Well-constructed, melodic, ear-holding, and a marvelous way to enjoy twenty-one minutes. Artful piano playing as well as orchestral accompaniment. Thank you for the video.
Some will criticize the music just because it was composed by Salieri. Any one who payed attention to the music will realize this is better than some Mozart's compositions. Salieri was not mediocre, he was a great master composer, but it is not enough to become immortal just as Mozart became.
I lived in Korea for a year back in the 1950's and recognized the musical talent in the Koreans. No wonder as they became better economically they produced countless outstanding musicians.
@@nathanbeler4874 Korean War was hot from June 1950 (North Korean invasion), September (Inchon Landing), and Chosin Reservoir retreat by US Marines in November-December 1950, where General Smith famously said “Retreat Hell, we are just advancing in a different direction!” The rest of the war until 1953 were skirmishes between UN forces and Chinese/North Koreans and F86 Sabre jets dog fights with MiG 15s. Most casualties for both sides and civilians were during the first year. After that less casualties but tremendous suffering by soldiers and civilians on both sides. To me that was the last heroic effort to save the free world from communist dictatorship and the war that Koreans are thankful for Truman, MacArthur, and UN countries that participated. South Koreans fought bravely alongside allied forces.
@@DomskiPlays it’s to educate most ignorant people who do not know where Korea is let alone its history, which is of no interest to foreigners I am sure. Korea is more familiar now because of cheap export of K-pop, and some popular exported goods but not from any admirable feats as they are becoming very liberal, the disease imported from USA.
After so long time, his music can now live on without bad thoughts about him. Because of the internet, Wiki and so on we're able to put him back very fast in a better light. What a wonderful music!
@@towmlvb3423 I doubt he was a genius but he was indeed a good composer who understood the craft and went along with the style of his time. Therefore he was famous back in the day but was slightly forgotten due to the change in music styles. His music is good but "genius" I think its to high of a level for Salieri.
Salieri taught young Franz Schubert the musical composition. Salieri was a genius who had a hand in making of the greatest composer in history, Schubert.
I think of Salieri more like an inspirational father figure to these young geniuses he taught, who helped facilitate the expression of their great talents. Someone with a spirit like Robin Williams in Dead Poets Society.
SALIERI era o maior Mestre de Música em Viena na segunda metade do seculo VVIII...O pianoforte italiano já estava bem avançado com CLEMENTI por volta de 1770! Aceitem que Mozart aprendeu tudo com mestres italianos!...SALIERI was the greatest Master of Music in Vienna in the second half of the 8th century...The Italian pianoforte was already well advanced with CLEMENTI around 1770! Accept that Mozart learned everything from Italian masters!!!
Amazing! Simply a superb performance, truly wonderful. Heeguin Kim gave a performance that was second to none. Thank you so very much for posting this video! How I wish that some of Salieri's compositions such as this one, were used in the movie Amadeus. Even though the movie was to portray the true genius of Mozart, Salieri, IMO, was deliberately maligned and portrayed as a "less than adequate, mediocre" composer who deliberately, with sustained malice toward God and His "little protégé", set out to murder Mozart out of pure envy. Salieri was superb composer and opera owes him a debt of gratitude.
To the one saying it's a concert "alla Mozart": this is the usual idiotic comparison done 250 years after.... Salieri was only 6 years older than Mozart and this concerto dated 1773 (as the other one he wrote) when Mozart didn't write ANY of his main concertos yet nor he impacted the genre of the piano concerto (in 1773 Mozart was 17) nor he gave the famous piano concerts in Vienna of the 80's. The first Mozart concertos were inspired by CPE Bach so explain how this concert can f****g be "in Mozart style" if at that time Mozart didn't yet define the style of the piano concerto and was still far to do that??? Today using the brain is an option
To Kevin Zhang, the erroneous belief that Salieri and Mozart were at loggerheads came long before 1984, it started with a Russian opera by a composer whose name escapes me at the moment. In fact Salieri was a great advocate of Mozart and was thanked by the disrespect of the Mozarts who considered him to be a lesser composer. Beethoven however thought a lot of him and was his pupil for a time
Even earlier with one of four short plays by Alexander Pushkin named Little Tragedies. The very one was named Mozart and Salieri, losely based on talks and tittle-tattle which were around names of this two talented composers those times.
Kim does, indeed, have a lovely touch on the keys. I wish the orchestra complemented her virtuosity a bit more. thanks for uploading. this is one of my favourite pieces of music.
@@aurehinianafamily1332 it would be better to read history books instead to learn by movies. Or not? ;) BTW Salieri was Mozart's teacher - the son of Mozart was his pupil and didn't die. Why? If he was envious (not jealous) why he teached to a Mozart? Anybody saw Salieri in Mozart's house preparing poisoned spaghetti? People please study, holliwood is shi... hemmm... nothing. Just a movie.
Salieri is a great composer. We need to distinguish ingenuity of the film "Amadeus" and Milos Forman as director of historical facts. The movie is fiction! This film, except that the characters are historical figures, is not a biography of Mozzart or Salieri! The script, acting, set design, ... belong to the top the film art. Just as those two of composers belong to the top of мusic art.
The film was a cinema adaptation(almost word for word) of Scaeffer's play 'Amadeus', which was a hit in London and on Broadway long before Hollywood got its hands on it.
Salieri was such a genius composing for piano, its such a shame he only wrote two concertos and no sonatas :( i really enjoy him a lot, sadly i dont enjoy opera :(
@@gerardgag LOL Now you stop spamming. I know exactly what I'm talking about. I don't know why you love this kind of music, but a childhood concerto of Mozart ist 1000 times better than all Salieri ever has written. Well, try this one: th-cam.com/video/Ng2uubWSETU/w-d-xo.html
Not profound but pleasant and meticulously constructed. Very "intellectual" in a sense. The difference between someone like Salieri and Mozart is that very thing. Intellect. Salieri's music resides there almost exclusively so he is able compose some very brilliant pieces. But they are not "inspired". This is where Mozart transcended the "mental level" in music. It is like some undefinable spiritual fire has breathed a divine essence into Mozart's music and it becomes a living thing that then becomes immortal. Who knows what this essence is? Genius. Connection to something divine? All I know is this genius and the spiritual perfection it allowed into Mozart's music cannot be explained, cannot be duplicated, only awed and appreciated. That doesn't mean not appreciating Salieri's musical accomplishment such as it is. He should not be underestimated. It means accepting him for who he is. A great technical master of his art. But he is no Mozart. Really.. who is?
Thank you Heeguin Kim 피아노 김희균 !!! Top concert. Why is this not performed on an equal footing with Mozart? Salieri, also: Andrea Luchesi - Piano Concerto in F, Giovanni Paisiella,... Giovanni Paisiello - Piano Concertt in G minor...
About SALIERI :D Read primary and contemporary resources - facts will save us from fleeting movie-based and unresearched ''opinions'' ... For what good he did to her son, ex husband & his music - and, after all, her dear self - Constanze, who was known to change her mind according to what suited her best interests, *never once went to visit* old hospitalised Salieri (who, along both Haydn brothers and other composers - was also respectively and affectionately called Papá) - meaning she would not really know what he supposedly had said, would she?! At the time when this anecdote began circulating, *entire medical staff in charge of Salieri wrote and signed a public letter (of June 25th, 1824) - attesting that Salieri never said this to anybody* - he was, up to that time and apart from the attending staff and possibly his family - all alone: because of the seriousness of his illness - nobody had the permission to see him - *he had no visitors whatsoever to tell it to.* The doctors themselves *swear on their own honour and conscience that they have never heard him say it either.* Povero uomo abbandonato e indifeso! In light of this letter - there is a splendid *chance that the anecdote - came from the outside* - meaning: from somebody who was *NOT Salieri* ... Cabale for the dying man, cabale! Even when approaching his death, Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung humorously notes that ''Salieri simply refuses to die'' ... I can live with this part of the canon - so can you; they were learning from each other; without Salieri - we would have a different Mozart (and vice versa); as Christophe Rousset says - whether or not Salieri felt hurt about Mozart nicking his ideas (especially from La Grotta) - well, he may have, he was only human - and Mozart recognised which ideas work and appropriated them as he saw fit. But the point is - that out of all 169 letters by Salieri - in rarely any does he speak judgementally of music (or character) of his contemporaries - and not one speaks ill of Mozart (or anybody else) - in fact, *he defended* ''Mozart's'' unfinished Requiem (letter from January 10th, 1820) - while *Mozart family spits acid* towards Salieri (and just about everybody else whose position they were envious of (Kapellmeisters and rich, successful independent musicians) or felt inferior to (original, technically demanding and studious Clementi and Vogler.) Guess they were human as well.) There is as of yet absolutely *no evidence whatsoever* that Salieri was a mean tongued bastard towards anybody - on the other hand, there's plenty to support the idea that the Mozarts - were just that, insecure, fearful and quite likely unjust towards many (read their letters in original German, English translations are largely filled with mistakes, idealised, wilfully interpreted and, of course, censored - quite curious!) It is plausible that with such a spiky attitude - people might have learned to dislike them ... By inviting Salieri to see The Magic Flute with him - Mozart at last perchance got three confirmations: Salieri showed - in public - that *he thinks highly of Mozart's music*, ''libretto and everything'' - and by arriving together, sitting with him in his lodge - *that Mozart has his favour.* Which is far from any later conceived story of jealousy or hatred, whichever its direction (please note that through 1829 Novello anecdotes ~ it was Constanze herself who actively propagated this lie). Salieri's presence might have also contributed to its success: to have a prominent member of the Emperor's Court and ''Italian camp'' (though Salieri was musically thought of as German) enthusiastically clapping and cheering - *ensured at the very least (e)quality of the work.* By attending this opera (in a way a renewed and from Mozart's part upgraded *1786* Challenge) *Salieri showed Mozart - that Mozart and the Singspiel - have his support.* What else could Mozart wish for?! What else could Salieri give?! And for goodness sake: these two have in 1791 shared in mutual respect those 2 square meters together - we too can respect both - and their contributions to music: Amadeus Chamber Orchestra, most fitting a tribute! :D BRAVO, everybody, congratulations for the tender touch and care given!
This Salieri's piece is not east to play at all and real musician would know why, those who say Salieri was nothing but mediocrity have no ears. The mediocrity in a piano piece is not only determined by the simplicity of a melody or whatever else who could be criticize here. Salieri was a master for the rythm, the silence, the pause etc... and only a deaf or a person who does not understand anything to music would not hear it in this concerto.
It's all a matter of aesthetic. As I am someone who already finds Mozart banal at times, imagine how much I'm bored by this piece. I'd rather listen to Stravinsky, thank you very much.
Troppo educato, quasi troppo stilisticamente perfetto per per passare alla Storia. Ma a me piace, nel pianoforte ci sento alcune anticipazioni dello spirito romantico di Chopin. Bistrattato oltre misura dalla sceneggiatura del capolavoro cinematografico di M.Forman Salieri è un grande maestro, comprensibile da tutti. Non occorre la infatti essere intenditori per lasciarsi coinvolgere dalla limpidezza della melodia. Ci sento una purezza d'animo che mi restituisce pace.
+ Milos Djurdjevic vous ne devez pas écouter souvent les concertos de Mozart...Entendre du Mozart dans cette " merdouillerie " c'est avoir les oreilles en court-jus...!
As far as Salieri being a mediocrity: he wasn't. He was better than 99% of those who tried to compose music for a living. He only appears mediocre (aside from the film) because he lived at the same time as a one-in-a-MILLENNIUM genius, Mozart. That's different than a one-in-a-generation or even a one-in-a-century genius. On the one hand, this is some great music here in Salieri's concerto, but doesn't stir the soul the way Mozart's piano concertos do, certainly the mature ones anyway, which I would consider from no. 17 on. Salieri is like the 65 storey skyscraper that happens to be next to the Sears Tower. In most states, Saleri would be the tallest building in the state and dominate the city skyline, but when aside Mozart in the Chicago skyline, Salieri seems ordinary in comparison.
But that skyline also contains the skyscrapers of Haydn... and Clementi... and Boccherini. How tall is Salieri looking now? OK I'm kind of joking, but remember Salieri wasn't a huge instrumentalist, he was an opera composer so if we're gonna put him on a pedestal let it be that one...
Classicism was a necessary evil in the history of Classical music, which we had to endure in order to get Beethoven. Sure, Salieri was an above-average Classicist composer, but every composer of that era that isn't Mozart or Haydn sounds like a fly-ridden long-expired pancake, so being top of that bunch doesn't say much about your ability to write good music.
Salieri was only 24 years old at the time when he was appointed director of the Italian opera by the Habsburg court and can imagine who was jealous of who and was so incompetent that he remained in this position until his death.
Salieri may not have been a genius like Mozart, but without Salieri, you would not have these composers: -Ludwig van Beethoven -Franz Schubert -Franz Liszt -Peter Winter -Antonio Casimir Cartellieri -Franz Mozart -Anton Eberl -Johann Hummel Beethoven would pioneer the Romantic Era of music while Liszt would be a virtuoso on the piano. Schubert pioneered the Lied (lead).
Nice performance ! But for those that think this piece from Salieri is good- I agree! But check out Paisiello’s piano concerti! ( Mozart is good , too😉)
Helleboros Retz he did not. Franz-Xaver. Süßmayr, a friebdcand occasional copyist for Mozart, finished the Requiem (Abbé Stadler and Eybler made some contributions as well but passed on completing the work).
What a pity the excellent Salieri is now mainly known ,quite wrongfully, as the man who thwarted Mozart and not as the excellent composed that he actually was, and in reality he actually helped him a great deal
The tragedy of Salieri is that his legacy was tarnished by a vicious rumor that he poisoned Mozart - a rumor exacerbated in 1830 by a play called “Mozart and Salieri” by Alexander Pushkin. The salacious nature of the rumor unfortunately spawned various conspiracies long after both Mozart’s and Salieri’s lifetimes - the worst of which is that somehow there was animosity between the two, and that Salieri lamented his “mediocrity” while resenting Mozart’s superiority. Nothing could have been further from the truth as contemporary evidence will reveal. It doesn’t help that Peter Schaeffer will kick the man while he’s down once again with his blasphemous play “Amadeus” in 1979 based on Pushkin’s slanderous fantasy. Fortunately today, his music is finally filling concert halls once again, due to the modern proliferation of information that has never been so readily available before. I look forward to a movement to bring back Salieri, and place him finally on the mantle along with the other masters, (some of which were pupils of his) where he truly belongs.
In conservatory I tricked my friend into thinking a Salieri piece was Mozart. He listened and said lovingly 'Ahhh Mozart'. When he learned the truth he was furious at me.
Chris Ridenhour well at least you showed him how lovely my music can be. Grazie signore
Ridenhour, you diabolical...
It doesn't sound like Mozart - more Beethoven.
Then he knows nothing about Mozart never could I be fooled
Salieri made a ton of money.
glad to see Salieri's C major concerto get some love from a wonderful pianist
Salieri was a master and Genius in the music.
vmozart71 well well well, Mozart actually complemented me
Grazie Signore!
He wasn't. Neither master nor genius. He was a poor composer.
@@DressedForDrowning Wrong. He was one of the best composers of his time. Quit watching Amadeus.
@@wolterzz3267 I base my opinion not on "Amadeus" but on the many music of him that is available in shops and markets, on CD or on TH-cam. If this would be "on of the best of his time", then it was a very bad time for musicians.
Su obra es maravillosa. Conforme lo voy escuchando lo aprecio mas. Simplemente un gran maestro. Dicho con humildad. Dios le va dando su lugar.
Lo de simplemente es un cumplido. Después de escucharlo es de mis favoritos. Su música acaricia el oido
I have attended some of his work and he truly is a genius. He an Mozart have collaborated and there was no hatred between the two. In all of my reading I have yet to see anything about him and Mozart being enemies. Listen to this beautiful dialogue between the piano and the rest of the orchestra. Phenomenal.
Finally, a Salieri song that made it to the big stage
Salieri was very successful. So no 'finally' about it.
This is a beautiful piece by Salieri. He deserves more credit than he gets for being a remarkable composer as well as the contemporaries of his era.
What are you talking about? Salieri always had a very high reputation till these days
António Salieri was born in Laegnago, Verona on August, 18, 1750. While studying in Vienna he met Gassman, former Emperor Kapellmeister, who took him to Vienna and taught him composition and introduced him to Matastasio. He was court composer and later Emperor Kapellmeister. He was Haydn’s friend and Shubert’s teacher. Some claim that although he was good and generous, he resorted to intrigue with the Emperor to ward off and eliminate his closest rival, Mozart. He composed opera, cantatas, oratories, motets, masses, etc. His most outstanding work being the Concerto for Violin, Oboe and Cello (Angelicum). He died in Vienna on May 7, 1825.
Although it doesn’t present Mozart’s genius, Salieri’s music is full of grace, elegance and sentiment. The pianist is magnificent and amazing for the sensitivity in the interpretation and the sound she gets from the instrument. The orchestra and its direction are superb. Thanks for this great recording.
A delightful, very talented interpretation, filled with incredible energy and inspiration, mesmerizing with its deepest sincerity !
First time listening to Salieri ever; lovely and exceeded my expectations. It's a pleasure to listen to, even if some don't consider it exceptional.
A small gem. Salieri was a good composer.
This concerto is simply amazing, it takes my breath away. I don't understand why this concerto didn't become more popular. I think it's time for Hollywood to dedicate a film for Salieri, after all the made up rubbish they threw at him in the Mozart film... In real life Salieri and Mozart were friends and obviously respected each other's work.
+My Uncle you know why this concert are not popular,simple,germans hate italians and always try to say bullshit again italians,this is a long history,ask italians about germans tourist,they go to italy on vacations and look like a superior men,italians don,t like germans¡¡¡¡¡
@@DressedForDrowning his reputation during his lifetime says otherwise.
@@DressedForDrowning Poor man's excuses? Salieri was anything but poor and bad. You're just an 'Amadeus' fanboy, are you?
@@DressedForDrowningSaiieri was a great composer, he get a position like "Generalmusikdirektor" in the Vienna opera. Mozart and Salieri where equal in the quality of there music. Mozart and Salieri where friends not enemies !
The only difference was that Salieri gets the higher position at Vienna.
@@DressedForDrowning I and much others can not understand You. Salieris music ist wonderful, full of harmony and melody. The only differenz was that Salieri gets the position as a "Hofkapellmeister", but this two where no time enemies. Salieri is great and Mozart is great.
After having watched Amedeus, I had to do some research on Antonio Salieri. I read his wiki biography and several other articles about him and was saddened to know his music was practically forgotten until around the 20th century. While I understand that Mozart, Beethoven and the likes are popular because of their innovation and extraordinary brilliance, I wish others would be given a chance to have their music heard to the masses. This concerto is now among my personal top favourites; listing above some of Mozart's pieces.
Bravo to the chamber orchestra as well. Great performance.
+ Peu Dick Lorne , sa musique n'a aucune profondeur , si ce n'est vers un abyme de médiocrité...Un simple exercice pour apprenti pianiste...!
Salieri was far from being mediocre! This guy tutored Liszt, Beethoven, & Schubert.
People who think he was mediocre, tells me they just watch amadeus, hollywood shit culture, Salieri was great one of the best.
ISRAEL HECHEM Even if people think his music is mediocre he is a legendary teacher.
he also influenced Mozart a bit, didn't he ? :)
Não é medíocre. Excelente compositor e professor de Schubert e Beethoven. Jamais medíocre!!!!
I personally find Salieri's music boring regardless of his fictional appearance in _Amadeus._ Then, again, I'm not a great fan of Classicism, Beethoven excluded.
Just listen to this piece. It has no drama, the melodies aren't catchy, there is no indication of counterpoint, no interesting harmonies; nothing. It's bland - even for Classicism standards.
If the uploader tricked people by writing not Salieri but Mozart to the title, everyone here would comment on how genius Mozart was...
This is a beautiful piece of music, and Salieri was not such a bad guy as he was depicted in some films and some books.
Schubert was tutored by Salieri. Salieri praised Schubert. Schubert dies shortly afterwards. Hm.
@@williamdavidhilton6659bro wtf is wrong with you. He teached a gazzilion people
They would be ignorant as this is clearly not Mozart, nice though it is.
Salieri was also the Mozart's teacher (Franz Xaver Wolfgang Mozart, also composer and son of his father)
Well-constructed, melodic, ear-holding, and a marvelous way to enjoy twenty-one minutes. Artful piano playing as well as orchestral accompaniment. Thank you for the video.
Some will criticize the music just because it was composed by Salieri. Any one who payed attention to the music will realize this is better than some Mozart's compositions. Salieri was not mediocre, he was a great master composer, but it is not enough to become immortal just as Mozart became.
I lived in Korea for a year back in the 1950's and recognized the musical talent in the Koreans. No wonder as they became better economically they produced countless outstanding musicians.
@@nathanbeler4874 Korean War was hot from June 1950 (North Korean invasion), September (Inchon Landing), and Chosin Reservoir retreat by US Marines in November-December 1950, where General Smith famously said “Retreat Hell, we are just advancing in a different direction!” The rest of the war until 1953 were skirmishes between UN forces and Chinese/North Koreans and F86 Sabre jets dog fights with MiG 15s. Most casualties for both sides and civilians were during the first year. After that less casualties but tremendous suffering by soldiers and civilians on both sides. To me that was the last heroic effort to save the free world from communist dictatorship and the war that Koreans are thankful for Truman, MacArthur, and UN countries that participated. South Koreans fought bravely alongside allied forces.
@@rockon416 thanks for the information
@@rockon416 That's interesting and all but I just can't seem to find WHO ASKED??
@@DomskiPlays it’s to educate most ignorant people who do not know where Korea is let alone its history, which is of no interest to foreigners I am sure. Korea is more familiar now because of cheap export of K-pop, and some popular exported goods but not from any admirable feats as they are becoming very liberal, the disease imported from USA.
After so long time, his music can now live on without bad thoughts about him. Because of the internet, Wiki and so on we're able to put him back very fast in a better light. What a wonderful music!
Concerto lindo, delicado, puro... exemplo de que a simplicidade pode ser linda. Bela orquestra e muita sensibilidade na interpretação da pianista.
Salieri's piano concerto is very standard piano concerto style.
Very beautiful and technical. He is good teacher.
Standard???? What???? There is nothing standard about a work of genius.
@@towmlvb3423 I doubt he was a genius but he was indeed a good composer who understood the craft and went along with the style of his time. Therefore he was famous back in the day but was slightly forgotten due to the change in music styles. His music is good but "genius" I think its to high of a level for Salieri.
모차르트 피협이상으로 아름답습니다. 모차르트에 가려져 저 평가된 살리에리 라는 작곡가을 탐구하는 계기가 되는 연주입니다. 협연 독주자 지휘자 모두 최상의 연주를 들려 주시네요. 감사 합니다. 잘 들었습니다.
Salieri taught young Franz Schubert the musical composition. Salieri was a genius who had a hand in making of the greatest composer in history, Schubert.
Yes I agree
Salieri, a great musician that Milos Forman transformed in a movie villain.
This is astounding and deserves more views.
Ég er sammála
This is amazing. Viva Salieri.
You can clearly listen here that Beethoven got a lot of inspiration for his own piano concertos from Salieri :-D
+Andre Goncalves Yes! From about 5:30 to 5:50 sounds like pure Beethoven.
@@davehshs651 It does, but it is not going anywhere. That was the genius of Beethoven. Beethoven used a buildup like that to introduce a new theme.
@@peace-now You're right. Good point.
The saddest thing is that, today, people learn history from movies instead of learning from books! Lazyness that becomes ignorance!
Yes - but his motif work is clearly influenced by Haydn - and ordered by Beethovens own mathematical thinking.
Juste bon pour un public asiatique très complaisant avec la musique du XVIII ème siècle...!
Indeed, Salieri respected Mozart, even if this respect was tinged with bitterness, and
W.A. was returning the like! ................... :-)
I think of Salieri more like an inspirational father figure to these young geniuses he taught, who helped facilitate the expression of their great talents. Someone with a spirit like Robin Williams in Dead Poets Society.
that was beautiful, thank you for posting it
SALIERI era o maior Mestre de Música em Viena na segunda metade do seculo VVIII...O pianoforte italiano já estava bem avançado com CLEMENTI por volta de 1770! Aceitem que Mozart aprendeu tudo com mestres italianos!...SALIERI was the greatest Master of Music in Vienna in the second half of the 8th century...The Italian pianoforte was already well advanced with CLEMENTI around 1770! Accept that Mozart learned everything from Italian masters!!!
Amazing! Simply a superb performance, truly wonderful. Heeguin Kim gave a performance that was second to none. Thank you so very much for posting this video!
How I wish that some of Salieri's compositions such as this one, were used in the movie Amadeus. Even though the movie was to portray the true genius of Mozart, Salieri, IMO, was deliberately maligned and portrayed as a "less than adequate, mediocre" composer who deliberately, with sustained malice toward God and His "little protégé", set out to murder Mozart out of pure envy. Salieri was superb composer and opera owes him a debt of gratitude.
Superbe et excellente encore.
+nonoyo beezewax germans hate italians,ask italians about behavior of german tourist in italy,they are fucking racist¡¡¡¡¡¡
Very good !
Saliere sempre Saliere, lindíssimo concerto. Bela Orquestra.
너무 아름다운 곡이네요. 가끔씩 콘체르토는 지루하다는 생각이 드는데 이곡은 단조로우면서도 선율이 너무나 아름다워 빠져듭니다.
Por qué este concierto no es tan famoso como otros conciertos de piano, siendo tan bello?
Se a mídia quiser ,com certeza será.
To the one saying it's a concert "alla Mozart": this is the usual idiotic comparison done 250 years after.... Salieri was only 6 years older than Mozart and this concerto dated 1773 (as the other one he wrote) when Mozart didn't write ANY of his main concertos yet nor he impacted the genre of the piano concerto (in 1773 Mozart was 17) nor he gave the famous piano concerts in Vienna of the 80's. The first Mozart concertos were inspired by CPE Bach so explain how this concert can f****g be "in Mozart style" if at that time Mozart didn't yet define the style of the piano concerto and was still far to do that??? Today using the brain is an option
+Hazonrer grazie tante,non me piace tedeschi¡¡¡¡¡¡¡
Salieri's wish came true to live on his music after he dies I absolve you salieri!
Take that, Salieri haters! Salieri positively brought the house down!
excellent moment !.....
Beautiful!!!
GRAZIE SIGNORE!!
To Kevin Zhang, the erroneous belief that Salieri and Mozart were at loggerheads came long before 1984, it started with a Russian opera by a composer whose name escapes me at the moment. In fact Salieri was a great advocate of Mozart and was thanked by the disrespect of the Mozarts who considered him to be a lesser composer. Beethoven however thought a lot of him and was his pupil for a time
It's Nikolai Rimsky-Korsarkov
I probably spelled it wrong
Even earlier with one of four short plays by Alexander Pushkin named Little Tragedies. The very one was named Mozart and Salieri, losely based on talks and tittle-tattle which were around names of this two talented composers those times.
Magnificent... ❤
Kim does, indeed, have a lovely touch on the keys. I wish the orchestra complemented her virtuosity a bit more. thanks for uploading. this is one of my favourite pieces of music.
Funny: 1st mov sounds like early Haydn, 3rd mov like early Mozart, and the 2nd one is special somehow.
I hope you guys appreciate my piece!
sì, messere, apprezziamo il brano ma ci danno fastidio le insinuazioni fatte nei film
Haha, fantastic
I absolve you I absolve you
I hate you you poisoned Mozart jealous you where leaded to hell by God
@@aurehinianafamily1332 it would be better to read history books instead to learn by movies. Or not? ;)
BTW Salieri was Mozart's teacher - the son of Mozart was his pupil and didn't die. Why? If he was envious (not jealous) why he teached to a Mozart? Anybody saw Salieri in Mozart's house preparing poisoned spaghetti?
People please study, holliwood is shi... hemmm... nothing. Just a movie.
Salieri is a great composer. We need to distinguish ingenuity of the film "Amadeus" and Milos Forman as director of historical facts. The movie is fiction! This film, except that the characters are historical figures, is not a biography of Mozzart or Salieri! The script, acting, set design, ... belong to the top the film art. Just as those two of composers belong to the top of мusic art.
The film was a cinema adaptation(almost word for word) of Scaeffer's play 'Amadeus', which was a hit in London and on Broadway long before Hollywood got its hands on it.
Salieri was such a genius composing for piano, its such a shame he only wrote two concertos and no sonatas :( i really enjoy him a lot, sadly i dont enjoy opera :(
He wasn't, he was a poor composer.
@@DressedForDrowning you should stop spamming the comment section with your poor opinion
@@gerardgag LOL Now you stop spamming. I know exactly what I'm talking about. I don't know why you love this kind of music, but a childhood concerto of Mozart ist 1000 times better than all Salieri ever has written. Well, try this one: th-cam.com/video/Ng2uubWSETU/w-d-xo.html
Not profound but pleasant and meticulously constructed. Very "intellectual" in a sense. The difference between someone like Salieri and Mozart is that very thing. Intellect. Salieri's music resides there almost exclusively so he is able compose some very brilliant pieces. But they are not "inspired". This is where Mozart transcended the "mental level" in music. It is like some undefinable spiritual fire has breathed a divine essence into Mozart's music and it becomes a living thing that then becomes immortal. Who knows what this essence is? Genius. Connection to something divine? All I know is this genius and the spiritual perfection it allowed into Mozart's music cannot be explained, cannot be duplicated, only awed and appreciated. That doesn't mean not appreciating Salieri's musical accomplishment such as it is. He should not be underestimated. It means accepting him for who he is. A great technical master of his art. But he is no Mozart. Really.. who is?
Им бы стоило поменяться национальностями, не правда ли?
It felt really down to Earth actually. I got an image of a Sunday stroll the park in the beginning.
Dear Eric, well thought out and well expressed. I feel you've touched on the very essence of the dilemma. Thank you.
Mozart is great. But not that great, really, I mean this concerto is beautiful, no less inspired than Mozart's piano concertos.
MAGNIFICO!
grande compositor
Thank you Heeguin Kim 피아노 김희균 !!! Top concert. Why is this not performed on an equal footing with Mozart? Salieri, also: Andrea Luchesi - Piano Concerto in F, Giovanni Paisiella,... Giovanni Paisiello - Piano Concertt in G minor...
Brava! 👏
Vibrant... Radiant... Brilliant... RENDITION!
At the time Salieri "admitted" to poisoning Mozart, he was suffering from dementia. Also, right before his death, he denied it again.
Hermoso!!!
no hubiese visto el video después de ver Amadeus pero hay que reconocer que era buen compositor y esta obra es muy bonita
Better than a lot of the crap they're playing on the radio these days...
About SALIERI :D Read primary and contemporary resources - facts will save us from fleeting movie-based and unresearched ''opinions'' ...
For what good he did to her son, ex husband & his music - and, after all, her dear self - Constanze, who was known to change her mind according to what suited her best interests, *never once went to visit* old hospitalised Salieri (who, along both Haydn brothers and other composers - was also respectively and affectionately called Papá) - meaning she would not really know what he supposedly had said, would she?! At the time when this anecdote began circulating, *entire medical staff in charge of Salieri wrote and signed a public letter (of June 25th, 1824) - attesting that Salieri never said this to anybody* - he was, up to that time and apart from the attending staff and possibly his family - all alone: because of the seriousness of his illness - nobody had the permission to see him - *he had no visitors whatsoever to tell it to.* The doctors themselves *swear on their own honour and conscience that they have never heard him say it either.* Povero uomo abbandonato e indifeso! In light of this letter - there is a splendid *chance that the anecdote - came from the outside* - meaning: from somebody who was *NOT Salieri* ... Cabale for the dying man, cabale! Even when approaching his death, Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung humorously notes that ''Salieri simply refuses to die'' ...
I can live with this part of the canon - so can you; they were learning from each other; without Salieri - we would have a different Mozart (and vice versa); as Christophe Rousset says - whether or not Salieri felt hurt about Mozart nicking his ideas (especially from La Grotta) - well, he may have, he was only human - and Mozart recognised which ideas work and appropriated them as he saw fit. But the point is - that out of all 169 letters by Salieri - in rarely any does he speak judgementally of music (or character) of his contemporaries - and not one speaks ill of Mozart (or anybody else) - in fact, *he defended* ''Mozart's'' unfinished Requiem (letter from January 10th, 1820) - while *Mozart family spits acid* towards Salieri (and just about everybody else whose position they were envious of (Kapellmeisters and rich, successful independent musicians) or felt inferior to (original, technically demanding and studious Clementi and Vogler.) Guess they were human as well.) There is as of yet absolutely *no evidence whatsoever* that Salieri was a mean tongued bastard towards anybody - on the other hand, there's plenty to support the idea that the Mozarts - were just that, insecure, fearful and quite likely unjust towards many (read their letters in original German, English translations are largely filled with mistakes, idealised, wilfully interpreted and, of course, censored - quite curious!) It is plausible that with such a spiky attitude - people might have learned to dislike them ...
By inviting Salieri to see The Magic Flute with him - Mozart at last perchance got three confirmations: Salieri showed - in public - that *he thinks highly of Mozart's music*, ''libretto and everything'' - and by arriving together, sitting with him in his lodge - *that Mozart has his favour.* Which is far from any later conceived story of jealousy or hatred, whichever its direction (please note that through 1829 Novello anecdotes ~ it was Constanze herself who actively propagated this lie). Salieri's presence might have also contributed to its success: to have a prominent member of the Emperor's Court and ''Italian camp'' (though Salieri was musically thought of as German) enthusiastically clapping and cheering - *ensured at the very least (e)quality of the work.* By attending this opera (in a way a renewed and from Mozart's part upgraded *1786* Challenge) *Salieri showed Mozart - that Mozart and the Singspiel - have his support.* What else could Mozart wish for?! What else could Salieri give?!
And for goodness sake: these two have in 1791 shared in mutual respect those 2 square meters together - we too can respect both - and their contributions to music: Amadeus Chamber Orchestra, most fitting a tribute! :D BRAVO, everybody, congratulations for the tender touch and care given!
Well stated
This Salieri's piece is not east to play at all and real musician would know why, those who say Salieri was nothing but mediocrity have no ears. The mediocrity in a piano piece is not only determined by the simplicity of a melody or whatever else who could be criticize here. Salieri was a master for the rythm, the silence, the pause etc... and only a deaf or a person who does not understand anything to music would not hear it in this concerto.
It's all a matter of aesthetic. As I am someone who already finds Mozart banal at times, imagine how much I'm bored by this piece. I'd rather listen to Stravinsky, thank you very much.
Мариос Христодулу man, can’t seem my fans anywhere :(
Мариос Христодулу: But this piece has nothing to do with Mr Mozart so I don’t understand what you’re saying?
Intriguing piece..feels in its time but just ahead of its time..very enjoyable.
Salieri seems pretty good. I wonder why not many places play his music.
5:23 Beyond Eternity! Destruction rules! Classical influence...
actually pretty good
Heeguin Kim is her name. I hadn't heard her before either.
the movie "Amadeus" portrays him as mediocre but without that movie the world would not know him to the extent we do now
Exquisite!!
We're gonna like Solieri cause up yours.
I love salieri
Muy hermoso
Very fine performance. Thanks for sharing this here.
About 5:35 is fabulous.
En 9´maravilloso!!!
Comment dirai-je respect salieri quel concertos
Troppo educato, quasi troppo stilisticamente perfetto per per passare alla Storia.
Ma a me piace, nel pianoforte ci sento alcune anticipazioni dello spirito romantico di Chopin.
Bistrattato oltre misura dalla sceneggiatura del capolavoro cinematografico di M.Forman Salieri è un grande maestro, comprensibile da tutti.
Non occorre la infatti essere intenditori per lasciarsi coinvolgere dalla limpidezza della melodia. Ci sento una purezza d'animo che mi restituisce pace.
Se Salieri non ha ucciso Mozart, di sicuro Puškin ha ucciso Salieri
Vaya!!!!
Se nota la influencia de MOZART EN SALIERI!!
Marvelous! Mozart before Mozart!
+ Milos Djurdjevic vous ne devez pas écouter souvent les concertos de Mozart...Entendre du Mozart dans cette " merdouillerie " c'est avoir les oreilles en court-jus...!
Does anybody have the sheet??
As far as Salieri being a mediocrity: he wasn't. He was better than 99% of those who tried to compose music for a living. He only appears mediocre (aside from the film) because he lived at the same time as a one-in-a-MILLENNIUM genius, Mozart. That's different than a one-in-a-generation or even a one-in-a-century genius. On the one hand, this is some great music here in Salieri's concerto, but doesn't stir the soul the way Mozart's piano concertos do, certainly the mature ones anyway, which I would consider from no. 17 on. Salieri is like the 65 storey skyscraper that happens to be next to the Sears Tower. In most states, Saleri would be the tallest building in the state and dominate the city skyline, but when aside Mozart in the Chicago skyline, Salieri seems ordinary in comparison.
But that skyline also contains the skyscrapers of Haydn... and Clementi... and Boccherini. How tall is Salieri looking now?
OK I'm kind of joking, but remember Salieri wasn't a huge instrumentalist, he was an opera composer so if we're gonna put him on a pedestal let it be that one...
Classicism was a necessary evil in the history of Classical music, which we had to endure in order to get Beethoven. Sure, Salieri was an above-average Classicist composer, but every composer of that era that isn't Mozart or Haydn sounds like a fly-ridden long-expired pancake, so being top of that bunch doesn't say much about your ability to write good music.
Salieri was only 24 years old at the time when he was appointed director of the Italian opera by the Habsburg court and can imagine who was jealous of who and was so incompetent that he remained in this position until his death.
Talvez Salieri seja muito maior que o filme Amadeus quis mostrar.
Salieri may not have been a genius like Mozart, but without Salieri, you would not have these composers:
-Ludwig van Beethoven
-Franz Schubert
-Franz Liszt
-Peter Winter
-Antonio Casimir Cartellieri
-Franz Mozart
-Anton Eberl
-Johann Hummel
Beethoven would pioneer the Romantic Era of music while Liszt would be a virtuoso on the piano. Schubert pioneered the Lied (lead).
someone have the score??????please please I Need....like this, piano and orchesta
Marco Arturo Bustos Sánchez imslp.nl/imglnks/usimg/4/40/IMSLP371406-PMLP599763-Salieri_-_Harpsichord_Concerto_in_C.pdf
+Marco Arturo Bustos Sánchez amigo bustos,creo tu debes mirar ediciones italianas come RICCORDI,por ejemplo
One word - Vienna :)
13:35 you're looking for this right?
Its sad that people don't listen to classic music anymore. To understand the classical music, one has to a trained ear for it.
Whats the "name" of the concerto, the catalog number and such things?
Nice performance ! But for those that think this piece from Salieri is good- I agree! But check out Paisiello’s piano concerti! ( Mozart is good , too😉)
I'm embarrassed to admit I first heard this concerto in Iron Man! 13#35
Ironic Obadiah stane felt overshadowed by Stark like Salieri and....
Didn't Salieri put the finish on Wolfgang's requiem ?
Helleboros Retz he did not. Franz-Xaver. Süßmayr, a friebdcand occasional copyist for Mozart, finished the Requiem (Abbé Stadler and Eybler made some contributions as well but passed on completing the work).
13:36 iron man movie piece
Hermoso concierto, Amadeus destrozó a Salieri, pero no era ningún boludo.
What a pity the excellent Salieri is now mainly known ,quite wrongfully, as the man who thwarted Mozart and not as the excellent composed that he actually was, and in reality he actually helped him a great deal
The rest is just the same isn't it?
The tragedy of Salieri is that his legacy was tarnished by a vicious rumor that he poisoned Mozart - a rumor exacerbated in 1830 by a play called “Mozart and Salieri” by Alexander Pushkin. The salacious nature of the rumor unfortunately spawned various conspiracies long after both Mozart’s and Salieri’s lifetimes - the worst of which is that somehow there was animosity between the two, and that Salieri lamented his “mediocrity” while resenting Mozart’s superiority. Nothing could have been further from the truth as contemporary evidence will reveal. It doesn’t help that Peter Schaeffer will kick the man while he’s down once again with his blasphemous play “Amadeus” in 1979 based on Pushkin’s slanderous fantasy.
Fortunately today, his music is finally filling concert halls once again, due to the modern proliferation of information that has never been so readily available before. I look forward to a movement to bring back Salieri, and place him finally on the mantle along with the other masters, (some of which were pupils of his) where he truly belongs.
Contrary to Milos Foreman's movie Amadeus, Salieri clearly was not a "mediocrity."