► ► ► Attention All Viewers, Thank you for watching my videos! I highly recommend some excellent resources for your piano learning, enrichment, and education: 1. Special member-only piano and theory instruction not available publicly on TH-cam (new content uploaded weekly): wellroundedpianist.com 2. BachScholar® Edition books and sheet music for all levels of piano students and teachers: store.subitomusic.com/index.php?main_page=advanced_search_result&search_in_description=1&zenid=qi7l0a25qf390h0d370dtjcdu5&keyword=bachscholar 3. To see what BachScholar® Editions has planned for the near future, please see this page: www.bachscholar.com/books-in-progress/ Thank you again for watching my videos and have a blessed day! Sincerely, Cory Hall (D.M.A.)
This group of sonatinas will be a solid reference for students (never mind what you say we should never listen to pieces beforehand). Maybe in the seminar channel instead of "how to play" you could point out certain difficult points about them.
Thank you for this nice step into classical music. I'm here because of A groovy kind of love - a modern song. Only the maestro can play piano like this.
@BachScholar Evidently I have a different printing. Mine only says allegro, but the books I have sometimes modify some of the pieces to make them more appropriate. (What I'm referring to isn't a book of Clementi; it's just the RCM Grade 5 book, so it was probably slowed down a bit to fit the level.)
I'd heard of them but I don't know much else, I'll have to look them up, as I'm very much interested in Classical era keyboard works. Czerny seems to have such confident command over the classical era language in his etudes, I wonder if his sonatas have a similar feel, just widened. Also, Weber, though known for operas, has greatly impressed me with his virtuosic classical era style piano sonatas, especially Perpetuum Mobile, the final movement of his first.
Thanks for posting this! I'm aware you don't take requests, but a while ago I asked you about pieces you were playing, and clementi popped up then; have you ever explored any of Clementi's Sonatas? There are quite a few mediocre ones, but there are also those that stand out, and these tend to be the most played, with a few underplayed-underground-masterpiece-exceptions about like his G Minor Sonata Scena Tragica from the 1820s. Horrowitz was a proponent of the Clementi Sonatas.
My personal favorites are the G Minor: Scena Tragica, one in F sharp Minor, D major from around 1800, and a rather famous one in B flat major. Maybe when I get comfortable with my own playing(and playing in front of a camera to say the least, a decent one), I can post the final movement of scena tragica, its somwhat like the sonatinas, a lot of engaging music conveyed most efficiently. Thanks for the video, and I await the 6th sonatina if you plan on it.
Musical Copyrights only last for 70 years after the composer died. So, Tony Wine is OK to freely based “A groovy kind of love” from Muzio Clementi’s “Rondo of Sonatina Opus 36”. Pachebel’s “Cannon” has been based and modified into a lot of modern music, one example is Maroon 5’s “Memory”
You played the third movement much faster than I'm used to hearing it... (it's 108 - 120 BPM in my book). Still, keep up the good work with the sonatinas. (I haven't heard the sixth one ever before, so I'm looking forward to it.)
The sixth is my favorite personally. My teacher had me buy the Alfred book of 6 of his sonata’s. I started the sixth and so far I’m one movement in. Loving it!
Just wondering whether the "Presto" is fast enough... but it has good clarity (unlike me is of course what I am talking about) Actually your speed for "Allegro moderato" is fine to me. The staccato to me ruin the tension though (I know you like it, it's just my opinion) (AND "Allegro di molto" sounds faster than "Presto"?) The third mvmt has the most fun part. Waiting for No. 6... (5 stars)
Czerny's early sonata's have the feel of Beethoven's, but overall Czerny utilizes better musical treatment and conveys a wider range of ideas. He has various 5-movement ones that end in fugues, and even a 7-movement one! I think Czerny is terribly underrated as a composer. To me, he's on par w/ Mendelssohn. So many of his waltzes, capriccios, fantasias, etc go unplayed...
@@azpizzazz3442That's correct. And apparently, I left the aforementioned comment 12 years ago. I must have been either engaging with or replying to someone whose account is no longer active or whose comment is no longer available.
Graham conquer GHC if your comfortable with let’s say grade 4 Clementi (or any classical composer), and want to for example learn baroque music, I would start at grade two Bach and quickly work my way up. In general, I like to learn a piece from each era of music before learning another too prevent becoming unskilled in let’s say... romantic music if I hadn’t played that genre in several months. Starting two grades below usually removes the struggle when learning a new composer or genre as the change in music can be drastic, i.e. Jazz is very different from classical, or how Beethoven is very different from Clementi even when they are in the same era of music.
Not downplaying your ability, but my mother would play this occasionally throughout my childhood and she did it slowly, and it's beautiful when it's a bit slower. No one plays it like she does
Its kinda funny I'm an x paratrooper and went to the Yamaha school of music from 8 but I play on my Casio CTX 3000 maybe for serving my Country I'll set up a go fund me account to get a piano that isn't made off carbon and hydrogen strings
► ► ► Attention All Viewers,
Thank you for watching my videos! I highly recommend some excellent resources for your piano learning, enrichment, and education:
1. Special member-only piano and theory instruction not available publicly on TH-cam (new content uploaded weekly): wellroundedpianist.com
2. BachScholar® Edition books and sheet music for all levels of piano students and teachers: store.subitomusic.com/index.php?main_page=advanced_search_result&search_in_description=1&zenid=qi7l0a25qf390h0d370dtjcdu5&keyword=bachscholar
3. To see what BachScholar® Editions has planned for the near future, please see this page: www.bachscholar.com/books-in-progress/
Thank you again for watching my videos and have a blessed day!
Sincerely, Cory Hall (D.M.A.)
6:58 is actually when Groovy Kind of Love starts.
Perfect rendition. I like how you recorded the whole sonata in one recording.
Eres el mejor, Cory.
Cory, eres el mejor.
Great playing!And I love the passion you have and perfect speed! Nice there on the trio too!
#1 00:05 #2 04:52 #3 06:58
Thanks!
@@c0urtneyxx512 3rd Movement: Groovy kind of love. Same notes only much faster
@@qianqianma5075 ?
The Rondo is certainly a groovy kind of love
This group of sonatinas will be a solid reference for students (never mind what you say we should never listen to pieces beforehand). Maybe in the seminar channel instead of "how to play" you could point out certain difficult points about them.
Danke! Es ist wunderschön! Leider kann ich nicht mehr so schnell und vor allem so perfekt spielen.
6:59 is the "groovy kind of love" part
Thank you. I came here after searching out the original 1965 version of Groovy Kind of Love..
Oh ya!!
@@kittyyyyc th-cam.com/video/bPJYT7LigtY/w-d-xo.html
Slow down to 0.5
Thanks for the video
I am practicing this song for piano. thanks :)
@GOODSPEED LI ok since it is longer than songs I play
😊
@@incredibleian5658and i but three years later
I’m actually learning this song on piano so it’s nice to hear it. Great recording by the way. And you actually create songs. That’s really cool!
The chords to ‘A Groovy Kinda Love’ are far more beautiful. Thanks for posting.
That was done in A major, compared to G major for this. (Phil’s version was in G.)
A bit of inspiration for a popular song in the third movement.
Thank you for this nice step into classical music. I'm here because of A groovy kind of love - a modern song.
Only the maestro can play piano like this.
I like how he plays the Sonatinas. I am learning a bit of those classical music he's playing
👏👏👏
I agree myself too!
1st song 0:00
2nd song 4:51
3rd song 6:58
Ty
*movement
Really enjoy this
Wow...(speechless)
Im practicing this thanks!
I'm learning this piece currently and ur video helped a lot!Great work!
7:48 - for practice reference
Bravo from from America
@BachScholar Evidently I have a different printing. Mine only says allegro, but the books I have sometimes modify some of the pieces to make them more appropriate. (What I'm referring to isn't a book of Clementi; it's just the RCM Grade 5 book, so it was probably slowed down a bit to fit the level.)
I'd heard of them but I don't know much else, I'll have to look them up, as I'm very much interested in Classical era keyboard works. Czerny seems to have such confident command over the classical era language in his etudes, I wonder if his sonatas have a similar feel, just widened. Also, Weber, though known for operas, has greatly impressed me with his virtuosic classical era style piano sonatas, especially Perpetuum Mobile, the final movement of his first.
Love it!!! Great!!
bravo from Australia
Can anyone tell what notes he ad libs in the left hand around 4:45? It’s not in the music and it’s so beautiful!
Thanks for posting this! I'm aware you don't take requests, but a while ago I asked you about pieces you were playing, and clementi popped up then; have you ever explored any of Clementi's Sonatas? There are quite a few mediocre ones, but there are also those that stand out, and these tend to be the most played, with a few underplayed-underground-masterpiece-exceptions about like his G Minor Sonata Scena Tragica from the 1820s. Horrowitz was a proponent of the Clementi Sonatas.
72살 할머니 이곡 지급 연습중예요
언제 이렇게 빌리 칠수 있을까요
연습하면 가능하긴 할까요
마음 비우고 치매예방으로 열심히 하렵니다
Turning a lemon into lemonade. Bravo Mr Hall.
AMAZING!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!🤩🤩🙊🙊
Siento que phil collins escuchaba muzio clementi 6:57 a baja velocidad (x0.25) - A Groovy Kind Of Love -
Quizas escucho Ivan Graziani...
Marvellous
I love the song
0:45 that is my favorite
My personal favorites are the G Minor: Scena Tragica, one in F sharp Minor, D major from around 1800, and a rather famous one in B flat major. Maybe when I get comfortable with my own playing(and playing in front of a camera to say the least, a decent one), I can post the final movement of scena tragica, its somwhat like the sonatinas, a lot of engaging music conveyed most efficiently.
Thanks for the video, and I await the 6th sonatina if you plan on it.
I sense that phil collins was hearing muzio clementi 6:57 in low speed (x0.25) - A Groovy Kind Of Love
Phil Collins didn't write 'Groovy Kind of Love'
No, New York composer Toni Wine wrote the melody (words by Carole BayerSager) in 1966 & freely admits she 'borrowed' the tune from this piece.
th-cam.com/video/LC_BZgOiNGI/w-d-xo.html ....before Phil Collins
Musical Copyrights only last for 70 years after the composer died. So, Tony Wine is OK to freely based “A groovy kind of love” from Muzio Clementi’s “Rondo of Sonatina Opus 36”.
Pachebel’s “Cannon” has been based and modified into a lot of modern music, one example is Maroon 5’s “Memory”
Or the converse! ahahha Joking of course, I've been wondering which song the allegro looks like since yesterday, fortunately I've read your comment!
6:57 ❤❤
You played the third movement much faster than I'm used to hearing it... (it's 108 - 120 BPM in my book). Still, keep up the good work with the sonatinas. (I haven't heard the sixth one ever before, so I'm looking forward to it.)
The sixth is my favorite personally. My teacher had me buy the Alfred book of 6 of his sonata’s. I started the sixth and so far I’m one movement in. Loving it!
Just wondering whether the "Presto" is fast enough... but it has good clarity (unlike me is of course what I am talking about)
Actually your speed for "Allegro moderato" is fine to me. The staccato to me ruin the tension though (I know you like it, it's just my opinion)
(AND "Allegro di molto" sounds faster than "Presto"?) The third mvmt has the most fun part.
Waiting for No. 6... (5 stars)
6:57
Bravo from Asia!!!!!
Czerny's early sonata's have the feel of Beethoven's, but overall Czerny utilizes better musical treatment and conveys a wider range of ideas. He has various 5-movement ones that end in fugues, and even a 7-movement one! I think Czerny is terribly underrated as a composer. To me, he's on par w/ Mendelssohn. So many of his waltzes, capriccios, fantasias, etc go unplayed...
Eeeehhhsoudesuka clemeti wrote this
lol this is clementi
@@azpizzazz3442That's correct. And apparently, I left the aforementioned comment 12 years ago. I must have been either engaging with or replying to someone whose account is no longer active or whose comment is no longer available.
@@Eeeehhhsoudesuka that makes more sense i suppose
it also just occurred to me how long ago that was wow
BTW, Czerny has made a piece quite similar to the first tempo of this Sonata, Studio op 849 n. 2 .
Bravo! But doesn't that Rondo sound familiar? A Groovy Kind Of Love...? Phil Collins? : )
The original version was from 1965, by Dianne and Annita.th-cam.com/video/bPJYT7LigtY/w-d-xo.html
This is where that song was originated from
Yes, Clementi has been inspired from Phil Collins!
Read about this a few min ago in Carole Bayer Sager's autobiography.
👏👏👏👏
I can play all muzio clementi songs but struggle with all else any ideas please help ?
Graham conquer GHC if your comfortable with let’s say grade 4 Clementi (or any classical composer), and want to for example learn baroque music, I would start at grade two Bach and quickly work my way up. In general, I like to learn a piece from each era of music before learning another too prevent becoming unskilled in let’s say... romantic music if I hadn’t played that genre in several months. Starting two grades below usually removes the struggle when learning a new composer or genre as the change in music can be drastic, i.e. Jazz is very different from classical, or how Beethoven is very different from Clementi even when they are in the same era of music.
I play on a grand piano and the brand is steinway and sons is it good?
Yes, Steinway is known to be a very nice brand.
Steinways are terrible. You're much better off on a second hand Kawai or electronic keyboard that has a decent demo button.
Lebowski53 wELL If I was given a Steinway I wouldn’t complain lmao
Claire Chai he doesn’t sell pianos he plays the piano
Wow
I like the way the middle movement ends.
This is very interesting performance with newer arrangemt from the pianist
Not downplaying your ability, but my mother would play this occasionally throughout my childhood and she did it slowly, and it's beautiful when it's a bit slower. No one plays it like she does
:0 good!
no encuentro la partitura de esta canción alguien me la pasa?
🎹 👍🏼
6:59 Diane & Annita?
clementi came WAYY before those people
👍
awesome!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Helped me understanding this one, i really thanks you at korea
I can’t even imagine what I was seeing 😱😱
hearing
U are seeing an Ling Ling playing piano
Que espetáculo lindooó de mais estou encantada
5:00 AIR SUISSE
6:57 ALLEGRO DI MOLTO
Groovy man!
0:01
내가 3년 전 이 곡을 가지고 콩쿠르에 나갔다니......
강약이 없는데 묘하게 끌리는 연주임
😍
It’s probably just me but I prefer it played a bit slower
Klementinin eserleri çoooookk gözel olur her zaman deyirem
Supeeeeerrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
🎹🎹🎹🎼🎼🎶🎶🎶🎹🎹🎹🎹🎹🎹🎹🎹🎹🎹🎼🎼🎼🎼🎼🎼
Bence çokkk iyi
Part III, Rondo, inspirated Wayne Fontana and later, Genesis, with "A groovy kind of love".
th-cam.com/video/cWy6yjjMKk0/w-d-xo.html
0:40
Musica di Muzio Clementi, sonatina n5 terzo tempo eseguìto molto lento.
th-cam.com/video/vgnh_ToNZFw/w-d-xo.html
..
Klassz
3:37 call 877 cash now
Jkjk, thanks for the music :)
.
So fast!
It’s presto,that’s why
00:00001
Uhh
00.0000001
on~~~~very Good😂❤👍
He play’s like a robot
Robot
Robot big
Does that mean perfect or does that mean he played with no emotion?
@@brendenwilson8316 no emotion
Ohh is very very very big
что кто what?!
Terrible camera angle
000000.1
I think it’s tooo fast 🥺
It should be faster, it's presto bro
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
the weather is fine
It's slower then it should be, but fine.
Its kinda funny I'm an x paratrooper and went to the Yamaha school of music from 8 but I play on my Casio CTX 3000 maybe for serving my Country I'll set up a go fund me account to get a piano that isn't made off carbon and hydrogen strings
Кто Русский?
Яяяяяяяя
Kamo akože toto mi dala učiteľka
Русские где?
Way too fast. Loses all the elegance. Try it half the speed. It's not a race!
For me no
Lady it would be faster cause it’s presto duhhhhh 🙄🙄🙄
It's presto excuse me
You know what "Presto" means? You obviously don't play piano
It’s presto,what do you expect?
Разве это хорошее исполнение? Неровно, грубо, не интересно трактует пианист, дёргано... Тяжело слушать.
6:58
Poop
@@FATAL_CHICKEN lol
4:51
5:28
6:58
4:52