1:28 sounds like it was ripped from the finale of Rossini’s Stabat Mater Btw late (post-William Tell) Rossini is extremely underrated and unexpected if you’ve only listened to his operas
It sounds nice in such tempo. But should it be played so fast? If I understand correctly, even if "vivacetto" is 200 bpm (but should be slower), it is for eighth because the time signature is 6/8 (not 6/4), then 100 bpm for quarter. Right?
Can someone knowledgable help me so obiosly he made s.141 as playable alternative but could he actually play this as fast and perfect back in the day dose anyone think
Can be easily done with any DAW, but consider that I edited each note or measure by hand so it's a lot of work in all of the software choices you can think of. I used Cubase.
@@lisztomani4c Oh yeah I realize how hard it is. I know PianoCzarX uses Logic Pro where I think you can see or listen to both MIDI and audio at the same time so you can easily change the MIDI tempo. Can you do the same in Cubase? I want to know if it's possible to match small notes too like trills with perfect accuracy. Or would I have to use something else? I think Reaper can do that.
Cubase can't do that, unfortunately. You have to run the music in a separate driver and that alone is pretty settling. Your comment actually made me consider switching to Logic.
@@bait5257 some parts seem humanly impossible to play at this tempo, but I like to think liszt could've. I think he was the greatest pianist of all time, his technique was unmatched and he was probably alot better than today's concert pianists
@@bait5257 the piece ur thinking of is el contrabandista I think. it is wrongly stated that Liszt himself failed to play it. what actually happened was that it failed to be a hit with audiences so it was just never played. I think liszt could have played all of his pieces in tempo. but ig we will never truly know🤷♂️
Plot twist: Liszt only played like half these notes at performances but wrote the compositions so clustered that other people wouldn't attempt to copy him.
I really love the main theme and the variations on it, that Mereaux wrote. I will make an arrangment of only the theme and variations and attempt to record it. That should be fun.