avé maria quel belle symphonie interprétée par franz chmel , et quel talent !! cette musique aussi emblématique restera toujours charnelle . ce monsieur nous surprend par sa grande virtuosité ; que j'écoute souvent , car cette instrument don l'harmonica me passionne . surtout quand c'est joué de cette façon , mais il n'y pas que lui bien évidemment qui joue aussi bien , albert raisner lui aussi est très bon . bravo et encor bravo a youtube de nous faire redécouvrir tous ces grands artistes .
Ave Maria stupenda che solo lui sapeva fare: Sei stato un angelo dell'armonica tutti dobbiamo essere grati a questo armonicista, perché solo lui sapeva gestire la musica classica: Quando lo sento mi fa commuovere tanto. Ciaooooooooooo!
Quanto mi piacerebbe suonare l'armonica come te, anche se da bambino la suonavo discretamente fino adesso che ho 74 anni. Ho ascoltato attentamente tutti i pezzi che fai e non c'è dubbio sei bravissimo: Ciao.
With the passing of Franz Chmel, the world has lost a Fantastic musician, who dared to experiment, and would not take "no" for an answer; Franz demonstrated that the harmonica is a worthy instrument, capable as a solo instrument with orchestral qualities. He played music that Nobody else would even dare to try and play on a harmonica, and gained a place for the harmonica as a Mainstream instrument. Rest In Peace.
Gregory Pearson, Franz Chmel only used One 16-hole chromatic for All of his music. Remember, you can play in Any and Every Key or scale on a chromatic.
@@kazhilly Thanks - I am getting into chromatic - I am familiar with the concept of all 12 keys, and am leaning toward a 16 hole. Do you know the manufacturer? I asked about keys because I saw the Hohner 270 comes in different keys,
@Gregory Pearson , there are quite a few manufacturers that make 16-hole Chromatics. Are you on FaceBook? Look for me: “Hilvert H. Scheper” and send me a message, and I can help you with advice and maybe more...
Damn, that Schubert guy lived a long time. He lived long enough to not only see all his fellow composers die, but long enough to witness the birth of air travel, the invention of radio, and Einstein discovering relativity.
So amazing. Who currently owns the rights? I would love to listen to Franz's material on platform's other than youtube! Or is there a service that still sells his CDs?