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César Franck - Piano Quintet in F minor 

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- Composer: César-Auguste-Jean-Guillaume-Hubert Franck (10 December 1822 -- 8 November 1890)
- Performers: The Schubert Ensemble (of London)
- Year of recording: 2001
Piano Quintet in F minor, M. 7, written in 1878-1879.
00:00 - I. Molto moderato quasi lento
16:06 - II. Lento, con molto sentimento
26:38 - III. Allegro non troppo, ma con fuoco
The Piano Quintet, one of the earliest masterpieces of Franck, marked his return to chamber music after more than 35 years. The work was dedicated to Saint-Saëns who, although he played the piano part in the premiere, so strongly disapproved of the musical language of the composer that he rejected the dedication.
- The first movement opens with a dramatic introduction, Molto moderato quasi lento, by the bowed strings. The piano replies in a gentle manner. The strings restate their opening. The piano turns even more gentle. The dialogue continues along similar lines until the piano suddenly launches into the Allegro. The second subject is characterized by a wistful inflection to minor. The development reaches a stormy climax. A passage mirrors the introduction. The reprise is very intense, but it concludes fading away.
- The second movement, Lento, con molto sentimento, is also in sonata form. It opens with a motive with a falling figure on the first violin, with a background of repeated chords of the piano. The atmosphere gradually turns more tragic. Then, a gentle melody in the lower strings is accompanied by piano in the high register. In the central section, the piano brings back the second subject of the opening Allegro. The reprise is again highly dramatic.
- The finale, Allegro non troppo ma con fuoco, is characterized by a relentless rhythmic drive. It opens with a repeated soft motive in the strings from which the first subject emerges. The second subject begins with a piano theme accompanied by the strings. The agitation continues throughout. Near the ending, the second subject of the Allegro reappears. But the rhythmic urgency resumes and brings the work to an intense conclusion.

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26 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 205   
@JJTownley_Classical-Composer
@JJTownley_Classical-Composer 7 лет назад
Franck and Borodin are in that rare class of composer who achieved 1st-rate composer status on just a handful works, all masterpiece. This is one of Franck's five or so most popular compositions...one of the only five that gets a regular playing these days and it's in a class with the Violin Sonata as one of the great chamber works in the repertoire. Interesting that with just these five compositions (and the others if you're familiar with his entire output) he established that unique "Franck" sound; one only has to listen 4 or 5 measures to instantly recognize he is the composer. That is the true mark of genius.
@magbag70
@magbag70 7 лет назад
same with the Preludio Choral and Fugue for piano. A piano masterpiece
@windstorm1000
@windstorm1000 6 лет назад
the other three being his symphony, symphonic variations, the prelude and variations for piano
@Danzig987
@Danzig987 6 лет назад
Plus one more: "Psyche" for chorus and orchestra (1888). ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-X2Qzfi13qaQ.html
@roiranen5950
@roiranen5950 6 лет назад
In my opinion- piano quintet, violin sonata, prelude choral and fugue, piano trio no. 1 and symphonic variations
@jdiwkall
@jdiwkall 6 лет назад
not sure I would put either Franck or Borodin in the first rate category even if some of their chamber/orchestra works are firmly rooted in the repertoire
@philip.stigaard
@philip.stigaard 2 года назад
I have never heard this kind of sound before, a true masterpiece
@gerardbegni2806
@gerardbegni2806 7 лет назад
A masterpiece. Some kind of interior drama erupts in that famous quintet.
@desdequesada
@desdequesada 2 года назад
At that time , he was in love with a pupil .
@gerardbegni2806
@gerardbegni2806 2 года назад
@@desdequesada Yes, I know, Augusta Holmès, who was also a composer and wrote in particular some naive choirs or sacred songs for the Catholic church. Yiou know, he had been named "Pater Seraphicus", which is .a biased vision. He was able to write great rometic-like outbursts. Listen for instance his ' "chasseur maudit" or some pécunier sections in his Symphony in d minor.
@honoratamusica
@honoratamusica 8 лет назад
Absolutely incredible! Franck was a genius!
@havekenbeek
@havekenbeek 6 лет назад
Un sommet de l'art de César Franck. A la fois rigoureux et rêveur. Excellente interprétation.
@janvanc7190
@janvanc7190 6 лет назад
I am no musician, but this chamber music is not for the faint hearted. First time I listen to this stormy passionate work. Thank you for uploading. Thoroughly enjoyed it.
@johnlorenzen4633
@johnlorenzen4633 4 года назад
Agreed. It burst onto the scene- nothing like it before. Even Tchaikovsky--no slouch in the intensity dept--witness his searing trio- might have blanched at this we works towering passion.
@alis1637
@alis1637 Год назад
Greatest piano quintet of all time
@iianneill6013
@iianneill6013 Год назад
This is so modern in feeling - like a 20th century novelist like John Cowper Powys, say - that it seems incredible that it was written in 1878 ...
@gabrielmeruelo3158
@gabrielmeruelo3158 7 лет назад
I absolutely love Franck's music, so original, so passionate and romantic. Marvelous stuff. Gabe Meruelo.
@windstorm1000
@windstorm1000 6 лет назад
I as well
@nadiadesimone9853
@nadiadesimone9853 7 лет назад
So special and passionate music.Tnx so much for posting ❤🌹❤
@pierreguinot9238
@pierreguinot9238 2 года назад
Ma version préférée de cette œuvre époustouflante, qui a peut-être même révélé au compositeur ce qu'il avait à faire dans la décennie de sommets qui a suivi dans sa création. Grand merci aux interprètes qui ont magnifiquent apprivoisé le monstre. Dans beaucoup d'autres interprétations, " ça fait trop de bruit", on n'entend plus à chaque moment chacun, ce qui est le danger ici. Oui, bravo, bravo, merci.
@sophiecarolinaabend3284
@sophiecarolinaabend3284 Год назад
3:17 4:12 😍😭 7:20 8:03 10:17 11:07 14:58
@oliverbensch6693
@oliverbensch6693 Год назад
One of the wonderful recordings of this great chamber musik work, Subtle, beautiful in sound and exciting music.
@rrraihman1
@rrraihman1 8 лет назад
A beautiful performance.
@bobhourigan7417
@bobhourigan7417 3 года назад
An intense listening experience. Very much enjoyed. Thanks for the post.
@louismarie92
@louismarie92 5 лет назад
Chef d'oeuvre !
@Evodem10
@Evodem10 8 лет назад
Magnifico!
@PianoHypnoshroom
@PianoHypnoshroom 2 года назад
Incredibly powerful piece, and dramatic dynamic changes
@gabrielmeruelo3158
@gabrielmeruelo3158 6 лет назад
One of the top piano quintets, along with Schubert, Schumann, Brahms, and two or three more. It's certainly in the top five. Gabe Meruelo.
@gabrielmeruelo3158
@gabrielmeruelo3158 6 лет назад
I was referring to Schubert's piano quintet in C Major, specially the second movement.
@windstorm1000
@windstorm1000 6 лет назад
don't think Schubert wrote a piano quintet--oh, the trout quientel--I love it but most would not put it in top 5--replace with the Dvorak.
@noiselesspatient
@noiselesspatient 3 года назад
Don't forget Frank's pupil, Louis Vierne. His piano quintet (a requiem for his son killed during WW1) is remarkable and heartbreaking.
@jorgemanuelbotelhoinfante2809
@jorgemanuelbotelhoinfante2809 6 месяцев назад
I would also like to rank Dvorak's' 2nd Piano Quintet amongst the masterpieces you've mentioned.
@snowcarriagechengcheng-hun3454
Thanks for uploading!
@MrGer2295
@MrGer2295 7 лет назад
Wonderful ! Thank you so much :)
@bimbobalderas8176
@bimbobalderas8176 7 лет назад
Thanks for the Music!
@gabykappscomposermariagabr749
@gabykappscomposermariagabr749 6 лет назад
Breathless!!! Franck just grabs me, and this interpretation may be a bit vicious, but it's totally gut-grabbing!
@gerardbedecarter
@gerardbedecarter 2 года назад
Beautiful playing.
@fendynathan9287
@fendynathan9287 2 года назад
only took me 15 seconds to like this piece, what a piece!
@MusicoftheSpheres
@MusicoftheSpheres 2 года назад
Too long! That first bar!
@naomiteplow4461
@naomiteplow4461 5 месяцев назад
Thank you so much for the gorgeous music, and for the clear, very-valuable explanation which has taught me a lot.
@gerardbegni2806
@gerardbegni2806 6 лет назад
The quintet of César Franck is a highly passionate and romantic score. It is indeed savage in some setions. He met various opponents. On the "right", Saint-Saêns, to whom it was dedicated, left ostensibly the dedicated score on the piano after having created it. On the "left", Debussy declared that he did not admit that one could dramatize the chamber music in such a way. These reactions are now over, and this quintet, together with Schumann's, is considered as a top of the genre, which includes many scores from many composers (including nowadays Xenakis). Moreover, it is an excellent example of the cyclic form as adopted by César Franck and many students of his own.
@johnlorenzen4633
@johnlorenzen4633 4 года назад
Excellent- read my comment at top
@didierschein8515
@didierschein8515 4 года назад
To which composition of Xenakis do you refer ?
@gerardbegni2806
@gerardbegni2806 4 года назад
@@didierschein8515Dear Didier Akea {Άκεα} (1986)
@didierschein8515
@didierschein8515 4 года назад
@@gerardbegni2806 Merci beaucoup. J'écouterai avec plaisir.
@gerardbegni2806
@gerardbegni2806 4 года назад
@@didierschein8515 C'est, comme tout Xenakis, une partition déroutante au premier abord. mais il est très intéressant de voir comment il allie son radicalisme fondamental avec une certaine "tradition d'écriture", fut-elle infiniment distanciée. C'est une problématique qu'il est obligé de se poser dans la musique de chambre, et plus tard, dans le grand orchestre polychrome.
@nathan2026
@nathan2026 2 года назад
i dont know, i just love this piece, perfect for my ears hail César Franck
@alis1637
@alis1637 2 года назад
Hail César!
@tgunersel
@tgunersel 7 лет назад
Thank you for sharing.
@Yannoux3000
@Yannoux3000 4 года назад
29:10 is sort of fascinating... sounds from another century, maybe even further than XXIth
@tpaealio
@tpaealio Год назад
The 3rd Movement always engenders recollections of Charles Dickens’ Oliver Twist for me; it was among the many pieces that played whilst I read, and I guess the music fits in with the Dickensian atmosphere.
@didierleroy6348
@didierleroy6348 2 года назад
Interprétation exceptionnelle
@guidoallievi2688
@guidoallievi2688 8 лет назад
Superbe interprétation, thanks for posting
@olla-vogala4090
@olla-vogala4090 8 лет назад
+Guido Allievi Je vous en prie
@fredericchopin7538
@fredericchopin7538 2 года назад
Extraordinary!
@rokeley94
@rokeley94 5 лет назад
Here I clicked on this thinking "what kind of madman writes for 5 pianos?!" but was treated to a wonderful string quartet instead (Duh). Thanks for all your uploads!
@echoes6092
@echoes6092 5 лет назад
I believe Rachmaninov wrote a piece for three pianos! That's the most I've ever heard of though.
@aenox848
@aenox848 3 года назад
@@echoes6092 Bach has a 4 Keyboard Concerto, available on youtube !
@PETERJOHN101
@PETERJOHN101 3 года назад
@@echoes6092 And those 3 pianos were stacked on top of each other so that two pianists perched on the shoulders of his lower level cohort. Stunning, I tell you, simply stunning!
@brianhammer5107
@brianhammer5107 2 года назад
This was recorded in 1998. It was on a BBC Music Mag CD, along with Faure's quartet.
@garygreen3845
@garygreen3845 7 месяцев назад
Knowing just his Dm symphony, Symphonic Variations, and the violin sonata, I was amazed listening to the very forward-thinking harmonies in some sections. I felt Poulenc and Prokofiev at times! Had to stop listening after the first movement to process! Bravo!
@marcvincenti6624
@marcvincenti6624 8 лет назад
The triple forte, crescendo section that just precedes the quiet final bars of the opening movement is one of the most savage, hair-raising things I've heard in a string quintet. I mean, I thought Brahms and Schumann had this territory nailed down and roped off for themselves in their string quintets, but, wow, Franck proves himself even more serious than they were. And there is a broken, quietly sobbing quality to the opening movement, the way the opening convulsions of the strings are played off against the singing phrases of the piano-so that the combination seems to speak of something irrevocably sundered. The opening of the second movement is quieter, but also still torn. And then I find the darkness a little too relentless, the absence of contrasts with the light something that weakens this work. Or perhaps it's that this band is a little shy about making the dolcissimos as dolcissimo as they might be, which would leaven matters a bit. Again, in the second movement, the piano breathes out some solo phrases, singing in quality, that suddenly fall silent, as if they had forgotten where they were going, and the whole thing as a terrible searching quality, and is suffused with chromaticism, everything slipping and sliding, refusing to come to a point of stability. Again, in the penultimate pages of the last movement there is a savage, gasping outburst and now it doesn't seem to lead anywhere, to point to any relief, as the quintet concludes seemingly only because it has to conclude, not because it has arrived anywhere. On the whole, a scary piece; but I do think that something more sweet and soft in the passages marked dolce or espressivo would have made the whole thing less daunting... I don't know; and would love to hear from others. Marc Vincenti
@olla-vogala4090
@olla-vogala4090 8 лет назад
Marc, you're back! Good to hear from you again on my channel, your comments are always a pleasure to read.
@marcvincenti6720
@marcvincenti6720 8 лет назад
Oh, thank you so much. I had a very good piano and music teacher when I was young. it's something I treasure. M.V.
@XavierMacX
@XavierMacX 7 лет назад
Piano quintet, my friend.
@donatellamolari5252
@donatellamolari5252 7 лет назад
Marc Vincenti ssef
@Danzig987
@Danzig987 6 лет назад
Here's another one to add to the list: Florent Schmitt's Piano Quintet (1908): ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-RRuKGQk2oss.html
@horx1000
@horx1000 Год назад
Extraordinaire Profondeur exceptionnelle
@user-me4yy7mo7h
@user-me4yy7mo7h 2 года назад
Дуже змістовна та емоційна музика.
@micbenz
@micbenz 2 года назад
Amazing quintet. Tragic that Franck produced so little music. Recently discovered some terrific rarities on here, check out the Dohnanyi, Berger and Mahleb (not Mahler!) piano quintets....also the Elgar is amazing
@Aaron-dj2vi
@Aaron-dj2vi 2 года назад
I'd reccomend for you to listen to Friedman's piano quintet if you haven't already.
@didierschein8515
@didierschein8515 4 года назад
A real masterpiecem that Saint-Saens didn`t understand. For me, on the best Piano Quintet, with those of Schumann, Brahms, Fauré qnd Enescu:
@didierschein8515
@didierschein8515 4 года назад
I forget the Quintet of Florent Schmitt, another french masterpiece.
@gerardbegni2806
@gerardbegni2806 4 года назад
I suggest to you not to forget Vierne, Florent Schmitt, Dvorak and Chostakovitch (and event Taneïev). Each one has great meits of its own -and even quite close to us, Elliott Carter.
@didierschein8515
@didierschein8515 4 года назад
@@gerardbegni2806 Yes, I especially appreciate the quintet of Carter: Messiaen wrote too a very short piece for string quintet with piano, in the last years of his life. It is a composition that accentuate the idea of dialog, or opposition, between the strings of the piano. I don`t know the quintet of Taneev. Another suggestion of your part. Thank you very much.
@computeraddict4993
@computeraddict4993 3 года назад
Vierne > all
@joshmckinney6034
@joshmckinney6034 Год назад
This piece is a total banger
@PETERJOHN101
@PETERJOHN101 3 года назад
There are many choice moments in this Quintet, but the motif that plays from 32:50 to 33:40 is especially elegant, and striking.
@shachar44321
@shachar44321 6 лет назад
He was way ahead of he's time !
@bensgoogle
@bensgoogle 6 лет назад
I think this was the recording that came with the BBC Magazine. This is probably my favorite BBC disc.
@MusicoftheSpheres
@MusicoftheSpheres 2 года назад
This was totally the best one - there were some corkers around about this time. The Nuits D'été recording was another special one.
@scriabinismydog2439
@scriabinismydog2439 3 года назад
7:17 oh my God
@Gibsonj62
@Gibsonj62 7 лет назад
Wow.
@paulaespin-piano2150
@paulaespin-piano2150 4 года назад
adoro esta música ❤️
@soysantiagoraul
@soysantiagoraul 3 года назад
Uo uo uoooooooo!!! 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
@MusicoftheSpheres
@MusicoftheSpheres 2 года назад
This is wonderful - thanks for the upload. I had this recording from BBC Music Magazine back in the day - was it twinned with the Brahms Quintet / Quartet? 8:04 makes me weep like a baby every time.
@charlesmartel7502
@charlesmartel7502 4 года назад
Can something written at age 56 truly be called an "early masterpiece"?
@mediolanumhibernicus3353
@mediolanumhibernicus3353 4 года назад
He composed it at 6.30 a.m.
@charlesmartel7502
@charlesmartel7502 4 года назад
@@mediolanumhibernicus3353 HA!
@GreenTeaViewer
@GreenTeaViewer 4 года назад
it can if it's one of his earliest masterpieces
@PETERJOHN101
@PETERJOHN101 3 года назад
If you're 96, it's almost fetal.
@johnlorenzen4633
@johnlorenzen4633 4 года назад
An intense unquiet, obsessive work. At first hearing, the composer seems to have gone slightly mad or fallen in love (or both) --so turbulent and passionate a work this is. But make no mistake-- Franck is in complete control. The musical obsession starts in the first movement with a cry of pain of some recent lost love reaching turbulent climaxes. The singular middle movement is, to me, a moonlit scene-- but not a serene one: It sounds/feels like the glittering, murderous night lagoon in La Giocanda: a gliding barcarolle piano rhythm with exquisite yet disturbing musical secrets in the strings -- perhaps a couple in a moored boat- again the feeling is not letting go when one should. The obsession continues in the 3rd moments with furious whirling notes relieved by the moonlit inquietude moodiness. Really stunning. Nothing like this passionate nature before in chamber music. No wonder the classicist, fastidious St. Sains, the premier pianist and quintet dedicatee, walked off after the concert leaving the score untouched. The composer- only perhaps momentarily hurt- loved his work believing it sounded just the way he wanted. And so this quintet remains one of finest in that august grouping along with Brahms, Schumann and Dvorak.
@jeffdurand2452
@jeffdurand2452 3 года назад
Saint-Saëns was not fastidious. He could even be funny: see "The Carnival of the Animals"...
@labemolmineur
@labemolmineur 2 года назад
I really wonder how that performance sounded under Saint-Saens, who was reportedly sight-reading. He had a reputation for being a formidable sight-reader and pianist, but in his compositions, he strikes me as one of those who lack something essential but who were able to achieve so much despite it. But, to me, that something constitutes music itself. It is the definition of true greatness, of divinely-inspired musical genius, of the difference between hard work with talent or pure love, completely free of any ulterior motives, and hard work without it. Nadia Boulanger thought something similar of him. Richard Strauss and Hugo Wolf fall in that category too for me. Saint Saens was offended by the work for several reasons. It's a work that wears all its psychological madness, all its longing, very sexual at times, on its sleeve, completely unrestrained, and if one does not give onself to it completely, as a performer, the music is simply "too much". If one does not allow oneself to experience and identify with the madness, one can only be judgmental of its excesses. The piece probably challenged Saint-Saens musically, technically and emotionally in ways that were beyond him, I believe, as someone with formidable skill who was always on top of what he had to play and perform, which humiliated and angered him, although no one but him felt and noticed the offense. Franck was happy enough with the result. This work has the obsession of Janacek's work- both are faces of an impossible love. I love your description of the second movement.
@jslartey2
@jslartey2 5 лет назад
This music does things to me that I can’t understand. My God. I have to take a break after the first movement.
@garywestfall4233
@garywestfall4233 5 лет назад
I agree. I just listened to the first moment for the first time and it churned up so many emotions at the same time that I expected to find a few splattered on the walls when it was over.
@garygreen3845
@garygreen3845 7 месяцев назад
Agree as well!! I stopped after the first movement to process what I had just heard!
@gerardbegni2806
@gerardbegni2806 7 лет назад
Probably one of the greatest quintets for piano and string quartett with Schumann's.
@klausbaden
@klausbaden 6 лет назад
Gérard Begni don’t forget the Brahms 😉
@Balakirev_
@Balakirev_ Год назад
Please hear quintet Taneyev🙏🙏🙏 then you would mabye regard what u wrote
@gerardbegni2806
@gerardbegni2806 Год назад
@@Balakirev_ I know very well Taneyev's quintet. I even played he piano part inan amaeutur rendering. It is of course a grat quintet, but in my mind Schumann's and Franck's are a bit grater than Taneyev's, Brahms', Fauré's, Vierne"s and Chostakovitch's. ❤❤❤❤❤
@choijiwonballetclassmusic
@choijiwonballetclassmusic 2 года назад
00:06 16:06 26:38 33:09
@rrkdudas6848
@rrkdudas6848 3 года назад
18:02 ultra Franck moment
@rrkdudas6848
@rrkdudas6848 3 года назад
and 28:37
@willcrisp4948
@willcrisp4948 3 года назад
Agreed - mega franckish
@kuang-licheng402
@kuang-licheng402 8 лет назад
nice
@238assante
@238assante 6 лет назад
great and interesting comments here below . I would add that Franck the organist is never very far in any of his compositions. The thick textures in the first movement of the Quintet remind me of his 3rd organ Choral and also his Pièce Héroïque . His conception of sound is massive at times and only to melt into this fluid lyricism as heard in his violin sonata or Prelude, Choral et Fugue for piano. I love those extremes. Imagine writing such masterpieces only to end hit by a trolleybus. gah!
@windstorm1000
@windstorm1000 6 лет назад
its especially tragic as Franck was a way late bloomer and I'm sure he had more music up his chromatic sleeve.
@jennifs6868
@jennifs6868 6 лет назад
as was Antonio Gaudi. such tragedy.
@norminvienna1046
@norminvienna1046 8 лет назад
It would be more than fair to give credit to the pianist, who I believe is William Howard.
@waroverpeace6170
@waroverpeace6170 7 лет назад
Yep he stayed in his lane wonderfully. Wasn't too overpowering which I hear from a lot of other performers and did all the right things.
@olla-vogala4090
@olla-vogala4090 7 лет назад
William Howard was the pianist for the 1997 recording, this is the 2001 recording. Are you sure it's the same pianist here?
@kennethdower7425
@kennethdower7425 3 года назад
@@olla-vogala4090 Yes, William Howard was the pianist on both recordings; the latter one was recorded at Champs Hill, Pulborough, Sussex, England, 7-8 Nov, 2003.
@Dylonely42
@Dylonely42 Год назад
Le génie français.
@luizcorato7562
@luizcorato7562 2 месяца назад
Belge.
@Lircking
@Lircking 9 месяцев назад
damn cool
@barbaraa3419
@barbaraa3419 3 года назад
Which quartet and pianist are performing on this recording?!?! Please respond, someone, this is the interpretation I want to listen to forever!
@MusicoftheSpheres
@MusicoftheSpheres 2 года назад
Schubert Ensemble of London: Douglas Paterson, Jacqueline Shave, Jane Salmon, Maya Koch, Mayumi Seiler, Peter Buckoke, Ralph De Souza, Roger Tapping, Simon Blendis, William Howard - I think William Howard was the pianist in this recording.
@lukasobrusnik4460
@lukasobrusnik4460 4 года назад
I Love 4:10 😍
@chickenwaffles9638
@chickenwaffles9638 2 года назад
There is so much pain in this piece
@arthurc3628
@arthurc3628 4 года назад
5:10 Ludwig.....
@goletra
@goletra 3 года назад
Poulenc must have channeled a little bit of this piece in his violin sonata
@fryderykchopin1381
@fryderykchopin1381 3 года назад
26:38
@atomicchicken4453
@atomicchicken4453 Год назад
banger on jah
@shin-i-chikozima
@shin-i-chikozima 5 лет назад
This music is so comfortable that it seems to fall into eternal sleep . I'm not sure if it's a dream or a reality . 🍎 From effulgent Tokyo in profound Japan in winter . Which national are you watching this video ?
@GreenTeaViewer
@GreenTeaViewer 4 года назад
Australia, in COVID-19 shutdown...
@johnlorenzen4633
@johnlorenzen4633 4 года назад
Not sure if " comfortable" is right word from this turbulent work. It's pretty far from Mozart.
@shin-i-chikozima
@shin-i-chikozima 4 года назад
@@GreenTeaViewer ありがとう‼️ Arigato ! ( Japanese thanks ) Japan , especially Tokyo is cruel and hustle and bustle with the Coronavirus infection . In capital area , almost stores and shops (bar , snack , amusement shop , karaoke shop ,night club ,etc ) are closed . And the unnecessary and non - sudden outings are self - restraint . Sadly , many people ,dubbed 「 self - restraint fatigue 」 are relaxing in parks , seashore , and riverside on Sunday . Many people have an easy , childish idea that they are less at risk of crisis and that they will not be infected by themselves . Coronavirus is very dangerous and overwhelmingly strong . Just talking or touching are infected . Don't be careless Be on the alert for Coronavirus infection . Take care of yourself Good luck !
@shin-i-chikozima
@shin-i-chikozima 4 года назад
@@johnlorenzen4633 Thanks Take care of yourself Good luck ! Be on the alert for Coronavirus infection .
@johnlorenzen4633
@johnlorenzen4633 4 года назад
@@shin-i-chikozima arigato! Let's stay safe.
@jordifuentesandres226
@jordifuentesandres226 7 лет назад
APARTE DE ESTE QUINTETO TIENE CUATRO TRIOS CON PIANO,SONATAS CON PIANO, 47 PIEZAS PARA ORGANO,ENTRE ELLAS TRES CORALES, 6 OBRAS PARA PIANO,PRELUDIOS,CORAL Y FUGA.
@jennifs6868
@jennifs6868 6 лет назад
Y le chasseur maudit, et la symphonie en ré mineur, bien sûr.
@honeymoonlight3731
@honeymoonlight3731 3 месяца назад
8:02 ✨️✨️✨️
@geronimodaloia6143
@geronimodaloia6143 3 года назад
it sounds like out of the Tim's Burton universe
@procrastinateurreformateur5968
op 14?
@herberthorak2027
@herberthorak2027 8 месяцев назад
Nicest Neapolitan chord ever at 16:17: b - flat Major to a minor.
@nihilistlemon1995
@nihilistlemon1995 Год назад
It just feels not as dreamy with the limited dynamic range . Because for the very majority of the time , the plays forte to mezzo forte . For as exciting rythmitically and the benefit of subtleties, try out the recording with Jonathan Fournel, Augustin Dumay, Shuichi Okada, Miguel Da Silva and Gary Hoffman.
@johnharding9634
@johnharding9634 6 лет назад
Is this the Catherine Collard recording?
@olla-vogala4090
@olla-vogala4090 6 лет назад
Please click 'show more' under the video
@mcrettable
@mcrettable 6 лет назад
saint saens rejected the dedication... jeez
@marksmith2625
@marksmith2625 4 года назад
...with half the talent of Franck!
@robertocozzarin
@robertocozzarin 3 года назад
@@marksmith2625 🤣
@alexanderbrown1954
@alexanderbrown1954 7 лет назад
Does anyone hear strange reminiscences of Schönberg's Verklärte Nacht in the first movement?
@bohusbogdan
@bohusbogdan 7 лет назад
Alexander Brown But this work was written earlier
@alexanderbrown1954
@alexanderbrown1954 7 лет назад
I know - I meant to ask whether it was possible that Schönberg was influenced either consciously or unconsciously by this work... just a thought!
@chrissahar2014
@chrissahar2014 6 лет назад
The opening motiv in the piano has some relations to a few motives in that work of Schoenberg. The unison string writiing that occurs quite a bit is also a timbre common in the the Schoenberg. Add that it is in a minor key the medium range harmonic plan is progressive for its time (moving from F minor to temporarily A the D flat and some movement between major thirds). Also interesting is how a some "development" of material is simply transposing it with re-voicing. Of course there is much to the Franck than that. But I mention all of these as the Schoenberg is very early and one of his late Romantic works. Franck is seen as a bridge from early to late Romanticism. So good ear to catch at a few affimities to the two works - although I would not say they are strong.
@nedhopkins897
@nedhopkins897 6 лет назад
No.
@aramkhachaturian8043
@aramkhachaturian8043 Год назад
31:30
@tuirfghfhg1787
@tuirfghfhg1787 5 лет назад
depressing masterpiece
@PETERJOHN101
@PETERJOHN101 3 года назад
I don't hear anything remotely depressing in this. It comes across to me as intensely probing and energetic, as if a hunt is in progress.
@janetpazio9992
@janetpazio9992 9 месяцев назад
I'm inclined to agree.
@serkratos1216
@serkratos1216 5 месяцев назад
7:50 13:05
@rickcomer8497
@rickcomer8497 3 года назад
French pianists are athletes.
@mediolanumhibernicus3353
@mediolanumhibernicus3353 4 года назад
What are the five greatest piano quintets of all time? Open to the floor. I launch with Shostakovich.
@pablobarrazaleemhuis221
@pablobarrazaleemhuis221 4 года назад
Veinberg's
@Ian24s
@Ian24s Год назад
Not bad
@hydre383
@hydre383 2 года назад
8:02
@gerardbegni2806
@gerardbegni2806 6 лет назад
Franck had only one challenger, Schumann. He chose - for personal reasons, but this would be too long to tell - a quite dramatic expresssion, both in the themes and in their development. The beginning is savage, one cannot tell it in another way. There are calmer sections in the piano, but the "savage" theme is imposing the tone of the work. The form is cyclic, which proves that Franck did not forget theoretical concerns even in that flow of lava. The writing of the string parts is somehow hampered by the preeminence of the first violin. But at the ned, probably there are two masterworks in that ganre: Schumann and Franck. Others like Brahms, Dvorak, Fauré, Chostakovitch stay behind - sometimes close, but behind.
@windstorm1000
@windstorm1000 6 лет назад
great comments. I also like the Elgar
@gerardbegni2806
@gerardbegni2806 6 лет назад
Yes. the Elgar quintet is a farwell to music, more ofr less. It is more chromatic than usual Elgar's works.
@PaulHummerman
@PaulHummerman 6 лет назад
"He chose - for personal reasons, but this would be too long to tell - a quite dramatic expresssion" - go on, give us some hints.
@Mezzotenor
@Mezzotenor 2 месяца назад
Oh, I see why Saint-Saens, the pianist at the premiere, got ticked off - it's SO antithetical to elder composer's sense of reserve, tradition, and structural conventions. Is this a piece I'll throw on the CD player a couple times a week? Probably not. But is it a vivid specimen of its kind, full of tumult and emotional twists? You betcha. And I suspect these fabulous performers make it sound easier than it really is.
@iangreer4585
@iangreer4585 Год назад
How the Hell did Camille Saint Saëns sight read this piece at its premiere?
@Dylonely42
@Dylonely42 Год назад
He was one of the greatest musicians of his time…
@nikolai5012
@nikolai5012 7 месяцев назад
He didn't
@Fortnite-xe5xn
@Fortnite-xe5xn 6 лет назад
Guckt auch Mal bei mir vorbei.ich mach selbst erfundene piano musik
@spawnofscriabintheblackmas7669
Fortnite 1 Me too
@WinrichNaujoks
@WinrichNaujoks 6 лет назад
Saint Saens was a fool
@papagen00
@papagen00 6 лет назад
not a masterpiece but pleasant enough.
@klausbaden
@klausbaden 6 лет назад
CVArts Sorry, but that’s one of the best works for the piano quintet genre. In one row with Schumann and Brahms!
@jamescross1903
@jamescross1903 5 лет назад
@@klausbaden Agree. Maybe we could add the Elgar Quintet to that list?
@jamescross1903
@jamescross1903 5 лет назад
@RA Leonard Absolutely a masterpiece.
@plekkchand
@plekkchand 4 года назад
Unbelievable tripe on this topic. I often think people love to hear themselves use the word "masterpiece" without considering the matter in any depth. Thus they flatter themselves. You Tube is the newest and most fertile ground for this public self-stimulation.
@plekkchand
@plekkchand 4 года назад
@@klausbaden no need to apologize,you happen to be wrong.
@Chorizo727
@Chorizo727 3 года назад
Another pointless boring piece. Understandable why Saint-Saens disapproved it.
@kennethdower7425
@kennethdower7425 3 года назад
Another pointless, boring "comment".
@fdggothic5015
@fdggothic5015 2 года назад
Is this comment perhaps the result of a musical form of the dunning Krueger effect?
@kikikim9853
@kikikim9853 3 года назад
26:37
@user-jh1ty3dk7m
@user-jh1ty3dk7m 2 года назад
26:47
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