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Chopin: 24 Preludes, Op.28 (Blechacz) 

Ashish Xiangyi Kumar
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Sometimes you're listening to a recording, and thinking it's pretty good, and then something happens which makes you go, "Woah, wait a minute -- what was *that*?" Blechacz's recording of the Chopin Op.28 preludes (taken from a 2007 live concert at the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam), is absolutely full of such moments of elegance and subtlety. Nothing he does is extreme (cf Pogorelich), but he has such fantastic articulation that he can pull of microscopic miracles of shading and colour -- not in the Horowitzian manner, which is straightforwardly stunning, but in an introspective and (occasionally) lithely playful way. As you'll see, often this touch is used to emphasise structural elements in the preludes, rather than merely decorate. I've listed out such moments below so you can follow them.
No.1 - 00:00 (Note the subtle textural shift at 00:23)
No.2 - 00:37
No.3 - 02:42 (Note how carefully the detached nature of the melody is observed, as well as the emphasis on tiny harmonic changes, such as the C-natural at 2:54)
No.4 - 03:37* (A marvellous rendition. Note how the surprising dynamic range matches the important harmonic shifts, the LH sotto voce, and the rubato used to lengthen the last beat of the bar when there’s a dotted quaver - semiquaver subdivision of the beat. This is an important structural element of the prelude which divides it up into its constituent sections.)
No.5 - 05:32 (Note the clarity of the voicing and the way Blechacz begins the piece.)
No.6 - 06:06 (Note the crescendo - decrescendo arc of the LH)
No.7 - 08:07
No.8 - 09:01* (A fantastic rendition. Perfect dynamic control (10:07 and 10:25 are representative), and some incredible textural shading (the second or so at 09:26, the LH countermelody at 10:12).)
No.9 - 10:54 (Note the doubled bass at 11:54, and the sudden dynamic shift and emphasis on the LH countermelody that highlights the harmonic change at 11:23)
No.10 - 12:25
No.11* - 12:58 (Another gem. Note the anti-crescendo at 13:08 leading to the beautifully tender sequence at 13:10, and the bass shading at 13:18 leading to the emphasis on the LH immediately after).
No.12 - 13:36 (Note the textural changes at 13.57)
No.13 - 14:59
No.14 - 18:06 (Note the countermelodies, and how they are shaped to emphasised harmonic shifts)
No.15* (Raindrop) - 18:41 (The whole thing is a study in legato and sotto voce, really.)
No.16 - 23:23
No.17* - 24:30 (Superb voicing throughout. One example is the sudden emergence of a lower voice at 26:17)
No.18* - 27:19
No.19 - 28:21 (Note the textural clarity.)
No.20* - 29:40 (Note the brilliant decision to emphasise the inner voice at 30:43, which demonstrates an important structural feature of the prelude, viz. the close relationship between the prelude’s two apparently disparate sections: the opening theme, and the chromatic theme.)
No.21 - 31:26 (Note the legato swell of the LH, and the hushed brightness of 32:05, with the LH nearly silent)
No.22 - 33:08
No.23* - 33:46 (Note the legatos and the subtle pedalling to ensure no trills are smudged.)
No.24* -- 34:42 (Note yet again the melodic clarity and the entrance of the un poco espressivo at 35:55).

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31 май 2024

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Комментарии : 785   
@mantictac
@mantictac 5 лет назад
The coughs at the end of No. 12 are so well defined, they may as well be a part of the bloody piece.
@erikbreathes
@erikbreathes 4 года назад
"cough" and "bloody" don't go well together under a chopin video. oooops
@willytnairn3342
@willytnairn3342 3 года назад
@@erikbreathes I was gonna make that joke hahaha
@euclidtheorem4817
@euclidtheorem4817 3 года назад
@@willytnairn3342 it's not even funny...he was so miserable
@vince6056
@vince6056 3 года назад
No.6 as well
@dibaldgyfm9933
@dibaldgyfm9933 3 года назад
ManticTac - thanks for pointing that cough out, I first thought this was a studio recording! But if he plays like this with an audience (which yes coughs after no.12 has ended) then Blechacz is simply so overwhelmingly good at rendering these beautiful gems. No. 24 is so stunningly strong felt - Never heard such a performer. Until now I adored the old recording by Benno Moisewitch, yes, he was also good, but not like this.
@beepst
@beepst 4 года назад
This music is like a hug if you're feeling sad.
@SOIBand
@SOIBand 4 года назад
to make you even more sad you mean ? :D
@oceanelf2512
@oceanelf2512 Год назад
That's so true.
@shokats3688
@shokats3688 2 месяца назад
I'm literally just using it for that same reason.
@jJPyLfGpLKetwBam
@jJPyLfGpLKetwBam 3 года назад
Chopin was a gift of god... His works are pure gold
@chopin65
@chopin65 6 дней назад
No. He was a gift of Chopin.
@hdk5973
@hdk5973 5 лет назад
If you're wondering, here are the names of the preludes. (src: Hans von Bülow; Wikipedia) [00:00] 1. Reunion (C Major) [00:37] 2. Presentiment Of Death (A Minor) [02:42] 3. Thou Art So Like A Flower (G Major) [03:37] 4. Suffocation (E Minor) [05:32] 5. Uncertainty (D Major) [06:06] 6. Tolling Bells (B Minor) [08:08] 7. The Polish Dancer (A Major) [09:01] 8. Desperation (F♯ Minor) [10:54] 9. Vision (E Major) [12:24] 10. The Night Moth (C♯ Minor) [12:58] 11. The Dragonfly (B Major) [13:37] 12. The Duel (G♯ Minor) [14:59] 13. Loss (F♯ Major) [18:06] 14. Stormy Sea (E♭ Minor) [18:42] 15. Raindrop (D♭ Major) [23:23] 16. Hades (B♭ Minor) [24:30] 17. Scene on the Place de Notre Dame de Paris (A♭ Major) [27:29] 18. Suicide (F Minor) [28:21] 19. Heartfelt Happiness (E♭ Major) [29:40] 20. Funeral March (C Minor) [31:26] 21. Sunday (B♭ Major) [33:08] 22. Impatience (G Minor) [33:46] 23. A Pleasure Boat (F Major) [34:42] 24. The Storm (D Minor) Edit (3rd): Disclaimer: I personally don't use them. I just shared these for anyone interested.
@haroldzepedamendoza5003
@haroldzepedamendoza5003 5 лет назад
Thank you so so so so much!!!!
@Amphitera
@Amphitera 5 лет назад
just so you know: Chopin (and probably most other composers) hated it with absolute passion when anyone (editors, publishers, whoever) named his pieces. If a piece isn't named by the composer, it should not be named at all. It's presumptous and plain wrong.
@hdk5973
@hdk5973 5 лет назад
@@Amphitera They are actually epithets, not (really) names. So the titles for each prelude was just descriptions as for Bülow, a devotee of Chopin's music. However, these were fallen to disuse, so you don't have to worry about everyone calling the twentieth prelude the new Chopin's Funeral March. Except for the fifteenth prelude, of course.
@milim3dia965
@milim3dia965 5 лет назад
You are my hero
@cinereo_argento
@cinereo_argento 4 года назад
18 19 20 are interesting consecutive epithets.
@zuzannawisniewska4464
@zuzannawisniewska4464 Год назад
" What's that beautiful music you're listening to?" "Chopin" "Oh, you listen to Chopin?' "No. I feel Chopin'
@anthonyc6017
@anthonyc6017 17 дней назад
Listening to #11 seems to define amateur and professional pianists. It is such a simple piece yet listening to all the subtle yet prominent details he includes leaves me in awe because while I am learning this, I did not even think to include those.
@fidelmflores1786
@fidelmflores1786 5 лет назад
Chopin died of TB. Seems the audience is dying of it too.
@kvnjng
@kvnjng 5 лет назад
I'm laughing hard at this.
@brysoncheng7574
@brysoncheng7574 5 лет назад
Jakub Goclon I laughed wayyy too hard at this...
@kostaschousianiths6076
@kostaschousianiths6076 4 года назад
Finally, someone said it...
@lulzmoney99
@lulzmoney99 4 года назад
I read this and wondered what the joke was... and then...
@crispusattucks4007
@crispusattucks4007 4 года назад
LOL
@piano1500
@piano1500 8 лет назад
What fascinates me about the Chopin Preludes is how they are so cohesive as a set of music, and you can clearly tell they are to be played as a set, and not individually. Here are some examples of what I mean: Prelude 3 ends on a B, Prelude 4 starts on a B....Prelude 6's melody of D, C#, D, B....is the same melody used in Prelude 7....C#, D, B.....Prelude 11 ends on a D#, Prelude 12 begins on a D#...and so on.
@markswanson549
@markswanson549 8 лет назад
+piano1500 Exactly! The are not stand alone pieces. They are preludes in the sense that each one is a prelude to the next one. I love the transition from #8 to #9.
@fergusmaclachlan1404
@fergusmaclachlan1404 7 лет назад
I don't think there's anything wrong with playing them individually, as encore pieces for example, but it also must be noted that the preludes follow a distinct pattern: Prelude 1: C major --> Prelude 2: Relative minor, then Prelude 3 is the dominant key of Prelude 1, then No.4 the relative minor of No.3's key and so on. If one considers this pattern, it's obvious why prelude 4 might start on the same note as the previous prelude. Nonetheless, they certainly sound pleasant played as a set, which exemplifies Chopin's genius: he could write 24 fantastic standalone pieces which also relate to each other, so that if one were to perform the entire set, it would sound like a wonderful flow of interconnected ideas rather than a series of disjointed, random or unrelated works.
@lisajohnson7758
@lisajohnson7758 7 лет назад
piano1500
@piano1500
@piano1500 7 лет назад
yes?
@piano1500
@piano1500 7 лет назад
Yes. Chopin uses the circle of 5ths rather than Bach using Chromatics. However, between prelude 6 and 7, for example, Chopin uses the same melody actually. That alone tells me that they were most likely meant to be performed as a set, and which is why in most cases, they are.
@markswanson549
@markswanson549 8 лет назад
I think the Preludes are one of mankind's greatest musical achievements. Virtually every human emotion is represented and the way each one flows into the next is pure genius.
@jeremiestreiff8183
@jeremiestreiff8183 8 лет назад
+Mark Swanson I feel exactly the same.
@NoahJohnson1810
@NoahJohnson1810 7 лет назад
Right :)
@OonHan
@OonHan 6 лет назад
Hi noah johnson i love your piano vids!
@Hotdogwateryum
@Hotdogwateryum 6 лет назад
wow so edgy
@nnytk2199
@nnytk2199 5 лет назад
question, why is there some asshole tuberculosis peep in the background just couphing blood into a rag?
@Examantel
@Examantel 4 года назад
The genius of Prelude No. 2 never ceases to amaze. Notice the dissonance of the left hand: on a keyboard, the notes ring a slowly beating perfect fifth juxtaposed with a quickly beating, restless diminished seventh. And then later, even more jarring diminished octave and minor sevenths. This must be the rocking beat of the funeral dirge. This sound world was so ahead of its time, it confounded contemporary critics. Chopin understood the mantra of "less is more," for the dissonance would be mitigated by placing thirds in between these wide intervals. Finally, it stands as one of the earliest examples of progressive tonality in the late Romantic sense, beginning in E minor and ending in A minor. Even the harmonic intricacies of Beethoven's Grosse Fuge in B-flat was ultimately earth-bounded by the return to B-flat major in the end. Here, in this quiet piece, tonality has begun to set free in a new sense.
@TomCatFromMA
@TomCatFromMA 4 года назад
This is magnificent. Please treat urself to a listen: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-N8jyMlf7PLw.html
@wallacethompson4022
@wallacethompson4022 3 года назад
Thank you for explaining. A lot of people hate that one and it is often overlooked.
@jorgegutierreztellez3663
@jorgegutierreztellez3663 2 года назад
​@@TomCatFromMA are you the person of the scores in net?
@Torebordalpiano
@Torebordalpiano 5 лет назад
10:07 On this high point, anybody else loves how he suddenly emphasizes the fast notes for expression?
@objectivitycave11
@objectivitycave11 5 лет назад
Edgy. I respect Chopin for being the musician I can never be. He was the master of arranging complex melodies and moments of extraordinary human feeling. I can’t capture those moments. He could. And then he built upon them . Until the 24 preludes came to be. So we thank him for these. And I thank the great creator for making him, as opposed as he was to Beethoven’s work, I thank him for respecting it. He was just a man. A great man the likes are rarely seen in this day and age .
@l.1244
@l.1244 2 года назад
of course you cant haha what did you think lol
@segmentsAndCurves
@segmentsAndCurves 2 года назад
@@l.1244 ok
@Bampaloudu64
@Bampaloudu64 6 лет назад
I've forgotten that Chopin's prelude were awesome. I was listening Rachmaninov's, thinking it's the best, it still for me the best, but Chopin's are finally magnificient.
@michaellessel5532
@michaellessel5532 3 года назад
I could only ever *dream* of being able to play no. 3 at that speed in such a clean manner
@jerry_moo
@jerry_moo 7 лет назад
I've just heard the second prelude, and I have got to say; it is staggering. How unorthodox for Chopin to go outside of his charming lyrical style, and go for a more macabre nature almost akin to that of Liszt's.
@mobus5081
@mobus5081 3 года назад
Autumn Sonata
@delko000
@delko000 3 года назад
How unorthodox? see sonata n2 movement 3
@jerry_moo
@jerry_moo 3 года назад
@@delko000 Elaborate on how do you compare the bleak dissonance of the prelude to the funeral march
@delko000
@delko000 3 года назад
​@@jerry_moo You were not talking about dissonance in your initial post, but about the more macabre nature vs usual charming lyrical style.
@kennethmheck1
@kennethmheck1 2 года назад
Note the subtle inclusion of the "Dies Irae" in the bass.
@Examantel
@Examantel 6 лет назад
Chopin's Prelude No. 2 is one of his most cryptic works. Scriabin would write a similar dark ostinato in his Op. 74 No. 2, one of his last compositions, perhaps to look back on one of his great role models.
@10mimu
@10mimu 6 лет назад
It’s a strange, unsettling and hermetic work Like a lonely beach, in a dark day
@Ethan-ib5hk
@Ethan-ib5hk 5 лет назад
I feel as if it represents someone like Quasimodo trying to dance and socialise with people at an upper class party/gathering. I imagine him in the centre of the room, shuffling around by himself, while all the aristocrats watch him from the side.
@marksaul3157
@marksaul3157 2 года назад
@@10mimu My story is of sadly wandering, and coming home--to an equally sad home. It begins in e minor(!) and wanders through very strange and approximate tonalities to a minor. For me, this is a case where the technical description matches closely the emotional.
@ayushrudra8600
@ayushrudra8600 Год назад
It reminds me off some of the Rachmaninov etudes tableaux
@cats_2878
@cats_2878 4 года назад
30:28 Dude bites into an apple
@knightofrhythm1
@knightofrhythm1 3 года назад
hahaha, they are eating a whole buffet over there
@TheRealLoudannIsHere
@TheRealLoudannIsHere 3 года назад
@@knightofrhythm1 They were eating the place... That sounds wrong...
@hoosas5998
@hoosas5998 3 года назад
Lol probably just papers crackling though 😄
@HyunaTheHyena
@HyunaTheHyena 2 года назад
LOL
@Brzaszcz
@Brzaszcz 4 года назад
I adore Chopin’s preludes. I wish I could play all of them in the future.🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱
@smichelin19
@smichelin19 Год назад
i can play no11 and 12 only 12 is very difficult😂
@dobbydoughnuts9941
@dobbydoughnuts9941 2 месяца назад
@@smichelin19how well can you play them?
@smichelin19
@smichelin19 2 месяца назад
@@dobbydoughnuts9941 umm somewhat okay
@n.p.6577
@n.p.6577 5 лет назад
I remember I once played the preludes no. 4 and 15. on a masterclass . There were close to no people in the hall. Since it was a private lesson, there was the professor, and one of his fellow friends (professional pianist). I remember me sitting there and playing these pieces, with a crying soul, but not showing it in real life, just enjoying the flow. When I finished I turned around, and both of them (Prof and Pro) were crying, having tears flowing down their faces. I was so touched by the fact that I managed to bring up tears on other people's Eyes. If these pieces are played musically, they can commit wonders...
@Vsiudysvoia
@Vsiudysvoia 3 года назад
Wonderful story❤️ Thank you for sharing!
@fredericchopin8140
@fredericchopin8140 5 лет назад
Thank me later
@tadpoleeeee
@tadpoleeeee 5 лет назад
Thanks daddy
@OliJono
@OliJono 5 лет назад
I know Frédéric Chopin, never heard of Frèdèric Chopin though.
@christosan82
@christosan82 5 лет назад
That can’t be you. How old are you mr. Chopin? Nice music by the way.
@christosan82
@christosan82 5 лет назад
O
@itsdanc
@itsdanc 5 лет назад
I'm the only real one
@marlenelouiseryl3863
@marlenelouiseryl3863 7 лет назад
It takes a great pianist to bring out all the subtlety and breathtaking beauty of these Preludes. Thank you, Mr Blechacz. Thanks for posting and for the insightful comments, too.
@sergiusava9151
@sergiusava9151 5 лет назад
Marlena Ryl-Zaleska and the
@chopin65
@chopin65 4 года назад
NO OFFENSE, BUT: I find his his instincts bizarre and almost unmusical. His tempo is beyond rubato and well into insane. His dynamics and voicing obscure. He frequently dampens the melodic line to emphasize harmony to the extent that phrasing becomes colorless. The volume drops too abruptly, and seems to have no logic to its patterns or structure. I love Chopin's music, but this man plays music like he is an alien from another planet, and has no cultural understanding of European music and it's playing tradition. His playing instincts remind me of Martha Argerich's style of "The School of Bizarre is Best" playing. It's too cerebral and intellectual. It's like they are high on mushrooms and have been drinking shots of tequila, and randomly demanding that Chopin meant that fortissimo means quiet, piano means break the strings, and tempo is for losers. No. It's great pianists play great composers, not great pianists play with reality and music. I get sea sick when I hear jokers like these fuck with the music I love. Keep him. He's just trying to be different. Different doesn't mean great. It just means different. PS. Don't reply with any of the following (I have heard them before and they are all lazy arguments): 1. He won a competition (Don't care. All I care about is how be plays the music). 2. He has recorded all of Chopin (So? Did he listen to what he recorded?). 3. He is popular, and lots of people think he is saving Chopin from obscurity (Lot's of things are popular, and popular is temporary.). 4. Asking if I am a pianist. I'm not. I play guitar and am a poet. I love classical music and have an opinion. Remember it is all opinion (Everyone is entitled to an opinion. I frequently hear musicians mock people who don't play. It's standard arrogance. Music belongs to everyone.). Please feel free to reply. I love a great debate. I am sure you can make as good an opposing argument. Truth is, most people don't bother, and say something nice so people will give them a thumbs up. I have no idea why. If I get trolled for this then I can have a laugh. If you think I am an asshole, fine. I defend your right to dislike me. Have a lovely day. I am sure you are a lovely person, and I hope your feelings are not hurt by this. Cheers.
@elias69420
@elias69420 4 года назад
@@chopin65 HE WON A CAMPITISHUN
@jorgegutierreztellez3663
@jorgegutierreztellez3663 2 года назад
@@chopin65 Do I answer you. music should be played with certain measures when the same author encourages it to be played more freely? No, we are not listening to a midi version. The fact that he has won a contest does not give him more weight, the weight is provided by him when he interprets the preludes well. It is romanticism, not baroque. But in the end, it's all personal taste.
@jorgegutierreztellez3663
@jorgegutierreztellez3663 2 года назад
@@elias69420 lol it's competition
@Sayeedur123
@Sayeedur123 2 года назад
The raindrop interpretation is really unique. At first I was surprised at the faster tempo taken but it makes sense making the notes sound like tapping raindrops on a windowsill. With the bright and defined approach it definitely stands out.
@smichelin19
@smichelin19 Год назад
can you do a video for chopin prelude no12 in Ab minor based on this intetpretation
@lj.619
@lj.619 7 месяцев назад
What the fuck happened to your videos lmao
@chopinisacomposerforonerig2970
@chopinisacomposerforonerig2970 3 года назад
In Schumann's other writings about Chopin that exist from 1836 through 1842, there is a good deal of positive feedback, although one will likely glean that Schumann was disappointed that there was not more significant development or innovation. In fact, he said more than once that Chopin's work was instantly recognizable because it was all so similar. He acknowledged Chopin's original showing as fabulous, and worried that it was too much for him to be more than that. "When he has given you a whole succession of the rarest creations, and you understand him more easily, do you suddenly demand something different? This is like chopping down your pomegranate tree because it produces, year after year, nothing but pomegranates." And furthermore: "We fear he will never achieve a level higher than that he has already reached. . . . With his abilities he could have achieved far more, influencing the progress of our art as a whole."In his 1841 review of Chopin's Sonata in B-flat minor in particular, Schumann did not seem to be happy with his fellow composer's progress. Although he talks about the abundance of beauty in the work, he also says that the "sonata" as a title must be in jest: "[Chopin] seems to have taken four of his most unruly children and put them together, possibly thinking to smuggle them, as a sonata, into company where they might not be considered individually presentable." To Schumann it seemed that Chopin had lost his way, and gotten too wrapped up in virtuosity for its own sake. He decries "obstacles on almost every page" with indecipherable progressions. The second movement - again claiming the marking "Scherzo" was in name alone - he describes as a "funeral march with something even repulsive about it." "A book of Mazurkas by Chopin and a few new pieces of his are so mannered they are hard to stand"-Felix Mendelssohn, 1835 "A composer for one right hand" -Richard Wagner
@Melchiorblade7
@Melchiorblade7 7 лет назад
Blechacz' rendition of number 13 legitimately made me tear up it was so beautiful
@10reubenl
@10reubenl 3 года назад
SO beautiful. He's my favourite composer. Whenever I hear a new piece by Chopin, I want to learn it! XD
@e.hutchence-composer8203
@e.hutchence-composer8203 3 года назад
Of all the composers who wrote sets of 24 preludes, no one wrote a better 24th Prelude than Chopin. It’s such a fiery piece to conclude the set.
@Luca-yg5qx
@Luca-yg5qx 3 года назад
Rachmaninoff...
@dap4699
@dap4699 2 года назад
Rachmaninoff...
@user-sw5pw3cs4w
@user-sw5pw3cs4w Год назад
Scriabin's is good too
@TheNOODLER100
@TheNOODLER100 Год назад
@@user-sw5pw3cs4w Call me vanilla, but Bach did it twice.
@barney6888
@barney6888 2 года назад
The Ab is, for me, one of the most beautiful pieces of music I have ever heard. Love Pollini's recording of it for its gorgeous tone.
@smichelin19
@smichelin19 Год назад
G# minor one for me( No12) Agree w you as well
@TwelfthRoot2
@TwelfthRoot2 3 месяца назад
i think Ab is my favorite. it's so damn charming.
@krnake
@krnake 8 лет назад
Omg! people are dying in the background !
@isaacgarcia2979
@isaacgarcia2979 4 года назад
Lol yea
@wandahelenagorecka-fichten9258
Pięknie wykonanie Preludiów Chopina przez Blechacza- eleganckie i subtelne dziękuję
@EttorealbertoGelli-vr6sz
@EttorealbertoGelli-vr6sz 4 месяца назад
Wandahelenagorecka. Si è così. Cara Wanda, si ricorda l'interpretazione del giovane POLLINI? Un miracolo. Un caro saluto
@DanielHinesVM
@DanielHinesVM 3 года назад
I just love how they're all different lengths and the feelings between them all are so varied. When a short one like no. 3 or 16 suddenly comes to an end, it's kind of a shock! I love that about this set.
@princianorvz
@princianorvz Год назад
I didn't know Blechacz won in the Chopin Institute competition, until I saw the E MINOR CONCERTO video! He is now a star!!! Bravo, Rafal!
@yayobro7194
@yayobro7194 4 года назад
Playing these pieces has been added to my Liszt.
@jankruithof507
@jankruithof507 3 года назад
yayo bro the Joke is playliszt
@roberacevedo8232
@roberacevedo8232 3 года назад
@@jankruithof507 No in this context, because he wants to play them, not hear them.
@jankruithof507
@jankruithof507 3 года назад
rober Acevedo sorry ur right
@Jeremiah_Rivers76
@Jeremiah_Rivers76 Год назад
I see what you did there, because “The Storm” is played in the opening credits of the Oscar-winning _Tom and Jerry_ episode “The Cat Concerto.” “Hungarian Rhapsody #2,” which is one of my favorite pieces of classical music from the Romantic Period, would never be the same after that episode.
@luihi9780
@luihi9780 7 лет назад
I love the dissonance of number 2
@thanos4677
@thanos4677 5 лет назад
Liugio h listen to his sonAta in b flat. The final movement and the first movement you might really like
@pianosbloxworld4460
@pianosbloxworld4460 2 года назад
Chopin is the predecessor of Arnold Schoenberg imagine if Chopin wrote a 12 tone piece
@magentuspriest
@magentuspriest 3 года назад
There's just something about the 9th prelude that gives me chills. All of the powerful cadences and unexpected harmony changes but the same constant rhythmic motive just make it one of the most unique ones of the set in my opinion
@Griwhoolda
@Griwhoolda 2 года назад
Yes! I love this one.
@bronot375
@bronot375 2 года назад
@@Griwhoolda Huh iih
@bronot375
@bronot375 2 года назад
@@Griwhoolda in hi how ihhhhhi in upoohhph in pohhop the Hu h I hi hi hih
@bronot375
@bronot375 2 года назад
Ipooi hi i hi Pippa BBBpihiiiohhoiihhph hi hih hi ooppppihihpohp hi ppphuiiih hhpii hi Paul hi opponents the hioh hi hi h hope update your uhhiip
@karolpawlowski5368
@karolpawlowski5368 2 года назад
Sir Fryderyk Chopin and Sir Rafał Blechacz are prides of Poland! The whole country is very proud of them! 🇵🇱
@TheSoteriologist
@TheSoteriologist 2 года назад
This no. 22 is extraordinary !
@justanotheryoutuber7446
@justanotheryoutuber7446 4 года назад
for no 7 i picture 2 strangers walking past each other and the moment seems so tranquil, them thiningk of how it would be like to reach out to the other, but in the end they walk further and further and they will soon forget each other and move on, i think i'm overthinking
@fiscalcpiano
@fiscalcpiano 7 лет назад
Wow, I'm just blown away at the brilliance of no. 16 - both the composition itself and the performance.
@sister_easy
@sister_easy Год назад
The best composer and the best pianist of all time!!! I love it! Fryderyk Chopin and Rafał Blechacz are my perfect, dreaming combination!
@joseph-fernando-piano
@joseph-fernando-piano 8 лет назад
I love how going through the whole set, you can find resemblances between some of the preludes and Chopin's larger, better known works, for example, #7 is written in mazurka rhythm, #13 has a very nocturne-like form (as does #15), #17 in A-flat is very similar to the post-octave middle section of the Op. 53 polonaise (also in A-flat major), #20 is similar to the funeral march from his sonata, and #24 is similar to his D-flat nocturne in the main theme, the wide-ranging bass line, and use of parallel thirds (the theme even returns in its final statement in D-flat major)...
@Xantares2003
@Xantares2003 7 месяцев назад
Also 14 th similar with finale of 2nd sonata
@balthazar500
@balthazar500 6 лет назад
Your analyses in the descriptions are fantastic. They make the music all the more enjoyable.
@hannastaszak1684
@hannastaszak1684 2 года назад
Cudowna muzyka genialnego Chopina, boskie wykonanie.
@CARROTMOLD
@CARROTMOLD 7 лет назад
I wish the first one was longer
@bobbyevans8496
@bobbyevans8496 7 лет назад
CARROTMOLD just repeat it
@xinjinguo2455
@xinjinguo2455 5 лет назад
The first one is my absolute favorite piece of chopin. But I don't know how to explain why.
@mojeo522
@mojeo522 5 лет назад
@@xinjinguo2455 i think is the rising pattern makes your brain like it. It is also my favorite.
@xinjinguo2455
@xinjinguo2455 5 лет назад
It also somehow makes me want to cry.
@mantictac
@mantictac 5 лет назад
It's very emotional. It sounds to be written very sincerely.
@user-jg1pc6er9d
@user-jg1pc6er9d 2 года назад
00:01 №1 C-dur 00:37 №2 a-moll 02:42 №3 G-dur 03:37 №4 e-moll 05:32 №5 D-dur 06:06 №6 h-moll 08:07 №7 A-dur 10:54 №9 E-dur 18:41 №15 Des-dur 29:40 №20 c-moll 34:42 №24 d-moll
@Zachy_Wacky978
@Zachy_Wacky978 2 года назад
The first prelude is the one I fell in love with instantly ❤️😍
@KV4671
@KV4671 7 лет назад
Thanks for this priceless upload and the very interesting comments on every single prelude ! You have done a great job !!
@grandpatzer
@grandpatzer 3 года назад
Never heard anyone play #4 like this. Amazing, especially the rubato and dynamics in the first section, before the buildup.
@jeffdawson2786
@jeffdawson2786 Год назад
An odyssey of emotions in here. Oh, yeah, and a masterpiece of virtuosity. Nobody plays these the same way. Stunning every time. So much modern piano comes from this.
@ilubCHRISTsomach
@ilubCHRISTsomach 8 лет назад
i love the way you described Blechacz's playing, it is very accurate and i must admit I never hard such an introspective rendition of the preludes. such a delight, and thank you!
@eefalzer
@eefalzer Месяц назад
No.16 is fantastic, and the contrast of its ferocity with the previous gentle prelude tickled me
@handznet
@handznet 19 дней назад
That shift in first prelude was like a breath of a fresh air, works for me!
@jeremydarrow3253
@jeremydarrow3253 6 лет назад
I love Prelude no 5. It is so melodic and short.
@smichelin19
@smichelin19 Год назад
Prelude No12 is my absolute favv😊
@charliebeareuwu
@charliebeareuwu 4 года назад
I was told to listen to these preludes for my composition studies, and they're fantastic! Thanks for uploading this with score, and thanks to all the commenters for pointing out interesting parts of the pieces
@Bnorma11
@Bnorma11 2 года назад
Beautiful performance ! In the spirit of Chopin.
@jfpary7336
@jfpary7336 2 года назад
What is the spirit of Chopin???
@blupowermind
@blupowermind 3 года назад
Ashish Xiangyi Kumar, your comments are extraordinary. And your selections and presenting works show us light. Thankyou. I am your follower. I believe music, the genuine and authentic music, has an origin beyond sensible understanding. Obviusly, great compositions are constructions, they are themes chained wiht some of order, but, above all, that has a soul insufflated like the metaphysical greek concept about divine breath, resulting "flow"!.... So, other kind of man reappears on that wheel of "eternal return"
@jumiduss
@jumiduss 6 лет назад
Just wanted to say I appreciate your thoughtful comments in the description. Nice to see someone building on content.
@Lengsham
@Lengsham 5 лет назад
My favourite performance of Chopin's preludes, so impressed I bought the studio version of Blechacz on CD
@KenNickels
@KenNickels 8 лет назад
Lovely miniatures. The F# major is my favorite. The cadences are so deceptive and coy, refractory.
@lisajohnson7758
@lisajohnson7758 7 лет назад
Ken Nickels
@Virtuoso80
@Virtuoso80 8 лет назад
Wow, thanks for posting, these are wonderful interpretations.
@kingsfort1
@kingsfort1 5 лет назад
What have I just listened to? Surely one of the great Chopin interpreters of the present day? This is so beautiful that I can hadly believe it's live.
@bobsquires4521
@bobsquires4521 2 года назад
In Andantino #7, very famous work, if you should strictly observe the pedaling, Chopin produces a smearing of the chromaticism - each appoggiatura (each downbeat - if you will,) is sustained into their resolutions - they ring together - consistently throughout. It's such a stunning effect to allow the sounds to overlap - not so conventional - if fact, most pianists might pedal the dissonance right out - as we hear here. But, It's how the tones continue to reverberate from a distance, say, from listening in another room or a larger hall - when you'd hear the reverb (by the acoustics of the room.) He composes reverb into the piece - 'dolce et simplice'. ..then beautifully continues the effect throughout with a cool handling of the end of measures 11 and 13, slightly differently, but, still, he lets each down beat smear/continue. That is if the pedaling is observed and it seems it should be since it is consistent - and becomes more detailed as the consequent phrases become most dramatic near the end - finally resolving. "Sweet and simple!' Does anyone observe the pedaling on this one? We'd need close micing to hear the effect (from the piano and not the room,) so it might be tough to discern on recordings. It's so cool - if it is truly intentional (and why wouldn't it be?,) then it was for the enjoyment of the performer first. Chopin preferred performing in small gatherings and was noted for his subtleties and this may very well be one of them. What's say? Have at me... XD
@mariavelazquezdeangulo1640
@mariavelazquezdeangulo1640 5 лет назад
Great performance, thanks for sharing .
@sasanian
@sasanian 2 года назад
Playing through the preludes in my Chopin book, these recordings are great to know what it's supposed to sound like and give me something to aspire to. Thanks!
@jordidewaard2937
@jordidewaard2937 5 лет назад
I was Lucky enough to be there ^^
@juanmavalerio7722
@juanmavalerio7722 3 года назад
Chopin's Op. 28 is probably my favorite. This recording is absolutely marvellous... the best I've heard; so emotional
@smichelin19
@smichelin19 Год назад
The 12th prelude is my favourite out of the whole set( i learnt it up to tempo in 5 weeks ) 13:37
@gimichi
@gimichi 5 лет назад
six stars - fantastic quality - He can get the soul of each piece
@2ndintelligentWorld
@2ndintelligentWorld 7 лет назад
the girl i fell in love with played raindrop. listening to it hurts my heart
@hithere4289
@hithere4289 5 лет назад
similar situation here :(
@nicoheizmann8074
@nicoheizmann8074 5 лет назад
secondintelligentWorld try to win her back!
@nicoheizmann8074
@nicoheizmann8074 5 лет назад
Gandalf Mclovin that‘s a shitty advice🤔 you should fight for what you want!
@tadpoleeeee
@tadpoleeeee 5 лет назад
@@TheLifeisgood72 big oof
@monsieurbrochant7528
@monsieurbrochant7528 5 лет назад
@@TheLifeisgood72 a modern tragedy
@johnphillips5993
@johnphillips5993 3 года назад
The audio buzz at the beginning is pure perfection.
@evslol1153
@evslol1153 3 года назад
Listening to number 3 just makes me feel.. so happy
@elsaesteves
@elsaesteves Год назад
Blechacz will be another Horowitz 💗💗💗💗 if I were him I'd get up and leave the hall when those disrespectful folks started coughing and sneezing. Concert halls must have this huge warning : 'Coughers and the like are not allowed, if you cough or sneeze you'll be invited to get out and pay a fine'. RAFAL... you are GRAND 💗
@benatchison2371
@benatchison2371 6 лет назад
Prelude no 10 is so beautiful.... it reminds me of Saint-Saens's Aquarium from his Le Carnaval des animaux.
@buckylove6918
@buckylove6918 3 года назад
number three gets me. Shoots away so spectacularly in the end.
@musictop7630
@musictop7630 2 года назад
I love the first prelude. ❤️
@cyranom.l.6261
@cyranom.l.6261 3 года назад
Pianista straordinario! È la migliore interpretazione dei preludi che abbia mai sentito,un balsamo!
@10reubenl
@10reubenl 5 лет назад
Such a beautiful set of works:)
@CatsAndClassicalMusic
@CatsAndClassicalMusic 2 года назад
This is the second time I’ve cried during music.
@carlosantonioguevaraalcana715
@carlosantonioguevaraalcana715 3 года назад
23:23 The prelude 16!!! One of My favorites!!! 😮👏🎹😎👍💯💙
@smichelin19
@smichelin19 Год назад
13:37 my personal favourite
@carlosantonioguevaraalcana715
@carlosantonioguevaraalcana715 7 месяцев назад
@@smichelin19 mmm, the number 12...
@marizacabral5141
@marizacabral5141 Год назад
Extraordinary interpretation of the preludes. Fantastic!
@elizeuandrade3935
@elizeuandrade3935 3 года назад
The transitions between the pieces are really smooth.
@JJA-zz3so
@JJA-zz3so 5 лет назад
Nice plays!!! Love them 😍
@jonm2969
@jonm2969 2 года назад
Exquisite playing! Bravo! These miniature masterworks stand proud full of Polish heritage! Chopin is smiling from above listening to fellow countryman and virtuoso Blechacz!!!
@nataliekaufman6031
@nataliekaufman6031 6 лет назад
The comments in the description make this video better than it already is.
@user-xd5lh4ou7j
@user-xd5lh4ou7j Год назад
Blechacz's preludes are amazing
@kitsuneelie9133
@kitsuneelie9133 3 года назад
In my opinion rafal has the single best interpretation of no.12 , it's so beyond beautiful words can't even describe
@davidghesser6745
@davidghesser6745 3 года назад
It's so good for the soul!
@4DTHINKER
@4DTHINKER 7 лет назад
No.12 sends me into tears. Grandpa RIP!
@Nickee_Sonicjinn
@Nickee_Sonicjinn 8 лет назад
Thank you so much for the upload especially with the sheetmusic. Rafal's exquisite reditions are just awesome! :) Your comments obviously helps me understand his interpretations better.
@TomCatFromMA
@TomCatFromMA 4 года назад
This is magnificent. Please treat urself to a listen: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-N8jyMlf7PLw.html
@graziellaiaccarinoidelson9702
@graziellaiaccarinoidelson9702 7 лет назад
Il Preludio n 1 è per me una meraviglia !
@UnaMoscaEnLaPared
@UnaMoscaEnLaPared 8 лет назад
¡Qué manera de tocar! Maravilloso...
@snowcarriagechengcheng-hun3454
Thanks for uploading!
@TorchArts
@TorchArts 4 года назад
Nr. 20's second part is so beautiful idk why always brings tears to my eyes
@danal81
@danal81 4 года назад
Very interesting voice leading and textures. In some of them I did miss Pogorelich, but in general this is a valuable recording. Thank you
@danielvalamilyen9975
@danielvalamilyen9975 3 года назад
20:40 this bass is epic
@maulcs
@maulcs 2 года назад
That 8 is so good
@anastasiahronis3560
@anastasiahronis3560 8 лет назад
Thanks for the comments and analysis of each!!
@tommyxia9489
@tommyxia9489 Год назад
The phrasing in op 20… incredible!!
@paulomoses6351
@paulomoses6351 2 года назад
parabéns kumar você tem uma técnica fora de série que clareza as melodias e interpretação perfeita.
@smichelin19
@smichelin19 Год назад
13:37 hands down my favourite prelude out of the set💯💯💯
@hannastaszak1684
@hannastaszak1684 2 года назад
Genialny pianista, wirtuoz i wielki mistrz. Brawo Rafał Blechacz.
@LinHsieh0
@LinHsieh0 6 лет назад
the audience needs some coughdrop
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