Тёмный

Maurice Ravel - Piano Concerto for the Left Hand 

olla-vogala
Подписаться 91 тыс.
Просмотров 535 тыс.
50% 1

- Composer: Joseph-Maurice Ravel (7 March 1875 -- 28 December 1937)
- Orchestra: Orchestre de la Société des Concerts du Conservatoire
- Conductor: André Cluytens
- Soloist: Samson François
- Year of recording: 1959
Piano Concerto in D major (for the left hand), written in 1929-1931.
Between 1929 and 1931, Ravel, despite his failing health, worked feverishly, his imagination as powerful as ever. Among the works completed during this period are the two piano concertos: this extraordinary work and the scintillating Piano Concerto in G major [uploaded on this channel].
This concerto was commissioned by the prominent Austrian pianist Paul Wittgenstein, brother of the celebrated philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein, who had lost his right arm due to a wound sustained in World War I. It is indeed a tragic irony that Ravel, who also served his country in World War I, and Wittgenstein were enemies in this terrible conflict. Nevertheless, Ravel, fascinated by the technical challenge of composing a concerto for the left hand, approached the project with immense interest and enthusiasm. In addition, Ravel admired Wittgenstein's determination to continue his career as a concert pianist. Piano works for the left hand were certainly not a novelty, as compositions by Scriabin, Alkan, Godowsky and Lyapunov attest, but Ravel wanted to create a unique work which would not merely demonstrate how a pianist can compensate for a physical handicap. He wished to compose a work which would stand out as a unique piano concerto. The outcome of Ravel's efforts is one of the great piano concertos of the twentieth century.
However, the Concerto, completed in October or November of 1931, failed to please Wittgenstein, who only gradually developed an appreciation for Ravel's work. Furthermore, when the Austrian pianist premiered the work in Vienna, in 1932, he took certain liberties with the score, to the composer's extreme consternation. Despite Ravel's frustration, he conducted the orchestra in Wittgenstein's Paris premiere of the Concerto in 1933. Because Wittgenstein had sole rights on the work for six years, Ravel had to wait until 1937 to hear a performance (by Jacques Février), which satisfied him.
The work, which is really in one movement, begins deep in the bass register, with the contrabassoon, along with the basses, presenting a subdued theme, which elicits a mournful response from the horns. The initial mournful mood is gradually, almost imperceptibly, transformed into an insistent, somewhat manic, musical idea. The piano enters with a simple statement, creating pentatonic resonances, which disappear, but remain in the background. As the initial somber atmosphere lifts, the piano gradually establishes a mood of exquisite lyricism, which pervades the middle section. Ravel's writing is so subtle and technically ingenious that the listener hears a gentle melody with a hypnotically diaphanous, but seemingly elaborate, accompaniment; it is easy to forget that one hand does all the playing. The energy behind the third section, in which the piano engages the orchestra, often mimicking particular instrumental sonorities, profoundly differs from the wave-like, fluid, ascending motion of the Concerto in G major; here, the energy is discontinuous, manifesting itself in obstinate, repetitive figurations and phrases which, if only for brief moments, conjure up the spirit of his Boléro. At the same time, Ravel devotes truly marvelous pages to the piano, particularly in the cadenza-like part of the final section, in which the left hand leads an engaging and richly developed melody into a glowing orchestral finale.
The piano concerto is dedicated: "à Paul Wittgenstein".

Опубликовано:

 

29 сен 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 464   
@donnytello1544
@donnytello1544 3 года назад
imagine how badass it’d be if ravel and Wittgenstein were on bad terms, and ravel decided to write a concerto completely for the right hand and dedicate it to Wittgenstein, or if he wrote this entire concerto and then added a single note at the end that required the right hand
@segmentsAndCurves
@segmentsAndCurves 3 года назад
Now that's something to imagine!
@harukaeruch.295
@harukaeruch.295 3 года назад
He might use his nose for that single note
@donnytello1544
@donnytello1544 3 года назад
@@harukaeruch.295 as he should
@antoniomartiradonna9498
@antoniomartiradonna9498 3 года назад
nico constantino, Ravel composed this concerto for the brother of Wittgenstein , the philosopher . not for the same philosopher. Ravel and Wittgenstein were friends, i presume.
@IgnatzKolisch
@IgnatzKolisch 2 года назад
@@antoniomartiradonna9498 They were not friends. They may have been friendly at one point, but Ravel became very aggressively offensive when hearing Wittgenstein rehearsing this very work, adding improvisations and changes that Ravel angrily forbade. "Performers are slaves," Ravel said to Wittgenstein. The disagreements between Ravel and Wittgenstein got quite hot, in front of many witnesses, which always makes the feelings one gets over angry arguments even worse. Ravel even told Wittgenstein bluntly that he was a bad pianist all along, and that losing his arm hadn't made him any better. Friends? If they ever were, it didn't last long!
@satosmi9408
@satosmi9408 9 месяцев назад
The most amazing thing about Ravel, to me, is his ability to invent themes (and harmonies woven thereupon) which, while not really straying far from the 'traditional' ways, exude some sort of 'wackiness', in that they do not follow the path you would expect, yet come to convince or even please you. This along with his diversified taste for music genres, is what I think to be a major inspiration to today's composers.
@stevef9530
@stevef9530 8 месяцев назад
I agree with your point. It’s interesting that quite hardcore modernist figures like Pierre Boulez were happy to conduct Ma Mère l’Oye, say, whilst being ferociously critical of the classical tradition. I think that at a point in history when that tradition was quite abruptly fractured by the impact of the modern, Ravel somehow managed to bestride the abyss that opened up. Whether modernity was a catastrophe or a revelation, under the pressure of the extreme violence of his time he managed to transform it into some kind of ‘inner quivering’ as Boulez put it. Intensely personal and intimate, but global too. I love many different composers and music of all kinds, but none that I know of have a greater emotional impact.
@louisvonbeethoven
@louisvonbeethoven 4 года назад
People who put YT ads in the middle of music like this are complete jerks.
@solidsnake9332
@solidsnake9332 4 года назад
And youre an arrogant fool. You have the ENTIRE composition, piano AND orchestra at your finger tips FOR FREE yet you complain about a 10 second ad. Get ad block then???
@charlottewhyte9804
@charlottewhyte9804 4 года назад
wow this is aawesome
@MuseDuCafe
@MuseDuCafe 8 лет назад
Again, recordings which are superb and archival in their importance, coupled with what can only be an intense real labor to present With The Scores. Many thanks.
@olla-vogala4090
@olla-vogala4090 8 лет назад
It is an intense labour to make these videos. Thanks for recognising that :)
@hogreeIC
@hogreeIC 8 лет назад
You might as well hear it from me as well - these videos really are absolutely superb, and I do hope you get some sort of reward for making them. One of the most useful channels on RU-vid for any musician; thanks very much for all your work
@thecozytrader00
@thecozytrader00 Год назад
This Cadenza has to be one of the best passages ever writen in the music story.
@javierlameiro3539
@javierlameiro3539 Год назад
but the precisely the cadenza elicited Wittgenstein´s main complaint, "too much cadenza"! He also rejected every other Concerto for the left hand written for him, of Prokofiev´s he said he didn´t understand a single note, and of Strauss´s, "too much orchestra"
@edby263
@edby263 Год назад
@@javierlameiro3539 Typical behaviour from the Wittgensteins
@AnAppleSlice
@AnAppleSlice Год назад
​@@javierlameiro3539 Wittgenstein was a snobbish prick who made edits to commissioned works of other composers without their permission. This concerto is a famous example of Wittgenstein having done so, which infuriated Ravel and despite Wittgenstein eventually playing the composition as it was, it soured their relationship. The fact of Wittgenstein having done this to other composers was also why no one accepted his subsequent commissions. Furthermore, he owned exclusive performance rights to the pieces he commissioned. As a result of this, Paul Hindemith's Op. 29 was not discovered until 39 years after Wittgenstein died as the latter hid it from the public simply because he didn't like it. All in all, despite having commissioned the piece, Wittgenstein's remarks are worth absolutely nothing. He may have pioneered left-hand-only piano techniques, but he wasn't the one who spent time and effort on the pieces.
@lightyagami1058
@lightyagami1058 6 месяцев назад
@@javierlameiro3539 Sorabji and Corigliano: *Sweats nervously.*
@belartful
@belartful 5 лет назад
Ravel takes a "disability" to a new and wonderful level..!!
@juanbolivar6742
@juanbolivar6742 Месяц назад
Real body positive.
@IpseTreevor
@IpseTreevor Год назад
This is the most 20th century sounding piece I've ever heard. It has the jazz influence, the impressionism, the terror of war, and all the strangeness of this era of music combined
@SCRIABINIST
@SCRIABINIST 11 месяцев назад
It's dark and at times almost industrial in its might. The extremely majestic opening theme. The romantic and tender melody that withers into the imperious march. Often times, the music is ambiguous in its mood and feelings, perhaps to me, symbolizing the growing complexity and developement of not only the arts, but the entire world at the turn of the 20th century.
@lupash
@lupash 8 месяцев назад
overly underrated comment
@liriking11
@liriking11 7 лет назад
I read that Ravel composed this for a fellow soldier pianist with whom he fought in WWI, who had lost his right arm in combat. That coupled with the absolute genius of this music, I have never had so much admiration for any man living or dead.
@Sophiex7
@Sophiex7 4 года назад
Yes, for Paul Wittgenstein (Ludwig's brother).
@averagemusicenjoyer
@averagemusicenjoyer 4 года назад
False, Ravel couldn’t fight in WWI ; and Wittgenstein has been less than friendly with this concerto by cutting parts by himself.
@lawrencegbailey5212
@lawrencegbailey5212 4 года назад
@@averagemusicenjoyer He did many things which you did not, fool.
@averagemusicenjoyer
@averagemusicenjoyer 4 года назад
Lairere Bailorous no one has asked you anything, Wittgenstein has been a moron with Ravel
@starless5668
@starless5668 4 года назад
But apparently, you did not read the description.
@fidelcastro9112
@fidelcastro9112 6 лет назад
12:18 - 14:00 is majestically beautiful.. My God the cadenza is fantastic! 2:10 is one of the greatest piano intros, if not the best!
@jostimromerovargas8364
@jostimromerovargas8364 4 года назад
Sorry. Wich is the best fir you??
@arvaborelius7269
@arvaborelius7269 4 года назад
I always knew comrade Castro had a good taste in music.
@WrulfWroar
@WrulfWroar 4 года назад
6:30 please
@ofilosofoouumfumante5655
@ofilosofoouumfumante5655 Год назад
The intro sounds like those japanese villain introductions
@IEEMAZ_Convoluted_14.2.8.5
@IEEMAZ_Convoluted_14.2.8.5 Год назад
@@ofilosofoouumfumante5655 lol what
@sebastianboeddinghaus3505
@sebastianboeddinghaus3505 3 года назад
Soldier friend: Loses right hand in WWI Ravel: composes concerto for just the left hand Because that's what hero's do
@stacia6678
@stacia6678 3 года назад
Soldier friend: doesn’t like the concerto and plays all wrong notes :/
@nghiavan8952
@nghiavan8952 3 года назад
Wittgenstein actually lost his entire arm.
@peabrane8067
@peabrane8067 3 года назад
He was sponsored
@segmentsAndCurves
@segmentsAndCurves 3 года назад
@@peabrane8067 This masterpiece is sponsored by Wittgenstein! Find out how to destroy your reputation multiple times!
@ogthekingofbashan333
@ogthekingofbashan333 3 года назад
Also Ravel: makes it too hard for him to play
@johnknox91
@johnknox91 Год назад
I find Ravel's understanding of musical structure to be extraordinary. The conversation between the piano and the orchestra in this piece is a work of genius, especially in the introduction. The orchestra introduces a dark, subdued theme in the very low register, and becomes increasingly manic. The piano soliloquy at first echoes the temperament but gradually becomes more tranquil, soothing the orchestra back to a state of calm. The orchestra then repeats the main theme introduced by the piano. Another effective use of structure by Ravel would be the Bolero, where he substitutes repition in place development. His ability to create scenes and tell stories through music is unparalleled.
@ukdavepianoman
@ukdavepianoman 5 лет назад
Very first time I heard this concerto I thought this sounds really difficult (assuming it was two hands). Imagine my shock when the announcer said "...Ravel's concerto for one hand"! I've battled through this and it is tough. Apart from covering huge spans, the sound control and balance is really tough...and on top of that, one has to make it sound musical and poetic. Samson Francois plays wonderfully.
@stacia6678
@stacia6678 3 года назад
Same thing i thought when listening; apart from the technical difficulties, making the piano sound fluttery or bashing at the pianist’s will poses a much bigger difficulty.
@thekeyoflifepiano
@thekeyoflifepiano Год назад
It's kind of like LiL PP energy. When you know ur small so you overcompensate.
@HopperDragon
@HopperDragon 3 месяца назад
​@@thekeyoflifepiano lmao what? This was written for a friend who lost his right arm in WW1
@nicholas72611
@nicholas72611 5 лет назад
God that sonority at 10:52 just gives me chills... That lydian melody in the upper register of the piano atop the quartal/quintal voicings in the strings. Ravel was not of this earth....
@SCRIABINIST
@SCRIABINIST 2 года назад
Has a similar rhythm to Prokofiev Sonata 7, but more French and less warlike
@isaackellogg3493
@isaackellogg3493 7 месяцев назад
Speaking of lydian (and therefore modes) do you know of any pieces you could recommend in the elusive hypomixolydian mode? I ran across it about fifteen years ago but can’t find anything apart from a few scales and the allegation that examples include the theme to Star Trek: TNG and “Sweet Home Alabama”-not exactly much on which to hang an understanding of the mode.
@robertkoelle8910
@robertkoelle8910 Год назад
Did anyone else seek this out after watching the season 8 episode of M.A.S.H.? Beautiful final scene between the wounded pianist and rhe doctor.
@CatherineEvm
@CatherineEvm Год назад
ГП: 1 раздел - 0:06; 2 раздел (каденция солиста №1) - 2:10; 3 раздел - 4:39 ПП - 6:12 Эпизод Allegro (разработка) - 8:12 Реприза - 13:04 Кульминация (каденция солиста №2) - 14:05 Кода - 18:05
@aechreuploads
@aechreuploads 8 месяцев назад
Even with 2 hands I could probably not play-
@rr7firefly
@rr7firefly 8 лет назад
Mister Olla-Vogala, thank you for including extensive notes on the Piano Concerto. Aside from placing the music in its historical context, the notes give us a greater appreciation of the compositional and performance (Wittgenstein's disability) achievements. I also much like the descriptive analysis of the Concerto and the sheet music. Merci!
@marichristian1072
@marichristian1072 8 лет назад
I suppose struggles between composer and soloist are nothing new. But it's difficult to imagine what Wittgenstein objected to in this magnificent concerto. Grateful thanks for posting, olla-vogala.
@harryandruschak2843
@harryandruschak2843 8 лет назад
+Mari Christian The truth is that Wittgenstein was a mediocre pianist. He totally rejected Hindimith's concerto, which gathered dust for decades, as it was beyond his limited abilities.
@chinyereobasi7236
@chinyereobasi7236 8 лет назад
+Harry Andruschak He only had one hand, what did you expect. I wouldn't exactly call him mediocre, though his abilities were limited.
@eoinalllen5951
@eoinalllen5951 8 лет назад
+Chinyere Obasi "With both hands he would not have stood out from a crowd of mediocre pianists." said Prokofiev
@chinyereobasi7236
@chinyereobasi7236 8 лет назад
Michael Varell And somehow Prokofiev's word is law? I admit, the only reason he got famous was because he could play with only one hand, but that doesn't diminish the fact that most of us couldn't do it.
@eoinalllen5951
@eoinalllen5951 8 лет назад
+Chinyere Obasi I wrote that quote because Prokofiev and indeed Ravel (who wasn't so fond of Wittgenstein himself) are examples of people who knew Wittgenstein and actually heard him play. From what I have heard here online, I don't really agree.
@LandOnBolts
@LandOnBolts 8 лет назад
it is amazing how far a composer goes in producing something like this! how does sound translate to anything else? why do we feel so good after a major 7th chord? love the mysteries of music...
@maxgamesst1
@maxgamesst1 7 лет назад
charles koder I like to think that maybe god made us that way
@slateflash
@slateflash 7 лет назад
That's exactly what i'm always wondering when i listen to music. Amazing indeed
@TheMikkis100
@TheMikkis100 6 лет назад
I've always been wondering how perfect a major 7th chord is. All music should have them!
@___xyz___
@___xyz___ 5 лет назад
@@TheMikkis100 No! For God's sake don't put major 7ths in everything. It's the greatest meme in contemporary music. There are whole works written exclusively in major 7ths. Sure, it sounds pleasing because it contains all good intervals (unless you start dealing with open voicings of flat ninths which are arguably atonal), but once you've heard major 7ths for a few hours, you will want to go out and kill somebody. So don't do that. But since you express such interest, because of the harmonic series, technically all notes contain the major 7th. But then, all notes contain all other chords as well. Just some chords are so far into the harmonic series that they're virtually indiscriminable. The big difference lies then in how "available" these harmonics are, whose adjacent notes are members of the major 7th. You'll quickly realise that, except for the actual "7th" interval, the whole major chord falls within the fifth harmonic of the root note! Thus, from the series, all a major chord is, is the root note with its second and fourth harmonic amplified. Then you start considering that each new note in the chord has its own harmonic series, and so on and so forth. What this means is that as soon as you get to the dyad (root + major third), you have a very audible "major 7th" by the 2nd harmonic of each note. Congratulations. You could stop there, tell the orchestra good job, safe trip home and see you all next time. But nay. Let's (transpose) copy/paste the dyad onto the 2nd harmonic (fifth) and see what happens. Holy hell, at this point we're audibly amplifying each note at least three times. There aren't many stray harmonics, cause the fifth and major third keep turning up again and again, amplifying the octaves of all the other fundamentals. Some might argue that this is merely a loudness problem, same as with radio stations and dynamically retarded modern audio productions, of which there is some merit. It's well established that louder music is associated with greater pleasure (granted that the listener themself finds music pleasing). But that would mean not taking into account phasing or "saturation" that occurs because the major 7th we're used to hearing from a piano isn't the real (just) major 7th whose harmonics fall mathematically perfect onto all other notes within the harmonic cluster of the chord by low number ratios, emanating a lifeless, stable drone. Needless to say, I don't know why major 7ths sound the way they do. There are probably people doing PhD theses on it as we speak. All I know is that it grinds my gears when inexperienced composers go dancing on the major 7ths thinking they've revolutionised music. And all the inexperienced listeners go blasting major 7ths into peoples faces like "check this cute music out so much better than mozart" when it's literally just an FX box with prepackaged major 7ths for the helpless masses. Ok my rant is over. TL;DR: ya'll need Gsus
@TheMikkis100
@TheMikkis100 5 лет назад
@@___xyz___ You should probably spend your time on something else
@christianvennemann9008
@christianvennemann9008 Год назад
As awesome as the piano part is, I never cease to be awestruck by Ravel's masterful orchestration, especially from 1:32 until the piano's entrance. Just indescribably magnificent!
@randomchannel-px6ho
@randomchannel-px6ho Год назад
That fortissimo d octave around 17:35, it's the little genius things like this that keeps me coming back to Ravel. It feels so special but looking at the piano score it doesn't stand out from the figures that come before it. Ravel has the orchestra subtly rejoin filling in the harmony just enough to sound like additional overtones of the Piano. It's just lovely. (The cadenza and the ending is one of my favorite musical moments in general).
@BruceBoschek
@BruceBoschek 4 года назад
I heard this in concert when I was still quite young in the 1950s. I have always been enthralled by it, but seeing the notes as it is being played gave me a completely new access to this astonishing work. How fascinating it really is, and what a challenge to a pianist! Thanks to everyone who made this possible.
@Peculate
@Peculate 7 лет назад
2:13 to 2:22 Mmmm parallel fifths galore (Although there are some fourths thrown in there too, for good measure - and to keep it in pentatonic)
@catherineb.7461
@catherineb.7461 5 лет назад
My harmony teacher is quacking😂
@none5020
@none5020 3 года назад
@@catherineb.7461 If only I had a duck as a teacher.
@CMLPoP
@CMLPoP 7 лет назад
10:00 is soooo beautiful like jesus christ i dont think i'll able to hear a better thing than that wow
@vaqalarxornawosk1731
@vaqalarxornawosk1731 6 лет назад
CML PoP it reminds me Ravels arr. of one part of Mussorgsky s Pictures of exhibition
@MultiDansk8
@MultiDansk8 5 лет назад
12:32 right here sounds pretty similar
@lawrencegbailey5212
@lawrencegbailey5212 4 года назад
YES.
@segmentsAndCurves
@segmentsAndCurves 3 года назад
Le Tombeau de Couperin, prelude by Ravel! Symphony no.2, 3rd movement - Scriabin
@albuch520
@albuch520 Год назад
Beautiful melody. Btw why does it remind me of Petrushka or some folk Russian motive
@enriquesanchez2001
@enriquesanchez2001 5 лет назад
THIS masterpiece never fails to elicit the indescribable emotions in the deepest recesses of my soul. I will always remain in awe of it's majesty and it's forceful affirmation of the Human Spirit. ♥♥♥
@Barbapippo
@Barbapippo 8 лет назад
This is a worthy YT channel, thank you!
@olla-vogala4090
@olla-vogala4090 8 лет назад
+Barbapippo You're welcome!
@PrimeCarrot
@PrimeCarrot 3 года назад
After years of listening to this piece, the cadenza has finally brought me to tears.
@georgiepentch
@georgiepentch 2 года назад
6:01 The piano writing in the Più lento is amazing 10:00 The orchestration
@HolyThunder460
@HolyThunder460 3 года назад
For all you M*A*S*H fans 2:10 you're welcome
@limmortale2001
@limmortale2001 2 года назад
i dont know MASH, so im gonna assume its _"Merry American Sinners in Hell"_
@luihi9780
@luihi9780 6 лет назад
5:20 reminds me of the g major concerto
@icemorewaterless
@icemorewaterless 5 лет назад
Liugio h it does sounds like towards the end of the first movement in G Major. Ravel wrote how concertos simultaneously!
@happy2space
@happy2space 4 года назад
I think bolero
@ivaylovassilev6450
@ivaylovassilev6450 3 года назад
Me too
@guyno_one293
@guyno_one293 3 года назад
This piece borrows from so much of Ravel's work, perfecting it in my mind. I hear undertones of the Pavane, Miroirs, and Mother Goose. Truly brilliant.
@knuthaakenaasen1880
@knuthaakenaasen1880 3 года назад
@@guyno_one293 And Rite of Spring by Stravinsky!
@bashendrickx
@bashendrickx 7 лет назад
The effort you put into these videos, hours and hours of work... I can not thank you enough.
@georgemandom69
@georgemandom69 4 года назад
With the background of this commission, the piece makes sense. It conjures up images of military scenes such as soldiers marching, grand parades, and the individual pensiveness and struggle that soldiers go through after the war. The sudden change back to military grandeur at the end is a grand finish I suppose.
@christianvennemann9008
@christianvennemann9008 4 года назад
10:53 is so magical.
@santiagocaldeira7555
@santiagocaldeira7555 11 месяцев назад
I sometimes wonder why there are no pieces for right hands... Almost seems like everyone would only lose their right arm in war 💀
@elijahvalongo9528
@elijahvalongo9528 4 года назад
Francois is such a beloved French artist... Absolutely flawless
@Dylonely42
@Dylonely42 Год назад
14:06
@jonathangandara109
@jonathangandara109 3 года назад
My musicology teacher, Jessie Fillerup just wrote a book called "Magician of Sound: Ravel and the Aesthetics of Illusion" One of the chapters is on this concerto and I'm blown away. For anybody who is at all interested in Ravel, take a look at Dr. Fillerup's book. It's wild.
@norikoagawa881
@norikoagawa881 2 года назад
この協奏曲をこんなにも華麗に美しく魂に訴えられるかのように演奏してくれるのはフランソワしか聞いたことがありません。テンポも多分ラヴェルが気に入ってくれていると思います。表現力のすばらしさは他に類をみません。しかもフランソワはレコード録音の際も取り直しなど一切なく、演奏会のように一発取りと聞いています。とても素晴らしいですね
@Dragonrose36
@Dragonrose36 4 года назад
I came here because of the M*A*S*H episode Morale Victory.
@jeanlucchapelon
@jeanlucchapelon Год назад
Ma version préférée ! Samson François était un coloriste de génie 🙏
@irislangford6320
@irislangford6320 Год назад
Absolument! I was in my early teens when I first heard Samson François' recording on vynil (early 60's) and listened again and again. The other side was the Concerto in G, which was also wonderful, but the Concerto for the Left Hand was spellbinding. One problem, however, with tying oneself to a single interpretation is that nothing else quite satisfies...
@solidsnake9332
@solidsnake9332 4 года назад
Masterful composition. I can almost just make out the scene of war. I tingle every time i hear that orchestral intro. . . Very introspective
@OmArVi-me4hp
@OmArVi-me4hp 3 года назад
If you play this piece from 8:13 to 9:56 at *1.25 speed it's sounds like jazz.
@alexanderbayramov2626
@alexanderbayramov2626 3 года назад
Thanks to your comment, I can't unhear now some similarities between that part and theme from the pink panther :D
@lawrence142002
@lawrence142002 5 лет назад
"I could play the notes! But I could never make the music".
@CinemaDemocratica
@CinemaDemocratica 3 года назад
Don't give it away!
@musclecarbear4704
@musclecarbear4704 3 года назад
Winchester III
@CinemaDemocratica
@CinemaDemocratica 3 года назад
@@musclecarbear4704 A genuinely moving moment in television. Back when the word 'moving' still meant what it's supposed to.
@coleb.t.6905
@coleb.t.6905 3 года назад
@@CinemaDemocratica what does moving mean now?
@CinemaDemocratica
@CinemaDemocratica 3 года назад
@@coleb.t.6905 I didn't mean anything overly provocative, I hope -- just that people say things are "moving," or "inspired," or "hilarious" when what they really mean is that they ... noticed them at all. I don't know how you feel about LouisCK but he did a whole thing about this phenomenon that I could hardly improve upon here. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-FSubdmYGVEI.html
@sohaib7526
@sohaib7526 8 лет назад
From an entire orchestra of sound to one left hand....that's insane!
@amerain1729
@amerain1729 6 лет назад
Logan tipaza I can do the same. Just click the "play" button with my left thumb XD
@signer530
@signer530 7 лет назад
The first time I listened to this- at 12:51, I was already smiling in that knowing disbelief as the music unfolded before me... "are you fvcking kidding me? Ravel! like UGH, Ravel you are fucking my ears into paradise!" And then, holy shit the third movement. This being one his pieces I've came to know more recently, its fascinating/delightful how self-referential/affirming this is about his musicality. But it's also sad as it's one of his very lasts gifts to the world.
@jimstokes6742
@jimstokes6742 6 лет назад
humm?
@isaacthomas6544
@isaacthomas6544 7 лет назад
You can't help but smile the whole time while listening to this. I can't believe anyone could have less than a glowing reaction to Ravel. A simply magical composer, and a great recording of this piece. Thank you for uploading!
@donnytello1544
@donnytello1544 3 года назад
Imagine if ravel wrote another concerto with the same themes but for the right hand, and then combined both concertos to make the ultimate double handed concerto. somebodies gonna put a bounty on my head for commenting this bc they won’t want any daring composers reading it, but you know what? Im That daring mf composer 😈
@qiaomuye6156
@qiaomuye6156 6 лет назад
this cadenza is crazy!!!
@solidsnake9332
@solidsnake9332 4 года назад
Master composition by Ravel. Tells a story of the highness and lowness of a tragedy called war, where Rich and Old send the Young and Poor to fight their wars. . .
@VICTOBERN
@VICTOBERN Год назад
One wonders quite seriously whether anyone will ever achieve this level of invention today. I wonder if indeed there was a grand classical era which was uniquely so. The modern world seems removed from the depth of musical creativity and sensitivity of the Ravel and other great composers of that time.
@LandOnBolts
@LandOnBolts 7 лет назад
I like M.A.H's rendition of this. it is so blended with the orchestra! this piece is one of my favorites
@busoni1
@busoni1 4 года назад
It's solid. But. This is my all time fav. Francois takes such a masculine, vibrant, no bs, approach to all of Ravel's works in a way that no one else does. It's refreshing.
@webstergilessmith6947
@webstergilessmith6947 5 лет назад
Just a really brilliant concerto. So beautiful in so many sections! Ravel was a most definite genius composer!
@szde
@szde 5 лет назад
From 8:30 onwards, you can absolutely see where Sondheim got The Ballad of Sweeney Todd from, by his own admission.
@annalinder9360
@annalinder9360 4 года назад
Wow, you’re totally right. Such a cool observation!
@StephenGottPianist
@StephenGottPianist 4 года назад
Love the Cadenza in this concerto. Sounds like Ondine from Gaspard. Love the Bassoon and oboe in this work too.
@VincentiusSmith
@VincentiusSmith 7 лет назад
This shows us what music really is about. So many people, so many bigots against the disabled refused to make this composition. Then Maurice turns up, and sees it as a source of inspiration. And just like that, us disabled people get to play the piano.
@Quotenwagnerianer
@Quotenwagnerianer 5 лет назад
You do realize that Ravel is only one of many composers that Wittgenstein turned to for writing him works? Prokoviev, Strauss, Korngold, Hindemith, Britten they all wrote music for him. You shouldn't trust M.A.S.H. or any other screenplay when it comes to portraying historical facts right. Ravel was not the first to accept Wittgenstein's commissions. His concert just happens to be the best of all that were commissioned.
@channelfogg6629
@channelfogg6629 5 лет назад
It's got nothing to do with 'the disabled'. It was commissioned by the Austrian pianist Paul Wittgenstein, who lost his right arm during World War I. Ravel don't go round trying to ingratiate himself with a pressure group.
@calebhu6383
@calebhu6383 5 лет назад
Alkan wrote great left-hand music long before Ravel.
@tjgdjhshygknbg5564
@tjgdjhshygknbg5564 7 лет назад
It could just be me, but this sounds quite like Stravinsky at times, while still being Ravel of course.
@CinemaDemocratica
@CinemaDemocratica 3 года назад
Doesn't a fair amount of Ravel sound at least a little like Stravinsky? And ... vice-versa?
@pierreboland8910
@pierreboland8910 3 года назад
@@CinemaDemocratica There are common points, in particular the care for the colour of the sound, the wish to extract weird sounds from unusual music instruments (listen to the contrabassoon in the beginning, with the lowest sound a wood instrument can ever give: a contra contra b flat. Also the saxophone in the mid). But the main difference according to me is that Stravinsky was reluctant to express any feeling with his music. So didn't Ravel, although he was far from willing express simple feelings like joy, sadness, nostalgy.
@jonlong5012
@jonlong5012 7 лет назад
This was in MASH
@Medici0045
@Medici0045 6 лет назад
Jon Long this is what brought me here, and has rekindled my love for such music, which has long been stowed away.
@hknapp-hj2sn
@hknapp-hj2sn 6 лет назад
Yes; it was a very moving story.
@philscott44
@philscott44 6 лет назад
MASH brought me here.
@oldschool5539
@oldschool5539 4 года назад
Same Here, Just watched the one particular episode about a month ago, Still one of the Best for that season!
@789armstrong
@789armstrong 4 года назад
I believe this is the best performance I have ever heard of this magnificent work.
@okon-guitar3908
@okon-guitar3908 3 года назад
The first interpretation in which the habanera rhythm in the opening cadence is really present. Great work from the soloist and the orchestra as well. Ravels masterpiece in best hands
@mrmangoberry8394
@mrmangoberry8394 3 года назад
hand*
@multimusicstudios5661
@multimusicstudios5661 3 года назад
Recently, as a master's of music composition candidate at GSU, I discovered this piece as a historical artifact and a novel composition. But today, the reality of the love, research, and sacrifice that Ravel demonstrated in creating this work commissioned by the concert pianist, Paul Wittgenstein who lost his right arm during WWI, is remarkable, and quite difficult to play with one hand.
@RockStarOscarStern634
@RockStarOscarStern634 Год назад
Paul Wittgenstein Could play across the whole Keyboard w/ just 1 Hand. The composer even made an arrangement for 2 Pianos, w/ the 2nd Piano playing the Orchestral reduction.
@jimstokes6742
@jimstokes6742 6 лет назад
Don't shoot the piano player. He's doing the best he can.
@coritaylorsverson
@coritaylorsverson 2 месяца назад
Just heard this work inspired miles Davis’ kind of blue. You can really hear parts of it in this. Wow.
@nicolasfagel6077
@nicolasfagel6077 2 года назад
When I listen to this masterpiece, I have the feeling of making a journey to France, Spain, Egypt and China in the same day... And it feels awesome !
@omarvi280
@omarvi280 3 года назад
Why does this composition sounds like jazz from 8:13 to 12:32?
@omarvi280
@omarvi280 3 года назад
Also this part could be adapted very well by Jacques Loussier, a deceased pianist that is well known by adapting classical compositions into jazz .
@remomazzetti8757
@remomazzetti8757 3 года назад
Because Ravel admired Gershwin and loved American jazz in general.
@marcsmith7789
@marcsmith7789 7 лет назад
This is a masterpiece. A stunning and deeply emotional work.
@Medtnaculuss
@Medtnaculuss 8 лет назад
About time! ;) Great video as always -- hope to see more soon!
@louisvalencia5244
@louisvalencia5244 4 года назад
The saddest d major ever at the beginning
@backwoodzninja274
@backwoodzninja274 5 месяцев назад
7:02 English Horn melody very similar to melody from First Movement of Prokofiev 5
@Grateful_Phan
@Grateful_Phan 5 лет назад
Fantasia on Themes from "Into the Woods," as I once heard a conductor call it.
@miaqmiaw
@miaqmiaw 4 года назад
13:04-14:00 is like a movie's OST
@suzannedallape6691
@suzannedallape6691 Год назад
I was lucky enough to have heard this live, by the magnificent Utah Symphony. It is absolutely unreal when heard live. You feel the opening strings before you hear them.
@joanneofarc.
@joanneofarc. 3 года назад
ravel
@OriginalAnonymous1
@OriginalAnonymous1 5 лет назад
I can't play a note on any instrument and I love music and I know great music when I hear it............and this is great music!
@alessandroanderlini2700
@alessandroanderlini2700 8 лет назад
I really want to thank you olla-vogala, for all your videos :) really a beautiful experience!
@adriandurand4531
@adriandurand4531 6 лет назад
Pianist Samson François was really UNIQUE when playing this concerto, which he was totally identified with. The piece is heroic, oniric, sinister, nostalgic and dramatic all at the same time. All misical works by Ravel are of outstanding quality, however this is one of his absolute masterworks.
@MarianoCardilloMusic
@MarianoCardilloMusic 8 лет назад
imperiale!!!! non sembra affatto eseguito con una mano sola!!!!
@lorddorogoth
@lorddorogoth 4 года назад
This is why I love 6/8
@DoctorJohnSmith9
@DoctorJohnSmith9 6 лет назад
The best episode of M*A*S*H brought me here. :)
@AlanCanon2222
@AlanCanon2222 3 года назад
"Morale Victory".
@InnaInMusic
@InnaInMusic 5 месяцев назад
Wittgenstein must have had PTSD during the climax
@marinadela1361
@marinadela1361 Год назад
It's genius how just one hand can sound like two or even three sometimes.
@lovaaaa2451
@lovaaaa2451 8 лет назад
Is this a live recording? The pianist seems quite lacky with some of the rhythms to me especially in the piano introduction, It's very important to be precise and follow score with ravel. If it's live I guess it's fine, it's a hard piece.
@olla-vogala4090
@olla-vogala4090 8 лет назад
+Lova aaa Please click ''show more' under the video, you will see the information. François most certainly isn't missing any notes, it's just the recording that's quite old (1959) so you may not hear every note.
@lovaaaa2451
@lovaaaa2451 8 лет назад
+olla-vogala I don't mind wrong notes, I was referring more to things like how at 3.32 he chooses to hold the D for a while instead of, like the score says go straight towards the A. Sounds too romantic for my, and probably Ravel's taste, rubatos should be saved for the cadenza. Also the part from 9.13 is rushed and stuff. Not meaning to bash Samson François, clearly he was a good pianist, though I'd imagine there are better recordings, and Ravel was very obsessed with his scores and didn't tend to like them being interpreted any differently. It might be good to be aware of for fellow pianists here in the comments!
@brettwilcots8608
@brettwilcots8608 7 лет назад
My thanks as I am much older don;t get to the library much and to have the scores with the music is a blessing. Peace.
@tashaschneider1419
@tashaschneider1419 6 лет назад
Love this piece with all my heart!
@bckm54
@bckm54 8 лет назад
What am I missing? At the very end, the orchestra seems to play a grace note that I don't see on the MS. I've heard this on every version, so I doubt it's something the conductor decided to put in there. Please provide some clarification... THANKS! :)
@giftcodez
@giftcodez 8 лет назад
I think I see what you mean. According to the full score, the grace note you hear is a B flat, which then immediately goes down to A. The trumpets (as well as others) play this, which is why it comes out so strongly. (Also, it's not really a grace note since it is actually played on the beat.)
@liriking11
@liriking11 7 лет назад
I love how the last thing the piano does is a d minor scale into a d major chord
@Zdrange03
@Zdrange03 5 лет назад
2 flats: it's a Bb scale ending on third degree (D).
@castleguard_of_xbox360
@castleguard_of_xbox360 2 года назад
This music goes from dark and menacing, to peaceful, full on marching to war and finally drama. 8:14 8:54
@eddieandmaxie
@eddieandmaxie Месяц назад
4:43 I KEEP REPLAYING THR ORCHESTRA HERE ITS SO GOOD
@valerieheinderyckx4506
@valerieheinderyckx4506 Год назад
Une des plus belles réalisations musicales de la main de l'homme... Merci. ❤
@eduardorabelo5642
@eduardorabelo5642 2 года назад
4:40 one of the most beautiful passagens in classical music imo (this concerto has the prettiest themes i ever seen)
@OdinLimaye
@OdinLimaye 2 года назад
So astoundingly beautiful; an absolute masterpiece from Ravel!
@aLi-rk5vh
@aLi-rk5vh 5 лет назад
오른손 다쳐서 두달정도 피아노 못치니까 이거하구있어요 ㅠㅠㅋㅋㅋㅋ
@eliter7991
@eliter7991 3 года назад
Soldier friend: “Whew… Now, without my right hand, I can forget about the tremendously hard piano repertoire and peacefully live my life, as a hero”. Ravel: >:)
@segmentsAndCurves
@segmentsAndCurves 3 года назад
Also soldier friend: "And make the musicologist shock by locking the HINDEMITH Piano concerto inside my house for 80 years."
@henkm9905
@henkm9905 3 года назад
A highlight in western culture.
@Examantel
@Examantel 4 года назад
A great performance, minus the rushing in the jazz-influenced section.
@Samgurney88
@Samgurney88 4 года назад
I've just broken my hand. This will keep me occupied for a while! Who can't love Ravel? I'm also a big fan of Ludwig Wittgenstein so it will be interesting to try my hand (pardon the pun) at a work commissioned by his brother.
@sergeboisse
@sergeboisse 8 лет назад
C'est un vrai plaisir d'écouter ce concerto en suivant la partition ! On mesure mieux à quel point Ravel était un génie. Et dire qu'il a composé le merveilleux concerto en Sol en même temps que celui-ci !
@stephenjablonsky1941
@stephenjablonsky1941 3 года назад
So, this concerto proves you don't a right hand. Give it away!
Далее
# Rural Funny Life Wang Ge
00:18
Просмотров 673 тыс.
Maurice Ravel - Piano Concerto in G major
21:58
Просмотров 766 тыс.
B. Smetana: Piano Trio in G Minor, op. 15, Trio Bohémo
29:12
Piano Concerto in G Major, M. 83: II. Adagio assai
8:41
Maurice Ravel - String Quartet in F major
28:46
Просмотров 1,6 млн
Yuja Wang - Ravel: Piano Concerto for the Left Hand
18:03