Literally just started rereading it, saw the reference and this is the first comment I see lmao. I love when my love of classical music cross boundaries into my other passions
+Rash LEB I've listened to many recording, including Alfred Brendel and Leon Fleisher, and none of them play that beautiful passage quite peacefully enough.
@@mhuten It's a tiny bit insulting to musicians when you just label it as "god-given talent". You deny the thousands upon thousands of hours and hard work they take to reach these levels. Mozart is not an exception to this. He was definitely above the rest, but don't for a second doubt that he didn't put in the work for it. Don't undermine his work and effort by just calling it "god-given". What he achieved was unique, but it was his and it was human.
Es gibt nicht so viele Pianisten, die sich völlig in den Dienst Mozarts stellen, er gehört dazu und ist für mich einer ganz großen Mozartinterpreten. Danke Maestro Perahia👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Estoy en un bar, con mi tablet y los auriculares puestos. El día es otoñal, nublado, inseguro...mi estado de ánimo, melancolico. Comienzo la escucha de este concierto...y antes de que finalice la introducción orquestal,en el suavísimo in crescendo con celestiales armonias, mis lagrimas ya surgen espontáneas e incontrolables inundando mis ojos. Hacia tiempo que no me sucedía escuchando música. Definitivamente, hay dos tipos de música: la de MOZART y el resto.
To those stuck in quarantine and learning this piece, I made an orchestra accompaniment for this concerto in my channel. I'm learning this myself and I'm using it to practice during lockdown.
Just started listening to this piece when i saw someone else in the train listening to it and couldnt help to check it out. Definitly worth and the best thing i did today. Thanks lady.
@@tonyheider7727let me give it a shot. It's a movement based on a prior jcb piece because jcb died when mozart started writing it. It was a tribute, to the man who helped shape and motivate him at 8 years old. He's modest though. He was way above him and Haydn talent wise in his later 20s.
It's a homage to JC Bach who died around the time it was written, the main theme is taken from JC Bach in homage. Mozart first met him as a child in the mid 1760s and in the 1770s said ' he is an honorable man and willing to do justice to others. I love him (as you know) and respect him with all my heart'.
Brilliant, glorious work yet tinged with a sweet sadness. Mozart had learned of the death of his friend Johann Christian Bach and this work apparently was written in his honor.
Putting aside for the time being the two minor key concerti (K. 466 and K. 491), the Allegro opening movements of his other piano concerti are all quite lively and spiritual and happy. However, in the two A Major piano concerti (K. 414 and K. 488), and in the G Major piano concerto (K. 453) the music is much calmer, particularly in this one (K. 414), probably because he wrote this concerto after hearing that his friend and mentor Johann Christian Bach had died. Perhaps Mozart (who had perfect pitch) associated keys with feelings.
particularly wonderful slow movementa wonderful re-discovery in a brendel and alban berg quartet recording I cannot find alas on youtubebut this is v beautiful too...
Brilliant way of phrasing it, sir! Were Mozart alive today, I'd imagine him describing it (Not just as pertains to his music, but ALL well made classical music on RU-vid) the same way!
Do we all remember??? I almost forgot myself... So..., 30 years ago an outstanding Polish pianist died in Philadelphia, Mieczysław Horszowski pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mieczys%C5%82aw_Horszowski . He was a teacher of great Murray Perahia....!
@@danal81 You create your own heaven by your deeds on Earth is my belief. You can believe what you want. I guess you are not a Christian. Neither am I, but I do believe in a God who is most Beneficent, Merciful and Compassionate
I also believe in Jesus Christ as a messenger of God who was created out of the spirit (Ruh) of God and was born of Immaculate conception to Virgin Mary.
He just had perfect pitch, heart, passion, and something no one else had: a photographic like musical memory. Everything he wrote and heard, was stored away in his head and he gradually kept enhancing what he liked in every piece and was able to do it faster for that reason.
+A A My point is, an indication for pizzicato playing is written into the score for those bars mentioned above. However some editions leave it out (!); apparently Perahia supplied a bad edition for his orchestra.
I wish we all were nothing ( non-existent ), where we all freed from everything !!!!!! I wish we all were nothing ( non-existent ), where we all freed from everything !!!!!! I wish we all were nothing ( non-existent ), where we all freed from everything !!!!!!