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Murray Perahia - Felix Mendelssohn, Fantasy in F#- ("Scottish Sonata") Op.28 

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Murray (Moshe) Perahia was born in the Bronx borough of New York City to a family of Sephardi Jewish origin. According to the biography on his Mozart piano sonatas CD, his first language was Ladino. The family came from Thessaloniki. His father moved to the United States in 1935; many family members perished in the Holocaust a few years later.
Perahia began studying the piano at age four with a teacher he says was "very limiting" because she made him play a single piece until it was perfect. He says his musical interests blossomed at age fifteen for reasons he can't explain, and he began to practice seriously. At seventeen, Perahia attended Mannes College, where he studied keyboard, conducting, and composition with his teacher and mentor Mieczysław Horszowski. During the summer, he also attended Marlboro, where he studied with musicians Rudolf Serkin, Alexander Schneider, and Pablo Casals, among others. He played duets for piano four hands with Serkin, who later made Perahia his assistant at the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia, a position he held for over a year.
In 1965 Perahia won the Young Concert Artists International Auditions. In 1972, he was the first North American to win first prize at the Leeds Piano Competition, helping to cement its reputation for advancing the careers of young pianistic talent. Dr. Fanny Waterman recalls anecdotally (in Wendy Thompson's book Piano Competition: The Story of the Leeds) that Horszowski had phoned her prior to the competition, announcing that he would be the winner. Other American contestants had apparently withdrawn their applications upon hearing that Perahia would be competing.
Perahia resides in London.
]Music career
In 1973 he worked with Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears at the Aldeburgh Festival, and with fellow pianist Radu Lupu. He was co-artistic director of the Festival from 1981 to 1989.
In the 1980s, Perahia was invited to work with Vladimir Horowitz, an admirer of his art. Perahia says this had a defining influence on his pianism.
Perahia's first major recording project was the complete piano concertos by Mozart, conducted from the keyboard with the English Chamber Orchestra. In the 1980s, he also recorded all the Beethoven piano concertos, with Bernard Haitink and the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra.
[edit]Hand injury
In 1990, Perahia suffered a cut to his right thumb, which became septic. He took antibiotics for this condition, but they affected his health. In 1992, his career was threatened by a bone abnormality in his hand causing inflammation requiring several years away from the keyboard, and a series of operations. During that time, he says, he found solace through studying the music of Johann Sebastian Bach. After being given the all-clear, he produced in the late 1990s a series of award-winning recordings of Bach's keyboard works, most notably a cornerstone rendition of the Goldberg Variations.
(Wikipedia)

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Комментарии : 245   
@yiensnotsofabulousjournal3526
@yiensnotsofabulousjournal3526 6 лет назад
4:45 II 6:38 III
@skylermccloud6230
@skylermccloud6230 5 лет назад
Thanks
@houseofbeeswax
@houseofbeeswax 12 лет назад
Moved as always by Sir Murray's gifted playing.
@maximusgalguin
@maximusgalguin 10 лет назад
Impecable....
@wonikim71
@wonikim71 5 лет назад
6:38
@jacmac127
@jacmac127 14 лет назад
Tremendous.....BIG fan of Murray. He is definitely one of the top tier pianists of this generation. We are so blessed to have him with us.
@aknightofcamelot
@aknightofcamelot Год назад
You are correct. I am also grateful for him.
@상감마마미워요
@상감마마미워요 Год назад
나는 광해대왕을 뫼옵던 장렬경휘정성명숙현신정순왕비(章烈敬徽貞聖明淑顯愼貞順王妃-광해군비 문성군부인 류씨)니라. 대체 이 반정이 종묘와 사직을 위한 것이더냐 부귀와 영화를 도모하기위한 것이더냐. 대답해보라!!!
@christianweatherbroadcasting
@christianweatherbroadcasting 4 месяца назад
Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way. We deserve Hell because we've sinned. Lied, lusted stolen, etc. But God sent his son to die on the cross and rise out of the grave. We can receive forgiveness from Jesus. Repent and put your trust in him. John 3:16 Romans 3:23❤😊❤😊
@schuegrafma
@schuegrafma 12 лет назад
Absolutely mind-blowing! I did not expect this at all. Mendelssohn is played far too rarely.
@christianweatherbroadcasting
@christianweatherbroadcasting 4 месяца назад
Jesus is the only way. We have all sinned and deserve Hell. Sins that may seem small in our eyes are big in God's and are worthy of Hell, such as lying lusting and stealing. But if we repent and trust only in Jesus, he is faithful and will save us from Hell and give us eternal life in Heaven. Trust in Jesus! John 3:16 Romans 6:23
@christianweatherbroadcasting
@christianweatherbroadcasting 4 месяца назад
Jesus is the only way. We have all sinned and deserve Hell. Sins that may seem small in our eyes are big in God's and are worthy of Hell, such as lying lusting and stealing. But if we repent and trust only in Jesus, he is faithful and will save us from Hell and give us eternal life in Heaven. Trust in Jesus! John 3:16 Romans 6:23
@joperez9892
@joperez9892 3 года назад
Great !!! After this, whoever listens to Mendelssohn and dares to call him "a second degree composer" deserves to be disemboweled with a wooden spoon !
@sissygirl141
@sissygirl141 8 лет назад
I went throuh a 5-month depression earlier this year, and nothing can encapsulate the bouts of depression, confusion, and raging bitterness I went through more than the 1st movement of this piece. What a powerful piece to listen to and play.
@אבגדהוזחטי-ע6ס
@אבגדהוזחטי-ע6ס 8 лет назад
Soul music !!
@christianweatherbroadcasting
@christianweatherbroadcasting 4 месяца назад
Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way. We deserve Hell because we've sinned. Lied, lusted stolen, etc. But God sent his son to die on the cross and rise out of the grave. We can receive forgiveness from Jesus. Repent and put your trust in him. John 3:16 Romans 3:23❤😊❤❤
@colinlang466
@colinlang466 9 лет назад
A definitive performance of Mendelssohn's rarely played unique treasure of pianistic invention. What an imaginative world he inhabited in which Music was more expressive that any verbal eloquence.
@daniel3231995
@daniel3231995 3 года назад
needs remaster. clarity totally gone from distortions.
@christianweatherbroadcasting
@christianweatherbroadcasting 4 месяца назад
Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way. We deserve Hell because we've sinned. Lied, lusted stolen, etc. But God sent his son to die on the cross and rise out of the grave. We can receive forgiveness from Jesus. Repent and put your trust in him. John 3:16 Romans 3:23❤😊❤❤
@skylermccloud78
@skylermccloud78 7 лет назад
shame this gets thousands of views while justin bieber baby baby crap and call me maybe and other crap gets millions modern society has no sense of music at all
@hajunchang3121
@hajunchang3121 5 лет назад
Lol what world do you live in
@houseofbeeswax
@houseofbeeswax 9 лет назад
Genius. Moving interpretation of the Mendelssohn Fantasy. Those who have been fortunate to hear and see him in perform in person are of the same accord . . . virtuoso.
@christianweatherbroadcasting
@christianweatherbroadcasting 4 месяца назад
Jesus is the only way. We have all sinned and deserve Hell. Sins that may seem small in our eyes are big in God's and are worthy of Hell, such as lying lusting and stealing. But if we repent and trust only in Jesus, he is faithful and will save us from Hell and give us eternal life in Heaven. Trust in Jesus! John 3:16 Romans 6:23
@tmthanhable
@tmthanhable 5 лет назад
Thank Perahia! You are one of the greatest pianists.
@brotten4396
@brotten4396 4 года назад
what a passionate performance
@Gydinglight12
@Gydinglight12 11 лет назад
A music critic I read long ago sneered that FM was a poor composer because he was "the Victorians' favorite composer!" I guess that automatically puts him in the critical trash can, but I am discovering his greatness via utube.
@skylermccloud78
@skylermccloud78 7 лет назад
wow the 39 people who clicked dislike must be very talented at piano
@Jauhara
@Jauhara 5 лет назад
Maybe because of the skip in the video.
@katbullar
@katbullar 4 года назад
Absolutely nothing against the playing, but the video editing is almost a crime...
@skylermccloud6230
@skylermccloud6230 10 месяцев назад
​@@katbullartrue
@katbullar
@katbullar 4 года назад
magnificent interpretation but really criminal editing of the video.
@AB-jn1vc
@AB-jn1vc 3 года назад
You are right> People are animals
@elmiramuradova561
@elmiramuradova561 3 года назад
Oh, so great performance. Emotional and beautiful. Thank you. Lovely pianist.
Год назад
Love the piece and this interpretation. A pity there some cuts in the video.
@GrandPiano42
@GrandPiano42 15 лет назад
The methods of Murray's father were definitely effective - BEAUTIFUL!!! Thanks for sharing
@christianweatherbroadcasting
@christianweatherbroadcasting 4 месяца назад
Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way. We deserve Hell because we've sinned. Lied, lusted stolen, etc. But God sent his son to die on the cross and rise out of the grave. We can receive forgiveness from Jesus. Repent and put your trust in him. John 3:16 Romans 3:23❤😊❤❤❤
@Bildungsrebell
@Bildungsrebell 2 года назад
What a great piece! I tend to forget Mendelssohn as a master of piano. You have Rachmaninov, Scriabin, Chopin, Liszt in mind, but hear at this great virtuoso piece. And don't forget the greatness of Perahia. You never think the piece is hard - which shows the mastership of him! (Be sure: The Fantasy is hard...) Great treasure, thanks for sharing!
@aphraxiaojun1145
@aphraxiaojun1145 Год назад
I thought it sounded pretty hard
@colinlang466
@colinlang466 9 лет назад
Why doesn't this imaginative "Sonata" feature regularly in recital programmes by virtuosi pianists? Is it too demanding of subtle insight? Scottish is a misnomer, merely the place of conception. It served as an inspiration to the later Russian keyboard composers, I guess.
@sebastientraglia1351
@sebastientraglia1351 9 лет назад
+Colin Lang It's certainly not too demanding in terms of technique. There is way more difficult pieces to master for that aspect out there. It is a very wonderful piece, inspired by Schubert's Wanderer Fantasy. It deserves the same attention of the latter, but I think it's just that Mendelssohn piano pieces in general, except for his "Songs without words", are quite ignored for no good reason. I much prefer his compositions for piano then those by Brahms, even though they were both quite classical.
@lisztme6001
@lisztme6001 8 лет назад
An interesting question you raise, Colin and Sebastien. There is no simple answer. One aspect (raised many years ago by Ernest Hutcheson) is that there's a chasm between Mendelssohn's best work and 'the rest.' This unevenness -- divine inspiration on one hand, flashy but facile and sometimes shallow on the other -- is sometimes found BETWEEN works, but sometimes even within ONE work. This requires performers to be selective, and over the years they have become TOO selective. Another aspect is that Mendelssohn hasn't always had champions to promote his piano work. I read somewhere that his First Piano Concerto was underplayed for years, until a star of the stature of Rudolf Serkin revived it, and now it is a staple of the repertoire. There are probably other aspects as well.
@jamaicanpianistcomposer
@jamaicanpianistcomposer 7 лет назад
My answer to that is many pianists and even competitions seemingly support this notion of finding validation in something they can tangibly compare. Everyone wants to play the warhorse compositions because they are performed by everyone... it is allegedly what everyone wants to hear because it is technically flashy and it can be easily pinned on a gauge to other pianists who have played them to satisfy this "who played it better" kind of mentality. Not saying that this is entirely the case, and i certainly do not believe for a minuet that all audiences what to hear is Liszt La campanella and prokofiev 7th sonata... but it does come across potently that way. What i miss is the unique voice that "Je ne sais qua" pianists should bring to a composition regardless of it's composition. Audiences should be drawn to a realm of discovery be it interpretation of an overly performed work, work of a lesser known composer or hardly performed composition. Perahia is a case in point. Pianists like this causes audience members to change their perspective of a composer or a composition in a positive light. Their fire leaves one wanting to search for the music and learn it.. want to hear more... make more discoveries. That is the type of pianist I in turn want to be.
@dweml258
@dweml258 12 лет назад
While breezing through the San Francisco newspaper in 1973 I saw an announcement for a recital at the Legion of Honor, by a pianist I never had heard of. "He might be good" I told myself. So I went. By the time he had finished the first half, I told myself, "I will never see a greater pianist in my lifetime." And I haven't, although I would tie him with Chick Corea, who I saw 2 years later. I still feel that way, I suppose that LangLang is up there. Oh, the pianist I saw that night was Murray P.
@baroquegeek
@baroquegeek 7 лет назад
Listening to this on Mendelssohn's birthday and I completely forgot what a beautiful piece this is that no one touches! Mendelssohn needs more stage time. And Perahia? WOW! almost 6am and I think I need a drink after listening to this. The perfect definition of brilliance from both composer and performer.
@dvdgrog
@dvdgrog 11 лет назад
Not by me. He's up there with the best of the best.
@alexkoh1673
@alexkoh1673 4 года назад
I owe this fellow a huge apology. I was somehow not impressed at the Leeds , silly me. He has now introduced me to HIS music. I now understand what the judges and everyone else experienced at that competition. Every note he plays is just perfect. The Schumann Sonata, a new work for me is just out of this world as is his Schubert withe Radu LUPU.
@erickverran653
@erickverran653 10 лет назад
Mendelssohn borrows from the Hammerklavier, third movement.
@erickverran653
@erickverran653 8 лет назад
You're right. The Op. 106 is a boring hash of the Hammerklavier.
@jamaicanpianistcomposer
@jamaicanpianistcomposer 7 лет назад
and i hear allusions to Liszt B minor and Dante Sonatas
@galanis38
@galanis38 7 лет назад
I would say that it's not top Mendelssohn, but not boring if well played. The opening movement makes clear reference to the Hammerklavier right from the outset, and that's why Mendelssohn gave it that opus no. though he had actually written the piece earlier than the opus no. would suggest. The movements after the first one are pure Mendelssohn, nothing to do with the Hammerklavier Sonata.
@StuartSimon
@StuartSimon 7 лет назад
Both Liszt pieces were composed after Mendelssohn's death.
@edwardfunke4023
@edwardfunke4023 6 лет назад
Actually, all the great composers "borrowed" from each other.
@lilly763
@lilly763 14 лет назад
I wish the video didn't skip in a few places, but Perahia plays this amazing piece beautifully. Now if only the third movement weren't so hard...
@BeckCaesar-r8l
@BeckCaesar-r8l 15 дней назад
Thomas George Thompson Matthew Allen Angela
@88alan8800
@88alan8800 13 лет назад
I never get tired of watching this performance
@voraciousreader3341
@voraciousreader3341 11 месяцев назад
While the inclusion of Maestro Perahia’s biography in the description is interesting, I would have much preferred to know where and when this recital took place. His artistry is always astonishing in the best possible sense!
@skylermccloud6230
@skylermccloud6230 10 месяцев назад
This was in Japan
@pianoredux7516
@pianoredux7516 Месяц назад
@@skylermccloud6230 When?? What year? Where?
@aquapianist
@aquapianist Месяц назад
@@pianoredux7516tokyo 1998
@nahai430430
@nahai430430 12 лет назад
It's a great pity that Perahia doesn't authorize some of his live performances officially. They are so good! Better than studio recordings.
@lovepiano6123
@lovepiano6123 7 лет назад
저 이곡으로 콩쿨나가서 1등했는데 아마도 이분 음악을 계속 반복해서들어서 좋은결과나온것같아요~~♡♡
@thekenanski8789
@thekenanski8789 4 года назад
Does he leave some stuff out at 9:43-9:45? In most editions I’ve seen there’s another several bars there, not an immediate deceptive cadence.
@notvee611
@notvee611 4 года назад
you re right, mine is longer.
@aaabbbccc5
@aaabbbccc5 14 лет назад
A great Master!
@gonzoftwable
@gonzoftwable 11 лет назад
This is exactly what one of my profs at the university told us. That is why we had a "Mendelssohn class" where we took a closer look since he is mostly called "not so interesting" because in music literature and history he was always seen as "too flat". But if you really get into it you can often see a much deeper motivation in his songs and pieces.
@yiyiku
@yiyiku 14 лет назад
he is so good in so many different styles and composers. big fan!
@antonellamajorano5348
@antonellamajorano5348 4 года назад
Grande Perahia , sempre molto intenso.
@Kumgll
@Kumgll 12 лет назад
I don't think people are 'sad' when they under-rate Mendelssohn, merely deaf. Odd thing is that his music tends to disturb the workings of my brain, in the same way that the manic Schumann does. Unlike Mozart and Schubert and Rachmaninov .
@AlvinSong2025
@AlvinSong2025 12 лет назад
master piece played by a master :)
@brianbernstein3826
@brianbernstein3826 7 лет назад
my grandfather heard Mendelssohn play this
@mimipie
@mimipie 5 лет назад
Brian Bernstein was it good?
@mimipie
@mimipie 5 лет назад
Brian Bernstein was it good?
@niccolopaganini4268
@niccolopaganini4268 5 лет назад
Commander Mango What kind of question is that?
@mimipie
@mimipie 5 лет назад
Niccolo Paganini a good one
@niccolopaganini4268
@niccolopaganini4268 5 лет назад
@@mimipie How could he know that, if his grandfather lived in the 1820s/30s?
@kokonssp
@kokonssp 2 года назад
wonderful, elegant and polite performance.
@pianoman1857
@pianoman1857 4 года назад
Mendelssohn so much underrated
@antonioorazi7040
@antonioorazi7040 10 лет назад
my son plays this
@mikoliism
@mikoliism 10 лет назад
cool story
@許紫涵-i1u
@許紫涵-i1u 6 лет назад
I play this now It's so interesting
@alexmorollo
@alexmorollo 11 лет назад
Mendelssohn class.....Mannes New School by any chance?
@der_sozenschreckdollfu9928
@der_sozenschreckdollfu9928 7 лет назад
I've already played the first three sides, but then it's getting difficult ;-)
@lanarv
@lanarv 13 лет назад
Thank you very much for the information about Perahia,though I read his biography and almost everything I could find about him on the net. :-) What a REMARKABLE pianist :-) Thanks for the post !
@germancardoso3587
@germancardoso3587 5 лет назад
I DIDN´T KNOW THIS SONATA, IT IS NEVER PLAYED BY GREAT PIANSTS, FIRST TIME I HEAR IT.
@semiraraoofi8739
@semiraraoofi8739 3 года назад
Very civilized i dare say🍁
@srothbardt
@srothbardt 12 лет назад
Thank you for this! I didn't know this piece, but I do now. The 2nd mvt. is very Beethovenian. Wish Perahia would record this with the three Scottish Capriccios. He's great. Thanks
@lanarv
@lanarv 11 лет назад
Ah...so EMOTIONALLY RICH rendition! Rich in EVERYTHING!
@301250
@301250 13 лет назад
He makes the music sings, such God given gifts....sadly, only to the selected few.
@kllabboo
@kllabboo 4 месяца назад
Perahia was also the pianist playing Beethoven’s music for the soundtrack for Immortal Beloved, with George Solti conducting. It performed was in the 1990’s, which must have been after his recuperation from his hand injury. What an amazing pianist!
@kitbuiz
@kitbuiz Год назад
performance is excellent, but the recording quality is terrible. Something buzzes in the background, breaks in the recording - a very poor quality sound.
@상감마마미워요
@상감마마미워요 Год назад
희빈 장씨(1659∼1701) : 조선 19대왕 숙종의 후궁. 본관은 인동(仁同)이다. 역관 장현(張炫)의 종질녀이다. 어머니의 정부(情夫)였던 조사석(趙師錫)과 종친인 동평군 이항(東平君 李杭)의 주선으로 궁녀로 들어가 숙종의 총애를 독차지했다. 1686년(숙종 12) 숙원(淑媛)이 되었다. 1688년 소의(昭儀)로 승진하고 왕자 이윤(李昀: 뒤의 景宗)을 낳았다. 왕은 기뻐하여 세자로 봉하려 했다. 그러나 송시열(宋時烈) 등 당시 정권을 잡고 있던 서인이 지지하지 않으므로 남인들의 원조를 얻어 책봉하려 했다. 이에 서인의 노론·소론은 모두 왕비 민씨(閔氏)가 나이가 많지 않으니 후일을 기다리자고 주장하였다. 숙종은 듣지 않고 1689년 정월에 이윤을 세자로 봉하고, 장소의는 희빈으로 승격했다. 이 때 송시열이 세자로 봉하는 것이 아직 이르다고 상소하였다. 왕은 이미 명호(名號)가 결정된 다음에 이런 의견을 말하는 것은 무슨 일이냐고 진노했다. 이에 남인 이현기(李玄紀)·남치훈(南致薰)·윤빈(尹彬) 등이 송시열의 상소를 논박하며 파직시켜 제주도로 유배하게 하고 다시 사사(賜死)하게 하였다. 그러나 송시열은 중로 정읍으로 이배(移配)되었다가 사약을 받았다. 이 밖에 서인의 영수들도 파직 또는 유배를 면하지 못했다. 반면에 남인의 권대운(權大運)·김덕원(金德遠) 등이 등용되었다. 이 정권의 교체를 기사환국 또는 기사사화라고 한다. 이 해 5월에 민비를 폐하고 장희빈을 왕비로 삼으려 할 때 서인 오두인(吳斗寅)·박태보(朴泰輔) 등 80여 명이 상소하여 이를 반대했다. 그러나 이들은 참혹한 형문을 받게 되니 이후 정국은 남인의 세상이 되었다. 기사환국 후 시간이 흐르면서 숙종은 폐비사건을 후회하게 되었다. 그러던 중 1694년 서인의 김춘택(金春澤)·한중혁(韓重爀) 등이 폐비 복위운동을 꾀하다가 고발되었다. 이 때 남인의 영수요 당시 우의정이었던 민암(閔黯) 등이 이 기회에 반대당 서인을 완전히 제거하려고 김춘택 등 수십 명을 하옥하고 범위를 넓혀 일대 옥사를 일으켰다. 이 때 숙종은 폐비에 대한 반성으로 옥사를 다스리던 민암을 파직하고 사사했으며, 권대운·목내선(睦來善)·김덕원 등을 유배했다. 이어 소론 남구만(南九萬)·박세채(朴世采)·윤지완(尹趾完) 등을 등용하고 장씨를 희빈으로 내렸는데 이것을 갑술옥사라고 한다. 또한, 이미 죽은 송시열·김수항(金壽恒) 등은 복작(復爵)되고 남인은 정계에서 물러나게 되었다. 소론이 들어서고 남인이 물러날 때 장희빈의 오빠 장희재(張希載)가 희빈에게 보낸 서장(書狀) 속에 폐비 민씨에 관련된 문구가 있어 논쟁이 벌어졌다. 여러 사람이 장희재를 죽이자고 했으나 세자에게 화가 미칠까 염려하여 남구만·윤지완 등이 용서하게 했다. 그런데 왕비 민씨가 죽은 다음에, 장희빈이 취선당(就善堂) 서쪽에 신당(神堂)을 설치하고 민비가 죽기를 기도한 일이 발각되었다. 이 일에 관련된 희빈과 장희재는 처형되고 궁인(宮人)·무녀와 그 족당(族黨)도 화를 입었다. 이것을 무고(巫蠱)의 옥(獄)이라고 한다. 이 때 장희빈에 대해 관대한 태도를 취한 남구만·최석정(崔錫鼎)·유상운(柳尙運) 등 소론의 선비들도 몰락하고 다시 노론이 득세하였다. 숙종은 이후 빈(嬪)을 후비(后妃)로 승격하는 일을 없애는 법을 만들었다.
@imankhodaei7062
@imankhodaei7062 4 года назад
I am breathless!
@peyriatdanielle
@peyriatdanielle 2 месяца назад
Très belle interprétation
@yamaho5
@yamaho5 13 лет назад
Yep, I have liked his playing for many years, and still do. Thank you for posting it.
@jbullets2175
@jbullets2175 8 лет назад
really could feel the passion in his playing, bravo!
@houseofbeeswax
@houseofbeeswax 4 года назад
Wonderful! Thank you Maestro!
@Eorzat
@Eorzat 11 лет назад
Indeed, some music historians may argue that by the time he was sixteen Mendelssohn had accomplished more than Mozart by the time he was respectively sixteen, not by the sheer amount of compositions, however, but by the degree of musical innovation in them.
@johannsebastienbach
@johannsebastienbach 5 лет назад
Yes hes is geater than mozart
@haewonryu2680
@haewonryu2680 5 лет назад
0:35 5:15 에러났나?ㅜㅜ
@가나다-z7k
@가나다-z7k 4 года назад
아마? ㅎ
@pdr770
@pdr770 3 года назад
I Think it's Need To Be Slow and Parishful. It's Stupid only Mambing on Piano.
@0609현은정
@0609현은정 8 лет назад
노래좋다
@상감마마미워요
@상감마마미워요 Год назад
나는 희빈 장씨니라 꺄아하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하하
@Arush09
@Arush09 14 лет назад
@normthedoorman - Perrahia just played his ass off and you are gonna point out a missed chord?! Don't be so pompous, I can't stand it when people point out stupid shit like that. However, I agree with the rest of your comment that he is indeed a product of his age. Btw, you made a mistake after typing Rachmaninoff...there should be a comma before 'etc'. Annoying isn't it?
@musicamysticus
@musicamysticus 12 лет назад
A supreme musician whose playing is sui generis.
@jerbiebarb
@jerbiebarb 14 лет назад
@Arush09 It's quite humorous to see people here ranking pianists, without any explanations at all, just empty and egotistical opinion. Unless some of you play near this level of accomplishment, there should be no such comments. You can only 'like' one better than another, at your experience level (which probably has very little to do with pianism), otherwise you make fools of yourselves.
@jerbiebarb
@jerbiebarb 14 лет назад
@acbulgin2 That's a good critique of what I blurted out (within these character constraints), and you must know a good critique is exceedingly rare in RU-vid comments.. I'm emotionally involved in this issue! The idea that someone can't look at a score and perform a work in a new manner, with a new approach, -- with our modern worldview, just gripes me. How do we know what the primitively-minded composer wanted? What did he SEE into the future of music?, were we there?
@jerbiebarb
@jerbiebarb 14 лет назад
@acbulgin2 Yes, I have a foolproof method for ranking pianists. You hear my playing and you know Perahia's playing. You explain who ranks higher and why. But this can't be done at the world class level, except by experienced and nitpicking critics according to their own personal likes and dislikes. What don't you understand?
@todds7
@todds7 14 лет назад
@normthedoorman A friendly variance of opinion: Rach. scuffs up a little from time to time. I just heard his do so today on the Telarc "Window of Time" CD. I honestly feel that Perahia is every bit of Rachmaninoff, certainly of Horowitz. All splendid, and not a one of them quite the talent of Glenn Gould as a player -- none. But we really do split hairs.
@jerbiebarb
@jerbiebarb 14 лет назад
@acbulgin2 Fascinating stuff, isn't it? Are you familiar with the historical development and acceptance of intervals? I'm convinced that so many more people would enjoy serious music if they only were taught the derivations of overtones and intervals from Nature. Simple arithmetic, but it's so pure and direct for explaining our natural affinity for music, from Byrd and JSB to LvB and Brahms, Ravel and even Schoenberg (but Berg then retained the lyrical appeal offered by the harmonic series)
@jerbiebarb
@jerbiebarb 14 лет назад
@acbulgin2 I never mentioned interpretations, because I want to hear all interpretations, no matter how much they deviate from the 'traditional' unsupported thinking about the 'style' of the composer, no matter what the score indicates, and no matter how much they grate upon small-minded listeners.
@paulgreen6921
@paulgreen6921 3 года назад
AH! Mr. Perahia is that “Ultra-zone” piano virtuoso! PWG. (This is a new piece for me).
@jerbiebarb
@jerbiebarb 14 лет назад
He grabbed the notes out of the wider universe - they're not forever his.. He released them to us, we interpreters are the new lions! We've heard (know) so much more than Beethoven et. al! and hopefully you'll trust us to express what they thought about AND so much more, because we fully fathom and respect the extended math of music! We don't stop at Mendelssohn or even Beethoven.
@dvdgrog
@dvdgrog 11 лет назад
Not by true music lovers.
@LEODIMARpianist
@LEODIMARpianist 5 лет назад
Bravissimo
@ZupaDub
@ZupaDub 11 лет назад
.. and thank you also so much for the notes on Murray Perahia, lovely to read he had an auspicious WIN here in Leeds.... all those years ago.... xxxx a current Leeds resident...
@skylermccloud78
@skylermccloud78 7 лет назад
way better then that overrated valentina listsa
@hjhseo1114
@hjhseo1114 6 лет назад
Skyler Mccloud don't rank artists like that. You show some damn appreciation for every artist
@skylermccloud6230
@skylermccloud6230 6 лет назад
Hayden K. Not for ones (lisistsa) that play eith no emotion whats so ever they dont produce music just noise murray on other hand is amazing with emotion so theres no comparison between the teo i used to like valentina until i started learning how to play piano and realized how overrated she is
@otonanoC
@otonanoC 6 лет назад
Perahia is the greatest American pianist alive. So not sure where you're going with this.
@skylermccloud6230
@skylermccloud6230 6 лет назад
@@otonanoC agreed hes amazing his moonlight sonata is the best and he seems to be getting better with age
@noblerkin
@noblerkin 5 лет назад
Skyler McCloud: I'm 65, my lessons began in 1961, and after a great deal of work on Liszt's Second Hungarian Rhapsody, I'm very sure that Lisitsa is quite overrated.
@user-qj9lo3gb1e
@user-qj9lo3gb1e 7 лет назад
presto 굿굿굿ㅜㅠㅠ
@user-qj9lo3gb1e
@user-qj9lo3gb1e 7 лет назад
pal joey 니가더바보
@user-qj9lo3gb1e
@user-qj9lo3gb1e 7 лет назад
pal joey 뭐지이새끼
@obrcht5742
@obrcht5742 Год назад
Nice to hear a musician sensitive to the beauties of Mendelssohn.
@김뇨롱-f8r
@김뇨롱-f8r 7 лет назад
2:07
@kerencanelo8580
@kerencanelo8580 4 года назад
Totally Beethoven
@guszdanovich333
@guszdanovich333 9 лет назад
Heavenly, pristine interpretation. Another 'wow' performance from a musician, not a dazzling showman. He, M Perahia, R Lupu, G Sokolov, A Brendel, A Schiff, A Volodos are the giants, living legends of the piano, Most others, like S Hough, M Uchida, M Pletnev, M Argerich, Emmanuel Ax, D Trifonov, Y Li, Lang Lang, L O Adnes, Y Bronfman, H Grimaud, V Lisitsa, M Pollini, I Pogorelich, E Kissin, N Goerner,, G Ohlsson, F Kempff, make up the elite
@lailaiwdable
@lailaiwdable 8 лет назад
It's a very intriguing comment you have made. Would you please provide some links as evidence to your argument.
@jamaicanpianistcomposer
@jamaicanpianistcomposer 7 лет назад
Not only is it intriguing. I find to be quite accurate as a pianist myself who has delighted in the performance of all of these pianist my entire life! I would like to add to the list though Cuban pianist Jorge Luis Prats
@edoardo8365
@edoardo8365 7 лет назад
Gus Zdanovich You have forgotten Horowitz, is the biggest of the giants
@theshitheads9419
@theshitheads9419 7 лет назад
Edoardo Del Monte and rubinstein
@carloscadenza
@carloscadenza 6 лет назад
I think you mean F Kempf, surely not the truly great W Krmpff?
@georgiyosipov4809
@georgiyosipov4809 2 года назад
Good, but Nikolai Petrov's the best
@Torebordalpiano
@Torebordalpiano 5 лет назад
2:36 Hihi, He thought nobody would notice, but he's actually cheating in the left hand, he plays the same (second) chord inversion in the left hand over and over again (who cares anyway, it's just a big rumble of sound), but the score actaully says to alternate between the second and third inversion, which is harder to coordinate.
@MissSophieBella
@MissSophieBella 14 лет назад
Geez! It's great!!! I'm 14 and I play it currently. Wish me good luck!:))
@rsjmd
@rsjmd Год назад
you should now be about 26...how did it come out? congratulations on choosing this beautiful piece which I am hearing for the first time as are so many of those who have been listening since it was posted and you commented.
@marinette_06
@marinette_06 6 лет назад
juste magnifique
@AlexRichter
@AlexRichter 12 лет назад
disagree. while impressive, Michel-Schub's version almost sounds like a midi.
@FirstGentleman1
@FirstGentleman1 7 лет назад
William Sterndale Bennett versucht den Meister in Worte zu fassen: "Ich kann nicht beschreiben, was ich meine, doch wenn Mendelssohn einen Raum betrat, hielt jeder inne und alles erschien in einem anderen Licht." Er beobachtete, wie selbst Robert Schumann Mendelssohn gegenüber unbewusst eine Haltung stiller Ehrbietung einnahm."
@DolfLoneWolf
@DolfLoneWolf 13 лет назад
Mendelssohn is sadly underrated.
@zinam5795
@zinam5795 Год назад
Not at all! That means, when's playing some great Pianist,you can see more clearly Mendelson's Geniuses!
@SebastienLoong
@SebastienLoong 15 лет назад
There's something definitely scottish about this piece lol.
@mrmonkeybuns
@mrmonkeybuns 13 лет назад
@framaulo wouldn't he still have been Mendelssohn ?
@schlaget
@schlaget 14 лет назад
The second part in insanely good.
@skylermccloud78
@skylermccloud78 6 лет назад
schlaget they both are
@giangra92
@giangra92 14 лет назад
Questo viedo fa schifo! Ci sono un sacco di parti spezzate...
@larchmontmark1
@larchmontmark1 6 лет назад
Excellent, as almost everyone is saying. BUT -- besides that I agree with Ann Singer about the occasional rushing, the first portion of the last movement (i.e. up to the 'double bar') isn't up to his usual standard -- including a couple of places where the left hand briefly gives up, a misreading of the score or maybe memory lapse at 7:13 (clearly not due to yet another tech glitch), and a probable memory lapse at 7:33 (can't rule out tech glitch here but unlikely to be that) -- all unlike his usual self. He makes up for it with a brilliant finishing half of the movement. I did hear him play this 'live,' and it was much better.
@xiaozhouxu1020
@xiaozhouxu1020 6 лет назад
Pretty sure 7:33 is a tech glitch
@larchmontmark1
@larchmontmark1 6 лет назад
.....yes!!! Upon second listen, you're right!
@loboris1995
@loboris1995 13 лет назад
@XxbambambxX we can hear bugs in the mp3,lol
@TheGreatRichter
@TheGreatRichter 13 лет назад
Does anyone know what concert this was from and if it is available on DVD? The writing appears to be Japanese so i am assuming the concert was held in Japan. There are other pieces in this concert also Bach, Beethoven,Chopin, Schubert.
@skylermccloud6230
@skylermccloud6230 6 лет назад
It was part of his japanese concert he also played moonlight sonata here
@skylermccloud6230
@skylermccloud6230 6 лет назад
You can watch the full concert part 1 and part 2 for free here m.bilibili.com/video/av11032463.html
@Fientjelientje
@Fientjelientje 14 лет назад
my friend played this when she was 13 o____O
@francoriva55
@francoriva55 2 года назад
Beautiful mr Perhaia@!!!
@xiaozhouxu1020
@xiaozhouxu1020 6 лет назад
What happened at 0:34?
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