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Schubert: Piano Trio No.2 in Eb, D.929 (Trio Wanderer) 

Ashish Xiangyi Kumar
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Schumann hailed Schubert’s 9th Symphony for its “heavenly length”, but that phrase could be just as appropriately used to describe this trio, a work of miraculous diversity whose vast swells and deflations have a boundlessness about them. The ingenuity on display here is extraordinary - the implausible modulations throughout (Mvt 1’s first theme is in Eb, the second in B min), the way a tiny motif briefly wedged between the first 2 themes of Mvt 1 expands into an ocean of sound, the gorgeous melody of Mvt 2, the baffling intricacy of Mvt 4’s sonata-rondo form.
Choosing a performance of this work to showcase was annoyingly difficult; loads of recordings were just weirdly lopsided - Schiff/Perenyi is too piano-ey, while the recent Mutter/Trifonov is far, far too violin-centric. This recording is close to perfect - lyrical without gilding this work’s undercurrents of pain, confiding in the slow sections, gripping in the climaxes, deft in those many wonderful modulations. And when the music really should be left to speak for itself - Mvt 2, for instance - it’s left just as it is, perfect.
MVT I, Allegro
EXPOSITION
00:00 - Theme 1 (T1), Eb
00:17 - Motif (a), in the cello. Note semitone descent/ rise pattern (Bb-B-Bb, C-B-C, and so on)
00:53 - T2, B min(!). Developed as soon as it is introduced.
01:51 - (a)
02:10 - (a) blooms into T3, in Bb. Rhythmic/textural change at 2:38 = T3*
02:58 - T4/Codetta, beginning with hemiola & incorporating (a).
DEVELOPMENT
03:31 - Transition
03:41 - T3*, in B. At 3:51, (a) introduced in bass & developed. This structure (T3*, then Motif 1) is repeated twice in F# & Db, in a long-drawn sequence replete with gorgeous modulations.
06:27 - Long dominant preparation
RECAPITULATION
07:20 - T1
08:16 - T2, E min
09:34 - T3, Eb
10:22 - T4
10:48 - Extended coda. (a) returns with a vengeance at 10:54. At 11:11, T2 returns. At 11:54 T1 enters, displaced into rising figure, before T2’s rhythm closes.
MVT II, Andante con moto
12:15 - A section. Melody with some lovely modal colour. At 13:04, in its second strain, a falling motif (b) is introduced (itself from the falling Gs at 12:58).
14:11 - B section. Melody introduced in violin, developing (b). At 15:19, climax of this section is reached.
16:02 - A section. Melody in piano, counterpoint in violin/cello. At 16:59, melody developed further in Ab min and C# min. At 17:30, outburst in F# min. (b) erupts over the Neapolitan at 17:44, which becomes dominant of C.
18:02 - B section. At 19:14, an exclamation, cycling through A, F, and C twice.
20:50 - A section. Coda. Melody introduced momentarily in the major, before returning to minor. In unison, violin/cello state a modified version of the melody a final time, before small cadenza in piano closes.
MVT III, Scherzo (Allegro moderato)
22:01 - Scherzo. Canonic imitation between piano & strings. Magical modulations throughout. (Ab to E, 22:44. Eb to C, 23:13, etc.)
24:53 - Trio
27:17 - Scherzo
MVT IV, Allegro moderato
EXPOSITION
28:48 - A section. Eb.
30:06 - B section. C min.
30:53 - C section. Eb. Lovely modulations at 31:18.
31:39 - B section, preceded by diminished 7th chord. Later presented in the major.
31:10 - A section, vigorously developed. The dramatic descending broken chords in unison recall (b) from Mvt 2 (19:14).
DEVELOPMENT
32:47 - Shift to B min, recalling Mvt 1. Continues in vein of the previous section, developing the A theme. At 33:38, a beautiful syncopated hemiola arpeggio is introduced, under which there suddenly returns
33:42 - the main theme from Mvt 2. Transcendent.
34:27 - B theme developed. At 34:43, the texture/rhythm is transformed: piano plays triplet counterpoint, cello and violin sustain theme in canon. Shortly after, B theme returns to B min & original texture, before surprising burst of F major at 35:24, exploiting ambiguity of preceding diminished 7th. At 35:35, return to 6/8, with dramatic/Brahmsian statement of B theme in Eb min follow by sudden shift to B min.
36:05 - Motif from A theme introduced, immediately followed by its inversion (which also recalls the marchlike texture of Mvt 2). Shifts into Eb min.
RECAPITULATION
36:32 - A section.
37:57 - B section. F min.
38:28 - C section.
39:15 - B section. F min, then major.
39:46 - A section. At 40:11 things appear to be wrapping up. Instead, we get
CODA
40:25 - Sudden shift to E min, where the A theme is developed & moves (through an ingenious set of modulations) into Eb min.
41:01 - The syncopated hemiola broken chords return, with the melody from Mvt 2 slipping in beneath as before. At 41:33, a burst of joy, as we move into the major. The only happy statements of the Mvt 2 theme are heard, suddenly celebratory and generous, in unison in the strings. They reenter twice at successively higher points - a Bb and Eb - before the strings take up the hemiola accompaniment from the piano. A truncated statement of A theme closes.

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27 май 2024

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Комментарии : 164   
@AshishXiangyiKumar
@AshishXiangyiKumar 5 лет назад
33:42 (12:22) Someone asked me (on one of the Beethoven sonata videos, I think) how to listen for structure, and I vaguely recall saying that was a really good question but also a difficult one to answer. Nonetheless, that bit I highlighted above seems a perfect illustration of what happens when structure really works - not as an academic thing or formal nicety, but when it really hits you as an emotional, experienced force. So I thought this would be a good opportunity to say something brief about structure. I think the basic way to understand how structure works is to note there are really two kinds of pleasure - pleasure _in_ something, and pleasure _at_ something. In-pleasures are essentially purely sensory - they feel good without intermediation (food, sex, a nice musical theme). At-pleasures are not really sensory per se - they’re what you feel when you hear that something good has happened in the world, for example. It not your _senses_ that are directly making you happy - it’s your mind doing the work. And structure in music is basically a way of dragging a whole bunch of sensory in-pleasures into an arrangement which lets them generate at-pleasure too. There is in-pleasure at 33:42, for sure - as a pure sensory experience it’s a really good bit of music. But what makes that moment great is the at-pleasure the structure provides, the pleasure of knowing that this is a beautiful theme you have already heard, now coming back in a radically different context - a lyric moment in a movement that, frankly, insists on opening with a rather trivial theme - and with a drastically different accompaniment. In a word, and simplifying a bit: surprise. But that’s only one of the many ways structure can provide at-pleasure. Often it *is* through surprise (the best sonata for this is, I think, Liszt’s B minor, because that’s a large part of how thematic transformation works - realising suddenly that something familiar has returned in a new guise, or that something apparently new has been heard before). But it can be though the exact _opposite_ of surprise, because you _anticipate_ what is to come. The pleasure you get from listening to the long buildup to an EDM bass drop and the dominant preparation at the end of the development section in a sonata really should be the same thing, and it’s all because you’re waiting for a big musical whizzbang or somesuch to come crashing through. It’s your brain doing the work - and I don’t mean this is an intellectual process at all, just that your mind generates happiness because of something it *isn’t* currently experiencing in a sensory way. Variation form is pretty interesting in this respect - it seems even more dependent on at-pleasure than complex forms like the sonata (think of how a really nice variation can sound banal in isolation: no-one would care that you can play Happy Birthday in the minor unless they already knew happy birthday, and the video at bit.ly/1PcGtCC wouldn’t be fun if you couldn’t recognise any theme) but the at-pleasure is neither from surprise or anticipation, but something even more abstract - just the mental act of linking one musical idea (a theme) with another (the variation). So in the context of the original question, which I think was about sonata form, the way I think of a sonata is that it is a bit of music talking to itself, building itself up through this scaffold of at-pleasures by satisfying/evading/modifying your expectations - and in a really good sonata (such as this trio) you get the sense you are lucky enough to eavesdrop.
@cinimod621
@cinimod621 5 лет назад
Thank you for your great work. I really enjoy to read what you write.
@renan1033zinho
@renan1033zinho 5 лет назад
really good clarification !
@pijlenboog23
@pijlenboog23 5 лет назад
Do you teach music somewhere? Or are you a musician? Can't believe you'd be an amateur
@msurocks1973
@msurocks1973 5 лет назад
Agree. But unlike the Lisztian/Wagnerian camp (you ref. The Liszt Sonata above), Schubert was more about the “truth of musical expression” and not in the sense of Liszt that he sought to steer the compositional process along rational lines in furtherance of his own desire and aim. Hence I’m more on the of the Schumann campaign of romanticism. Alas! Don’t fret-I don’t claim Lisztian compositions as vulgar as andras Schiff would maintain.
@Xelvonar
@Xelvonar 5 лет назад
One way I have described it to other is that music of the Classical and Romantic period is about setting up harmonic and motivic expectations and then either fulfilling them or postponing (or sometimes subverting) the fulfillment of those expectations.
@curtissitruc6894
@curtissitruc6894 5 лет назад
Came 50% for the piece and 150% for the great analysis♥️
@user-gr5hi4um2u
@user-gr5hi4um2u 5 лет назад
Kind of "romantic" to be Beethoven (just kidding, I absolutely agree)
@easeandcomposure657
@easeandcomposure657 5 лет назад
If anyone's interested: there's a wonderful lecture about this trio by Bruce Adolphe from his Inside Chamber Music series. He talks about how the second movement was inspired by a Swedish song, how it's connected to Beethovens death and the Eroica and a lot of other interesting things. It's up on RU-vid, highly recommended!
@patr8394
@patr8394 2 года назад
It really is a terrific introduction to the work.
@NewMusicWeekly
@NewMusicWeekly Год назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-NrFU8wWm19o.html
@AshishXiangyiKumar
@AshishXiangyiKumar 5 лет назад
00:00 - Mvt 1, Allegro 12:15 - Mvt 2, Andante con moto 22:01 - Mvt 3, Scherzo 28:48 - Mvt 4, Allegro moderato
@sanderspoelstra8072
@sanderspoelstra8072 5 лет назад
Ashish, can you _please_ do an upload of the D958 sonata? I would love to read your commentary on the piece.
@winsomelau6188
@winsomelau6188 5 лет назад
One of Schubert's last works. Obessed with his works especially in the late period
@jojomj
@jojomj Год назад
God, I absolutely adore Schubert. You don't understand what I would go through to hear what Schubert would have written if he hadn't passed so young.
@blackcat0000
@blackcat0000 Год назад
Yeees, me too right now, I'm realising I love Schubert
@AP47735
@AP47735 3 года назад
That modulation from b minor to eb minor at 36:14 is amazing
@francescodepaoli2655
@francescodepaoli2655 3 года назад
Barry Lyndon. Piano trio n. 2. Kubrick. Schubert. Geniuses and masterpieces...
@MrMrgogo46
@MrMrgogo46 5 лет назад
33:49 return of the theme that emerged in the mvmt 2, th'ats why schubert is a genius. give me goosebumps every time. I don't know really why. But schubert is telling us a story that he only can understand
@markhughes7927
@markhughes7927 4 года назад
Ghost-story!
@luisdeorueta9748
@luisdeorueta9748 4 года назад
He seems to remember one of his impromptus in the first movement...
@liachechel
@liachechel 3 года назад
@far ema it was Mozart's idea first, not Beethoven. For example, his piano concerto no.12. The main theme from the first movement reappears in the second movement in a different way.
@thevanguard4462
@thevanguard4462 2 года назад
@@liachechel this technique appeared way before Mozart
@bennygotthard6641
@bennygotthard6641 2 года назад
That kind of retrospection is extremely well composed by Schubert in this case
@OneConcertante
@OneConcertante 5 лет назад
Ashish: Uploads chamber music Me: Nice
@marichristian1072
@marichristian1072 5 лет назад
I'm fascinated by the sheer number of bowing techniques ( and pizzicato) Schubert employs for violin and cello.A trio for virtuosi only. Magnificent recording. Thank you.
@jeromeweingart5596
@jeromeweingart5596 4 года назад
This a superb, elegant performance, beautifully balanced, and very well recorded. I was unfamiliar with this ensemble. Thanks for introducing me to them. "The Trio Wanderer is a French piano trio made up of Vincent Coq piano, Jean-Marc Phillips-Varjabédian violin and Raphaël Pidoux cello. Trio Wanderer’s members graduated from the Conservatoire de Paris." Wikipedia
@ESilva-gw9ig
@ESilva-gw9ig 3 года назад
A true masterpiece wonderfully played by these superb musicians. Schubert is one of the greatest ever.
@rosch982
@rosch982 4 года назад
I love how Schubert modulates from one key to another! I really like 32:47 where he finishes a section in B-flat Major and then goes on in B Minor. He is a genius!!
@trutwijd
@trutwijd 4 года назад
No one modulates like Schubert, effortless. I was learning a piece that I found on this channel that went from B-minor (2 sharps) to friggin A-flat minor (7 flats!) and was looking at it wondering... huh how'd that happen?? check it out: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-DG_ftHbEGps.html
@sophiaDrossopoulou
@sophiaDrossopoulou 5 лет назад
My gamily and I heard the Trio Wandered yesterday, and we were blown away by this trio. We bought their CD, and listened to it another three times at home, but I was also looking for an analysis. Thank you, Ashish!
@siddheshgooptu
@siddheshgooptu 5 лет назад
Like everyone else in the comment section, I came running as soon as I saw the notification that said you'd uploaded a Schubert piano trio! Coupled with your great analysis of the piece and your comment about listening for structure, this video is definitely going into my favourites!
@KaniaWijayanti
@KaniaWijayanti 5 лет назад
Schubert will always deserve a special place in my heart and I couldn't agree more with you about Schiff's and Perenyi's rendition. As much as I repect and love the two masters, this rendition is far superior and brings justice to Schubert's heavenly qualities.
@dibaldgyfm9933
@dibaldgyfm9933 3 года назад
The Trio Wanderer is a French piano trio made up of Vincent Coq piano, Jean-Marc Phillips-Varjabédian (since 1995, replacing Guillaume Sutre) violin and Raphaël Pidoux cello. Trio Wanderer’s members were all graduated from the Conservatoire de Paris.
@javert3344
@javert3344 11 месяцев назад
00:00 - Mvt 1, Allegro 12:15 - Mvt 2, Andante con moto 22:01 - Mvt 3, Scherzo 28:48 - Mvt 4, Allegro moderat
@notsomething7561
@notsomething7561 Год назад
I just discovered this channel today searching for recordings, but oh my goodness I have found a GEM in these inciteful analyses!
@philip.stigaard
@philip.stigaard 2 года назад
21:15 this is the best coda ever
@TimondeNood
@TimondeNood 5 лет назад
Thank you! Always have loved the profoundness of the second movement! Thank you Schubert.
@enriquesanchez2001
@enriquesanchez2001 5 лет назад
I am so glad you cited this movement. To me it is grand beyond proportions! Funny - the first time I heard it was in Stanley Kubrick's BARRY LYNDON. The undercurrents of passion and pathos runs deep into my heart. ♥
@stack72
@stack72 5 лет назад
It's really nice to see that you're posting stuff regularly again! I really like this one.
@marg1661
@marg1661 5 лет назад
I love those descriptions so much
@madeleinebaur539
@madeleinebaur539 5 лет назад
Thank you for posting this wonderful and genius piece!
@msurocks1973
@msurocks1973 5 лет назад
Oh yes. Very nice. This with Mendelssohn’s 1st trio and Schumann’s 1st and 3rd are my favorite. Final movement is wonderful mix of previously introduced themes and intertwining them new beauties. Love the section at 11:08 left he repeats later as well. Thanks for making it available. Nice excuse to listen to this masterpiece of the chamber music repertoire once again!
@DavidPNeff
@DavidPNeff 2 года назад
This is my favorite piano trio. I love watching the score and reading your in depth notes. I'm trying to learn this piece and the notes are hugely helpful.
@pf_jun
@pf_jun 5 лет назад
Impeccable... Thank you for uploading!
@emilynightingale7758
@emilynightingale7758 5 лет назад
thank you so much for the analysis and time examples in the description. As I am studying this piece as part of my A-level music course, this is really helpful. Thank you.
@jessicachiu5953
@jessicachiu5953 2 года назад
4:55 sounds really like his impromptu op.90 no.4~it's so beautiful~~♡
@ShaunakDesaiPiano
@ShaunakDesaiPiano Год назад
A combination of no 4 and no 2 too perhaps?
@pichuliux2
@pichuliux2 5 лет назад
Dear Mr. Xiangyi Kumar , thank you very much for posting this masterpiece, this trio is a miracle!
@moforibalait
@moforibalait 5 лет назад
Thank you for the complete post
@marcap1000
@marcap1000 4 года назад
"But Schubert’s always twilit genius, death- touched, he liked above all to seek where he lifts to the loftiest ex- pression a certain only half-defined but inescapable destiny of solitude...." as in this incomparable Andante con moto.... (Thomas Mann's Doktor Faustus, chap. IX). Thank you so much for sharing
@user-yn6on5rm7g
@user-yn6on5rm7g 8 месяцев назад
amazing exceptional accuracy of work with sound at all stages - from composition to performance, recording and analysis!
@georgenorris2657
@georgenorris2657 3 года назад
That finale is beyond startling!
@cw9555
@cw9555 Год назад
This is a beautiful piece by Schubert
@cesarleiva2443
@cesarleiva2443 3 года назад
First movement is breathtaking!!
@limesquared
@limesquared 5 лет назад
Twelve minutes in-yes! Wonderful!
@Cubanbearnyc
@Cubanbearnyc 3 года назад
....What a mind that of Schubert !!!
@12321dantheman
@12321dantheman 11 месяцев назад
heard the theme around 12:17 in the film barry lyndon, didn't realise it gets developed so beautifully beyond that
@ytyt3922
@ytyt3922 5 лет назад
Love your channel. I would love for you to post the Mendelssohn D minor piano trio. Would be curious to read your take on it. And thank you for the Schubert score!
@user-pp1vj1lt1i
@user-pp1vj1lt1i 4 года назад
This video made my day
@namsonangthai5234
@namsonangthai5234 2 года назад
Absolutely love section 12:17
@newcjon
@newcjon 3 года назад
Jeez this is IMMENSE!
@davidrehak3539
@davidrehak3539 2 года назад
Franz Schubert:2.Esz-dúr Zongoratrió D.929 1.Allegro 00:00 2.Andante con moto 12:16 3.Scherzando: Allegro moderato 22:01 4.Allegro moderato 28:48 Trio Wanderer
@doublesharp4325
@doublesharp4325 4 года назад
Beautiful performance. I only wish it had the even better original uncut version of the finale, with the contrapuntal combination of the slow movement theme with the repeated-notes motif. :)
@georgenorris2657
@georgenorris2657 5 лет назад
Best piano trio playing I have ever heard I think. Beautiful playing and such a beautiful piece!
@aperson6934
@aperson6934 4 года назад
Listen to the Beaux Arts Trio. You'll love it!
@tguiot
@tguiot 5 лет назад
I found Trio Wanderer to be a good reference in most of the piano trio litterature. Excellent choice for this Schubert!
@aperson6934
@aperson6934 4 года назад
I agree. I'd also highly recommend the Beaux Arts Trio. My piano teacher studied with the lead pianist Menahem Pressler and introduced me to them. I can't listen to piano trios the same anymore.
@tejasnair3399
@tejasnair3399 3 года назад
Love the reference to the minuet from Haydn’s Symphony No. 23 in the Scherzo movement.
@johnchessant3012
@johnchessant3012 5 лет назад
Very nice!
@user-ru8vy1uz7c
@user-ru8vy1uz7c 3 года назад
Bravo bravo bravo genial music super
@nicholasjeremy3960
@nicholasjeremy3960 Год назад
I just realized that the arpeggio accompaniment in the return of the theme of mvt 2 in mvt 4 (33:42) is actually taken from 31:13 in the C section!
@KadirPeker
@KadirPeker 3 года назад
Wonderfully annotated.
@LukeZX4
@LukeZX4 5 лет назад
I have such a massive sweet spot for the piano trio genre as a whole. Maybe because it's simply due to the piano, or how generally the violin doesn't get TOO much emphasis, because I cannot say the same for string quartets. Even compositions that are decidedly mediocre but happen to be a piano trio get so many repeated listenings out of me. I adore this trio and Trio Wanderer, so thank you for giving your thoughts on it. Also, a small mistake: the MVT IV should begin at 28:50, rather than 28:24.
@samchua6758
@samchua6758 5 лет назад
Hey do you have any recommendations for piano trio pieces
@ytyt3922
@ytyt3922 5 лет назад
The violin obviously doesn’t get as much emphasis here because it is a PIANO trio.
@adammiller6299
@adammiller6299 5 лет назад
@@samchua6758 I'm enjoying all of Beethoven's piano trios. I love the Archduke and the Ghost Trio, in particular. Here's a link. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-C_lD8UhHAEA.html
@isakhungnes4416
@isakhungnes4416 5 лет назад
I know this is none of my business or anything, but I have followed your channel a couple of years now, and the question starts to bug me: What is your profession?
@Brian013100
@Brian013100 5 лет назад
He has a law degree from Cambridge, and I think he's based in Singapore. (He's mentioned this in previous comments.)
@bhastro9959
@bhastro9959 2 года назад
@@Brian013100 - it seems he is actually a professional classical-music RU-vidr. And probably the best.
@pavelvishnevsky6315
@pavelvishnevsky6315 2 года назад
After listening to this, I was struck by your comment: "Schiff/Perenyi is too piano-ey, while the recent Mutter/Trifonov is far, far too violin-centric. This recording is close to perfect" Yes, I agree.
@PushkaryovVsevolod
@PushkaryovVsevolod Год назад
Гениально!
@nicholasjeremy3960
@nicholasjeremy3960 2 года назад
3:54 reminds me of his impromptu op. 90 no. 4
@kelvinluk27
@kelvinluk27 5 лет назад
What, Ashish uploading a trio? What next, a Bartok String Quartet? (P.S. are you gonna do any late Scriabin or Haydn?)
@Superphilipp
@Superphilipp 5 лет назад
+1 for late Skriabin. It's some of the most mesmerizing music that I know.
@wodzimierzwosimieta2758
@wodzimierzwosimieta2758 4 года назад
3:53 - 4th impromptu op.90?
@womaner1004
@womaner1004 3 года назад
I think so too
@klop4228
@klop4228 5 лет назад
First time I've heard this piece. What strikes me is how balanced everything sounds - I don't know if that's Schubert or the recording. I'm not a fan of the Piano Trio as an ensemble because of how inherently unbalanced it is, pitting an instrument with a full range against a high and low one (where the low one can also take middle register by sacrificing the lower one). Oddly, even a duet where one side is a piano works better. The other thing I really like about this piece is that I didn't notice any of Schubert's distinctive timewasting, which is a good thing. Strikes me as odd that Schumann liked how long the Great C Major is, given that (at least in the first movement) a lot of that is achieved by timewasting. Don't get me wrong - I love the symphony - but when you repeat the same figure over and over with miniscule changes to the chord it starts to sound a bit stuck. If I have any complaints about the piece itself, it's that I didn't realised how long the exposition was in the last movement, and it felt like it could have ended much sooner. Just my first impression - will probably change on my next listening. If I have any complaints about the performance, then it's the lack of repeat in the first movement (almost invariably the repeat will help, because it sets up the rule of three with the recapitulation, and also because it gives the audience the material twice, so they can learn the music that's about to be developed - especially important on a first listening), and the pizzicato. Overall, loved it on a first listening, and will likely listen again.
@tam8321
@tam8321 Год назад
12:22 thème 1 14:12 thème 2 15:19 passage rude 17:25 passage affolé 12:15 début 12:55 cloches
@steffen5121
@steffen5121 5 лет назад
Merry 1. Advent folks!
@bennygotthard6641
@bennygotthard6641 2 года назад
Schubert at its finest.
@fatimacanche9081
@fatimacanche9081 3 года назад
Que buen trio
@ivankuligovskii5046
@ivankuligovskii5046 5 лет назад
13:04 Hello from G.Pergolesi 😁
@catherinejones9396
@catherinejones9396 2 года назад
Such a pretty work. piano trios played as well as this are delightful listening. This trio is very good-who are they? I have been wondering after hearing them with one of the Mendelssohn trios. Thank you for the download.
@shechren
@shechren Год назад
this is the best piano trio ever. why was you fell down early, Franz? if you'd skill about counterpoint, probably i think you could be over your idol, Beethoven.
@michielvaneechoutte3685
@michielvaneechoutte3685 Год назад
RU-vid's adds shoud be banned from youtube for trying to push CRAP amidsth such divine melodies!
@mikesimpson3207
@mikesimpson3207 3 года назад
Maybe it's just how the dice have fallen as far as what recordings I've been exposed to, but I'm confused as to why nobody seems to repeat the expositions in Schubert. I would have assumed he left his repeats out himself if the score wasn't in front of me. I guess it might be because his first movements tend to skew a little long, but the same could be said of Beethoven, and I hardly ever hear a Beethoven recording without repeats. This performance is great, but the balance on the first movement is so back-heavy, what with the long development and fairly substantial coda, which would normally be offset by the relatively long exposition, but here (and in other recordings of other pieces, as I've said) the exposition is essentially half the length. Also, the repeat of the exposition has an important function in the form, hammering all the important bits into the listener's head so that they can be easily recognized and compared to their reappearance in the second half. Why short-change Schubert like that, when most recordings of Haydn/Mozart/Beethoven/etc. repeat the exposition?
@gervaisfrykman266
@gervaisfrykman266 3 года назад
I whip it back to the start at the double bar.
@wantondon9630
@wantondon9630 Год назад
BOOM, BABY !
@seansmith6255
@seansmith6255 2 года назад
Oh presentable liberty
@mathieuwilson2985
@mathieuwilson2985 Год назад
I do not listen to a lot of classical music... and its weird that Stan ( by Eminem ) brought me here. It is now my fourth time in a row listening to this mix. I could say ( with reserve ) that this is the definition of musical perfection.
@stevemsteven6103
@stevemsteven6103 4 года назад
2:38 I'm sure I'm not the only one who thinks that this sounds like Ave Maria.
@wodzimierzwosimieta2758
@wodzimierzwosimieta2758 4 года назад
Thanks, now I can't unhear it
@tobiaszeller4323
@tobiaszeller4323 2 месяца назад
3:42 op 90 impromtus, no 4, in a-flat major?
@chagok_s2
@chagok_s2 4 года назад
헐 2악장 저 유명한 멜로디가 이 곡이었다니,,,,
@user-hk7py1ej9o
@user-hk7py1ej9o Год назад
12:22 Berry lyndon!
@seansmith6255
@seansmith6255 Год назад
Such an underated film One of kubricks bests
@isaacvaldez7216
@isaacvaldez7216 2 года назад
12min 10 sec is my favorite part
@iggyrock8327
@iggyrock8327 5 лет назад
✌️👏
@steffen5121
@steffen5121 5 лет назад
What is your favourite composer, Ashish?
@aaronpitts3077
@aaronpitts3077 4 года назад
I found this through the #47shift ☘️🍀☘️
@star_0406
@star_0406 4 года назад
00:00 00:00 12:15 12:15 22:01 22:01 28:48 28:48
@vishnuhalikere2151
@vishnuhalikere2151 5 лет назад
17:26 sounds so dvorak-like to me in the melody don't know why it just does
@DavidArdittiComposer
@DavidArdittiComposer 4 года назад
It does. It’s like all of Dvorak comes out of this theme. Technically what it is is a repeated exchanging of minor for its relative major in root position chords - a thing that does not occur much in music before this time. It’s a Dvorak signature.
@Farahmand1010
@Farahmand1010 2 года назад
Œuvre immortelle
@tango_doggy
@tango_doggy 3 месяца назад
Here from Presentable Liberty
@tranminhtu8339
@tranminhtu8339 2 года назад
30:04
@bvbwv3
@bvbwv3 2 года назад
May I ask who the members are of this heavenly group?
@ShaunakDesaiPiano
@ShaunakDesaiPiano Год назад
2:38 would it be appropriate to say that here, the semitone descent/ascent reveals itself to be a quote of Ave Maria?
@crobatchoppurple8728
@crobatchoppurple8728 3 года назад
Has the second movement theme appeared elsewhere? Sounds awfully familiar
@paraline1532
@paraline1532 2 года назад
in the film the mechanic I think
@tango_doggy
@tango_doggy 2 месяца назад
Credits of the game Presentable Liberty
@enter3eun800
@enter3eun800 6 месяцев назад
3:45 부터 너무 아름답다
@Roh0io
@Roh0io 5 лет назад
Ashish I've been meaning to ask you something. Are you from India? Cuz Ashish kumar is a typical indian name
@samchua6758
@samchua6758 5 лет назад
Yes but xiangyi sounds Singaporean maybe
@AshishXiangyiKumar
@AshishXiangyiKumar 5 лет назад
Singapore.
@declamatory
@declamatory 5 лет назад
Uh, oh! They missed the repeat at 3:32!
@nicb4589
@nicb4589 5 лет назад
Lyle Waller It’s conventional to omit repeats in some circumstances. Schubert is known for long his compositions, so perhaps the recording ensemble decided to spare us the time.
@declamatory
@declamatory 5 лет назад
@@nicb4589- Actually, it's NOT conventional to skip repeats except on D.S.s and D.C.s. If the group had intended to "spare" us some time, perhaps it should have not have even bothered recording the piece.
@Quotenwagnerianer
@Quotenwagnerianer 5 лет назад
Amen Lyle! I think leaving out repeats, especially in sonata form movements is the worst possible offence one can commit to the structure of a piece.
@trutwijd
@trutwijd 4 года назад
A little bird dies every time a Schubert repeat is skipped. ;) 42 minutes tho, can't say I blame em.
@Sam-gx2ti
@Sam-gx2ti Год назад
@@declamatory No, Nic is right. Hans von Bülow once told a student working on a Beethoven piece that composers wrote repeats into the music the way that people write "Faithfully/Sincerely yours" at the end of a letter, and in his book After the Golden Age, Kenneth Hamilton explores the romantic practise of omitting repeats in well-known pieces as a performance decision. Many if not most musicians of the romantic era and before would probably scoff at the idea that one shouldn't bother playing a piece at all if they're not to be following every mark on the score.
@laputa6464
@laputa6464 3 года назад
Who are the performers?
@nathanielkroeger9769
@nathanielkroeger9769 5 лет назад
The chord progression at 00:55 reminds me of the opening bars of movement 3 of Schubert's Sonata 18 ( 26:55 in this video ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-bX_IjA3x_rw.html )
@fatimacanche9081
@fatimacanche9081 3 года назад
Linda musica
@kindaoddish1073
@kindaoddish1073 2 года назад
15:55
@annnlonggg
@annnlonggg 5 лет назад
The five-note motive of T3* in Mvt. 1 kind of re-iterates 'Ave Maria'.
@dragonlazer0649
@dragonlazer0649 2 года назад
12:15
@Pakkens_Backyard
@Pakkens_Backyard 2 года назад
What is this piano difficulty D: There are some really awkward stuff in there DDD:
@selforche2381
@selforche2381 3 года назад
한국인은 없는것인가? 2악장 완전좋은데ㅠ
@Schleiermacher1000
@Schleiermacher1000 2 года назад
Sorry, I'm missing a few repetitions.
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