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Sergei Rachmaninoff ‒ Piano Concerto No.1, Op.1 

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Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873 - 1943), Piano Concerto No. 1 in F-sharp minor, Op. 1 (1891, rev. 1917)
Performed by Simon Trpceski, pianist, with Vasily Petrenko conducting the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, recorded in 2010.
00:00 - No. 1: Vivace
12:20 - No. 2: Andante
18:55 - No. 3: Allegro vivace
Rachmaninov was not quite eighteen when he began work on his First Piano Concerto. At the time he still had a year of Conservatoire study ahead of him, during which his tasks would be to compose his first opera and his first symphony, these being Arensky’s conditions for accelerated graduation. The symphony would in fact be delayed several years, but Tchaikovsky’s support for the resulting opera (Aleko) led to publishing agreements and a rapid opening-up of professional opportunities.
The first documented mention of the Concerto seems to be on 26 March 1891, in a letter to another of his numerous cousins, and its completion followed on 6 July, after a month of near-solitude at Ivanovka. Rachmaninov compensated for his ongoing lassitude, or so he claimed, by composing the second and third movements in a two-and-a-half day burst, working from five o’clock in the morning until eight in the evening. The score carried a dedication to Ziloti.
Rachmaninov performed the first movement at a student concert on 17 March 1892, in the Small Room of the Hall of Nobility. On that occasion the student orchestra was conducted by Vasily Safonov-by then Director of the Conservatoire-who was used to making corrections and cuts in his students’ work. This time, however, Safonov found himself bowing to the will of the fledgling composer. It is not entirely clear when, or even if, Rachmaninov played the work in its entirety (though others certainly did so) before he shelved it for revision. It was to be September 1917 before he finally got round to that task. Rachmaninov set the finishing date to the revised score on 10 November, just weeks after the storming of the Winter Palace and the enthronement of the Bolshevik regime, whose baleful effects he would flee six weeks later (though he had been laying plans even before the October Revolution), never to return to Russia. He first performed the new work on 29 January 1919 in New York with the Russian Symphony Society Orchestra, conducted by Modest Altschuler.
Rachmaninov was an inveterate rewriter. But he took the red pen to his First Piano Concerto more radically than to any other of his works (the case of the Fourth Concerto runs it close). The central tutti of the first movement and the first half of the cadenza were newly composed, and the finale was just as extensively recast. Among the excised material was much that openly declared a debt to Grieg’s Piano Concerto.
That model can still be detected behind the opening orchestral fanfare and pianistic flourishes. This is an amplified version of Grieg’s straightforward tonics and dominants, Nordic candour traded in for Slavonic melodrama. The orchestra then launches into one of Rachmaninov’s signature swooning lyrical themes, immediately picked up by the piano. Still shadowing the Grieg Concerto, the piano continues with darting figurations, before giving way to another orchestral song-theme. The largely sequentially constructed development section with rhapsodic breaks, the piano-led reprise, and the hypertrophic cadenza all fall into the pattern established by Grieg. But the devil is in the detail, and especially in its revised version this movement asserts its individuality by means of its ecstatic waywardness.
One of Grieg’s closing slow movement ideas supplies Rachmaninov with the opening of his comparatively modest Andante. This is marked by the piano’s improvisatory dreaminess, the quintessence of Romantic rhapsody: healing, as it were, all past longings and allowing the hero of the Concerto-the music’s personality, mediated by the soloist, with which we are invited to identify-to shake off the fetters of the past. Rachmaninov’s instinct for decorative passagework and for inspired harmonic deflections and balancing returns shines through. Now only the final cadences remind us of the music’s Griegian paternity.
Concerto finales are by tradition brilliant, physically exhilarating affairs, which is one reason why the symphonic scherzo is usually dispensable. This finale is no different. But perhaps compensating for the fact that the opening ideas are flashy and rather empty, it is the lyrical second subject that brings the movement into focus. Once again it is Rachmaninov’s genius for variation and renewal that keeps the structure alive, rather than any deeper-lying compositional strategies. And by 1917, when he was putting the Concerto into its definitive shape, he was unrivalled in his ability to ratchet up audience excitement over the last pages.

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18 май 2024

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Комментарии : 466   
@christianvennemann9008
@christianvennemann9008 5 лет назад
I know this is overshadowed by No. 2 and No. 3, but this is amazing and criminally underrated.
@sinsagoodmansbrother
@sinsagoodmansbrother 4 года назад
Magnificent Comment...
@uscjd2004
@uscjd2004 4 года назад
It’s every bit as good. The cadenza is an absolute firecracker. And to think he wrote the business end of it when he was 18. What a man.
@nimrodshefer3649
@nimrodshefer3649 4 года назад
@@uscjd2004 its the second version of the concerto written way after he is18.....
@EagerEthan22
@EagerEthan22 4 года назад
​@pyrotechnic5254 I don't recall anyone asking. How about instead of diminishing others opinions in favor for your own you go and listen to your boring classics.
@HJKelley47
@HJKelley47 4 года назад
@pyrotechnic5254 : OMG. Rachmaninov & Prokofiev are at the top of my list. I've been a Rach fan for about 40+ yrs. However, each to his own (LOL).
@ruchirrawat8804
@ruchirrawat8804 2 года назад
how an 18 year old even had the ideas for composing this masterpiece is beyond me.
@TheMelopeus
@TheMelopeus Год назад
This is not the original version from when he was 18. It's very different than the original by the musicality and cool ideas are the same for the most part. That's proof it can't be learned. It's from his being.
@null8295
@null8295 Год назад
he already had his own mature style in opus 1
@Ziad3195
@Ziad3195 Год назад
Honestly modern life has so much distractions that you can't really shine in your interests anymore and especially not this young. This was quite common back then - mastering your craft this. young. I hate modernity so much everyday more than the last.
@handsomeX
@handsomeX Год назад
@@Ziad3195 Great point
@f.p.2010
@f.p.2010 11 месяцев назад
​@@Ziad3195 ain't no way you seriously believe this
@sebastianbaynes9452
@sebastianbaynes9452 4 года назад
I don’t know what it is about these Rach concertos but none of them feel like pieces of music in the traditional sense; rather journeys within his mind told through the medium of music. It’s as if with each one you can forget that it’s a composition and just experience the raw emotion he creates
@theshmoob
@theshmoob 3 года назад
i know! the other day my brother, who is not into classical music, told me he stumbled on the 2nd concerto on youtube and he said he just sat there and listened to the whole thing! he said he couldn't explain it, it was just so good, it sucked me in!
@Flame-rp6yq
@Flame-rp6yq 3 года назад
a world without art and music is no world at all I look for music to feel the power and emotion of the work
@Bevsworld04
@Bevsworld04 3 года назад
@@thai-pc4jy my mom calls rachmaninoff "crapmaninoff"... its all just random notes to her... so there's that
@plushistoriae
@plushistoriae 2 года назад
@@Bevsworld04 Thats awful... he's my fav composer.
@plushistoriae
@plushistoriae 2 года назад
Yeah, I agree. Similar to a lot of Berlioz' works, a prime example being symphony fantastique (im sure you know what I mean)
@oceancheung6139
@oceancheung6139 4 года назад
17:35 best moment of the 2nd movement, crystal-like tone, amazing harmony, adding the bright, light running by the flute, like floating in the sky of a wonderland full with imagination. Rachmaninov was truly a genius in both piano and composing
@relaxpoweryt2707
@relaxpoweryt2707 3 года назад
It remainds me kinda Harry Potter
@sebastianbaynes9452
@sebastianbaynes9452 3 года назад
I particularly like this part in this recording as well - those staccato notes after each group really make it I think
@luizg8034
@luizg8034 3 года назад
@@sebastianbaynes9452 I've searched for another pianist who plays it staccato and found none! playing it legato takes away the magic :(
@randomcubing7106
@randomcubing7106 3 года назад
Like anime
@AndrewKierszenbaum
@AndrewKierszenbaum 11 месяцев назад
@@luizg8034Respectfully I disagree! I find it actually more mysterious and airy played legato :)
@Varzmir
@Varzmir 6 лет назад
6:22 gives me chills
@steve1357908642
@steve1357908642 7 лет назад
Oh my god i love the second movement in this concerto, underrated masterpiece
@seonyonghwang
@seonyonghwang 5 лет назад
Absolutely agree.
@JonathanKofi
@JonathanKofi 4 года назад
17:05 to the end of the mov't... just can't get enough of that!!
@theshmoob
@theshmoob 3 года назад
@@JonathanKofi haven't heard the staccatos presented so clearly before! at that section
@randomcubing7106
@randomcubing7106 3 года назад
17:35 THAT FLUTE! Absolutely magnificent!
@donnytello1544
@donnytello1544 2 года назад
It’s my favorite
@PianoturtleX
@PianoturtleX 2 года назад
You are talking about the line that is not in the 2 piano score right?
@christianvennemann9008
@christianvennemann9008 2 года назад
I just realized the low notes at 11:13 are the first three notes to Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C-sharp minor.
@donnytello1544
@donnytello1544 2 года назад
Not the same but close
@jagp135
@jagp135 2 года назад
@@donnytello1544 they're the exact same. A - G# - C#
@donnytello1544
@donnytello1544 2 года назад
@@jagp135 nvmd your right, I just heard it wron g
@samaritan29
@samaritan29 2 года назад
@@jagp135 its not the same harmonic outline tho
@giovannitognato6417
@giovannitognato6417 4 года назад
I feel privileged just for the fact that Rachmaninoff existed, that he composed wonderful masterpieces and that, fortunately, I can listen to them. His way of composing, his music makes me perceive the dimension of infinity that I've always been afraid of. Please, stop doing whatever you're doing and listen to its sea of ​​notes ........ Rachmaninoff is simply immense.
@440ab
@440ab 3 года назад
Ok
@JelaniBell
@JelaniBell 4 года назад
the staccato at 9:23 on the 3 notes before the accented chords...literal perfection
@Twentythousandlps
@Twentythousandlps 5 лет назад
A lot happened in music between 1891 and 1917 and Rachmaninoff's revisions reflect that in much of the harmonic subtlety his musical language had acquired. But the earlier version is truly remarkable coming from an 18-year old.
@korolevpiano7794
@korolevpiano7794 4 года назад
0:00 - Vivace 12:20 - Andante 18:55 - Allegro Vivace
@korolevpiano7794
@korolevpiano7794 Год назад
17:00
@christianvennemann9008
@christianvennemann9008 4 года назад
Ugh, I could listen to that _maestoso_ passage from the 1st movement's cadenza forever. 😍😩
@ban9nas177
@ban9nas177 4 года назад
Christian Vennemann time stamp?
@christianvennemann9008
@christianvennemann9008 4 года назад
@@ban9nas177 The cadenza itself starts at 9:13, and the _maestoso_ passage starts at 11:25.
@OfficialWorldChampion
@OfficialWorldChampion 4 года назад
From now on I will always hear the word maestoso in italics
@christianvennemann9008
@christianvennemann9008 4 года назад
@@OfficialWorldChampion Fun fact: I had been misspelling _maestoso_ without the first s for the longest time.
@austinworkman9967
@austinworkman9967 4 года назад
omg gaspard
@theflipeechestlanjao7754
@theflipeechestlanjao7754 Год назад
Second movement is underrated as hell. It feels so nostalgic and beautiful, it just feels like nature. Imagine being in Germany enjoying the spring, watching nature, such a good feeling
@itsdarksucks
@itsdarksucks 2 года назад
11:10 - 11:50 is one of my favourite moments in any piano concerto. This part of the cadenza is so amazing well written, especially 11:24 with those luscious chords reinstating the theme! Such a badass moment in piano writing, Rachmaninoff's piano cadenzas are works of art 😍
@yekware
@yekware Год назад
Those chords are so... lush
@gameclips5734
@gameclips5734 6 месяцев назад
very basic by his own standards though, bortkiewicz does it better in his piano concerto no1
@onecello9577
@onecello9577 3 года назад
the second movement is an absolute gem, especially the Ravelien Coda... written 30 years before Ravel's Concerto in G!
@JoelSalazarM
@JoelSalazarM 11 месяцев назад
This version is from 14 years before Ravel's concerto. Your point still stands 💁‍♂
@justelynnnjoelle
@justelynnnjoelle 3 года назад
Just think, Rachmaninoff composed this when he was 18...
@clarapanas6657
@clarapanas6657 3 года назад
Really? How Do u know?
@justelynnnjoelle
@justelynnnjoelle 3 года назад
@@clarapanas6657 PianoStreet and also through his composer page on Wikipedia
@jf2602
@jf2602 3 года назад
I was playing with mud when I was 18
@justelynnnjoelle
@justelynnnjoelle 3 года назад
@@jf2602 right?
@Eorzat
@Eorzat 3 года назад
He actually revised it in 1917. So, yes, he first composed it at age 18, but a lot of the parts that you like may have come from the revised version after he gained much more compositional experience.
@tarikeld11
@tarikeld11 3 года назад
19:06 How do you even compose something like this??
@dz6374
@dz6374 3 года назад
Ikr lol. I guess it’s alternating between C#7, Am and Fm?
@pianoforte17xx48
@pianoforte17xx48 3 года назад
This reminded me of the red riding hood at the end of the middle section
@CalebRen
@CalebRen 3 года назад
@@dz6374 The root of the chord is moving down in major 3rds to disrupt the tonality. Rachmaninoff did Coltrane changes first!
@dz6374
@dz6374 3 года назад
@@CalebRen Looool yes he did!
@onecello9577
@onecello9577 3 года назад
​@@CalebRen well, I think the elusiveness of the meter is actually more destabilising than the chord progression, which is really a highly ornamented Neapolitan sixth progression (the G natural being the inverted seventh); it feels like a a 4/4 bar with an extra quaver (if one hears the triplets as regular quavers, which is what the heavy accent on the second note implies)... then he follows that with an even more confusing 12/8, omg
@vishnuhalikere2151
@vishnuhalikere2151 4 года назад
22:52 to the end of that whole section is just some of the gorgeous writing I've ever heard
@estebanabad2795
@estebanabad2795 3 года назад
Scriabinesque
@AE0N777
@AE0N777 3 года назад
@@estebanabad2795 nice name
@danielzaytsev820
@danielzaytsev820 3 года назад
I just wanted to say that the second movement is sublime
@jorgefraile218
@jorgefraile218 3 года назад
The moment from 6:08 to 7:16 takes me to another dimension!
@Dodecatone
@Dodecatone Год назад
The modulation beginning at 15:35 is heart-stoppingly gorgeous.
@timothyalan34
@timothyalan34 5 лет назад
I can't stop listening to 21:06-21:41.
@vishnuhalikere2151
@vishnuhalikere2151 5 лет назад
I can’t stop listening to 22:52
@spakkakiwi1
@spakkakiwi1 5 лет назад
My favourite of his 4. That violin solo in the 1st movement before the big cadenza is just magical, esp in that key
@eylulhorozoglu3459
@eylulhorozoglu3459 4 года назад
3:28 is just wonderful ah
@ianbd77
@ianbd77 2 года назад
Love how the 2nd movement was interpreted here. This is such a wonderful concerto and among my favourites to put me in a good mood.
@NanaKwame96
@NanaKwame96 Год назад
Rachmaninoff is incredible. This is personally my favorite piano concerto by him. The second movement is magical.
@melon4611
@melon4611 4 месяца назад
0:05 Intro 0:38 Theme 1 2:41 Theme 2 3:29 Development 5:22 False recap 6:48 Recap - Theme 1 8:26 Recap - Theme 2 8:59 Cadenza 11:52 Coda 12:23 Theme 1 13:39 Theme 2 15:04 Transition 15:35 Theme 1 17:05 Theme 2 18:57 A - Intro 19:14 A - Theme 1 20:06 A - Theme 2 21:05 B - Theme 1 22:11 B - Theme 2 23:02 B - Theme 1 23:58 A - Intro 24:16 A - Theme 1 25:10 A - Theme 2 26:11 Coda
@sean-kb4wr
@sean-kb4wr 3 месяца назад
Ty
@polskapianist
@polskapianist 7 лет назад
I for one like this concerto a lot.ought to be played more often.
@stalkerstomper3304
@stalkerstomper3304 5 лет назад
21:02 what a beautiful surprise of glorious tempo and melodic contrast. Incredible. The entire section of this part is beyond words how hauntingly soulful this melody is sung by the piano.
@tomekkobialka
@tomekkobialka 8 лет назад
The Andante from 17:05 is simply glorious! Thank you for uploading. :)
@Medtnaculuss
@Medtnaculuss 8 лет назад
+tomekkobialka I completely agree. I've been listening to the whole 2nd movement over and over. In fact this is probably my favourite concerto by him. That moment is my favourite too all the way to the end with those delightful cascading chords.
@DaveYostCom
@DaveYostCom 6 лет назад
staccato + legato! yes! masterful, the whole thing.
@tisho91
@tisho91 5 лет назад
I adore it! And the 1890 version is also amazing! But it's rare to find it nowadays unfortunately :(
@ttvlazyupton064
@ttvlazyupton064 5 лет назад
22.13 even more sublime
@LincolnPng
@LincolnPng 3 года назад
Reviving this comment, but yes. I've heard numerous recordings and no one seems to quite nail the semi-staccato like he does. The phrasing is absolutely phenomenal.
@fidelcastro9112
@fidelcastro9112 5 лет назад
Genius Rach chords at 17:59 !
@TheMrcolumbo
@TheMrcolumbo 7 лет назад
I can’t bear the beauty of 22:39.
@danielperkins3905
@danielperkins3905 6 лет назад
I'm pretty sure rach added that section later in life (he revised this concerto in the 30s) because those chord progressions that come towards the end of that phrase sound very late-rach to me
@johnoh537
@johnoh537 5 лет назад
How does anyone conceive something so beautiful?
@vishnuhalikere2151
@vishnuhalikere2151 5 лет назад
I personally can’t bear the beauty of 22:52 Edit: the chord right on 23:04 also just hits me for some reason and i love it
@samanthacasey8018
@samanthacasey8018 5 лет назад
Mr.Columbo ..I inhale at this point it's so beautiful
@mountchoco8174
@mountchoco8174 5 лет назад
For a sec i thot you said you couldnt hear the beauty.
@SCRIABINIST
@SCRIABINIST 2 года назад
8:36 is probably one of the most beautiful moments I've heard from Rach, same with 25:40
@pedrofuster9161
@pedrofuster9161 2 года назад
I love that too! And Scriabin also
@carmenridiche7984
@carmenridiche7984 Год назад
This concert is a beautiful one . So pitty for underrated.
@internetuser_03
@internetuser_03 Год назад
and the entire second movement esp starting from 17:04
@jsphotos
@jsphotos 4 года назад
1st - - 00:39 01:11 01:00 01:54 02:42 03:06 05:22 *06:50 07:39 *08:26 *10:30 *11:24 2nd - - *13:39 15:05 *16:39 3rd - - 20:03 21:06 *22:12 *23:07 25:14
@JoshuavanderVeen
@JoshuavanderVeen 4 года назад
In other words, the whole thing. lol :) yeah me too
@user-mj5rh4gc8c
@user-mj5rh4gc8c 3 года назад
2番より後に作られているが、実によく練られた構成。ⅰ10:40~憧れと切なさのこもった密集和音の連打のカデンツァ、ⅱ 13:54 媚薬のようなメロディ。16:47 宝石のちりばめられた、もはやこの世のものとも思われぬ三度と半音階のパッセージの組み合わせの間を縫ってオケがしたたり落ちる。アシュケナージがここをもっと蠱惑的に弾いている。Ⅲ22:30ここも艶やかな艶っぽいメロディ。ゲルバーが「ラフマニノフは麻薬だ」と言っていたのを思い出す。25:25人生肯定的なアグレッシブなオケのテーマの中をピアノが上から下まで縦横に技巧の限りを尽くして駆け巡り、最後は天上に昇天するような勢いである。
@canman5060
@canman5060 Год назад
This is my best love of all the Rachmaninoff Piano Concertos.
@georgiepentch
@georgiepentch 2 года назад
17:05 obsessed with this theme
@mehanaellispiano
@mehanaellispiano 2 года назад
Absolutely!
@damienheemskerk
@damienheemskerk 4 года назад
The second movement's opening makes me really think of the prelude to Tristan and Isolde
@mangomerkel2005
@mangomerkel2005 2 года назад
10:30 What a beautiful part!
@wkehl2011
@wkehl2011 6 лет назад
Rachmaninoff was a genius!
@yekware
@yekware Год назад
He was beyond a genius
@carl-gunnarhillefors7612
@carl-gunnarhillefors7612 Год назад
HE WAS A MUSICAL GENIUS AND MASTER OF RYTHM I N HIS MUSICAL WORKS AS OF ALL HIS PIANOCONCERTOS! SHUT YOUR EYES AND LISTEN TO HIS MASTER-PIECES!
@thomasalempijevic7592
@thomasalempijevic7592 3 года назад
RACHMANINOV's piano concerti are my favorites ! The first is so underrated though... it feels even more modern than the following ones, i wholeheartedly love this one
@Bevsworld04
@Bevsworld04 3 года назад
That might be because this one was revised in 1917 (which is what you're hearing now). The original was mich more dissonant and clearly want written by the Rach we know today
@codythedoggo7671
@codythedoggo7671 Год назад
How can you not love Rachmaninoff
@APotatoWT
@APotatoWT 2 года назад
Rachmanioff is a genius at composing concerto
@lukebarlow6274
@lukebarlow6274 4 года назад
The intro of the 2nd movement gives me goosebumps! So beautiful!
@LukeFaulkner
@LukeFaulkner 2 года назад
Does anyone know what's happened to Medtnaculus? I love these score videos but noticed it's been 5 years since the last one...
@themoonfleesthroughclouds
@themoonfleesthroughclouds 2 года назад
I think he said he just moved on from making them or something
@DanielKRui
@DanielKRui 3 года назад
Having just come from the 1st (1891) version, I somewhat miss the dissonant (F sharp augmented over B octave or C sharp octave) climactic low chords at the end (as well as the cool octave rising "scales" of the piano over those chords)...although I suppose this ending is more "light" and "fluffy" to match the overall lighter and sparkly tone of the revision.
@markus7894
@markus7894 6 лет назад
This is the perfect recording! What a surprise, I was not aware of! Thank you so much!
@randomcubing7106
@randomcubing7106 3 года назад
14:28 My god I feel like being with You up there
@whll4751
@whll4751 4 года назад
... and to join in with the magic moment times... 6.07 to 6.45 for me... had an 'ooo' moment in that section. I have heard this before but now really paying attention to it so may find other 'ooo' moments as I explore. Rachmaninoff is breathtaking :)
@maisey2363
@maisey2363 4 года назад
This is the first time I heard this and WOW! What a great intro / piece
@flyingpenandpaper6119
@flyingpenandpaper6119 4 года назад
This piece is based on the Grieg A Minor Piano Concerto which is why at times it sounds very similar. Rachmaninoff and his fellow students at the conservatoire were told to use a pre-existing concerto as a framework on which to build.
@estebanabad2795
@estebanabad2795 3 года назад
@@flyingpenandpaper6119 what about Scriabin's piano concerto?
@flyingpenandpaper6119
@flyingpenandpaper6119 3 года назад
@@estebanabad2795 That was written after this concerto?
@estebanabad2795
@estebanabad2795 3 года назад
Now I see that it was written 5 years later, in 1896
@flyingpenandpaper6119
@flyingpenandpaper6119 3 года назад
@@estebanabad2795 They are both very good concertos though :-)
@benevolence18
@benevolence18 3 года назад
17:04 oh how beautiful music!😌
@dillpickle9313
@dillpickle9313 6 лет назад
A difficult and wonderful composition by a favorite composer .. gifted as he was, still am astonished he composed most of this masterpiece before his twentieth birthday . . and that he could play it as well ..am aware of comparisons to compositions such as the Grieg and others in reviews written at the time...agreed he may have used other compositions for a template to weave his own tapestry, that said, it still seems he weaved in much of his own original inspired style .. not to mention the difficulty of the piano writing . . just reminding everyone that in addition to being one of my very favorite composers, he had a reputation as one of the most formidable pianists of his day ..
@wkehl2011
@wkehl2011 6 лет назад
Rachmaninoff praised Tchaikovsky for the mark he left as a composer, yet I find Rachmaninoff's own music so much deeper :-)
@donnytello1544
@donnytello1544 3 года назад
it was said that greigs concerto was rachs favorite concerto, and he deeply dedicated his first concerto on greigs
@leongunnyli6059
@leongunnyli6059 3 года назад
I always like major scale on sorrow and this 2nd movement is a successful example
@user-vn2xg5mn7i
@user-vn2xg5mn7i 6 лет назад
1:26 I like it!!!!
@kieraasahi8240
@kieraasahi8240 Год назад
The second movement is gorgeous
@KMusic_13
@KMusic_13 8 лет назад
Thank you for putting this together! Great interpretation.
@barstumkaya2581
@barstumkaya2581 3 месяца назад
I LOVE the first movements cadenza. Especially from 10:31 to the end 11:51. And second/third movements are even better than i remembered, what an amazing concerto
@barackobama953
@barackobama953 4 года назад
He was probably one of the only composers to completely develope and mature his style at the age of 18.
@fogonpr
@fogonpr 4 года назад
I know what you are talking about. You think that he made this at age 18, I thought so too. But no, this is actually the last concerto that he wrote. This is inspired by another concerto that he did for an assignment from his composition class. The students needed to do a concerto based of another. He based his on Grieg's only concerto in a minor (it would be important to mention that Grieg based his concerto on Schumann's). Just like Grieg's this one starts with the octaves going down after a short orchestral introduction. The original concerto was lost. Rachmaninoff remembered the concerto and transformed it to what you are hearing now. So he did not do this when he was 18.
@barackobama953
@barackobama953 4 года назад
El Fogon Del Buen Gusto oh. That’s kind of disappointing, but now that I think about it, it does sound very much like Grieg’s Concerto.
@fogonpr
@fogonpr 4 года назад
@@barackobama953 It's not disappointing. Think of it this way, he wrote prelude in c sharp minor when he was 19. Oh yeah, the structure is basically the same from Grieg's concerto. However I'm pretty sure that the inspiration from Grieg is only from the first movement. The other 2 movements are new and not part of the original idea when he was 18.
@AE0N777
@AE0N777 3 года назад
I still think he had developed his style at that age. His original transcript was remarkably advanced for his age.
@jessicakespohl8340
@jessicakespohl8340 3 года назад
Well, Rach revised this, as he was constantly doing; also bear in mind Russia's political unrest for years before he and many others left! A very difficult time we cannot know! I felt like not commenting anymore, but reading first comment of "paeffill", I thought, "What arrogance"! I think that comment didn't even deserve response!
@dqthegreatist
@dqthegreatist 4 года назад
Definitely an underrated masterpiece, I truly love the expressiveness and intimate lyricism! Especially in the second movement! I could not possibly imagine this piece came from the hands of a man in his 20s!
@silzai1
@silzai1 7 лет назад
Fabuloso, gracias por compartir.
@janetbutler6805
@janetbutler6805 2 года назад
6.06 send shivers down my spine
@luden6794
@luden6794 9 месяцев назад
17:35 Wow! It is one of most beautiful thing in history
@shimsham9113
@shimsham9113 3 года назад
Imagine this is your first opus......
@scroogemcduck4376
@scroogemcduck4376 4 года назад
The second part is just a song for the soul
@randommusic2850
@randommusic2850 3 года назад
Slight correction, it is the second movement, not part
@calebhu6383
@calebhu6383 6 лет назад
3:28
@maxmcwhirter5456
@maxmcwhirter5456 Год назад
Fantastic recording, don't know if it's the recording setup itself, or the mixing or the mastering but the balance and dynamics are wonderful
@birdsunion3294
@birdsunion3294 7 лет назад
18:00 LICHOI JAZZ
@alanbash2921
@alanbash2921 2 года назад
Best Recording Ever Of Rachmaninoff #1......( of course with the Composers #1 as well ! ).....
@timofeytereshenko
@timofeytereshenko 4 года назад
Why I did not know about this before .... That`s absolutely insane
@URMUSIC97
@URMUSIC97 4 года назад
Sorry. But this is his best concerto. Beautifully crafted and mature. Gorgeous highs and lows of a beautifully crafted musical rollercoaster!
@olliemartinelli4034
@olliemartinelli4034 3 года назад
I think all 4 are just equally as good as one another. No 1 full of passion and Russian spirit. No 2 is so deep and sad. No 3 is kind've of a glorious battle with the passion and sadness of 1 and 2. No 4 is a mix of the other 3 but with something new added to which is very unlike Rachmaninoff, probably the americanness. So in my opinion all 4 are all ridiculously good.
@Adam-xy4ny
@Adam-xy4ny 4 года назад
2nd Movement: 12:16
@alanbash2921
@alanbash2921 2 года назад
Wonderful Pianist !…… P. S. LOOK at the Photo of Rachmaninoff at the Beginning of this performance....SPECIFICALLY THE LENGTH OF RACHMANINOFF’S THUMB !!!!!…Rachmaninoff was the only Great Pianist in History That Could Stretch 13 White notes with one Hand ( C to A ) !!!!
@pocaudraphael6066
@pocaudraphael6066 3 года назад
9:13 : cadenza
@pocaudraphael6066
@pocaudraphael6066 2 года назад
3:28
@annedunford7638
@annedunford7638 Год назад
I love how Alexander plays this - it is lyrically sublime…
@vincem3748
@vincem3748 5 лет назад
20:47 is the music that plays whenever I complete a level in a video game. Then 20:53 plays at the start of the next level, lol
@ob4161
@ob4161 5 лет назад
Haha I don't play video grd
@ob4161
@ob4161 5 лет назад
Games*
@jorgefraile218
@jorgefraile218 3 года назад
0:37 this is the most beautiful melody I have ever seen, and 1:00 too!
@hadrieneverard8121
@hadrieneverard8121 3 года назад
What about 17:05 ?
@jorgefraile218
@jorgefraile218 3 года назад
@@hadrieneverard8121 Definitely, that too is one of my favourites.
@Bevsworld04
@Bevsworld04 3 года назад
It almost sounds like the theme to a 19th century mad scientist
@tarikeld11
@tarikeld11 3 года назад
2:04 why is the piano part in 6/8 but the orchestra in 2/4?
7 лет назад
Love this...beatiful concerto viva la vida.
@riffraftmusic8669
@riffraftmusic8669 5 лет назад
Just curious if anyone can cite a film noir movie soundtrack which quotes the First Movement main theme (1, 2, b3, 5, b5, b7...). It sounds so familiar, and I'm sure it's been at least paraphrased billions of times, but I can't find anything which gives a movie title attached to it.
@enZ7Zhe
@enZ7Zhe 4 года назад
Just the same thougths
@debipotpie
@debipotpie 7 лет назад
I love how the music is posted in real time!!!!
@estebanabad2795
@estebanabad2795 6 лет назад
This concerto reminds me of scriabin's piano concerto also in f-sharp minor
@flyingpenandpaper6119
@flyingpenandpaper6119 4 года назад
I hear it too and I'm almost certain that this 6:51 is a reference to Scriabin's Op. 2 No. 1 :)
@JoshuavanderVeen
@JoshuavanderVeen 4 года назад
Yeah but this f minor
@spacejohannes
@spacejohannes 7 лет назад
This is a very good recording!
@AaronAlterman
@AaronAlterman 3 года назад
21:10 there's something very Chopin-esque about this bit!
@FnatiCPiano
@FnatiCPiano 2 месяца назад
True!
@faust6241
@faust6241 5 лет назад
Very adequate speed for this concerto
@javierlopez-ry9do
@javierlopez-ry9do 6 лет назад
lo confundí con el de Greig
@MegaCirse
@MegaCirse Год назад
Ecouter Sergei, c'est définitivement abolir le déferlement des bruits et des images du quotidien pour entrouvrir l'espace d'un ailleurs où la contingence et la représentation cèdent la place à l'immatérialité du sensible. La puissance expressive de l'architecture sonore rompt avec toute forme de transcription du réel pour s'attacher à l'expression d'un univers fabuleux où la couleur et le rythme des compositions constituent une expiration qui donne voix à l'exaltation 🤓
@user-jw1vz9mu5w
@user-jw1vz9mu5w 11 месяцев назад
Brilliantly written!! ❤
@MegaCirse
@MegaCirse 11 месяцев назад
@@user-jw1vz9mu5w 🤠
@Bevsworld04
@Bevsworld04 3 года назад
17:00
@zinnian3186
@zinnian3186 4 года назад
25:14-40 is classical meow mix lol
@kenny8644
@kenny8644 3 года назад
Lol
@DerekLowePianist
@DerekLowePianist Год назад
This sounds so much like Grieg's piano concerto!
@joshuaslater7858
@joshuaslater7858 Год назад
nothing like it. Imo.
@erenoz2910
@erenoz2910 4 года назад
3:29 fucking genius
@calebhu6383
@calebhu6383 4 года назад
0:06, 11:25, 15:45, 25:15
@SolvoltDkwebshop
@SolvoltDkwebshop 4 года назад
The most beautiful music
@parislovesrachmaninoff
@parislovesrachmaninoff 7 месяцев назад
This is the BEST recording of this concerto. When I am old and frail this will bring lovely memories of my past.
@randomcubing7106
@randomcubing7106 3 года назад
25:41 What a charm
@789armstrong
@789armstrong 4 года назад
I believe this is Rachmaninoff's greatest work. I've been listening to it since I was 6 yrs old on 78RPM back in the 1950's. One reason its not more popular is because there are so few truly great performances of it, where none of the difficult passages are faked through with half the notes missing. Byron Janis, Valentina Lisitsa, Lugansky and Pletnev are among the few that do it justice.
@onecello9577
@onecello9577 3 года назад
it certainly feels fresh compared to No.2 & 3, but his greatest work?...
@SpaghettiToaster
@SpaghettiToaster 2 года назад
What about Zimerman?
@789armstrong
@789armstrong 2 года назад
@@SpaghettiToaster yes, I bought Zimermans CD many years ago and I love his 2nd Concerto but to me Pletnev eclipses everyone else on the 1st Concerto ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-kiCSdraoQmM.html
@789armstrong
@789armstrong 2 года назад
@@onecello9577 its strictly a matter of taste and mood. I love Olga Kerns #3 as well as Bronfman and find it a toss up as to which is best or favorite Concerto. I recently discovered Matsuev's spellbinding performance of the 2nd which is quite overwhelming. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-LQanRa1lUSQ.html
@annedunford7638
@annedunford7638 Год назад
Sasha just began playing it this year
@mr.p5446
@mr.p5446 Год назад
First movement excellent. Second and third a little bumpy in terms of lining. On the third , the connections are even weaker. That’s why I love n.3. That is no concerto more beautiful and complete that was ever written for piano than Rach 3
@NFStopsnuf
@NFStopsnuf 4 года назад
I feel as if this concerto has greater ideas than his second and third concertos, yet what makes this one less popular is the presence of somewhat awkward writing/orchestration especially in the final movement.
@pianodan1608
@pianodan1608 8 месяцев назад
too underrated!
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