The Serenity in this particular piece is like non other, and the reasolution at the end just makes one feel like there isn't any troublr in this. Thank Susan for Such a beautiful rendition , Recieve Blessing in the yonder.
This is just wonderful , used to hear this piece at the beginning of 1984s Sherlock Holmes 📀 series. Always thought is part of the series track. Looking forward to playing this, Thank you 😊🙏
I just turned 10 and I am playing this piece of music and I was not that confident but when I saw you play the piece I was feeling allot more confident 😉 thanks for all of your AMAZING songs you put on RU-vid 😍😍
I had the G and C peg removed and replaced by a key-peg as it gives my head more freedom to move. It’s not very aesthetic to be honest but it is a lot more comfortable!
@@Dylan_1344 "During her journey Paradis began composing solo piano music as well as pieces for voice and keyboard. The earliest music attributed to her was a set of four sonatas of about 1777, but these are probably the work of Pietro Domenico Paradies, with whom she is often confused (the Toccata in A sometimes ascribed to her is from a sonata by him). Similarly, the famous Sicilienne is spurious, probably the work (after a Weber violin sonata op.10 no.1) of its purported discoverer, Samuel Dushkin." (Angermüller, Rudolph, Hidemi Matsushita, and Ron Rabin. "Paradis [Paradies], Maria Theresia." Grove Music Online. 2001; Accessed 4 Feb. 2022)
Every RU-vid video I found presents the piece as Paradis, but it is most likely by Samuel Dushkin (who died in 1976). We have to start calling it the Sicilienne by Dushkin so that we don't contribute to the misinformation.