Could you imagine being famous for your music over two HUNDRED years after your death? I mean,obviously there are many people that hold a better record,but still...
This concerto 24 has always inspired me to stay alive in the thougest years in my life. It is also the music who brings me insperation to get the guts to write about that time in a story or novel. I know not many people would do that. But that is my own choice.
I often wonder what Mozart was thinking of, composing such a demanding, concentrated, violent and unforgiving concerto for the Viennese public. And Mozart struggled with the composition of this concerto like no other. It's a concerto written as chamber music combined with the power of a symphony, and it's one of the greatest achievements in the artistic history of Western culture. Every note is the product of the most staggering genius.
@BebesitaRubiaRapera Two years ago I found out. Trust me, I cried all night. Google Robert Newman AND Mozart and read. There is a lot out there that seriously questions his ability. The music industry created Mozart and the 'scholars' keep the myth up. . . Crazy ? Find out. Keep an open mind, because Newman is not dumb, or a crazy nut. Thanks my friend. PM me if you want.
@BebesitaRubiaRapera please don't feed the troll. it's probably robert newman you're interacting with. there is no reading that has to be done regarding the greatness of mozart. all that is required is functioning ears.
Lyrics: Lick my ass nicely, lick it nice and clean, nice and clean, lick my ass. That's a greasy desire, nicely buttered, like the licking of roast meat, my daily activity. Three will lick more than two, come on, just try it, and lick, lick, lick. Everybody lick his own ass himself.
@FriendlyCroock It's a fortepiano, a different instrument from the one that eventually evolved into the modern concert grand piano. In fact, if I remember correctly, for most of his cycle Bilson used a modern copy of Mozart's own Walter fortepiano that the composer himsef used throughout his years in Vienna.
What a wonderful concerto. It is sad for me to admit my own lack of talent, tried playing violin and sucked at it. I guess some of us are meant to just enjoy listening to wonderful music :)
Malcolm Bilsons recordings of mozarts concertos are my favorites.His playing is superb and the use of period instruments really helps you to get an idea to what Mozart heard. Also notice that this recording is not tuned to 440 tuning.Its around 1/2 below that,which is EXACTLY what Mozart would've heard! Yes,what we hear as a "B "today,Mozart and his contemporaries heard as a C!just think,every composition of Mozarts as we hear it today would've sounded a 1/2 step sharp to him!
genius is a relative term, and its not for us to judge anybody, especially ourselves. mozart was a pathological optimist... with the best attitude and work ethic you can do anything.
wow you jus pop off at the keyboad n type anything huh. you should look up the word relative. and uh pathological optimist?oh did you know him or is that something your assuming based on other things or are you just attempting to sound semi intelligent. well you have 626 in ur name so u must be the mozart info king
dont know what 626 has to do with mozart.. its my birthday
musicologists know from letters mozart wrote and from accounts of his friends that he was pathological optimist. but dont take my word for it, do your own research.
In the vast landscape of historical intellects, If ever there was a genius, Mozart was. I must say, however, that I am not clear on just what a genius is. Leonardo? Einstein? They were geniuses, it can be said. They may merely roam the trails of, sip from the streams of, and gaze in wonder at the peak of the mountain called Mozart.
comicrelief- I don't agree. Einstein's, (if you're referring to Albert , not Alfred Einstein, who was a fan of Mozart and a musicologist) achievements are also extraordinary, and why do you compare Mozart to Einstein when the realms they conquered were ENTIRELY different? Incidently, Einstein did love Mozart, and said he would rather die than to be unable to listen to Mozart, his music is so pure that it should have existed since the universe was created etc.
That is an interesting point, though their 'realms' maybe are not entirely different, and/or maybe the acts of their 'conquering' them were not, and so on. It has been something of an ongoing question, it seems. Admittedly I could not answer objectively; it is my personal view, if I had to offer one. --- Anyway, my remark was kind of poetic, wasn't it?; and yes, i referred to Albert the physicist, though Alfred the writer may well have been a genius for all I know.
comic4relief- certainly, you shouldn't judge the greatness of Einstein without actually knowing his life, and contributions to physics completely. Why don't you spend time praising Mozart's music rather than doing this "risky" stuff? Just like how composers like Mozart were imbued with talent, the field of physics requires someone with IQ 190 rather than than 10 people with IQ 180. Only Geniuses understand Einstein's contributions completely.
OK, I guess that's not fair. I do know something of his work, though, granted, probably not as much as you seem to. He vindicated a welling notion in the world that classical physics needed a breath of fresh air. He painted a beautiful visualization of the universe that definitely could have stood repainting, and inspired others to do the same. Probably most youngsters today don't understand that they live in a post-Einstien world. Maybe you and I are comparing apples and oranges though.
Actually, many a video has a comment, or a series of comments, in which I try to share knowledge, and hold the music in the highest esteem. You would not find many of them in Favorites, mainly because usually, it seems, I comment on something I have disagreement with, or criticism of..., and those tend not to be in Favorites. Anyway, I typically offer a response, and lend an ear to further response, rejoinder, etc, rather than spouting angrily at the other person.
I don't intend to compare oranges and apples. I'm only saying we shouldn't do things like comparing Einstein to Mozart. It's pointless and never gets into a logical conclusion.
Maybe we're just misunderstanding each other. I have to admit I find it all rather mystifying: It seems that classical music, or let's say the refinement of the classical harmony, and form and so on, would have come about anyway, with or without Mozart. He was rather unique, extraordinary in many ways, interspersed throughout.
Composers and scholars, and so on, who aim to divert from classical and focus on taking a fork in the road toward twelve-tone and such, still can find pleasure in Mozart. Even they must recognize the place of Mozart and his music pals in the overall musical landscape-- fork in the road or no.
Actually I am aware of that, thanks. My perhaps too loose, perhaps too spirited, terminology was, if i recall, in the context of some comments which seem not to be here now. Elias was seeming worrisome over the apparent lack of enthusiasm for listening to an entire concerto rather than impatiently jumping to something else after only the first movement. I hope to assure other listeners that at least trying to take in the entire work is worth one's time.
Grazie! The tempo is a bit slow to me (Gardiner's Mozart switches between the best and...meh.. for me :P) But the balance in the orchestra between strings, winds and piano is absolutely wonderful.
Nobody even looks at my vids period or even comments. I posted the rigoletto sparafucile scene with Talvela and nobody watches it yet i posted the red hot chilli peppers under the bridge (dont look for it, it got removed by youtube for copyright infringement) and it got 1000 views.
You guys do know there are multiple parts to my videos right? Always the first part gets many views and then each successive video less and less views...100 viewers for part 1 and 13 for part 3?
I have the same with my videos. Guess that comes from people just hearing part of it to get an impression. And if they comment, they mostly do it on the 1st movement.
Hi, many thanks :-). For those interested in Mozart, I have composed several piano sonatas in Mozarts style. I´ve uploaded one of them, but could upload more. It´s somewhat sad that I can compose like Mozart, and practically nobody seems to be interested in it...
Yep, that is very common among users who upload parts of a whole, be it concerto, symphony, movie, or whatever. I don't understand why... When you start listening to a piece, you can't stop until you have listened to the whole.. especially when it is Mozart, right? :D
Could you imagine being famous for your music over two HUNDRED years after your death? I mean,obviously there are many people that hold a better record,but still...
stephenG559 1 month ago
This is the worst rendition of this piece I have heard.
TA152H01 2 months ago
@TA152H01 Which is the best?
1984robert 1 month ago
This has been flagged as spam show
is there another piano concerto when mozart repeats the bit at 6:32 - 6:34 but with the piano answering? I know I've heard it some place else
weyrz 3 months ago
Why does it end so abruptly at the end :(
AlphaKiloFive 4 months ago
@AlphaKiloFive
It's part one of four. It's supposed to transfer fluently.
Surtak 3 months ago in playlist Surtak's favourites
@AlphaKiloFive this is part 1 of 4
TheSittingArchitect 1 month ago in playlist Favorite videos
This is AMAZING!!!
6dragonslayer6 4 months ago
Comment removed
SuperMegaPeanut 5 months ago
This concerto 24 has always inspired me to stay alive in the thougest years in my life. It is also the music who brings me insperation to get the guts to write about that time in a story or novel. I know not many people would do that. But that is my own choice.
whitevader007 6 months ago
I have written my first Piano sonata,,if anybody likes to listen search for Dan B M Stomberg Piano sonata
Im glad to play for you,
dnabiologic 6 months ago
C'est rafraîchissant d'écouter aussi ce beau concerto avec des instruments avec facture à l'ancienne. Belle interprétation.
Enad700 8 months ago
classic music...ahhhhhH!
mrsherifa 9 months ago
I often wonder what Mozart was thinking of, composing such a demanding, concentrated, violent and unforgiving concerto for the Viennese public. And Mozart struggled with the composition of this concerto like no other. It's a concerto written as chamber music combined with the power of a symphony, and it's one of the greatest achievements in the artistic history of Western culture. Every note is the product of the most staggering genius.
The real mystery is how on earth he did it.
Paracelsus72 9 months ago 6
@Paracelsus72 he did not. Mozart is a lie.
Mozartmostly 6 months ago
@Mozartmostly What? Why you said that Mozart is a lie? Answer me, please.
BebesitaRubiaRapera 5 months ago
@BebesitaRubiaRapera Two years ago I found out. Trust me, I cried all night. Google Robert Newman AND Mozart and read. There is a lot out there that seriously questions his ability. The music industry created Mozart and the 'scholars' keep the myth up. . . Crazy ? Find out. Keep an open mind, because Newman is not dumb, or a crazy nut. Thanks my friend. PM me if you want.
Mozartmostly 5 months ago
Comment removed
devilxhlywood 5 months ago in playlist Mozart
@BebesitaRubiaRapera please don't feed the troll. it's probably robert newman you're interacting with. there is no reading that has to be done regarding the greatness of mozart. all that is required is functioning ears.
devilxhlywood 5 months ago in playlist Mozart 5
This has been flagged as spam show
The11246 9 months ago
Yay, 100th like. :-)
Sakkura1 10 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
@Sakkura1 Yay, 2nd dislike. :-)
yitzchak13 9 months ago
Man, he's got a cool looking nose!!! Looks like mine! And the hairline to boot! Sweet, lavender lollipops batman lol
paullecoure76 10 months ago
this is the best piano concerto ever written in history!
btyremanable 11 months ago 5
Salieri disliked it twice.
Sage80 11 months ago 5
@Sage80 LOL
dnine14 10 months ago
what type of piano is that?
FriendlyCroock 1 year ago
@FriendlyCroock It's a fortepiano, a different instrument from the one that eventually evolved into the modern concert grand piano. In fact, if I remember correctly, for most of his cycle Bilson used a modern copy of Mozart's own Walter fortepiano that the composer himsef used throughout his years in Vienna.
Paracelsus72 9 months ago
Wow.
HappyThoughts66 1 year ago
is that a piano or a harp? bravo mozart!
devilxhlywood 1 year ago
@devilxhlywood It's a fortepiano actually
Vantheman91 1 year ago
@Vantheman91
i meant that the piano in this movement is reminiscent of a harp being strung, at least to my ear :]
devilxhlywood 1 year ago
true music i'ld like it million times if i have to
grief28 1 year ago
Elias try to upload In "hd" or whatever it lets your videos exceed 10 min cap.
gundown22 1 year ago
This is my favorite precisely because of what emotion in conjures, I imagine this as his most tempestuous concerto. Like a Thunder Storm out at sea.
NihilTico 1 year ago
La parte 5:59 6:09 parece un poema a la primavera.
stephenykevin 1 year ago
Who said that Mozart writes "lite" music. This has the power and pathos of Beethoven, who undoubtedly learned from this concerto.
iamalittlespy 1 year ago
Comment removed
iamalittlespy 1 year ago
OMG... this Orquesta isn´t in 440Hz... its in 441 XD!! jajajaja
erickalk 1 year ago
Beethoven said to Cramer after a performance of K. 491 : "we shall never
be able to do anything like that." and I think he's right, bravo Mozart!
celebrei 1 year ago 3
she get's subs because her videos are impecable in sound. this concerto is very FUCKING SUBLIME!!!
Mozartmostly 1 year ago
so much emotions ! More than 20 piano concerto ! Brilliant music
Karolekkarolek100 2 years ago
mozarts birthday was yesterday.. Jan 27, 1756 ... happy 254 mozart
dunngar 2 years ago 30
What a wonderful concerto. It is sad for me to admit my own lack of talent, tried playing violin and sucked at it. I guess some of us are meant to just enjoy listening to wonderful music :)
PaulinaColombia 2 years ago 5
how long did you try playing for though? you can't give it up to easy...
thefru 1 year ago
Malcolm Bilsons recordings of mozarts concertos are my favorites.His playing is superb and the use of period instruments really helps you to get an idea to what Mozart heard. Also notice that this recording is not tuned to 440 tuning.Its around 1/2 below that,which is EXACTLY what Mozart would've heard! Yes,what we hear as a "B "today,Mozart and his contemporaries heard as a C!just think,every composition of Mozarts as we hear it today would've sounded a 1/2 step sharp to him!
mrbrianmccarthy 2 years ago 3
BEETHOVEN'S FAVOURITE MOZART
chopinandliszt 2 years ago 3
genius is a relative term, and its not for us to judge anybody, especially ourselves. mozart was a pathological optimist... with the best attitude and work ethic you can do anything.
valeo626 2 years ago
wow you jus pop off at the keyboad n type anything huh. you should look up the word relative. and uh pathological optimist?oh did you know him or is that something your assuming based on other things or are you just attempting to sound semi intelligent. well you have 626 in ur name so u must be the mozart info king
jimmyti9cer 2 years ago
dont know what 626 has to do with mozart.. its my birthday
musicologists know from letters mozart wrote and from accounts of his friends that he was pathological optimist. but dont take my word for it, do your own research.
btw, from Merriam-Webster:
Main Entry: 2relative
3 : not absolute or independent : comparative
valeo626 2 years ago
Cool story, bro.
paulatreides123 2 years ago 3
Listening to this makes me want to kill someone.
rewquiopfdsahjkl 2 years ago
What makes you say that. How do you mean?
comic4relief 2 years ago
By the way, there is a transcription of this piece for solo piano. You can download it from imslp.
chopinandliszt 2 years ago
YES! My favorite Mozart piano concerto. Marvelous.
gdbalck 2 years ago 18
Breathtaking, Mozart was a geaunius.
SonofDostojevskij 2 years ago 8
In the vast landscape of historical intellects, If ever there was a genius, Mozart was. I must say, however, that I am not clear on just what a genius is. Leonardo? Einstein? They were geniuses, it can be said. They may merely roam the trails of, sip from the streams of, and gaze in wonder at the peak of the mountain called Mozart.
comic4relief 2 years ago 3
comicrelief- I don't agree. Einstein's, (if you're referring to Albert , not Alfred Einstein, who was a fan of Mozart and a musicologist) achievements are also extraordinary, and why do you compare Mozart to Einstein when the realms they conquered were ENTIRELY different? Incidently, Einstein did love Mozart, and said he would rather die than to be unable to listen to Mozart, his music is so pure that it should have existed since the universe was created etc.
chopinandliszt 2 years ago
That is an interesting point, though their 'realms' maybe are not entirely different, and/or maybe the acts of their 'conquering' them were not, and so on. It has been something of an ongoing question, it seems. Admittedly I could not answer objectively; it is my personal view, if I had to offer one. --- Anyway, my remark was kind of poetic, wasn't it?; and yes, i referred to Albert the physicist, though Alfred the writer may well have been a genius for all I know.
comic4relief 2 years ago
comic4relief- certainly, you shouldn't judge the greatness of Einstein without actually knowing his life, and contributions to physics completely. Why don't you spend time praising Mozart's music rather than doing this "risky" stuff? Just like how composers like Mozart were imbued with talent, the field of physics requires someone with IQ 190 rather than than 10 people with IQ 180. Only Geniuses understand Einstein's contributions completely.
chopinandliszt 2 years ago
Contributions to what?
comic4relief 2 years ago
OK, I guess that's not fair. I do know something of his work, though, granted, probably not as much as you seem to. He vindicated a welling notion in the world that classical physics needed a breath of fresh air. He painted a beautiful visualization of the universe that definitely could have stood repainting, and inspired others to do the same. Probably most youngsters today don't understand that they live in a post-Einstien world. Maybe you and I are comparing apples and oranges though.
comic4relief 2 years ago
oops: not Einstien, Einstein -- a stone
comic4relief 2 years ago
Actually, many a video has a comment, or a series of comments, in which I try to share knowledge, and hold the music in the highest esteem. You would not find many of them in Favorites, mainly because usually, it seems, I comment on something I have disagreement with, or criticism of..., and those tend not to be in Favorites. Anyway, I typically offer a response, and lend an ear to further response, rejoinder, etc, rather than spouting angrily at the other person.
comic4relief 2 years ago
I don't intend to compare oranges and apples. I'm only saying we shouldn't do things like comparing Einstein to Mozart. It's pointless and never gets into a logical conclusion.
chopinandliszt 2 years ago
Just what "comparing apples and oranges" infers.
comic4relief 2 years ago
Maybe we're just misunderstanding each other. I have to admit I find it all rather mystifying: It seems that classical music, or let's say the refinement of the classical harmony, and form and so on, would have come about anyway, with or without Mozart. He was rather unique, extraordinary in many ways, interspersed throughout.
comic4relief 2 years ago
Composers and scholars, and so on, who aim to divert from classical and focus on taking a fork in the road toward twelve-tone and such, still can find pleasure in Mozart. Even they must recognize the place of Mozart and his music pals in the overall musical landscape-- fork in the road or no.
comic4relief 2 years ago
ロ短調に聞こえるwwww
それはともかく、いい曲だねえ。
bomkekeke 2 years ago
Dude, I'm totally listening to the whole thing. It's a half-hour long beautiful song. The end is great. Queue 'em up.
comic4relief 3 years ago 4
You know in the world of classical music thats note that long. And its not a song its a pianoconcerto.
SonofDostojevskij 2 years ago
Actually I am aware of that, thanks. My perhaps too loose, perhaps too spirited, terminology was, if i recall, in the context of some comments which seem not to be here now. Elias was seeming worrisome over the apparent lack of enthusiasm for listening to an entire concerto rather than impatiently jumping to something else after only the first movement. I hope to assure other listeners that at least trying to take in the entire work is worth one's time.
comic4relief 2 years ago
Grazie! The tempo is a bit slow to me (Gardiner's Mozart switches between the best and...meh.. for me :P) But the balance in the orchestra between strings, winds and piano is absolutely wonderful.
sonata1992 3 years ago
Nobody even looks at my vids period or even comments. I posted the rigoletto sparafucile scene with Talvela and nobody watches it yet i posted the red hot chilli peppers under the bridge (dont look for it, it got removed by youtube for copyright infringement) and it got 1000 views.
LifeJuice90 3 years ago
If you want I'll share my acct with ya. I have 500 subscribers now.
elias12186 3 years ago
Sure I could help add to the collection of masterpieces you already have,
LifeJuice90 3 years ago
500???? Holy toledo that's a lot!!!! I'm officially one of them. How do you get so many subscribers?
BarbaraPloyer333 3 years ago
Upload videos for a year and a half ;)
elias12186 3 years ago
@BarbaraPloyer333 500 is a lot? oh my, what do you say to the people with 500K? xD
faleru 4 months ago
Flea's in music school now.
comic4relief 3 years ago
You guys do know there are multiple parts to my videos right? Always the first part gets many views and then each successive video less and less views...100 viewers for part 1 and 13 for part 3?
elias12186 3 years ago
Hi,
I have the same with my videos. Guess that comes from people just hearing part of it to get an impression. And if they comment, they mostly do it on the 1st movement.
ComposerTS 3 years ago
Personally, I like the interpretation with Marriner/Brendel for this concerto best, I´m not such a big fan of baroque interpretations.
If you are interested, I have composed a "Piano sonata a la Mozart" you can take a look at.
ComposerTS 3 years ago
I prefer baroque, but Marriner/Brendel is definitely on the top of my list too.
sonata1992 3 years ago
Say- I just looked at your channel and at a video you had posted that said you composed the music. You're good!!
BarbaraPloyer333 3 years ago
Hi, many thanks :-). For those interested in Mozart, I have composed several piano sonatas in Mozarts style. I´ve uploaded one of them, but could upload more. It´s somewhat sad that I can compose like Mozart, and practically nobody seems to be interested in it...
ComposerTS 3 years ago
@elias12186
Yep, that is very common among users who upload parts of a whole, be it concerto, symphony, movie, or whatever. I don't understand why... When you start listening to a piece, you can't stop until you have listened to the whole.. especially when it is Mozart, right? :D
meYry12thofMay87 1 year ago
@elias12186 Modern ears can´t stand listening to one piece of music for more than 20 minutes (kind of like a Pink Floyd song).
ElFrankus 1 year ago
@elias12186 It gets lower in numbers on the next video because, people usually go type something different it after hearing the first part.
TheMagicBolt 9 months ago
Love this concerto!
earthatic 3 years ago
Looking forward to the next pieces, i'm the first to watch this!
Leinaah 3 years ago