Added: 4 years ago
From: tguiot
Views: 86,299
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  • Very good. I enjoyed it.

  • i want a little hat just like that

  • MOZART, MASTER OF THE UNIVERSE!!!

  • I'm never bored by Gulda's Mozart. The way he plays and the way he conducts! Eyes and eyebrows are conduccing.

  • Comment removed

  • absolutely love it. - so soothing. I listen to this at work to create such a peaceful environment.

  • absolutely love it.

  • Gracias Mozart ,asta la vista Maestro.

  • Amazing cadenza : )

  • Colosal. No más palabras.

  • when does the cadenza start?

  • bellissima cadenza

  • there are people in the world how inspire you

    this man on piano as example are masters of a profession

    a profesion you only can learn by loving it and understand it

    this concerto is a creation from the inside of someone special

    and who always can blow me away with the things he did!

    i play piano nog for 7 months bye mysels and really love it!

    the sounds inspire you comment my video please after 7 months of playing complication of own music good commenter recommended!

  • there are people in the world how inspire you

    this man on piano as example are masters of a profession

    a profesion you only can learn by loving it and understand it

    this concerto is a creation from the inside of someone special

    and who always can blow me away with the things he do!

    i play piano nog for 7 months bye mysels and really love it!

    the sounds inspire you comment my video please after 7 months of playing complication of own music good commenter recommended!

  • In Soviet Russia, piano plays you

  • Damn, Larry David is one talented son of a bitch!!

  • @bsd300d :D GOLD!

  • Superb!

  • einfach wahnsinn!!!

  • amazing cadenza

  • im pretty sure the cadenza (the solo part during 4:40 etc) is improvised. i dont really like it.

  • such joyfulness

  • Gulda's cadenza is superb.

  • love the ending so beautiful, He is amazing.

  • nice facial expressions

  • Excellent!

    Just a little mistake from 1:51 to 1:54, from 3:35 to 3:54, and the variations or whatever it was from 4:00 to 4:58, but who cares, only God is perfect.

  • let me introduce you this interesting musical critic, David C F Wright. He lives in Britain and he used to write articles to make people think Chopin was mediocre, Salieri was a better musician than Mozart. (He also says the Mozarts hated Salieri because of it) He wrote a bunch of articles, and sounds quite like an academic, but I think he's a pathetic amateur who doesn't have any substance. I also write my own article to criticize this critic, but I don't know his e-mail.

  • @

    marianomanto, if you see it clear, objective and in the history, it was usual to improve cadenzas and it was usual to play with an orchestra without the conductor...What do you think how many famous pianists where also jazz musicians and besides this even composers? Gulda was the only. Not a Horowitz, Arrau, Richter, Kempff or Backhaus. Any questions?

  • Glenn Gould didn't do much with jazz, but he did improvise. He was also a composer and performed his own cadenzas for others' concertos. He also did some conducting from the keyboard. You're right. It's too bad that most modern pianists dont carry on the tradition of improv in concertos and even elsewhere.

  • this man is very inspiring :)

  • Mr. Gulda is showing the true meaning of cadenza: improvising. I love his cadenza and I love this rendition.

  • actually, the cadenza is pretty much in Mozart's own style. The final scale, trill and the left hand chord can be seen very often in Mozart's piano music, the cadenza of the 3rd movement of piano sonata k333, for example. There are also additional relevant virtuositic elements.

  • Then you'd have to agree that the wonderful Beethoven cadenzas for the Mozart K 466 Concerto are stylistically inappropriate? Or the Clara Schumann cadenzas for the Beethoven Concertos? Or even the late Beethoven cadenza for his earlier B-flat concerto? The whole idea of cadenzas is to add some of the performer to the work and be definition that means some kind of time difference. Even cadenzas "in the style of" are making a statement, admittedly different from a Gulda, Glenn Gould, etc.

  • u know what i think about him>! maybe it sounds crazy to untrained ppl!!!! but he plays Mozart the best playing I have ever heard and seen; he plays it the way it HAS to be played!

  • amazing interpretation

  • long live mozart

  • Which cadenza is this?

  • Gulda wrote his own cadenza for this concerto.

  • @tguiot Darn,I was hoping that the sheet would have it, if I were to buy it.

  • there is another vid with aimi kobayashi playing coronation concerto, but there is non such solo part like here in 2:40, could someone tell me which is the original arreangment?

  • omg i wish i can play that piece like him, well just the mecanique, i didnt like much the tecnique, its bouncy, but he is a great player

  • you should watch music you should go to heaven tucsedo or just jeans and garbo who cares it is music ...yea Martha Argerich???? many others stay with him for now and enjoy how he made Beethoven of Mozart as Mozart himself would do, I am sure, Vivaldi would not mind when JS Bach transcribed his concertoes for Organs and orchestra, Stokovsky was busy with other works let be someone daring to transcribe these d minor and D major for organ Silbermann!!!! and full symphonic orchestra Goulda..

  • interesting, mozart without a doubt kicks the hell out of beethoven never ceases to amaze me

  • He was...Easter 1786!

  • cool...

  • Mozart was the teacher of Beethoven for 2 weeks...

  • no he wasn't.... was he?

  • Yeah, when he was 16, Beethoven briefly studied under Mozart, but had to leave early due to family troubles. It's also fairly obvious that Mozart had a large influence on Beethoven. (Compare Mozart's 40th symphony with Beethoven's 5th symphony, and Mozart's C minor piano concerto with Beethoven's 3rd piano concerto, for instance.) Still, belittling Beethoven due to who he was influenced by is crude. Mozart wasn't a lone wolf either.

  • He left because his mother was ill - but met Haydn when he was returning to Vienna from London a few months later and studied under him.

    Lucky man!

  • there's actually no absolute evidence that beethoven even met Mozart. It is said that Mozart heard him once and said he would become a great musician, but even that is not quite sure...

  • magnificent

  • Nice? This is extraordinary........

    Do not forget that Mr. Gulda is Martha's teacher.

    I was moved to tears.

  • Mozarts Piano Concertos are SUPERB!!

  • It´s very very nice!

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