Added: 8 months ago
From: BoschPianoMusic
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  • Does anyone know the piece played on line 24:00 ????????

  • @superbadmofo1 Rachmaninov's Elegie.

  • What song is that at line 24.00 anybody knows???????

  • More than impressive... thanks a lot for this huge upload!

  • Yes, mr.Tolstoy, we all need music like this!!!! Poor man was a great writer, but had no ear for music.

  • @vova47 You know, I don't think he didn't have an ear for music.After all, he proclaimed Scriabin a genius! And among the rest, towards the end of his life, he judged Shakespeare to have written nothing of any real value and in the essay "What is art?" he questioned whether Beethoven was an artist!I think he only had the flaw of believing his taste to be an objective measure of value.

  • @TheStefanNestor I know it and I have read "What is art?" with interest and amazement.

    Do we need any further proof that the man was deaf, if he didn't value Beethoven? Personally,for whatever it is worth, I could live without Tolstoy but not without Beethoven.

  • @vova47 And not without Rachmaninoff either!

  • Rachmaninoff was a gift to humanity, he is the peak of human artistic creative achievement. Not only as the greatest composer but also the one extraordinary pianist for all ages :-)

    Thank you for sharing this, great video.

  • SERGEI VASILIEVICH RACHMANINOFF ( 1 April 1873 – 28 March 1943) was a Russian composer, pianist, and conductor. Rachmaninoff is widely considered one of the finest pianists of his day and, as a composer, one of the last great representatives of Romanticism in Russian classical music.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Technique -- As a pianist, Rachmaninoff ranked among the finest pianists of his time, along with Leopold Godowsky, Ignaz Friedman, Moriz Rosenthal and Josef Hofmann, and perhaps one of the greatest pianists in the history of classical music.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Technique -- He was famed for possessing a flawless, clean and inhuman virtuoso piano technique. His playing was marked by precision, rhythmic drive, an exceptionally accurate staccato and the ability to maintain complete clarity when playing works with complex textures. Rachmaninoff applied these qualities to excellent effect in music by Chopin, especially the B flat minor Piano Sonata.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Technique -- Rachmaninoff's repertoire, excepting his own works, consisted mainly of standard 19th Century virtuoso works plus music by Bach, Beethoven, Borodin, Debussy, Grieg, Liszt, Mendelssohn, Mozart, Schubert, Schumann and Tchaikovsky.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Technique -- Rhythmically, Rachmaninoff is considered one of the best Romantic performers. He never lost the basic metric pulse, yet he constantly varied it. Harold C. Schonberg suggests the young Vladimir Horowitz might have gotten this kind of rhythmic snap from Rachmaninoff. In addition, Rachmaninoff's playing had extreme musical elegance, with attention paid to the shape of the melodic line.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Technique -- His playing possessed a masculine, aristocratic kind of poetry. While never becoming sentimental, he managed to wring dry the emotional essence of the music. He did so through subtly nuanced phrasing within his strong, clear, unmannered projection of melodic lines.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Technique -- Rachmaninoff possessed extremely large hands, with which he could easily maneuver through the most complex chordal configurations.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Technique -- His left hand technique was unusually powerful. His playing was marked by definition—where other pianists' playing became blurry-sounding from overuse of the pedal or deficiencies in finger technique, Rachmaninoff's textures were always crystal clear. Only Josef Hofmann shared this kind of clarity with him.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Technique -- Both men had Anton Rubinstein as a model for this kind of playing—Hofmann as a student of Rubinstein's and Rachmaninoff from hearing his famous series of historical recitals in Moscow while studying with Zverev.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Technique -- Incidentally, it might not have been a coincidence that the two pieces Rachmaninoff singled out for praise from Rubinstein's concerts became cornerstones for his own recital programs. The compositions were Beethoven's Appassionata and Chopin's Funeral March Sonata.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Technique -- Moreover, he may have based his interpretation of the Chopin sonata on Rubinstein's. Rachmaninoff biographer Barrie Martyn points out similarities between written accounts of Rubinstein's interpretation and Rachmaninoff's audio recording of the work.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Technique -- As part of his daily warm-up exercises, Rachmaninoff would play the phenomenally difficult Étude in A flat, Op. 1, No. 2, attributed to Paul de Schlözer.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Tone -- From those barely moving fingers came an unforced, bronzelike sonority and an accuracy bordering on infallibility. Correct notes seemed to be built into his constitution, and a wrong note at a Rachmaninoff recital was an exceedingly rare event.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Tone -- Arthur Rubinstein wrote:

    He had the secret of the golden, living tone which comes from the heart ... I was always under the spell of his glorious and inimitable tone which could make me forget my uneasiness about his too rapidly fleeting fingers and his exaggerated rubatos. There was always the irresistible sensuous charm, not unlike Kreisler's.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Tone -- Coupled to this tone was a vocal quality not unlike that attributed to Chopin's playing. With Rachmaninoff's extensive operatic experience, he was a great admirer of fine singing.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Tone -- As his records demonstrate, he possessed a tremendous ability to make a musical line sing, no matter how long the notes or how complex the supporting texture, with most of his interpretations taking on a narrative quality. With the stories he told at the keyboard came multiple voices—a polyphonic dialogue, not the least in terms of dynamics.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Tone -- His 1940 recording of his transcription of the song "Daisies" captures this quality extremely well. On the recording, separate musical strands enter as if from various human voices in eloquent conversation. This ability came from an exceptional independence of fingers and hands.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Memory -- Rachmaninoff also possessed an uncanny memory—one that would help put him in good stead when he had to learn the standard piano repertoire as a 45-year-old exile. He could hear a piece of music, even a symphony, then play it back the next day, the next year, or a decade after that. Siloti would give him a long and demanding piece to learn, such as Brahms' Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Handel.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Memory -- Two days later Rachmaninoff would play it "with complete artistic finish." Alexander Goldenweiser said, "Whatever composition was ever mentioned—piano, orchestral, operatic, or other—by a Classical or contemporary composer, if Rachmaninoff had at any time heard it, and most of all if he liked it, he played it as though it were a work he had studied thoroughly."

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Interpretations -- Regardless of the music, Rachmaninoff always planned his performances carefully.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Interpretations -- He based his interpretations on the theory that each piece of music has a "culminating point." Regardless of where that point was or at which dynamic within that piece, the performer had to know how to approach it with absolute calculation and precision; otherwise, the whole construction of the piece could crumble and the piece could become disjointed. This was a practice he learned from Russian bass Feodor Chaliapin, a staunch friend.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing.

  • Interpretations -- Paradoxically, Rachmaninoff often sounded like he was improvising, though he actually was not. While his interpretations were mosaics of tiny details, when those mosaics came together in performance, they might, according to the tempo of the piece being played, fly past at great speed, giving the impression of instant thought.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Interpretations -- One advantage Rachmaninoff had in this building process over most of his contemporaries was in approaching the pieces he played from the perspective of a composer rather than that of an interpreter.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Interpretations -- He believed "interpretation demands something of the creative instinct. If you are a composer, you have an affinity with other composers. You can make contact with their imaginations, knowing something of their problems and their ideals. You can give their works color.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Interpretations -- That is the most important thing for me in my interpretations, color. So you make music live. Without color it is dead."[50] Nevertheless, Rachmaninoff also possessed a far better sense of structure than many of his contemporaries, such as Hofmann, or the majority of pianists from the previous generation, judging from their respective recordings.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Interpretations -- A recording which showcases Rachmaninoff's approach is the Liszt Second Polonaise, recorded in 1925. Percy Grainger, who had been influenced by the composer and Liszt specialist Ferruccio Busoni, had himself recorded the same piece a few years earlier.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Interpretations -- Rachmaninoff's performance is far more taut and concentrated than Grainger's. The Russian's drive and monumental conception bear a considerable difference to the Australian's more delicate perceptions. Grainger's textures are elaborate. Rachmaninoff shows the filigree as essential to the work's structure, not simply decorative.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Marfan syndrome -- Along with his musical gifts, Rachmaninoff possessed physical gifts that may have placed him in good stead as a pianist. These gifts included exceptional height and extremely large hands with a gigantic finger stretch.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Marfan syndrome -- This and Rachmaninoff's slender frame, long limbs, narrow head, prominent ears, and thin nose suggest that he may have had Marfan syndrome, a hereditary disorder of the connective tissue. This syndrome would have accounted for several minor ailments he suffered all his life. These included back pain, arthritis, eye strain and bruising of the fingertips.

    Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.

  • Excellent. The narrator should have some medicine for his throat, though.

  • When I first heard the 2nd piano concerto, I was imagine the similar sceneries of russian coutry like here....Ivanovka :) marvellous documentary.!

  • thaaaaank youuu! I've been looking for this for 10 years!!!! The title I knew it under was 'Rachmaninoff Memories' no wonder I couldn't find it!

  • Thank you very much!

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