Watch this video in a new window

Rachmaninov - piano concerto No.2 /1

Alexis Weissenberg and Herbert von Karajan  
 
Customize

More From: Jirzy

Loading...

QuickList(0)

Upgrade to Flash Player 10 for improved playback performance. Upgrade Now or get more info.
2,384 ratings
Sign in to rate
1,037,660 views
Want to add to Favorites? Sign In or Sign Up now!
Want to add to Playlists? Sign In or Sign Up now!
Want to flag a video? Sign In or Sign Up now!

Statistics & Data

Loading...

Video Responses (0)

This video has no Responses. Be the first to Post a Video Response.
Sign in to post a Comment

Text Comments (1,192)   Options

Loading...
fudge977 (11 hours ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
I don't listen to classic music much, but this is beautiful.
VanishingDust (19 hours ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
6:56 O_O Oh wow.....
KarinaPhi10 (1 day ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
...every man must find its own way through the trials and tribulations of this life.... find a way to follow his conscience... and are we not all tested at certain points in life? Somehow, music and art elevates us from those uncertainties...because it brings us closer to love..... and it finds its voice in pieces like this... who we are is not written on a piece of paper nor can be imprisoned by any outer judgement of time. Thanks so much for posting this.
peridot1984 (3 days ago) Show Hide
+1
Marked as spam
Such an interpretation brings out powerful emotions; another pianist that comes close to such a feat is Ingrid Sala Santamaria
1kaylapunk1 (3 days ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
i really wish i could play this on piano.
wdarina (4 days ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
Brilliant !!!!
pizzachik22 (1 week ago) Show Hide
+4
Marked as spam
gorgeous. soo beautiful
LJBSasha (1 week ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
Without being in the Nazi party he wouldn't have been able to do much career-wise and might well have had to go into exile - perhaps he didn't feel big (famous) enough to be able to succeed while under such conditions...

Still, I'll admit that it's disquieting. [Were it the SS - or if he did evil to his colleagues from within the Party - THEN it would be considerably worse. Still, he proved to be a superb artist above 1st-class!!]
LJBSasha (1 week ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
Either way, here's a 1st-rate interpretation bar none!! Pity for the glitch near the beginning as well as the sound and video aren't properly synchronised. Ah well, it's minor compared to getting to know this superb rendition of a 1st-rate piece!!!

Sjergjéy Vasíljevich's therapist truly did a marvelous job in helping him out of his desperate funk after the fiasco of his 1st-symphony (it after all lasted 3 whole years!!). That concerto alone repaid the therapy a million-fold!
cwcaplinger (5 days ago) Show Hide
+1
Marked as spam
Rachamaninoff wasn't a Nazi, he was Russian. Herbert von Karajan's family (the conductor in this video) were members of the nazi party at one point early, they were very wealthy and well known in society. However, it is said he himself renounced it and left the country.

Would you like to comment?

Join YouTube for a free account, or sign in if you are already a member.