Georges Cziffra - Chopin etude no.11 op.25
Top Comments
All Comments (58)
-
@janvandoedelpuk absolutely not. he's even gaining speed in the more difficult passages!
-
@newFranzFerencLiszt haha, that's a good one:D
-
Hear the bizzard howl...
-
I wonder he didn't play the right hand with a lot of octaves lol
-
@MonsieurRafi absolutely right. if you want to convince him, just show the waltz transcriptions of strauss.. thats insane..
-
it's bone chillingD:
-
The piano EXPLODED!!
-
@janvandoedelpuk Agreed, but Georges Cziffra rarely make these rythmic mistakes unintentionally. This's my favorite intepretation, unpredictable and moodchanging just like the stormwind itself.
-
sorry, I thumbed down instead of clicking on "answer" ... :/ Well, about the rubato, I guess we can say it's a peculiar one, youy like it or you don't, but you can't say it isn't, at least, an interesting one =) yes there's a "rythmic distortion", as you're saying, but I don't dislike it ... "tout les goûts sont dans la nature" ^^
-
@MonsieurRafi If his rubati are musically motivated then I don't understand his sense for rubato. I am not pleading for a metronome performance. There is a lot of room left between rhytmic distortion and a metronome perfromance.
This ain't Winter Wind already...
This is now officially a blizzard...
talonboy5432 3 years ago 52
A stormy mind blowing performance - more like a hurricane than winter winds. Cziffra plays like a man possessed!
piano345 3 years ago 28