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MASTER PIANISTS FROM AROUND THE WORLD

Learning from the greatest pianists in the world is crucial. They have reached the pinnacle of their craft through dedication, training, and exploration. Studying their performances provides insights into technique, musicality, and expression. Their mastery inspires and guides aspiring pianists, helping them develop their own unique voice. It deepens appreciation for the piano repertoire and its historical significance. By learning from the best, we gain wisdom, expand horizons, and strive for excellence in our own piano journeys.

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Argentina

Austria

Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 27 | Menahem Pressler, Paavo Järvi & the Orchestre de Paris
32:46

Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 27 | Menahem Pressler, Paavo Järvi & the Orchestre de Paris

Music was his elixir of life: On October 17, 2012, just before his 90th birthday, pianist Menahem Pressler gave a concert in Paris' Salle Pleyel. With the Orchestre de Paris conducted by Paavo Järvi, Pressler played Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 27 in B-flat major, K. 595. Nimble fingers even at grand old age – Menahem Pressler is proof that it's possible. The star pianist was able to look back over a 50-year career. Between 1955 and 2008 he was performing some 100 concerts each year with the Beaux Arts Trio alone. Menahem Pressler passed away on May 6, 2023, aged 99. (00:00) Applause (00:18) I. Allegro (14:32) II. Larghetto (22:54) III. Rondo, Allegro The Piano Concerto No. 27 in B-flat major (K. 595) is the last of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s (1756 – 1791) piano concertos, of a total of 21. He wrote it in 1791, the year of his death. At its premiere in Vienna, Mozart played the solo part himself – it was to be his final public appearance at the piano. Even though this is the last of Mozart’s piano concertos, the drive to realize new compositional forms is nonetheless still very evident. Echoes of Mozart’s well-known spring composition Komm Lieber Mai… (Longing for the Spring) can be heard in the third movement, the Rondo. Although it's written in a major key, the piece sounds mournful, infused with a sense of yearning. The composer had fallen on hard times and was hoping to acquire some financial security by producing a large body of work. Soloist Menahem Pressler (1923 – 2023) was born Max Pressler in the German city of Magdeburg. His family is Jewish, and after the Nazis came to power, he fled with his parents in 1939 – initially to Palestine, and then on to the US in 1940. The members of his family who remained behind were murdered by the Nazis. In 1946, the young Pressler won the Debussy International Piano Competition in San Francisco, remaining in California thereafter to continue his studies. He founded the world-renowned Beaux Arts Trio in 1955. The ensemble would go on to created over 50 recordings. Numerous musicians comprised the trio up until its final concert, in 2008. Pressler also performed as a soloist throughout his life. Estonian conductor Paavo Järvi was musical director of the Orchestre de Paris from 2010 – 2016. Paavo Järvi was born in Tallinn, but emigrated to the US in 1980. For a long time he was musical director of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, and is still in partnership with the ensemble as its Conductor Laureate. He’s been music director and chief conductor of the Tonhalle-Orchester Zürich since 2019. The Orchestre de Paris is one of the largest and most-respected orchestras in the world. Founded in 1967, it has been led by several conducting greats, including Herbert von Karajan, Sir Georg Solti and Daniel Barenboim. In 2015, it relocated from the Salle Pleyel to the Philharmonie de Paris in the French capital’s 19th arrondissement. A production of LGM Télévision © EuroArts 2012 Watch more concerts in your personal concert hall: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL_SdnzPd3eBV5A14dyRWy1KSkwcG8LEey Subscribe to DW Classical Music: https://www.youtube.com/dwclassicalmusic #mozart #menahempressler #pianomusic
Clara Schumann: Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 7 | Gewandhausorchester & Lauma Skride (piano)
22:23

Clara Schumann: Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 7 | Gewandhausorchester & Lauma Skride (piano)

An astonishingly mature piece composed by a teenager: The Gewandhaus Orchestra Leipzig plays Clara Schumann’s Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 7 with Lauma Skride on the piano, conducted by Andris Nelsons. (00:00) Allegro maestoso (06:25) Romanze. Andante non troppo, con grazia (11:18) Finale. Allegro non troppo Clara Schumann (née Wieck) (1819-1896) began her work on this piano concerto at just 13, after having been taught the piano, violin, orchestration, and composition by her father, music teacher Friedrich Wieck, as well as some of Leipzig’s most distinguished music teachers. The young musician premiered the piece in November 1835 with the Gewandhaus Orchestra, playing the piano parts herself. The concert was conducted by Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy (1809-1847). Aged only 15 at the time of the premiere, Clara Schumann could already look back upon an impressive musical career, which had started seven years previously with her debut as a pianist at the Gewandhaus Leipzig. From a young age, Schumann showed considerable talent as a musician, but her father’s role in the advancement of her early career cannot be overstated. During the years 1831 and 1832, Friedrich Wieck arranged for his daughter (then aged 13) to travel around Europe and perform in various cities. A memorable moment on this concert tour was certainly her performance of a bravura piece in front of the renowned poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, who expressed his admiration of the young girl with the following words: “This girl has more power than six boys together”. It was also through her father’s occupation as a music teacher that Clara Schumann came into close contact with her future husband Robert Schumann (1810-1856), who took music lessons with Wieck and even lived in the Wieck household for a year. It was around the time of the premiere of Clara Schumann’s Piano Concerto, Op. 7 that the pair became aware of their mutual affection. They married in 1840, despite the disapproval of Friedrich Wieck. Clara Schumann is remembered today as a virtuoso pianist who performed on some of Europe’s most prominent stages throughout her career. However, her role as a composer in her own right, as well as a confidant and advisor to her husband Robert Schumann, cannot be left unmentioned. Watch more concerts in your personal concert hall: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL_SdnzPd3eBV5A14dyRWy1KSkwcG8LEey Subscribe to DW Classical Music: https://www.youtube.com/dwclassicalmusic #ClaraSchumann #PianoConcerto #Gewandhausorchester

Canada

China

Czech Republic

Alice Sommer - Everything is a Present (Documentary of 2009)
53:03

Alice Sommer - Everything is a Present (Documentary of 2009)

Subscribe to the channel for more content: https://goo.gl/GLSuto Buy the DVD here: http://www.allegrofilms.com/films/ "Alice Sommer Herz is thought of by tens of thousands of people in many parts of the world as woman of exceptional wisdom who is uniquely untainted by catastrophe and is as inspiring a human being as one is ever likely to encounter. She touches the hearts and stimulates the minds of all who discover her. I have seen it happen again and again in the 30 years that I have known her. When the German television station, WDR, challenged us to make the film We Want the Light, I would not have accepted the challenge If I had not known Alice Sommer so well. I had a film maker's instinct that her wisdom and her unfailing grace when recounting her experiences, would make an impossibly difficult task just about manageable. And so it did. That film has won a number of international prizes and I am certain that they were won by Gigi Sommer. That is not false modesty. It is not to say that our skills in putting the film together were not crucially important but the inner strength, the ingredient which elevated the film so high, came, in my view, from our 98 your old star. When we made that film we deliberately shot a great deal more material with Gigi Sommer than we would ever have been able to use, because I felt that we should, one day, make a film about her alone. For years the idea remained a shadow but six weeks before her 106th birthday she said, "You know, old age is like illness. I am not myself. The body is unable to resist as it used to do." That statement provided the missing catalyst. It made it imperative for me to produce a tribute to her for her rapidly approaching anniversary, using the unseen material which we shot with her when she was 98. We finished it 10 days before the great day, which falls on 26 November 2009. When we showed her the results of our labours she said, "Very good, Nothing unnecessary. It must have been a tremendous amount of work." She said also that she very much liked the way in which the music had been integrated with her words. Yes, dear Gigi, it was a lot of work and every second of it was golden time. And in a glorious cause. I have devoted the whole of my professional life to making films which keep the artistic persona of our artists alive in a way that books and records and even concerts cannot do after they have left us. It happened as a result of a very unusual constellation of circumstances: first among them, the arrival of a new generation of super-talented and very exuberant young musicians and, simultaneously, the arrival of the first silent, lightweight 16mm film cameras. That made it possible for us to make a type of film that had never been made before and the appeal of the genre is enduring. Gigi Sommer is an artist worth remembering and we are proud and grateful for having had the opportunity to do something to keep the spirit and the grace and the gravitas and the music of Alice Sommer Herz alive in the world." Christopher Nupen, 16 November 2009 An Allegro Film by Christopher Nupen

England

Benno Moiseiwitsch plays Chopin's Preludes live in 1961
37:35

Benno Moiseiwitsch plays Chopin's Preludes live in 1961

If you wish to support The Piano Files, please consider membership on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thepianofiles An unpublished recording of a February 8, 1961 concert performance of Benno Moiseiwitsch playing the Chopin 24 Preludes Op.28 with the rarely-played posthumously published Prelude No.26 introduced into the cycle (he did not include it in his commercial recording). In early 1961, Moiseiwitsch gave three Wednesday recitals at the Y in New York over the course of three weeks - January 25, February 1, and February 8 - and only portions of these were published in a Pearl set produced by Allan Evans. While not all of the performances find the great Russian pianist at his best, there is indeed some stupendous playing, including this phenomenal traversal of the Chopin Preludes. Moiseiwitsch had put the Op.28 cycle on disc for HMV on December 29-30, 1948 and this live traversal over a decade later is equally powerful and emotive, his marvellous interpretations appreciable despite the less-than-ideal recording quality (one can hear audience applause bleeding through the opening minute of the tape from another recorded performance, but the rest is better and is definitely worth tolerating). As always, Moisewitsch plays with a gloriously varied tonal palette, elegant phrasing and voicing, impressive dexterity (other performances from these concerts were not as unified), sumptuous timing, and tremendous sensitivity and strength - grand, noble, refined pianism! A wonderful addition to Moiseiwitsch's recorded legacy!

France

Debussy plays Debussy | Clair de Lune (1913)
03:51

Debussy plays Debussy | Clair de Lune (1913)

Claude-Achille Debussy - Clair de Lune (Mondglanz, Mondschein, Moonlight), Suite Bergamasque, Debussy, piano. The Suite bergamasque was first composed in 1890-1905. "Claude Debussy Plays His Finest Works" Claude Debussy, Piano Roll, 1913. NOTE: This is NOT an ACOUSTIC RECORDING. This is a recording obtained by PIANO ROLL, see further details below. But acoustic recordings were made by Debussy with Mary Garden and you can hear here: https://youtu.be/W3NX_TrxfVk?t=1h17m25s (tempo 01:17:25) From 1903 to 1913, Claude Debussy recorded several of his own pieces on piano rolls. Debussy was delighted with the reproduction quality, saying in a letter to Edwin Welte: “It is impossible to attain a greater perfection of reproduction than that of the Welte apparatus. I am happy to assure you in these lines of my astonishment and admiration of what I heard. I am, Dear Sir, Yours Faithfully, Claude Debussy.” More than one century old, these recordings allow us to listen to the great composer playing his own works. Debussy made his last recordings when he was 52 years old and suffering from cancer, in 1913. He died less than five years later, on March 25, 1918. Rolls for the reproducing piano were generally made from the recorded performances of famous musicians. Typically, a pianist would sit at a specially designed recording piano, and the pitch and duration of any notes played would be either marked or perforated on a blank roll, together with the duration of the sustaining and soft pedal. Reproducing pianos can also re-create the dynamics of a pianist's performance by means of specially encoded control perforations placed towards the edges of a music roll, but this coding was never recorded automatically. Different companies had different ways of notating dynamics, some technically advanced (though not necessarily more effective), some secret, and some dependent entirely on a recording producer's handwritten notes, but in all cases these dynamic hieroglyphics had to be skillfully converted into the specialized perforated codes needed by the different types of instrument. The playing of many pianists and composers is preserved on reproducing piano roll. Gustav Mahler, Camille Saint-Saëns, Edvard Grieg, Teresa Carreño, Claude Debussy, Manuel de Falla, Scott Joplin, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Sergei Prokofiev, Alexander Scriabin, Jelly Roll Morton and George Gershwin are amongst the composers and pianists who have had their performances recorded in this way. Claude Debussy's famous Clair de lune is the third piece of the Suite bergamasque for piano, a work whose title was chosen as much for its composer's love of the word-sounds as for its Renaissance implications (though the work can rightly be described as something of a tribute to the French harpsichordists of olden days). The D flat major of Clair de lune is perfectly chosen, the gleaming melody in parallel thirds (con sordina, Debussy requests) expertly balanced by the beautifully dissonant tempo rubato that follows it. During the un poco mosso middle section of Clair de lune, the music swells far past the pianissimo of the opening, and in its climax one might say that the young composer has crafted more of sunlight than of moonlight; the incessant arpeggios may well be overdone, but one can cherish them all the same. Little wisps of these arpeggios find their way over into the reprise of the opening music, and the rolling tones of the middle section are given a few measures to plead their case once more before the final chromatic cadence, a moment of absolute tranquility, is made. Clair de Lune is a French poem written by Paul Verlaine in the year 1869. It is the inspiration for the third and most famous movement of Debussy's 1890 Suite bergamasque of the same name. 'Clair de lune' ('Moonlight') is from Verlaine's early collection Fêtes galantes (Gallant Parties, 1869). Clair de lune Votre âme est un paysage choisi Que vont charmant masques et bergamasques Jouant du luth et dansant et quasi Tristes sous leurs déguisements fantasques. Tout en chantant sur le mode mineur L'amour vainqueur et la vie opportune, Ils n'ont pas l'air de croire à leur bonheur Et leur chanson se mêle au clair de lune, Au calme clair de lune triste et beau, Qui fait rêver les oiseaux dans les arbres Et sangloter d'extase les jets d'eau, Les grands jets d'eau sveltes parmi les marbres. Paul Verlaine Moonlight Your soul is a select landscape fair Where charming masqueraders and bergamaskers go Playing the lute and dancing and almost Sad beneath their fantastic disguises. All sing in a minor key Of victorious love and the opportune life, They do not seem to believe in their happiness And their song mingles with the moonlight, With the still moonlight, sad and beautiful, Which gives the birds to dream in the trees And makes the fountain sprays sob in ecstasy, The tall, slender fountain sprays among the marble statues. Paul Verlaine
Richard Clayderman - A Comme Amour
03:19

Richard Clayderman - A Comme Amour

Richard Clayderman (París, Francia, 28 de diciembre de 1953) es un famoso pianista francés. Actualmente es reconocido como uno de los pianistas de música clásica y ligera más exitosos a escala mundial, con más de 70 millones de discos vendidos siendo premiado con 267 de oro y 70 de platino y habiendo realizado más de 600 conciertos alrededor del mundo. Comenzó sus estudios de piano a muy temprana edad de la mano de su propia madre, quien era un profesora de música. Con 12 años ingresó en el Conservatorio de Música de París, donde cuatro años después obtuvo el Primer Lugar al Mérito. Sus primeros pasos como músico profesional los dio tocando en sesiones de grabación para poder seguir pagando sus estudios de capacitación y perfeccionamiento. En función de ello y de su especial talento tocó en grabaciones de Michel Sardou, Thierry LeLuron y Johnny Halliday. En 1976 es convocado junto con otros 20 pianistas por el productor discográfico francés Olivier Toussaint y su socio, el compositor Paul de Senneville para realizar una prueba para la empresa discográfica francesa Disques Delphine para grabar algunas baladas. Clayderman fue elegido y entraría a los estudios de grabación para realizar su primer álbum titulado con su nombre. En este álbum ejecutó el piano y el sintetizador siendo este uno de los dos que realizara con este instrumento. La mundialmente famosa Ballade pour Adeline, compuesta por Paul de Senneville en honor de su hija, recién nacida entonces, fue una de las piezas de este álbum que lo lanzó al estrellato mundial. Este sencillo vendió alrededor de 22 millones de copias en más de 30 países. Actualmente lleva grabadas más de 1500 piezas musicales distintas, entre ellas El Vals Del Recuerdo de Marcelo Boasso, Yesterday (de The Beatles), The Sound of Silence (de Simon and Garfunkel), Strangers in the night (de Frank Sinatra), Todavía existe el amor y Memory. Ha grabado dos discos acompañado por la orquesta de James Last.
Bach by Marcelle Meyer - Complete Inventions & Sinfonias, Partitas, Toccatas, Italian Concerto ..
03:27:59

Bach by Marcelle Meyer - Complete Inventions & Sinfonias, Partitas, Toccatas, Italian Concerto ..

Album available // Bach by Marcelle Meyer: Complete Inventions & Sinfonias, Partitas, Toccatas, Italian Concerto.. 🎧 Qobuz https://bit.ly/3d2UzgH Apple Music https://apple.co/34WGqNK 🎧 Amazon Music https://amzn.to/3Z2yWmH Tidal https://bit.ly/3r2QwFl 🎧 Spotify https://spoti.fi/36l5VIO Deezer https://bit.ly/2Ye1bk4 🎧 Youtube Music http://bit.ly/3PQAH20 SoundCloud https://bit.ly/3FTiFXo 🔊 Download high-fidelity classical music: https://classicalmusicreference.com/ Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750) by Marcelle Meyer / NEW MASTERING. Active les sous-titres en français pour lire la présentation (00:00-03:15) Inventions for Two Voices 00:00 No.1 in C major, BWV 772 01:00 No.2 in C minor, BWV 773 02:14 No.3 in D major, BWV 774 03:12 No.4 in D minor, BWV 775 03:54 No.5 in E-flat major, BWV 776 05:29 No.6 in E major, BWV 777 08:19 No.7 in E minor, BWV 778 09:47 No.8 in F major, BWV 779 10:31 No.9 in F minor, BWV 780 12:11 No.10 in G major, BWV 781 13:07 No.11 in G minor, BWV 782 14:17 No.12 in A major, BWV 783 15:23 No.13 in A minor, BWV 784 16:16 No.14 in B-flat major, BWV 785 17:37 No.15 in B minor, BWV 786 Inventions for Three Voices / Sinfonias 18:38 No.1 in C major, BWV 787 19:36 No.2 in C minor, BWV 788 21:16 No.3 in D major, BWV 789 22:22 No.4 in D minor, BWV 790 24:19 No.5 in E-flat major, BWV 791 26:56 No.6 in E major, BWV 792 28:05 No.7 in E minor, BWV 793 30:12 No.8 in F major, BWV 794 31:11 No.9 in F minor, BWV 795 34:19 No.10 in G major, BWV 796 35:13 No.11 in G minor, BWV 797 37:05 No.12 in A major, BWV 798 38:17 No.13 in A minor, BWV 799 39:54 No.14 in B-flat major, BWV 800 41:07 No.15 in B minor, BWV 801 42:23 Fantaisie en Ut (c) mineur BWV 906 Fantaisie chromatique et fugue en ré mineur BWV 903 46:40 Fantaisie 54:20 Fugue Toccata en Ré mineur BWV 913 59:02 Introduction 1:01:45 Presto - Fugato 1:04:45 Adagio 1:08:59 Allegro - Fugato Concerto Italien en Fa majeur BWV 971 1:12:40 Allegro 1:16:09 Andante 1:20:45 — English Suite No.4 in F major BWV 809 1:24:08 Prelude 1:28:24 Allemande 1:30:22 Courante 1:31:55 Sarabande 1:34:34 Menuets I & II 1:37:19 Gigue Toccata en Fa# mineur BWV 910 1:40:32 Introduction 1:41:23 Lentamente 1:43:17 Presto e staccato 1:46:22 Fugato Toccata en Ut mineur BWV 911 1:48:54 Introduction 1:49:51 Adagio 1:51:49 Fugue Toccata en Ré majeur BWV 912 1:58:26 Presto Allegro 2:00:51 Adagio - Fugato - Adagio 2:06:31 Fuga Fantaisie et fugue en la mineur BWV 904 2:09:07 Fantaisie 2:11:48 Fugue Partita No.1 in B♭Major BWV825 2:15:21 Praeludium 2:17:00 Allemande 2:19:19 Courante 2:21:57 Sarabande 2:26:35 Menuet I & II 2:28:23 Gigue Partita No.3 in A minor, BWV 827 2:30:36 Fantasia 2:32:17 Allemande 2:33:53 Courante 2:36:39 Sarabande 2:38:02 Burlesca 2:40:03 Scherzo 2:41:07 Gigue Partita No.2 in C minor, BWV 826 2:44:03 Sinfonia 2:48:33 Allemande 2:52:34 Courante 2:55:07 Sarabande 2:57:57 Rondeau 2:59:18 Capriccio Partita No.6 in E minor, BWV 830 3:02:26 Toccata 3:08:54 Allemande 3:11:29 Courante 3:15:01 Air 3:16:13 Sarabande 3:21:33 Tempo di Gavotte 3:23:36 Gigue Piano : Marcelle Meyer Recorded in 1946-49, at Paris New mastering in 2020 by AB for CMRR 🔊 FOLLOW US on SPOTIFY (Profil: CMRR) : https://spoti.fi/3016eVr 🔊 Download CMRR's recordings in High fidelity audio (QOBUZ) : https://bit.ly/2M1Eop2 ❤️ If you like CM//RR content, please consider membership at our Patreon page. Thank you :) https://www.patreon.com/cmrr Marcelle Meyer is probably the greatest French pianist of the 20th century. All these recordings are of exceptional historical and educational value. Millions of pianists around the world are learning Bach's Inventions. They are essential works for piano training. As the great teachers often say, it is much easier to play melodic lines at full speed and impress the audience than to make several voices sing well. Marcelle Meyer excels technically but above all musically. It is impressive how she has been able to combine fluidity of play and expressiveness. It is the letter absolutely reproduced. The letter, but also the spirit.. Scarlatti by Marcelle Meyer - The Keyboard Sonatas, K 380 (Century's rc.): https://youtu.be/3Iiyzo9vdYA Rameau by Marcelle Meyer - Les Sauvages, Les Oiseaux.. / Presentat° Alexandre Tharaud (Century’s rc.): https://youtu.be/nomf2OrFlU8 Johann Sebastian Bach PLAYLIST (reference recordings): https://bit.ly/3t5cRU2

Germany

Alice Sara Ott - Bach: Prelude in C Major, BWV 846, I. Prelude, Upright Piano (Official Music Video)
01:58

Alice Sara Ott - Bach: Prelude in C Major, BWV 846, I. Prelude, Upright Piano (Official Music Video)

Listen to Alice Sara Ott's album 'Echoes Of Life': https://dgt.link/eol-deluxe Discover full concert performances and operas on STAGE+, the new streaming service from Deutsche Grammophon: https://www.stage-plus.com/ Hailed by Diapason as “striking for its sincerity and authenticity”, Echoes Of Life offered an individual and thought-provoking take on Chopin’s Bach-inspired 24 Préludes, Op. 28. Ott highlighted the works’ timeless nature by framing them with music by 20th- and 21st-century composers, including her own arrangement of fragments of the Lacrimosa from the Mozart Requiem. For the extended edition, she has chosen pieces connected with the music, composers and themes of the original album, but without imposing her own associations on them. As the pianist explains, since Bach’s Prelude in C major (from The Well-Tempered Clavier) inspired Chopin’s first Prélude, and the works by Francesco Tristano and Chilly Gonzales on Echoes Of Life, it was the obvious starting point for the extended edition. “It appears twice in its full form,” she says, “once on a grand piano, with a sound that embraces the entire room and space, and a second time on a prepared upright piano, in a much closer and intimate setting so one can hear the hammers hit the felt on the strings.” Alice Sara Ott - Bach: Prelude in C Major, BWV 846, I. Prelude, Upright Piano (Official Music Video) Subscribe here for more classical video clips – The Best Of Classical Music: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-DG _______________ Find Deutsche Grammophon Online Homepage: http://deutschegrammophon.com Facebook: http://fb.com/deutschegrammophon Twitter: http://twitter.com/dgclassics Instagram: http://instagram.com/dgclassics Newsletter: https://deutschegrammophon.com/newsletter _______________ 最优质古典音乐 – 此处订阅: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-DG Le meilleur de la musique classique. Pour vous abonner cliquez ici: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-DG 最高のクラシック音楽―登録はこちら: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-DG 최고의 클래식음악을 구독하세요: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-DG Подписаться на лучшую классическую музыку:: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-DG La mejor música clásica - Suscríbase aquí: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-DG #deutschegrammophon #classicalmusic #stage+

Hungary

Etelka Freund plays Brahms Piano Sonata No.3
36:47

Etelka Freund plays Brahms Piano Sonata No.3

If you wish to support The Piano Files, please consider membership on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thepianofiles Hungarian pianist Etelka Freund in a September 1953 recording of the Brahms Piano Sonata in F Minor Op.5, issued on the Remington label (R-199-109). Freund was a pianist with a remarkable lineage whose interrupted career has led to her largely being forgotten; fortunately there has been a relatively recent revival of interest as her scant studio discography and some private recordings have become available. Born in 1879, Freund had a talented older brother Robert who had studied with Moscheles (a contemporary of Beethoven and friend (and teacher) of Mendelssohn), as well as with Tausig and Liszt, in addition to playing for Brahms. Etelka, some 20 years younger than Robert, had an opportunity to regularly play for Brahms, who admired her very much: when a friend of the composer asked if the young lady played, the composer affirmed, 'To the enjoyment of everyone!" She also trained with Liszt pupil István Thomán (who also taught Bartok) and Busoni, as well as with her compatriot Bartok, with whom she had a close relationship. She stopped concertizing between 1910 and 1936 to focus on raising her children, but then resumed playing to continued great critical acclaim. Freund finally emigrated to the US in 1946 and had a successful debut at the Washington National Gallery the following year, but managers were not interested in promoting a 68-year-old pianist. Fortunately she made a handful of recordings but was largely forgotten despite having maintained her facility to a very old age - she died in 1977 at the age of 98. This Brahms Sonata recording comes from one of the two LPs she made for the Remington label in the early 1950s. It should be noted that a recording of the Chopin Waltzes attributed to her is adamantly believed by several leading pianophiles to be a different pianist - I'm making inquiries to get the specifics. The same for an account of the Schumann Brahms Variations by one Frieda V, long thought to be Freund: it is in fact the Austrian pianist Frieda Valenzi. Freund would have been about 74 years old when she set down this account of this titanic Brahms Sonata, a challenging work for an artist of any age. She plays with impressive strength and cohesiveness: melodic lines are beautifully highlighted, chords impeccably balanced, and textures exquisitely clear. Her timing is particularly remarkable, with just the right degree of expansiveness so as to never be exaggerated or sentimental. A magnificent performance by an artist worthy of continued interest and exploration.
Liszt: The Great Piano Works  - Part 1
03:17:56

Liszt: The Great Piano Works - Part 1

Download & Streams https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/LisztTheGreatPiano Physical Purchase https://www.brilliantclassics.com/articles/l/liszt-the-great-piano-works/ Brilliant Classics Spotify: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/Spotify Spotify Classical Piano Playlist: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/ClassicalPianoPlaylist Composer: Franz Liszt Franz Liszt is universally celebrated as one of the greatest-ever virtuoso performers on the modern piano. Contemporary accounts describe his seemingly superhuman technical abilities and equally striking charisma and stage presence. Yet Liszt was a formidable composer, and his expansion of pianistic possibilities was achieved as much through innovation in his own great piano works as through his astonishing performance on the instrument, if not more. Like many child virtuosos thrust early into busy concert careers (Liszt’s began at the age of nine) he retired early, weary of the spotlight, turning his back on the stage at the remarkably early age of 35. Since he lived to the likewise remarkable old age of 75, much more than the latter half of his life was devoted solely to composition, and having been a pianist of his calibre, the works he created for his own instrument were indeed groundbreaking. Tracklist Below: Played by: Vincenzo Maltempo 00:00:00 Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 1 in C-Sharp Minor, S.244/1 00:13:02 Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 2 in C-Sharp Minor, S.244/2 00:25:41 Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 3 in B-Flat Minor, S.244/3 00:30:58 Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 4 in E-Flat Major 00:36:20 Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 5 in E Minor, S.244/5 00:46:17 Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 6 in D-Flat Major, S.244/6 00:53:22 Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 7 in D Minor, S.244/7 00:58:57 Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 8 in F-Sharp Minor, S.244/8 01:06:13 Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 9 in E-Flat Major, S.244/9 01:17:35 Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 10 in E Major, S.244/10 01:23:39 Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 11 in A Minor, S.244/11 01:29:37 Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 12 in C-Sharp Minor, S.244/12 01:39:56 Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 13 in A Minor, S.244/13 01:50:05 Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 14 in F Minor, S.244/14 02:02:59 Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 15 in A Minor, S.244/15 02:08:49 Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 16 in A Minor, S.244/16 02:13:50 Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 17 in D Minor, S.244/17 02:16:46 Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 18 in F-Sharp Minor, S.244/18 02:19:53 Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 19 in D Minor, Ss.244/19 Played by: Enrico Pace 02:30:04 Années de pèlerinage I, S.160: I. Chapelle de Guillaume Tell 02:35:34 Années de pèlerinage I, S.160: II. Au lac de Wallenstadt 02:38:43 Années de pèlerinage I, S.160: III. Pastorale 02:40:24 Années de pèlerinage I, S.160: IV. Au bord d'une source 02:44:22 Années de pèlerinage I, S.160: V. Orage 02:48:29 Années de pèlerinage I, S.160: VI. Vallée d'Obermann 03:02:20 Années de pèlerinage I, S.160: VII. Eglogue 03:05:58 Années de pèlerinage I, S.160: VIII. Le mal du pays 03:11:54 Années de pèlerinage I, S.160: IX. Les cloches de Genève

Italy

Beatrice Rana and LSO perform Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 5 in E-Flat Major (Full Performance)
40:06

Beatrice Rana and LSO perform Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 5 in E-Flat Major (Full Performance)

Beatrice Rana plays Beethoven's grand "Emperor" Concerto with the London Symphony Orchestra and conductor Gianandrea Noseda. 00:06 I. Allegro 20:50 II. Adagio un poco mosso 29:22 III. Rondo: Allegro ma non troppo Listen to more music by Beatrice Rana here: https://lnk.to/ranaLY Though the appellation "Emperor" was not given by the composer himself, this concerto was born during a time of military influence: the Napoleonic Wars. Beethoven began writing the work in 1808 and completed it in 1809 in Vienna, the same year that the city came under siege by Napoleon's army. Due to the composer's then-severely declining hearing, the concerto was premiered by soloist Friedrich Schneider, rather than by Beethoven himself, in 1811. Filmed in February 2022 at the Barbican Centre, London. __________ Warner Classics ► Website: http://www.warnerclassics.com Subscribe to our: ► YT- Channel: https://wnrcl.me/subscribeYT ► Newsletter https://wnrcl.me/subscribeNL Follow us on: ► Facebook: http://www.fb.com/WarnerClassicsErato ► Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/warner_classics ► Twitter: http://twitter.com/WarnerClassics ► YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/warnerclassics Listen to us on: ► Spotify: http://open.spotify.com/user/warnerclassics ► Apple Music: http://itunes.apple.com/curator/warner-classics/1153741571 ► Deezer https://www.deezer.com/profile/321050935 Warner Classics is the home of classical music, featuring iconic high audio quality recordings from the greatest classical legends, opera stars and orchestras of the last century. Discover our unique collection of live performances, studio sessions and films featuring Maria Callas, Jacqueline du Pré, Nigel Kennedy, Mstislav Rostropovich, Yehudi Menuhin, Itzhak Perlman, Herbert von Karajan, Berliner Philharmoniker and more. Along with its sister label Erato, Warner Classics continues this tradition with today's most in-demand classical artists, such as Philippe Jaroussky, Joyce DiDonato, Diana Damrau, Emmanuel Pahud, Alexandre Tharaud, Sir Antonio Pappano, Christina Pluhar and Renaud Capuçon. Enjoy this ever-expanding library of official performance videos and exclusive interviews from the classical greats. Check back regularly for more music from your favourite composers including Bach, Mozart, Chopin, Debussy, Satie, Beethoven, Vivaldi, Handel and more.

Japan

Poland

Krystian Zimerman – Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 5 in E Flat Major, Op. 73: II. Adagio un poco moto
08:44

Krystian Zimerman – Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 5 in E Flat Major, Op. 73: II. Adagio un poco moto

Krystian Zimerman joined forces with Sir Simon Rattle and the London Symphony Orchestra in December 2020 in Beethoven’s five piano concertos. Their spellbinding performances harvested a bumper crop of critical superlatives. Here was “history in the making”, wrote The Times in its five-star review, while Bachtrack noted, “Purity and clarity are hallmarks of Zimerman’s playing and there was an almost aristocratic composure to his phrasing and a velvet touch … Everything was meticulous, not … a quaver out of place.” Tracing a path from Classicism to Romanticism, the five works are masterpieces of a genre revolutionised by Beethoven. It was as a virtuoso pianist that he first made his name and he premiered all but the Fifth Concerto himself – his deafness was so serious by then that he no longer felt confident about performing in public. Krystian Zimerman – Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 5 in E Flat Major, Op. 73: II. Adagio un poco moto Listen to 'Beethoven: Complete Piano Concertos': https://dgt.link/zimerman-beethoven Subscribe here for more classical video clips – The Best Of Classical Music: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-DG Discover full concert performances on DG Premium - registration and basic library are free: https://www.dg-premium.com Get your front row ticket here for exclusive streams and world premieres with leading artists: https://www.dg-stage.com _______________ Find Deutsche Grammophon Online Homepage: http://deutschegrammophon.com Facebook: http://fb.com/deutschegrammophon Twitter: http://twitter.com/dgclassics Instagram: http://instagram.com/dgclassics Newsletter: https://deutschegrammophon.com/newsletter _______________ 最优质古典音乐 – 此处订阅: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-DG Le meilleur de la musique classique. Pour vous abonner cliquez ici: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-DG 最高のクラシック音楽―登録はこちら: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-DG 최고의 클래식음악을 구독하세요: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-DG Подписаться на лучшую классическую музыку:: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-DG La mejor música clásica - Suscríbase aquí: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-DG #KrystianZimerman #Beethoven #Piano
Josef Hofmann 1937 COMPLETE The Golden Jubilee Concert
01:52:20

Josef Hofmann 1937 COMPLETE The Golden Jubilee Concert

According to the Polish music critic Piotr Wierzbicki, Hofmann was "the greatest pianist of the 20th century". It's easy to find the parts of this legendary concert, but not so easy to find the entire performance. So here it is: Curtis Student Orchestra ; Fritz Reiner, conductor (in the Brahms, Rubinstein, and Hofmann works) Recorded in the Metropolitan Opera House on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of Josef Hofmann's American debut, Nov. 28, 1937. Originally this was made available as a set of 13 records. Only 20 sets were produced in 1937. Hofmann's wife Betty arranged for the recording without Hofmann's knowledge. Betty Hofmann did sent the records to Hofmann’s mother who could not attend the concert, this because she lived in Berlin. This particular exemplar (set) is archived at the Staatliches Institut für Musikforschung in Berlin Germany. The Curtis Institute Student Orchestra conducted by Fritz Reiner: 1. Brahms - Academic Festival Overture Op.80 2. Introductory remarks by Walter Damrosch 3. Rubinstein - Piano Concerto No.4 in D minor - Moderato assai - Allegro - Andante - Allegro 4. Chopin - Ballade op.23 5. Chopin - Nocturne op.9 No.2 6. Chopin - Waltz op.42 7. Chopin - Andante Spianato & Grand Polonaise op.22 8. Chopin - Nocturne op.15 No.2 9. Chopin - Waltz op.64 No.1 10. Chopin - Etude op.25 No.9 11. Chopin - Berceuse op.57 12. Hofmann - Chromaticon (for piano and orchestra) 13. Mendelssohn - Spinning Song op.67 No.4 14. Rachmaninoff - Prelude op.23 No.5 15. Beethoven-Rubinstein - Turkish March 16. Moszkowski - Carpice Espagnole op.37 Enjoy!

Russia

Rachmaninoff: Symphony No. 2 | Antonio Pappano with the Staatskapelle Dresden
58:47

Rachmaninoff: Symphony No. 2 | Antonio Pappano with the Staatskapelle Dresden

A frenzy of timbres: Sergei Rachmaninoff's Symphony No. 2 in E minor, Op. 27, performed by the Sächsische Staatskapelle Dresden under the baton of Antonio Pappano. The concert took place in the Semperoper Dresden in 2018. The second symphony by Russian composer Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873 - 1943) could also be called his "Dresden Symphony" since Rachmaninoff wrote the symphonic work in 1906/07 in Dresden, where his family had spent the winter months for three consecutive years. The premiere of Symphony No. 2 took place again in St. Petersburg in 1908 under the composer's direction and was a great success, which Rachmaninoff was in dire need of, since the premiere of his first symphony in 1897 had been a debacle and had plunged him into depression and a deep creative crisis. All the more astonishing was the great success he had with his 2nd Symphony. This may be due, on the one hand, to the balance that characterizes the form of each of the four movements. But above all, it is the symphony's tonal colours that give it an incomparable radiance. Through lush orchestration and varied combinations of instrumental groups, the orchestra's tonal possibilities come into their own. In the past, Rachmaninoff's Symphony No. 2 was often performed in an abridged version. Here, the Staatskapelle Dresden plays it completely authentically – in its unabridged original version and at the location of its creation. (00:00) Rachmaninoff: Symphony No. 2 in E minor, Op. 27 (00:25) I. Largo - Allegro moderato (19:23) II. Allegro molto (29:50) III Adagio (44:19) IV. Allegro vivace © EuroArts Music International Watch more concerts in your personal concert hall: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL_SdnzPd3eBV5A14dyRWy1KSkwcG8LEey Subscribe to DW Classical Music: https://www.youtube.com/dwclassicalmusic #Rachmaninoff #StaatskapelleDresden #AntonioPappano

United States of America

Austria

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