Khatia Buniatishvili - Rhapsody in Blue

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  • Опубликовано: 20 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 4,7 тыс.

  • @chickenman9059
    @chickenman9059  2 года назад +972

    Orchestre National de Lyon
    Leonard Slatkin (Conductor)
    Khatia Buniatishvili (Piano)
    February 11, 2017

    • @alanwarburton8362
      @alanwarburton8362 2 года назад +9

      Mowjhawke

    • @alanwarburton8362
      @alanwarburton8362 2 года назад +12

      Mowhaw

    • @georgescancan7503
      @georgescancan7503 2 года назад

      What words, dear "bloodgrss", how many emotions! Did I step on your foot, respected businessman who sells half-naked, barefoot, busty whiskey drinkers who call themselves "pianists"?! Owning a piano keyboard is not yet an art, it is a craft! Therefore, your "pianists" attract the attention of an uneducated audience with their half-naked body, bare feet and other tricks. As their bodies age, these "pianists" will disappear! Together with them, you will disappear, dear "bloodgrss"! And we will all say goodbye to you: Ciao, baby!!! With your propaganda of the "attractive young half-naked body" you block the way to the stage for really talented people. Your place is the garbage pit of history!

    • @Vodichka9
      @Vodichka9 2 года назад +5

      @Georges Can can You're the proverbial swine gazing at pearls. One wonders how little shame you have in publicly exposing yourself.

    • @georgescancan7503
      @georgescancan7503 2 года назад

      @@Vodichka9
      You are deeply mistaken if you think classical music is meant to boost testosterone levels in your aging body! This "lady" shamelessly sells her body, she successfully sells her body in her other videos. It is precisely such "lovers of classical music" as you, dear sir, who destroy classical music by writing sweet comments. It is these "lovers of classical music" who drool and snot at the sight of the "fresh body" of a pianist! ruclips.net/video/VBZhP3aPaNU/видео.html

  • @randybenjamin5685
    @randybenjamin5685 9 месяцев назад +271

    Today, February 12th 2024, is the 100th Anniversary of the first performance of "Rhapsody in Blue" .
    This performance is magnificent.

    • @johnnyfred2125
      @johnnyfred2125 Месяц назад +3

      Birthday tradition of mine.

    • @LindaSohier-b8j
      @LindaSohier-b8j 8 дней назад

      @@johnnyfred2125 Really, monsieur Verrycken????

    • @garymann8626
      @garymann8626 8 часов назад

      This was my dad's favorite song. He lived in upstate NY and took a train to NYC to see Gershwin himself play this.

  • @RonCook-ny3lo
    @RonCook-ny3lo 2 года назад +1898

    I am 88 years old. I have heard this composition many many times. I have never heard it performed this well by a performer who seems to totally enjoy it. I am sure if George were listening to this particular performance, he would say "Ah. This is what I heard when I composed it."

    • @UKOnation
      @UKOnation 2 года назад +62

      I didn´t read many answers ( exaktly it´s only yours at the moment), but I´m shure, this is the best comparison and also compliment to her, which can be given.
      I agree 100 %.

    • @AFMMD-q8
      @AFMMD-q8 2 года назад +57

      May you have many, many more years of listening pleasure in the company of great composers. I'm 64, been listening to it since I was a kid, best music in the world.

    • @dawhike
      @dawhike Год назад +51

      This type music keeps us ALL ALIVE! I hope I'm still kicking at 88! 😎

    • @t.s.t.4085
      @t.s.t.4085 Год назад +14

      Thank you for erudite/sweet, comments.
      I'm 55+:
      Sang, played clarinet, sang again, acted, and (Yuch....)
      Sang, and sang, and sang.......

    • @t.s.t.4085
      @t.s.t.4085 Год назад +14

      Tell us so much more about yourself, 88-year old.
      We (U.S.) want(s) to learn.

  • @HanWijman
    @HanWijman 8 месяцев назад +105

    Rhapsody in Blue was played at the funeral of my late Father. Afterwards we got so many compliments about the beautiful music. A lot of new fans.

  • @MrWphilips
    @MrWphilips 7 месяцев назад +63

    Khatia is a superstar!
    Incredible musicianship and brilliant personality!
    She brings this masterpiece to emotional life! Wonderful!

  • @DanielDaniel1
    @DanielDaniel1 Год назад +1175

    Nobody mentioning how masterfully this was recorded and mixed. Huge shout out to the sound team

    • @MariusRiley
      @MariusRiley Год назад +11

      💯

    • @pierre-gabrieljobin9450
      @pierre-gabrieljobin9450 Год назад +17

      Indeed the sound of this colourful piece is very rich and very well mixed.

    • @IsraelChaffin
      @IsraelChaffin Год назад +35

      No doubt! And the camera angles with shot duration and switching was engaging-it pulled me further in and gave me the joy of seeing key players as they expressed the beauty within their soul.

    • @williamherndon4873
      @williamherndon4873 Год назад +10

      Improving on perfection….you just wit nessed it

    • @LucBoeren
      @LucBoeren Год назад +8

      Absolutely

  • @donmcmillan261
    @donmcmillan261 8 месяцев назад +94

    A class lady at the piano. As she finishes she acknowledges the Conductor, the concert mistress, the orchestra, and then she takes her bow to receive audience recognition. Such a beautiful piece of music. thanks, Khatia!

    • @saimadelen
      @saimadelen 12 дней назад

      🙏♥️💖❤️Beautiful, beautiful n beautiful🙋‍♀️🌹🌹🌹

    • @LindaSohier-b8j
      @LindaSohier-b8j 5 дней назад

      @@saimadelen What do you mean, VERRYCKEN?

  • @skopp888
    @skopp888 Год назад +397

    The genius of Rhapsody in Blue is how it invokes such a feeling of well being, of familiarity, of nostalgia. Of a time gone by, of good times, of better times. Of good times still to come

    • @timford3599
      @timford3599 Год назад +18

      Beautifully stated Rishie.

    • @Jacquiejo2012
      @Jacquiejo2012 10 месяцев назад +8

      This was magnificently and masterfully preformed!

    • @cpalmer5033
      @cpalmer5033 8 месяцев назад

      N​@@Jacquiejo2012

    • @kirbyculp3449
      @kirbyculp3449 7 месяцев назад +1

      After listening many many times I have finally felt that this music describes the feelings of a man that is going on a date for dancing with his beautiful future wife.

    • @joeherald7319
      @joeherald7319 5 месяцев назад +2

      You are so correct. It's like a 20 minute walk through the 20th century. Good and bad happy and sad fast and slow yet always joyous and hopeful.

  • @301rs
    @301rs 8 месяцев назад +229

    What a privilege! Without modern technology and RUclips, I probably would have never seen this wonderful performance. The artistry of Khatia and the accompanying orchestra are pure magic!

    • @kevinburnson
      @kevinburnson 7 месяцев назад +6

      One wonderful piece of music!! You can see the pride, the passion, the pleasure in the faces of these musicians!! BRAVO!! This is what you get when great orchestras and great music come together. What a treat for body and soul.

    • @tomskimcdouglegaming806
      @tomskimcdouglegaming806 4 месяца назад

      And those tiddies. Spectacular.

    • @DiZastur
      @DiZastur 4 месяца назад +2

      First time I heard this was in 2000. My friend and I bought an ex cab to go skiing for a week in Nelson BC, Canada. We bought the car, an old 1990 chevy caprice classic, not realizing the stereo system was worth twice what we paid for the car. My friend flipped this CD in...OMFG...I will never forget, going up the switchback outside Osoyoos BC first thing in the morning, fresh snowfall, at the apex you see the mountain peaks for hundreds of miles...and this song was playing. My only thought was...it just doesn't get any better than this. Most majestic moment I've ever experienced.

    • @fazzaz31
      @fazzaz31 4 месяца назад +1

      @@DiZastur Glad you enjoyed the performance. The orchestrsa was damn good and cudos to the clarinet. Sadly, Khatia's piano woefully underperformed. I couldn't tell what it was, but it sounded like an upright beerhall relic to me. Steinway or go home.

    • @FuckFeminists
      @FuckFeminists 3 месяца назад

      Are you seriously going to credit "modern technology" for learning of Rhapsody in Blue?
      What a bizarre place to lay your gratitude. That same modern technology has destroyed the recording industry.

  • @shaunweaver2107
    @shaunweaver2107 Год назад +226

    I love how Ms. Buniatishvili not only enjoys playing, but seems to thoroughly enjoy listening to the orchestra as well. Her phrasing is so clear, precise and full of expression. What a joy! What a great recording. Bravo to all!

    • @patrickrussell1888
      @patrickrussell1888 7 месяцев назад +5

      Well, my Leonard Berstein version of the 60s was due for modernization...and this version did just that! 😊

    • @James-un8rr
      @James-un8rr 7 месяцев назад +5

      Truely real angels ,,!,❤❤❤

    • @Inbraneinthememsane
      @Inbraneinthememsane 2 месяца назад

      What’s her only fans profile?

    • @lucasalvi4034
      @lucasalvi4034 2 месяца назад

      idiot

    • @DavidShaw-ox2ji
      @DavidShaw-ox2ji Месяц назад +1

      Greatest mix of jazz & classical music … Gershwin was a genius of both mediums

  • @joeherald7319
    @joeherald7319 Год назад +166

    Just one guy's opinion but, I think is the most moving piece of music ever written. It's got some of the musical stylings of the best of 20th century America. There's: classical, jazz, big band, stride piano, banjo, march tempo, blues, concerto and more. And in this performance Khatia totally "gets it". And the way she is dressed adds an extra 1940's swanky night club aura of suave glamor to this beautiful presentation. PS- I could watch this every day and get chills every time.

    • @Dank_Engine
      @Dank_Engine 8 месяцев назад +12

      You’re not alone. It’s one of my favorites

    • @wa1-marketing955
      @wa1-marketing955 6 месяцев назад +7

      I wholeheartedly agree ..

    • @mikeaubrey1310
      @mikeaubrey1310 6 месяцев назад +8

      i just sent a half dozen texts suggesting that this is the finest music ever written. 100 yrs old. this version is the best of the best. you are correct. at 9min 35 seconds is proof

    • @charlotteb.derrick5117
      @charlotteb.derrick5117 5 месяцев назад +6

      Spot on you are! One of my all time favorites….I must add you are very observant….on all points….💜💜💜

    • @jazluvr99
      @jazluvr99 5 месяцев назад +4

      Agreed... on all counts!! 😀

  • @DecoWorks4u
    @DecoWorks4u Год назад +722

    That clarinet intro almost squeezed the life out of me. Sensational performance

    • @YewtBoot
      @YewtBoot Год назад +34

      He was masterful at it, and Khatia certainly made good note of it.

    • @spikespa5208
      @spikespa5208 Год назад +41

      Her expression at his little embellishment at 0:47. Priceless. And again at 5:12, if she had given me that look, I wouldn't have been able to continue playing.

    • @jakerazmataz852
      @jakerazmataz852 Год назад +8

      Flawless.

    • @FreeCandle
      @FreeCandle Год назад

      Came to say this!

    • @craigcarlson4022
      @craigcarlson4022 11 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, indeed!

  • @nortledorfus
    @nortledorfus Год назад +248

    This is THE MOST MOVING MUSIC I'VE EVER HEARD...and I'm 73 years old. Her performance and that of the orchestra was absolutely OUTSTANDING. Brought me to tears.

    • @noeliafernandez9478
      @noeliafernandez9478 Год назад +5

      Excelente interpretación !pianista y orquesta

    • @lukebradley3193
      @lukebradley3193 11 месяцев назад +3

      The classic American symphony in my opinion. It was composed a couple years before the great depression, but it seems to define the spirit that carried America through that, and into the Looney Tunes act of involving itself in WWII. Just this beautiful chaos to the piece, all these distractions and victories. The pianist Khatia Buniatishvili, was apparently born in the Soviet Union, and it's something to think that with her semitic features she may not have even been born to play the piece had America not found that strength to involve itself in world affairs when very poor. All the pieces just come together in this performance, to make this incredible thing. Music is such a universal language, there really isn't anything anyone needs to say if one can really listen, and YOU sir, can obviously really listen...

    • @bennywyman1
      @bennywyman1 10 месяцев назад

      😅

    • @semajtee
      @semajtee 9 месяцев назад

      Me too!

    • @ofdrumsandchords
      @ofdrumsandchords 9 месяцев назад

      Great performance, indeed. Happy man, with so many masterpieces to discover.
      Musicians have a say. Mozart is a man talking to God, Bach is God talking to men.

  • @danoneill8751
    @danoneill8751 Год назад +38

    Holy crap. Statistically speaking, no one will ever do anything so well as that pianist in that performance.

    • @castlebound2010
      @castlebound2010 4 месяца назад +1

      Talent, effort and motivation since the times of Mozart and even before so...

    • @PhilipChovan
      @PhilipChovan 4 месяца назад

      ❤ 3:57

  • @bartram33
    @bartram33 8 месяцев назад +10

    From someone who doesn’t have a musical note in his body, I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, musicians are born not made. That was breathtaking, both Khatia and the orchestra!

  • @jimwalker5412
    @jimwalker5412 Год назад +85

    I'm 75 yoa my Father passed away when I was 12 yoa RIB was his favorite piece of music, this just brought me to tears, Love you Dad

  • @johnhenke6475
    @johnhenke6475 2 года назад +225

    When I was a kid, about 10 or 11, I road my bike to downtown in Casa Grande Arizona and discovered the Salvation Army store. It was a musty smelling place with lots of old uniforms from the Second World war and all kinds of interesting junk nobody wanted anymore. There was these old 78 RPM records for ten cents each. They were only 20 years or so old at that time. I bought Rhapsody in Blue, I don't know why. I took it home and set our record player on 78 RPM and flipped over the needle and played it. I cried listening to it. It was so beautiful. I didn't know music could be so beautiful.
    You just made me cry again. Thank you.

    • @haroldbrown6630
      @haroldbrown6630 2 года назад +12

      Well written comment . . . I can smell the place.

    • @petervrabcak5597
      @petervrabcak5597 2 года назад +8

      The man was a genius, so is the lady!

    • @alexdevon2588
      @alexdevon2588 2 года назад +9

      Your wonderful true story made me cry. Emotionally and sentimentally, beautiful! I adore this piece also and when Khatia plays it, she really feels it and transmits this feeling to us. The best of Worlds.

    • @georgescancan7503
      @georgescancan7503 2 года назад +1

      @@alexdevon2588
      Alexander Boot
      Writer, critic, polemicist
      Sex sells - all of us short
      The other day I listened to something or other on RUclips, and a link to Chopin’s Fourth Ballade performed by the Georgian pianist Khatia Buniatishvili came up.
      The link was accompanied by a close-up publicity photo of the musician: sloe bedroom eyes, sensual semi-open lips suggesting a delight that’s still illegal in Alabama, naked shoulders hinting at the similarly nude rest of her body regrettably out of shot…
      Let me see where my wife is… Good, she isn’t looking over my shoulder, so I can admit to you that the picture got me excited in ways one doesn’t normally associate with Chopin’s Fourth Ballade or for that matter any other classical composition this side of Wagner or perhaps Ravel’s Bolero.
      Searching for a more traditional musical rapture I clicked on the actual clip and alas found it anticlimactic, as it were. Khatia’s playing, though competent, is as undeniably so-what as her voluptuous figure undeniably isn’t. (Yes, I know the photograph I mentioned doesn’t show much of her figure apart from the luscious shoulders but, the prurient side of my nature piqued, I did a bit of a web crawl.)
      Just for the hell of it I looked at the publicity shots of other currently active female musicians, such as Yuja Wang, Joanna MacGregor, Nicola Bendetti, Alison Balsom (nicknamed ‘crumpet with a trumpet’, her promos more often suggest ‘a strumpet with a trumpet’ instead), Anne-Sophie Mutter and a few others.
      They didn’t disappoint the Peeping Tom lurking under my aging surface. Just about all the photographs showed the ladies in various stages of undress, in bed, lying in suggestive poses on top of the piano, playing in frocks (if any) open to the coccyx in the back and/or to the navel up front.
      This is one thing these musicians have in common. The other is that none of them is all that good at her day job and some, such as Wang, are truly awful. Yet this doesn’t really matter either to them or to the public or, most important, to those who form the public tastes by writing about music and musicians.
      Thus, for example, a tabloid pundit expressing his heartfelt regret that Nicola Benedetti “won’t be posing for the lads’ mags anytime soon. Pity, because she looks fit as a fiddle…” Geddit? She’s a violinist, which is to say fiddler - well, you do get it.
      “But Nicola doesn’t always take the bonniest photo,” continues the writer, “she’s beaky in pics sometimes, which is weird because in the flesh she’s an absolute knock-out.
      “The classical musician is wearing skinny jeans which show off her long legs. She’s also busty with a washboard flat tummy, tottering around 5ft 10in in her Dune platform wedges.”
      How well does she play the violin though? No one cares. Not even critics writing for our broadsheets, who don’t mind talking about musicians in terms normally reserved for pole dancers. Thus for instance runs a review of a piano recital at Queen Elizabeth Hall, one of London’s top concert venues:
      “She is the most photogenic of players: young, pretty, bare-footed; and, with her long dark hair and exquisite strapless dress of dazzling white, not only seemed to imply that sexuality itself can make you a profound musician, but was a perfect visual complement to the sleek monochrome of a concert grand… [but] there’s more to her than meets the eye.”
      The male reader is clearly expected to get a stiffie trying to imagine what that might be. To help his imagination along, the piece is accompanied by a photo of the young lady in question reclining on her instrument in a pre-coital position with an unmistakable ‘come and get it’ expression on her face. The ‘monochrome’ piano is actually bright-red, a colour usually found not in concert halls but in dens of iniquity.
      Nowhere does the review mention the fact obvious to anyone with any taste for musical performance: the girl is so bad that she should indeed be playing in a brothel, rather than on the concert platform.
      Can you, in the wildest flight of fancy, imagine a reviewer talking in such terms about sublime women artists of the past, such as Myra Hess, Maria Yudina, Maria Grinberg, Clara Haskil, Marcelle Meyer, Marguerite Long, Kathleen Ferrier? Can you see any of them allowing themselves to be photographed in the style of “lads’ mags”?
      I can’t, which raises the inevitable question: what exactly has changed in the last say 70 years? The short answer is, just about everything. Concert organisers and impresarios, who used to be in the business because they loved music first and wanted to make a living second, now care about nothing but money. Critics, who used to have discernment and taste, now have nothing but greed and lust for popularity. The public… well, don’t get me started on that. The circle is vicious: because tasteless ignoramuses use every available medium to build up musical nonentities, nonentities is all we get. And because the musical nonentities have no artistic qualities to write about, the writing nonentities have to concentrate on the more jutting attractions, using a vocabulary typically found in “lads’ mags”. The adage “sex sells” used to be applied first to B-movies, then to B-novels, and now to real music. From “sex sells” it’s but a short distance to “only sex sells”. This distance has already been travelled - and we are all being sold short.

    • @imbok
      @imbok 2 года назад +7

      When I heard this performance, I ugly cried - hard. This stuff is magic.

  • @juligrlee556
    @juligrlee556 8 месяцев назад +42

    Thank you Khatia for everything you have invested in your music. It's heavenly.

  • @valeriecoopet9897
    @valeriecoopet9897 8 месяцев назад +188

    I am not a musician, but I am pretty sure most musicians are magical creatures put on earth to create beauty.

    • @rickhunter7
      @rickhunter7 5 месяцев назад +2

      Here's a secret: being a musician is more about hard work than talent. Sure being talented helps but most of it is just practice, so, in reality anyone can be a musician with enough effort.

    • @MusicLife-xy4ph
      @MusicLife-xy4ph 4 месяца назад +4

      @@rickhunter7 Not "anyone". You're right, talent is not enough to be a musician. Hard work isn't either.

    • @rickhunter7
      @rickhunter7 4 месяца назад +2

      @@MusicLife-xy4ph I agree, some people are born without a musical ear and it seems no matter how hard they try they can't overcome that. They can still enjoy music as much as the next person.

    • @Mark-tz6ie
      @Mark-tz6ie 2 месяца назад +1

      @valeriecoopet9897 thank-you Valerie and on behalf of stated beauty makers I wish you would tip us more.

    • @Mark-tz6ie
      @Mark-tz6ie 2 месяца назад

      @rickhunter7 I agree with you. I was born with perfect pitch, the very definition of music talent. But you are right. Hard work, I feel, is more significant than talent. There are musicians who are talentless but they really love music , work hard at it, and wind up being in demand. But of course the formidable Buniatishvili is a product of hard work and talent. And a touch of pure genius.

  • @terrybrowning5143
    @terrybrowning5143 Год назад +119

    the clarinetist stole the show...certainly my heart!.....that ascension...flawless!

    • @rnashrock
      @rnashrock 4 месяца назад +3

      The best I've ever heard!!!

    • @frankcoverjr.-jz3ne
      @frankcoverjr.-jz3ne 4 месяца назад +3

      With just the right amount of swing!😊

    • @acropolis4032
      @acropolis4032 3 месяца назад +3

      it’s not Swing in the opening passage. It’s pure Klezmer!

    • @claudegagnon999
      @claudegagnon999 2 месяца назад +1

      Beautiful instrument!

    • @claudegagnon999
      @claudegagnon999 2 месяца назад

      @@acropolis4032 Yep!

  • @hanszimmer8801
    @hanszimmer8801 Год назад +257

    This is the greatest performance of Rhapsody in Blue I've ever heard. Absolutely formidable and overwhelming. I love it 💙

    • @thomassicard3733
      @thomassicard3733 Год назад +3

      All the fast notes are SO FAST that you can't even hear them!! WONDERFUL!! Right??????

    • @wchambers3849
      @wchambers3849 Год назад +8

      You should listen to Leonard Bernstein’s performance. The best I’ve ever heard!

    • @kevinmalone3210
      @kevinmalone3210 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@wchambers3849I agree, Bernstein performance was unmatched. She's very good, but her style isn't on par with the way he played it.

    • @Dbean48
      @Dbean48 8 месяцев назад +2

      Totally agree, Gershwin would approve of this performance..above and beyond any before..😎🇺🇸

    • @craighill1882
      @craighill1882 8 месяцев назад +4

      Bernstein was an overrated pretty boy, loved by the critics and no one else.

  • @dxdxdkino1583
    @dxdxdkino1583 Год назад +136

    Khatia Buniatishvili, the orchestra, the conductor, the sound team, the camerawork... Everything is on point. Beautiful performance

  • @bradzoltick6465
    @bradzoltick6465 10 месяцев назад +50

    The best performance of Rhapsody in Blue - ever! Wonderful playing. Just beautiful.

  • @johnalcorn8079
    @johnalcorn8079 Год назад +74

    George Gershwin wrote classics from Summertime to Rhapsody in Blue.He kept changing direction in music.He died at 38yrs old,who knows what he would have written.A Genius!

    • @IbanezArtist85
      @IbanezArtist85 Год назад +1

      And Summertime was even recorded by the Zombies (and
      done very well by them).

    • @sondrasmith2691
      @sondrasmith2691 Год назад +7

      He WAS true genius. I agree with you.

    • @invisibleink2644
      @invisibleink2644 8 месяцев назад +4

      And Ira, too.

    • @robotaverage
      @robotaverage 5 месяцев назад +1

      If he'd lived long enough to get a Fender Strat in his hands he would have slayed like Hendrix.

    • @_..-.._..-.._
      @_..-.._..-.._ 3 месяца назад +1

      He’d have been a rap superstar, and lived large.

  • @jasonstarr6419
    @jasonstarr6419 2 года назад +836

    As a performer - professional for a period of my life - I know how important it is to be recognized for my/your contribution in a performance. Her attention to the principals and conductor for quite some time prior to taking her own bow shows that she not only has tremendous talent, but also has enough humility and appreciation for others that she recognized them first. Brilliant performance, tremendous humanity.

    • @mariodisarli1022
      @mariodisarli1022 2 года назад +9

      @vibratingstring
      International Association of Theatre Critics (Hong Kong) 31.03.2016 .....
      One may say that it is important for musicians to have a unique musical style and personality, but is it even acceptable to interpret the pieces like what Buniatishvili did? Buniatishvili is intoxicated by being virtuosic and often forgets what is behind the music. One should have faith in his or her own interpretation, but he or she should also re-think whether he or she is doing justice to the music or not. In addition, technique is much more than playing the notes accurately and rapidly. Technique refers to the total mastery of the keyboard. Yet, at times Buniatishvili’s playing lost control, no matter use of pedal, or tone production. Virtuosity does not necessarily mean speed and volume. In order to become a mature artist with individuality, Buniatishvili has to reflect on her musical approach and attitude towards music making.

    • @georgescancan7503
      @georgescancan7503 2 года назад

      What words, dear "bloodgrss", how many emotions! Did I step on your foot, respected businessman who sells half-naked, barefoot, busty whiskey drinkers who call themselves "pianists"?! Owning a piano keyboard is not yet an art, it is a craft! Therefore, your "pianists" attract the attention of an uneducated audience with their half-naked body, bare feet and other tricks. As their bodies age, these "pianists" will disappear! Together with them, you will disappear, dear "bloodgrss"! And we will all say goodbye to you: Ciao, baby!!! With your propaganda of the "attractive young half-naked body" you block the way to the stage for really talented people. Your place is the garbage pit of history!

    • @mariodisarli1022
      @mariodisarli1022 2 года назад +1

      @vibratingstring Dear, you have a flat mind! You are here because they give you a young vigorous body, classical music does not play any role for you.

    • @Vodichka9
      @Vodichka9 2 года назад +7

      @vibratingstring The hatred is insane and Talibanesque.

    • @georgescancan7503
      @georgescancan7503 2 года назад

      @@Vodichka9
      Fake Appellation
      Fake Appellation
      vor 4 Stunden
      @Georges Can can You're the proverbial swine gazing at pearls. One wonders how little shame you have in publicly exposing yourself.
      Georges Cancan
      Georges Cancan
      vor 3 Minuten (bearbeitet)
      @Fake Appellation
      You are deeply mistaken if you think classical music is meant to boost testosterone levels in your aging body! This "lady" shamelessly sells her body, she successfully sells her body in her other videos. It is precisely such "lovers of classical music" as you, dear sir, who destroy classical music by writing sweet comments. It is these "lovers of classical music" who drool and snot at the sight of the "fresh body" of a pianist! ruclips.net/video/VBZhP3aPaNU/видео.html

  • @TheRealBrook1968
    @TheRealBrook1968 2 года назад +489

    Flawless clarinet solo. One of my favorite pieces and is the best opening I have ever heard in a live performance.

    • @sosenpott5445
      @sosenpott5445 Год назад

      Der Klarinettist ist wirklich großartig, ganz im Gegensatz zu Khatia Buniatshili. Da gibt es niemanden, der oder die großartiger ist, als Yuja Wang. Ich bin verliebt in sie.
      The clarinettist is really great, in contrast to Khatia Buniatshili. There is no one more magnificent than Yuja Wang. I am in love with her.

    • @IsraelChaffin
      @IsraelChaffin Год назад

      Yes!!! Mmmmm. ^_^

    • @randyzaucha8745
      @randyzaucha8745 Год назад +2

      I abandoned clarinet to play keyboards.

    • @nattersting976
      @nattersting976 Год назад +9

      If this doesn't make your neck hair quiver, you aren't alive.

    • @IsraelChaffin
      @IsraelChaffin Год назад +2

      @@randyzaucha8745 how's that experience been?

  • @JohnCollins-th8hm
    @JohnCollins-th8hm 10 месяцев назад +131

    Ive said it before, and I’ll say it again, but watching a great performer onstage completely enjoying themselves is just the best. She is so fun to watch. And hairdo is just perfect!

    • @Blivot
      @Blivot 9 месяцев назад +7

      ...all this and she never missed a note and had the entire piece set to memory O M G !!! That is truly amazing! Piano Power! Band too!

    • @paladin1726
      @paladin1726 8 месяцев назад +3

      She is as beautiful as beautiful gets. Yes, that hair when she’s playing is perfect

    • @davidphillips3925
      @davidphillips3925 6 месяцев назад

      Yes, it is quite evident when this lady plays the piano it is all about her.

    • @observer3232
      @observer3232 3 месяца назад

      Not only is her piano playing superb, but her appearance and performing style is sexy and erotic.

  • @СветланаМещерякова-з2б
    @СветланаМещерякова-з2б 10 месяцев назад +31

    Это чудно, великолепно! Все великолепны: и оркестр и Хатия шикарна во всём: в исполнении, в эмоциях!!!! А какое вступление !!! Как красиво!!!! Не хватает слов, чтоб выразить насколь ко это гениал ьно!!!

  • @fporretto
    @fporretto 2 года назад +545

    “Rhapsody in Blue” is the clearest, highest, strongest shout of joy in American music. It’s impossible to play it decently unless you love it - and Khatia Buniatishvili clearly does. This performance combines exuberance and precision in perfect proportion. Bravo!

    • @bruceatkinson5357
      @bruceatkinson5357 2 года назад +4

      Quite decently!

    • @SchwarzeWitwe2
      @SchwarzeWitwe2 2 года назад +7

      I saw a youtube comment years ago that called it a "brilliant piece of British music." Excuse me?!

    • @fporretto
      @fporretto 2 года назад +3

      @@SchwarzeWitwe2 *_HUH??_*

    • @SchwarzeWitwe2
      @SchwarzeWitwe2 2 года назад +4

      @@fporretto some fool thought it was British, which blew my mind.

    • @fporretto
      @fporretto 2 года назад +10

      @@SchwarzeWitwe2 Well, it blew mine, too! I suppose I should just relax and chuckle over the mistake -- but can you imagine if some American were to refer to the marches of Elgar as _American_ music? It would be the War of 1812 all over again! The British would invade and burn down Washington D.C. again...though come to think of it, that doesn't sound so bad just now...😉

  • @meteor2012able
    @meteor2012able 8 месяцев назад +42

    I am 91 yo, I first heard this in a movie when I was a teenager. I was smitten by the composition and never stopped being amazed ...😢 at how impactful it is.
    Great performance!!!❤❤❤

    • @RandysFiftySevenChevy
      @RandysFiftySevenChevy 7 месяцев назад +1

      United Airlines used it their advertising, and that's where I first was exposed to this beautiful tune.

    • @TKn-dq8kp
      @TKn-dq8kp 7 месяцев назад +2

      I am 91 as well and saw this movie after we were liberated in The Netherlands. This movie music never left me until now, unfortunately there was no Kathia then. What an artist! What a beauty!. Great experience whenever I play it and great memories. Thank you!

    • @1867DJP
      @1867DJP 7 месяцев назад

      What movie?

    • @TKn-dq8kp
      @TKn-dq8kp 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@1867DJP As far as I can remember the name of themovie had something to do with the rhapsody but even as I remembered the music I am not sure about the movie's name, it is almost 75 years ago

    • @1867DJP
      @1867DJP 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@TKn-dq8kp Maybe an American in Paris

  • @dontheshark
    @dontheshark Год назад +132

    Love watching her enjoyment of performing and her respect for the orchestra while they were playing. Her smiling throughout was wonderful.

  • @manyplanets
    @manyplanets 5 месяцев назад +16

    Playing with Khatia is like playing with the composer of all her pieces. She represents them. She embodies the soul of every piece she plays and she can play anything. And she revives these pieces for the audience and her fellow players who I can imagine love playing with her more than anything. She is a performer but also a channeler.

  • @melvynemanuel4396
    @melvynemanuel4396 Год назад +182

    Her timing is impeccable. Brings a lump to my throat. Watching her is like a beautiful, beautiful dream. I am emotionally overcome. I'm so glad I'm alive to here her play.

    • @warbuzzard7167
      @warbuzzard7167 Год назад +5

      To see such people so connected to the music is a great inspiration!

    • @comfyathome
      @comfyathome Год назад +1

      Spell-check "here"!

    • @melvynemanuel4396
      @melvynemanuel4396 Год назад +3

      a typo no doubt.@@comfyathome

  • @sailorgeer
    @sailorgeer 2 года назад +764

    What a fantastic performance! I love how Ms. Buniatishvili watches the other soloists and conductor so intently, truly playing with them as opposed to treating the orchestra as mere accompaniment. Bravo!

    • @MrPetrie
      @MrPetrie 2 года назад +9

      Yes!

    • @chickencrapoperator
      @chickencrapoperator 2 года назад +5

      Well put.

    • @georgescancan7503
      @georgescancan7503 2 года назад +3

      Buniatishvili est vulgaire dans tout, dans son comportement sur la scène, dans son habillement dans la scène, dans son pianisme! C'est un produit pour divertir sexuellement la foule et gagner de l'argent pour le manager! Tout ce qu'elle dit est préparé et rendu par la grande équipe derrière elle! En France et en Europe, il existe des dizaines de pianistes de la plus haute classe, mais ils ne montreront pas leurs seins et d'autres parties du corps sur scène. Par conséquent, la route vers la scène est fermée pour eux! Nous pouvons dire avec une certitude absolue: dans le secteur du concert, la mafia est active et cette vidéo en est la preuve!

    • @gearsofsounds
      @gearsofsounds 2 года назад +6

      @@georgescancan7503 mort de rire à l’idée qu’une vraie personne en 2022 puisse encore faire un commentaire de vieux schnock de 1964. Si en plus vous trouvez que cette robe montre une poitrine indécemment c’est que vous avez un sacré problème, il faut rapidement consulter…

    • @celsodorneles484
      @celsodorneles484 2 года назад +3

      @@georgescancan7503 caro tenho que concordar convosco em partes, pois a música não precisa de tal postura apelativa. Mas também não se pode deixar de reconhecer o talento da moça.

  • @bobsmachine618
    @bobsmachine618 Год назад +134

    The look on her face seems to say "This is what all the hard work was for, and it was worth it.". All the musicians in this performance are exceptional.

  • @lucasalvi4034
    @lucasalvi4034 2 месяца назад +13

    Beautiful, wonderful, astonishing, brilliant and joyful. Her timing, expression involvment , communication and connection with the orchestra is fantastic, as her smile. She really feels and enjoy while playing! All beautiful !

  • @blissbombseventeen8114
    @blissbombseventeen8114 Год назад +23

    This retired dancer/ choreographer just wants to get back up again listening and watching the pure mastery and magic weaved by Khatia! Love the orchestra, conductor and gosh those rhythms!

  • @789armstrong
    @789armstrong 2 года назад +1637

    If Gershwin had seen this performance he would write another rhapsody just for Khatia.

  • @toms2494
    @toms2494 4 месяца назад +33

    Just think the Orchestra is reading the music and Khatia is playing by memory, she is fantastic.

  • @rexmundi1812
    @rexmundi1812 9 месяцев назад +411

    This is where RUclips demonstrates its value.

    • @jonhardt6243
      @jonhardt6243 5 месяцев назад +2

      Amen!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @sylviajones4907
      @sylviajones4907 5 месяцев назад +3

      Thinking same. How fortunate I am to hear & see this performance.

    • @Dave.Mustaine.Is.Genius
      @Dave.Mustaine.Is.Genius 4 месяца назад +3

      ​@@sylviajones4907especially "to see" 😂😂😂😂😂

    • @castlebound2010
      @castlebound2010 4 месяца назад +1

      When all we have to do is choose wisely from all the 'infinite' options out there...

    • @Dave.Mustaine.Is.Genius
      @Dave.Mustaine.Is.Genius 4 месяца назад

      @@castlebound2010 I choose this woman's body over many videos on Yetube

  • @hlpimcnfsdl9715
    @hlpimcnfsdl9715 2 года назад +102

    khatia is everywhere. Speaking language after language. Relatively young. At the top of her game. Playing globally. The world at her feet. The comment section full of praise. Can you imagine how that must feel? And yet, watching her I get the feelng she's holding it all together. With style, with grace, and with a whole lot of passion and talent. She is a gem.

    • @francescolaface192
      @francescolaface192 2 года назад

      Katia.e' una pianista.versatile e irraggiungibile. Complimenti.

    • @MusicAdmirer
      @MusicAdmirer 2 года назад +3

      I love that she's acknowledging the orchestral musicians.

    • @sosenpott5445
      @sosenpott5445 Год назад

      Please listen to and watch Yuja Wang. Everything you say about Khatia applies to her.

    • @hlpimcnfsdl9715
      @hlpimcnfsdl9715 Год назад

      Yuja wang is a force of nature. I have watched her. She's an experience all to herself.

    • @businessdevil7094
      @businessdevil7094 2 месяца назад

      ​@@sosenpott5445 also, hot af.

  • @diegoforesti4726
    @diegoforesti4726 Год назад +7

    Sono passati quasi cento anni dalla prima esecuzione di questo capolavoro e risentendolo oggi è più fresco e vitale che mai!!! Caposaldo del Novecento di un genio assoluto che ci ha lasciato troppo presto. Chissà cosa avrebbe potuto scrivere ancora se fosse vissuto più a lungo. Grazie George!!!!

  • @billsimpson604
    @billsimpson604 2 года назад +78

    If people are still around in a hundred thousand years, they will still be listening to that piece. And it won't be better than that performance. Gershwin attained immortality with that work. Khatia played it perfectly.

    • @liberalwithguns5265
      @liberalwithguns5265 Год назад +2

      Well said sir! And so true

    • @timford3599
      @timford3599 Год назад

      Thank you, Bill. We are of the same mind in appreciation of this wonderful performance of ALL involved.

  • @claire0880
    @claire0880 Месяц назад +2

    Wowww! Je suis aux anges! Magnifiques! Merci beaucoup à vous Khatia et tous les musiciens sans oublier le chef d'orchestre!!! Quelle plaisir à mes oreilles...C'était magique! Câlins du Québec! ❣🙏🌿🌹🌹🌹🌿

  • @larumpole
    @larumpole 2 года назад +184

    I grew up with Leonard Bernstein’s 1976 performance of Rhapsody in Blue at the Royal Albert Hall in 1976 (search for it on RUclips), and that was, to me, the definitive rendition - I could neither appreciate nor enjoy the slightest deviation from Bernstein’s authoritative cadence and his orchestration. Khatia Buniatishvili’s spirited and sympathetic performance now challenges my mindset; I am open to two fantastic renditions of Gershwin’s masterpiece. Bravo Ms. Buniatishvili! Gershwin would adore your interpretation and style, and Leonard would truly respect and appreciate the competition.

    • @semajtee
      @semajtee Год назад +13

      I agree with you 100%

    • @katz7life
      @katz7life Год назад +13

      I also have that one performance in 1979 as THE one. Then I listened to this one. My life is infinitely better and richer, with no exaggeration.

    • @TheMorphrick
      @TheMorphrick Год назад +4

      I still prefer the Bernstein one, but this is my second favorite

    • @robertcraven1771
      @robertcraven1771 Год назад +5

      I’d never have thought anyone would give Bernstein a run for his money. I stand corrected.

    • @guybo07
      @guybo07 Год назад +1

      I so want to find it on RUclips & see & hear it!! 😮

  • @dawnnoele
    @dawnnoele Год назад +85

    I love love love how she thanked the conductor and the orchestra before she took her bows. That shows incredible humility and respect. This is the first time I've watched her play, but I'm definitely gonna look for more. She's incredible. 💕💕💕

    • @paulware4701
      @paulware4701 Год назад +2

      Likewise!

    • @kevinmeachem2138
      @kevinmeachem2138 Год назад +3

      Also noted the way she listened to and showed appreciation for the clarinet solo before giving her tremendous performance. Team effort.

    • @leastcoast5606
      @leastcoast5606 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@lindasohierJerk.

  • @larrycurrid8626
    @larrycurrid8626 Год назад +37

    Oh my God! Astounding. What a magnificent performance. No one writes music like this anymore.

    • @Dave.Mustaine.Is.Genius
      @Dave.Mustaine.Is.Genius Год назад +5

      Peter Gundry, Adrian Von Ziegler, Hans Zimmer, Ye Banished Privateers. Pyrolysis, Stormfrun, Burzum, Sleep Dealer, Steve Wilson, Joe Satriani, Death and Megadeth does.

    • @vernacular1483
      @vernacular1483 Год назад +1

      Maybe you’re just looking in the wrong places 😊

    • @Dave.Mustaine.Is.Genius
      @Dave.Mustaine.Is.Genius Год назад

      @@vernacular1483 :D Whole bodies of women are great and hof

    • @werideatdusk
      @werideatdusk 8 месяцев назад

      Megadeth???

  • @davidhankins7776
    @davidhankins7776 8 месяцев назад +112

    I am a 65-year-old CPA, taking a break from doing tax returns. I was so overwhelmed by this video that I had to respond. It was mesmerizing! First of all, I am blown away by her passion. She literally absorbs and becomes the music. It is almost like watching a great athlete perform. She is so physically powerful and yet graceful. Her strength, not only in her hands is extraordinary. I recall watching Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin play guitar in the movie The Song Remains the Same, and how his hands move so incredibly fast, and the power that came out of that thin man. Again, like watching a great athlete. Khatia is similar. She attacks the piano, like she is trying to squeeze every last note and sound out of it. Yet, she is graceful as well. What a combination! Khatia reminds me of Judy Garland. Ms. Garland would just belt out her songs, singing as loudly and powerfully as possible. A literal wall of sound. It didn't matter what the song was. She gave it her complete effort. She could make the song Mary had a Little Lamb sound like the greatest piece of music ever. Khatia also has incredible focus and concentration. She is in "the zone", a place of total consciousness and mindfulness, like an out of body experience. A place where only the greats can go and experience. I think perhaps the best way to describe her performance and playing is breathtaking! She literally takes your breath away. I found this video while watching an old clip of Rita Hayworth and Fred Astaire dancing to Boogie with Stu by Led Zeppelin. It is amazing watching her dance. Breathtaking! You can't take your eyes off of her. Again, like Khatia. Like Ms. Hayworth dancing among dozens of other dancers, Khatia demands full attention. The consummate entertainer. She is playing amongst some of the best musicians in the world, and yet she is the central focus. And yet as others have shared, she is humble and shares the spotlight with the orchestra. Frankly, I don't usually get this moved or touched to respond to a RUclips video. But I can see that I'm not the only one! I am so blessed to have discovered Khatia and her music. Some people are just extraordinarily talented and special. She is definitely one. Thanks for letting me share. Back to tax returns!

    • @derkmanley3220
      @derkmanley3220 5 месяцев назад +4

      Dear D: Thank you for Your Text. You
      are an excellent writer! I confess. I have never had a CPA as a friend or
      Colleague 😅.
      I commend you on your ability to
      describe Khatia. You left out one
      other thing about Her: She has to be the sexiest Pianist on the Planet 🌏.
      If you are still with us , I. E, please respond to my Comments.
      Faithfully Yours,
      The Rev. Derrill B. Manley , Jr., Ph.D

    • @derkmanley3220
      @derkmanley3220 5 месяцев назад +1

      Khatia! You are A Force of Nature!

    • @James-un8rr
      @James-un8rr 4 месяца назад

      ❤extectcey

    • @mixerD1-
      @mixerD1- 4 месяца назад +1

      Slightly disturbing 🤔

    • @FuckFeminists
      @FuckFeminists 3 месяца назад

      This is a copied and mildly edited comment that I saw on another artist's video.
      Wow that's weird.

  • @lucashankins9425
    @lucashankins9425 Год назад +44

    George never imagined this being played so well.

  • @rortlieb
    @rortlieb Год назад +55

    This is one of the greatest compositions in history and this is the best performance I’ve heard. BRAVISSIMO!!!

  • @Chicken_Consumer
    @Chicken_Consumer Год назад +14

    A part of my soul disintegrates every time an unskipable ad interrupts this performance

    • @paulychannel7914
      @paulychannel7914 Год назад +5

      Then pay for an ad free subscription ! ..... You won't regret that ......

    • @duzzitmatter8679
      @duzzitmatter8679 Месяц назад

      Pay for it just long enough to download and record for your personal use later. It’s legal.

  • @Lil_Mozart_V
    @Lil_Mozart_V 10 месяцев назад +15

    This is brilliant. From the expressiveness of the orchestra, to the sound production, to the camera work. Bravo.

  • @rossdennis5694
    @rossdennis5694 2 года назад +182

    I never grew up with Classical Music - parents were into the crooners (Bing, Val Doonican, Sinatra) with one exception, my father could play Rhapsody in Blue on piano in full and occasionally did at home, despite him having no association with orchestra's or other in his working/social life since I grew up - Used to be the 'piano man'' at dance halls/clubs in his youth playing all the latest hit songs. But I did tear up, listening to Khatia's rendition of this, as it so strongly reminds me of my father who passed away in 1986. She is brilliant and it is a magical composition !

    • @georgescancan7503
      @georgescancan7503 2 года назад

      I shed tears reading your biography of a "true connoisseur of classical music"! But I burst out laughing. Reveal to us the secrets of your delight, what exactly is in this work, what part of it do you like. Listen to this work performed by two more oriental women, their names are Lola Astanova and Yuya Wang. I am sure that you will lose your peace forever! ruclips.net/video/Fpsku1TwQ7E/видео.html

    • @rossdennis5694
      @rossdennis5694 2 года назад +4

      @@jennifer86010 I happily stand corrected on the musical genre...but the emotional resonance remains.

    • @georgescancan7503
      @georgescancan7503 2 года назад

      @@jennifer86010
      Who is Yuja? Product PR and show industry! Absolutely ordinary pianist, pulled onto the stage by mafia structures for the sexual entertainment of snotty youths and old libertines! Her videos and interviews multiply at the rate of cholera spread! She filled the entire Internet with her "art" consisting of a half-naked body. We must finally say: enough !!!
      The Classical Review
      Wang’s powerful virtuosity stronger on flash than depth in Boston recital
      May 13, 2018
      By Aaron Keebaugh
      Yuja Wang performed Friday night at Jordan Hall for the Celebrity Series. Photo: Robert Torres
      ...
      There is no doubting Yuja Wang’s technique at the keyboard. The Chinese-born pianist is capable of unleashing torrents of octave runs, and her left-hand figures supply an almost orchestral sense of depth and gravity to her sound. She clearly shapes every phrase, and her notes resonate with a ping.
      ...
      Still, there were times Friday night when one wondered if Wang only saw some of this music as just showpieces for her mesmerizing technical skill. Her selections of Rachmaninoff Preludes and Études-tableaux, though played deftly, didn’t always flower with the vocal quality so integral to the composer’s style.
      Wang takes a full-bodied approach to Rachmaninoff, and she renders his textures in multi-dimensional shapes. In the Prelude in G minor, Op. 23, No. 5, her strong left hand figures tethered the march rhythms to the ground. The Prelude in B minor, Op. 32, No. 10 unfolded in Debussyian washes of color. In the Étude-tableau in E-flat minor, Op. 39, No. 5, Wang’s harmonies and bass lines crashed together in blistering clusters. But in each, Rachmaninoff sense of sweeping grandeur went largely unexplored.
      Three of Ligeti’s Etudes, which filled out the program, were similarly muscular but lacking in probing musicality. Wang’s running chromatic figures blurred into a fog in Etude No. 9, “Vertige,” and in Etude No. 1, “Désordre,” churning Bartókian rhythms propelled the music ever forward. In Etude No. 3, “Touches bloquées,” Wang’s performance needed more of the intimacy that this music requires. Though Wang played the work quickly-as marked-the Etude’s halo-like harmonics, caused by the pianist keeping some of the keys depressed with the left hand while punching out syncopated figures with the right, failed to shimmer. Ligeti incorporated difficult passages into these works not as vehicles for showboating but to create ethereal musical tapestries. And throughout, it seemed as if Wang was playing Ligeti’s notes, not Ligeti’s music.
      ...
      The program will be repeated 8 p.m. Thursday night at Carnegie Hall in New York.

    • @georgescancan7503
      @georgescancan7503 2 года назад

      @@jennifer86010
      Alexander Boot
      Writer, critic, polemicist
      Sex sells - all of us short
      The other day I listened to something or other on RUclips, and a link to Chopin’s Fourth Ballade performed by the Georgian pianist Khatia Buniatishvili came up.
      The link was accompanied by a close-up publicity photo of the musician: sloe bedroom eyes, sensual semi-open lips suggesting a delight that’s still illegal in Alabama, naked shoulders hinting at the similarly nude rest of her body regrettably out of shot…
      Let me see where my wife is… Good, she isn’t looking over my shoulder, so I can admit to you that the picture got me excited in ways one doesn’t normally associate with Chopin’s Fourth Ballade or for that matter any other classical composition this side of Wagner or perhaps Ravel’s Bolero.
      Searching for a more traditional musical rapture I clicked on the actual clip and alas found it anticlimactic, as it were. Khatia’s playing, though competent, is as undeniably so-what as her voluptuous figure undeniably isn’t. (Yes, I know the photograph I mentioned doesn’t show much of her figure apart from the luscious shoulders but, the prurient side of my nature piqued, I did a bit of a web crawl.)
      Just for the hell of it I looked at the publicity shots of other currently active female musicians, such as Yuja Wang, Joanna MacGregor, Nicola Bendetti, Alison Balsom (nicknamed ‘crumpet with a trumpet’, her promos more often suggest ‘a strumpet with a trumpet’ instead), Anne-Sophie Mutter and a few others.
      They didn’t disappoint the Peeping Tom lurking under my aging surface. Just about all the photographs showed the ladies in various stages of undress, in bed, lying in suggestive poses on top of the piano, playing in frocks (if any) open to the coccyx in the back and/or to the navel up front.
      This is one thing these musicians have in common. The other is that none of them is all that good at her day job and some, such as Wang, are truly awful. Yet this doesn’t really matter either to them or to the public or, most important, to those who form the public tastes by writing about music and musicians.
      Thus, for example, a tabloid pundit expressing his heartfelt regret that Nicola Benedetti “won’t be posing for the lads’ mags anytime soon. Pity, because she looks fit as a fiddle…” Geddit? She’s a violinist, which is to say fiddler - well, you do get it.
      “But Nicola doesn’t always take the bonniest photo,” continues the writer, “she’s beaky in pics sometimes, which is weird because in the flesh she’s an absolute knock-out.
      “The classical musician is wearing skinny jeans which show off her long legs. She’s also busty with a washboard flat tummy, tottering around 5ft 10in in her Dune platform wedges.”
      How well does she play the violin though? No one cares. Not even critics writing for our broadsheets, who don’t mind talking about musicians in terms normally reserved for pole dancers. Thus for instance runs a review of a piano recital at Queen Elizabeth Hall, one of London’s top concert venues:
      “She is the most photogenic of players: young, pretty, bare-footed; and, with her long dark hair and exquisite strapless dress of dazzling white, not only seemed to imply that sexuality itself can make you a profound musician, but was a perfect visual complement to the sleek monochrome of a concert grand… [but] there’s more to her than meets the eye.”
      The male reader is clearly expected to get a stiffie trying to imagine what that might be. To help his imagination along, the piece is accompanied by a photo of the young lady in question reclining on her instrument in a pre-coital position with an unmistakable ‘come and get it’ expression on her face. The ‘monochrome’ piano is actually bright-red, a colour usually found not in concert halls but in dens of iniquity.
      Nowhere does the review mention the fact obvious to anyone with any taste for musical performance: the girl is so bad that she should indeed be playing in a brothel, rather than on the concert platform.
      Can you, in the wildest flight of fancy, imagine a reviewer talking in such terms about sublime women artists of the past, such as Myra Hess, Maria Yudina, Maria Grinberg, Clara Haskil, Marcelle Meyer, Marguerite Long, Kathleen Ferrier? Can you see any of them allowing themselves to be photographed in the style of “lads’ mags”?
      I can’t, which raises the inevitable question: what exactly has changed in the last say 70 years? The short answer is, just about everything. Concert organisers and impresarios, who used to be in the business because they loved music first and wanted to make a living second, now care about nothing but money. Critics, who used to have discernment and taste, now have nothing but greed and lust for popularity. The public… well, don’t get me started on that. The circle is vicious: because tasteless ignoramuses use every available medium to build up musical nonentities, nonentities is all we get. And because the musical nonentities have no artistic qualities to write about, the writing nonentities have to concentrate on the more jutting attractions, using a vocabulary typically found in “lads’ mags”. The adage “sex sells” used to be applied first to B-movies, then to B-novels, and now to real music. From “sex sells” it’s but a short distance to “only sex sells”. This distance has already been travelled - and we are all being sold short.

    • @carolmikofsky4976
      @carolmikofsky4976 2 года назад +1

      @@jennifer86010 aside from jazzy passages, there is the SOUND OF THE CITY

  • @lucashankins9425
    @lucashankins9425 Год назад +123

    In my opinion, the best interpretation of RIB. The tone and tempo of the conductor multiplied by the passion on the piano. The best I have ever seen. It’s a definite standing ovation.

  • @snatchbloock
    @snatchbloock Год назад +30

    I'm 78 and have loved this music since my teens, but I have never witnessed such intense focus and total concentration as Ms. Khatia demonstrated today. What a beautiful performance...bravo

  • @jazluvr99
    @jazluvr99 5 месяцев назад +19

    To say that I am blown away by this performance would be a gross understatement. Beauty, style, elegance, God-given talent, flawless technique - and that extra special flair for the dramatic - Khatia is beyond compare. Oh, I almost forgot that incredible orchestra! 😉 Wonderful performance of this timeless classic.

    • @lindasohier
      @lindasohier 4 месяца назад

      I know very well who you are !!!!!

  • @randysandford4033
    @randysandford4033 Год назад +23

    Not only was the music SUPERB but watching her facials as she played without a single note in front of her, just straight from the heart, is what made this particular "Rhapsody" soar above all the others. BRAVO!

  • @DariusSarrafi
    @DariusSarrafi 2 года назад +69

    She totally gets jazz. It's always nice to hear someone of her caliber and passion play this piece!

  • @TTony-tu6dm
    @TTony-tu6dm 2 года назад +30

    Possibly the greatest piece of American music ever composed. And she blows it away. Bravo!

  • @ericviseur3853
    @ericviseur3853 Месяц назад +3

    Écoutez Écoutez la performance est La , le Travail des musiciens, l entraînement, le Bonheur partagé par de tels talents qui ont tout vécus pour la musique pour atteindre la perfection. BRAVO

  • @MrPetrie
    @MrPetrie 2 года назад +33

    As a Mississippi farm boy beginning college in the summer of 1959 at Memphis State University, I attended my first live classical concert and heard Leonard Pennario and the Memphis Symphony Orchestra performing Rhapsody in Blue at the Overton Park Shell. What a great beginning for a lifetime of listening to live classical performances! This is a special treat to see and hear the beautiful and talented Khatia Buniatishvili performing this masterpiece.

    • @Griffinmc
      @Griffinmc 2 года назад +2

      My favorite high schoolteacher and I have great taste! Hey, B.C., isn’t Khatia wonderful? And I’ve loved Gershwin since I was that nerdy kid in your classes!

  • @aneyeinthesky7193
    @aneyeinthesky7193 Год назад +34

    Fantastique!! She does not play the music, SHE IS THE MUSIC!! her hands do not touch the piano, they joyfully dance with a piano full of sounds coming out.
    All the musicians are outstanding and she is the soloist.

  • @patricksirmon6555
    @patricksirmon6555 Год назад +168

    The look she would give to the individuals during their solos was almost if they were performing it directly to her. ❤❤❤

    • @kcmichaelm
      @kcmichaelm Год назад +17

      This was my favorite part!! It seemed a heartfelt acknowledgment of the back-and-forth which makes the piece so wonderful. It felt like each part playing off each other. This was the first time I’ve ever seen Bernstein’s production topped.

    • @Dave.Mustaine.Is.Genius
      @Dave.Mustaine.Is.Genius 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@kcmichaelm me favourite part is her whole body :))

  • @SCRClasses
    @SCRClasses 7 месяцев назад +13

    That is the best R in B I've heard in a long, long time. Perhaps EVER! Her playing is both spectacularly clean and brilliantly free. There is not a MOMENT where she hasn't made a strong, beautiful, thoughtful intensely MUSICAL choice.

  • @TandemKnights
    @TandemKnights 2 года назад +45

    To me, Gershwin is quintessential American music and nothing is more quintessentially American than Rhapsody in Blue. I always felt like the work of Gershwin was accessible to the "average man", someone that might not ordinarily listen to symphonic music. He blends classical and jazz elements but his work is sweeping , with thematic variations. His sound just reminds me of innovation, industry and freedom, with occasional moments of astonishing beauty. What a giant Gershwin was!
    BTW, this is an amazing performance by the whole symphony and the pianist is....what can I say, what a treat!

    • @anthonypuccetti8779
      @anthonypuccetti8779 2 года назад

      Gershwin is not quintessential American music. There is none because America doesn't have a common ethnic culture. Not many Americans listen to Gershwin. And much of european classical music is more accessible than Gershwin and jazz in general because it uses more straightforward and clear and eloquent musical language that expresses things that are easily identifiable. The language of jazz is not straightforward and clear, the moods it expresses are obscure, and it usually evokes the boozy atmosphere of a mid 20th century nightclub.

    • @TandemKnights
      @TandemKnights 2 года назад +1

      @@anthonypuccetti8779 You took it to a place of ethnicity. Quintessentially American, to me, means enterprising and industrious. Yes, Gershwin has a jazz element to his music, especially stuff like Summertime, but Rhapsody is pure symphony.

    • @TandemKnights
      @TandemKnights 2 года назад +1

      @@b.y.2460 To me, Copland has the sound of the US west, wide open spaces and freedom. I also think his work is uniquely American sounding.

    • @anthonypuccetti8779
      @anthonypuccetti8779 2 года назад

      @@b.y.2460 They didn't borrow from thousands of native Americans and African Americans.

    • @anthonypuccetti8779
      @anthonypuccetti8779 2 года назад

      @@b.y.2460 "Every motif of the piece played in this video is based on the Native American expression of the pentatonic scale"
      Where did you get that? Native american chant doesn't adhere to pentatonic scales. It doesn't have a clear shape like european folk melody does. It sounds almost atonal. And pentatonic scales are used in european folk music. So it is foolish to say without other evidence that an american composer who uses them must have been influenced by native american or african music.
      "(and many of the rhythms are those you still hear at pow wows)"
      Point them out.
      " Parts of it use the west African 'modified' pentatonic scale that was brought to America on slave ships and became known as the blues scale."
      Again, the pentatonic scale is used in european folk music. It comes naturally to humans in cultures around the world. It isn't an african or native american musical trait. European folk music was brought in abundance to America, and african americans heard and sang and played anglo, scotch and irish music since the 1700s or earlier, long before the blues developed. And there was French Cajun music in New Orleans. Musicologists who write about American music tend to ignore the obvious european sources and influences on african american music, for which there is plenty of evidence, and instead talk about ambiguous african roots even though there are no records of african tribal music prior to the 20th century. The rhythms of blues and jazz is as different from African tribal music as it is from European music.
      "Native American and African tonal sensibilities have become modern American tonal sensibilities, from gospel to rock, and from Shaker hymns to ring tones."
      That is nonsense. Modern american tonal sensibilities are derived from the european tonal system with major and minor scales and chords and chordal structure. Modern american songs that use pentatonic melodies also use major and minor scales and chords, just as in european folk music. And bent notes in pentatonic melodies is also used in some kinds of european folk music such as Irish fiddle tunes. Have you even listened to american and african tribal music? It doesn't have chords and modulation! The use of chords and modulation only developed in Europe, especially starting in the medieval era. The Shakers came from England. Shaker hymns are anglo melodies.

  • @petersnell3128
    @petersnell3128 2 года назад +117

    With her soul she plays. The result: an interpretation too sublime for words to fully describe. Hats off to Khatia!!👏👏👏👏

  • @photo3642u
    @photo3642u 2 года назад +25

    The sensuous conversation between the piano & principle clarinet was palpable, aided & abetted by the eye contact that Ms Khatia is well known for! This performance sets the standard for others to aspire to.

  • @JohnChambers-w2s
    @JohnChambers-w2s 6 месяцев назад +9

    I've watched this video 10 times, it never gets old! Khatia is just fantastic! So talented, no sheet music, so fast her fingers blur! She crosses her hands, how do you do that! Her expressions are just as interesting to watch, you can tell she is enjoying herself performing RIB, and she cues the rest of the orchestra with just a look. The orchestra is fantastic, and I agree the sound and video people captured the performance perfectly. What a blessing to run across this on U-tube.

  • @johndymond1605
    @johndymond1605 Год назад +29

    This must be one of the most beautiful pieces of music ever written❤

  • @derinmenekse6774
    @derinmenekse6774 Год назад +15

    She is AMAZING, the orchestra is AMAZING everything is fabulous about this video ❤️🫶🏽🫶🏽🫶🏽🫶🏽🧿

  • @jimrosenthal1228
    @jimrosenthal1228 2 года назад +270

    Hers is one of the best interpretations of Rhapsody that I have ever heard- clear, articulate, and it even SWINGS!!! People forget how much Gershwin was influenced by jazz artists, and the high regard that some of them had for Gershwin (Art Tatum, for one) This was a delight to hear, from beginning to end. And a shout out to the sound engineers who recorded this performance- they did an outstanding job.

    • @stevedoe1630
      @stevedoe1630 2 года назад +4

      Sounds good even on _my_ headphones… high quality orchestra, pianist, recording, audio engineers… the whole kit and kaboodle.

    • @sebastian-benedictflore
      @sebastian-benedictflore 2 года назад +1

      Indeed, a change from the audio of the most recent van cliburn first round or chopin competition, for example

    • @mike97525
      @mike97525 2 года назад +2

      All from memory😉😉

    • @agneslefevre1656
      @agneslefevre1656 2 года назад +2

      exactement, j'ai vu un film, les personnages, tour à tour danser, les musiciens eux même semblaient danser. Puis la romance doucement se dessine, les émotions montent jusqu'à l'explosion, explosion des sens, la montée en puissance n'est pas sans évoquer le Sacre du printemps, le tout très jazzy. On my opinion

    • @petergals4451
      @petergals4451 2 года назад +7

      For me it is clear she enjoys to the bones that so "jazzy" sections of this master pieces. Eyes totally closed at the most part of her interpretation, simply power and masterful!!

  • @gregs2466
    @gregs2466 3 месяца назад +12

    I have always loved this piece but I have never heard it played so well. The pianist blew my socks off and her emotions playing perfectly were something I will never forgot. The entire orchestra and the individual musicians were perfect. Wow!!

  • @sygad1
    @sygad1 2 года назад +226

    I'm not often left speechless but this did it. A flawless rendition of an amazing piece of music. The pianist stole the show, have you ever seen anyone enjoy their work that much?

    • @mcleodmichael1
      @mcleodmichael1 2 года назад +1

      yes. yuja wang.

    • @sygad1
      @sygad1 2 года назад +1

      @@mcleodmichael1 cheers for the suggestion, i'll look into that.

    • @georgescancan7503
      @georgescancan7503 2 года назад +1

      @@mcleodmichael1
      Alexander Boot
      Writer, critic, polemicist
      Sex sells - all of us short
      The other day I listened to something or other on RUclips, and a link to Chopin’s Fourth Ballade performed by the Georgian pianist Khatia Buniatishvili came up.
      The link was accompanied by a close-up publicity photo of the musician: sloe bedroom eyes, sensual semi-open lips suggesting a delight that’s still illegal in Alabama, naked shoulders hinting at the similarly nude rest of her body regrettably out of shot…
      Let me see where my wife is… Good, she isn’t looking over my shoulder, so I can admit to you that the picture got me excited in ways one doesn’t normally associate with Chopin’s Fourth Ballade or for that matter any other classical composition this side of Wagner or perhaps Ravel’s Bolero.
      Searching for a more traditional musical rapture I clicked on the actual clip and alas found it anticlimactic, as it were. Khatia’s playing, though competent, is as undeniably so-what as her voluptuous figure undeniably isn’t. (Yes, I know the photograph I mentioned doesn’t show much of her figure apart from the luscious shoulders but, the prurient side of my nature piqued, I did a bit of a web crawl.)
      Just for the hell of it I looked at the publicity shots of other currently active female musicians, such as Yuja Wang, Joanna MacGregor, Nicola Bendetti, Alison Balsom (nicknamed ‘crumpet with a trumpet’, her promos more often suggest ‘a strumpet with a trumpet’ instead), Anne-Sophie Mutter and a few others.
      They didn’t disappoint the Peeping Tom lurking under my aging surface. Just about all the photographs showed the ladies in various stages of undress, in bed, lying in suggestive poses on top of the piano, playing in frocks (if any) open to the coccyx in the back and/or to the navel up front.
      This is one thing these musicians have in common. The other is that none of them is all that good at her day job and some, such as Wang, are truly awful. Yet this doesn’t really matter either to them or to the public or, most important, to those who form the public tastes by writing about music and musicians.
      Thus, for example, a tabloid pundit expressing his heartfelt regret that Nicola Benedetti “won’t be posing for the lads’ mags anytime soon. Pity, because she looks fit as a fiddle…” Geddit? She’s a violinist, which is to say fiddler - well, you do get it.
      “But Nicola doesn’t always take the bonniest photo,” continues the writer, “she’s beaky in pics sometimes, which is weird because in the flesh she’s an absolute knock-out.
      “The classical musician is wearing skinny jeans which show off her long legs. She’s also busty with a washboard flat tummy, tottering around 5ft 10in in her Dune platform wedges.”
      How well does she play the violin though? No one cares. Not even critics writing for our broadsheets, who don’t mind talking about musicians in terms normally reserved for pole dancers. Thus for instance runs a review of a piano recital at Queen Elizabeth Hall, one of London’s top concert venues:
      “She is the most photogenic of players: young, pretty, bare-footed; and, with her long dark hair and exquisite strapless dress of dazzling white, not only seemed to imply that sexuality itself can make you a profound musician, but was a perfect visual complement to the sleek monochrome of a concert grand… [but] there’s more to her than meets the eye.”
      The male reader is clearly expected to get a stiffie trying to imagine what that might be. To help his imagination along, the piece is accompanied by a photo of the young lady in question reclining on her instrument in a pre-coital position with an unmistakable ‘come and get it’ expression on her face. The ‘monochrome’ piano is actually bright-red, a colour usually found not in concert halls but in dens of iniquity.
      Nowhere does the review mention the fact obvious to anyone with any taste for musical performance: the girl is so bad that she should indeed be playing in a brothel, rather than on the concert platform.
      Can you, in the wildest flight of fancy, imagine a reviewer talking in such terms about sublime women artists of the past, such as Myra Hess, Maria Yudina, Maria Grinberg, Clara Haskil, Marcelle Meyer, Marguerite Long, Kathleen Ferrier? Can you see any of them allowing themselves to be photographed in the style of “lads’ mags”?
      I can’t, which raises the inevitable question: what exactly has changed in the last say 70 years? The short answer is, just about everything. Concert organisers and impresarios, who used to be in the business because they loved music first and wanted to make a living second, now care about nothing but money. Critics, who used to have discernment and taste, now have nothing but greed and lust for popularity. The public… well, don’t get me started on that. The circle is vicious: because tasteless ignoramuses use every available medium to build up musical nonentities, nonentities is all we get. And because the musical nonentities have no artistic qualities to write about, the writing nonentities have to concentrate on the more jutting attractions, using a vocabulary typically found in “lads’ mags”. The adage “sex sells” used to be applied first to B-movies, then to B-novels, and now to real music. From “sex sells” it’s but a short distance to “only sex sells”. This distance has already been travelled - and we are all being sold short.

    • @u1zha
      @u1zha 2 года назад +2

      Not to mention Hiromi Uehara has an out of this world vibe. Check out her Canon in D, an approachable introduction to how to shred piano and enjoy it :D

    • @alexdevon2588
      @alexdevon2588 2 года назад +3

      @@mcleodmichael1 Sorry, Wang doesn't come close, she has the cold hermetic alchemy of the Orient.

  • @dariuszm.d.4360
    @dariuszm.d.4360 2 года назад +55

    Probably the best 17 minutes of my life.... again and again and again.

    • @raquelcastro457
      @raquelcastro457 Год назад +1

      Super magnífico, super magistral y super hermosísimooooooo

  • @robertborlenghi7308
    @robertborlenghi7308 2 года назад +71

    It makes one feel better about humanity that George was able to create this work, and Khatia to bring it to life. Bravo!

  • @godly74
    @godly74 9 месяцев назад +23

    100 years of Rhapsody in Blue! It's still as good as the first time I heard it.

  • @donaldmccormack7580
    @donaldmccormack7580 Год назад +17

    I´m sure most of us have heard a lot of people play Classical music on the piano but in reality there is only a very small handful of true Classical Musicians. After hearing Katia play Rhapsody in Blue I have discovered she is in that small group.
    She smiles a lot and looks totally relaxed but she has evidently spent long hours and hard work in perfecting her craft. Her natural genious in being able to tap into the essence of whoever she is interpreting allows us all feel this magic with her. She obviously loves what she is playing and her smile invites us all to enjoy it with her.

  • @steveburke3923
    @steveburke3923 2 года назад +81

    This is a lady with mischief in her heart! Her looks to the musicians as they answer her magnificent
    playing bring a smile to my face. And her playing...OHH..her playing...is as breathtaking as her beauty!

    • @dxwallace55
      @dxwallace55 2 года назад +3

      Our band teacher in high school once told me "You like the sound of the band more than your own instrument". I think some people like the "whole" more than the "parts"

    • @philipdavidson8420
      @philipdavidson8420 2 года назад +2

      Both good-looking and talented, yes. I believe the scientific term is " hot chick" 😉

    • @Remshmuck
      @Remshmuck 2 года назад +1

      @@philipdavidson8420 super duper

    • @philipdavidson8420
      @philipdavidson8420 2 года назад

      @@Remshmuck YESSS 😃

  • @par72golfer
    @par72golfer Год назад +19

    Khatia is a rhapsody in and of herself. No one can play this incredible music like she does.

  • @stevenfriedman3670
    @stevenfriedman3670 2 месяца назад +7

    I am crying because of this beautiful piece of music. It makes me feel better about being human.

  • @lunamotionproductions9559
    @lunamotionproductions9559 2 года назад +44

    Rhapsody is one of my favorite compositions. Khatia Buniatishvili's performance is perhaps the most sensitive rendition I've ever heard. Incredible emotion and reverence for the material. It choked me up.

  • @djecoed
    @djecoed 2 года назад +135

    I never comment on RUclips videos. I always feel like it’s an exercise in self indulgence (no offense; we all want to be heard). But I feel that this performance and this recording compels comment.
    This is astonishing. The composition is amazing. The performances superlative. This is the first video I’ve seen of Ms Buniatishvilli And it is… A revelation. Her technical skill, her characterizations, her expressions, the way she engages the orchestra… Even her hair is perfect. And lest we forget, the camera work, the editing, hours of behind-the-seens* toil that we dismiss or ignore or simply never consider but are yet critical to this end….
    There are times I witness something that leave me stunned at what my brethren and sestren** can accomplish and this is one of them.
    If you have read this far, thank you for hearing me. I’m an old man. Please do not judge me harshly.
    *no I don’t didn’t misspell that
    ** = sisters; I crafted this word. You are invited to use it with attribution. How’s THAT for self indulgence?

    • @etiennecfourie777
      @etiennecfourie777 2 года назад +6

      Thank you kindly Sir. I shall use it on the very best next occasion with due credit. Lol!!

    • @djecoed
      @djecoed 2 года назад +1

      @@etiennecfourie777 Haa ha ha ha ha ha haaaa I am flattered, sir.

    • @S0ulinth3machin3
      @S0ulinth3machin3 2 года назад +11

      you should comment more often. It was worth reading.

    • @djecoed
      @djecoed 2 года назад +2

      @@S0ulinth3machin3 I am very flattered

    • @radkokosoTT
      @radkokosoTT 2 года назад +2

      Well written!!

  • @tjmcguire9417
    @tjmcguire9417 Год назад +18

    People forget. A piano, played with verve vigour and talent is an entire orchestra in and of itself. I have played this. In my day I was Royal Conservatory ARTCM. So wonderful to see talented young folks like her carry on. I watch closely. She has superb right hand articulation. From allegro to sotto voce; she is quite accomplished. She knows the voices. Plainly. Lovely artist. Sometimes... her pace is too fast. Not by much. Just her adrenalin speaking I expect. Just the fact it can be seen by a worldwide audience on RUclips is important. Carry on Khatia. You do all dedicated pianists proud. We all know the dedication it takes.

    • @TheMorphrick
      @TheMorphrick Год назад +3

      Exactly my thoughts. In some parts might be slightly rushed, but the passion she expresses, compenses by far any technicality. Awesome performance!

    • @tehm-tpc
      @tehm-tpc Год назад +4

      To be fair, if you go by the Piano Rolls Gershwin made of this isn't basically everyone just dragging compared to him? I remember those sounding WAY more rushed.

    • @mariaraqueldefranchi7460
      @mariaraqueldefranchi7460 2 месяца назад +1

      Pasión al máximo, bravo.

  • @harrietnix6396
    @harrietnix6396 10 месяцев назад +4

    I've been hearing this tune for about 40-50 years, and I've never heard it so elegantly performed . Khatia and the orchestra were spectacular !

  • @SolveEtCoagula93
    @SolveEtCoagula93 2 года назад +39

    What I love about this performance is the apparent ease with which she plays, and still finds time to have a great deal of fun in her interactions with the orchestra. A fantastic talent and an absolute pleasure to watch.

  • @ShockzG5
    @ShockzG5 Год назад +79

    The best clarinet solo I’ve heard of this piece. Laid back af man just how it was meant to be

    • @silvergirl7810
      @silvergirl7810 Год назад +13

      Right? That was THE sexiest intro to this song I’ve ever heard- I was happily hanging on every note

  • @Bustafunny
    @Bustafunny 2 года назад +106

    That was the jazziest, bluesiest arrangement of Rhapsody In Blue I've ever heard. Music at it's absolute finest!

    • @ellenmarch3095
      @ellenmarch3095 2 года назад +1

      Well, it was the arrangement Gershwin wrote, so... Not knocking anyone's talent, this was a great performance to be sure, but I've only ever heard one arrangement, both playing in orchestra and a piano solo version that had all parts on the same keyboard. Every note is in order, the only thing you can really play with is tempo.

    • @ellenmarch3095
      @ellenmarch3095 2 года назад +5

      Just saying Gershwin is a genius.

    • @MottiShneor
      @MottiShneor 2 года назад +1

      No it isn't. Sorry.

    • @silvergirl7810
      @silvergirl7810 Год назад +3

      I agree- that intro - wow- the sexiest intro to this song I’ve ever heard!

    • @davidelongo6438
      @davidelongo6438 Год назад

      Your statement clearly proves you know literally nothing about Jazz and Blues, of course. Please, do you a favour, and go to listen to the Rhapsody as conducted by Maurice Peress in 1987.

  • @stevenbelow2502
    @stevenbelow2502 Год назад +16

    I love the whole piece but starting at 9:19 you can really tell she gets it. She goes through the slowest part of the piece with such feeling and great body and facial expression. She is not only a top talent on the ivories but she s the consummate performer. I’d listened to this piece dozens of times throughout my 63 years, but since I discovered this video I’ve probably doubled that number. Bravo Khatia and the entire orchestra.

  • @TerranceTrzynka
    @TerranceTrzynka Год назад +12

    I can understand why she gave such enthusiastic applause to the orchestra, their communication was a beautiful thing to behold. Surely an new benchmark for the performance of Rhapsody in Blue.

  • @armandopannone286
    @armandopannone286 Год назад +10

    Suona come i grandi improvvisatori del jazz, ma anche come i migliori interpreti classici e rigorosi di brani senza tempo. Il pianoforte, guidato dalle sue mani, è dolce come un'arpa e veemente come tempesta. Una tempesta di emozioni. E' l'anima della Musica.

    • @lutecia665
      @lutecia665 Год назад +1

      Yess!! Absolutely agree with you! 👏👏❤️‍🔥💫💥💫

    • @gianbattistavisani6743
      @gianbattistavisani6743 9 месяцев назад

      meravigliosa che dire di più !!!!!!!!!!!

  • @cadjs
    @cadjs 2 года назад +170

    Wow! The clarinet at the beginning always gives me goosebumps 😍

    • @johnvannewhouse
      @johnvannewhouse 2 года назад +1

      Thought it was a soprano sax....but I'm no musician...dammit.

    • @nonsense2369
      @nonsense2369 2 года назад +6

      He did impeccably

    • @almirfagone105
      @almirfagone105 2 года назад

      Quem dá arrepios é a pianista.. ... ....

    • @mungous1000
      @mungous1000 2 года назад +4

      I think she was flirting with the clarinetist in the beginning. LOL

    • @mrleewins
      @mrleewins 2 года назад +6

      I understand that Gershwin was at a rehearsal and a clarinetist was doing a warm-up. Gershwin was so impressed with the notes that he made it the opening of his great musical piece.

  • @juanrabanales4933
    @juanrabanales4933 8 месяцев назад +18

    Man of culture, we meet again. 🥸

  • @ratking_c24
    @ratking_c24 2 года назад +165

    Her playing is gorgeous but can we also mention the cinematography!! The cuts and angles make you feel as if you’re in a busy city and it fits sooo good with the music!!

    • @redskindan78
      @redskindan78 2 года назад +5

      Yes! It feels like Manhattan, and I can imagine people in the 1930s, wearing tuxedos and drinking champagne.

    • @reddyandre
      @reddyandre 2 года назад +12

      Amazing camera work, AND amazing EDITING.

    • @valerie_handani_pianist
      @valerie_handani_pianist 2 года назад +1

      I couldn't agree more. I drown in admiration while watching this amazing music video!

    • @stephaniestanley8041
      @stephaniestanley8041 2 года назад +1

      Yes the editing made this a living, breathing performance!

    • @bruceatkinson5357
      @bruceatkinson5357 2 года назад

      Hearing is enough for me.

  • @thorenjohn
    @thorenjohn 2 года назад +57

    Wow. I love her musicality and interpretation. Her speed and articulation are amazing. Hats of to Slatkin and the orchestra, too - they really took this to heart.

    • @georgescancan7503
      @georgescancan7503 2 года назад

      Alexander Boot
      Writer, critic, polemicist
      Sex sells - all of us short
      The other day I listened to something or other on RUclips, and a link to Chopin’s Fourth Ballade performed by the Georgian pianist Khatia Buniatishvili came up.
      The link was accompanied by a close-up publicity photo of the musician: sloe bedroom eyes, sensual semi-open lips suggesting a delight that’s still illegal in Alabama, naked shoulders hinting at the similarly nude rest of her body regrettably out of shot…
      Let me see where my wife is… Good, she isn’t looking over my shoulder, so I can admit to you that the picture got me excited in ways one doesn’t normally associate with Chopin’s Fourth Ballade or for that matter any other classical composition this side of Wagner or perhaps Ravel’s Bolero.
      Searching for a more traditional musical rapture I clicked on the actual clip and alas found it anticlimactic, as it were. Khatia’s playing, though competent, is as undeniably so-what as her voluptuous figure undeniably isn’t. (Yes, I know the photograph I mentioned doesn’t show much of her figure apart from the luscious shoulders but, the prurient side of my nature piqued, I did a bit of a web crawl.)
      Just for the hell of it I looked at the publicity shots of other currently active female musicians, such as Yuja Wang, Joanna MacGregor, Nicola Bendetti, Alison Balsom (nicknamed ‘crumpet with a trumpet’, her promos more often suggest ‘a strumpet with a trumpet’ instead), Anne-Sophie Mutter and a few others.
      They didn’t disappoint the Peeping Tom lurking under my aging surface. Just about all the photographs showed the ladies in various stages of undress, in bed, lying in suggestive poses on top of the piano, playing in frocks (if any) open to the coccyx in the back and/or to the navel up front.
      This is one thing these musicians have in common. The other is that none of them is all that good at her day job and some, such as Wang, are truly awful. Yet this doesn’t really matter either to them or to the public or, most important, to those who form the public tastes by writing about music and musicians.
      Thus, for example, a tabloid pundit expressing his heartfelt regret that Nicola Benedetti “won’t be posing for the lads’ mags anytime soon. Pity, because she looks fit as a fiddle…” Geddit? She’s a violinist, which is to say fiddler - well, you do get it.
      “But Nicola doesn’t always take the bonniest photo,” continues the writer, “she’s beaky in pics sometimes, which is weird because in the flesh she’s an absolute knock-out.
      “The classical musician is wearing skinny jeans which show off her long legs. She’s also busty with a washboard flat tummy, tottering around 5ft 10in in her Dune platform wedges.”
      How well does she play the violin though? No one cares. Not even critics writing for our broadsheets, who don’t mind talking about musicians in terms normally reserved for pole dancers. Thus for instance runs a review of a piano recital at Queen Elizabeth Hall, one of London’s top concert venues:
      “She is the most photogenic of players: young, pretty, bare-footed; and, with her long dark hair and exquisite strapless dress of dazzling white, not only seemed to imply that sexuality itself can make you a profound musician, but was a perfect visual complement to the sleek monochrome of a concert grand… [but] there’s more to her than meets the eye.”
      The male reader is clearly expected to get a stiffie trying to imagine what that might be. To help his imagination along, the piece is accompanied by a photo of the young lady in question reclining on her instrument in a pre-coital position with an unmistakable ‘come and get it’ expression on her face. The ‘monochrome’ piano is actually bright-red, a colour usually found not in concert halls but in dens of iniquity.
      Nowhere does the review mention the fact obvious to anyone with any taste for musical performance: the girl is so bad that she should indeed be playing in a brothel, rather than on the concert platform.
      Can you, in the wildest flight of fancy, imagine a reviewer talking in such terms about sublime women artists of the past, such as Myra Hess, Maria Yudina, Maria Grinberg, Clara Haskil, Marcelle Meyer, Marguerite Long, Kathleen Ferrier? Can you see any of them allowing themselves to be photographed in the style of “lads’ mags”?
      I can’t, which raises the inevitable question: what exactly has changed in the last say 70 years? The short answer is, just about everything. Concert organisers and impresarios, who used to be in the business because they loved music first and wanted to make a living second, now care about nothing but money. Critics, who used to have discernment and taste, now have nothing but greed and lust for popularity. The public… well, don’t get me started on that. The circle is vicious: because tasteless ignoramuses use every available medium to build up musical nonentities, nonentities is all we get. And because the musical nonentities have no artistic qualities to write about, the writing nonentities have to concentrate on the more jutting attractions, using a vocabulary typically found in “lads’ mags”. The adage “sex sells” used to be applied first to B-movies, then to B-novels, and now to real music. From “sex sells” it’s but a short distance to “only sex sells”. This distance has already been travelled - and we are all being sold short.

  • @DocRossow
    @DocRossow 2 года назад +143

    She plays with such passion, such joy, and with such a beautiful connection with the orchestra. Outstanding performance by everyone involved.

  • @fredericgay6238
    @fredericgay6238 8 месяцев назад +3

    Sublimes : et l'oeuvre et l'interprète.
    Seigneur, quelle pianiste !...
    A ce niveau- là, on ne peut plus parler de talent...
    Vous êtes la musique incarnée, très chère Madame !
    Quel doigté ! Quel touché !
    Quelle science du rythme et de votre Art ! Quelle virtuosité si humainement habitée ! Chapeau !
    Vous faites chanter votre instrument.
    D'une manière incomparable.
    Mille fois merci. Mille fois bravo !
    Du fond du coeur.

  • @msingh1932
    @msingh1932 2 года назад +139

    While her incredible skills are apparent even to a non-musical person like me, I think her flourish and flair of the head helps the orchestra stay on note more than the conductor's baton. The exquisite movement of her fingers tell that she is the music and the music is her. Joy to the world...

    • @jimmyyu2184
      @jimmyyu2184 2 года назад +3

      Check out Leonard Bernstein version of the same song, done decades before her. I love this song, of all versions and this one is up there with Leonard's.

    • @mastertheo6
      @mastertheo6 2 года назад +3

      So exciting and beautiful not only to listen to but yo watch. You can hear the excitement, joy and fun the entire orchestra are having. What a star performance

    • @bugscanner1357
      @bugscanner1357 2 года назад +1

      Сказочное описание….. 😊

  • @60ferran_
    @60ferran_ 2 года назад +51

    Khatia is a unique piano player, masterful her interpretation, staging, magical moment, who is lucky to be able to enjoy this interpretation on RUclips. Thank you.

  • @bunkee2009
    @bunkee2009 Год назад +7

    I am Seventy Four, and Have Heard RIB Many Times. This Is The Best. Great Orchestra, and Khatia is Delightful and Outstanding.
    Excellent Recording. Thank You.

  • @GT-bz9nc
    @GT-bz9nc 9 месяцев назад +10

    Absolutely stunning performance of a masterpiece.