Rachmaninoff: Piano Concerto No. 3 - Anna Fedorova - Live concert HD

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  • Опубликовано: 21 сен 2024
  • Kijk voor meer concerten op: avrotros.nl/kla... / avrotros.klassiek - / klassiekonline
    Nordwestdeutsche Philharmonie o.l.v. Gerard Oskamp
    Anna Fedorova, piano
    Rachmaninov - Derde pianoconcert, op. 30
    De Oekraïense pianiste Anna Fedorova maakt een bliksemcarrière. Of ze nu Mozart, Ravel of Moesorgski speelt, ze wordt geprezen om haar enorme expressiviteit. Haar allergrootste succes tot dusver boekte ze met Rachmaninoffs Tweede pianoconcert. Een uitvoering daarvan, tijdens Het Zondagochtend Concert, werd een ongekende RUclips-hit. • Rachmaninoff: Piano Co...
    Inmiddels bracht Fedorova het werk uit op cd, en zet ze de volgende stap op haar reis met Rachmaninoff.
    Rachmaninoff
    Fedorova speelt Rachmaninoffs Derde pianoconcert met de Nordwestdeutsche Philharmonie, het orkest waarmee ze ook het Tweede uitvoerde. Het is onbetwist een van de moeilijkste composities voor piano. Vol met zich steeds complexer ontwikkelende thema’s. Maar vooral ook vol lyriek: het Derde pianoconcert is een werk vol emotionele uitersten.

Комментарии • 3 тыс.

  • @TheAskald
    @TheAskald Год назад +677

    0:22 1st movement
    0:27 theme A (piano)
    1:22 theme A (orchestra)
    3:16 theme A transitioning to theme B
    3:53 theme B
    4:32 theme B in its lyrical version
    5:09 theme B extended
    7:32 theme A
    8:42 intense development
    9:48 transition to the cadenza
    11:30 cadenza on theme A
    14:28 orchestra joins playing theme A
    15:26 cadenza on theme B
    17:19 theme A
    19:08 2nd movement
    19:13 main theme (oboe) and the orchestra developing the theme
    21:26 piano entrance
    21:47 main theme (piano) 1st modulation
    22:57 main theme (piano) 2nd modulation
    24:07 notice the 1st movement theme A on the strings
    25:10 main theme (piano) 3rd modulation
    25:27 build up to 2 climaxes (25:45 & 26:08) with the orchestra playing main theme
    27:17 "Spanish dance"
    27:56 notice the 1st movement theme A in the piano lower inner lines
    28:14 climax closing the lively part of the movement
    28:30 main theme (oboe) and the orchestra restating the movement opening
    29:50 transition to 3rd Movement
    30:15 3rd movement
    30:18 theme A
    31:42 theme B
    32:18 theme B lyrical version
    33:40 theme A development 1
    34:37 theme A development 2
    35:35 other development
    36:11 orchestra plays theme A development 1
    36:45 1st movement theme A on the strings
    37:12 1st movement theme B extended
    38:18 theme A development 3
    39:10 little break and calm cadence
    39:35 start of the themes restatement
    39:40 theme A (orchestra)
    40:09 theme A (piano)
    41:08 theme B
    41:43 theme B lyrical version
    42:20 last part begins
    42:49 build up to the mini-cadenza
    43:03 mini-cadenza
    43:18 climax on theme B (lyrical version)
    44:44 coda
    Rachamninoff's piano concerto no.3 is one of the pieces I cherish the most, and my favorite concerto❤
    I hope this can help people wanting to get into it!

    • @lea8321
      @lea8321 Год назад +16

      you put so much thought into this! definitely my favorite rachmaninoff concerto, probably my favorite piano concerto! happy early birthday to rachmaninoff (it’s tomorrow, April 1st)!!

    • @andrewashdown3541
      @andrewashdown3541 Год назад +14

      Very helpful breakdown thankyou

    • @maiacharbonnier4416
      @maiacharbonnier4416 Год назад +7

      thank you !

    • @dylanrees
      @dylanrees Год назад +7

      This makes listening to the whole concerto so much more approachable - thanks!

    • @audenisarat8179
      @audenisarat8179 Год назад +3

      You are an angel thank you ❤️🧡🧡

  • @lkrupp215
    @lkrupp215 5 лет назад +1977

    “To play a wrong note is insignificant. To play without passion is inexcusable.” Ludwig van Beethoven

    • @orsemcore
      @orsemcore 4 года назад +46

      i don't remember asking?

    • @jorgebeto1827
      @jorgebeto1827 4 года назад +9

      Ecxatly, he said thats famous words

    • @jorgebeto1827
      @jorgebeto1827 4 года назад +14

      sorry Lawrence . Van beethoven not von

    • @davidsbeandip
      @davidsbeandip 4 года назад +68

      this makes me feel better whenever I mess up practicing >

    • @estebancaddeo4981
      @estebancaddeo4981 4 года назад +1

      Awesome

  • @Eric-xt3os
    @Eric-xt3os 4 года назад +374

    What I love about Rachmaninoff's piano concertos is that they're so thick with musical ideas that every time I hear a great pianist play it, it sounds so fresh because they inevitably have some interpretative ideas that bring different focus, even the orchestra members themselves.

    • @martaluzvargas
      @martaluzvargas 2 года назад +9

      We need that so thick in every arts. Listen and going to concerts shoud be an academic prerequisite. Where else can we get creative resources to solve engineering and human problems?

    • @jorgebahamondes9633
      @jorgebahamondes9633 2 года назад +6

      Bella Ana. Excelente pianista una artista

    • @杉原英敏
      @杉原英敏 Год назад +2

      ❤❤❤❤❤なんともいい野菜

    • @SwiSwiKat
      @SwiSwiKat 7 месяцев назад

      WTAF??? 👏👏👏👏👏

  • @789armstrong
    @789armstrong 4 года назад +371

    Krystian Zimerman once said "when you play Rachmaninoff, you have to live it" that's exactly what Anna does here. She has this music in her bones.

    • @zoink5484
      @zoink5484 5 месяцев назад +1

      Spotted

    • @canalgugi9136
      @canalgugi9136 4 месяца назад

      Onde exatamente ele disse isso

    • @alvarosousa8834
      @alvarosousa8834 3 месяца назад

      Just Solokov have even more passion

  • @ernent
    @ernent 8 лет назад +795

    I must confess that I have watched your Rachmaninov 2nd only four and a half million times ...

    • @johne6081
      @johne6081 5 лет назад +42

      I told you a million times not to exaggerate. :)
      Rach 2 and 3 are among my 10 favorite compositions, and I always enjoy her interpretations.

    • @Billbillr
      @Billbillr 5 лет назад +1

      Me too!!!!

    • @אפריםליברמן
      @אפריםליברמן 5 лет назад

      אצלי רחמנינוף 2 --- היצירה האהובה ביותר אחרי שחרזאדה , שהיא במקום הראשון --- והשלישית היא נמבר ניין של דבוז'אק .

    • @wilsjane
      @wilsjane 5 лет назад +6

      Her rhapsody on a theme of Paganini is well worth watching too.

    • @ribeirobreno
      @ribeirobreno 4 года назад +4

      Watch more, your views only counted to about two million so far... :D

  • @carlkligerman1981
    @carlkligerman1981 3 года назад +310

    Thank god we have pianists brave enough to perform this tortured, beautiful masterpiece. Thank you!! Brava madame!

    • @sorellman
      @sorellman 6 месяцев назад +3

      I was thinking the same thing, this must be one of the most difficult piano concertos to perform. She was both brave and brilliant at that.

    • @jan-jaapbrokkinghoorn5274
      @jan-jaapbrokkinghoorn5274 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@sorellman @carlkligerman1981 its just a fact, amazing piece and how she plays... it it is insane!

  • @vassilisroukas8395
    @vassilisroukas8395 5 лет назад +968

    The only thing I cannot understand is how the heck Rachmaninoff composed such masterpiece. My mind is just blown. That is soooo freaking complex. I just don't get it.

    • @trutwijd
      @trutwijd 4 года назад +118

      It really is amazing, we've got all this technology and plastic 1/4/5 music on the radio and you wonder if anyone could compose even the first 2 minutes of a piece like this today?

    • @regvar8468
      @regvar8468 4 года назад +36

      @@trutwijd no chance

    • @fildzafadzli8620
      @fildzafadzli8620 4 года назад +41

      probably because he learned a lot of useful music theory that may helped him to composed all of his masterpieces

    • @trutwijd
      @trutwijd 4 года назад +70

      @@fildzafadzli8620 I took a lot of Music Theory classes too, wasn't half bad... but I still couldn't compose Row Row Row Your Boat. :)

    • @fildzafadzli8620
      @fildzafadzli8620 4 года назад +9

      J Truts try to compose again then

  • @jacienthorne4642
    @jacienthorne4642 4 года назад +560

    I love that in-between movement instead of clapping everybody started coughing

    • @jameshetfield5894
      @jameshetfield5894 4 года назад +91

      At 18:50 yeah! 😆 The whole audience sounded corona positive.

    • @stiquin
      @stiquin 4 года назад +99

      well I have learned that it is quite rude to clap inbetween movements, since you interrupt the piece itself which is not over yet, it just takes a pause (with length defined by the conductor, and not by the people). and the people coughing in the pause inbetween movements usually held back any coughing during the piece itself which would disturb recordings, such as this one.
      so yeah this is kinda expected and also quite normal behavior in the classical music scene (at least in europe)

    • @letiziaesophias8780
      @letiziaesophias8780 4 года назад +6

      I hate that moment 😂🤣

    • @reneekent3596
      @reneekent3596 4 года назад +36

      As long as there are audiences you will hear coughing in between movements--get used to it or buy CDs. I've attended more orchestral and opera concerts than I could count; I've noticed people cough between movements because they've been holding it in for so long. Maybe they just can't stand to be silent for 45 minutes.

    • @israel_should_not_exist
      @israel_should_not_exist 4 года назад +3

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @dcafiso
    @dcafiso 2 года назад +458

    The Rach 3 is a human masterpiece created by a Genius, an achievement of the highest degree. Anna Fedorova is an incredible virtuoso, a wonderful Maestro.

    • @pschilling5424
      @pschilling5424 2 года назад +20

      This is absolutely everything that my fellow commenters say that it is. My heart is touched with profound beauty.
      There are parts so perfectlly written and played thay call us back to them over and over.
      Thank you, UTube for making these concerts available. ~~ Love Anna's playring!!

    • @classicmiriam
      @classicmiriam 2 года назад +10

      I’ve always adored this music. It has actually had a big impact on how I’ve developed as a composer. Especially on an emotional level and that is the type of music that I do.

    • @Xargxes
      @Xargxes Год назад +9

      MaestrA ;)

    • @jjeherrera
      @jjeherrera Год назад +4

      @@Xargxes And virtuaosA.

    • @eliskadvorakova9806
      @eliskadvorakova9806 Год назад +6

      Always have tears in my eyes...

  • @demiurg25
    @demiurg25 6 лет назад +514

    1. Allegro ma non troppo 0:21. Cadenza 11:30. Very tender and sad theme 😢 15:12.
    2. Intermezzo: adagio 19:05. Brilliant finale chords of this movement: 29:50.
    3. Finale: alle breve 30:14. Preparing the final 42:10. Final chords 44:43.
    I hope this help you.

  • @alecrechtiene558
    @alecrechtiene558 3 года назад +324

    43:18-44:35 is the most beautiful thing I have ever heard. So intense it just makes me wanna cry.

  • @johndean958
    @johndean958 2 месяца назад +3

    It doesnt get better than
    this. Thank God we have Anna. Bravo. Soul touching expression and great strength in her playing. Cheers,John (Australia)

  • @vickimednick2845
    @vickimednick2845 6 лет назад +120

    I don't know what it is about Rachmaninoff, but sometimes I just sob when I hear his music. My heart swells, my spirit soars and I'm at one with the world. Anna Fedorova ain't bad either. Magnificent!

    • @markojovanovic38
      @markojovanovic38 2 года назад +3

      I agree

    • @hampsog
      @hampsog 2 года назад +4

      Yes yes I always cry..I've learned to accept that impact.

    • @markojovanovic38
      @markojovanovic38 2 года назад +2

      @@hampsog that is the power of Rachmaninoff ;)

    • @Richard-vu7kh
      @Richard-vu7kh 2 года назад +11

      I struggle not to blubber and sob when I hear this music. The second piano concerto utterly devastates me. I don’t dare listen to Rachmaninoff if friends or family are around.

    • @jpp0901
      @jpp0901 2 года назад +3

      You have put words to what I feel when I hear this and rach 2. Well said

  • @kendicloud
    @kendicloud 8 лет назад +58

    It's nice that they officially allowed this performance to be shared in youtube.

  • @zebragit
    @zebragit 7 месяцев назад +3

    This came on Classic FM as I left the clinic just having my autism diagnosis. It felt as if it had been written for the way I felt inside at that moment. I will never forget this beautiful concerto.

  • @MuhammadKhan-vm5ow
    @MuhammadKhan-vm5ow Год назад +109

    Saw her play this yesterday in concert, She was absolutely amazing, basically got a standing ovation. I think she definitely interprets the piece a lot more now it sounds even more amazing live

    • @MuhammadKhan-vm5ow
      @MuhammadKhan-vm5ow Год назад +3

      @Abram Huang yes! It was amazing! The ending of the encore piece was also really beautiful

    • @LazlosPlane
      @LazlosPlane Год назад

      Where was that?

    • @LazlosPlane
      @LazlosPlane Год назад

      I wish she would come to NEW YORK!! COME! ANNA!!!

  • @PikkaBite
    @PikkaBite 4 месяца назад +3

    I've always loved the chemistry between Anna Fedorova and Maestro Oskamp.

  • @overdue1702
    @overdue1702 7 месяцев назад +3

    The Eb chord right on 44:38 never fails to break me and make me cry. It's very simple harmony, but killing orchestration, melody, dinamics and placement of every single detail. I just find this tiny bit so incredible.

  • @SimonUbsdell
    @SimonUbsdell 4 года назад +98

    The astonishing thing about Fedorova is how minutely she listens to everything that the orchestra is doing and becomes part of it - musicianship that goes far beyond mere (!) virtuosity and deep into the heart of the music. Amazing.

    • @staffanolofsson8201
      @staffanolofsson8201 2 года назад +1

      Yes this is good, I also like Anas music. Still I find Daniil Trifonovs version on RUclips better, with a lot more blood and suffering, and another temperament, higher temperature.

    • @SimonUbsdell
      @SimonUbsdell 2 года назад +7

      @@staffanolofsson8201 Respectfully, I have to disagree. I find him fussy, muddy and mannered. Not to my taste at all. Pianism, not musicianship. And I’m afraid to say I hate pianism. The “passion” is ersatz and tacky. Additionally, as it relates to my point about Fedorova, he is a pianist accompanied by an orchestra; she is a musician embedding herself in the orchestra. Most importantly her rhythmic suppleness and precision is something that is beyond most pianists but it adds so much that is expressive to this repertoire. Her command of the architecture is in a different league (it's not about playing phrases, anyone can play phrases.). And her control of colour is simply glorious. Your wayward friend doesn’t come close in those regards. It’s not all about how hard you can hit the keys, or how sweaty you can make yourself look ... But thank you for getting me to listen again to this majestic performance!

    • @danlds17
      @danlds17 Год назад +4

      I really noticed that too, the fact that she doesn't try to preempt the orchestra, especially as new instruments and / or themes are introduced. So many other pianists (so called virtuosos) will try and beat the orchestra to the punch or outrace them, it doesn't sound good to me. Anna's music is as it should be !

    • @frankiek2269
      @frankiek2269 Год назад

      She’s not supposed to listen to the orchestra in this piece. They all [conductor included] are SUPPOSED to key off of her. They didn’t do it. Because of the Conductor. He had the orchestras volume of playing too high. You couldn’t even hear the fine touch playing she was doing because of this. Check out Olga Kern doing this. Much better because the conductor is better. Fedorova’s and Kern’s renditions are only compared by preferences. But the conductor’s are easily compared. One is lacking in this.

    • @godbluffvdgg
      @godbluffvdgg 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@frankiek2269 Perhaps you should get your ears tested...Or a better system...Just saying...As a musician for 47 years, I found it delightful to hear both the subtleties of Anna's playing AND the orchestra.

  • @jameshidalgo9337
    @jameshidalgo9337 7 лет назад +403

    1. Allegro ma non tanto: 0:22
    2. Intermezzo: Adagio: 19:08
    3. Finale: Alla breve : 30:15

    • @ilovemycatrussell9298
      @ilovemycatrussell9298 5 лет назад +9

      Your time of the 3rd movement is off. It starts at 29:50

    • @TrainwaySons
      @TrainwaySons 5 лет назад +4

      You forgot the lieder part from 0:00 to 0:22 :D

    • @gustavotobon4295
      @gustavotobon4295 4 года назад +1

      Cuando oigo esta musica es cuano mas creo en Dios

    • @jorgefraile218
      @jorgefraile218 4 года назад +6

      @@ilovemycatrussell9298 I don't think so, 30:12 is where the last two cords of the 2nd movement, leading then to the 3rd movement, so in any case, 30:12 is even before the 2nd movement has ended.
      PD: Please don't take this comment really seriously

    • @gustavsoler1812
      @gustavsoler1812 4 года назад +1

      no, the 3rd moviment starts at 30:15

  • @bearded_toad
    @bearded_toad 2 года назад +20

    Do you get that moment sometimes when the piece you're listening to is so beautiful it moves you to tears? Yeah.

  • @pexsterkorppi
    @pexsterkorppi Год назад +47

    To me, this is one of the finest performances ever on the area of music, or arts in general. I raise my hat to the genius Rachmaninoff, and Anna Fedorova for being able to perform on this extreme high level. Magnificent.

  • @tieniebadenhorst1768
    @tieniebadenhorst1768 3 года назад +31

    I have listened to this performance by Ms Fedorova a number of times. I then listened to the performances of this concerto by various other pianists who were all technically very good. Most other pianists played the concerto a bit faster. But many, in my opinion, played it to show off their technical skill. I could not find one other performance played with such emotion like this one by Ms. Fedorova and without forfeiting her technical skill.
    The orchestra support was done superb with required emotional performance thanks to the great conductor Oskamp.
    Many thanks for this great performance to Ms Fedorova, Mr Oskamp and the great orchestra.
    Greetings from South Africa.

    • @vartolomei55
      @vartolomei55 3 месяца назад +1

      Indeed it is a great performance . Greetings from Romania !

  • @awso-noanazz
    @awso-noanazz Год назад +7

    I'm here because of the movie Shine. I just had to hear the whole concerto. Beautiful. Movie is great too. Although too much artistic license, swaying from the truth. Geoffrey rush was amazing. He sure earned that award.

  • @RayChancho
    @RayChancho 7 месяцев назад +7

    I came here per Zunzunegui's recommendation, and it's totally worth.

  • @careinn10
    @careinn10 3 года назад +26

    her phrasing is EXQUISITE. those opening bars... who knew there could be such a world of inflection contained within those subtle notes.

  • @paulissler8319
    @paulissler8319 2 месяца назад +4

    Not new to classical, but new to this Lady. Wonderful talent, such emotion. Bravo

  • @markfowlermusic
    @markfowlermusic 5 лет назад +620

    the section that starts around 25:00 and lasts around a minute is pure genius, I have never felt so much passion by a composer, its just to me one of the greatest moments in all of music.

    • @pimdeboerr
      @pimdeboerr 5 лет назад +9

      Indeed!

    • @minaragy5131
      @minaragy5131 4 года назад +5

      what I was looking for ♥

    • @mikah9289
      @mikah9289 4 года назад +29

      I agree. The following section from 27:17 to 28:37 is fantastic, too. I really can't get it out of my head and get goosebumps every time I hear it.

    • @sarapiazza1325
      @sarapiazza1325 4 года назад +18

      it is. sometimes i listen to this same couple of minutes many times in a row. is just so magical and genius i can't get over it. sometimes i cry too, lol

    • @markfowlermusic
      @markfowlermusic 4 года назад +7

      @@sarapiazza1325 yes that's really the only way i listen to music now LOL, just my favourite parts hahaha.

  • @davidhomer78
    @davidhomer78 4 года назад +27

    I just can't help it, I listen to this and the 2nd piano concerto over and over. It's great every time.

    • @TheAskald
      @TheAskald 4 года назад

      I have a harder time getting into the 3rd. How many listens does it takes you to really enjoy a piano concerto?

    • @davidhomer78
      @davidhomer78 4 года назад +4

      @@TheAskald I enjoyed the second one the first time. The third took several times. Sometimes I play minecraft and turn the sound off and have classical music playing instead. With Anna Fedorova I would rather watch her fingers working the keys.

    • @mimimotor
      @mimimotor Год назад

      I confess...

    • @godbluffvdgg
      @godbluffvdgg 10 месяцев назад

      I always play the 3rd first, and segue into the 2nd. Only because I fell in love with the 3rd first...The 2nd, helps me to balance my emotions, brought on by the 3rd...

  • @humptydumpty-m8u
    @humptydumpty-m8u Месяц назад +2

    Phenomenal performance for the pianist, the orchestra, and the conductor 🙏🏻🌹🎶🙌👍🏻🌈🌻

  • @Maranatha14
    @Maranatha14 7 лет назад +193

    I thought I lived on planet Earth, nope, just listened to this music and realised God's taken me to Heaven, beautiful.

    • @summerdawn6777
      @summerdawn6777 5 лет назад

      @@johne6081 🔥🌪️⚡🌈🌦️🌨️🔥

    • @1292liam
      @1292liam 5 лет назад

      muttley laugh

    • @sharonwatson1055
      @sharonwatson1055 4 года назад

      This is where we intersect with God.

    • @mangomerkel2005
      @mangomerkel2005 2 года назад

      Well Franz, your music is not that bad :)

  • @petefairest4054
    @petefairest4054 6 лет назад +14

    On a final rather dissapointing note ladies and gentlemen how can anyone in their right mind give this incredibly beautiful music a thumbs down, rachmaninov was in my opinion the most incredible composer of the 20th century who wrote the most beautiful, romantic, emotional and soul stirirng music that i have ever heard, and of course there is the incredible Anna Fedorova,, thank you for bringing some happiness to my remaining days.

    • @elizabethschaeffer9543
      @elizabethschaeffer9543 4 года назад +2

      The trolls are there to be ignored. Or pitied. We are so fortunate in being able to appreciate and relish this beautiful music and the amazing composer and awesomely talented pianist who have given this gift to us.

    • @leslieackerman4189
      @leslieackerman4189 14 дней назад +1

      ESPECIALLY his 3rd piano concerto!

  • @m123think
    @m123think 2 месяца назад +2

    One of the BEST interpretations of this piece, in my opinion. Just love it!

  • @caracabrera1601
    @caracabrera1601 3 года назад +9

    Anna Federova: Thank you for sharing your magnificent talent worldwide.

  • @Laffen47
    @Laffen47 5 лет назад +1282

    I will not fall in love with the pianist
    *I will not fall in love with the pianist*
    Oh, who am I kidding...

    • @tgunersel
      @tgunersel 5 лет назад +34

      Indeed :) Same here :)

    • @alumbo
      @alumbo 5 лет назад +7

      Who are you kidding? No reasonable man.

    • @tbu1mi
      @tbu1mi 5 лет назад +21

      You are done. Of course you love her. You like air, sunlight and cold water?

    • @Steppenziege
      @Steppenziege 5 лет назад +53

      @Lenny Online You call this ugly? We must've seen a complete different video.

    • @Sennmut
      @Sennmut 5 лет назад +40

      @Lenny Online What planet are you from?

  • @FabioAmaralDiFini-wb5wj
    @FabioAmaralDiFini-wb5wj 3 месяца назад +2

    As spectacular as everything which is done by Anna Borysivna Fedorova...

  • @johnschwartzberg7567
    @johnschwartzberg7567 5 лет назад +6

    In the midst of despair for our world, Anna makes me proud to be a member of the human race.

  • @jaimeseguel4751
    @jaimeseguel4751 7 лет назад +21

    Who cares about anything but the fantastic contrasts of emotions, their summits and their backwaters, simply does not enjoy the essence of music. This is in my opinion one of the best versions of this concert, and I have heard many. Anna is great in body and spirit.

  • @metalscholarsreact666
    @metalscholarsreact666 Год назад +6

    I really like how she is part of the orchestra and doesn't let those first section 'stick out' more than the music is asking them to. She's hearing the whole picture

  • @anso9023
    @anso9023 8 лет назад +135

    Fedorova would bring tears to Rachmaninoff's eyes.

  • @Pneuma3339
    @Pneuma3339 3 года назад +35

    The Rach 3 is the most beautiful piece I’ve ever heard

    • @SimonBrisbane
      @SimonBrisbane 3 года назад +1

      It feels almost sacrilegious to say such a thing in our world of amazing composers, yet here we are.
      “almost”

    • @ikbalmalikramadhan3939
      @ikbalmalikramadhan3939 2 года назад +3

      Rach 2 is lovely too

    • @mangomerkel2005
      @mangomerkel2005 2 года назад +5

      I personally like Rach 2 much more because it is more romantic and simply more beautiful because of the romantic themes. Rach 3 is also an incredible masterpiece, but in my opinion too technical, which means a little lack of romanticism. And romanticism is what Rachmaninoff is made of.

  • @cmberrian
    @cmberrian Год назад +5

    Rachmaninoff is quickly becoming one of my top three personal favorites composers and I think it was Anna playing con#2 that really got me into checking out his amazing work.

  • @timpreston459
    @timpreston459 2 года назад +48

    I am so grateful that I live in a time when I can watch this magnificent performance on RUclips in HD Anna is a wonderful pianist And the whole orchestra gave a superlative performance. Thanks

  • @RobertoSierra-g6y
    @RobertoSierra-g6y 11 месяцев назад +5

    EXCELLENT Concerto, Anna Fedorova and Symphonic Orchestra.Thanks

  • @MJSpangle
    @MJSpangle Год назад +6

    I leave all discussions as to who's who at the door, and content myself with listening to a truly amazing pianist playing incredible music. As far as I can tell, there are multiple gifts we have been given. One is the composer. The next is his music, the third is this wonderful pianist. The fourth is her playing. For all of these, I am profoundly grateful.

  • @erman.eryaman
    @erman.eryaman 4 года назад +42

    This piano concerto is, for me, one of the best piano concertos of all time.
    And congratulations to Anna Fedorova, you played it awesome...

    • @pschilling5424
      @pschilling5424 2 года назад +5

      For me, Anna Fedorova,, is the special one I always go back to over and over. Love you Anna.
      Thank You, for your dedication to wonderment. Time will never forget you and your concerts!

  • @alansmith1770
    @alansmith1770 4 года назад +18

    Her piano playing is totally out of this world. Rachmaninoff my favourite composer

  • @WaterFlame957
    @WaterFlame957 2 года назад +14

    25:28
    That's just such beautiful phrasing when the strings come in.

  • @byugoi
    @byugoi 4 года назад +151

    5:47 is the biggest eargasm I've ever had. The way the orchestra seamlessly jumps in and the chromatic rise on the piano is frighteningly beautiful.

    • @tylermonsen3704
      @tylermonsen3704 2 года назад +5

      that part totally made me cry when I heard it live in concert

  • @pascalcocquyt4564
    @pascalcocquyt4564 2 года назад +42

    Buitenaards is het 3 e van rachmaninoff. Woorden ontbreken mij.hart en ziel heeft rachmaninoff om dit te componeren.absoluut meesterwerk.bravo anna voor je brilliant performance

    • @santiagoo5953
      @santiagoo5953 7 месяцев назад +2

      Hey, why is this version differwnt fron the ones horowitz and yunchan lim play?

    • @Mazurking
      @Mazurking 7 месяцев назад +6

      Rachmaninov wrote different versions for certain parts of the concerto. The performers can choose which versions they play.

  • @martinmartin4606
    @martinmartin4606 2 года назад +7

    The lady plays very elegant and generous, I enjoy it at least five times a day!

    • @martinmartin4606
      @martinmartin4606 8 месяцев назад

      她的演奏非常激情,是非常出色的演奏,是世界上最好最伟大的钢琴演奏家,值得推荐,

  • @danieljames8708
    @danieljames8708 4 года назад +5

    I keep coming back to Anna, She plays with Such Love. She is one of the Finest of our Times....

  • @thomasneubauer4667
    @thomasneubauer4667 8 лет назад +95

    A hauntingly beautiful and intensely passionate performance with an impeccable sense of timing. The way Anna shapes long lines and uses the space between the notes to create tension is simply stunning!

    • @robertmurray7506
      @robertmurray7506 6 лет назад +4

      I could not agree with you more. She is truly great with Rac 2 and 3. Her passion and timing are great. Rachmaninoff did not like this when he first played it after he wrote it on a cruse ship. I think it is one of his greatest works.

    • @summerdawn6777
      @summerdawn6777 5 лет назад

      @@robertmurray7506 🙏

    • @elizabethschaeffer9543
      @elizabethschaeffer9543 4 года назад +2

      Well said. You catch her performance in all its breathtaking beauty. Thanks.

  • @小生001嚴融怡
    @小生001嚴融怡 Месяц назад +2

    This is the most touching and exciting version I have ever heard, and both the pianist and the orchestra performed admirably.

  • @davidjared3402
    @davidjared3402 4 года назад +26

    Magnificent; anyone who can play "Rach 3" that well deserves a standing ovation. Spasibo, Anna!

  • @MikeBrown-ov2ol
    @MikeBrown-ov2ol Год назад +26

    one of the most beautiful pieces of music ever created!
    I wish the people of our world would focus more on producing this kind of legacy instead of trying to kill each other.
    Mankind has produced so many great things, why can't we just get along without thirst for power within a mortal lifespan, when we could have immortality through culture, eternal glory through masterpieces of art?

    • @pjotarendewolf2195
      @pjotarendewolf2195 6 месяцев назад +2

      Yes, hell yes, but we will, and it's not over yet, just focus on the good! And go on!

    • @rcjdeanna5282
      @rcjdeanna5282 6 месяцев назад +1

      It's easier to kill each other and win a medal than to learn one page of this.

    • @mikekolyshkin3931
      @mikekolyshkin3931 4 месяца назад

      You are a hundred times right. Unfortunately, this kind of the highest level culture is possessed by too small part of the humans. The majority of the people on the planet are pursuing just base goals and they threaten destroying the culture per se.

    • @oogieobanyon
      @oogieobanyon 3 месяца назад

      That, Mike, is the question of the millenium. One many of us have long pondered, since childhood. Perchance, are you the Mike Brown who was in the novel group Left Banke?

    • @alexdevon2588
      @alexdevon2588 3 месяца назад +1

      What you wrote is almost as beautiful and soul rendering as this marvelous concerto. A big bravo to you! May peace win the battle of survival foe=r humanity and artistic Creativity!

  • @draeme00
    @draeme00 Год назад +3

    Here I am in the middle of Riyadh Saudi Arabia 🇸🇦 listening to that elegant music and studying for my exams next week.. I took a glimpse on the comment section and saw that too many generations and cultures from around the world listening to a piano concerto composed by a Russian composer and performed by an Ukrainian artist make me wonder how can music really unite the world 🤍✨

    • @leslieackerman4189
      @leslieackerman4189 13 дней назад

      Indeed. But the percent of people that appreciate and let this music get into their souls is minimal

  • @kevinmckeever6163
    @kevinmckeever6163 5 лет назад +99

    I have listened to this Concerto daily if not several times a day, I am completely absorbed by it's melodious beauty, it can only be equalled by No.2 but currently I prefer this. Recommended highly.

    • @MattBonk991
      @MattBonk991 2 года назад +1

      I go between 2, 3, and 4 over the span of a week for the past 2 months. Its just too good.

  • @floatingfreedom6091
    @floatingfreedom6091 2 года назад +21

    Rachmaninov is sublime . His tempo, melody, depth , the way his pieces lift and rise are all astonishingly Beautiful . I’ve listened to him over 40 years . This young lady captures all of that. Kudos

    • @Ale-qf1pm
      @Ale-qf1pm 2 года назад

      Very sublime playing on her part

  • @nigelsansom2407
    @nigelsansom2407 5 лет назад +26

    I absolutely love this performance. Anna Federova is a star! It’s one of the most brilliant pieces of music ever. A story I remember about this piece is that when Rachmaninov was sailing across to New York to play it for the first time in public in 1910, he practiced it all the way there on a dummy keyboard. And, the conductor for that performance was Gustav Mahler.

  • @nancyanderson5310
    @nancyanderson5310 Год назад +4

    I am a more substantial person after hearing this glory. God gave humanity yet another luminous gift. Life can be so beautiful.

  • @gozdesafakemek7931
    @gozdesafakemek7931 4 месяца назад +2

    Anna you are amazing! Rachmaninoff with Anna Federova's performance is my highlight of the day when I am working. Full concentration and very moving!

  • @noyb72
    @noyb72 3 года назад +11

    This is the power of this platform. Having access to this media is so enjoyable. Something I would never get to experience live.

  • @starxtraders
    @starxtraders 8 лет назад +13

    Anna best performance of the Rach 3 I have ever seen. I was in tears at the stagering performance. I usually find pianists play that peice of music too fast but you were spot on

  • @ArthurLavitsky-bq8kg
    @ArthurLavitsky-bq8kg 8 месяцев назад +3

    Anna is just brilliant here. And she's gorgeous too ☺

  • @talamioros
    @talamioros 3 года назад +28

    I've always loved that waterfall of notes at 38:00 or so, and she does them so exquisitely. Some others do it passionately, heavily, but I love her delicate interpretation, it creates a whole new dimension to that passage. Not to mention the rest of the concerto as a whole is amazing of course, but that crowned the whole experience for me.

  • @jimeiring
    @jimeiring 5 лет назад +8

    Its hard to write a comment when rendered speechless. Anna’s performances of 2nd and 3rd Rach makes me feel that no matter what strife is going on in the world, life is worth living if only to witness this magnificent talent.

  • @filiperocha1465
    @filiperocha1465 Год назад +3

    "How many moments of genius today Cecil?"
    A lot!!!

  • @bramhuysen5907
    @bramhuysen5907 3 года назад +18

    Anna is a genius. Period...... and so cute, too....

  • @rogerwhite95
    @rogerwhite95 10 месяцев назад +5

    Very possibly the finest performance of this supreme masterpiece I've heard. Just awesome.

  • @robertgrier3065
    @robertgrier3065 10 месяцев назад +4

    She has the sweetest smile in classical music.

  • @TorAndreKongelf
    @TorAndreKongelf 4 года назад +50

    The amount of arm-chair piano professors and arm-chair musicologists in this comment section is entertaining and somewhat embarrassing. This woman is amazing and works hard every day and gives super quality high performances of this music. In this day and age, we should just embrace it as much as we can.

  • @rockfordrocker8971
    @rockfordrocker8971 4 года назад +22

    It's just so GOOD. The playing, the feels. The orchestra. The everything. And of course, it's Rachmaninoff she's playing.

  • @alvarito45
    @alvarito45 3 года назад +8

    Rachmaninov concerto for dreaming about all the universe and its grandeur. Has no limits, goes beyond perfection, soul, anima, alma. Second movement set one on a rare space with no matter... OMG how great.
    Best XX century composer. No doubt about it for me!!

  • @juiianadebeers8230
    @juiianadebeers8230 6 лет назад +154

    Ana, I cried my eyes out from beginning to end. Your gift is ethereal. You bring the drama of life to Rachmaninoff's poignant concertos. I feel like I witnessed the Divine playing through your fingers! Thank you for sharing your talent with the world and me.

    • @leonghchan
      @leonghchan 5 лет назад +2

      Did you actually though?

    • @philldwyer5221
      @philldwyer5221 5 лет назад

      JuIiana de Beers watch a pianist called Valentina Lisitsa she totally commands Rachmaninov 3.
      Please reply if you agree.🎹🎹🎹🎼

    • @philldwyer5221
      @philldwyer5221 5 лет назад

      JuIiana de Beers what does ethereal mean? Sorry I don’t know that one?
      Best wishes from Phillip.
      🎹🎹🎹🎼

    • @eduardosuarez4762
      @eduardosuarez4762 5 лет назад +4

      @@philldwyer5221 V Lisitsa is cold - no spirit.

    • @neilsvonzeppelin250
      @neilsvonzeppelin250 4 года назад +1

      @@eduardosuarez4762 Bizarre appreciation. Valentina Lisitsa is passionate all the way. It is even a reproach that some make to her !

  • @jackiesenich2622
    @jackiesenich2622 4 месяца назад +3

    Anna is so talented!!! Absolutely beautiful music.

  • @tommytwogloves16
    @tommytwogloves16 Год назад +3

    Anna. You have a talent that only God and His Angels could have bestowed upon you. Con Amore Massino.

  • @claytonchim7861
    @claytonchim7861 5 лет назад +14

    listening to this song for me is like taking drugs, i just keep coming back for more

  • @ctfamily40
    @ctfamily40 Год назад +23

    The second ever performance of this piece was with Rachmaninoff as soloist and Mahler as conductor. I would give anything to have been at that concert!

  • @BenTrem42
    @BenTrem42 3 года назад +7

    *_Paradigmatic_* ... athleticism, artistry ... genius.

  • @CaptConvent
    @CaptConvent 7 лет назад +422

    I think there are generally two types of pianists. The ones who play with technical excellence and hit very few wrong notes, and the ones who play with as much emotion as they can get out of the piano and notes are secondary. She is the latter. She is pushing the instrument to its limits and giving it all heart. She plays sections of this and I'm taken aback by its emotional power. And I could listen to someone else play it and miss those sections entirely. Correct notes and all.

    • @richardcondon3797
      @richardcondon3797 6 лет назад +12

      Then there's Van Cliburn who actually did both.

    • @kentbetts
      @kentbetts 5 лет назад +8

      @@richardcondon3797 Depended on the venue. If it was a small town of music illiterates, Cliburn missed notes. It's ok.

    • @Adrianw6211
      @Adrianw6211 5 лет назад +3

      Kent Betts please elaborate on what you mean

    • @Ragingmarmot
      @Ragingmarmot 5 лет назад +2

      Hence, the concept of "interpretation"

    • @tsunamio_o2679
      @tsunamio_o2679 5 лет назад +28

      Rachmaninoff 'missed' notes that he composed too... so I don't think playing right notes makes the musician.

  • @1962mano
    @1962mano 6 лет назад +6

    Amongst all the incredible piano virtuoses we have these days, Anna Fedorova stands out as the brightest star, definitely. She is simply phenomenal.

  • @tylerryan2573
    @tylerryan2573 3 года назад +56

    This is, without a doubt, the greatest performance of the greatest piece of art ever made. I am indescribably privileged to be able to listen. Truly, I am humbled with every visit to this video.

  • @AlexanderBatyr
    @AlexanderBatyr 8 лет назад +299

    After watching these awesome performances of 2nd & 3rd piano concertos lets request Anna Fedorova to play Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini, op.43.
    Thumbs up!

    • @danielliu26
      @danielliu26 6 лет назад +9

      Alexander Batyr she did
      (Just in case you haven't seen it - it's wonderful)

    • @MrDanieldock
      @MrDanieldock 6 лет назад +14

      ruclips.net/video/ppJ5uITLECE/видео.html
      Here it is, is AWESOME!

    • @wilsjane
      @wilsjane 5 лет назад +6

      I would love to hear her interpretation of his 4th piano concerto.
      The one he refused to write, The Warsaw Concerto.

    • @glennaharris9497
      @glennaharris9497 4 года назад +2

      She has. It is on the internet -- a beautiful rendition of Rhapsody of a Theme of Paganini.

    • @nandovancreij
      @nandovancreij 2 года назад

      @@wilsjane if ur still around ive got some amazing news for u (i attended it myself and her interpretation is refreshing:))

  • @rolflips1366
    @rolflips1366 4 года назад +9

    The music just flows from her soul through her hands to the keyboard.

  • @heribertosuarezfernandez5043
    @heribertosuarezfernandez5043 3 года назад +2

    My beautiful princess!!

  • @musicpainter1
    @musicpainter1 6 лет назад +18

    I am in awe at such talent, from the composer to the orchestra to the pianist, and all in harmony of a magnificent aesthetic. This is the summit of human achievement in the arts. We need more of this in our lives and our culture. Thank you to all who created this masterpiece perfotmance.

  • @georgemelikian5411
    @georgemelikian5411 2 года назад +12

    What a God given inspiration God truly has loved us and blessed us by giving composers and musician's like you and Rachmaninov I truly I enjoy your performance thank you and God bless you

  • @josephus9794
    @josephus9794 Год назад +3

    At the end of the performance, I could do nothing but stand and applaud. Thank God that I could enjoy this wonderful performance at RUclips.

  • @kathyrankin3052
    @kathyrankin3052 3 года назад +5

    In these very dark times, this music lifts my soul! I listen to it over and over. Thank you Anna!!!

  • @marioramongarcia9998
    @marioramongarcia9998 3 года назад +14

    She has everything: poetry, strength, passion and technique. And her sound is always beautiful, as she herself! I liked also very much her version of the 2nd piano concerto.

  • @elizabethstrebulaev4848
    @elizabethstrebulaev4848 2 месяца назад +1

    Listening to this outside, looking out onto the alps - covered with a thin mist and clouds covering out the sun. So romantic 🌹

  • @robertbonter1190
    @robertbonter1190 8 лет назад +127

    Thank you, Anna. You are appreciated in America.

    • @rarejer
      @rarejer 8 лет назад +12

      +Robert Bonter ... and Canada.

    • @ogabrielbruno
      @ogabrielbruno 8 лет назад +14

      +Robert Bonter and Brazil too.

    • @voxtor3000
      @voxtor3000 8 лет назад +10

      +Robert Bonter And in Spain too

    • @auricgolddfinger5869
      @auricgolddfinger5869 8 лет назад +8

      +Robert Bonter And in Texas too. What an awesome gift!

    • @FFnopal
      @FFnopal 8 лет назад +11

      +Auric Golddfinger En México tambien

  • @GeorgeRamrod
    @GeorgeRamrod 3 года назад +8

    FANTASTIC!! What can I say for Rachmaninoff, for his music, for the pianist.... It is mind-blowing!!!!

  • @johnmestres7220
    @johnmestres7220 3 года назад +1

    Rachmaninoff and Federova take you on a roller coaster of pleasure and delight!

  • @vincefagalde8926
    @vincefagalde8926 5 лет назад +8

    Are you kidding me? Crushed that difficult piece like a walk in the park! That girls got mad skills!

  • @victorsanabria5479
    @victorsanabria5479 11 месяцев назад +5

    Juan Manuel Zunzunegui sent me here and I’m glad for it.

  • @benschreckermusic9072
    @benschreckermusic9072 3 года назад +16

    With the subtlest of inflections Ferdorova leaves so much space for the strings in the main theme... And yet just a few bars later she's bringing things out in the arpeggios of the piano part that I don't normally pick up on. Fantastic performance

  • @glennaharris9497
    @glennaharris9497 5 лет назад +10

    One of the most beautiful pieces ever written and magnificently performed by one of my favorite pianists.

  • @jwhen01
    @jwhen01 8 лет назад +123

    ANOTHER OUTSTANDING RACHMANINOFF PERFORMANCE by the amazing Anna Fedorova.
    Exiting five stars! World Class!!!

    • @georgescancan7503
      @georgescancan7503 8 лет назад +2

      +Jacob Hendriks ..."the amazing Anna Fedodova." ah, ah, ah! : Sex in advertising
      From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
      "Sex in advertising or "sex sells" is the use of sex appeal in
      advertising to help sell a particular product or service. Sexually
      appealing imagery may or may not pertain to the product or service in
      question. Examples of sexually appealing imagery include nudity, pin-up
      girls, and muscular men.
      The use of sex in advertising can be highly overt or extremely subtle.
      It ranges from relatively explicit displays of sexual acts, to the use
      of basic cosmetics to enhance attractive features."
      ALEXANDER BOOT Author, critic, polemicist
      Blogs > Alexander's blog >
      Sex sells - all of us short
      Submitted by Alexander on 24 June 2013 - 12:59pm
      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.

    • @mariodisarli1022
      @mariodisarli1022 8 лет назад

      +Georges Cancan Caution! A fraud!
      BETRUG !!!
      Hier gibt es z.B. 20.000 Klicks für 84,95 Euro, 100 Likes für 9,99 Euro. Bezahlung per PayPal.... getviews.de

    • @jwhen01
      @jwhen01 8 лет назад +10

      Who is this idiot? (+Georges Cancan )
      NOTE: I write my personal view about Anna Fedorova's great concert. Nothing else!
      Please stop making these stupid childish remarks.
      I've never payed nor received any money for making a remark!

    • @georgescancan7503
      @georgescancan7503 8 лет назад +3

      +Jacob Hendriks ..."the amazing Anna Fedorova." ..."great concert." Sexy Anna? Jacob Hendriks - idi...?! THE TELEGRAPH
      As Nicola Benedetti, the violinist, bemoans the idea that sex sells
      classical music, professor of marketing Gloria Moss explains why both
      genders cash in on their looks to make their millions
      By Professor Gloria Moss
      1:27PM
      BST 01 Apr 2014
      Like it or not, looks affect our responses. So Nicola Benedetti’s
      comments that “classical music isn’t supposed to be sexy” and that her
      success bears no relation to her looks flies in the face of volumes of
      marketing research. It also flies in the face of history, since you have
      only to think of the effect of composer and pianist Franz Liszt in the
      19th century (a 'looker' in his day) on women to realise this. Women
      would tear bits of his clothing, fight over broken piano strings and
      locks of his shoulder-length hair. They would even take his cigar butts
      and place them in their cleavages.
      .....
      When it comes to classical music, you could argue that people don't buy
      or listen to it based on what the composer or musician looks like: they
      listen to their CD or record rather than watch it online through a music
      video, where female pop stars generally flirt with the camera to
      generate attention.
      ....
      However, people's responses to classical musicians do have a visual
      element, whether it is through the CD cover, concert hall or visual
      recording, and this will inevitably influence purchasing reactions.
      Related Articles
      Sex isn't what sells classical music, Nicola Benedetti says 01 Apr
      2014
      'Women who do well out of their looks play the game' 01 Apr 2014
      'I can wear long skirts when I am 40' 05 Feb 2014
      Besides, how do the successful classical musicians get their big break
      in the first place? Of course, talent is a huge part of it. So is hard
      work. But combine that with a beautiful body, flowing locks and an
      attractive smile, and you're onto a winner.
      Take extraordinary pianist Yuja Wang, who has made it her signature to
      perform in short dresses.
      Take Anne Sophie-Mutter, plucked for stardom by Karajan at the age of
      13, and her strapless Galliano dresses.
      ....
      Also think of violinist Nigel Kennedy, protégé of Yehudi Menuhin, and
      the way his punk hairstyle may have helped him reach a large audience.
      The winning recipe is a superabundance of talent plus looks.
      Those who know how to use their looks well have an advantage: sex will
      always sell.
      ....
      At the end of the day, Benedetti may well baulk at the impact of looks
      but there is no denying their impact in her own success. That's just the
      world we live in; how does that old saying go: if you've got it, flaunt
      it.
      Dr Gloria A Moss is professor of marketing and management at
      Buckinghamshire New University and a visiting professor at ESG, Paris.
      She is the author of gender, design and marketing and has a new book,
      'Why men like straight lines and women like polka dots', appearing in
      the spring.

    • @Desireyso58
      @Desireyso58 8 лет назад +4

      +Georges Cancan HOLA FRITZ o MARIO o GEORGES CAN CAN. You are the same misoginist, POOR GUY! You'll never be what you wanna be!