There are many unusual tempo and rhythm choices on these recordings. Surprising. And it should be. Timofeyeva's Haydn is among the best. She is now in my favorite list as well as Sokolov, Schiff, Gould, Richter, and Brendel.
When you listen to these pieces, its hard to believe how many good ones there are!! Haydn was amazing! So prolific and clever, and he rarely repeated himself, quite a feat considering how much music he wrote.
I just clicked on the photo of a beautiful woman, i confess. But i'm enchanted both with the music and the performance. It's surprising to find so little information about her on the web... Thanks for the load, it's charming...
@Jemand Anderes i'm not an expert in anything, my friend, but, since you asked my opinion, the best thing i can tell you is that the performance and the subtle gestures of pleasure of the pianist remind me David Helfgot, not only as he is portrayed in the movie, but also the real one. They both play like floating in a graceful, speedy stream of music that flows from their hands with no effort at all. Of course, that's the illussion created by the mastery gained after years of practice: everything seems easy. It´s been nice to hear this Trushechkin, thanks.
Ms. Timofayeva's pianism was to me an extraordinary discovery. What an exquisite touch, wonderful musicality, and almost superhuman technical facility. I could listen for hours to her playing.
Same here - an amazing discovery. She seems to have avoided coming to the West. The only concert I am aware of there was in Paris. Other than that it's Russia and Japan and one or two places I forget. Maybe South America.
She was the most compelling and colorful player in the Montreal Int.Competion 1968.She was as nice and sweet as her .paying wishing the Soviet chaperones would permit to buy a dress with money from her Prize!!Hope she is content, healthy and enjoying her "Babuschka" years.Greetings from a colleague and admiring enjoying being "Deduschka" !! Christopher
My love for Haydn started more than forty years ago after hearing just one of his quartets: The Bird, Opus 33. That was my introduction to this prolific composer...and I started listening to more and more of his music... found them to be just wonderful. What an amazing composer with such great ability to compose piece after piece of gorgeous and engrossing music which, after nearly 300 years, is still wonderfully charming and calming and delightfully appealing! Listen to his Sunrise quartet. What a tender and beautiful quartet! And many more such treasures...!
He was not only an amazingly prolific composer, churning many dozens of delightful pieces, he invented the whole genre. Indeed, he invented the modern piano sonata, the string quartet, the piano trio, the symphony, even the sonata form that is very much alive to this day.
Very delicate, no banging about, fluency, lovely touch on the keyboard, you can see where Mozart got his inspirations. Cannot fail to comfort your spirit!
I did not imagine that Haydn was so interesting. Formerly I found his works (those which I listened to) "just nice," but I was not really impressed, enraptured by them, they did not really attract me. It seemed to me always the same trying to make you think that everything is OK, the Sun is shining, and the birds are singing, and to ignore the deep abyss of the hardships of life that I was experiencing, and therefore I did not identify with that music. Now it is very different. Thank you for letting me know better Haydn and appreciate him. It is being a discovery.
@@arekkrolak6320 There are many passages of a delicate beauty, for example, in the sonatas nos. 12, 31, and many others. Those pieces are classical, but not conventional. They have attracted my attention.
I had the same response when I first heard Haydn's piano sonatas. I had always thought of him as a "poor man's Mozart" (so to speak). But when I heard the sonatas, played by Gilbert Kalish, my opinions changed entirely. I fell in love with them. I feel a little embarrassed at how I had dismissed Haydn for so long.
@@titicatfollies6615 No need to feel ANY embarassment...probably all of us have felt and done the same over our lifetimes with regards to performers, composers, friends, spouses, etc. Our sensibilities change as we get older. You made choices based upon who you were at the time...normal.
Lubov Timofeyeva is utterly delightful in rendering these Haydn Sonatas with such fidelity, joy, clarity and finesse. Listening to these is like opening gifts on Christmas morning! While I've listened to Timofeyeva before and liked her playing, I just love this recording. I played many of these sonatas as a teenager, so it's like a nostalgic journey to revisit them now at 74 years old. Thank you ADGO for posting these in their entirety here!
Humor and joy in the outer movements, as only Haydn could conceive. But also, deep emotional solace in the inner movements. You surely understand the vision and spirit of Haydn! Perfection! Well done!
I enjoyed the way Ms Timofeyeva played these sonatas. Clarity is essential in such as these pieces. Her ornamentation was terrific. My early piano lessons resulted in a hatred for Haydn, whom, of course, my teacher adored. I've obviously recovered..
Well, I cannot say that I hated Haydn, but I must confess that I felt almost nothing when I listened to his works: it seemed to me always the same trying to make you think that everything is OK, the Sun is shining, and birds are singing, while you are experiencing all hardships of life. Therefore, I definitely preferred romantic and modern piano, and, as far as the classical period was concerned, I liked Mozart far more than Haydn. How ignorant I was… Now I am discovering lots of passages of delicate beauty in these sonatas (especially from the no. 12 onwards), and I am happy to be able to turn my indifference into appreciation for Haydn. Thanks to Lyubov Timofeeva! This has been a similar case as when Sviatoslav Richter reconciled me with Bach's "Well Tempered Clavichord"…
Thank you, ADGO, from Portugal, for posting these magnificent interpretations by Lubov Timofeyeva. Haydn ( from whom Mozart got so much inspiration ) is one of a kind in the history of Music, a miracle, indeed. How much creativity he was able to put into each composition and all seems easy as if one comes to a very well-known country but it was a newfound land by Haydn! Piano Sonata in E-flat major 1798. You can hear it again and again as it awakens your mind each time in a better way.
As a fervent admirer of Joseph Haydn I am delighted with the discovery of his piano sonatas with Lubov Timofeyeva, a marvelous pianist. I love her expressive refined style of playing. Thank you very much ADGO !
@@annemiebock7292 Indeed, a wonderful refreshing performance of the Haydn sonatas, but we must thank especially ADGO for uploading this recording. In any case thank you for your nice reaction.
It doesn’t help with the various numberings. I was at a talk given by the pianist and composer John McCabe who took us through a whirlwind tour of the sonatas. He was very interesting. It’s a shame that talks/lectures like these, given to a small audience at the Hereford Three Choirs (when his excellent new work Woefully Arrayed was premiered) are not recorded. We lose a wealth of information, such as how Britten marked his piano pieces that he performed. If you never heard McCabe’s anecdote, you will never guess it in a month of Sundays.
@@jesemepardens9151They were genuine friends and best leave it at that although secretly I really agree. Charm. wit, reflective thought at the worst - no tragedy - great fun!
Thanks for the post. I was so fascinated with the playing of Lyubov Timofeyeva that I acquired a CD box of this recording, which was very rare in the market.
So delighted to find this video. RUclips is a good place to discover all the wonderful pianists who are not necessarily world famous or well known. Thank you!
I´m listening again and the beautiful sonata 11, XVI:2 reminds me of Beethoven's Diabelli Variation (minute 1:09:17). I don't know who inspired who, given that Beethoven, as the name of his work indicates, took original ideas from another composer, Anton Diabelli... it's kind of confusing, but beatiful, like the performer...
a pure jem almost impossible to find elsewhere than youtube ! i really love the way Lubov Timofeyeva is giving justice to the imagination and in some case, sense of humor of Joseph Haydn. magnificent
ADGO THIS IS INCREDIBLE!!! finally, Finnaly, FINALLY!!! I was always looking for a video, that featured all of Haydn's piano sonatas, but I only find playlists...I've already starting giving up hope and finally! This miracle has come for more than nine hours. It was a big surprise, thank you Adgo!
Absolutely brilliant, as good as Richter! ADGO, I am so glad you posted this... I cannot find it anywhere else. Like others on this thread, I had always underestimated Haydn compared to Mozart or Beethoven.... Lubov Timofeyeva has set me straight for all times.
Jesus Christ, I am wondering how the hell it was possible to keep all Haydn's sonatas hidden from our eyes for such a long time? In comparison to other composers, even the most minor ones, they have their own compilations published here on RUclips. It is high time we could set our eyes on Haydn's sonatas and draw some Inspiration and Lesson from them!
Having mastered the finale to Sonata #59, it's part of my opening on most days after playing the introduction to the Emperor Concerto. This video opens the possibility of further Haydn studies. Thanks for posting.
Gracias ADGO, por tomarse el tiempo necesario y suficiente de organizar este conjunto de piezas invaluables, me he sorprendido, es muy poco lo que se puede encontrar Haydn. Desde la primera vez que escuché algunas de sus piezas, lo encontré INCONMENSURABLE entre los hombres que han dejado riqueza intelectual y espiritual a la humanidad. Además su vida cargada de excelsa humildad y servicio a su don de ser músico, es aun, necesario exaltar. La música es el reflejo del alma.
Thanks very much for this valuable post. I've been a fan for many years, and about 10 years ago was lucky enough to get the cd box with her complete Haydn sonatas. She has a real feeling for the delight, buoyancy, and bonhomie in this music, and her crisp articulation is wonderful. For me, sometimes, in some sonatas, she trills a bit too much, but that minor carp shrinks into insignificance next to all her virtues.
@Jemand Anderes Absolutely marvelous articulation, and he so nicely brings out the wit that so often characterizes Haydn's prestos. Thank you. For my own personal taste, I prefer the presto in No. 31 to be a bit slower than this, the way Pogorelich and Bavouzet play it, i.e., just under 4 minutes.
My cat loves Ms. Timofeyeva's piano sonatas.
You have a very smart cat..
There are many unusual tempo and rhythm choices on these recordings. Surprising. And it should be. Timofeyeva's Haydn is among the best. She is now in my favorite list as well as Sokolov, Schiff, Gould, Richter, and Brendel.
When you listen to these pieces, its hard to believe how many good ones there are!! Haydn was amazing! So prolific and clever, and he rarely repeated himself, quite a feat considering how much music he wrote.
Very hard to pick a favorite from among them.
I just clicked on the photo of a beautiful woman, i confess. But i'm enchanted both with the music and the performance. It's surprising to find so little information about her on the web... Thanks for the load, it's charming...
@Jemand Anderes i'm not an expert in anything, my friend, but, since you asked my opinion, the best thing i can tell you is that the performance and the subtle gestures of pleasure of the pianist remind me David Helfgot, not only as he is portrayed in the movie, but also the real one. They both play like floating in a graceful, speedy stream of music that flows from their hands with no effort at all. Of course, that's the illussion created by the mastery gained after years of practice: everything seems easy. It´s been nice to hear this Trushechkin,
thanks.
Hello, Haydn. Goodbye, sadness.
Exactly !!!
Deeply satisfying.
Hard to be sad while really listening 😊
Ms. Timofayeva's pianism was to me an extraordinary discovery. What an exquisite touch, wonderful musicality, and almost superhuman technical facility. I could listen for hours to her playing.
Same here - an amazing discovery. She seems to have avoided coming to the West. The only concert I am aware of there was in Paris. Other than that it's Russia and Japan and one or two places I forget. Maybe South America.
I do listen to her for hours thanks to ADGO...she deserves it
You need to check her Chopin preludes and etudes
perfect for studying; it doesn't distract me, and yet it keeps me going on. I've heard it so many times!
She was the most compelling and colorful player in the Montreal Int.Competion 1968.She was as nice and sweet as her .paying wishing the Soviet chaperones would permit to buy a dress with money from her Prize!!Hope she is content, healthy and enjoying her "Babuschka" years.Greetings from a colleague and admiring enjoying being "Deduschka" !! Christopher
0
My love for Haydn started more than forty years ago after hearing just one of his quartets: The Bird, Opus 33. That was my introduction to this prolific composer...and I started listening to more and more of his music... found them to be just wonderful. What an amazing composer with such great ability to compose piece after piece of gorgeous and engrossing music which, after nearly 300 years, is still wonderfully charming and calming and delightfully appealing! Listen to his Sunrise quartet. What a tender and beautiful quartet! And many more such treasures...!
He was not only an amazingly prolific composer, churning many dozens of delightful pieces, he invented the whole genre. Indeed, he invented the modern piano sonata, the string quartet, the piano trio, the symphony, even the sonata form that is very much alive to this day.
Very delicate, no banging about, fluency, lovely touch on the keyboard, you can see where Mozart got his inspirations. Cannot fail to comfort your spirit!
Her performance holds a marvelous power
Yes it does.
@@joeb6773
Thankyou
From
A corner o Tokyo
🥋🍲🍡🍙🍚🎎🎏🗼🎋🎍🍜🍣🍢💐🎑🎴⛩️🇯🇵
Tokyo is bragging about heavy snow Tomorrow
I did not imagine that Haydn was so interesting. Formerly I found his works (those which I listened to) "just nice," but I was not really impressed, enraptured by them, they did not really attract me. It seemed to me always the same trying to make you think that everything is OK, the Sun is shining, and the birds are singing, and to ignore the deep abyss of the hardships of life that I was experiencing, and therefore I did not identify with that music. Now it is very different. Thank you for letting me know better Haydn and appreciate him. It is being a discovery.
so what exactly has changed your opinion? :)
@@arekkrolak6320 There are many passages of a delicate beauty, for example, in the sonatas nos. 12, 31, and many others. Those pieces are classical, but not conventional. They have attracted my attention.
@Kobzar3374 - Mozart shadows Haydn. Sometimes I like Haydn better. He was an extraordinary fellow, very sensitive and sensible.
I had the same response when I first heard Haydn's piano sonatas. I had always thought of him as a "poor man's Mozart" (so to speak). But when I heard the sonatas, played by Gilbert Kalish, my opinions changed entirely. I fell in love with them. I feel a little embarrassed at how I had dismissed Haydn for so long.
@@titicatfollies6615 No need to feel ANY embarassment...probably all of us have felt and done the same over our lifetimes with regards to performers, composers, friends, spouses, etc. Our sensibilities change as we get older. You made choices based upon who you were at the time...normal.
definitely one of the best Haydn recordings. my favorite anyways.
Lubov Timofeyeva is utterly delightful in rendering these Haydn Sonatas with such fidelity, joy, clarity and finesse. Listening to these is like opening gifts on Christmas morning! While I've listened to Timofeyeva before and liked her playing, I just love this recording. I played many of these sonatas as a teenager, so it's like a nostalgic journey to revisit them now at 74 years old. Thank you ADGO for posting these in their entirety here!
Thank you very much. I'm a performer of Haydn's piano music and I am discovering this magnificent pianist. Her Haydn is unique.
@Jemand Anderes 1
⁷8
⁷8
I have unreserved admiration for the perfect way in which Lubov Timofeyeva renders the wonderful sonatas of Master Haydn!
Since it doesn't have commercials I'll watch / listen to this regularly...
VIELEN herzlichen Dank, das perfekte Antidepressivum ohne schädliche Nebenwirkungen.
I just found this and I can't stop listening, there's such an easiness and clarity in her playing! Magnificent!
Humor and joy in the outer movements, as only Haydn could conceive. But also, deep emotional solace in the inner movements. You surely understand the vision and spirit of Haydn! Perfection! Well done!
45番美しい。1楽章から2楽章への入りは素晴らしい。3楽章も良い。
This is lovely, thank you for uploading. And yes, the commercial-free listening is wonderful!
And some passages of the first movement of no. 58 are really surprising, very appealing.
Finally a video of haydn complete sonatas
There are also uploads on Haydn complete sonatas but on individual movement.There is a very good one played by Buchbinder.
If you listen closely, you can still hear a lot of baroque motives. Even in Mozart you can hear, but much less. This amazes me
This is a feast! What a great master was Haydn! Well played!
Such fond memories.....My mothers favourite..
I enjoyed the way Ms Timofeyeva played these sonatas. Clarity is essential in such as these pieces. Her ornamentation was terrific. My early piano lessons resulted in a hatred for Haydn, whom, of course, my teacher adored. I've obviously recovered..
Well, I cannot say that I hated Haydn, but I must confess that I felt almost nothing when I listened to his works: it seemed to me always the same trying to make you think that everything is OK, the Sun is shining, and birds are singing, while you are experiencing all hardships of life. Therefore, I definitely preferred romantic and modern piano, and, as far as the classical period was concerned, I liked Mozart far more than Haydn. How ignorant I was… Now I am discovering lots of passages of delicate beauty in these sonatas (especially from the no. 12 onwards), and I am happy to be able to turn my indifference into appreciation for Haydn. Thanks to Lyubov Timofeeva! This has been a similar case as when Sviatoslav Richter reconciled me with Bach's "Well Tempered Clavichord"…
I keep listening more than a few times a week to this music and a great interpretation
Thank you, ADGO, from Portugal, for posting these magnificent interpretations by Lubov Timofeyeva. Haydn ( from whom Mozart got so much inspiration ) is one of a kind in the history of Music, a miracle, indeed. How much creativity he was able to put into each composition and all seems easy as if one comes to a very well-known country but it was a newfound land by Haydn! Piano Sonata in E-flat major 1798. You can hear it again and again as it awakens your mind each time in a better way.
Nghe solo thì đơn điệu, đôi lúc thấy cũng dễ chịu. Lối chơi như này, có thể thay Chopin được.❤ Cảm ơn về kỹ thuật trình diễn
Sonata No. 10 XVI:1 is a beauty
Bernd Sorg
Wonderful performer! I love these sonatas so much and listen to them so often with great pleasure!
She's got great endurance...I couldn't play chopsticks for 9 minutes and she's playing Haydn for 9= hours WHEW!
As a fervent admirer of Joseph Haydn I am delighted with the discovery of his piano sonatas with Lubov Timofeyeva, a marvelous pianist. I love her expressive refined style of playing. Thank you very much ADGO !
Vielen Dank für diese hervorragende Interpretation , eine Wiederbegegnung mit Haydn , die verzaubert!
@@annemiebock7292 Indeed, a wonderful refreshing performance of the Haydn sonatas, but we must thank especially ADGO for uploading this recording. In any case thank you for your nice reaction.
What can I add to all the glowing comments except to express my sincere thanks for this magical treat?
very unique and agreeable.
Many thanks for uploading this treasure, beautiful!
Danke für diese hervorragende Interpretation von Haydn, seine Sonaten werden nicht oft gespielt! Ich bin beeindruckt!
tres heureux de connaitre cette pianiste! merci
No. 45 is very beautiful.
Glad to be awake early. This is a jewel, many jewels - treasure! Thank you, ADGO.
she: haydn level cleaned!! we: discovering haydn THANKS !
No. 43 is great. And so many others…
BRILLIANT INTERPRETATION BRILLIANT MUSIC
Прекрасное исполнение и великая Музыка!С.Рихтер говорил,что ему ближе Гайдн,чем Моцарт...
Grande pulizia di suono e Haydn esce in modo formidabile. Compliments Timofeyeva very compliments. Trentadue Domenico su RUclips. Ciao! I love you!!
Finally i found the best complete recording of Haydn Sonatas!
Unforgettable teenager memories... Thanks a lot!
That theme and variations from XVI:27 is the greatest thing in the whole world
Wow! Listen no. 45 at 06:12:22 and 06:14:24 - the melodies are so beautiful!
Haydn is such an underrated and overlooked composer of classical piano music, often shadowed by the likes of Mozart and Beethoven.
Without Haydn the likes of M and B would sound entirely different. Interesting thought.
It doesn’t help with the various numberings. I was at a talk given by the pianist and composer John McCabe who took us through a whirlwind tour of the sonatas. He was very interesting.
It’s a shame that talks/lectures like these, given to a small audience at the Hereford Three Choirs (when his excellent new work Woefully Arrayed was premiered) are not recorded. We lose a wealth of information, such as how Britten marked his piano pieces that he performed. If you never heard McCabe’s anecdote, you will never guess it in a month of Sundays.
I agree. I was surprised at the relative paucity of recordings when i checked the other day.
I prefer Haydn to Mozart !
@@jesemepardens9151They were genuine friends and best leave it at that although secretly I really agree. Charm. wit, reflective thought at the worst - no tragedy - great fun!
Thanks for the post. I was so fascinated with the playing of Lyubov Timofeyeva that I acquired a CD box of this recording, which was very rare in the market.
where did you find it? any other copies available
@rsjmd It was a second- hand item sold on the internet. No other stock available.
Какое сказочное исполнение. Браво!
The Best
Wonderful music.
Ooooooffff wow thanks for sharing this!
Lovely
sublime
Fantastic. Wonderful. Crisp and playing with feeling.
Delightfully soothing music.
Really good clarity in her playing of these sonatas.This is what my teacher always emphesis on during my studies on these Haydn sonatas.
So delighted to find this video. RUclips is a good place to discover all the wonderful pianists who are not necessarily world famous or well known. Thank you!
Listening to this will be a long project, but I'm up for it.
Thank you for sharing.
Wow! Thank you.
I´m listening again and the beautiful sonata 11, XVI:2 reminds me of Beethoven's Diabelli Variation (minute 1:09:17). I don't know who inspired who, given that Beethoven, as the name of his work indicates, took original ideas from another composer, Anton Diabelli... it's kind of confusing, but beatiful, like the performer...
Magnificent pieces. Excelent rendition.
No. 31 is great. Thank you for sharing!
Just overcome by her mastery! She has such technical facility, almost intimidating.
Excellence is the better word to describe Lubov; very good pianist; a good sample of the Russian School of Piano
She rocks it and then some!!
Good morning from LA! I love her playing, very clean. Thank you for posting.
Fine! Thank you for having shared this video and changed my opinion about Haydn for the best.
My favorite complete set by far.
Thanks for these treasures OO
Потрясающе! Какая изумительная музыка! И какая красавица ее играет!
Это 70-е годы, 50 лет назад.
@@user-zf5yu3zm2c я Карнавал ее слушал в школе, в 80е. Пластинка была начала 70х, да
Vers Nice. Thanks for this discover.
a pure jem almost impossible to find elsewhere than youtube ! i really love the way Lubov Timofeyeva is giving justice to the imagination and in some case, sense of humor of Joseph Haydn. magnificent
The last movement of no. 51 is so elegant. This music brings peace to me.
This is true.
And the last one of no. 56. Well, it seems that I have a thing for the last movements now…
And the last movement of no. 60.
Beautiful music 🎹 Thanks 🎶
ADGO THIS IS INCREDIBLE!!!
finally, Finnaly, FINALLY!!! I was always looking for a video, that featured all of Haydn's piano sonatas, but I only find playlists...I've already starting giving up hope and finally! This miracle has come for more than nine hours. It was a big surprise, thank you Adgo!
Casi 10 horas!, me acompañan todo un día de trabajo en casa por la pandemia; fantástico en calidad.
Great. Thanks a lot!
Just wonderful!
Splendid!
Прекрасно, чудесно!
Lubov is a wonderful pianist -- a real gem. Hope to hear more of her recordings.
She is an excellent pianist. I am surprised that I hadn't heard of her.
"The best is kept to last".
Nº 48 is very beautiful.
Absolutely brilliant, as good as Richter! ADGO, I am so glad you posted this... I cannot find it anywhere else. Like others on this thread, I had always underestimated Haydn compared to Mozart or Beethoven.... Lubov Timofeyeva has set me straight for all times.
Jesus Christ, I am wondering how the hell it was possible to keep all Haydn's sonatas hidden from our eyes for such a long time? In comparison to other composers, even the most minor ones, they have their own compilations published here on RUclips. It is high time we could set our eyes on Haydn's sonatas and draw some Inspiration and Lesson from them!
Lots of great artists have been recording Haydn sonatas over the past 70 years.
Hidden? I've been listening Haydn Sonatas on youtube since 2008.
Genijalna Ljubov!Obozavam je, slusala sam je uzivo,njen Bach je nebeski!👏👏💐❤️
Having mastered the finale to Sonata #59, it's part of my opening on most days after playing the introduction to the Emperor Concerto. This video opens the possibility of further Haydn studies. Thanks for posting.
Good luck, personally it is wonderful that you and others are keeping faith with Haydn et al. x
Haydn’s works are universally identified by Hoboken (Hob.) numbers; ‘Sonata #59’ is meaningless.
It's a great big gift!
Delicious!
Thanks for uploading this true diamond! Unfortunately, too long to be downloaded.
Try downloading it with VideoProc
Works for large playlists as well
Wow! The sounding quality is superb.
Gracias ADGO, por tomarse el tiempo necesario y suficiente de organizar este conjunto de piezas invaluables, me he sorprendido, es muy poco lo que se puede encontrar Haydn.
Desde la primera vez que escuché algunas de sus piezas, lo encontré INCONMENSURABLE entre los hombres que han dejado riqueza intelectual y espiritual a la humanidad.
Además su vida cargada de excelsa humildad y servicio a su don de ser músico, es aun, necesario exaltar. La música es el reflejo del alma.
Thanks very much for this valuable post. I've been a fan for many years, and about 10 years ago was lucky enough to get the cd box with her complete Haydn sonatas. She has a real feeling for the delight, buoyancy, and bonhomie in this music, and her crisp articulation is wonderful. For me, sometimes, in some sonatas, she trills a bit too much, but that minor carp shrinks into insignificance next to all her virtues.
am in full accordance with your words!
@Jemand Anderes Absolutely marvelous articulation, and he so nicely brings out the wit that so often characterizes Haydn's prestos. Thank you. For my own personal taste, I prefer the presto in No. 31 to be a bit slower than this, the way Pogorelich and Bavouzet play it, i.e., just under 4 minutes.