Rediscovering Chopin Nocturnes with Garrick Ohlsson | Ep. 2 The Chopin Podcast

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  • Опубликовано: 20 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 109

  • @itzelguerra2655
    @itzelguerra2655 Месяц назад +82

    Ben, for the past 2 decades I’ve been trying to expand my repertoire beyond Chopin. This series is not helping. I fall in love all over again with the music. Thank you.

    • @benlawdy
      @benlawdy  Месяц назад +10

      There's a segment on John Field's Nocturnes in the larger episode, if that helps! Posting the video tomorrow.

  • @nintendianajones64
    @nintendianajones64 Месяц назад +29

    There's no better speaker or advocate for Chopin than Garrick Ohlsson. I hope he's around for many years to come.

  • @tom6693
    @tom6693 9 дней назад

    I've just spent the week revisiting Garrick Ohlsson's Arabesque recordings of the Nocturnes from 1995, performances I've always loved for their great poetry and beauty, the overall expansiveness of conception and execution. As sheer pianism they're flat-out magnificent, the control of tone and touch positively staggering, creating so many colors and conjuring such rich emotions--as if every note is getting its due, every phrase getting deliciously turned. This is truly sumptuous playing, personal without being idiosyncratic. And coming back to them is a great joy--yet another gift of this series.

  • @da__lang
    @da__lang Месяц назад +8

    I never get tired of hearing Garrick Ohlsson talk about Chopin. He's a treasure.

  • @purpleowl2075
    @purpleowl2075 Месяц назад +29

    Can't wait until the Ballades - they're my favourite of Chopin's oeuvre!

    • @RobertSmith-le8wp
      @RobertSmith-le8wp Месяц назад

      They’re all good. I have the entire 4 ballades by Cho Seong Jin as one of my downloads in case I ever lose cell service I can listen. Him and Zimmerman are my favorite interpretations

  • @Lavovoyaye
    @Lavovoyaye 21 день назад +1

    This podcast is just precious, appreciated the generous knowledge imparting here, from Taiwan!

  • @valerypyram176
    @valerypyram176 16 дней назад

    Great video. I like the way you are analyzing the different parts of the Chopin pieces of music. Garrick’s ways of explaining the different nuances and techniques is exceptionally awesome, and plays the keys beautifully

  • @wpols1908
    @wpols1908 Месяц назад +2

    Thanks for giving the op 37 no 2 the attention it deserves

  • @ThePianoFiles
    @ThePianoFiles Месяц назад +13

    Yet another fabulous episode - loving this series!!!!

    • @benlawdy
      @benlawdy  Месяц назад +3

      Did you listen to the full audio pod, Mark? You get a shoutout there about an hour in. The video segment containing it will be up tomorrow.

    • @ThePianoFiles
      @ThePianoFiles Месяц назад +1

      @@benlawdy Oh my, I didn't... I'll check it out! Keep up the great work on this amazing series - groundbreaking and very important stuff!

  • @micaholson7718
    @micaholson7718 Месяц назад +5

    Thank you for the dedicated thoughtfulness you put into your content. It is amazing. Always

  • @SGregW
    @SGregW Месяц назад +3

    Great lesson Garrick, and very nice piano you have there! I've always appreciated not only your playing of many works over the years, but also your choice of using something other than a Steinway for your recordings and performances. My mother bought your 1979 Angel LP Nocturne set and gave it to me for my 11th birthday present. I wore those LPs out to a frazzle, and was delighted when I found them re-released on CD many years later.

  • @AethonZerus
    @AethonZerus 24 дня назад +1

    The op 55 no 2 is one of my top favorites. But it's exceedingly difficult to play well, and most pianists, even great ones, don't do a very good job. And I think it all comes down to what Chopin was trying to teach his student in the opening bars of the c minor. Each and every note, especially in the contrapuntal sections, must be given great attention. Each phrase must come across as richly thematic, and everything must be played with intention. This is the difference between the nocturne being a stunning, magical experience, or falling flat. In my opinion, Pogorelich does a good job of accomplishing this. I would encourage you to take a listen.

  • @orlandooracle7008
    @orlandooracle7008 Месяц назад +4

    Thank you so much for posting these videos on RUclips for us!! I really appreciate it!! I’m not tech savvy so I don’t really have ever listened to any podcasts unless they’re in video format on here. So thank you so much! I really appreciate you taking the time to share with us.

  • @leeanballad
    @leeanballad 25 дней назад

    Thank you so much for this series! It’s so amazing! Gold material! Many blessings to you!

  • @mkmk54248
    @mkmk54248 Месяц назад +1

    I was introduced to the Nocturnes listening to my mother's Stefan Askenase recording when I was little. Askenase's recording of the Nocturnes remains my all-time favorite. And my favorite Nocturne, although I love them all, is the Opus 27 No. 2.

  • @frédéricchopinFan.9479
    @frédéricchopinFan.9479 Месяц назад +3

    Great Video Ben and Garrick. Love your videos and content. Can’t wait for the rest of The Chopin podcast. Thank you!

  • @juditherwinneville7797
    @juditherwinneville7797 Месяц назад +2

    The first Chopin Nocturne I ever played, Op. 9, No. 1!

  • @markolson1677
    @markolson1677 Месяц назад

    These Chopin Podcast episodes are so fantastic I think my head will explode! I cannot thank you enough, it is all beautiful and educational and just fun to hear the interactions and discussions. Thank you!

  • @GG-of9og
    @GG-of9og Месяц назад +4

    Loving the podcast so much so far!

  • @KR-mm4el
    @KR-mm4el Месяц назад +4

    can't wait for the video about his ballads

  • @pottedrodenttube
    @pottedrodenttube Месяц назад +3

    This is a truly wonderful podcast.

  • @chiekomiami5022
    @chiekomiami5022 Месяц назад +1

    Ben, you have lots of great ideas and so generous. Thank you for this podcast.

  • @bluepearl4806
    @bluepearl4806 Месяц назад

    It was all delightful thank you!! Garick Ohlsson is one of the best chopin interpreters for me..he plays beautifuly

  • @lswanson3473
    @lswanson3473 21 день назад

    Thanks!

  • @AcousticBruce
    @AcousticBruce Месяц назад +2

    The double movement in Nocturne 48 no1, is often played slow by other players so it’s good to see that Garrick has sped it up. Another of my favorite recordings is my Valentina Lisista. Her 48 no 1 is my favorite.

    • @benlawdy
      @benlawdy  Месяц назад +2

      Garrick does it both ways - faster in his earlier recording, slower in the later one. What I like about his slower version is how the inner voices start to speak in really beautiful ways.

  • @thegreenpianist7683
    @thegreenpianist7683 Месяц назад +6

    You mentioned earlier that each episode will cover each of the genres he composed: Ballades, Scherzi, etc... You probably already recorded most the podcast in full but I really hope one-offs like the Barcarolle, F minor Fantasy will be covered as well, maybe all lumped together as "Others" or smth.
    Anyway, as a giant Chopin simp, I'm absolutely loving every minute of this podcast.

    • @benlawdy
      @benlawdy  Месяц назад +9

      Episode 10 is dedicated to the three main miscellaneous solo works - the Fantasy, Berceuse, and Barcarolle.
      I'm lumping in Rondos with the Impromptus in Episode 6.
      And other miscellaneous works will be distributed throughout various episodes!

    • @thegreenpianist7683
      @thegreenpianist7683 Месяц назад +2

      @@benlawdy That's wonderful to hear! The Barcarolle is one of my all-time favorites. Thank you so much for all the effort you put into these.

  • @Seleuce
    @Seleuce 15 дней назад +1

    I love this podcast! :D
    As for Noc. in C-sharp minor and quoting his own concerto, you didn't mention that he wrote the Nocturne for Ludwika, his older sister. It's believed he had done so for her to prepare to play his concerto. If I remember right, there are even several manuscripts of the piece in his and in her hand that slightly differ.

  • @sivolkhoargen1066
    @sivolkhoargen1066 Месяц назад +2

    Wonderful video. Mr. Olhsson is close not to play, but to draw, or crave the melodies!! Are as like as them materialize. I never listened to a 37, 2 so beautiful. I loved the four connections on the C# minor. I knew about the mention of the begining of the last movimento on the concerto. I was surprised with the other. Thanks for this cool video ❤

  •  Месяц назад +1

    Three cheers for Ben!!! Ah! The Brown Albums. I spent years walking to work listening to the Mazurkas on my headphones. Infinite depth.

  • @damland1357
    @damland1357 Месяц назад

    This is truly incredible, thank you so much Ben!

  • @purpleowl2075
    @purpleowl2075 Месяц назад +3

    The comparison to Beethoven's Appassionata is spot on 👌

  • @CodyHazelleMusic
    @CodyHazelleMusic Месяц назад +2

    Great job on this series! Loved the first episode and looking forward to the rest

  • @ianc6765
    @ianc6765 Месяц назад +2

    Thank you Ben. This is interesting…and inspiring.

  • @robertoquijada6736
    @robertoquijada6736 Месяц назад

    Thank You very Much Mr.Ben. Robert FROM Venezuela.

  • @PeterFamiko-lw8ue
    @PeterFamiko-lw8ue Месяц назад +2

    Nocturnes are diamonds of chopin s

  • @potatohunter3763
    @potatohunter3763 Месяц назад

    Excited for the ballades,each one is better than the other!

  • @aidanstrong1061
    @aidanstrong1061 Месяц назад

    Joy to listen/watch, thank you!

  • @Daniel_Zalman
    @Daniel_Zalman Месяц назад +2

    Ben, this was great....as always!

  • @kodiak71gene
    @kodiak71gene Месяц назад +2

    Ben, I am moving back to Utah next year and looking for a teacher…do you take students? I am entranced with your Chopin series…it’s a lot of work I’m sure but rest assured so greatly appreciated.

  • @militaryandemergencyservic3286
    @militaryandemergencyservic3286 Месяц назад

    Seymour Bernstein does the best recording I ever heard of the nocturne no.1. It is on YT. It was recorded later than the 'golden age' and yet it sounds exactly like a 'golden age' recording.

  • @christopherwarner5331
    @christopherwarner5331 Месяц назад

    The set is also on iTunes and downloadable from Apple Music. Not as a box, but each of the different types of genre. I began listening yesterday.

  • @samaritan29
    @samaritan29 Месяц назад +3

    Hey Ben, fascinating interview - keep up the great work, you two. I just want to flag for the sonata videos - please talk about the Chopin cello sonata, inspite of the fact that it’s not necessarily relevant to the upcoming competitions it really is one of his late masterworks that deserves the same level of appreciation as his other 2 sonatas.

    • @benlawdy
      @benlawdy  Месяц назад +1

      Planning on it!

  • @RMPdude
    @RMPdude Месяц назад +1

    Excellent! Thank you, Ben. -- Josh B. in China.

  • @hurricane_hazel
    @hurricane_hazel Месяц назад +1

    Such amazing content. I am considering patreon because I want mooooooore. Thank you!

  • @lawrencetaylor4101
    @lawrencetaylor4101 Месяц назад +1

    Merci

  • @gameclips5734
    @gameclips5734 Месяц назад +1

    glad garrick decided to slow down the c minor nocturne, sounds much better

    • @benlawdy
      @benlawdy  Месяц назад +1

      Especially what he does with the inner voices.

    • @gameclips5734
      @gameclips5734 Месяц назад

      @@benlawdy yeh first time hearing those notes brought out in the left hand, sounds interesting

  • @TomTom53421
    @TomTom53421 Месяц назад +1

    Have you listened to Ivan Moravec’s complete Chopin nocturnes? OMG his op. 27 no. 2 is so perfect

    • @benlawdy
      @benlawdy  Месяц назад +2

      @@TomTom53421 yes i discovered moravec in college and his nocturnes were so different than Rubinstein’s and really transported me. Jed Distler (spoiler alert) actually highlights Moravec’s ballades in episode 3

    • @TomTom53421
      @TomTom53421 Месяц назад

      @@benlawdy too bad I have to wait 😭

  • @ronl7131
    @ronl7131 Месяц назад +1

    Good vid

  • @militaryandemergencyservic3286
    @militaryandemergencyservic3286 Месяц назад

    5:50 - as my teacher said: 'Anyone BUT Richter for Chopin'...

  • @militaryandemergencyservic3286
    @militaryandemergencyservic3286 Месяц назад

    op 55 no 2 is perhaps my fave - i like Ashkenazy's version....the summit of Romanticism...

  • @militaryandemergencyservic3286
    @militaryandemergencyservic3286 Месяц назад

    23:53 Ben, Ben, Ben did you forget to say how the ending is exactly the same as the end of his PC2 second movement (i'd recommend the incomparable Poon for the best - along with Hofmann - yt recording of the op. 11 concerto.

  • @della8872
    @della8872 Месяц назад

    Thank you for the amazing content! Btw, how is Seymour Bernstein doing, have not heard from him fro a long time. :)

  • @coopersy
    @coopersy Месяц назад

    A curiosity that has fascinated me for years, in Nocturne #20, Garrick starts the fourth measure (20:49) with f# in the left hand, whereas the notation below starts with d#. My favorite recording is Ashkenazi, and he plays d#, but most recordings play f#. I find the d# much more mysterious…. Any history to this, as it completely changes the tenor of the passage…

  • @charlesshephard2764
    @charlesshephard2764 Месяц назад

    We look at the cover of Mr Ohlsson's magnificent box set of the Complete Works of Chopin often enough. Please ask him what the story behind the painting on the cover is. Do we know, for example, what Chopin's program on that occasion was? And more generally, is Mr Ohlsson's approval sought when it comes deciding what the covers of his albums will look like?

    • @benlawdy
      @benlawdy  Месяц назад +3

      I can ask if he gave his approval, but my guess he wasn’t party to it. Just looked it up and the painter is Kwiatkowski. He painted a piece entitled “Chopin in concert at the Hotel Lamber” in 1840, and seems to have repeated the scene in an outdoor setting with seeming political significance called “The Polonaise.” Something to look into further. Apparently he also painted a scene of Chopin on his death bed.

  • @AlbertoSegovia.
    @AlbertoSegovia. Месяц назад

    My first purchase of any classical music was the same Collection by Rubinstein, but the effect it had on me was not what many people express; I found the music like being to be ended as soon as possible. I never truly connected. And worse, the preludes: I found them sickly, bizarre, and savage. Although admirable and enjoyable, it did have a degree. But to be really delighted, I could never understand it. But my formation made me think that I was on the right track and made it difficult to externalize. And I never felt the nocturnes were particularly nocturnal, never. It would be interesting to conduct a poll.

    • @benlawdy
      @benlawdy  Месяц назад +1

      Is there other classical music/ piano music that you connect more to? Chopin doesn't literally have to be "for everyone"!

    • @AlbertoSegovia.
      @AlbertoSegovia. Месяц назад

      @@benlawdy “to make classical music, and above all the music of Frederic Chopin, accessible to everyone.” How, is the question. The time is overripe. Thank you for responding! Sincerely 🤩

  • @constancecooper8301
    @constancecooper8301 Месяц назад

    Op 48 #1, "doppio movimento" matters immensely. Where else is Chopin specifically arithmetical about tempo? -- no matter how madly difficult it is. Ohlsson, it goes without saying, pulls it off.

  • @nikanm17
    @nikanm17 Месяц назад +3

    Hi there Ben
    You may not know this but in Iran in the Tehran Conservatory of music we students binge watch your videos and talk about them and learn a lot from them so thank you for that.
    I have a question that since you have access to lots of great pianist you could ask them maybe and enlighten me.
    There have been a lot of great composers in the romantic era and specifically contemporaries to Chopin and a lot of them like Kalkbrenner are very similar to Chopin in style and also you could say they were almost as good as Chopin in someways however why we keep listening to Chopin instead of them?
    What is it in Chopin music that we just can't find in a lot of similar composers that logically should appeal to us the same way?
    Is it something in the melody and harmony that he possesses or it's merely luck that he is the most famous from that era. (I'm one of the biggest fans of Chopin on earth btw)
    I will be glad to know the answer.
    Thanks!

    • @benlawdy
      @benlawdy  Месяц назад +3

      Thank you for your comment! I'm flattered that my videos have stimulated discussion among you and your peers. You ask a huge question, and I'm not sure I have a great answer - certainly not in a RUclips video - but you're right, it would be a good question to ask some of these great pianists I'm lucky to interview. I would say, perhaps, that Chopin had a rare combination of melodic imagination and harmonic inventiveness, while being grounded in the voice leading schemas and phrase structures of the 18th century, and this allowed him to create music that communicated both emotionally and logically. He also didn't write music for his time, he wrote it for its own sake, with attention to its own internal logic, proportion, and detail, and this organicism allows his must to stand the test of time like very few of his contemporaries.

    • @nikanm17
      @nikanm17 28 дней назад

      @@benlawdy Awesome reply man thanks!❤️‍🔥

  • @RobertSmith-le8wp
    @RobertSmith-le8wp Месяц назад

    Hello Ben, what do you think of the Thierry de Brunhoff recording of the nocturnes ? I thought they were excellent considering that he pretty much retired with that performance when he was only 40.

  • @militaryandemergencyservic3286
    @militaryandemergencyservic3286 Месяц назад

    at 15:09 I couldn't help noticing that those recollections were written in 1872. So that is at least 13 years after Chopin died. How accurate do you think the writer is? I would refer you to the excellent Fischer-Deskau book in which similarly distant recollections are rendered regarding Schubert by his friends. I think it is unreliable. I may be wrong...

  • @vincenzodamore5317
    @vincenzodamore5317 23 часа назад

    Are you sure “doppio movimento” means double the tempo? I have never interpreted this indication as such. I think it means something like there are two lines, each one moving at its own pulse. It doesn’t have much to do with tempo, it’s an indication of structure…

    • @benlawdy
      @benlawdy  23 часа назад

      @@vincenzodamore5317 music dictionaries say it means double the preceding tempo, but your idea is an interesting one. The only thing is, what you say is true of many other passages in Chopin and it doesn’t seem necessary for him to indicate that kind of structural relation with a performance cue.

    • @vincenzodamore5317
      @vincenzodamore5317 22 часа назад

      @ thank you for your reply! So nice to speak to you - congratulations for your amazing content. Well, musicologists and music dictionaries certainly know better than I. You have a good point, of course. However, the same can be said for drastic changes of tempos. First example that comes to my mind: second Ballade, tempo goes double in the second section but Chopin doesn’t need to call it “doppio movimento”. Well, music is not maths after all :)

  • @JacquesLuu
    @JacquesLuu Месяц назад

    Where the part where you guys talk about Kate Liu nocturne?

    • @benlawdy
      @benlawdy  Месяц назад +2

      ruclips.net/video/KUr7UxBOdeY/видео.html

    • @benlawdy
      @benlawdy  Месяц назад +2

      Had to make a separate video out of it :)

  • @luukkrijnen638
    @luukkrijnen638 Месяц назад

    Whos interprets the op 9 no 1 in the intro?

  • @RobertSmith-le8wp
    @RobertSmith-le8wp Месяц назад

    Hello all, I’ve found some good composers here on youtube. Nothing crazy, just pieces written on Musescore, only occasionally played by the person themselves. Do you know any modern artist that make nocturnes ? Of the pieces I’ve found, they usually only a minute or two. I would love to find a longer piece

  • @MasmorraAoE
    @MasmorraAoE Месяц назад +1

    Very interesting as all the other episodes, but in my humble opinion massively overedited...There are like 3 cuts every sentence.
    I wouldn't care as much if they weren't actually audible cuts, but the majority are...
    Is there a time constraint?
    Or just trying to please the YT algorithm?
    In any case, I'm still loving the series and cant wait for the next episodes!

    • @benlawdy
      @benlawdy  Месяц назад +3

      I know what you mean. This one was tough to edit. It's normal to remove "ums" and awkward pauses and stutters and aimless asides (if I'd left them in, I'd be hearing comments about that haha). But I admit the cuts are a bit harsher/more obvious to the ear in this one - they're a product of a few things: one is that the original interview needing to be re-ordered, another is that we generally had more issues with sound in this one. Another is that it's just me and a part-time assistant working on this, and we're trying to develop a workflow to assemble everything more efficiently together and that's taking some getting used to. We're solving a puzzle each time to develop Garrick's segments in a way that is digestible and fits on the longer (90-minute) podcast with several other segments. I also suspect that if you were only listening and not watching, it wouldn't have been quite as noticeable.
      I do post the full Garrick interviews with minimal cuts on my Patreon. They are in some ways more interesting, because you get more context and Garrick goes on more tangents, and sometimes there's whole discussions of pieces/topics there that I removed in the final edit. But there are no scores or other bells and whistles to them, and the audio is a bit rougher (it's basically the original Zoom call, just tightened up a bit).

    • @MasmorraAoE
      @MasmorraAoE Месяц назад

      @@benlawdy I work on a Podcast professionally. You'd be surprised how much more tolerant podcast listeners are to "uhs" and little stutters than we realize.
      Makes it all sound more like an actual conversation and less like a highly scripted TV interview.
      For high quality sound in online Podcasts, I highly recommend you look into something like Zencastr. (or similar programs, riverdale eg).
      It records audio locally and uploads it in real time, it's a vastly superior alternative to Zoom, Skype, etc.
      It's not free though and requires all participants to have a very good internet connection. Might be worth looking into for you!
      Keep up the good work!

  • @militaryandemergencyservic3286
    @militaryandemergencyservic3286 Месяц назад

    23:41 - i would say Schubert already did it in the middle section of his d946/1. Oh and by the way, Ben, this not-so-brilliant nocturne is played best by both Pletnev live - ruclips.net/video/AYgOvIV-OaE/видео.html and me ruclips.net/video/j323NiPLB6U/видео.html

  • @Manfred-nj8vz
    @Manfred-nj8vz Месяц назад

    About Chopin's own thoughts considering the incompleteness of the musical notation and much more (the video contains english subtitles):
    ruclips.net/video/9N2Nwb_3w9M/видео.html

  • @garssympa500
    @garssympa500 Месяц назад

    What was the piece that your dad played (total novice here).

    • @benlawdy
      @benlawdy  Месяц назад +1

      Chopin's First Nocturne (in B-flat minor, Op. 9 No. 1)

    • @garssympa500
      @garssympa500 Месяц назад

      @@benlawdy Thank you very much for the speedy response. Will check out on RUclips.

  • @mcurtisallen
    @mcurtisallen Месяц назад

    Richter's version is full of wistfulness, _mono no aware_ . Impeccable.

  • @sunnyy...
    @sunnyy... Месяц назад +1

    t h a n k you

  • @davcaslop
    @davcaslop Месяц назад +1

    10:10 to 10:25 What an absolute insult to Chopin, who is known by his students and contemporarys to really write EXACTLY how he wanted everything to be played. Even being mad at embellishments added by Liszt.
    23:21 to 23:34 The left hand should NEVER be out of time in a rubato passage or under a group of notes, I don’t say it, Chopin says so, the left hand is the “choirmaster”. Once you acknowledge this, most recordings are just unlistenable.
    And I won’t even talk about how ANY pianist respects Chopin enough to play his pedaling indications. Yes, he had a different piano, but it doesn’t change the outcome that much if you are really careful, because today’s pianos although heavier are much easier to control.

    • @benlawdy
      @benlawdy  Месяц назад +3

      Thanks for your comment. A few things:
      (1) The "who cares?" remark in the time range you cited regards interpreting Chopin's ambiguous tempo indication.
      (2) Although it's not what we're talking about in this video, it's worth pointing out that Chopin embellished his own Nocturnes and encouraged his students to do so; see the authentic variants passed down through Mikuli in Op. 9 No. 2. He also continued to alter many of his pieces when he rewrote them as gifts to students and colleagues. So, as fastidious a craftsman he was in his notated compositions, he also knew them to be evolving organisms, and in certain genres (like the early Nocturnes) he clearly expected a level embellishment, like that of a bel canto aria.
      (3) Agreed there's a lot seasick rubato in Chopin - again, not the discussion in the video here. Garrick's recordings hardly embody this rubato. But also, the question of rubato in Chopin isn't so straightforward; there are many testimonies about his unwavering left hand, but there are also testimonies about how much time he would take in both hands in certain passages. See the book "Stolen Time" by Richard Hudson.
      (4) His pedal indications are also ambiguous.

    • @davcaslop
      @davcaslop Месяц назад +1

      @@benlawdy Thanks for answering my comment, I will further study what you said and I will reply accordingly

    • @AlbertoSegovia.
      @AlbertoSegovia. Месяц назад

      @@davcaslop if the tempi are not respected, then it’s more likely that Chopin himself or others will find more of that disliked rubato. So it’s a very relevant topic to analyze the nuances of what they wrote. It’s not the same to multiply a bar by 1.5 or more, than just a beat (which is VERY noticeable). So any discussions about this should begin with the tempo, especially if the metronome was used; IF we want to give a chance to the way the pieces were conceived in a manner of aesthetic function of art.

    • @AlbertoSegovia.
      @AlbertoSegovia. Месяц назад

      @@davcaslop But we know how the story goes,

    • @AlbertoSegovia.
      @AlbertoSegovia. Месяц назад

      And, of course, if the original tempos were part of a system where ornamentation was added to music, and the balance was searched between rubatoand a choir master way of playing, the metronome will give us a clue about how much rubato was acceptable, and how practical it was to add ornamentations. A clue of Chopin being very detailed in tempo also in his irrational rhythmic groupings, which, from a practical perspective, printing them on the sheet music that the author hopes to sell, have aesthetic weight, best perceived when they are respected when playing, to acknowledge the reason of them being printed. For example in his Op. 27 number 2 or in his preludes. That weight should not be ignored.

  • @Test-nj4fx
    @Test-nj4fx Месяц назад

    Is there a strange lag in the video, or is it being edited to create these strange jerks? Every so often while someone is talking the image jerks. Otherwise such a great discussion.

    • @benlawdy
      @benlawdy  Месяц назад +2

      @@Test-nj4fx those are cuts. I optimized the podcast audio first, removing pauses and stutters and superfluous content, and there’s no real way to hide that in the video. So it’s going to look choppy and jumpy sometimes.

    • @Test-nj4fx
      @Test-nj4fx Месяц назад

      Thanks Ben. Wonderful work!

  • @1234ainixiangni
    @1234ainixiangni 3 дня назад

    Why today's composer can't compose anything like Chopin's Nocturnes?

  • @marizacabral5141
    @marizacabral5141 22 дня назад

    No one should miss the Nocturnes played by Maria João Pires.

  • @AlbertoSegovia.
    @AlbertoSegovia. Месяц назад

    If no one cares that much how a piece should sound, why mention the legatissimo? How about ending this series altogether? Any standard goes. So much for admiring the artists. Be careful,