Sokolov - Schubert: Impromptu 1 Op. 90 (D899)

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июл 2017
  • Berlin, 2013. No copyright infringement intended. If you enjoyed this recording, consider purchasing the entire recital's recording (Schubert, Beethoven, some encores by Rameau, his signature Brahms Intermezzo..).

Комментарии • 131

  • @stephenmyers7298
    @stephenmyers7298 3 года назад +12

    One of the very few pianists whose mannerisms don't get on my nerves. He is at the service of music,not the other way around..

  • @CarlosLopez-lq2qo
    @CarlosLopez-lq2qo 4 года назад +55

    This interpretation of Schubert by Sokolov took my breath away! He’s truly a Remarkable masterful Pianist.

  • @vladotepesh
    @vladotepesh 5 лет назад +103

    Once I drove for ten hours alone in a car, some urgent trip, and all there was in the car was a CD of Sokolov performing the Schubert Impromptus, among other things - I did not turn it off even once nor switched to a radio station for the whole ride, no matter how tired I was.

  • @taymot2131
    @taymot2131 3 месяца назад +6

    He's the best living pianist. Period. 🙏

  • @tatianarybina320
    @tatianarybina320 5 лет назад +39

    It's too wonderful for words!

  • @syourke3
    @syourke3 5 лет назад +76

    Sokolov should be cloned a few thousand times. He’s a unique talent. Schubert that’s Breathtakingly beautiful! Profound!

    • @dodgeball693
      @dodgeball693 4 года назад +12

      If you clone him he wouldn’t be unique anymore, yeah?

    • @syourke3
      @syourke3 4 года назад +6

      PoweredbyPlants True. But so what? More people could enjoy his wonderful music making.

    • @gabriele6596
      @gabriele6596 3 года назад +1

      @@syourke3 for this we have recordings.

    • @syourke3
      @syourke3 3 года назад +3

      @@gabriele6596 Recordings don’t excite me the way great live performances do.

    • @saleenapiano
      @saleenapiano 3 года назад +2

      agreed! :)

  • @binaku50
    @binaku50 4 года назад +14

    Sokolov plays wonderful.He paints a whole landscape here.

  • @dr.johnbrunn1550
    @dr.johnbrunn1550 4 года назад +19

    My personal favorite of all Schubert's impromptus

  • @giachogovadze8495
    @giachogovadze8495 2 года назад +12

    Не у кого нет в мире такои чуствительний и вырозительный звук как у маестро соколова, он гений, он бог музыкалних мелизмов и вобше он супер ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @hernanmunozratto5899
    @hernanmunozratto5899 5 лет назад +28

    Brilliant Sokolov ❤️

  • @staffanolofsson8201
    @staffanolofsson8201 2 года назад +7

    Thank you Schubert for composing this music, and thank you Grigory Sokolov for playing is so well. I can see in the public at 4:36 a women sitting with her hands like in a prayer. That is the way I also want to approach this music.

  • @pdavide1
    @pdavide1 5 лет назад +20

    BRAVO! That brings back memories. I learned this piece as a teenager way back in the 1970's. I didn't find it as technically demanding as, say, Beethoven's Waldstein Sonata but I love the melodic twists and turns. It remains one of my favorite concert pieces.

    • @thingiezz
      @thingiezz 4 года назад +1

      Comparing something to the great Waldstein on a technical level is quite a high standard

    • @luiginocm
      @luiginocm 2 года назад

      Exactly the same with me in the 1970s. What a nostagia.

  • @jinjiena8646
    @jinjiena8646 4 года назад +16

    THIS PIECE IS FREAKING AMAZINGGGGG

  • @helenavondrakenstein4969
    @helenavondrakenstein4969 3 года назад +12

    best living pianist on the planet

  • @jorgekratsman3576
    @jorgekratsman3576 4 года назад +4

    In the great film "AMOUR" of Hanecke is this Impromptu the central Piece, and Sokolov captures more than any other the essence of the meaning. Great!!

  • @user-vz2df1mi6p
    @user-vz2df1mi6p 4 года назад +3

    The full touch and thick or delicate tone of voice that remains unchanged even as one grows older do not stop.

  • @tobiaspeter6555
    @tobiaspeter6555 Год назад +5

    I cannot believe youtube interrupts this beautiful performance for commercials after ONE MINUTE of music

    • @wolfgangklofat594
      @wolfgangklofat594 Год назад +1

      You should rent RUclips " P R E M I U M " ! It is without interruptions - but you must pay for it (e.g. 12 Euro the month).

    • @miguelangelacebo
      @miguelangelacebo 5 месяцев назад

      @@wolfgangklofat594 In your f* world in which money is over everything else, yes.

  • @user-di2zi6ze9d
    @user-di2zi6ze9d 4 года назад +15

    Игра, радующая душу и слух! Браво !

  • @Johannes_Brahms65
    @Johannes_Brahms65 4 года назад +48

    He plays it so differently. He doesn't stick to all the markations that Schubert put in the notes. He also switches tempo all the time. He captures Schuberts soul, with all its moodswings, much better than other pianists i heard with this overly romantic piece though!

    • @AlexPashkov
      @AlexPashkov 4 года назад +8

      I absolutely agree with the first part of your message, where you talk about the text. And I can't agree with your about Sokolov's understanding of Schubert's music. In my opinion, here we are dealing with a clear example of disrespect for the composer's intentions, a deep misunderstanding of the score. And as a result of all the above-an incredibly pretentious performance, which is completely unacceptable for Schubert's music as a whole.

    • @tadalamond7957
      @tadalamond7957 3 года назад +9

      @@AlexPashkov chill its schubert Impromptus not your. Unless you play it its hard to talk about how it should be. Music is speaking and interpretion as well.
      This is what composers want

    • @AlexPashkov
      @AlexPashkov 3 года назад +5

      @@tadalamond7957 I’ll try to upload my performance of op 90., so you’ll understand what I meant...and basically I was talking about respect to the text itself, since I didn’t have chance to ask Schubert himself,- all what we have it’s just text he wrote...and music is speaking, really it does, only through the composer...check up Richter´s and Michelangeli ´s sayings about that subject.

    • @AlexPashkov
      @AlexPashkov 3 года назад +3

      @Rei Chin First of all, the tempo marking.Allegro molto moderato sounds like adagio here. The beginning of the piece has a certain genre source - it is one of Schubert's many marches, possibly with military Napoleonic overtones.If we had orchestrated this piece, no oboist would have been able to play the first phrase in one breath at such a slow pace.( Unless Celibidache is invited to conduct ). Speaking of orchestration, it is worth to mention that the pianist only leads the upper voice well in chords, but completely neglecting to pay attention to the middle voices and bass, which is sometimes simply not heard. The phrasing is full of dubious deviations from the tempo, tending more to the music of Rachmaninoff or Scriabin. In General, there are a lot of details. Everything has a touch of speculation and artificiality, as is often the case in Sokolov's playing...And I don't want to say I don't like him, I just think he looks pale here. I love his recording of the second Saint-Saens concert. But his readings of Schubert's music seem to me ponderous, devoid of flight, and, alas, very far-fetched.

    • @AlexPashkov
      @AlexPashkov 3 года назад +8

      @Rei Chin I know what You're talking about.I am also very pleased that our discussion does not go beyond the bounds of decency, because here on RUclips such dialogues often end in mutual insults. Same like You, I have not yet found a vivid performance of this opus. Many years ago, I heard it performed by Vladimir Nielsen, my teacher, and that was the best one. But as far as I know, there is no recording of this concert. It seems to me that you mistakenly consider tempo deviations to be a form of romantic interpretation of this piece. Schubert is certainly a romantic composer. But his romanticism is contained in the circle of his images, not in tempo designations. I find Brendel's rendition of this work insufficiently romantic. In addition, speaking of tempos, it seems to me that Sokolov chose the tempos very well in the second and third impromptu, because the second one is usually performed too fast and the third one is too slow. In General, in my position it is very difficult to “just enjoy someone's performance”, since I am a concert pianist myself. Whether I like something or not, I have to analyze it, because I'm learning all the time.

  • @DinaDina-jw7tc
    @DinaDina-jw7tc 4 года назад +7

    Its so beautiful, thank you maestro.

  • @galinaprozorova7903
    @galinaprozorova7903 2 года назад +6

    Игра похожа на молитву. Браво маэстро!!!

  • @kayres6388
    @kayres6388 4 года назад +8

    I am not sure I have ever heard something so beautiful as I did between around 5:30 and around 6:45, with this undescribable moment at 6:13. the switch in color. I cant put it in words.

  • @saleenapiano
    @saleenapiano 3 года назад +29

    by far the most beautiful interpretation of this piece i have ever heard; i used to feel that the piece, while essentially lyrical and quintessential Schubert, is a bit long and repetitive and does not maintain my interest throughout; however in this performance, with its varying moods, tempi, dynamics etc, i find it totally engaging

    • @galanis38
      @galanis38 Год назад +4

      It is indeed long and difficult to sustain. But in a great performance like this one it is a masterpiece.

    • @saleenapiano
      @saleenapiano Год назад

      @@galanis38 agreed!

  • @galinaprozorova7903
    @galinaprozorova7903 4 года назад +13

    Маэстро, вы гений!!! Браво!!!

  • @shin-i-chikozima
    @shin-i-chikozima 3 года назад +3

    His specutacular performance challenges the admiration of all ages

  • @Im____ltm
    @Im____ltm 2 года назад +5

    Pure genius.

  • @pajaf0341
    @pajaf0341 3 года назад +4

    As stunning, as he plays. I just can not get over Guldas last recording.

    • @adamblock5141
      @adamblock5141 Год назад

      Can you guide me to the performance that you’re speaking of?

  • @Jessica-si5wo
    @Jessica-si5wo 3 года назад +4

    So beautifull

  • @amedhorsalat3395
    @amedhorsalat3395 2 года назад +2

    Cuanta inspiracion en esa composicion y en el performance !

  • @beechrad1965
    @beechrad1965 3 года назад +3

    Mature, insightful and complete interpretation of this work. His touch is equaled only by Kissin. Bravo.

    • @marksmith3947
      @marksmith3947 Год назад +1

      I can't agree or disagree with your comparison. I find kissin and Sokolov absolutely dissimilar pianists

  • @MLavielle
    @MLavielle 2 года назад +2

    ¡Espléndida interpretación!

  • @juandomenech9116
    @juandomenech9116 Год назад +1

    Tenía 17 años viviendo en Londres, cuando césar el madrileño vio el piano y durante 10 minutos empezó a tocar la pieza de Schubert! Nadie lo interrumpió y todos en silencio escuchando. Al final le pregunté que como se llamaba el autor y dijo Shubert, compre el disco de la coleccion Naxos y desde ese día de vez en cuando la sigo escuchando

  • @styleexnietz1900
    @styleexnietz1900 3 года назад

    Beauty in itself. (Nature of Schubert' works.)

  • @frankiephenomanal
    @frankiephenomanal 3 года назад +1

    Bravo professor 🙏🏽

  • @francescaziveri934
    @francescaziveri934 Год назад +1

    Magnifico!!!!

  • @nvartandreassian8037
    @nvartandreassian8037 4 года назад +5

    voici une bonne leçon pour ceux qui croient que la technique est tout . Sokolov nous démontre comment mettre la technique au service de l'execution des volontés du compositeur....et aussi qu'il faut avoir une CULTURE immence ....

  • @musiclover4311
    @musiclover4311 Год назад +3

    The most underrated pianist. My favorite, above Andras Schiff, Martha Argerich or Krysian Zimerman. For my ears, absolutely the greatest.

    • @marksmith3947
      @marksmith3947 Год назад

      On RUclips he is the most overrated pianist, quite undeserving in the unquestioning adulation he receives. For my money the most underrated living pianist is Bronfman. I don't hate Sokolov btw. I just find him too eccentric to be taken seriously as a top pianist. In particular I tend to loathe his baroque playing, which I find mannered and indulgent

    • @estyz12
      @estyz12 Год назад

      @@marksmith3947 Perhaps he is overrated, but I do think it is important to consider we have lost a lot of literature and practice regarding classical and romantic performance. In the early 20th century, pianists played Bach (baroque music) like Liszt; this is likely due to the overwhelming amount of support the audience had for romantic performance practice (which still manages to be practically lost), with little observation of how the piece should be played. Perhaps Sokolov plays from those generations of pianists (though I do observe he is quite some younger). I suppose there is a lack of classicism in Sokolov's music that you may find unpalatable, yet I think if you listen with an open mind and open ears this could be a wonderful interpretation. Music can cater to an audience, and I think he succeeds in catering to the audience he intended for their wonderful receptions. His interpretations of Russian music may be more enticing to you for his eccentric qualities. He has quite a good recording of Prokofiev's eight sonata and Rachmaninoff's third concerto. I too enjoy Bronfman's music, though I do not think he is the giant that Sokolov is.

    • @marksmith3947
      @marksmith3947 Год назад

      @@estyz12 he has bad taste in many genres. He played the worst performance of Schubert op 90 I've ever heard.

  • @nolinkypresquiledequiberon3442
    @nolinkypresquiledequiberon3442 Месяц назад

    UNE TOTALE MERVEILLE: l"âme de cette fabuleuse musique, une des plus belles

  • @RiazRouhani
    @RiazRouhani 3 года назад +1

    🌹🌹🌹❤️❤️❤️ magical

  • @gustavo123213
    @gustavo123213 Год назад +4

    7:20 ✨✨✨✨

  • @hermutlohr8681
    @hermutlohr8681 3 года назад +4

    Sokolov sings Schubert!

  • @claudioparrella183
    @claudioparrella183 Год назад +1

    la migliore su youtube

  • @rsjmd
    @rsjmd 5 лет назад +7

    Just how can there be no comments about this performance1

  • @theoboueid6450
    @theoboueid6450 9 месяцев назад

    Sokolov is a master of his musical craft

  • @nobodyknowsme3481
    @nobodyknowsme3481 4 года назад +9

    best interpretation i prefer this to zimerman i had been loved

    • @marcelodimase5805
      @marcelodimase5805 4 года назад +2

      Amazing interpretation. The music of Schubert expressed in a perfect manner.

  • @hika7230
    @hika7230 Год назад +5

    魂が肉体から解放されて天国に行けそうな気がする。

  • @NoferTrunions
    @NoferTrunions Год назад

    Sokolov and Pires see this differently and what they do with it is mesmerizing.

  • @analuizamottapetrucci66
    @analuizamottapetrucci66 7 месяцев назад

    Espetáculo!

  • @pawenowacki8158
    @pawenowacki8158 Год назад

    Nadzwyczajny, wyjątkowy

  • @nobodyknowsme3481
    @nobodyknowsme3481 3 года назад +1

    탁월한 해석 음악은 스튜디오가 아니라 현장의 소리만 의미가 있다는 멋진 연주자

  • @nobodyknowsme3481
    @nobodyknowsme3481 3 года назад

    정말로 최고의 연주

  • @sheana2005
    @sheana2005 2 года назад +1

    What incredible sensitivity!

    • @deltasquared7777
      @deltasquared7777 Год назад

      What sensitivity?? Sokolov is a brilliant pianist, but here he is really hacking and butchering this. Poor Schubert must be turning over in his grave. .

    • @sheana2005
      @sheana2005 Год назад

      @@deltasquared7777 Be specific in your criticism. Don’t make broad statements without evidence, as in “in measures x through y he did ___”.

    • @deltasquared7777
      @deltasquared7777 Год назад

      @@sheana2005 My criticism is that this overall performance is a disaster in interpretation of Schubert. There is no point in nitpicking measure by measure which appears to be how Sokolov approached Op 90 while losing an overall perspective of the piece--refer to my other comment on this. .

  • @sparetimenovels
    @sparetimenovels 2 года назад

    Cool...

  • @cajcip
    @cajcip 4 года назад +1

    6:29 that coughing beurk!

  • @petergoldstein1075
    @petergoldstein1075 25 дней назад

    Whoa I just the Erlking a little before 5:00

  • @aallpprr8998
    @aallpprr8998 3 года назад +5

    The ads killed the final

    • @hernana6689
      @hernana6689 3 года назад

      If you use Chrome, change to Brave: the problem disappears.

    • @aallpprr8998
      @aallpprr8998 3 года назад +1

      @@hernana6689 im on iphone..

  • @sophiebokova3571
    @sophiebokova3571 3 года назад +7

    Какая дикость - за несколько тактов до окончания музыкального произведения врезается реклама!!! Эти "новые люли" заточены под 0 и 1 и понятия не имеют о СОДЕРЖАНИИ и Целостности восприятия любого творения человеческой мысли!

  • @desperateastro
    @desperateastro 7 месяцев назад +1

    For once, a real interpretation, complete and compelling! If you are sick of plastic mass-produced 'careful and proper' interpretations,Sokolov gives you a powerful individual perception of a piece.
    😮

  • @ruslanchistyakov2919
    @ruslanchistyakov2919 Год назад +1

    Божественно !

  • @user-sayok
    @user-sayok 2 года назад

    나는 이 해석이 미치게 좋다 내가 죽기전에 듣고자 할때 소콜로프의 이 연주가 되지 않을까 한다

  • @manuelgonzalo9474
    @manuelgonzalo9474 3 года назад +1

    Was this impromptu inspired by Rossini's opera La gazza ladra?

  • @boram324
    @boram324 7 месяцев назад

    너무 아름다운데 외로운 느낌 😢

  • @user-sayok
    @user-sayok 2 года назад

    탁월한 해석 터치가 살아있다

  • @michaelwong7902
    @michaelwong7902 2 года назад +2

    god 3:12

  • @user-qt7li6hl2t
    @user-qt7li6hl2t 3 года назад +1

    Also he is the best in Bach.

    • @stonefireice6058
      @stonefireice6058 3 года назад +1

      I agree! He superseded Gould: instead of self absorbed genius we hear a master, bowing to the composer.

    • @marksmith3947
      @marksmith3947 Год назад

      ​@@stonefireice6058I find that a very strange comment. You can like Sokolov or not but it's impossible to deny that he is so personal in his performance choices that he strains the eccentricity meter

  • @taymot2131
    @taymot2131 3 месяца назад

    Is this in Berlin?

  • @lucassousatrindade1184
    @lucassousatrindade1184 3 года назад +1

    Ele deve estar mastigando uma bala de pimenta.

  • @ph7205
    @ph7205 2 года назад

    아름다운 소리 섬세한 표현 잘하기는 하지만 소녀 감성의 순정 슈베르트 그 자체는 아님 하지만 에센바흐가 치는 슈베르트는 슈베르트 그 자체라는 느낌이 들게 한다

  • @esfirross6800
    @esfirross6800 3 года назад +2

    I was influence by Karl U.Schnabel interpretation that taught me. This's disrespected rendition. Pitiful for GS!

  • @user-ux5ux2sw7v
    @user-ux5ux2sw7v 2 месяца назад

    In. My. Opinion. Is. Even. Better. Than. Shura. Cherkassky

  • @duckisfaction
    @duckisfaction 2 года назад +2

    Schubert wrote different things. Shame for sokolov really.

  • @wolfgangklofat594
    @wolfgangklofat594 Год назад +2

    After a wonderful beginning this pianist looses the line - like often in his playing. Compare him e.g. with Brendel and Richter!

    • @marksmith3947
      @marksmith3947 Год назад +1

      Agree. This is one of the worst Sokolov performances I've heard. He's also terrible --- very weird --- in the E flat major impromptu from the same set

    • @peterthomas3405
      @peterthomas3405 5 месяцев назад

      Alfred Brendel would no doubt think this 'romanticising in the Russian manner', to use his phrase, but surely both approaches can be considered valid in today's world of huge concert halls and the pianos built to fill them. While Sokolov may not rigidly adhere to every mark of the score, for me he magically links this late work, written in the midst of 'Winterreise', with Schubert's teenage 'hit', 'Erlkonig'; gripping and thoroughly persuasive.

  • @rayzan9561
    @rayzan9561 4 года назад +1

    If he concerned himself less with making a visual impression, he'd be even better. What's all that dancing with his hands? Play the music!!

    • @salvationbygracealone5111
      @salvationbygracealone5111 4 года назад +1

      That's actually right. I understand that he release and prepares, but I also think could be less hands floating in the air. Even the best pianists can still be rightly criticised, they are still mere humans who need to progress and changes like all of us. I was listening to him twice live, was of course amazing, but 2nd time it distracted me his hands gymnastics. And it makes everything looks to elite wise and maybe also intimidating for some. It should always look natural, not intimidating, for people who looks for inspiration. I thought then, he is after a recital surely half dead, for the effort he puts into the keys. Of course it's not like this, but it looks like. Anyway... still great guy.

    • @peterelliott5720
      @peterelliott5720 4 года назад +9

      I doubt you know better than Sokolov - one of the greatest musicians of all time - how he should best go about maximising the quality of his performance. Schopenhauer wrote 'Talent hits a target no one else can hit; genius hits a target no one else can see.' The targets that Sokolov hits in his music making really are beyond my comprehension - the perfect delineation of many lines, each with there own dynamics and tonal qualities being just one example. It would follow that the physical means he uses to go about hitting these targets might also allude my/our current understanding - that is, without actually asking him. I have several theories of why he moves his hands so expressively but none are conclusive. One thing i think is certain though: if it wasnt purely in the service of the music, he wouldn't be doing it.

    • @user-bc9mn7gq2c
      @user-bc9mn7gq2c 4 года назад +3

      Ray & Salvation -- not sure you're right. His hand motions may help him to achieve this wonderfully limpid & coloristic playing that never sounds stiff & jerky--even when playing quick chord changes with dotted rhythms, demi-staccato, w/ a minimum of pedal. My impression from listening to many live performances is: he is much more concerned with projecting his concept tonally & musically, & communicating to the audience--as opposed to mere visual tricks.

    • @rayzan9561
      @rayzan9561 4 года назад

      If you have conditioned yourself over the years that a certain tone could only be realized with a certain physical gesture, then yes, of course, you could not achieve that fluidity in playing without that exaggerated movement of your hands. An association has been established. The point is, in principle, that association is not necessary. Rubinstein and Horowitz were never "stiff and jerky, yet were very physically economical (as much as their emotions could possibly allow). As to the matter of whether the physical life of the pianist is a mode of communication to the audience (just as the music itself is), that's a very sad reality that we witness more and more. I don't want anyone to pantomime to me what Schubert is all about. I only want the music to do that. It is true though that a lot of the audience would not agree with that. So give them what they want, I guess. Why only pay for sound when you could get sound and vision?!

    • @ilovecats581
      @ilovecats581 3 года назад

      Youre talking ROT!!!