One of the many of his great traits was that he was one with the orchestra... he did not try to dominate. The music, the flow was important. This, conversely, made his greatness show out all the more. He never felt the need to rush, to show off speed in playing over technical flawlessness. So many think that playing music really fast is what makes you sound great; but greatness flows and shows) when the performer is one with the music.
In 1971, I attended an outdoor concert at Ravinia Park in Chicago, I took along a nice young lady on our first date. I forget who was to be the scheduled performer, but while I was arranging our blanket and wine glasses, an announcer apologized that the scheduled performer was not able to appear, but they were happy to announce that as a consolation, Van Cliburn would perform the Piano Concerto No. 1 by Tchaikovsky!!! Some consolation! I never saw the young jady again, but my love of Mr. Cliburn's performance endures to this day!! Bravissimo!!
One of those rare, remarkably great pianists who keeps his eyes closed during performance, preferring to “sit back and listen” to the sounds he and the orchestra are producing. Instead of focusing on his own hands. Huge talent; huge knowledge; huge sensibility. Thank you very, very much for this upload. A great privilege seeing and hearing Mr Van Cliburn.
I heard him play this concerto at Tanglewood in 1965: the audience was so ecstatic that he returned to play the 3rd movement again as an encore. His Emperor is still the greatest of them all.
Not True! The Best Beethoven piano concerto no 5 players are Really=1:Wilhelm Kempff the most beautiful piano Sound ever! 2:Vladimir Ashkenazy the most volcano colorful piano sound ever for Beethoven no 5! 3:Solomon Cutner the Best structure for music! 4:Grigory Sokolov his rhythmic vitalness is unbeatable! 5:Maurizio Pollini the big Genius! 6:Emil Gilels Golden tone! Gilels the King Pianist! 7:Mikhail Pletnev crystal sharp the most powerful!!
Amazing footage of Khrushchev giving applause to a true hero that tore down the cold war barriers. For all we know, Cliburn's effect on the premier could very well have been the straw that softened his heart just enough to enable him to back down during the Cuban missile crisis. He might have said, "No..... If America is where Van Cliburn is from, then I love America... Turn those missiles around!" Way to go Van!! (I'm joking, of course. It was the secret deal to remove missiles in Turkey that closed the deal.)
Exactly. His hands were huge. His body designed to give momentum and propulsion at the keyboard. Born for this very artistic gift. We have witnessed a true artistic giant come and go. How fortunate we were! Thank you, Lord God, for this blessing of music!
This is probably my final you tube comment but I would just like to thank all people who uploaded videos of Van Cliburn, whose greatness I would otherwise have missed. He has got me through the pandemic and he has been inspirational. Rachmaninov 3 and Beethoven 5 sublime amongst others. I wish everyone good health and many blessings. I am English.
Come on Charmaine Morley!! Van Cliburn not The Best Beethoven piano concerto no 5 player! The Greatest Best Beethoven Piano Concerto no 5 players Are really=1; Vladimir Ashkenazy ( The Most Colorful Volcanic Piano Sound Ever for Beethoven Piano Concerto no 5!!) 2: Wilhelm Kempff ( The Most Beautiful Piano Sound Ever for Beethoven Piano Concerto no 5!) 3: Grigory Sokolov ( The Best Rhythmic Vital Beat! Unbeatable vitalness!!) 4: Solomon Cutner=( The Perfect Structure of Music! Solomon Cutner The Highest IQ points!) 5: Mikhail Pletnev ( The Most Powerful Ever! Pletnev The Best Crystal Bright Sharp Clear Perfect Beethoven piano concerto no 5!!) 6: Maurizio Pollini ( The Genius playing Beethoven piano concerto no 5!!) 6: Van Cliburn=Why Van Cliburn?? Because Van Cliburn better than The Stiff Claudio Arrau! Van Cliburn better than The Mechanical Boring dull stiff machine Robot King Krystian Zimerman!) Van Cliburn his Best Concertos Are Really Prokoviev Piano Concerto no 3!!! ( A class of his own!!) Brahms piano concerto no 2! The Best Greatest Brahms piano concerto no 2 players Are really=1: Grigory Sokolov with The Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra video RUclips from 1987! Sokolov The Best Piano sound! Sokolov his Rhythmic vitalness is unbeatable!! Sokolov The Most Titanic Ever!) Sviatoslav Richter with The Paris Orchestra conductor Lorin Maazel recording from 1969! Edwin Fischer The Recording from 1942!! Van Cliburn in Moscow 1962!? Van Cliburn better than The Stiff Claudio Arrau! Van Cliburn better than The Mechanical Boring dull stiff machine Robot King Krystian Zimerman!!!
@@tiggywinkle20 I totally agree with you. It’s sad to see someone who seems to enjoy putting down other’s opinions. The entire world would have been better off without reading RH’s comment. He could have said it as his opinion which it is but he seem to feel the need to make others think that his opinion was the absolutely correct one and no other opinion mattered. Maybe he will one day learn how to be kind and then his opinion might be of some value.
Not true! You Are telling lies! The Best pianists of All Time Are really Artur Rubinstein ( thr God) Grigory Sokolov ( The Titan) Emil Gilels ( The King) Wilhelm Kempff ( The most beautiful piano sound Ever) Radu Lupu ( The most colorful sound Ever) Mikhail Pletnev ( The most Powerful Ever) Sviatoslav Richter!!
@@RaineriHakkarainen You have your own opinions and that's fine, but allow the same courtesy of others! Van Cliburn is truly one of the masters and that is indisputable, whether you like his interpretations and style is your own opinion.
I grew up with this rendition. Whenever my father put on this vinyl album, the house went hush, so there would be peace and quiet as well as the extraordinary sounds eminating from this piano, exhorting me to rise above my misery, beyond anything I could have imagined and goodness knows I invented things to escape my childhood reality. Yet every time my father put this recording on, usually on a Sunday morning, I knew that everything was alright. The world had become a sane place again.
Cliburn must have spoiled all other recordings of this concerto then, hehe. He sure did spoil Tchaikovsky's No.1 for me. Growing up, that was the only recording we had....and now in the golden age of YT and access to pretty much every recording out there, nothing comes close to Van's performance of T's No.1 with Kondrashin.
I was fortunate to see him four times in person during his career, and he was flawless every time I heard him play. I have all of his recordings and know them by heart.
It is such a thrilling piece of music. Beethoven must be in musical heavenly bliss when he hears it played so magically by van Cliburn. Bravo, Thank you. And the conductor had IT.
Ahh, Natalie. Would you comment on whether this Beethoven has a piano to use. If so, who would tune and maintain it? Are any recordings available that we poor living things on crappy earth might hear. Some form of celestial music, perhaps. Do you suppose Mr. B and Tchaikovsky are getting along and perhaps collaborating to find the Lost Chord?? Just curious.
As he pulls this off there's never a sense he's on a high wire. Then he walks off with it. The greatest performance of the Fifth then till now. Period.
I'm a nobody when it comes to classical music....but I know what I like and what moves my soul....this artist expresses in me feelings I thought were long dead....I love you Mr. Cliburn and wish you were not deceased so I could had told you this in person.
Прекрасный концерт.Все так празднично,красиво.Дирижер как король, жесты выразительны и величественны.Пианист завораживает,звук изумительный,льющийся.Оркестр -гении.Бетховен был бы доволен.Спасибо.
Not true! Van Cliburn not The greatest! The greatest pianists of All Time Are really Artur Rubinstein ( The God) Grigory Sokolov ( The Titan The Giant of The piano) Emil Gilels ( The King) Wilhelm Kempff ( The most beautiful piano sound Ever) Radu Lupu ( The most colorful sound Ever) Mikhail Pletnev ( The most Powerful Ever) Sviatoslav Richter!!!
@@RaineriHakkarainen Stop you troll! No one stated that greats like Richter and Sokolov are any less than they are.. people are allowed opinions, and your own is of no greater significance than any other.
Never, ever thought I would get the chance, then ended up seeing him twice.: first in '99, then again seven years later on his last major tour. I never thought I would, but the stars aligned. In 99 some family friends had dress circle seats and couldn't attend (I know, right? Unless someone is being born or dying that's something you make the time to attend). Anyway, the whole experience spoiled me rotten, and seven years later I tipped the wait list and got season tickets in dress circle, including his Tchaikovsky #1 performance. Since then I've seen many, performers on the ivories, and only Andre Watts comes close (and there is still a significant gap). IMHO he's simply the best there ever was. Just a gem of a man as well.
@@brucesavell8843 I was there. 🤗 I traveled all over the United States to hear Van play but never heard him play the Emperor in live concert. The adagio is one of the most beautiful pieces of music ever written and no one played it as exquisitely, as ethereally as Van. He was a beautiful pianist and a beautiful person. I once told him that I could hear other concert pianists play a piece and their playing would not move me emotionally, but when I heard him play it, I was transported. That brought tears to his eyes. He described when he closed his eyes and looked upward while playing as his "going into the ether." His angelic playing brought tears to my eyes. It was like he could look into your soul and play what was there. I had several conversations with him over the years and he was the most humble, infinitely kind artist. To know Van was to love him.
@@Craig-ib7gk I heard him play the MacDowell for the second time in Huntsville Alabama on 5/25/99. At the reception later, at the Von Braun Center, Van wrote a beautiful note on my program. I had it specially framed to preserve it forever. It looks just the same today as it did 20 years ago. At the reception, Van greeted me with a warm hug and kiss and admired my black and white gown. The skirt of my gown had broad black and white vertical stripes that resembled piano keys. I had been attending Van's concerts for 40+ years. I was a ballerina for 20 years, studying with the Royal and also private instruction with a fantastic Russian ballerina, who was actually a blue blood related to the Tsar. Her mother had been a prima and danced with Nijinsky. Her parents were close friends of the Rachmaninoffs. Van and I were both Russophiles sharing a deep love for Russian Romanticism. We had several lovely conversations over the years. I remember every word as if it were yesterday. Van made you feel like you were the only one in the room and he always greeted me with a big bear hug and kiss. He loved people! I would throw roses on stage from front row (as they did in Moscow) and he was very touched by that gesture. He was the consummate gentleman, very old world elegant. At the reception in Huntsville, Van placed his right hand very gently on my waist and led me over to a wall displaying several large black and white photos (circa '60's & '70's) of him and the Huntsville conductor, Taavo Virkhaus. They were the same age, 65 and both so tall and elegant in their tux. Van was in great spirits and said, "Denise, look at Taavo and me when we were YOUNG and carefree!" He then called Taavo over so my friend could take photos of us. As I stood between Van and Taavo, I joked "I feel like the middle of a Maestro sandwich - and I NEVER want this moment to end!" Van had an incredible sense of humor, very playful, and he roared with laughter when I said that. He was still devastatingly handsome and oh, so ELEGANT. he always said that he "belonged to the 19th century!" His dashing looks, the refined Irish bone structure, his 6' 4" height, his eloquence and charisma took your breath away! He was very spiritual and I told him that whenever I met him, there was a golden aura about him, an energy that was palpable. I told him it was "the aura of Genius!" He would blush, wave his fingers like "Oh NO!", but he understood what I meant. He was VERY much into the metaphysical. He shared with me in Nashville in '97 that he felt his mother's spirit "all over" his home in Fort Worth. "She's there! She's there!" he told me. He was a gem of a man, incredibly sensitive, thoughtful and kind - and he was very funny. When he spotted me standing at the foot of the stage at Tanglewood in 2001 peerinf at him over a huge bouquet of his favorite red roses (I had Irish Bells added in memory of his mother), after he had just played the Grieg with Andre Previn conducting, his eyes widened and lit up...and he started waggling those incredibly long fingers "Hello!" at me from the middle of the stage! I mouthed "Howdy, Tex!", gave him a wink...and waved right back at him. It was a bit cheeky but I knew he'd LOVE it! Van gave me this playful look like "Oh...YOU!!" , but the look on Andre Previn's face was priceless because he didn't know who the hell I was! Van had just dropped his hand from Andre's and rushed to the foot of the stage to plant several sloppy kisses all over my face, and a big one on my lips with a "MYUAH!" (He got me!) He then said, "You SURPRISED me!!" I said, "Well, I just HAD to hear you play hear the Grieg again! I LOVE you!" I had flown from Atlanta to Albany, NY, rented a car and drove to the Berkshires to hear Van play one of my favorites, the Greg. (The Grieg was his mother's favorite concerto.) Later, Tommy Smith, his partner waved me over to the stage door and let me in. Sidenote: Van always remembered how much I loved "Widmung" and would play it as his last encore whenever he spotted me front row. In Nashville in '97 after he played it, he stood in front of me on stage, raised his hand towards me and said "For you..." He actually apologized to me backstage at Tanglewood and said, "I'm so sorry I couldn't play "Widmung" for you. They wouldn't allow me to play ANY encores tonight!" Tommy said it had something to do with regulations regarding the amount of time the orchestra was on stage, something like that. It just shows you what an incredibly thoughtful pianist Van was! I'm just a fan, I'm not a celebrity, I'm not a concert pianist, but Van wanted so much to please his audiences and play the pieces that were meaningful to them. I will never, ever forget him. I'll say it again, to know Van was to LOVE him.
Can you tell us where they are all seated, how about the instruments. Where do they keep them when not performing? Tell us, are you really that gullible or just stupid.?
Wonderful performance and those singing notes in the slow movement. Van had magnificent stage presence as well as musicianship. I would describe him and this work as noble! It made my afternoon! Thank you.
Thank you so very much for sharing this wonderful recording with us. Van Cliburn was truly Brilliant and gifted. Thank you again for this wonderful music.
2020: As a pianist it is such a pleasure to hear Beethoven's music away from the piano, BUT in-your-Head and HEART; hard to clear with an Oscilloscope too!! An very Outstanding performance by Cliburn! Thank you RUclips!!
Could you point Beethoven out for the rest we who are to myopic to see this wonderful individual? It is amazing that Beethoven was not mobbed by groupies.
A real treat to see Van Cliburn when he was so young and had just taken the international scene by storm. He was a true phenomenon! (I knew he was quite tall, but WOW, he was so tall and lanky he could hardly get his knees under the keyboard!)
He was tall, 6'4", but looked even taller as he lost a lot of weight in Moscow due to chronic colitis (brought on by nerves, 11-15 hrs a day practice and not eating regular meals). Colitis plagued him most of his life. You can imagine the extreme pressure placed on this 23 yr old at that time - most of which he placed on himself! He said he wanted to be "more than perfect!" He WAS. I cry every time I listen to the adagio at 22:58.
A great combination of Of the greatest musical genius of all time, Beethoven plus the incredible talent of Van Cliburn, along with the Moscow Philharmonic made for a memorable listening experience! Have loved Beethoven since a young boy and fell in love Van Cliburn from the first time I heard his music. Saw Van live in Atlanta and was mesmerized by his musical ability on the piano! Thanks for sharing this.
Великолепное , царственное арпеджио, хрустальное piano в вернем регистре... Достойное обрамление бриллианта Клиберна оркестром под управлением гениального Кирилла Кондрашина.
Spend just a little time in comparing Van with any to take his place in coming years. The test is to find any pianist who will come close. You hear here a performance not to be matched before or since. There is perfection touched by genius blessed by the composer. Then there is an orchestra and conductor that brought an intimacy rare.
An absolutely enthralling, intense and at times almost unbearably moving performance of Beethoven's Masterpiece played by Van Cliburn. Many thanks fairlytaleofnewyork for this truly memorable upload.
Thank you so much for putting this up. I have not heard his recording of this for almost 30 years and I am literally laughing and tearing up. It is the best. The best.
While I believe Van loved this piece, he probably felt it too easy technically. Even so, the musicianship here is absolutely superb. Also, the cut away to Krushchev makes me believe this is from 1958, as the neighbor is the same person as seen in other 1958 recordings. When I met Van, he told me the Rach third was his favorite piece.
One reason - No longer having classes in music appreciation in schools. Lack of support for school orchestras, instruction for gifted students, potential students who can not afford instruments, even in the cheapest plastic versions. Such a shame that gaming, bullying, and the negative reactions to music students by their peers prevent more kids form entering into music.
These recordings are just wonderful and I thoroughly enjoy watching them. One thing....I always thought that Emeperor was spelled Emperor? No big deal, but twice?
Gracias, Mamá y Papá, porque cuando yo tenía siete años Uds escuchaban a "Vania" Cliburn tocando el Concierto N°1... Admirados de que este jovencito "yanki" hubiera conquistado a los rusos. Maravilla de maravillas!! La Orquesta y el pianista parece que hubieran tocado juntos toda la vida!! Qué emoción recordar esta belleza desde mi infancia... desde este Concierto aprender a amar a Tchaikovsky ... para siempre! ♡♡
Благодарю Бога, Бетховена. Вана Клиберна. Кирилла Кондрашина. Оркестр, Ютуб, Блогера за то. что я могу слышать и видеть это счастье!!! Пусть радость и счастье вернётся у вам в 100 раз больше!!!!!!❤❤❤❤❤❤
Thanks so much for this upload. I think this was filmed in 1962, as all his performances from 1958 (around the time of the Tchaikovsky Competition) have the Steinway name on the side of the piano whereas later films don't.
It was the competition from Russia, he won the hearts of the Russians as well as the coveted award that he so deserved. He was like a US ambassador. I come back to this a lot because it's breathtakingly beautiful. Only Beethoven and only van cliburn could have performed this miracle. Look at those incredible fingers.
@@anitahuie1145 Did you read Oliver Nunn's thoughts about when this was filmed? For sure not, so three answers of you too much. We all know what you have wrote.
Coterranio de Lwding VAN Bethoven. .VAN. solo.los los Holandeses. Pasados los años que ahora es gringo. Que fácil Comercelo. de un Bocado llegó por tocar conciertos. ..
This is not my final word, but I am hearing Stephen Hough on radio right now playing this at a much faster tempo to my ears. I find he does that a lot. Am not a pianist, and am not criticising Hough as one, but so used to Van Cliburn playing this at his tempo so beautifully, find others difficult! Got criticised on another website re Hough, which was not personal, but just keep coming back to Cliburn. Yes, I do like other pianists and keep an open mind, I hope!
Not true! Van Cliburn not The greatest! The greatest pianists Are really Artur Rubinstein ( The God) Grigory Sokolov ( The Titan The Giant of The piano) Emil Gilels ( The King) Wilhelm Kempff! The most beautiful piano sound Ever) Radu Lupu ( The most colorful sound Ever) Mikhail Pletnev ( The most Powerful Ever) Sviatoslav Richter!!
The very best of the best. He brought Russia and the U.S. together just proves that music is the universal language and love is the key. Of course , Beethoven played a large part. God rest them both. I like to think they are playing in heaven.
One of the many of his great traits was that he was one with the orchestra... he did not try to dominate. The music, the flow was important. This, conversely, made his greatness show out all the more. He never felt the need to rush, to show off speed in playing over technical flawlessness. So many think that playing music really fast is what makes you sound great; but greatness flows and shows) when the performer is one with the music.
In 1971, I attended an outdoor concert at Ravinia Park in Chicago, I took along a nice young lady on our first date. I forget who was to be the scheduled performer, but while I was arranging our blanket and wine glasses, an announcer apologized that the scheduled performer was not able to appear, but they were happy to announce that as a consolation, Van Cliburn would perform the Piano Concerto No. 1 by Tchaikovsky!!! Some consolation! I never saw the young jady again, but my love of Mr. Cliburn's performance endures to this day!! Bravissimo!!
One of those rare, remarkably great pianists who keeps his eyes closed during performance, preferring to “sit back and listen” to the sounds he and the orchestra are producing. Instead of focusing on his own hands. Huge talent; huge knowledge; huge sensibility. Thank you very, very much for this upload. A great privilege seeing and hearing Mr Van Cliburn.
Didn't see that..thanks!!1
I heard him play this concerto at Tanglewood in 1965: the audience was so ecstatic that he returned to play the 3rd movement again as an encore. His Emperor is still the greatest of them all.
I'm so jealous!
@@FahimibnDawud me too
Also Kruscev and Gromyko were there...wonderful...
Not True! The Best Beethoven piano concerto no 5 players are Really=1:Wilhelm Kempff the most beautiful piano Sound ever! 2:Vladimir Ashkenazy the most volcano colorful piano sound ever for Beethoven no 5! 3:Solomon Cutner the Best structure for music! 4:Grigory Sokolov his rhythmic vitalness is unbeatable! 5:Maurizio Pollini the big Genius! 6:Emil Gilels Golden tone! Gilels the King Pianist! 7:Mikhail Pletnev crystal sharp the most powerful!!
You had to have been there--live! Ne plus ultra.
Cliburn and Kondrashin embraced this music like an old friend, the Russians embraced Cliburn, the music embraced us all. Thank you for posting.
Van Klibun. La excelencia del mundo ,no ha habido otro mejor a través. de los años. México. 🇲🇽. 🫶🥇🫶. 🎶🎶🎶🎶
Es un crimen que le metan anuncios ,yo lo puse SIN. Anuncios 😮
Es Holandes. Van solo los. Holandeses. lo usan. ❤.
Quando i capi di stato assistevano ai concorsi musicali e di teatro.
Amazing footage of Khrushchev giving applause to a true hero that tore down the cold war barriers. For all we know, Cliburn's effect on the premier could very well have been the straw that softened his heart just enough to enable him to back down during the Cuban missile crisis. He might have said, "No..... If America is where Van Cliburn is from, then I love America... Turn those missiles around!"
Way to go Van!! (I'm joking, of course. It was the secret deal to remove missiles in Turkey that closed the deal.)
Van Cliburn's interpretation, technique, and musicianship can be described in one word: flawless.
Absolutly!
And only Van Cliburn gave this piece an imperial, heroic tone. Sorry, Arthur, Alfred and Claudio!
Exactly. His hands were huge. His body designed to give momentum and propulsion at the keyboard. Born for this very artistic gift. We have witnessed a true artistic giant come and go. How fortunate we were! Thank you, Lord God, for this blessing of music!
Agree. He's the best among the greats. Passes the test of time with flying colors!
I Totally agree... How I LOVE him... and how I miss him!
This is probably my final you tube comment but I would just like to thank all people
who uploaded videos of Van Cliburn, whose greatness I would otherwise have
missed. He has got me through the pandemic and he has been inspirational.
Rachmaninov 3 and Beethoven 5 sublime amongst others. I wish everyone
good health and many blessings. I am English.
Come on Charmaine Morley!! Van Cliburn not The Best Beethoven piano concerto no 5 player! The Greatest Best Beethoven Piano Concerto no 5 players Are really=1; Vladimir Ashkenazy ( The Most Colorful Volcanic Piano Sound Ever for Beethoven Piano Concerto no 5!!) 2: Wilhelm Kempff ( The Most Beautiful Piano Sound Ever for Beethoven Piano Concerto no 5!) 3: Grigory Sokolov ( The Best Rhythmic Vital Beat! Unbeatable vitalness!!) 4: Solomon Cutner=( The Perfect Structure of Music! Solomon Cutner The Highest IQ points!) 5: Mikhail Pletnev ( The Most Powerful Ever! Pletnev The Best Crystal Bright Sharp Clear Perfect Beethoven piano concerto no 5!!) 6: Maurizio Pollini ( The Genius playing Beethoven piano concerto no 5!!) 6: Van Cliburn=Why Van Cliburn?? Because Van Cliburn better than The Stiff Claudio Arrau! Van Cliburn better than The Mechanical Boring dull stiff machine Robot King Krystian Zimerman!) Van Cliburn his Best Concertos Are Really Prokoviev Piano Concerto no 3!!! ( A class of his own!!) Brahms piano concerto no 2! The Best Greatest Brahms piano concerto no 2 players Are really=1: Grigory Sokolov with The Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra video RUclips from 1987! Sokolov The Best Piano sound! Sokolov his Rhythmic vitalness is unbeatable!! Sokolov The Most Titanic Ever!) Sviatoslav Richter with The Paris Orchestra conductor Lorin Maazel recording from 1969! Edwin Fischer The Recording from 1942!! Van Cliburn in Moscow 1962!? Van Cliburn better than The Stiff Claudio Arrau! Van Cliburn better than The Mechanical Boring dull stiff machine Robot King Krystian Zimerman!!!
Youri Egorov?
I have just noticed by chance your comment and it’s misinterpretation is why
I no longer comment on these sites.
My comment refers to Mr RH. I am not commenting again.
@@tiggywinkle20 I totally agree with you. It’s sad to see someone who seems to enjoy putting down other’s opinions. The entire world would have been better off without reading RH’s comment. He could have said it as his opinion which it is but he seem to feel the need to make others think that his opinion was the absolutely correct one and no other opinion mattered. Maybe he will one day learn how to be kind and then his opinion might be of some value.
Van Cliburn is still the greatest of all time. I can’t really listen to any other interpretations of the great concertos. Immaculate perfection.
Not true! You Are telling lies! The Best pianists of All Time Are really Artur Rubinstein ( thr God) Grigory Sokolov ( The Titan) Emil Gilels ( The King) Wilhelm Kempff ( The most beautiful piano sound Ever) Radu Lupu ( The most colorful sound Ever) Mikhail Pletnev ( The most Powerful Ever) Sviatoslav Richter!!
@@RaineriHakkarainen You have your own opinions and that's fine, but allow the same courtesy of others! Van Cliburn is truly one of the masters and that is indisputable, whether you like his interpretations and style is your own opinion.
All opinions are valid; I prefer others : Glenn Gould; Lang Lang ; Horowitz ; Richter ; Rubinstein.... Yuja Wang ,
@@federicocastillo8948 agree, except Yuja Wang. LoL. She doesn't belong in the same sentence as as those real artists you just listed.
@@RaineriHakkarainenThe best: Claudio Arrau
Thank God I was able to see him play in person once in FlagstaffAZ. I’ll love him forever.
I grew up with this rendition. Whenever my father put on this vinyl album, the house went hush, so there would be peace and quiet as well as the extraordinary sounds eminating from this piano, exhorting me to rise above my misery, beyond anything I could have imagined and goodness knows I invented things to escape my childhood reality. Yet every time my father put this recording on, usually on a Sunday morning, I knew that everything was alright. The world had become a sane place again.
Cliburn must have spoiled all other recordings of this concerto then, hehe. He sure did spoil Tchaikovsky's No.1 for me. Growing up, that was the only recording we had....and now in the golden age of YT and access to pretty much every recording out there, nothing comes close to Van's performance of T's No.1 with Kondrashin.
@@TSK24692 His rendition/interpretation of Tchaikovsky No.1 is absolutely breathtaking and none other touches it by far, in my opinion.
I was fortunate to see him four times in person during his career, and he was flawless every time I heard him play. I have all of his recordings and know them by heart.
It is such a thrilling piece of music. Beethoven must be in musical heavenly bliss when he hears it played so magically by van Cliburn. Bravo, Thank you. And the conductor had IT.
Ahh, Natalie. Would you comment on whether this Beethoven has a piano to use. If so, who would tune and maintain it? Are any recordings available that we poor living things on crappy earth might hear. Some form of celestial music, perhaps. Do you suppose Mr. B and Tchaikovsky are getting along and perhaps collaborating to find the Lost Chord?? Just curious.
Háy traductor ,pero no funciona. 😮.
As he pulls this off there's never a sense he's on a high wire. Then he walks off with it. The greatest performance of the Fifth then till now. Period.
For some reason, Van Cliburn's interpretations and renditions of these concerti are so moving to me!
My goodness, this is profoundly exquisite
I'm a nobody when it comes to classical music....but I know what I like and what moves my soul....this artist expresses in me feelings I thought were long dead....I love you Mr. Cliburn and wish you were not deceased so I could had told you this in person.
Музыкант на века. Браво Ван!!!
I love that he does not push this piece at all. Very elegantly and beautifully played.
and ALL the BIG singing movements in the orchestra are SOOO poetic .... especially the last movement! JUST like they should be...!
You have done the world a great service in presenting this.
Прекрасный концерт.Все так празднично,красиво.Дирижер как король, жесты выразительны и величественны.Пианист завораживает,звук изумительный,льющийся.Оркестр -гении.Бетховен был бы доволен.Спасибо.
Astonishing virtuosity he had. He is as entranced by the music as the audience. The joy of playing it was in his soul. Bravo!
Bravo indeed.
Bravo, bravo. Beautifully played by Van Cliburn. Beethoven must've been smiling.
His Rach 3 in Moscow is sublime!!!!!!
2020: Beethoven's had an IQ over "200".
[ IQ< 200]... !!!
@@ruexcited2WholeHearted Rach 2 as well 😉
Marvellous conductor, orchestra and pianist play Beethoven's wonderful concerto.
The EMPEROR of pianists- Simply MAGNIFICENT!!!!!! OMG REGAL, ROYAL and ELEGANT
And an imperial interpretation.
Not true! Van Cliburn not The greatest! The greatest pianists of All Time Are really Artur Rubinstein ( The God) Grigory Sokolov ( The Titan The Giant of The piano) Emil Gilels ( The King) Wilhelm Kempff ( The most beautiful piano sound Ever) Radu Lupu ( The most colorful sound Ever) Mikhail Pletnev ( The most Powerful Ever) Sviatoslav Richter!!!
@@RaineriHakkarainen Stop you troll! No one stated that greats like Richter and Sokolov are any less than they are.. people are allowed opinions, and your own is of no greater significance than any other.
It doesn't get any better...my favorite composer so brilliantly interpreted!!!
FLAWLESS IN EVERY ASPECT. I AM SO GLAD TO HAVE LISTENED AND VIEWED THIS PERFORMANCE, HISTRIONIC.
I have such regret that I never heard him play live.
S chopin
Heard him play in Atlanta. It was an unforgettable experience!
Never, ever thought I would get the chance, then ended up seeing him twice.: first in '99, then again seven years later on his last major tour. I never thought I would, but the stars aligned. In 99 some family friends had dress circle seats and couldn't attend (I know, right? Unless someone is being born or dying that's something you make the time to attend). Anyway, the whole experience spoiled me rotten, and seven years later I tipped the wait list and got season tickets in dress circle, including his Tchaikovsky #1 performance. Since then I've seen many, performers on the ivories, and only Andre Watts comes close (and there is still a significant gap). IMHO he's simply the best there ever was. Just a gem of a man as well.
@@brucesavell8843 I was there. 🤗 I traveled all over the United States to hear Van play but never heard him play the Emperor in live concert. The adagio is one of the most beautiful pieces of music ever written and no one played it as exquisitely, as ethereally as Van. He was a beautiful pianist and a beautiful person. I once told him that I could hear other concert pianists play a piece and their playing would not move me emotionally, but when I heard him play it, I was transported. That brought tears to his eyes. He described when he closed his eyes and looked upward while playing as his "going into the ether." His angelic playing brought tears to my eyes. It was like he could look into your soul and play what was there. I had several conversations with him over the years and he was the most humble, infinitely kind artist. To know Van was to love him.
@@Craig-ib7gk I heard him play the MacDowell for the second time in Huntsville Alabama on 5/25/99. At the reception later, at the Von Braun Center, Van wrote a beautiful note on my program. I had it specially framed to preserve it forever. It looks just the same today as it did 20 years ago. At the reception, Van greeted me with a warm hug and kiss and admired my black and white gown. The skirt of my gown had broad black and white vertical stripes that resembled piano keys. I had been attending Van's concerts for 40+ years. I was a ballerina for 20 years, studying with the Royal and also private instruction with a fantastic Russian ballerina, who was actually a blue blood related to the Tsar. Her mother had been a prima and danced with Nijinsky. Her parents were close friends of the Rachmaninoffs. Van and I were both Russophiles sharing a deep love for Russian Romanticism. We had several lovely conversations over the years. I remember every word as if it were yesterday. Van made you feel like you were the only one in the room and he always greeted me with a big bear hug and kiss. He loved people! I would throw roses on stage from front row (as they did in Moscow) and he was very touched by that gesture. He was the consummate gentleman, very old world elegant. At the reception in Huntsville, Van placed his right hand very gently on my waist and led me over to a wall displaying several large black and white photos (circa '60's & '70's) of him and the Huntsville conductor, Taavo Virkhaus. They were the same age, 65 and both so tall and elegant in their tux. Van was in great spirits and said, "Denise, look at Taavo and me when we were YOUNG and carefree!" He then called Taavo over so my friend could take photos of us. As I stood between Van and Taavo, I joked "I feel like the middle of a Maestro sandwich - and I NEVER want this moment to end!" Van had an incredible sense of humor, very playful, and he roared with laughter when I said that. He was still devastatingly handsome and oh, so ELEGANT. he always said that he "belonged to the 19th century!" His dashing looks, the refined Irish bone structure, his 6' 4" height, his eloquence and charisma took your breath away! He was very spiritual and I told him that whenever I met him, there was a golden aura about him, an energy that was palpable. I told him it was "the aura of Genius!" He would blush, wave his fingers like "Oh NO!", but he understood what I meant. He was VERY much into the metaphysical. He shared with me in Nashville in '97 that he felt his mother's spirit "all over" his home in Fort Worth. "She's there! She's there!" he told me. He was a gem of a man, incredibly sensitive, thoughtful and kind - and he was very funny. When he spotted me standing at the foot of the stage at Tanglewood in 2001 peerinf at him over a huge bouquet of his favorite red roses (I had Irish Bells added in memory of his mother), after he had just played the Grieg with Andre Previn conducting, his eyes widened and lit up...and he started waggling those incredibly long fingers "Hello!" at me from the middle of the stage! I mouthed "Howdy, Tex!", gave him a wink...and waved right back at him. It was a bit cheeky but I knew he'd LOVE it! Van gave me this playful look like "Oh...YOU!!" , but the look on Andre Previn's face was priceless because he didn't know who the hell I was! Van had just dropped his hand from Andre's and rushed to the foot of the stage to plant several sloppy kisses all over my face, and a big one on my lips with a "MYUAH!" (He got me!) He then said, "You SURPRISED me!!" I said, "Well, I just HAD to hear you play hear the Grieg again! I LOVE you!" I had flown from Atlanta to Albany, NY, rented a car and drove to the Berkshires to hear Van play one of my favorites, the Greg. (The Grieg was his mother's favorite concerto.) Later, Tommy Smith, his partner waved me over to the stage door and let me in. Sidenote: Van always remembered how much I loved "Widmung" and would play it as his last encore whenever he spotted me front row. In Nashville in '97 after he played it, he stood in front of me on stage, raised his hand towards me and said "For you..." He actually apologized to me backstage at Tanglewood and said, "I'm so sorry I couldn't play "Widmung" for you. They wouldn't allow me to play ANY encores tonight!" Tommy said it had something to do with regulations regarding the amount of time the orchestra was on stage, something like that. It just shows you what an incredibly thoughtful pianist Van was! I'm just a fan, I'm not a celebrity, I'm not a concert pianist, but Van wanted so much to please his audiences and play the pieces that were meaningful to them. I will never, ever forget him. I'll say it again, to know Van was to LOVE him.
The piano keyboard seems too small and does not have enough keys for his hands. What a sensation! Amazing.
I think so too
What an orchestra heaven must have.!!!!!
Can you tell us where they are all seated, how about the instruments. Where do they keep them when not performing?
Tell us, are you really that gullible or just stupid.?
OMG BEETHOVEN EMEPEROR CONCERTO. MY FAVORITE COMPOSER, and VAN CLIBURN you can't beat that WOW!!!.
Особенно вторая часть.
Wonderful performance and those singing notes in the slow movement. Van had
magnificent stage presence as well as musicianship. I would describe him and
this work as noble! It made my afternoon! Thank you.
So thankful for these videos on you tube. It beats t.v. and I can pretend I’m actually at a concert or ballet. Cliburn/Kondrashian. Perfection.
King Cliburn- what elegance, he looks so majestic, extraordinary musicality
Thanks a million for posting this magnificent performance!
Such a great talent and ambassador for the US. Can we ever get back to this graciousness again?
Thank you so very much for sharing this wonderful recording with us. Van Cliburn was truly Brilliant and gifted. Thank you again for this wonderful music.
Third movement is one of the most stirring pieces of music ever written and here played at the highest level of all interpretation and excellence.
Ahhh. Back again. Loved this man. It makes me cry because it's so beautiful. I know for certain that Herr Beethoven was with him.
It made me cry too.
2020: As a pianist it is such a pleasure to hear Beethoven's music away from the piano, BUT in-your-Head and HEART; hard to clear with an Oscilloscope too!!
An very Outstanding performance by Cliburn!
Thank you RUclips!!
Could you point Beethoven out for the rest we who are to myopic to see this wonderful individual? It is amazing that Beethoven was not mobbed by groupies.
Kondrachin in his glee/smile at the entrance shows the world what is about to take place. The greatest performance of the great B 5th.
I have watched this again. Pure poetry throughout. Do I really see 12 dislikes ?
To each his own, but I have stated twice what I think. Superb!
I love listening to this when I am not performing various tasks and duties.
A real treat to see Van Cliburn when he was so young and had just taken the international scene by storm. He was a true phenomenon! (I knew he was quite tall, but WOW, he was so tall and lanky he could hardly get his knees under the keyboard!)
He was tall, 6'4", but looked even taller as he lost a lot of weight in Moscow due to chronic colitis (brought on by nerves, 11-15 hrs a day practice and not eating regular meals). Colitis plagued him most of his life. You can imagine the extreme pressure placed on this 23 yr old at that time - most of which he placed on himself! He said he wanted to be "more than perfect!" He WAS. I cry every time I listen to the adagio at 22:58.
Magnificent. The shots of his hands as he plays are amazing
A great combination of Of the greatest musical genius of all time, Beethoven plus the incredible talent of Van Cliburn, along with the Moscow Philharmonic made for a memorable listening experience! Have loved Beethoven since a young boy and fell in love Van Cliburn from the first time I heard his music. Saw Van live in Atlanta and was mesmerized by his musical ability on the piano! Thanks for sharing this.
Did you see him at the Fox in '78 or '79? He played Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto #1
Beethoven would have been so proud
Великолепное , царственное арпеджио, хрустальное piano в вернем регистре... Достойное обрамление бриллианта Клиберна оркестром под управлением гениального Кирилла Кондрашина.
BRAVO! Thanks for correct tempo-- rhithm & the sound of this Music!
Damned!! I love watching these old Van Cliburn videos!
the commercial interruptions destroy this magnificent performance which will outlive all the advertisers.
1st mvt. 1:21
2nd mvt. 22:54
3rd mvt. 30:55
Thank you
Spend just a little time in comparing Van with any to take his place in coming years. The test is to find any pianist who will come close. You hear here a performance not to be matched before or since. There is perfection touched by genius blessed by the composer. Then there is an orchestra and conductor that brought an intimacy rare.
Se llama. Entrar Por La. Puerta Grande. Desde México. 🇲🇽 ❣️❣️❣️❣️❣️❣️❣️😍🖐️
How these geniuses can play something that long and complicated without sheet music is beyond comprehension
私も本当にそう思います。
不思議ですね。
An absolutely enthralling, intense and at times almost unbearably moving performance of Beethoven's Masterpiece played by Van Cliburn.
Many thanks fairlytaleofnewyork for this truly memorable upload.
Such a profound piece
Thank you so much for sharing this wonderful video.
Amazing !!!
Thank you so much for putting this up. I have not heard his recording of this for almost 30 years and I am literally laughing and tearing up. It is the best. The best.
The passage starting at 20:48 is truly magical...
While I believe Van loved this piece, he probably felt it too easy technically. Even so, the musicianship here is absolutely superb. Also, the cut away to Krushchev makes me believe this is from 1958, as the neighbor is the same person as seen in other 1958 recordings. When I met Van, he told me the Rach third was his favorite piece.
I find it hard to believe Rach 3 is his favorite piece. Why would he even have one favorite? Did he mean concerto?
Again I thank you for this . It's my favorite. Thanks to the genius of Beethoven, and van cliburn and the fabulous Russian symphony orchestra.
@@organboi dear friend, that was Beethoven piano concerto 5 by beethoven.
?......
?....l
Pure greatness!
A MOMENT! THANKS VAN
Formidable! Quelle joie ecouter ce pianiste. Merci, merci, mille fois merci pour ce grand plaisir!
Thank you for these videos of the magnificent Van Cliburn,such genius
Se me habia perdido. ,hace años. Gracias. 🎼🎶🎶🎶🎶😂
So GOOD! Brilliantly GOOD! Over and Over Again Good.
Simply outstanding. ¡¡¡WOW!!!
Tuve estos conciertos ,durante la la ultima competicion ❤
How does this only have 12k views in over five years?
It's lost in history but never surpassed.
One reason - No longer having classes in music appreciation in schools. Lack of support for school orchestras, instruction for gifted students, potential students who can not afford instruments, even in the cheapest plastic versions. Such a shame that gaming, bullying, and the negative reactions to music students by their peers prevent more kids form entering into music.
Mil gracias por este y otros videos de Kondrashin - Van Cliburn .
Mil gracias por subir esta joya musical ; Beethoven ... Kondrashin ... Van cliburn !
Wonderful to this this great performance! Thank You!
Las voy a guardar. 🫶🙏❣️👏👏👏🇲🇽
Maravillosa interpretación 👏👏👏👏
These recordings are just wonderful and I thoroughly enjoy watching them. One thing....I always thought that Emeperor was spelled Emperor? No big deal, but twice?
Gracias, Mamá y Papá, porque cuando yo tenía siete años Uds escuchaban a "Vania" Cliburn tocando el Concierto N°1... Admirados de que este jovencito "yanki" hubiera conquistado a los rusos. Maravilla de maravillas!! La Orquesta y el pianista parece que hubieran tocado juntos toda la vida!! Qué emoción recordar esta belleza desde mi infancia... desde este Concierto aprender a amar a Tchaikovsky ... para siempre! ♡♡
U N B E L I E V A B L E................... respect from Macedonia
interesting glimpse into history to see Khrushchev applauding at the end.
délicat sans fanfare, c'est l'essence de Beethovan. Merci pour le vidéo
Grandioso!
Благодарю Бога, Бетховена. Вана Клиберна. Кирилла Кондрашина. Оркестр,
Ютуб, Блогера за то. что я могу слышать и видеть это счастье!!! Пусть радость и счастье вернётся у вам в 100 раз больше!!!!!!❤❤❤❤❤❤
Bravo bravo bravo
I've heard about him for a long time. Finally, I saw Kiril Kondrashin in the film.
1:24 I. Allegro
22:57 II. Adagio un poco moto
30:57 III. Rondo, Allegro ma non troppo
Heartbreaking beautiful
Wonderful playing. The ads are unbearable. I have made it a rule to remember the product and vow never to buy it.
blame youtube, the demonitizing and censoring monster. but it was predictable. no?
Put adblock plus on your computer and never get another ad when watching something.
Wonderful
Завидую тем, кто был в это время в зрительном зале!!! Две легенды : Клиберн и Кондрашин!!!
Yeah! veryvery nice Cliburn, beautiful, energetic and graceful it is.
By the way, I hear that Beethoven said "Tempo is Music." 92yrs.Japanese.
GENIUS!!!.
So Entertainment ! Thank you very much and Happy May , dear Satoko ! :)
Kiril Kondrashin's Scherezade with the Concertgebow remains my favorite. A wonderful conductor who died too soon.
Thanks so much for this upload. I think this was filmed in 1962, as all his performances from 1958 (around the time of the Tchaikovsky Competition) have the Steinway name on the side of the piano whereas later films don't.
Dear sir, this was filmed on Moscow when van cliburn won the Russian competition, kruschev was delighted,.
Pure genius.
It was the competition from Russia, he won the hearts of the Russians as well as the coveted award that he so deserved. He was like a US ambassador. I come back to this a lot because it's breathtakingly beautiful. Only Beethoven and only van cliburn could have performed this miracle. Look at those incredible fingers.
@@anitahuie1145 Did you read Oliver Nunn's thoughts about when this was filmed?
For sure not, so three answers of you too much.
We all know what you have wrote.
Friendship among nations under the guidance of our great Master Ludwig van Beethoven
Coterranio de Lwding VAN Bethoven. .VAN. solo.los los Holandeses. Pasados los años que ahora es gringo. Que fácil Comercelo. de un Bocado llegó por tocar conciertos. ..
This is not my final word, but I am hearing Stephen Hough on radio right now
playing this at a much faster tempo to my ears. I find he does that a
lot. Am not a pianist, and am not criticising Hough as one, but so used to
Van Cliburn playing this at his tempo so beautifully, find others difficult!
Got criticised on another website re Hough, which was not personal,
but just keep coming back to Cliburn. Yes, I do like other pianists and
keep an open mind, I hope!
¡Què maravilla de pianista ! Recièn lo estoy conociendo gracias a Usted
Van is great!!! The best of human race.
Not true! Van Cliburn not The greatest! The greatest pianists Are really Artur Rubinstein ( The God) Grigory Sokolov ( The Titan The Giant of The piano) Emil Gilels ( The King) Wilhelm Kempff! The most beautiful piano sound Ever) Radu Lupu ( The most colorful sound Ever) Mikhail Pletnev ( The most Powerful Ever) Sviatoslav Richter!!
Even though I wasn't there I still feel honored.
Гордиться надо тем, что он оказался намного порядочнее чем вы.
Кондрашин лучший дирижёр!👏👍
His entrance was America walking into the room; along with the Hope of Humanity; something that once meant everything to this world.
The very best of the best. He brought Russia and the U.S. together just proves that music is the universal language and love is the key. Of course , Beethoven played a large part. God rest them both. I like to think they are playing in heaven.
It must have been interesting for Steinway to get a piano to heaven. Did American Moving Vans deliver it?
@@organbuilder272 😂👍
Einfach genial
B R A V O BETHOVEN da Klibern!!!! madloba !! titebi imxelaa roialzec ar eteva 2021 29 07
degeneratebo reklana dasawkisSHi gaushvit!!!!!!!!!!
Вана Клиберна любят не только за талант пианиста, но и за внешнее обаяние!
Я давно искала эту запись,Ино не знала кто ее исполнял. Теперь понятно. Самая лучшая интерпретация этого концерта у Клиберна.