i've got goosebumps all over my body..

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  • Опубликовано: 22 июл 2022
  • -musician: Yuja Wang
    -piece: Prokofiev: Piano Concerto No. 2 (1st movement, cadenza)
    -original video: • Video
    Thank you so much for watching! ❤️
    This video features materials protected by the Fair Use guidelines of Section 107 of the Copyright.
    #yujawang #prokofiev #pianoconcerto2 #prok2 #cadenza #tragic#vivaldi #singer #opera #chopin #pianist #stravinsky #rameau #bach #goldberg #horowitz #piano #classicalmusic #langlang #sokolov #liszt #chopin #mozart #tchaikovsky #music #pianist #rachmaninoff #argerich #cziffra #meme #schiff #violin #cello #recorder

Комментарии • 905

  • @bsharp.classical
    @bsharp.classical  Год назад +227

    New video! Hope you are all doing well! ❤ Enjoy :)
    -musician: Yuja Wang
    -piece: Prokofiev: Piano Concerto No. 2 (1st movement, cadenza)
    -original video: ruclips.net/video/7bf-Vxl-eew/видео.html
    Thank you so much for watching!

    • @Alexander_Goosev
      @Alexander_Goosev Год назад +1

      Tikhon Khrennikov. Concerto No.2 for piano and orchestra (finale):
      ruclips.net/video/BxSN-qX_vAQ/видео.htmlm15s

    • @thomas5714
      @thomas5714 Год назад +3

      Thanks for linking the original - this left me wanting the entire piece. Brilliant editing too. 👏

    • @timothybolshaw
      @timothybolshaw Год назад +8

      This performance of the Prokofiev Piano Concerto No 2 ranks among the greatest classical music performances of all time. Yuja was brilliant, but some credit also goes to the Berlin Philharmonic (probably the best orchestra in the world right now) and the conductor. We are so lucky that this was captured in a high quality recording that we can all enjoy.

    • @douwemusic
      @douwemusic Год назад

      @@timothybolshaw Berliner-Wiener-Concertgebouw holy trinity right now, in my opinion!

    • @stephenkristan853
      @stephenkristan853 6 месяцев назад +2

      She’s an apex virtuoso.

  • @avohill4
    @avohill4 6 месяцев назад +592

    So grateful the score is included. Now we can play along.

  • @muscovado09
    @muscovado09 Год назад +272

    The grand piano went out for a smoke after her piece

    • @eskylent7962
      @eskylent7962 5 месяцев назад +2

      This comment is gold! 😂

    • @ragnarthered2179
      @ragnarthered2179 5 месяцев назад

      And so did I. And also thankfully, before.

    • @aleccullen2696
      @aleccullen2696 4 месяца назад +2

      Went up in smoke more like it. This is what's called piano abuse.

    • @GingerIndiana
      @GingerIndiana 3 месяца назад

      Prokofiev's piece...

    • @Kuulei265
      @Kuulei265 3 месяца назад +1

      Actually the piano was on fire after she was done. I know my hair practically caught fire listening to this.

  • @wuwupiano
    @wuwupiano Год назад +1496

    To think this fiendish cadenza is really to give the entrance of the orchestra the biggest climax point ever. Absolutely bonkers composing. Love it.

    • @coralreef909
      @coralreef909 Год назад +61

      Yeah. Now try playing it. A technical tour de force knuckle buster of a cadenza. The cumulation of many many thousands of hours of hard concentrated practice. Prokofiev 2nd concerto is one of the most notoriously difficult modern concertos in the repertoire.

    • @douwemusic
      @douwemusic Год назад +30

      @@coralreef909 that's actually mainly because of the 2nd mvmt! I played the 1st mvmt on my music exam when I was 18 y/o (though I did have to leave out the 4 scale measures at 1:36 because my teacher had given me scale tips and fingerings that turned out to be completely wrong) and the 3rd mvmt when I was 23, and the 3rd is easier than the 1st. The 2nd I probably can't play for the next 10 years, though.

    • @ciararespect4296
      @ciararespect4296 Год назад +14

      @@coralreef909 not really. Plenty can play it without much practice as they've already honed their skills on other hard works . It's a mixture latent talent and being born into a household that favours music by supplying excellent teaching and decent instruments
      If you start at three with concentrated lessons and excellent teachers guiding you in practice as well you would be able to approach this after a few years.
      With piano you learn the technique first and with repeated memorisation techniques music theory and reading skills it becomes easier and faster to learn music like this
      I learnt this at about nine years of age
      I'm not declaring I'm some sort of genius I was just lucky to have the correct foundation from a young age

    • @michaelreich2306
      @michaelreich2306 Год назад +14

      @@ciararespect4296 You are probably right! But honestly, who in the audience would hear a mistake? .;

    • @bohanxu6125
      @bohanxu6125 Год назад +17

      Do you guys actually enjoy listening to this? I think this is one of the best example on how difficult music is not necessarily good music. For instance, do you guys honestly think that you would save his music in your youtube playlist and, like, actually listen to it in the future?
      While I acknowledge the awe of difficulty and mastery can be enjoying.... there can also be a separate component of unproductive elitism and pretentiousness of "sophisticated taste", when it comes to a person declaring that it loves a difficult musics piece. If one can drop this pretentiousness (while the awe of mastery is still fine), I feel like most people won't really enjoy this music piece.
      Although I acknowledge how people's taste in music can be very different.... if a person never acknowledge a single difficult musics piece to be "difficult but bad", then I think there is a very good chance that that person is blinded by this unproductive elitism and pretentiousness of "sophisticated taste"

  • @robinday2137
    @robinday2137 4 месяца назад +64

    Imagine using this score in a film. The drama it would require…..Prokofiev is so over the top here.

  • @ashercaplan3254
    @ashercaplan3254 Год назад +681

    The way that she plays the two measures at 1:47 makes her interpretation the best in my opinion. Most pianists slow it down for dramatic effect and then return to a faster pace, but she plays it with this frantic and desperate energy that is unparalleled.

    • @nicolaspachecoarango
      @nicolaspachecoarango Год назад +55

      I prefer very much her approach I think that by slowing down I can't really enjoy those beautiful arpeggios melting with the melody.

    • @masantonio8790
      @masantonio8790 Год назад +35

      @@nicolaspachecoarango I don't think this part is meant to be "beautiful" in a traditional way (in my opinion). I think it's intended to sound a bit frantic and chaotic.

    • @nicolaspachecoarango
      @nicolaspachecoarango Год назад +9

      @@masantonio8790 yes obviously with beautiful I mean it's in his unique way.

    • @masantonio8790
      @masantonio8790 Год назад +19

      @@nicolaspachecoarango I reread your comment after posting and realized mine was kinda pointless. I get what you were saying now.

    • @Eorzat
      @Eorzat Год назад +15

      I think it’s the opposite. Most pianists probably add a bit of rubato so that it doesn’t sound like a bat out of hell. Playing it straight and unfazed is definitely the more dramatic approach in my opinion.

  • @ald5365
    @ald5365 Год назад +674

    What kind of madness brought Prokofiev too write such an insane music. And after the apocalypse, he writes one of the most insanely painful and beautiful theme at 00:47, each time it lets me completely disarmed, without breath. I've never heard somebody played this like Yuja Wang. So much intensity, power, intelligence, she never rushes, each notes is crystal clear, she understands each mesure of this crazy music. It's truly a magical moment !

    • @danielguardman3530
      @danielguardman3530 Год назад +10

      Alexei Sultanov did

    • @Nikolass1000
      @Nikolass1000 Год назад +6

      Yundi Li did great

    • @johnwalsh8827
      @johnwalsh8827 Год назад +2

      @@Nikolass1000 I love Yundi Li's interpretation!!! More meaning and less mechanical, in my humble opinion.

    • @Calagat
      @Calagat Год назад +2

      Competing with Rachmaninoff.Prokofiev pined for Rachmaninoff's approval.

    • @ik6non712
      @ik6non712 Год назад +6

      it's dedicated to his friend whom recently (as of the composition) took his own life

  • @Azian2DaMax
    @Azian2DaMax Год назад +558

    one of the only (if not THE only) live performances of this cadenza I've seen played at the right tempo without any stutters or missed notes. i too get goosebumps every time when the orchestra comes in.

    • @Nikolass1000
      @Nikolass1000 Год назад +6

      Yundi Li sounds better for me. But both are amazing

    • @simonvanprooijen
      @simonvanprooijen Год назад +17

      0:04 has several missed notes but yea the rest is played very well

    • @xhelan131
      @xhelan131 Год назад +11

      there were definitely missed notes in this performance lol

    • @MrLULE
      @MrLULE Год назад

      @@Nikolass1000 same

    • @emilio-wm9jt
      @emilio-wm9jt Год назад +2

      @@simonvanprooijen wtf,check your ear mate

  • @christianvennemann9008
    @christianvennemann9008 Год назад +123

    2:12 That apocalyptic orchestral reentry is just too epic 🔥🔥

  • @hjhseo1114
    @hjhseo1114 Год назад +461

    This tempo just makes so much sense for the audience. I felt it was a bit difficult for me to connect the harmonies when listening to slower recordings but this speed makes it seamless!

    • @user-gz5sv2hu9n
      @user-gz5sv2hu9n Год назад +7

      Listen Ashkenazy- most best, bro

    • @ALP839
      @ALP839 Год назад +10

      @@user-gz5sv2hu9n Mostest, doubtlessly.

    • @ambiva
      @ambiva Год назад +3

      This performance indeed is the one that can people appreciate the true epicness and beauty of Prokofiev 2. Most other recording are dull and doesnt justify Prokofiev's genius

    • @hjhseo1114
      @hjhseo1114 Год назад +4

      @@user-gz5sv2hu9n I have!

    • @MargoB
      @MargoB Год назад

      Yes!

  • @markware1955
    @markware1955 Год назад +201

    This was the cleanest "on the edge of your seat" performance of this impossible cadenza I have ever heard...WOW!

  • @buffnerdtv
    @buffnerdtv Год назад +28

    *Quietly closes piano lid and puts Chopin's book of Preludes & Etudes back on the shelf and goes to bed.*

  • @BrianCuthbertson
    @BrianCuthbertson 4 месяца назад +34

    She surely is the most remarkable pianist in the world. There can only be a handful in history who could hold a candle to her.

    • @L1102
      @L1102 4 месяца назад +3

      Cziffra

  • @vvalery1522
    @vvalery1522 Год назад +83

    I don’t think my car even goes that fast.
    Wow. She’s truly amazing!

  • @Kuulei265
    @Kuulei265 5 месяцев назад +17

    Good grief!! Whew! What passion. Almost overwhelming. And her hands! She’s wonderful!

  • @randomchannel-px6ho
    @randomchannel-px6ho Год назад +153

    0:45 I'm not sure I've ever heard someone do the three hand effect quite this well. The middle voice sounds like an entirely different instrument.
    Yuja Wangs ability is like Ravels compositions, it's so good you don't even want to try because what's the point.

    • @christianvennemann9008
      @christianvennemann9008 Год назад +18

      1:38 also stands out to me, in regards to her three-hand effect. This is one of my all-time favorite performances of one of my favorite piano concertos 🙌🏾🙌🏾

  • @christianvennemann9008
    @christianvennemann9008 Год назад +63

    1:47 I used to hate how fast she played this part compared to other pianists, but I finally see how it fits so perfectly with the overall frenetic, baleful tone of this piece!

  • @samsungrefrigeratorcondens4354
    @samsungrefrigeratorcondens4354 Год назад +111

    I haven't heard this piece before, so this hit me like a bullet train.

  • @stangovers7441
    @stangovers7441 4 месяца назад +25

    I'm 74 and have played piano since age 7, and I must say, that what she did was absolutely amazing!! Including the score made it more so. Thank you b sharp, or can I call you c??!!

    • @arjuna-fn2pg
      @arjuna-fn2pg 4 месяца назад +2

      B-ing sharp doesn't necessarily require c-ing?

  • @mauvebear3942
    @mauvebear3942 Год назад +68

    I know clapping between movements is unnecessary but this… I would simply applaud after this movement.

    • @null8295
      @null8295 Год назад

      And ruining everything with your noise? I would clap your head then

    • @mauvebear3942
      @mauvebear3942 Год назад +6

      @@null8295 damn bro you're too feisty

    • @null8295
      @null8295 Год назад +1

      @@mauvebear3942 sorry I just hate noise

    • @vlasoslav2782
      @vlasoslav2782 Год назад +5

      absolutely nothing wrong with clapping between movements in exceptional scenarios such as this

    • @albertomartin4812
      @albertomartin4812 Год назад

      Well, first movements were often composed with triumphant endings precisely for applause. That tradition was lost during the XXth century.

  • @nikinewton7917
    @nikinewton7917 5 месяцев назад +14

    She is world-class. The best of the best. ❤❤

  • @paulgreen6921
    @paulgreen6921 Год назад +104

    Very MONSTROUS cadenza as ever I have heard. Enough to give ole Godzilla goosebumps on the atomic trees on his thermonuclear back. You know? PWG

    • @wuwupiano
      @wuwupiano Год назад +3

      Ha ha! What a description. Can't beat Gutierrez's recording though. Really brought out the epicness.

    • @maryvallettakeith6146
      @maryvallettakeith6146 Год назад +2

      🤣👍

    • @XavierMacX
      @XavierMacX 4 месяца назад +1

      Love this comment! Haha. The crazy part is this wasn't even the full cadenza.

    • @MarshallArtz007
      @MarshallArtz007 4 месяца назад

      Godzilla would love it! 🎹🦖

  • @cageynerd
    @cageynerd Год назад +21

    Off her Berlin performance, Prokofiev #2 became my favorite piano concerto. She plays it sooo convincingly -- the magic of a genius.

  • @yvoheaton6402
    @yvoheaton6402 Год назад +41

    I am not a pianist and doubt I ever will be. I cannot begin to comprehend how anyone memorises a piece like this with all its technicality and its complexity. Simply stunning.

    • @Un1234l
      @Un1234l Год назад +6

      Years of progressively building up on small steps and piano knowledge, vocabulary, technique.

    • @davidlebel9687
      @davidlebel9687 9 месяцев назад +2

      It’s not that hard actually. You memorize as your repeat things I’ve and over again

    • @Phantastically
      @Phantastically 7 месяцев назад +8

      memorizing is probably by far the easiest part of learning a piece as insanely difficult as this lol

    • @Hervinbalfour
      @Hervinbalfour 6 месяцев назад

      You start memorizing a piece as soon as you start learning it. Not that difficult.

    • @lavatrex
      @lavatrex 5 месяцев назад +1

      people praising memorization on a piece like this is absolutely INSAN

  • @tisono1168
    @tisono1168 Год назад +48

    I listened Prokofiev's 2nd piano concerto about 30 years ago, played by Vladimir Ashkenazy.
    Since then, I have been obsessed with this music. For me, this music is not only one of Prokofiev' great works, but also a masterpiece of all the piano concerto composed in 20th century.
    I am overwhelmed with Wang's insane performance!!

    • @pianoredux7516
      @pianoredux7516 5 месяцев назад +1

      I saw Ashkenazy play it in 1966 at Carnegie Hall. From way back in the first or second tier (I forget which) his hands appeared to be a stroboscopic blur throughout the concerto.

    • @tisono1168
      @tisono1168 4 месяца назад

      Thank you for sharing your valuable experience. It is a shame that Ashkenazy has retired in 2020.

  • @ho-mw6qp
    @ho-mw6qp Год назад +126

    This is one of those miracle moments in music I feel so lucky to be alive to witness; the composition, the interpretation and execution… when I first heard it I felt like I was getting possessed by euphoria itself.

    • @hippophile
      @hippophile Год назад +7

      Possessed... very apt description!!! Yes...

  • @jellis333j7
    @jellis333j7 6 месяцев назад +7

    How thankful a great composer must be to have a great performer play his work!!! But let’s give Prokofiev the credit for this amazing piece of music.

  • @markfowlermusic
    @markfowlermusic Год назад +5

    Transcendental

  • @sabrinaxie1736
    @sabrinaxie1736 Год назад +23

    Yuja is one of the best portrayers I've seen of Prokofiev. What ingenuity.

  • @ambiva
    @ambiva Год назад +123

    It is because of this interpretation, Prokofiev 2 instantly replaces Rachmaninov 2 & 3 and become my favorite concerto of all times. It's just beautiful. On 1st listening the whole piece sounds unusuall and bizzare at a lot of moment, the more I listen to it, the more epic it becomes. Prokofiev is a true genius.

    • @christianvennemann9008
      @christianvennemann9008 Год назад +2

      And the orchestra's reenty with its apocalyptic restatement of the opening orchestral theme at 2:12 never gets old. Just too epic!!!

    • @primeartonline-pianocovers1535
      @primeartonline-pianocovers1535 Год назад +2

      Try Ginastera Concerto No. 1

    • @specialperson335
      @specialperson335 Год назад +5

      It went the same way for me, my favorites used to be rach 2 and 3 and then prokofiev 2 and 3 completely replaced them once i had heard them. I just find Rachmaninoffs concertos great in describing our world but Prokofievs concertos are from another world, incredible originality.

    • @adrianwright8685
      @adrianwright8685 Год назад +3

      I find I can enjoy both Prok and Rach not to mention Bach and Mozart, Ravel and Beethoven etc, etc, without finding any need to pick a favourite.

    • @charlietian4023
      @charlietian4023 7 месяцев назад

      Completely agree and this is how I felt about proko 2 when I had to play it in orchestra

  • @jasontzouganatos9311
    @jasontzouganatos9311 Год назад +18

    This is my fav concerto. Yuja especially plays it so well.

  • @markevanson9163
    @markevanson9163 Год назад +9

    This is the sound of a peaceful ocean unwillingly stirred by a typhoon into a raging beauty. Incredible.

  • @mariana.makasjian
    @mariana.makasjian Год назад +8

    literally got chills when the orchestra started woww

  • @smartsnco
    @smartsnco 5 месяцев назад +6

    Just - WOW!

  • @ronl7131
    @ronl7131 Год назад +19

    Yuja Wang really understands Prokofiev. Performs wonders, highest Artistry…precision, voicing, rhythm, intensity….lucky listeners….She opens the window for us to enjoy the Sound Worlds of all the Composers she performs….short and long Masterpieces

  • @daveluttinen2547
    @daveluttinen2547 6 месяцев назад +5

    This whole performance of Prokofiev 2 was nothing short of perfect. This is my favorite concerto by Prokofiev and her interpretation is atmospheric, musical, engaging, and full of the technical fireworks one would expect without losing the composer's intent. She is a force of nature - and wish her the absolute best for her future.

  • @MarshallArtz007
    @MarshallArtz007 6 месяцев назад +7

    Possibly her single greatest performance. Earth shattering! 🔥🌍🔥

  • @patriciagraham222
    @patriciagraham222 Год назад +8

    Wild! Yuja Wang one of the most amazing pianists ever!

  • @Intake33
    @Intake33 Год назад +4

    Surely the greatest cadenza in classical music

  • @albertvidal8344
    @albertvidal8344 Год назад +26

    The first time I heard this concerto was this exact performance by Yuja Wang and felt so lucky to discover such music and performance.
    And later on, couldn’t find any other pianist play it like this. Just nuts

    • @prometheusrex1
      @prometheusrex1 Год назад +4

      What do you think of Gutierrez?

    • @slowloris4346
      @slowloris4346 Год назад

      Trifinov plays the 4th Movement very well. Kissin's cadenza is slower but I really like it.

    • @gdkabsbdkwkwm4187
      @gdkabsbdkwkwm4187 Год назад

      Lugansky

    • @MarshallArtz007
      @MarshallArtz007 6 месяцев назад

      @@slowloris4346: I also like Yulianna Avdeeva’s recording. It’s a different approach, but very convincing. Here’s the link to the video (excellent audio & video, too):
      ruclips.net/video/dmUUAOiQKKU/видео.htmlsi=2NyGUGTzryPUdnFP
      Bronfman’s recording with Mehta & Israel Philharmonic is also very fine. 😎🎹

  • @caseym8385
    @caseym8385 Год назад +14

    AH this brings back memories. In college I bought a CD set of the Prokofiev Concerti played by Ashkenazy after having heard my teacher play No. 1. I was listening to it in the background when this cadenza came on and I was stopped in my tracks. I was so overwhelmed with my jaw on the floor at what I had just listened to.

  • @martinforrester8249
    @martinforrester8249 Год назад +13

    That was stunning, absolutely amazing, loved the intensity, Yuja is in a class of her own.

  • @nobodyplaylists
    @nobodyplaylists Год назад +8

    yes! one of the best cadenzas that I've heard in my life!

  • @stuartdryer1352
    @stuartdryer1352 4 месяца назад +3

    She is a beast. In the best possible way.

  • @jeffaldridge4051
    @jeffaldridge4051 Год назад +41

    This is so miraculously we’ll played that it has even silenced the irritating wardrobe comments which usually follow any video of this amazing artist. BRAVA👏

    • @nicholasschroeder3678
      @nicholasschroeder3678 Год назад +10

      😂 I think they're mostly from old people who haven't gotten any in years

    • @carmelmoore7012
      @carmelmoore7012 Год назад +1

      Maybe that's because this particular dress is less revealing than usual.

    • @truBador2
      @truBador2 Год назад +1

      Didn't silence you though.

    • @jeffaldridge4051
      @jeffaldridge4051 Год назад +1

      Mine was a silent comment, written, not spoken…….

  • @chirilas5217
    @chirilas5217 6 месяцев назад +4

    Impossible to play like this. Just crazy, wow!! Unbelievable.👏👏👏👏👏👏

  • @chester6343
    @chester6343 Год назад +3

    Watched Yuja last night, she's brilliant

  • @blackkeymaestro
    @blackkeymaestro 6 месяцев назад +3

    Goosebumps and tears ... not too many things in life out there that can produce similar effect. Love music, and love Yuja! ❤

  • @amandac2683
    @amandac2683 Год назад +7

    It sounds crazy to say that this is what I listened to when I was studying for my uni exams. It gave me extra strength to keep going through torture and challenges. I love Yuja, she was only 5 when I was studying university. I listened to kissin’s recording which is equally brilliant.

  • @Brian-bp5pe
    @Brian-bp5pe 5 месяцев назад +4

    Incredible composition, incredible pianist!

  • @tiffsaver
    @tiffsaver 6 месяцев назад +4

    A player in a lifetime.

  • @jackieking1522
    @jackieking1522 Месяц назад +1

    Thank you...that was startling.... will now dig it back out and listen again..... having the text displayed was another eyeopener... just breathtaking....thanks again.

  • @thejils1669
    @thejils1669 Год назад +7

    The first movement of the Prokovief PC2, just like the Brahms' 1st, mvt1 (octave trills), is truly revolutionary. When Beethoven wrote thematic material, he always relied on chordal progressions (don't believe me...look at the opening bars of his PC3...a straight C minor chord is right there). The thematic material for the Prokovief PC2 is so simple and unassuming you really wonder where its going...but, at the same time, it's catchy and memorable...only to fade without absolute resolution into the triplet opening bars of the piano as an introduction to its main theme. Then, the ending of the piano cadenza just propels the music into this apocalyptic orchestral tutti playing as forte as humanily possible the opening theme, this time with a definitive tonic resolution...all leading to the very humbled piano triplet and opening theme which just fades away into oblivion...pure genius! There's got to be a philosophical message embedded in there somewhere.

  • @synthbass9788
    @synthbass9788 Год назад +4

    That transition to orchestra was the best

  • @luismusique9531
    @luismusique9531 Год назад +9

    Imo, lugansky and Matsuev along with Yefin Bronfman and Horacio. Gutiérrez got incredible renders of this concerto, specially Matsuev and Lugansky, but Yuna Wang managed to make of this concerto a masterpiece of her own 👌

  • @user-vr3sb8fy6g
    @user-vr3sb8fy6g Год назад +6

    Thank you very much Dear Yuja for the fantastic performance! Prokofiev would be delighted!

  • @petersnell3128
    @petersnell3128 Год назад +4

    Modern day pianists indeed play with frightening accuracy

  • @rodolfovazquez8144
    @rodolfovazquez8144 Год назад +3

    I can imagine what kind of practicing she had to do to play so masterly. BRAVO!!!

  • @cool_kai3298
    @cool_kai3298 6 месяцев назад +2

    i didnt even look at the title of the piece and already knew it was prokofiev since yuja wang shines so much whenever it comes to heavy key slamming intense pieces!

  • @whatdoiputhere9618
    @whatdoiputhere9618 Год назад +5

    Wow. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a piano played like this. I didn’t even know they could sound like this.

  • @possisvideos
    @possisvideos Год назад +4

    this crazy piece is made for yuja. she loves prokofjeff.

  • @markpaterson2053
    @markpaterson2053 Год назад +4

    Prokofiev gifted the world with his music; ever since, artists have been proving how this is the gift that keeps on giving.

  • @MichelleW34
    @MichelleW34 6 месяцев назад +2

    I have chills!!! This lady is incredible

  • @789armstrong
    @789armstrong 4 месяца назад +2

    Prokofiev never sounded more dazzling!

  • @johnpcomposer
    @johnpcomposer Год назад +5

    Amazing cadenza. It has to be one of the most difficult in the repertoire...thanks for posting. Brilliant playing. You can't approach this with any trepidation.

  • @waynejones3870
    @waynejones3870 4 месяца назад +4

    Prokofiev was a formidable pianist. But I think even this passage from his 2nd Piano Concerto would challenge him.

  • @nadesmond6029
    @nadesmond6029 Год назад +2

    Been listening to this piece for almost 15 years... My soul still drops every single time.

  • @mgetz7469
    @mgetz7469 Год назад +3

    I have all of the Prokofiev Piano Concertos. This piece is good stuff. Reeeeeally good stuff. Whooo.....I mean... if you don't feel something listening to this piece...the passion and drive...the beautiful chaos and coloring....then you have not experienced enough life. That's really all I can say. Bravo to this performance. Damn good.

  • @tbarrelier
    @tbarrelier Год назад +8

    She has definately been to the crossroads!

  • @JaneWu8888
    @JaneWu8888 Год назад +3

    Thank you so much for uploading this incredible video! Lifetime application!!!

  • @woodybob01
    @woodybob01 Год назад +29

    Holy shit that was the most impressive thing I've seen in a while

    • @scomu9742
      @scomu9742 Год назад +3

      Probably in a lifetime too :)

    • @cageynerd
      @cageynerd Год назад +1

      @@scomu9742 Lifetime -- she's the real deal. There will never be for a lifetime... Go see her. At least you can say you did.

  • @PianoPsych
    @PianoPsych Год назад +2

    That is the most exciting performance of the cadenza from Prokofiev’s 2nd Piano Concerto that I have ever heard, and I’ve heard a lot of them.

  • @mitchmatthews6713
    @mitchmatthews6713 Год назад +3

    She is too incredible for mere words!

    • @markmearth1
      @markmearth1 Год назад +2

      I was trying to find the words to express. I could not. Her performance and energy, her "oneness" with the music absolutely amaze me. Your sentence is EXCELLENT.

  • @AbigailPoirier
    @AbigailPoirier Год назад +6

    On the plus side, mere mortals would never know if she missed a note or 99. Super impressive skills!

    • @user-sw5pw3cs4w
      @user-sw5pw3cs4w 11 месяцев назад

      As someone who can actually play this piece and is preparing it for a competition, I can confidently say she missed approximately 0 notes.

  • @MikePulcinellaVideo
    @MikePulcinellaVideo Год назад +1

    One of the all-time best!

  • @checallo
    @checallo Год назад +5

    I've got goosebumps all over my body.
    Immense and divine. Such a sublime combination would make me hope that there is an ultra-earthly dimension much more beautiful than our 'human' one. Obviously I like to think so, it seems like I can't do more.
    I had the opportunity to watch her playing a couple of times when she came in Rome

  • @hybridroid
    @hybridroid Год назад +3

    This tells a whole story. What a masterpiece

  • @3YZ-TS191
    @3YZ-TS191 6 месяцев назад +3

    What I LOVE about Yuja is her unfailing musicianship. In the face of even the most technically difficult scores, she maintains integrity to the essence of the music, and does not succumb to the temptation of gratuitous virtuosic self-flattery or self-aggrandizement. This, to me, separates her from many of her contemporaries, and puts her alongside the great musical expositors of recent and distant generations.

  • @Fanchen
    @Fanchen Год назад +2

    Learning this rn

  • @paules3437
    @paules3437 Год назад +2

    Feh! Piece of cake. I mean, how hard could it be?
    I do appreciate it when people post the score as well. That makes this twice as enjoyable.

  • @oldwhtman
    @oldwhtman Год назад +4

    Listening to music like this and musicians of this level of talent makes me feel like the village idiot in an ant farm.

    • @markmearth1
      @markmearth1 Год назад

      Me too! I am with you, totally. I have become a slug. What manner of musician is this? What manner of human is this? What manner of composer is this? Amazing.

  • @paulshi2821
    @paulshi2821 Год назад +5

    Incredible interpretation

  • @10reubenl
    @10reubenl 8 месяцев назад +1

    She’s like “hold my beer”. Absolutely magical! Crazy number of notes. She makes it look easy!

  • @Dushki77
    @Dushki77 Год назад +5

    Only yuja could pull this off👏

  • @michaelmum8395
    @michaelmum8395 Год назад +12

    What a spectacular performance!!! Bravo!!!

  • @cristianpopa3866
    @cristianpopa3866 Год назад +3

    She is The best pianist in the world 100%

  • @liselotterobinson5417
    @liselotterobinson5417 6 месяцев назад +1

    Amazing woman with so much talent and emotion

  • @joestephens7105
    @joestephens7105 3 месяца назад +1

    I heard Ray Moses play this at Sam Houston State in 1975 at a Piano Concerto festival and it absolutely made the hair on the back of my neck stand on end.

  • @paulcummins6780
    @paulcummins6780 6 месяцев назад +5

    Best version of this cadenza ever! I just love her interpretation.

  • @robertbradymusic
    @robertbradymusic Год назад +7

    Never heard Prokofiev PC2 Cadenza before.
    People are always programming the 3rd. Wow that level of pianistic virtuosity and level of detail in the score in 1912/1923… reminds me a little of Sorabji :)

    • @ambiva
      @ambiva Год назад

      You should watch the whole video, this piece is magical. for most people 1st time listening: weird, what's this, 2nd time listening: hmm it's quite something, 3rd time: this is a god piece epic on so many levels. It has replaced my favorite Rachmaninov 2&3 completedly.

    • @macdondb
      @macdondb Год назад

      It's depressing how I never hear this on classical radio... In fact, all I hear from Prokofiev are Symphony No. 1, maybe the PC 1, and maybe some selections from Lieutenant Kije or Romeo and Juliet... Depressing...

    • @robertbradymusic
      @robertbradymusic Год назад +1

      @@macdondb in U.K. BBC Radio 3 is quite conservative too

  • @cristianpopa3866
    @cristianpopa3866 6 месяцев назад +2

    SHE IS THE BEST OF THE BEST IN THE WORLD 100%

  • @JABARDELLI
    @JABARDELLI Год назад +1

    Mesmerizing!!! ❤️❤️❤️

  • @franklinpotter4861
    @franklinpotter4861 Год назад +28

    Holy fuck, that was supremely, insanely, incredibly skilled, such godly hands and talent, thousands and thousands of days of practice and practice since childhood must have been needed to be able to play this piece. Truly amazing, if she went to one of those shows like america's got talent, she'd win instantly, no contest tbh.

    • @rex8873
      @rex8873 Год назад +2

      She’d need to have a sad story though.

    • @Literalistic
      @Literalistic Год назад +27

      No actual talented self-respecting musician would go to a show like America’s Got Talent

    • @reinstate317
      @reinstate317 Год назад

      @@Literalistic +++

    • @markmearth1
      @markmearth1 Год назад

      It might go totally over their heads. I think it is totally over my head, but a deep central part of my soul is deeply touched and moved.

  • @bysscanna
    @bysscanna Год назад +20

    yuja wang is an amazing pianist !! someday i’m going to play just like that

    • @stevefoley4073
      @stevefoley4073 Год назад +4

      And the very best of luck. I hope you make it. You'll need thousands of hours of practice, but if you do that, nothing's impossible

    • @bysscanna
      @bysscanna Год назад

      @@stevefoley4073 thank you so much ❤️

  • @GingerIndiana
    @GingerIndiana 3 месяца назад

    Prokofiev's genius... And she brings it to a climax with such a powerful tension.

  • @user-tb9pl3ij5n
    @user-tb9pl3ij5n 4 месяца назад +1

    Что-то невероятное...Грандиозное исполнение!!! 👏👏👏💐💐💐

  • @djftex
    @djftex Год назад +4

    So she has 3 hands right, maybe 4? 😀 Love this goddess!

  • @AdrianCameron123
    @AdrianCameron123 Год назад +9

    That key change at 1:13...pure perfection 😍😍

  • @hermodnitter3902
    @hermodnitter3902 Год назад

    Absolutely stunning!!!

  • @pauljohnson6233
    @pauljohnson6233 4 месяца назад

    literally incredible in the truest sense of the word.