Inside Chamber Music with Bruce Adolphe: Brahms Trio in A minor Op. 114
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- Опубликовано: 8 фев 2015
- Bruce Adolphe, CMS resident lecturer
Johannes Brahms: Trio in A minor for Clarinet, Cello, and Piano, Op. 114 (1891)
Filmed live in the Daniel and Joanna S. Rose Studio on February 11, 2014.
Artists: Yekwon Sunwoo, piano; Romie de Guise-Langlois, clarinet; Mihai Marica, cello
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The introductory talk is perfect, simply perfect.
Wow, what an incredible cello sound in an otherwise dry space. When clarinettists get to play with great cellists it's really constant eargasm all over :)
Bruce Adolphe is a credit to his desire to incite deep interest in music
I have to pause the vid and comment: this is too wholesome!! I can easily listen to him talk forever, and the performers are great too! ugh how i miss me some live music
This letture is wonderfully ecpressed with competence and clarity...and a great capacity in creating interest. Your lecture is appreciated with joyful remarks that render classical music a pleasant adventure. The analysis and synthesis is beautifully compared. The musicians of great quality considering their youth...bravo. please give other lectures...thank you.
Thank you Lincoln CMS, This is truly amazing project, absolutely the best educative video for performers and listeners that I saw on the internet!
Came upon this terrific Brahms lecture. Lovely playing and insightful commentary-a pleasure!
Very interesting en wonderful! Thank you so much for this.
Clarinetist is fantastic! Bravo!
best explanation of things Brahms I ever heard - many thanks BA!
A very enjoyable, very informative, and very entertaining series hosted by Mr Adolphe. Can we have more, please?
these are of supreme quality! thank you for creating them. can you make these available as a podcast!
Can someone please explain what's meant by the "the first corpse" comment?
What piece is he playing at 5:30?
It's the second theme of the Capriccio (the 7th piece) of the Op. 116 Fantasies.
This guy's even better than Leonard Bernstein. Wow!
Let´s speak about vibrato on the PIANO! It´s a mystery!!
Wind bag- what's the point? It is what it is- let the music speak for itself.
man, bruce adolphe is such a great lecturer and scholar. also Romie de Guise-Langlois is cute, i'd have her over for netflix
He said Brahms and Schumann but he didnt initially specify which Schumann. During their day Clara Schumann was more well known and celebrated.
Is it true? I thought they were equally famous because they toured together
To hell with Stravinsky. Does his music move you in any way?
I mean, why wouldn't it
Stravinsky was brought up in the lecture because of his innovations in rhythm, not because of his music being good or bad
@@garrysmodsketches Thank for that. But, can you sing any of it from memory? O, Yes we can. But is it "danceable?" :-)
does it need to be danceable to move you in any way?
@@marianobalestena3741 Just kidding, more or less. I'm a musician, versatile. I've played a few Stravinsky pieces, and at least three are written for dance. Also played in a pop/rock cover band. Danceable was one of the criteria. :-))
clarinet + vibrato = NO