What Makes a Virtuoso?

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  • Опубликовано: 11 июн 2018
  • In today's Everything Music, we explore what it means to be a virtuoso.
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Комментарии • 3 тыс.

  • @mr.k905
    @mr.k905 5 лет назад +1473

    It’s so easy to impress people with speed. It’s much harder to impress them with a genius/virtuous musical idea.

    • @dabeamer42
      @dabeamer42 4 года назад +16

      Like old JS improvising a fugue (of someone else's subject)

    • @tomacosta85
      @tomacosta85 4 года назад +18

      Imho a virtuoso can play virtually any thing at will appearing effortlessly.

    • @marcossidoruk8033
      @marcossidoruk8033 4 года назад +21

      @J. Milton Jeffreys technique Is part of virtuosity, playing fast in the guitar can be pretty Easy with legato, but amazingly hard with alternated picking. What i am trying to say Is that the difficulty of playing fast changes with the technique used and the complexity of the piece. we shall always consider that when talking of speed

    • @JamesReubenGruta
      @JamesReubenGruta 4 года назад +47

      Speed is just a setting. Note choice and phrasing are the real ingredients

    • @pjaylett
      @pjaylett 4 года назад +8

      I’d call Dave Gilmour a virtuoso but according to this video he doesn’t fit the description 🤔

  • @RickGraham
    @RickGraham 6 лет назад +2683

    Thank you, Rick! Honoured and Humbled.

    • @RickBeato
      @RickBeato  6 лет назад +428

      My pleasure! In addition to your playing, I love your generosity and commitment to teaching. Thanks from everyone!

    • @6stringstorulethemall967
      @6stringstorulethemall967 6 лет назад +150

      From one Rick to another

    • @dwightdwindley3141
      @dwightdwindley3141 6 лет назад +4

      Yes!!!

    • @milotimberlake2047
      @milotimberlake2047 6 лет назад +2

      How your hand doin rick?

    • @joemisek
      @joemisek 6 лет назад +4

      Hope you are able to return to playing soon.

  • @alekzamonski1179
    @alekzamonski1179 5 лет назад +86

    I personally think of virtuosity as the ability to play whatever you want on your instrument, and whatever comes into your head. In other words, you are completely connected with the instrument and there is no barrier between what you have in your head and what comes out of your instrument.

  • @paulbrewer2374
    @paulbrewer2374 4 года назад +48

    "It's not how fast you play, it's what you play when you're playing fast." I love that quote. Thank you, Rick!

  • @chrisarias4055
    @chrisarias4055 6 лет назад +764

    Paganini: the original shredder

    • @JariSatta
      @JariSatta 6 лет назад

      Yahtzee!

    • @TheKABE09
      @TheKABE09 6 лет назад +9

      Not really, you know. Music virtuossity dates from early 17th century

    • @IRex-wm9pd
      @IRex-wm9pd 6 лет назад +24

      Liszt, inspired by Paganini, was pretty good himself.

    • @carrottoponcrak
      @carrottoponcrak 6 лет назад +6

      Locatelli, the original shredder

    • @ayushsuyayush
      @ayushsuyayush 5 лет назад +17

      Vivaldi the dude with the best riffs

  • @dusty3913
    @dusty3913 5 лет назад +835

    I never thought of virtuosity as being able to play fast. I always understood it to be much more meaningful. It describes a player who knows their instrument inside and out, where to find each note, having a good ear, and the ability to reasonably duplicate pieces by ear.

    • @deadcatforcutie9349
      @deadcatforcutie9349 5 лет назад +65

      totally agree - speed is by no means a measure of musicality

    • @HC_GUITAR
      @HC_GUITAR 5 лет назад +3

      @@deadcatforcutie9349 Spot on!

    • @danguee1
      @danguee1 4 года назад +55

      From wiki: ".a virtuoso was, originally, a highly accomplished musician, but by the nineteenth century the term had become restricted to performers, both vocal and instrumental, whose technical accomplishments were so pronounced as to dazzle the public". I think the accepted meaning of virtuoso is showier than your definition.

    • @dusty3913
      @dusty3913 4 года назад +5

      @@danguee1 This doesn't say much. The first half describes virtuosity as "highly accomplished musicianship", while the later connotation describes it as "pronounced technical accomplishments". Slightly different words which say the same thing. But, you're equating "speed" which was the characteristic being discussed, with "showiness". They aren't synonyms. Technical accomplishment, either way, is the hallmark of virtuosity and musicianship. One who flaunts this technical ability is being showy, I guess. But, the crux of the distinction is in the musically literate mind who can spot the difference between a guitarist who may be able to play repetitive, albeit blisteringly fast runs (the one-trick pony) and the virtuoso, who does it in musically coherent and compositionally meaningful ways. Or, Uncle Ben's stepdad vs Steve Vai.

    • @ElihuNavon
      @ElihuNavon 4 года назад +13

      I like to think that playing an instrument is like speaking a language, but instead of syllables you have notes and instead of conveying ideas you convey emotions. According to this perception, a virtuoso should be capable of expressing feelings and emotions flawlessly and immediately. Regardless of speed or difficulty.
      Just like a good writer can convey an idea beautifully.

  • @sammoretti5625
    @sammoretti5625 Год назад +26

    The number one lesson I learned from my guitar teacher:
    “Don’t focus on speed. Speed comes in time. Tone is what you must practice.”

    • @nfields5
      @nfields5 4 месяца назад

      🙌🏾

  • @cypherusuh
    @cypherusuh 5 лет назад +2747

    remember kids, if you can play it slowly you can play it quickly

    • @capybara-k6g
      @capybara-k6g 5 лет назад +74

      Interesting

    • @432pro
      @432pro 5 лет назад +142

      *S A C R I L E G I O U S*

    • @beth9018
      @beth9018 5 лет назад +20

      cypherusuh twoset

    • @alextsavalos5692
      @alextsavalos5692 5 лет назад +17

      Soooo truue man ! being a classical guitarist for many years it applies to everything

    • @bjrnbjrnsson4012
      @bjrnbjrnsson4012 5 лет назад +23

      *I N T E R E S T I N G*

  •  5 лет назад +502

    In fact, from Bach, Beethoven, Liszt were renowned improvisers. And in general, musicians were expected to improvise, until the late 19th century. Liszt would seldom play his compositions. We even know (thanks to Czerny) how Beethoven would sound when improvising. And Bach would engage (as was customary then) in "improvisation battles".

    • @JohnSmith-oe5kx
      @JohnSmith-oe5kx 5 лет назад +54

      Yes, Mozart is another great example: many consider some of his piano concertos to be beautiful but a bit sparse, but Charles Rosen makes a very convincing case that it is because the concertos he wrote for himself had largely skeletal piano parts upon which he would improvise--a skill for which he was famous across Europe. Mendelssohn was also famed for his improvisational skill.

    • @jrgilbert
      @jrgilbert 5 лет назад +34

      YES YES YES!!! HERE HERE!! I commented on Bach too!! I was a music Major in college and a professor told us stories of Bach's legend of improvisation. He was so beast...so extraordinary that it wasn't long until his contemporaries would try to avoid parties because Bach would make them look so bad. Lol. Yes. I'm so glad you commented about this too!

    • @jubuttib
      @jubuttib 4 года назад +21

      The way I understood what Beato was saying was that the point wasn't Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, Liszt, etc. not being good at improvising, but looking at our current context the classical music virtuosos of today are mostly just playing the existing compositions at a high level of technical prowess etc., vs. modern jazz, rock etc. So the creative virtuosity is better showcased today in those genres, rather than classical music.

    • @allan2098
      @allan2098 4 года назад +4

      I wasn't there, but I have read that Liszt would consistently play many of his own compositions in concert, it would not make sense not to. He was at the cutting edge of the scene at his height of fame. Please consider that the word 'Improvisation' is quite different from creating variations, embellishments and ornamentations. The Baroque idea of improvising was generally held to be creating variations on a theme. True improvisation rarely occurs. Possibly in the jazz form if any. Maybe Bach could do it..? We will ever know!

    • @matthewv789
      @matthewv789 4 года назад +6

      Allan D I think the improvisation was quite significant, arguable more so than you really hear in jazz even. If you listen to a set of variations, the creativity is amazing. They are not merely embellishing or ornamenting by any means. Beethoven famously did this with the theme that became the eroica variations and finale of the 3rd symphony. He was so dismissive of some string quartet at a concert that he took the cello part, turned it upside down, and proceeded to improvise a complete set of variations at the piano on that upside down and backward part (that neither he not anyone else in the world had ever heard before). If you listen to the finale of that symphony you will see how varied it was. Or taking Bach, what he was improvising included six-part fugues, on a given theme (which is just a single voice found in the first couple of bars). Go listen to a Bach fugue, and imagine coming up with that live... composing them is normally a very laborious process for us mere mortals, in order to get the voice leading and harmonizations right while preserving the theme each time it appears.

  • @SamTheYorkist
    @SamTheYorkist 4 года назад +42

    I love how back in the day pianists felt safe knowing Paganini was a violinist but then Liszt came along and adapted Paganini’s work onto the keys - both incredible musicians

  • @chrismcdermott7766
    @chrismcdermott7766 Год назад +11

    As a part time instructor at the big guitar college in Boston, for 20 years I observed first hand the change in young players taking advantage of the endless resources on RUclips. When I was a kid we would spend hours dropping the needle down on the guitar solo to try and learn it. And if you wanted to see your hero play, you had to buy a ticket if you were lucky. Now if you want to learn jimi hendrix or anybody else, you can not only find all footage of his shows but countless tutorials on every note he ever recorded. So the technical ability of young players has shot through the roof in the past 20 years beyond anything ever seen before. Now kids are showing up with complete technical ability and knowledge of many styles. But I would get many students who could play an entire Dream theater album note perfect yet cannot play through a Blues without getting lost. This is because none of these kids are actually playing music together. Most of their musical experience is spent in front of a computer. Music improvisation is a social skill. But we would also get young players who literally have it all. The scariest technique, innate musicality, with much jamming and gig experience. I have been waiting to see when this huge shift in music will occur because of it. We are seeing some of it on RUclips but I hope it makes it's way into an actual live social culture soon.

    • @malamute8257
      @malamute8257 Год назад

      ive noticed this a lot from a different perspective. I'm a guitar instructor, but only 29 years old, teaching in three different stores as opposed to a school. I am hard on myself because I can't play sixteenth notes at 150 bpm, but 99% of the time, Ive come to realize the people who are technically better than me can not do what I can- If you put on any pop song, I can be improvising accompaniment over it within a few seconds. My brother is a berklee grad and his music has become largely inaccessible to his audience who just thinks he is playing random notes during a rock song. I'll take my monkey brain any day.

  • @michelleohlhoff5842
    @michelleohlhoff5842 5 лет назад +218

    While it is a priviledge to have exposure to such virtuosity, it is often overwhelming, debilitating, consuming. many kids/young professionals just feel totally unworthy. Exposure is good in small doses.
    What is best on youtube are these tutorials, that break down the grooves or riffs into bite-size chunks, which inspires players because it is a goal you can grasp and reach, even if at first just slowly.

    • @IGotSoupProductions
      @IGotSoupProductions 4 года назад +16

      It's only overwhelming if you think it matters. People like Beethoven, Charlie Parker, or George Gershwin became great virtuosos to express their musical ideas. Most virtuosos of today live almost exclusively in the technical realm and their ideas are crap. Even Guthrie Goven, whom I respect a lot for his stylistic versatility and musical philosophy, is a pretty mediocre songwriter.

    • @tommypwood672
      @tommypwood672 4 года назад +1

      Are you serious....oh wow no you didn't. You didn't go down snowflake ally...we don't want to offend ..good job johny

    • @stars-dz4fj
      @stars-dz4fj 4 года назад +8

      Tommy Pwood what

    • @gtr1487
      @gtr1487 4 года назад +5

      I was recently overwhelmed with learning ‘Jessica’ as well as the solo note for note. I have it nailed. but solo is tricky AF at some parts so I go slow...for now. 🤟🏻

    • @utooberblooper
      @utooberblooper 4 года назад +2

      what people need to be is HONEST WITH THEMSELVES AND THEIR CHILDREN.its always best if we "do not hand out first place ribbons to the looser of the race"
      this passes on a sense of "excellence is earned and its a long road to earn it" when a person goes out into the real world told they can be anything without the
      leg work,talent-less but always told he/she is "the greatest" it all falls apart like a house of cards in a hurricane.if you want to reach any pinnacle in anything ,
      it requires a very strict level of personal SACRIFICE,supreme dedication,work and time. in music,there is no instant gratification,no short cut,there's no magic
      quick path or way of faking being a virtuoso.if it was effortless and easy,everyone from the bag lady or methhead down the street to your garbageman would be another
      bach,eddie van halen,yngwie malmsteen,randy rhoads with little to no effort.

  • @zackcoffmanguitar
    @zackcoffmanguitar 6 лет назад +569

    You shouldn’t be playing faster than you can think. - Guthrie Govan

    • @Kingding6
      @Kingding6 6 лет назад +96

      Guthrie thinks at warp speed

    • @matthewws5694
      @matthewws5694 6 лет назад +9

      That's deep

    • @Roonagu
      @Roonagu 6 лет назад +78

      So..Doom metal for me then

    • @zeus259
      @zeus259 6 лет назад +43

      How is he prententious? He's one of the most humble and knowledgeable guitarists there are...

    • @zeus259
      @zeus259 6 лет назад +7

      ?

  • @TruthSurge
    @TruthSurge 5 лет назад +121

    Godz... finally, Shawn Lane gets some respect! Thanks for that, Rick. Lane was a beast.

    • @Swampster70
      @Swampster70 2 года назад +2

      But he shows a piece where it sounds like he's smacking the fingerboard with his weiner after dousing it in hot sauce and inhaling PCP. There was nothing musical or virtuosic about the clip shown as it sounded like Guitar Center around 1pm on a Saturday sped up 200%.

    • @kyleilling6092
      @kyleilling6092 2 года назад

      @@Swampster70 and you're ignorant

    • @teeple1877
      @teeple1877 Год назад

      Shawn is the most terrifying guitar player that ever lived imo… he deserves sooo much respect… RIP

  • @PCmaatje
    @PCmaatje 2 года назад +37

    Great to see Guthrie Govan being part of the guitar virtuoso!! He is sooo talented!! Although I actually missed Gavin Harrison in the drummer virtuoso line-up. You should definitely check him out!! He's drummer at prog rock band Porcupine Tree, as well as at King Crimson and The Pineapple Thief. I think he's from another planet when it comes to drumming!!

    • @raddudeski2745
      @raddudeski2745 Год назад +3

      Guthrie Govan’s work with Steven Wilson (also of Porcupine Tree) is bar none. Supposedly his guitar solo in the song Drive Home was done in one take(!!!). Absolutely one of the greatest guitarists out there, love seeing Rick give credit where deserved.

  • @ryanboshell6124
    @ryanboshell6124 4 года назад +10

    John McLaughlin is one of the best examples of a virtuoso I have ever seen. Leading a jazz band on an nylon strung acoustic in such a fashion was pure magic.

  • @jlopez97122
    @jlopez97122 6 лет назад +49

    Virtuosity I think is a talent that comes in so many styles, shapes, and forms. A lot of these virtuosos play crazy fast, display perfect technique, and great discipline. To me personally, this gets boring really fast. I prefer the type of virtuosity of those that know when, what, how and how much to play. Both take a huge amount of musicianship and they earn my respect! Great video, Rick!

    • @andywaynebrooks
      @andywaynebrooks 5 лет назад +5

      virtuoso doesn't mean artist. You might be the most skilled guitar player in the world like SRV but if your songs all sound like elevator mall music then it will be boring as hell. But get some kid from Aberdeen Washington who isn't the most skilled playing just 4 power chords and doing something totally original and non orthodox in 1991 you might turn the music Industry inside out and redefine rock music forever. That's real art.

    • @treff9226
      @treff9226 5 месяцев назад

      Yep! Like Johnny Ramone, Kurt Cobain, Jack White, The Edge.....all guitarists who certainly don't dazzle with speed or dexterity, they captivate with original styles and tones and personality. You can feel their soul and spirit when listening to their playing.​@@andywaynebrooks

  • @icecreamforcrowhurst
    @icecreamforcrowhurst 6 лет назад +286

    Your hair makes you a virtuoso. I thought everyone knew that

    • @eoin.
      @eoin. 5 лет назад +4

      example: evengy kissin :D

    • @TheBfutgreg
      @TheBfutgreg 5 лет назад +5

      What does that make Satch then?

    • @raulperez2308
      @raulperez2308 5 лет назад +6

      hair or lack of*

    • @victorprokop6868
      @victorprokop6868 5 лет назад

      Hair or weird fingers

    • @lll19977
      @lll19977 5 лет назад

      @@TheBfutgreg he started out with long hair actually. He has only lost his hair, not his skills. 😂

  • @zain_khedr
    @zain_khedr 5 лет назад +560

    I see Guthrie Govan i click

    • @Tsukamaki
      @Tsukamaki 4 года назад +13

      Yup, me as well.
      If I lived to be 300 I still couldn't play his 'alien' licks. Dudes in whole different dimension than most of us mere mortals.

    • @viktorvalky9772
      @viktorvalky9772 4 года назад +1

      same :D

    • @4carnage4
      @4carnage4 4 года назад

      Same

    • @JohnWilliams-zu8wg
      @JohnWilliams-zu8wg 4 года назад +3

      I see Allan Holdsworth, i click.

    • @valebliz
      @valebliz 3 года назад +3

      @@RogueReplicant so edgy, so superficial and stupid.

  • @FusionHowie
    @FusionHowie 2 года назад +15

    How about the musicology professor/producer, best teacher I ever had in my almost 60 years of existence? Rick Beato is the music information virtuoso! This channel is THE only positive that came out of the pandemic for me. I am so grateful for this channel! Rick Beato has filled in all the blanks of missing information about the music we all care about. Peace from Detroit MI.

  • @alexd2227
    @alexd2227 6 лет назад +12

    Thank you for including Guthrie Govan in this. The man is certainly one of the greatest working guitarists, as well as a phenomenal teacher. Hopefully his star continues to rise. A guy like that deserves the world.

    • @PCmaatje
      @PCmaatje 2 года назад

      Amen to that!! Prog on! 🤘

  • @adorethered
    @adorethered 4 года назад +29

    Rick: Look at all these amazing musicians you can learn from for free. (doesn't mention himself) dude I've learned SO much from your channel and you're a perfect example of this! Love your content!

  • @jasonstewart2590
    @jasonstewart2590 4 года назад +11

    I remember reading an interview about Billy Joel and he said most of his hits came from waking up in the morning with these music tones in his head, the second he woke up. He instantly ran over to his piano and tried it out and it worked for him.

  • @KamiKaZeJeremy
    @KamiKaZeJeremy 5 лет назад +146

    let me do justice for us bass players, mentioning Jaco Pastorious or Stanley Clarke or Ron Carter, bass players too have amazing techniques

    • @gpang788
      @gpang788 5 лет назад +5

      OMG only 2 likes.

    • @brandonproctor3639
      @brandonproctor3639 5 лет назад +2

      Alot of bass techniques are being used now in this new era of metal on 7, 8, and 9 string guitars.

    • @lucasmedeiros5383
      @lucasmedeiros5383 4 года назад +2

      isn't Flea a bass genius as well? I mean, I don't understand too much 'bout bass, so forgive me if I'm saying bullshit

    • @johannes5881
      @johannes5881 4 года назад

      Lucas Medeiros He absolutely is.

    • @sashingopaul3111
      @sashingopaul3111 4 года назад +1

      fear not bassists, there is a separate video for the beloved bass

  • @Dsullivann
    @Dsullivann 6 лет назад +219

    Virtuoso = being really really really really really good.

    • @acespades8747
      @acespades8747 5 лет назад +3

      Wrong. Absolutelly wrong. To begin with "good" is a subjective word relative to a subject action or denomination and other person perpective. You will never be one as the fact not to have any idea of the exactly word def. Dude go and play videogames. Tht´s a thing you can comprehend, at least barely.

    • @wbiro
      @wbiro 5 лет назад +6

      @@acespades8747 I agree with Dave - he did not say being a virtuoso on an instrument was being an artist...

    • @NavyGatorMyEye
      @NavyGatorMyEye 5 лет назад

      See you are pretty really really really really really good yourself there! Nice drums man.

    • @spekkio77
      @spekkio77 5 лет назад +9

      @@acespades8747 no, I agree it is just being really good, as opposed to being a good song-writer. weather a tune is "good" is what is subjective. if you are well-versed on an instrument, you are good at playing it, and that isn't a matter of opinion. You can't say it's your opinion that Guthrie Govan or Malmsteen is not technically a good guitar player. And dude, stop trying to sound smart, because you're spelling is riddled with errors.

    • @lordofstringss
      @lordofstringss 5 лет назад +4

      Virtuoso = being really really really really really poor social skills?

  • @CamiloVelandia
    @CamiloVelandia 6 лет назад +2372

    Dude. Porn is not allowed on youtube. They're gonna take this down!

    • @Fadhilonn
      @Fadhilonn 6 лет назад +20

      😂😂😂

    • @RickBeato
      @RickBeato  6 лет назад +109

      Camilo Velandia My man! I should have put some of your crazy licks in Camilo!

    • @keithmore4784
      @keithmore4784 6 лет назад +7

      LOL!!!

    • @Troycus
      @Troycus 6 лет назад +9

      I'm still laughing.

    • @scottopiela7283
      @scottopiela7283 6 лет назад +4

      LOL

  • @Tyresome
    @Tyresome 5 лет назад +17

    I've played in bands for years. This channel or at least this video is the best showcase of what different musicians can offer. You've picked the perfect examples. Thank you so much!

  • @IverJ
    @IverJ 4 года назад +3

    Yngwie was the guy that started it for me. I had started playing guitar in 1978 at age 7, but only noodled around with it. I liked the sound of guitar on the old western movies where the cowboy would strum a few chords sitting around the campfire. Then, in the early 80s I heard Yngwie. That changed everything. Before long I was practicing 5-10 hours a day, sometime longer. I was a full time guitar player until I was 30 when I joined the Navy after 9/11. Now I only play in church, but still love to tear it up!

  • @kanis999
    @kanis999 6 лет назад +199

    I remember slowing down some improvised Guthrie Govan solos only to find that the intervals and patterns he was playing were incredibly complex. He's not just going up and down scale and chord shapes, he's making unique musical phrases at the speed of light, and I love that.

    • @larrylindgren9484
      @larrylindgren9484 5 лет назад +3

      But if you can't heard the difference at warp speed then so what. He's for the most part just playing fast to show off he can. Boring.

    • @nostalgiajunkie
      @nostalgiajunkie 5 лет назад +47

      Larry Lindgren you don’t know what you’re talking about and obviously haven’t listened to Govans music with an unbiased perspective. He’s almost never “showing off” he’s just at a different level of playing. Just cuz it’s hard for you to wrap your mind around, doesn’t mean it’s mindless.

    • @larrylindgren9484
      @larrylindgren9484 5 лет назад +3

      @@nostalgiajunkie Remember the old saying. Just because you can doesn't make it right. And yes he is showing off. If he wasn't then why play it as a speed it wasn't written for? Because you are saying, "Look at me!" It's a yawn fest. If you have to slow it down to hear how so called hard it is then I'd say you might be playing it to fast:P But I guess in todays world it's all about ,"Look at me!" Not matter what people are doing they all want to be looked at. It's sad really.

    • @debaser1042
      @debaser1042 5 лет назад +35

      @@larrylindgren9484 You heard it here first folks. Real music slow. Bad music fast.
      Larry, search the difference between opinion and fact. Just because slower music to you comes across as more authentic doesn't mean every person who likes to play faster than your preference are unmusical show-off frauds.
      Is it so inconceivable that, in the same way you prefer slower music, someone somewhere may POSSIBLY see depth and value to something faster? You don't have to like all music. You can even say you think Guthrie's music sucks. But you can't invalidate the fact that it is valuable, complex music, with incredible musicianship.
      I don't like Polyphia at all. But I still think they're crazy good players and they're actively successful in the music they seek out to create. And if I only listened to Guthrie Govan's music because he's showing off, why wouldn't I also like Polyphia? They play fast, why shouldn't I like it then since I obviously only like one-dimensional music that's technically impressive and I see no value in real musicality.
      Maybe that's because I actually like the music and there's a legitimate nuance between people who just "play fast to show off." The whole argument is flawed and is based off a misconception that no one honestly enjoys fast music outside of the fact that it's fast.

    • @semanticsamuel936
      @semanticsamuel936 5 лет назад +14

      @@larrylindgren9484 Guthrie Govan definitely isn't doing that though. He can (and does) play fast, but you absolutely can hear the notes he's playing. His signature piece - Wonderful Slippery Thing - really demonstrates this. It's got a catchy hook, some seriously funky chords throughout. It's upbeat, but not your typical warp-speed shred piece (and at times it's slow and chill). The solo is just cool. And yeah, you can hear that there's something about it that's different. Those runs are not simple up-and-down-the-scale fast. He's using all kinds of bizarre modes, which he mixes up, and he's a real music theory savant (watch some of his tutorials) and knows his stuff back to front.
      Most guitar players can learn to shred and sweep through arpeggios. I can. It's the sort of thing that makes people who don't know much about the instrument think you're a whole lot better than you actually are. It really just takes a period of focused practice to build muscle memory. Govan isn't doing that - just do what Mike suggested in his post - slow it down and look at the structure.

  • @rdpatterson2682
    @rdpatterson2682 6 лет назад +107

    If the images are any indication, hair is a predominant factor.

  • @falixmcfackey
    @falixmcfackey 2 года назад +4

    Perlman in his first appearance Ed Sullivan is what made my dad decide to play the violin at 6 years old. He went on to be the concert master of the RI philharmonic. Always blows my mind to think of a kid that young choosing their lifelong profession.

  • @akbrooks70
    @akbrooks70 5 лет назад +197

    Tosin Abasi is one of those guys. He’s doing some really innovative stuff.

    • @fretbuzz59
      @fretbuzz59 4 года назад +13

      From what I've seen, his stuff is complex & difficult, and has about as much to do with music as juggling knives and fruit has to do with cooking.

    • @luvpants2012
      @luvpants2012 4 года назад +9

      Yeah the real geniuses always stand out. There's virtuoso's and then there's geniuses. There's a slight difference. Yngwie is a virtuoso, Steve Vai is a genius.

    • @fretbuzz59
      @fretbuzz59 4 года назад +10

      @@luvpants2012 I was with ya initially, about virtuosos vs geniuses--one doesn't need to be a virtuoso to be a genius--then you went and called Vai a genius. Oof.

    • @luvpants2012
      @luvpants2012 4 года назад +7

      fretbuzz59 Not to offend, but based on that input you're not a person I want to have this discussion with

    • @fretbuzz59
      @fretbuzz59 4 года назад +1

      @@luvpants2012 Don't worry, the feeling is mutual.

  • @SeanAsheOfficial
    @SeanAsheOfficial 6 лет назад +23

    Warmed my heart to see Shawn Lane.

  • @KeleFinesse
    @KeleFinesse 6 лет назад +119

    Probably my favourite RUclips channel right now. So informative!

  • @brendonsawyer
    @brendonsawyer 3 года назад +16

    John Mayer will always get my vote for virtuosity. He’s one of the best at phrasing and musical innovation. I’ve seen so many musically-inclined/knowledgeable people watch his live “Neon” performance and they all just have this immediate reaction/look of “what the f.....” and then about 3/4 the way through the performance, they have a look of “how the f......”
    Plus, it’s no secret he’s one of the best when it comes to guitar players.

    • @Yngsatchvai
      @Yngsatchvai 2 года назад

      He is frustrating to try though.
      He even reaches over with his thumb.
      Man is next level for sure

    • @SealedKiller
      @SealedKiller 2 года назад

      @@Yngsatchvai Reaching with over with your thumb has been done since the 60s and probably earlier. But yeah Mayer is good.

    • @heavnnnsent
      @heavnnnsent Год назад

      John Mayer songs that raise some boring to me maybe because I haven't heard all of them yet. And apparently, he has morals of an alley cat 😆😆😆

  • @frankbaird8645
    @frankbaird8645 3 года назад +5

    So glad you mentioned Guthrie. He really belongs here. His solo on Steven Wilson's Drive Home is IMO the most expressive, beautiful, heartbreaking playing I ever heard. It's not fast but I challenge anyone to play with more feeling.

  • @Tomurow
    @Tomurow 6 лет назад +25

    I once heard virtuosity described as ‘completely transcending the instrument’, like Allan Holdsworth did.

  • @jfo3000
    @jfo3000 5 лет назад +4

    Transcribe a Holdsworth solo, spend months learning to play it, analyse and understand it; this increased my skill level and musicality immensely. Then realize that Allan improvised that solo and never played it that way again! That is a true modern guitar virtuoso...The Big Boss...could think that fast on his feet and actually play it with the utmost proficiency and beauty.

  • @MegaRockstar5150
    @MegaRockstar5150 5 лет назад +24

    I agree with you 10,000 % , I believe that virtuosity comes from the heart not from 100 arpeggios . Thanks buddy .

  • @dhakshan
    @dhakshan 2 года назад +3

    You can't speak of musical virtuosity without talking about Paganini. Even Rick could not escape from that. Thank you Mr.Beato

  • @TheSpeenort
    @TheSpeenort 6 лет назад +31

    In a 1975 interview of Andres Segovia in "Guitar Player" magazine, he first states, "I'm still learning." Later in the article they asked him why he played a particular Bach piece so fast. He answered, "Because I can."

    • @briankeegan8089
      @briankeegan8089 6 лет назад +10

      I don't think you understand that quote. Great players _can_ think that fast . . . which they prove by remaining expressive even at high speed. If you're tapped out on your top speed and have no brain left, you're jacking off.
      I bet Segovia would know exactly what he's talking about, and agree.

    • @briankeegan8089
      @briankeegan8089 6 лет назад +2

      Oh, ok. Not incorrect. Not bad advice. Snobby.

    • @briankeegan8089
      @briankeegan8089 6 лет назад +7

      I have no idea who this Govan guy even is. But I think his quote is great advice. Nothing you offer seems to explain why you don't think so.
      BTW, what is a "cold heart" fact? I am unfamiliar with this term. I don't see that you've actually countered with any facts or insight at all, instead offering nothing but a few bits of silly name calling.

    • @wufflon2131
      @wufflon2131 6 лет назад +3

      "He was humble, genuine and insanely talented. "
      Same goes for Govan imho.

    • @briankeegan8089
      @briankeegan8089 6 лет назад +4

      Troll level: rookie.

  • @gcaligula6653
    @gcaligula6653 6 лет назад +14

    I agree with you, it's not how fast you play, it's what you play.

    • @ronsansone6032
      @ronsansone6032 6 лет назад +3

      G Caligula , TOTALLY disagreed.
      It's all ABOUT speed.
      That's why after I record I digitally speed up the final mix to about 666 bpm because I'm sure Satan👹 enjoys that speed.. 😨
      I'm pretty sure robots will enjoy my work someday too. 😉🤣🖖

    • @matthewv789
      @matthewv789 4 года назад

      G Caligula and HOW you play the notes you are playing. There is a huge world of difference between different interpretations of classical pieces, even when all the notes are the same (and played both correctly and beautifully).

  • @MrMaynardWR
    @MrMaynardWR 2 года назад +4

    Jeff Beck is a great example of a virtuoso who doesn't play all that fast. His technique is so proprietary

  • @rockclimber2050
    @rockclimber2050 3 года назад +1

    I love the quote, “or at least you’re trying to improvise”. He then smiles and smirks at the camera.

  • @michaelkozma5929
    @michaelkozma5929 6 лет назад +59

    These pianists are insane!!!!!!!!!!! Geeeeeeeeeeeze, i'm always fascinated by Pianists. thank you for posting them Rick.
    Allen Holdsworth was on another Dimension of Jazz fusion scale work on his guitar for his time.
    So sad to hear the way he died.

    • @lucashenry7293
      @lucashenry7293 5 лет назад +10

      @Chris Manzi before? Holdsworth was shredding in the early 70's. Check his Soft Machine material. Outstanding.

    • @snuppssynthchannel
      @snuppssynthchannel 5 лет назад +2

      @Chris Manzi Holdsworth was a far greater electric guitarplayer then Al was even in 71.

    • @aaronlebos
      @aaronlebos 5 лет назад +1

      @Chris Manzi Al doesn't even come close to Holdsworth please...

    • @Sp0nge5
      @Sp0nge5 5 лет назад +1

      That paganini caprice was no doubt the craziest thing in the whole video.

    • @matthewv789
      @matthewv789 4 года назад

      The Astronaut Look up Nahre Sol Etude Fantasy. Fun to watch her hands. :)

  • @danielsherrer8223
    @danielsherrer8223 5 лет назад +28

    Hey it's the anthony bordain of music.

  • @SpartanLaserCanon
    @SpartanLaserCanon 5 лет назад +1

    I'm glad there is so much music out there for me to listen. I don't really like Pop or Country, but most other genres I like.

  • @franktaylor3740
    @franktaylor3740 11 месяцев назад +1

    Glad to see Shawn Lane included in the mix. Pure virtuosity!

  • @luisxgonzalez
    @luisxgonzalez 6 лет назад +6

    Holdsworth, my favorite guitarist to grace this earth. RIP

  • @mafuaqua
    @mafuaqua 6 лет назад +8

    Classical musicians in fact did improvise. In 1829 Carl Czerny wrote "Introduction to Improvising" ("Anleitung zum Fantasieren auf dem Pianoforte"), where he states, that knowing to improvise is a special duty and adornment for every clavier-virtuoso.
    Unfortunately most of modern classical virtuosi have forgotten this duty an hence this art is lost.

  • @resumacast
    @resumacast 4 года назад +6

    Man what you are doing in this channel is the best musical education I’ve had in my life. Great work. Thank you very much.

  • @MrYatesj1
    @MrYatesj1 5 лет назад +4

    So true, the older I get (52 now) the more I love sweetness vs speed. Always love your postings Rick. Cheers!!

  • @boblob2003
    @boblob2003 6 лет назад +3

    It’s a great time to be learning your craft if you’re starting out. The ability to view talent yesterday and today fuels today’s “virtuosic arms race”. I’ve seen some insanely good unknowns on RUclips. We all just need to remember it’s about the music, not just the notes.

  • @ceili
    @ceili 6 лет назад +175

    I loved that you mentioned Rick Graham!

    • @RickBeato
      @RickBeato  6 лет назад +22

      He seems like a great guy who is incredibly generous with his knowledge. Love that!

    • @ceili
      @ceili 6 лет назад +1

      What like numbness? Maybe you should see a doctor.

    • @aymericmarchand3472
      @aymericmarchand3472 6 лет назад

      That is precisely why I've been following both of your channels!

    • @RickBeato
      @RickBeato  6 лет назад +8

      N1974 Tom is amazing and is going to be on an upcoming episode.

    • @jps9508
      @jps9508 6 лет назад +2

      Rick Beato Great ! Martin Miller is another great musican. The list seems to be endless...

  • @andywomack3414
    @andywomack3414 3 года назад

    I don't understand a tenth of what Rick is talking about but I think I understand the spirit.
    I love the music of Bach, Mozart, Beethoven ... Rachmaninoff etc.
    In 1967 (more or less) a group of friends and I took a transit bus to the Lyric Theater in Baltimore to see "The Doors." They were not quite famous despite having their first two albums already published. We purchased the cheap seats in the balcony, and after the second song we noticed empty seats in the fifth row. So the eight of us moved on down to claim those seats. No problem, the theater wasn't even filled.
    What a show. They played every song on their two albums, the best live show I've ever seen.
    What was weird was the silence of the crowd leaving the theater afterward. Everyone's mind had been blown by the performance.
    I hope somewhere in the archive of Rick Beato presentations there is one about "The Doors."
    Connection to Rachmaninoff: The Lyric in Baltimore was the site of the premier of his "Rhapsody on a theme of Paganini."

  • @kevinsbott
    @kevinsbott 4 года назад +3

    This is perhaps the best piece of musical journalism I have ever seen in my life. Thanks so much Rick!

  • @steveseim
    @steveseim 6 лет назад +38

    Your point about George Benson is probably the most important point of the whole video. There's definitely a difference between virtuosity and artistry.

  • @jaimeandresmenesespico7572
    @jaimeandresmenesespico7572 5 лет назад +1774

    Ling Ling practices 40 hours each day

  • @christullmann7666
    @christullmann7666 4 года назад +6

    Randy Rhoads, genius/ Virtuoso is my favorite ..R I P !!!

  • @markh1708
    @markh1708 4 года назад +1

    A virtuoso, as far as I'm concerned, is someone who makes music enjoyable, regardless of instrument. Rick is spot on, I'm delighted I've found his channel!

  • @gykin9064
    @gykin9064 6 лет назад +97

    Rick beato and Adam neely are my favourite RUclipsrs

    • @Beardwhip
      @Beardwhip 6 лет назад +1

      theyre def 2 of the best music education 'tubers out there! I found Rick through Adam Neely

    • @AdamNeely
      @AdamNeely 6 лет назад +17

      Rick is one of my favorite too!

    • @tonyedwards4067
      @tonyedwards4067 6 лет назад

      check out Jens Larsen..

    • @higorguedes4413
      @higorguedes4413 6 лет назад +2

      He responded you

  • @NahreSol
    @NahreSol 6 лет назад +43

    Love your insights!!! Great video 🙌

  • @charlesbrown6171
    @charlesbrown6171 5 лет назад

    These are absolutely fabulous, Rick. Thanks so much for the very wide diversity of music you present.

  • @quailstudios
    @quailstudios 4 года назад +2

    It’s great to see Glen Gould in this video playing the Goldberg Variations. Thanks Rick.

  • @Cl4rendon
    @Cl4rendon 6 лет назад +7

    I LOVE that example with George Benson!!!

  • @ToastedCigar
    @ToastedCigar 6 лет назад +33

    Great video, as always, Rick! :) Kinda off-topic, but since you mentioned Rick Graham, I gotta say that he is one of my favourite contemporary guitarists. His legatos are exceptional. You should do an interview with him!

  • @JohnSmith-oe5kx
    @JohnSmith-oe5kx 5 лет назад +2

    Peterson on the Dick Cavett show is a fantastic clip. And although many felt that Peterson simply played too many notes, they were very seldom banal. The speed at which he could improvise (and execute) was astonishing. Keep up the great work, Rick

  • @PaulMcCaffreyfmac
    @PaulMcCaffreyfmac 4 года назад +2

    Alfred Brendel is the greatest pianist I have ever seen in concert. He moved me AND blew my mind

  • @PrinceDavid.
    @PrinceDavid. 6 лет назад +55

    I'm pretty sure that Shawn Lane wasn't from this world, he was just another whole new level.

    • @satchboogie2058
      @satchboogie2058 6 лет назад +5

      Most underrated guitar player imho

    • @snuppssynthchannel
      @snuppssynthchannel 6 лет назад +2

      Allan was greater in my opinion.

    • @shininggallade
      @shininggallade 6 лет назад +9

      I would say Allan was definitely greater in terms of inventiveness and musicality, but no one rivals Shawn in terms of speed & technique. Not even today.

    • @dannethcharles3904
      @dannethcharles3904 6 лет назад +4

      Alex Mann with all due respect, I've watched Lane for a long time, and I genuinely believe that Govan has more technical ability, if nothing else

    • @johannlop1076
      @johannlop1076 5 лет назад +1

      Datanditto technicality isn’t more important than musicality, so, TO ME, Guthrie is better.

  • @oisinmcphillips2090
    @oisinmcphillips2090 6 лет назад +262

    we gotta get rick graham on for a sounding off at some point

  • @MrDmadness
    @MrDmadness 5 лет назад

    Thank you for every thing you do Rick Beato, Love the channel. solid quality content with no fluff... excellent

  • @1LaOriental
    @1LaOriental 5 лет назад +1

    Love your channel! So great to see someone bringing together classical and more modern music together, as it should be! Subscribed!

  • @Star_Sn1per
    @Star_Sn1per 6 лет назад +31

    Thanks for not forgetting SHAWN LANE

    • @seansabol1714
      @seansabol1714 5 лет назад +1

      Yeah, but he forgot Jason Becker

    • @mikhailoldskool8955
      @mikhailoldskool8955 5 лет назад

      dont forget marty friedman also played with jason becker in Cacophony albums and those scales runs arpeggios is really something inspiring the best up till today even fast but melodious and complex i salute this 2 guitarists ,cheers

  • @acandycoloredclown7005
    @acandycoloredclown7005 5 лет назад +78

    You never talk about Robert Fripp

    • @oZiinCx
      @oZiinCx 5 лет назад +19

      Fripp is on the next level

    • @erenanidem3479
      @erenanidem3479 5 лет назад +19

      robert doesn't want to be mentioned

    • @AlbaSaab
      @AlbaSaab 5 лет назад +3

      The Aquayeet King He’s an alien.

    • @janparadowski4894
      @janparadowski4894 4 года назад +6

      He should, Fripp is close to being a modern equivalent of the finest classical composers

    • @moro3ify
      @moro3ify 4 года назад +4

      Every time Fripp is being mentioned a normie dies. So please be careful.

  • @duaneblake7986
    @duaneblake7986 4 года назад +1

    Thank you Rick! "It's not how fast you play..." total agreement!

  • @hmadbak9004
    @hmadbak9004 3 года назад +2

    Thank you so much for all the education. You make theory accessible to those who bypassed theory and learned by ear, only to regret it as they hit that plateau in their music development - like me.

  • @AlecNicholson
    @AlecNicholson 5 лет назад +5

    nice to see Glenn Gould represented in there. my favourite pianist of the 20th century playing a snippet there by the the greatest musical virtuoso who ever lived, or probably ever will :)

  • @mpactdesignmedia
    @mpactdesignmedia 5 лет назад +48

    Along with your 'George Benson' point, David Gilmour is also an absolute virtuoso. Because he's the fastest guitarist on the planet? No! It's because of his amazing phrasing and sense of what is needed where for the song.

    • @Yakanhikoerotikkushiti
      @Yakanhikoerotikkushiti 5 лет назад

      I honestly heard faster underated guitarists that tap non stop like it's pudding tbh

    • @User-lu3gv
      @User-lu3gv 5 лет назад

      I partly agree, I find it very hard to see him as a virtuoso. But no other guitarists solos have made me cry. :/ pussy ik xD

  • @mikemedina9902
    @mikemedina9902 3 года назад

    Rick I love your channel. There is no Google search that compares your knowlendge of music. Thanks for sharing. Blessings

  • @JacobA666
    @JacobA666 5 лет назад +2

    I like that you mentioned that it's not about how fast you play it's about what you play!

  • @hughJ
    @hughJ 2 года назад +5

    It stands to reason that the great classical composers, in their day, would have been more likely to be known for their virtuosity as players than for their sheet music composition, as live performances were all you had for listening to music.
    It's interesting how music from before the days of audio recording now exists almost like a fossil, such that you can never be fully confident in what exactly it sounded like or how different live performances may have interpreted it. And even if you could hear one performance, there was nothing akin to a studio recording to establish a canonical version. It's really hard to imagine how I would be able to appreciate a Hendrix or EVH without the aid of recordings -- I would only be able to hear them by virtue of attending someone else's live cover of it, who themselves probably also never heard the original artist play.

    • @MTNcorps
      @MTNcorps 2 года назад +1

      Exactly, how many notes, techniques, etc, got lost in transposition. Dynamics and feeling are also vague on the sheet. I bet the performances were incredible!

  • @sixfingr
    @sixfingr 4 года назад +5

    Would love to have heard Holdsworth slowed down to show how it's even more impressive slow. Having been a listener to many of these greats for years, I understand, but for the uninitiated, you make such a good point and an illustration would have been fantastic.

  • @1tgiuntac395
    @1tgiuntac395 2 года назад +2

    Finally Shawn Lane gets some props. He was so much more than just a shredder!

    • @teeple1877
      @teeple1877 Год назад +1

      No one will ever play like that again.. he was indeed one of a kind.. Probly the greatest technical chops ever along with a brilliant musical mind.

  • @alexbostelle287
    @alexbostelle287 2 года назад

    The runs are sweet but your voicings are the measure of your savory musical gift

  • @michaelbeerbados3291
    @michaelbeerbados3291 5 лет назад +5

    This is why YES is likely the greatest ensemble in their prime..5 virtuoso's and fantastic song writers.. Immaculate, untouchable impregnable..and timeless YES was the greatest band in history

    • @babarishka
      @babarishka 5 лет назад +1

      I concur!!!!!!

    • @beyondthelol
      @beyondthelol 5 лет назад +1

      lmao how are YES virtuosos

    • @babarishka
      @babarishka 5 лет назад +1

      @@beyondthelolMillions of musicians would agree that Yes, at least in their heyday, were indeed virtuosos. Do you even play an instrument?

    • @ignacioclerici5341
      @ignacioclerici5341 2 года назад

      @@beyondthelol perhaps listen to Sound Chaser, Gates of delirium, and see for yourself

    • @jamesspalten5977
      @jamesspalten5977 Год назад

      Yes were virtuosos!! Another band, Rush were virtuosos as well!!

  • @salmanezar7584
    @salmanezar7584 5 лет назад +3

    3:18 OMG GOULD 😭😭 I cried ❤️

  • @andrewashdown3541
    @andrewashdown3541 Год назад +1

    To have heard Bach improvise would be the ultimate time-travel experience for me

  • @edwardestep970
    @edwardestep970 5 лет назад +1

    Yuja Wang! Thank you for putting her here. I think she one of the greats for yrs to come

  • @TruthSurge
    @TruthSurge 5 лет назад +25

    A lifetime of learning and practice and willpower! Plus, freaky genetics doesn't hurt. Someone who spent MOST of their time doing one thing instead of thousands of worthless things like texting on a smartphone.

    • @prismavidamusic7226
      @prismavidamusic7226 3 года назад +1

      So you're saying if I only text on a smartphone, I'll be a genius? (PS. I actually don't own a smartphone or even a stupid phone. Just a saxophone).

    • @ryan_alexander
      @ryan_alexander 3 года назад +9

      He had us in the first half not gonna lie.
      God boomers really think like this huh

    • @Diesel257
      @Diesel257 3 года назад +4

      ... or posting RUclips comments. Smh. Boomer logic at its finest.

    • @gabrielguerrero7296
      @gabrielguerrero7296 3 года назад +1

      Your boomer is showing

    • @tomjeff1743
      @tomjeff1743 3 года назад

      Haha - or leaving a comment.

  • @L.A.W.Studios
    @L.A.W.Studios 6 лет назад +31

    Halle-friggin-lujah on your latterr point. I'll take a Gilmour or a Keef etc.. over a Malmsteen any day..
    Not knocking the fast guys, I just enjoy feel, groove, style and inventiveness over speed..Why?
    For the same reason I prefer not to hear someone speaking to me a million miles an hour.
    Much more compelling to hear rise and fall, flow mixed with pauses, purposefulness and emphasis etc... Great Video!

    • @tonybates7870
      @tonybates7870 6 лет назад +2

      David Lake
      The guy is not necessarily retarded because he feels this way.

    • @anthonydavella8350
      @anthonydavella8350 5 лет назад

      FWIW, thats what made Gary Moore my personal fave. The speed he used was part of the emotion in his blues soloing.

    • @truthurts1692
      @truthurts1692 5 лет назад

      So, david- it seems everyone who disagrees with you is retarded? Are you 13, or what?

  • @franckgauthier1978
    @franckgauthier1978 3 года назад

    passion, total dedication, unwavering willpower... it's not much but it's all you need

  • @davedennis6042
    @davedennis6042 4 года назад

    I have learned so much from you. You make me think. And THAT's why I love these videos.

  • @jabulaniharvey
    @jabulaniharvey 5 лет назад +4

    You are so right! Being a virtuoso player does not equal being gifted as a virtuoso composer.....neither can they become like, say, Art Tatum an inventive composer AND virtuosic player

    • @JohnSmith-oe5kx
      @JohnSmith-oe5kx 5 лет назад +1

      Except that Tatum is a poor example because he was not much of a composer.

  • @gulfcoastbeemer
    @gulfcoastbeemer 6 лет назад +443

    Emperor Joseph II: Too many notes.
    MOZART: I don't understand. There are just as many notes, Majesty, as are required. Neither more nor less.
    EMPEROR: My dear fellow, there are in fact only so many notes the ear can hear in the course of an evening. I think I'm right in saying that, aren't I, Court Composer?
    SALIERI: Yes! yes! er, on the whole, yes, Majesty.
    MOZART: But this is absurd!
    EMPEROR: My dear, young man, don't take it too hard. Your work is ingenious. It's quality work. And there are simply too many notes, that's all. Cut a few and it will be perfect.
    MOZART: Which few did you have in mind, Majesty?

    • @mrsteve8341
      @mrsteve8341 6 лет назад +61

      I freaking love Amadeus

    • @theHumanBryno
      @theHumanBryno 6 лет назад +37

      Off topic, but the channel "History Buffs" does an interesting rundown about what's true and untrue about Amadeus.

    • @skok58
      @skok58 6 лет назад +15

      "Well. . . there it is. . ."

    • @luigipati3815
      @luigipati3815 6 лет назад +13

      there's a lot more to Mozart than the movie you saw, you people would do better to take real lectures on music history. The crap you see in a movie is not history, it's the fancy of a film maker making a movie for the masses and the average crowd. Serious musicians take music history classes about Mozart and others; they don't watch movies. The movie you saw should never be confused with Mozart's true history. The stuff about Salieri poisoning him is but a legend. Salieri taught several of the best musicians ever, such as Beethoven, Schubert, Liszt, Moscheles, Hummel, Meyerbeer. In fact he even taught Mozart's SON. Would he have KILLED someone like Mozart? It's like saying that a scientist would have killed Einstein, out of 'envy'. Much nonsense has always been created about famous people. Mozart was buried in an unmarked grave because he left many debts. There's a ton of stuff more about Mozart than the entertainment act you saw about him. Most of it, is a fantasy novel. Is Elvis dead? and all that

    • @luigipati3815
      @luigipati3815 6 лет назад +1

      there's another highly intelligent person on youtube. Immanuel Kant would be proud of you, ha ha.

  • @gregcampwriter
    @gregcampwriter 5 лет назад

    One of the reasons that I subscribe to this channel is that Beato talks about the genre of good music, regardless of how the music store classifies the pieces.

  • @williama.walker2287
    @williama.walker2287 3 года назад

    I am reminded of a story about classical piano great Alfred Brendel. He was teaching a masterclass once, and a young pianist played a difficult fast piece for him. Brendel's response was "I wish that I had technique like that". There was an unspoken "but" in there. The younger performer may have had impressive technique, but there was no heart in the playing, and music without heart too often becomes noise.

  • @jonathanking8800
    @jonathanking8800 4 года назад +3

    I would like to see what Rick has to say about Fingerstyle guitarists. Their virtuosity is different than all displayed here. The fact that they play different basslines and high parts congruently with their own beat portion is amazing and transcends what can be tabulated or written on sheet paper.

    • @anomymouse5043
      @anomymouse5043 Год назад

      Indeed: Luca Stricagnoli, Tuck Andress, Michael Hedges, Lucas Brah...

  • @mickvenice
    @mickvenice 5 лет назад +3

    Al Di Meola was one of the great virtuoso of all times and his music was very interesting and complex. I think we can't say the say the same thing about heavy metal shredder that began to play very fast decades after him.

    • @thejoker-go3fh
      @thejoker-go3fh 2 года назад

      Yeah he was shredding in return to forever and it was melodic. Idk why people dont know him that much. He was a great player

  • @Rog5446
    @Rog5446 5 лет назад +2

    Nice to know that Rick agrees with me.
    It's not how you play, it's what you play.

  • @BluesBoySid
    @BluesBoySid 5 лет назад

    For me a Virtuoso in music is a person, who can play fluently in every genre, knowing and using every technique which is possible to achieve on instrument. And of course all what They play is readable - You can hear every single note. Thank You for this video.