Scriabin Sonata No. 3, Op. 23, "STATES of the SOUL" - Guide
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- Опубликовано: 4 июл 2024
- Scriabin's epic sonata no. 3 is one of only two with a more classical approach of four movements, before he ventured further into more integrated forms. However, you can already here savour everything that makes Scriabin great - soaring melodies, expansive textures over the whole piano, tightly knit counterpoint with individual voices and ever-unfolding chromaticism to name a few important ones.
Pianist Henrik Kilhamn guides you through the composition with its four movements, with presentations interlaced with musical excerpts, the score and some analytical insights.
0:00 About
1:24 Context of Composition
2:16 I. Drammatico
9:50 II. Allegretto
12:32 III. Andante
18:09 IV. Presto con fuoco
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🎵 Music: Alexander Scriabin: Piano Sonata No. 3 in F# minor, Op. 23 (1898)
📄 Score: Muzgiz edition, 1947, editor: Konstantin Sorokin, imslp.org/wiki/Piano_Sonata_N...)
Emoji artwork provided by JoyPixels, joypixels.com
🎓 Sources: "States of the Soul" poem: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piano_S...)
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Vill bara berömma Dig Henrik för dina härliga och inspirerande Utube-klipp. Keep going, så himla roligt att se och lyssna på/
Thanks for introducing me to Scriabn! Nice to meet his music 😀
Yes! Scriabin again! Masterpiece. For me he's one of the biggest (Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Haydn etc.). Thanks. Love these videos.
Thank you so much, your love for music is so evident.
Scriabin is just wonderful! Man, I really wish he finished his Mysterium.
Clear and knowledgeable analysis combined with an amazing performance of the piece. I love how Scriabin makes the piano sound as full as an orchestra. Very inspiring! Thank you!
The 3rd, 4th, 5th and the Fantasy are all so epic. Music to transcend beyond suffering with mystical awe.
Thank you so much for your videos. You are my favorite RUclipsr right now, I watch your videos everyday. You have such a great talent for music and communicating the emotional/musical/technical/compositional components of it. I hope your passion for music and sharing this content with us never falters! Forever grateful for you :)
I love this channel so much - as always, thank you Henrik!!
This was amazing - I've always loved this sonata, and one of my favorite performances is the very easy-to-find Horowitz, but after hearing your analysis and how you perform that ending, I would so love to hear a full recording of this by you.
I'm recording his early sonatas this year (in a better studio than my own!), should come out in October if all goes as planned.
@@SonataSecretsThat's awesome, and thanks so much for responding!
Have you ever thought of doing Scriabin’s etude op 42 no 5? Every Scriabin piece is magical, but that one I find to be especially beautiful despite it’s chaotic undertone
I put the like but i wanted the button "supergiant like" for this beautiful and perfect analysis. Love the way the mood of the various movements are explained through words, music and emoticons.
The trio of the second movement, sometimes, reminds me of Eglogue from the first book of Liszt's Anneés de Pèlerinage.
I really like this new guide format. It seems more focused and concise than the previous format. Perhaps you'll be able to analyse more piano sonatas in the future? Rachmaninoff no. 1 and 2, other Scriabin sonatas, maybe even Medtner or Feinberg? It would be captivating either way. I am waiting for future videos eagerly.
Thanks, glad you like it! Yes, it feels worthwhile to do videos on larger works like this without going into detail on everything. Still a lot of work though. A few more Scriabin sonatas are coming this year. Rach 2 is also on my radar but further in the future.
I am not familiar with Scriabin's music. Thanks for the analysis. An epic work!!
Scriabin is by far my favourite composer ❤ thank you! I hope to see you cover more Scriabin in the future :)
I have been waiting for this one. Thank you!
Amazing so enjoy your analyses of all the works. I try hard to play them and I find it so useful you dissecting things
This is really good music! And it’s new for me!! Thanks, I love d that!❤❤❤
I know, right! :)
finally!! i've been waiting for this one 😃
id love to see a video on Schuman's fantasia in c major
Great analysis!
By the way, in the second movement, you would have noticed acciaccaturas tied to their corresponding octaves in the previous bars. What do you think they are and how should they be executed?
Thanks! Yes, quite weird writing even for Scriabin... I suppose you could make sure to just catch them in the pedal and that would be accurate to the score. But I realized I don't even do that 😅, instead I prefer more clarity on the next chord.
@@SonataSecrets alright...thanks!
Nice video! Have you thought of analyzing op8 no12?
Yeah, I've played it and I should probably do it on the channel at some point...
This is tremendous, thank you!!! :D If I may ask -- could you tell me where the Development begins in this version? ruclips.net/video/vN-1-0hV0OM/видео.html I think it's at the one minute & 48 second mark. And lasts until three minutes and 44 seconds into the piece, yes?
It's in pure sonata form, right?