SCHUBERT - Impromptu n°3 (Horowitz)

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  • Опубликовано: 9 авг 2011
  • Concert d'horowitz à Vienne (1987)
    L'Impromptu n° 3 en si bémol majeur est surnommé « Rosamunde » car son thème est en effet une variation de sa musique de scène. Schubert avait déjà réutilisé ce thème dans le Quatuor à cordes n° 13 en la mineur, D. 804, également surnommé « Rosamunde »
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Комментарии • 4 тыс.

  • @jucafii
    @jucafii 5 месяцев назад +430

    Horowitz was 84 years old when he performed this beautiful piece in Vienna. It's a lesson for those who, nowadays, think that a person over 50 or 60 can't do anything else.

    • @2Hearts3
      @2Hearts3 3 месяца назад +35

      When i was little, i took piano and dance lessons. When i was 8 or 9, my Mom told me i had to choose one or the other, piano or dance, that she couldn't keep up all those lessons. "I like it all though, Mom, which one?" She advised, "You won't be able to dance much at 85, but you can still play the piano then." I followed her advice.l, and have always been glad i did. Thanks, Mom♥️

    • @poetcomic1
      @poetcomic1 3 месяца назад +15

      Martha Agerich is about that old and still performing undiminished.

    • @djgrab1
      @djgrab1 2 месяца назад +6

      What an inspiration

    • @bryanlentz7160
      @bryanlentz7160 Месяц назад +1

      AGREED!

    • @eneto7785
      @eneto7785 20 дней назад +3

      Amazing how those old and tired hands softly touches the keyboard on both strong and kindly parts.

  • @EvaggeliaZach
    @EvaggeliaZach Месяц назад +34

    My grandfather died today. This is my favorite piece and I am listening to it to say goodbye to my favourite person.

    • @johndillon6859
      @johndillon6859 Месяц назад

      Bless your heart ❤❤

    • @iomproirbais
      @iomproirbais 4 дня назад +1

      Today, and probably tomorrow, you will be my favourite person. I hope this realigns the universe from the weight of your loss somewhat. All the best to you, and may you and your family be blessed. Lots of love from Scotland.

  • @charlesfoster141
    @charlesfoster141 3 месяца назад +67

    Nobody plays today as Horowitz played. His sense of touch and expression are unequaled. Horowitz made every piece his own. Just magnificent. Enough said.

    • @Ernesto7608
      @Ernesto7608 Месяц назад +2

      Your statement is false unless you have listened to ALL the pianists in the world who play this music.

    • @charlesfoster141
      @charlesfoster141 Месяц назад +3

      @@Ernesto7608 ridiculous. Cream rises to the top.

    • @billdouglas2936
      @billdouglas2936 Месяц назад +4

      My all-time favorite interpretative pianist. He could play “Jingle Bells” and my eyes would begin tearing up. Such beautiful and emotional musical interpretations.

    • @charlesfoster141
      @charlesfoster141 13 дней назад

      @@Ernesto7608 baloney

    • @jeanettebressler4143
      @jeanettebressler4143 2 дня назад

      He moves my soul .

  • @johnnyaddams4728
    @johnnyaddams4728 29 дней назад +12

    I personally love how curious Horowitz looks while playing the piano. He observes and seems pleased with the delicate sound that is produced when his finger touches a note. It is so precise and so intentionally on every note and every pause. No one plays the piano like Horowitz. An icon of classical music.

    • @ZalexMusic
      @ZalexMusic 4 дня назад

      He is playing, but he is also listening.

  • @aIkaIi
    @aIkaIi 4 года назад +3543

    I find it _so_ ironic that the most calm and emotionless looking pianist is actually playing with the _most_ emotion and love put into the piece...Like...how??

    • @LL-zf3pj
      @LL-zf3pj 4 года назад +333

      Samuel Cho Yes I agree. Unlike the other pianists that show a bunch of unnecessary theatrics/drama. It’s kind a disgusting. Once they start doing that crap I exit out.

    • @aIkaIi
      @aIkaIi 4 года назад +134

      @@LL-zf3pj I was also taught to curve my fingers when playing but his fingers look flat

    • @gabrielm9606
      @gabrielm9606 4 года назад +144

      Samuel Cho It’s because it’s a slow piece on mostly black keys and makes it easier to control the volume with flatter fingers

    • @aIkaIi
      @aIkaIi 4 года назад +22

      @@gabrielm9606 I guess that makes sense

    • @travelingxavier
      @travelingxavier 4 года назад +151

      @Samuel actually, you are supposed to play with curved fingers. Horowitz is one of the few pianist who plays with flat fingers regardless of what song he’s playing. His pink is always curled up like a “cobra” only releasing that curl to play a note. The way his fingers fly around the key is define you unorthodox for sure .

  • @MathieuPrevot
    @MathieuPrevot 4 года назад +1491

    He was 85 years old at that time.

    • @pavelskipaganini
      @pavelskipaganini 4 года назад +113

      @Christelle Rheeder It is cool that he plays so well while being so old?

    • @melb6557
      @melb6557 4 года назад +93

      And he died a year later. ;(

    • @superhacker35
      @superhacker35 4 года назад +52

      @@pavelskipaganini you tell me when you reach 85 and still able to move your fingers...or if you reach 85 and are even able to speak...or goddamn reach 85 in the first place. this is litterally more impressive then an 11 year old playing with this phrasing and technique. Brain function already starts to deteriorate incredibly fast at age 25!

    • @ViolinDeNoche
      @ViolinDeNoche 4 года назад +3

    • @thomasjuniardi3559
      @thomasjuniardi3559 4 года назад +9

      Wait what ?!?...his fingers not even shaking/tremors !, I guess he's playing with his heart rather than his brain at that moment 😬

  • @myartofbeinghere
    @myartofbeinghere Год назад +582

    This performance is just breathtaking. His pianissimos are absolutely exquisite. It feels incredibly personal, almost as if from a lifetime dedicated to music, it has become such a part of him that he's offering us himself through this piece. One of the most touchingly beautiful things I've ever heard.

    • @PhilMatous
      @PhilMatous 10 месяцев назад +4

      Well said, Sojourner.

    • @user-we6yd3tq8e
      @user-we6yd3tq8e 10 месяцев назад +4

      Спасибо!

    • @maryjohnston9329
      @maryjohnston9329 10 месяцев назад +4

      Simply exquisite

    • @estelleneethling12
      @estelleneethling12 8 месяцев назад +3

      I remain astounded at how he 'carries' the haunting theme with his right hand whilst playing the incredibly difficult rallentandos with the same hand.

    • @RalphDratman
      @RalphDratman 8 месяцев назад +2

      I found my breath catching, even though at first I was not paying close attention to this almost overwhelming performance,

  • @craigadam
    @craigadam 10 месяцев назад +263

    He never made mistakes. The piano just didn’t understand him. We are so lucky to have these recordings. Thank you Mr Horowitz for improving the world for as long as these recordings survive.❤

    • @VivaRenata
      @VivaRenata 10 месяцев назад +7

      Well, he had his own piano in the Steinway showroom on 57th ave. in NYC that was kept in place for him and maintained and transported to wherever he wanted to play. In my book he's not close to Rubinstein or Arrau, but that's my opinion

    • @ml-zj4oh
      @ml-zj4oh 9 месяцев назад +9

      rotfl @@VivaRenata 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @gerhardprochazka2984
      @gerhardprochazka2984 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@VivaRenataare you that perfect?

    • @VivaRenata
      @VivaRenata 6 месяцев назад +20

      @@gerhardprochazka2984 Can you even read? I expressed an opinion and that does not mean that I make any claim to perfection. It's a good thing people have different likes and dislikes, otherwise it would be a very boring life.

    • @Verdeazulgris
      @Verdeazulgris 2 месяца назад +3

      ​​@@VivaRenataPues tienes razón. Yo personalmente adoro a Horowitz pero es inadmisible que se permitan comentarios tan estúpidos diciendo a alguien que da su opinión "eres tú más perfecto?"😳😰
      Luego dicen de Tiktok que allí vale todo... Al menos allí cada vez se censura más a estos tipejos, denuncias un comentario igual o más suave, y lo eliminan en pocas horas 😎

  • @dale731
    @dale731 5 лет назад +1778

    Somewhere, Schubert is smiling.

  • @stefankortenbusch7385
    @stefankortenbusch7385 4 года назад +2214

    After his death, his famous Steinway toured alone to be shown and played in Steinway shops. I had the privilege to get a 20 min slot when the piano was in Frankfurt, Germany, and was very uncomfortable with the extremely soft keys which had been custom made for the artist. Almost impossible for me to play it being used to the standard weight of Steinway keyboards. This however explains why he could play so delicately with this extravant technique: his long fingers resting almost flat on the keys. Very special.

    • @poloplop71
      @poloplop71 4 года назад +79

      I was wondering how an entire audience could have heard him whilst playing like that, barely even moving a finger lol

    • @flouz2
      @flouz2 4 года назад +95

      The one who prepared his piano for concerts must have had a hell of pressure on there shoulders .....

    • @lj1175
      @lj1175 3 года назад +6

      @@flouz2 😁

    • @NoferTrunions
      @NoferTrunions 3 года назад +77

      I was thinking about how various adjustments like key gram weight should be tuned to the performer - even a basic adjustment according to their actual arm weight. Finger length would be another factor. And then finally the performers preference. Professional athletes have very specific choices in their gear - consider golf clubs. Unfortunately, most concert pianists have to deal with the piano that is provided.

    • @alexandergonzalezevans49
      @alexandergonzalezevans49 3 года назад +8

      Oh wow! Was the Steinway room back then at the same place it is now on Bockenheimer?

  • @2Hearts3
    @2Hearts3 Месяц назад +8

    Exquisite 🕊️ In an interview once, Mike Wallace asked him, "Maestro, what is it that makes your playing so special?" Horowitz replied, "I love every single note."

  • @bumba5897
    @bumba5897 3 месяца назад +27

    The best performance of this piece ever, and one of the greatest piano performances of all time

  • @ruthchipperfield3061
    @ruthchipperfield3061 6 лет назад +1062

    Horowitz's hands are extraordinary. When so many modern performers' fingers leap and dance over the keys, he seems to be picking up the music that's already there. What a still place he is in.

    • @mjutteau
      @mjutteau 4 года назад +33

      He's got very long fingers so that helps

    • @ava_alami
      @ava_alami 4 года назад +17

      Man your comment gave me chills

    • @janebethsharon
      @janebethsharon 4 года назад +35

      That is because he is a pianist. The moderns are performers acting the part of pianist.

    • @TheMusicalKnokcers
      @TheMusicalKnokcers 4 года назад +8

      Listz also played with flat fingers (heard this in a documentary on liszt produced by ARTE "Liszt un visionnaire virtuose").

    • @carlofischetti306
      @carlofischetti306 4 года назад +11

      beautiful comment

  • @pppp-zp2vo
    @pppp-zp2vo 4 года назад +1447

    He doesn’t seem like playing the piano, seems like he’s just petting it and the piano speaks by itself as if a cat purrs when it is petted. Only if my first language were English, i would be able to describe this better😢
    (And thanks to twoset&sophie for introducing this wonderful piece!)

    • @atlasi5872
      @atlasi5872 4 года назад +114

      You described it perfectly

    • @pppp-zp2vo
      @pppp-zp2vo 4 года назад +15

      Xaria S thank you!

    • @melindamills6995
      @melindamills6995 4 года назад +34

      You have done exceedingly well already describing it.

    • @pppp-zp2vo
      @pppp-zp2vo 4 года назад +6

      Melinda Mills thank you :)

    • @davidskeeterskeeter1835
      @davidskeeterskeeter1835 4 года назад +3

      Perfecto,! respect,,😀👏👏👏🇬🇧

  • @user-hk8ti8po4b
    @user-hk8ti8po4b Год назад +544

    This is my favorite performance of Horowitz. Whenever I listen to his performance of Schubert, I feel very comforted. A ray of light in a painful life. Thanks to his performance, I continue to live my life.

    • @mikolajochocki2810
      @mikolajochocki2810 Год назад +12

      Thank you for this

    • @ohmygodtheywereroommates1272
      @ohmygodtheywereroommates1272 Год назад +12

      this is my favorite performance of my favorite piece of music ever, I understand my friend

    • @peterarthur3380
      @peterarthur3380 Год назад +26

      "......A ray of light in a painful life....".... All of your words move me so much - they are so personal, yet they could be about every human being in the world. No one gets through this life without pain (however fleeting)..... and some people have to endure harrowing pain for a long time. How good it is then that one can listen to classical music masterpieces such as Schubert's Impromptu No. 3, beautifully interpreted and performed by the inimitable Mr. Horowitz. So much has changed in the world since COVID-19 came to cause us grief, but great music and great musicmaking endures.... May this always be the case! Many more blessings, Peter

    • @kathleencook3060
      @kathleencook3060 Год назад +11

      Beautiful comments.
      I am speechless.
      But you have found the words I can feel when I hear the Maestro play.
      Thank you.

    • @akb2756
      @akb2756 Год назад +9

      Yes... I think it's sweetly melancholic - which is how I feel so often. I'm a pianist but haven't played this...I don't know whether I could manage his sweet serenity.

  • @djgrab1
    @djgrab1 2 месяца назад +100

    If this recording isn’t played at my funeral I’m not going

    • @Verdeazulgris
      @Verdeazulgris Месяц назад +1

      😂😂😂😂

    • @Ernesto7608
      @Ernesto7608 Месяц назад +1

      I prefer to have MY performance of this music played at my funeral. My beloved have nothing to do with Horowitz.

    • @colinlaney3400
      @colinlaney3400 Месяц назад

      Good choice, i go with John Cage‘s ‚In a landscape‘

    • @sarahturner5065
      @sarahturner5065 Месяц назад +2

      I’m totally stealing this comment and using it. Hilarious.

    • @Verdeazulgris
      @Verdeazulgris Месяц назад +1

      @@sarahturner5065 Por fin alguien que lo entiende🤭😂

  • @ajbrewer1777
    @ajbrewer1777 3 года назад +1589

    PLEASE READ IF YOU ARE LEARNING THIS PIECE: I posted another comment asking about what he does on 0:24, since he strays from the sheet music and adds his personal bit of “dissonance” very nicely. I spoke with my teacher and we came to the conclusion that it is F natural and D natural in the left hand and B flat, D natural, A flat, and the top B flat on the right hand. Enjoy! (Please like so that people learning this piece will see this comment)

    • @Seiyariu
      @Seiyariu 3 года назад +70

      This is exactly right. I noticed too when learning from the sheet that it didn't sound the same. I personally prefer it as it adds something different the second time the phrase is played. Interestingly, other pianists have played this version including Kissin, Lipatti, Richter and Buchbinder

    • @Tulanir1
      @Tulanir1 3 года назад +50

      It's a B-flat 7 going to E-flat minor, so just a classic dominant cadence to the relative minor. F is in the bass instead of B-flat because it's a leading tone from G-flat to E-flat.

    • @jamien.5528
      @jamien.5528 3 года назад +2

      Thanks!

    • @olespankiv5016
      @olespankiv5016 3 года назад +11

      Thank you very much! Also can you advise on how Horowitz is playing the third B flat little bit softer or quieter? It's like he's pulling the note, I can't really describe how it sounds

    • @remitoubia7252
      @remitoubia7252 3 года назад +6

      It's just the right version, simply

  • @thalivenom4972
    @thalivenom4972 4 года назад +2028

    thank you sophie oui oui for showing me this! like snowflakes dancing on the wind

    • @jasonrich4940
      @jasonrich4940 4 года назад +32

      Couldn't have said so better myself. His hands just gently coax the music out of the piano, like the song wayans always there but just needed to be lifted up

    • @rufflesmusic8724
      @rufflesmusic8724 4 года назад +18

      sophie oui oui~

    • @lawrencelaurente8930
      @lawrencelaurente8930 4 года назад +29

      So we are here because of Sophie oui oui :))

    • @TheBeethovenFanPage
      @TheBeethovenFanPage 3 года назад +22

      I know the piece, but THANK YOU SO MUCH SOPHIE OUI OUI for leading us to this beautiful, sincere performance! Vladimir Horowitz is one of the greatest pianists. May his soul rest in piece. I wish I discovered his performances earlier than that. RUclips should fix its algorithm and stop recommending "how to make condensed milk in 5 min" while I spend all my time searching for music.

    • @user-se5my2px9o
      @user-se5my2px9o 3 года назад +5

      *Hi! If you like clasical music, maybe you want follow my chanel?*

  • @BangkokVoiceCoach
    @BangkokVoiceCoach 10 месяцев назад +397

    I love how he appears to be doing almost nothing, like a bank manager behind a desk checking an application for a mortgage. And yet the sounds coming out of the piano are utterly astonishing.

    • @robbdavies7749
      @robbdavies7749 8 месяцев назад +11

      Great comment

    • @lindalukens4381
      @lindalukens4381 7 месяцев назад +12

      He played beautifully without adding the theatrics some pianists use today.

    • @ingridlot
      @ingridlot 6 месяцев назад +2

      😂❤

    • @Discoboogy
      @Discoboogy 5 месяцев назад +2

      It's just perfect.

    • @annakavan1869
      @annakavan1869 4 месяца назад +2

      I am sorry to hear that u own a debt.

  • @matthewjacobson8925
    @matthewjacobson8925 9 месяцев назад +45

    Little did the audience realize they were about to witness the finest performance of controlled emotion on the piano realized by any artist or composer ever. A lucky bunch to have the opportunity to have a first row seat to what has to be the most touching piece and performance I’ve ever heard. Bravo Mr. Horowitz. Bravo

    • @galept
      @galept 2 месяца назад +1

      Funny enough, I read that he had crippling stage fright. Almost wouldn't walk out on stage sometimes, but always did. I remember watching a longer clip of this performance and, at the beginning, when he sits down to play he looks out and stares at the audience. My mother and grandmother were pianists and said that was a huge "no-no". Apparently it's a clear sign he's thinking about others.
      Once he gets going, I'm sure it all goes away, and he becomes who we know he is.

  • @user-uz4ng7hp1f
    @user-uz4ng7hp1f 4 года назад +1159

    Came from TwoSet's video. What a masterpiece. The melody is like an endless river, full of emotion.

    • @Zanarkand102
      @Zanarkand102 4 года назад +31

      That B-Flat tho...

    • @hnywening6080
      @hnywening6080 4 года назад +6

      Haha! Same! I had been listening to Khatia Buniatshvili's recording before. I'm amazed how different the sound quality of the pianos they play sound, let alone their interpretation. I found the piano Khatia played is much more mellow and warm. Both of the recordings become extremely more interesting if you compare the two. : )
      ruclips.net/video/LUp2u9wI1fY/видео.html

    • @hom2fu
      @hom2fu 4 года назад +4

      #4 also good too

    • @joaopedrolessa2242
      @joaopedrolessa2242 4 года назад +12

      There is no one better than “The Old Horowitz” . He might not have the perfect technique anymore, but surely had the best interpretation

    • @linglingpractice40yearsada96
      @linglingpractice40yearsada96 4 года назад +1

      me too, and yes it is

  • @georgesclermont1911
    @georgesclermont1911 5 лет назад +470

    Had the privilege and immense satisfaction of hearing this genius live twice. Once in Severance Hall (Cleveland) for a return after many years of silence. The recital lasted almost 4 hours: encores, encores, encores. The public was wild, people were crying with joy when he appeared and with sadness when he signalled 'enough'. One of the most memorable moment of my life.

    • @tongcai6857
      @tongcai6857 5 лет назад +45

      Sadly, Those times are gone. The world has moved on to a different era of music, but we can all enjoy what we have. You are very lucky to have heard this Master play.

    • @NoferTrunions
      @NoferTrunions 3 года назад +6

      1976, right?

    • @georgesclermont1911
      @georgesclermont1911 3 года назад +8

      @@NoferTrunions I would have said '74 but it might have been '76. No later

    • @vladimirgurevich3656
      @vladimirgurevich3656 3 года назад

      @@NoferTrunions 1986 or 1987

    • @NN-vn3bs
      @NN-vn3bs 3 года назад

      Vienna 1987

  • @peterchattelin6721
    @peterchattelin6721 11 месяцев назад +121

    I am in tears hearing him play so heavenly
    and intens beautiful. Never heard shubert like this. Wish I had seen Horowitz live! Love his playing!

    • @user-ne7qq2rq6x
      @user-ne7qq2rq6x 10 месяцев назад +1

      😅❤❤❤❤❤😮さ😮😮😅😂🎉

    • @filipsakowski4492
      @filipsakowski4492 10 месяцев назад +5

      What's crazy is that the people who have seen him live say the recordings, beautiful as they are, don't give him justice at all

    • @user-dc2lq2bz8e
      @user-dc2lq2bz8e 8 месяцев назад +2

      Волшебное pianissimo...Как уход в другую реальность...Столько оказывается в ней света...покоя...тишины для души...😊

  • @FlexingClassicalMusic
    @FlexingClassicalMusic 6 месяцев назад +51

    Classical music never goes out of style. It's an important part of our cultural heritage, always appreciated and celebrated.

  • @GreenredProductions
    @GreenredProductions 6 лет назад +2933

    To me this is the best interpretation of this piece. Much slower but with perfect sound control.

    • @Star_Sn1per
      @Star_Sn1per 6 лет назад +30

      I think Alfred Brendel does it best tbh

    • @user-vl8gn1kf8e
      @user-vl8gn1kf8e 6 лет назад +11

      Absolutely!!!!

    • @stephanvandermerwe
      @stephanvandermerwe 6 лет назад +101

      I agree; everyone these days think that speed is a artistic virtue -it is not! A magnificent performance -from one of the 20th century's greatest pianists.

    • @Binnebrook
      @Binnebrook 6 лет назад +55

      Such a generous, gracious tempo. Heartbreaking....

    • @Binnebrook
      @Binnebrook 6 лет назад +71

      My goodness, he barely moves his hands...

  • @anorangewithacapybaraunder2370
    @anorangewithacapybaraunder2370 4 года назад +353

    It’s like he and the piano are reminiscing of times long past. He merely rests his hands on an old friend and they talk, like a final farewell. Peaceful, beautiful.

    • @ronaldbarnett2025
      @ronaldbarnett2025 4 года назад +9

      Beautifully said.

    • @catherinecessna
      @catherinecessna 3 года назад +8

      Wonderful comment.

    • @fourstrings48
      @fourstrings48 3 года назад +6

      What a beautiful and moving comment! I thank you for having made it....

    • @jamesa8705
      @jamesa8705 3 года назад +4

      Your simple and beautiful comment makes one enjoy the performance even more. Thank you!

    • @taniacummings9207
      @taniacummings9207 3 года назад +1

      That's a beautiful description, thank you. I watch this so often and it never fails to thrill. I am in awe.

  • @iradaaxmedova4928
    @iradaaxmedova4928 Год назад +152

    Это чудо.Такое проникновенное исполнение гениальной музыки.Вечная память Шуберту и Великому Пианисту.

    • @gregciach1920
      @gregciach1920 Год назад +3

      Правда! А всё таки вы напали на Укрину...

    • @larisatarabaeva5461
      @larisatarabaeva5461 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@gregciach1920 , правда и истина не всегда одно и тоже... примите это в расчет, когда начнете пороть очередную чушь. Лучше музыку слушайте.

    • @markdenemark7298
      @markdenemark7298 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@larisatarabaeva5461 А пример, когда истина отличается от правды, привести можно, мадам?

    • @gregciach1920
      @gregciach1920 11 месяцев назад

      @@markdenemark7298 - ;)

    • @olivianorton215
      @olivianorton215 8 месяцев назад

      @@gregciach1920 напали нелюди, а не русский народ.

  • @ElenaVDL
    @ElenaVDL Год назад +151

    Oh, God, what a soulful performance of Schubert, as if music is born from nothingness and
    takes possession of the soul, filling it with bright joy and the dream of bliss.

    • @ordinaryguy815
      @ordinaryguy815 Год назад +4

      Perfectly worded

    • @PhilMatous
      @PhilMatous Год назад +2

      Elena, that is the most beautiful definition of music I've ever heard, although I would substitute God for nothingness

    • @vickiehorowitz1934
      @vickiehorowitz1934 2 месяца назад

      This is a performance that always gives me chills. There are no words for this feeling. Thank you, maestro.

  • @danahblanc
    @danahblanc 4 года назад +447

    whenever i listen to this play, i feel like i'm at the last chapter of my life, silently remembering past days with a slight sense of nostalgia, but without longing for going back. it's lonely but not sad. peaceful, meditative, and simply beautiful.

    • @BrianaAugustine
      @BrianaAugustine 4 года назад +4

      D Kay I totally hear that in this music too

    • @NessaFlower3592
      @NessaFlower3592 4 года назад +9

      Beautifully put.

    • @jeffphillips7267
      @jeffphillips7267 4 года назад +10

      It's called reconciliation ... we should all be so lucky at the end.

    • @user-rk1pb6kg9r
      @user-rk1pb6kg9r 3 года назад +10

      Schubert composed this piece not quite far away from his death while sick, so I also play it assuming he would have looked back at his life while composing it.

    • @4Topwood
      @4Topwood 3 года назад +6

      @@user-rk1pb6kg9r Actually, Schubert composed this before his final illness. He was making plans for his future right up until he became ill.

  • @TheAvenstar
    @TheAvenstar 4 года назад +577

    Three people I have met, whom I will never forget: Vladimir Horowitz after a concert at Orchestra Hall in Chicago, c. mid 70's. I forgot the other two.

    • @matthewchansavage3699
      @matthewchansavage3699 4 года назад +43

      wait what... "three people I have met, whom I will never forget" and then "I forgot the other two" lol

    • @malcolmdale
      @malcolmdale 4 года назад +64

      Reminds me of Victor Borge - " two things I can never remember............three things."

    • @ava_alami
      @ava_alami 4 года назад +8

      You a lucky one.

    • @authenticmusic4815
      @authenticmusic4815 4 года назад +11

      @@matthewchansavage3699 get a brain

    • @e.hutchence-composer8203
      @e.hutchence-composer8203 4 года назад +33

      Matthew Chansavage the point is that the other two aren’t worth remembering compared to Horowitz

  • @charlesfoster141
    @charlesfoster141 2 месяца назад +9

    Just listened again and clearly discern that no one else captures Schubert's piece nearly as well as Horowitz. This performance is brilliant and perfection beyond words. We are very fortunate that we have this to enjoy forever now that Horowitz is gone. Guy in Columbia Mississippi

    • @Ernesto7608
      @Ernesto7608 Месяц назад

      "No one else" is an exaggeration in a population of 8 billion! You cannot possibly have heard everyone who plays or played this music.

    • @charlesfoster141
      @charlesfoster141 8 дней назад

      @@Ernesto7608 idiot

  • @GuillaumeGerbet-md6in
    @GuillaumeGerbet-md6in Год назад +195

    What I love about Horowitz is that he gently, charms music out of the piano as if it is Aladdins lamp, without contorting like a snake charmer or pulling faces like clown. He is concentrating on the music and is not trying to convince his audience, with weird mannerisms, of his genius.

    • @leoross4918
      @leoross4918 Год назад +17

      I agree with you, but I feel the mannerisms are often not voulentary and performers such as Lang Lang should not be ridiculed because of their way of connectiong with music.

    • @ullakorpi-anttila88
      @ullakorpi-anttila88 Год назад

      .

    • @ullakorpi-anttila88
      @ullakorpi-anttila88 Год назад

      .

    • @ullakorpi-anttila88
      @ullakorpi-anttila88 Год назад +3

      What a fine comment - exactly !!!!!

    • @davidmintzer3743
      @davidmintzer3743 10 месяцев назад +3

      He seems to wave his hands over the keys and conjure up beautiful sounds. Amazing artist.

  • @l.h.9194
    @l.h.9194 5 лет назад +140

    This is absolutely ethereal.

  • @bailahie4235
    @bailahie4235 4 года назад +167

    One of the most beautiful pieces of Schubert which brings me to tears sometimes. A feeling of total surrender, deep peace and no movement, everything is forgiven, you may be exactly who you are, and where you are. A total release of all need to struggle on the level of the soul.

  • @tomokoTBACHBWV971
    @tomokoTBACHBWV971 2 года назад +40

    この演奏で私はいつも胸がいっぱいになる どんな言葉よりも私の心を揺さぶり慰めてくれる
    ホロヴィッツとピアノに深く感謝します

  • @freem4nn129
    @freem4nn129 7 месяцев назад +40

    brings me back to when my grandfather used to play this in his study. Brings up such powerful emotions.

    • @joserolz8831
      @joserolz8831 7 месяцев назад +5

      Brings ME back to my Dad who played this piece beautifully. He was a great admirer of Mr. Horowitz.

  • @789armstrong
    @789armstrong 3 года назад +479

    This is why people would camp out overnight, in the rain, to buy a ticket to a Horowitz concert.

    • @philliphamilton3591
      @philliphamilton3591 3 года назад +10

      Yes, I’d be first in the queue. Pure magic!

    • @Powerslider
      @Powerslider 3 года назад +5

      That is so epic. His music is pure gold.

    • @bigchungus9740
      @bigchungus9740 3 года назад +2

      I wish I could hear him I only got into classical music when I was around 7 because I started learning piano at 6 and now that I’m 12 I’ve missed the chance but at least I have these videos

    • @TheYoshi463
      @TheYoshi463 3 года назад +1

      @@bigchungus9740 What are you talking about? Horowitz has been dead for a long time now...

    • @Elitistt
      @Elitistt 3 года назад +1

      @@TheYoshi463 He's obviously saying he wishes he was able to have heard him when he was alive.

  • @halloooo1duuuuu
    @halloooo1duuuuu 7 лет назад +393

    Horowitz just understands this piece best. It has such a calm and sad melody, it sounds like a profound story someone tells.

    • @tzinasok1
      @tzinasok1 5 лет назад +2

      exactly!

    • @junelucchesi5434
      @junelucchesi5434 4 года назад

      He had a most unique gift that nobody can come close

    • @alexlee1398
      @alexlee1398 4 года назад

      I thinks that you wrong is and but that you are is not good and were the soups are is a result of the Economist intelligence agency for international development of the fact of 2

    • @alexlee1398
      @alexlee1398 4 года назад

      I agree

    • @erhardgeiger6199
      @erhardgeiger6199 4 года назад

      nothing is sad in this melody
      its a glory for a lot of, up to your imagination

  • @coloredcloud9717
    @coloredcloud9717 10 месяцев назад +44

    This piece means a lot to me
    Can't stop weeping tears every time hearing it and thinking about how short Schubert's life is :"(

  • @Largo64
    @Largo64 4 года назад +172

    I only had the good fortune to hear Horowitz in concert twice. The first time was his last appearance in the Los Angeles area at the Hollywood Bowl before his first retirement. The second time was his first appearance in the Los Angeles area at the Ambassador Auditorium in Pasadena after coming out of retirement about twenty years later. So I actually attended two of his concerts back to back, but twenty years apart. He was wonderful!

  • @serafin1719
    @serafin1719 3 года назад +27

    I Imagine Schubert ringing the church bell to cherish this outstanding performance of this humble man ...

  • @junevandermark952
    @junevandermark952 2 месяца назад +6

    From my perspective, this is the best rendition ever of this beautiful piece of music ... tender ... and heartfelt.

    • @Ernesto7608
      @Ernesto7608 Месяц назад

      You must hear other renditions too. There are excellent performances of this music that may be different, but equally good.

    • @junevandermark952
      @junevandermark952 Месяц назад

      @@Ernesto7608 All the other renditions I heard were more aggressive, as though the performers were trying to prove a point, rather than allowing the music itself to prove the point.

  • @user-bk9ix7wk3p
    @user-bk9ix7wk3p 3 месяца назад +10

    魂の声を、そのまま鍵盤に映しとったような音の数々。どんなに時代が変わろうとも、人の心を動かす稀代の名演奏だと思う。

  • @francescotenderini1489
    @francescotenderini1489 3 года назад +73

    In my opinion, this is just the best interpretation of this masterpiece. I've seen them all, but Horowitz... I dunno if it's only the "sound" or the fact that he doesn't need to swing around to produce such an effect. I did try to listen to other interpretation eyes closed, but in reality this one for my tastes is just gold rain coming from heaven, and i cry every time I listen it. Rest in peace.

  • @roselynebigi
    @roselynebigi 2 месяца назад +5

    il caresse les touches avec tant de tendresse! Un maître inégalé.

  • @Menarecuteaaa
    @Menarecuteaaa 11 месяцев назад +59

    I feel like without all the expressions and dramatic faces other pianists pull, this performance is showing us pure, raw emotion through a lifetime of dedication to music, no showbiz, no clown faces, just him and his piano making beautiful music together

    • @ullakorpi-anttila88
      @ullakorpi-anttila88 10 месяцев назад +5

      Honesty and earnesty in this performance brings out the true beauty of the music - and it touches the deepest recesses of my soul...

    • @nikitaedell
      @nikitaedell 10 месяцев назад +4

      if the looks influences you, than you are not listening properly

    • @Menarecuteaaa
      @Menarecuteaaa 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@nikitaedell my point is that if this man stays completely still and produces music more beautiful than most other pianists who are very theatrical and dramatic with their movements, then there is no point in making all the excessive movements

    • @nikitaedell
      @nikitaedell 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@Menarecuteaaa ok? they dont do the movements to Express more or looke more expressive its literally just natural

    • @ratpoison1000
      @ratpoison1000 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@nikitaedell don't act dumb, you know what they talkin about

  • @mjleger4555
    @mjleger4555 Год назад +34

    I was a member of the National Fraternity of Student Musicians as a child, and auditioned under the great Horowitz, (probably about age 8 or 9, (I don't remember the date without looking it up) but I was too young to understand what a great privilege it was until much later in my life. I still have the scorecard signed by him in my collection of various treasures. My parents took us to various concerts by the great performers of the time. Young, I'd often get a bit antsy but was rapt during the ballets! Later, as a young adult, I performed with orchestras both with the flute and guest artist on the piano.
    Later I performed as a singer and entertainer in nightclubs playing the usual standards, which I learned by ear. Now, I'm back to enjoying these great famous classical numbers again.

  • @Caocao8888
    @Caocao8888 7 лет назад +187

    Total control over the dynamics, phrasing, rubato, technique, pedaling, everything that makes great music. It's breathtaking!

    • @hanswdecker2287
      @hanswdecker2287 5 лет назад +3

      Caocao8888 over the rainbow
      Over the rainbow

    • @AnnieKlein34
      @AnnieKlein34 4 года назад

      I suggest you listen also to Frank Braley. You'll also find that same «Total control over the dynamics, phrasing, rubato, technique, pedaling, everything that makes great music.»

    • @Ivor49
      @Ivor49 4 года назад

      that technique is heart warming, it's like a arrow to the heart,
      he still some hesitation in notes

  • @foxfiresidechats5227
    @foxfiresidechats5227 3 года назад +160

    The most amazing part of this recording are the bells that begin to play outside at 2:20. Simply sublime. They could not help but play with him. This is why Horowitz is the master. He inspires the music that is inside of everyone to come alive with his playing. Bravo, forever Maestro.

    • @SynchroScore
      @SynchroScore 3 года назад +9

      And I thought that was just me hearing them. Wonderful how things sometimes work in concerts.

    • @josephmashburn4451
      @josephmashburn4451 2 года назад +7

      Yes a beautiful accompaniment to his playing.

  • @jjlwaardenburg
    @jjlwaardenburg Год назад +33

    I've been listening to this amazing performance so many times, that I'm actually missing the 'church bells' (around 2.20) when I listen to a different one 😅. For me this video is one of RUclips's gems...

    • @Me-uv6kc
      @Me-uv6kc Год назад +3

      I love the church bells lol, that's how I remember it was Horowitz and Schubert

  • @20dty
    @20dty Год назад +8

    Nach Jahren wieder zufällig drauf gestoßen. Mir kommen die Tränen 😢❤

  • @efucosiche
    @efucosiche 3 года назад +52

    I Heard every version of this impromptu and this is my favorite at all!! No rush, calm and deep and meditational feeling! I’m sure schubert should be agree with me. All the interpreting over the world make of this piece a running champion of who is more fast but no! This is the right tempo for this impromptu! Noting more, nothing less! Thanks Horowitz 🙏 so deeper! So intense! What a beautiful soul!

  • @shin-i-chikozima
    @shin-i-chikozima 5 лет назад +83

    This song gives me comfort and solace ,and heals my tired mind and sorrow , and melts away my suffering and grief .

    • @shin-i-chikozima
      @shin-i-chikozima 5 лет назад +1

      @oegaziz43 ありがとう❗お便り感謝しています‼️さようならです‼️
      Thank-you very much to your reply .
      Take care of yourself
      Good luck !

    • @shin-i-chikozima
      @shin-i-chikozima 5 лет назад +1

      @oegaziz43 Thank-you very much to your reply . 🍎

    • @guavajellyjam
      @guavajellyjam 5 лет назад +2

      True , so so true . It's pure solace .

    • @randiarikstad4752
      @randiarikstad4752 4 года назад +2

      And answer how it is possible to go on living.``?

    • @hushedmusic
      @hushedmusic 4 года назад +2

      « To love Schubert is to see the beauty hidden in the shades of everyday life and to understand the art of patience. »
      Khatia Buniatishvili

  • @arjanitbalca1783
    @arjanitbalca1783 Год назад +17

    Minimum. That's how I would characterize that performance. He does not scream, he does, in fact, through the language of depth. He is not silent either. No mimics, no shaking of the head with hair sufficiently long for shallow drama, no desire to be necessarily liked. That happens when passion survives ego. And again, that happens to only a few. Horowitz's play is not an interpretation, he is, at that point, beyond the highest level of interpretation. His play is his own ode to what Schubert felt when he wrote the piece.

    • @OziCastle
      @OziCastle 8 месяцев назад +3

      Whilst I agree with some of your points I don’t believe “mimic” or any sort of passionate physical movements are a show of ego over passion. Different people express there feelings in different ways and just because one prefers a certain way of expression does not mean it’s ok to class the latter anything less

    • @Watankatanka
      @Watankatanka 8 месяцев назад +1

      You are so right!@@OziCastle

  • @suegha
    @suegha 10 месяцев назад +28

    This is an amazing performance. I've listened to it 1000 times, it never ceases to amaze me!

  • @crepesuzette28
    @crepesuzette28 7 лет назад +147

    Un immense merci à Schubert comme à Horowitz de nous faire entendre une musique si magnifiquement douce et raffinée! Notre monde en a tellement besoin...

    • @user-er3mp2jx4f
      @user-er3mp2jx4f 5 лет назад +1

      닥피라 개새끼야

    • @norahdealmeida5847
      @norahdealmeida5847 5 лет назад +4

      Vous avez raison! Tout à fait! C’ est une musique magnifiquement douce et raffinée! Comme Schubert , lui-même !

    • @eduardocarper
      @eduardocarper 5 лет назад +1

      C'est vre

    • @andrepinori354
      @andrepinori354 4 года назад +1

      Horowitz avait une technique et une puissance d'emotion rarissimes.gendre de toscanini il a aborde l'ensemble du repertoire avec bonheur .artiste rare!
      A.Pinori

    • @johnirvingbenson
      @johnirvingbenson 4 года назад

      Oui. un grand besoin en effet.

  • @rudyjakma3664
    @rudyjakma3664 3 года назад +101

    Horowitz literally plays as if he were in love with the piano. Maybe he was, it is absolutely perfect. The new generation, like Anastasia Huppmann and Lang Lang, are brilliant. Their technique is astonishing. Yet, they still cannot best pianists like Rubinstein and Horowitz. Not yet. They are virtuoso players and a joy to listen to. Good, even brilliant as they are, they still have to learn the quiet reflection that so enriched the performances of the old masters.

    • @danielmoser8814
      @danielmoser8814 3 года назад +12

      I agree. I realy love those young artists they are just awsome. But Rubinstein, Horowitz and for me Michelangeli are still immortal.

    • @labienus9968
      @labienus9968 3 года назад +4

      @@danielmoser8814 Argerich commented that Horowitz is the the pianos greatest lover

    • @danielmoser8814
      @danielmoser8814 3 года назад +2

      @@labienus9968 The pianos were all in love with him. Just listen.

    • @labienus9968
      @labienus9968 3 года назад +1

      @@danielmoser8814 I don't understand your point? listen to Agerich's comment on the recent doct. on celebrating the Russia return-it's very touching, and if anybody knows what she's talking about, she would be the one
      ruclips.net/video/tXPkSeY_zVg/видео.html

    • @joeperson448
      @joeperson448 2 года назад +1

      There is no such thing as one pianist "besting" another. This is not an athletic competition in one of the sports with hard data, like weight-lifting. This is music, and it is all subjective.

  • @user-km8fg5ob7i
    @user-km8fg5ob7i 2 года назад +66

    Можно ли словами выразить наслаждение от услышанного!!! Такого пианиста природа повторить не в состоянии. Услышав, поверишь в божественность миросоздания.

    • @gregciach1920
      @gregciach1920 Год назад +1

      Правда! А всё таки вы напали на Укрину...

    • @user-rv5gi7hv6c
      @user-rv5gi7hv6c 6 месяцев назад

      @@gregciach1920 бери шинель и лезь в окоп .

    • @user-rv5gi7hv6c
      @user-rv5gi7hv6c 6 месяцев назад

      послушайте в исполнении Дениса Паскаля .

    • @caelislilia
      @caelislilia 4 месяца назад

      ​@@gregciach1920Arts means Peaceful men...

  • @estelleneethling12
    @estelleneethling12 10 месяцев назад +14

    Words fail me to express the beauty of this performance!!!!

  • @drummerschild6487
    @drummerschild6487 7 лет назад +297

    this man has an amazing amount of love in his heart

    • @waltercelsogomes7836
      @waltercelsogomes7836 6 лет назад +1

      drummerschild

    • @waltercelsogomes7836
      @waltercelsogomes7836 6 лет назад +2

      Very touching and an amaxing sendibility

    • @sasodcfred
      @sasodcfred 6 лет назад +4

      So true. Very, very true... Greetings from a music lover from Macedonia

    • @norahdealmeida5847
      @norahdealmeida5847 5 лет назад +6

      So beautiful what you wrote about him!!! This is the greatest quality someone may have!!!

    • @MrDuboce
      @MrDuboce 5 лет назад +5

      In the words of my friend Dorothy, "He grabs your soul and never lets go."

  • @skdsenator
    @skdsenator 5 лет назад +25

    Раньше думал, что играть Шуберта должны такие же молодые, как и автор. Для трогательного романтического подхода. Горовиц же смог не только передать романтический настрой, но и показать ту мудрую глубину, которая заложена в произведениях юного гения! Спасибо!

  • @andreasmolau9859
    @andreasmolau9859 2 года назад +14

    Es ist so, als könne es kaum eine andere Möglichkeit der Interpretation geben. Fantastisch.

  • @bangcon8427
    @bangcon8427 2 года назад +92

    I'm a non-musician person and don't have enough knowledge about it but I came here because I watched twosets' video and I don't understand why this struck me the most.. it sure is interesting how his hands are just resting on the keys cause some people I saw, express it through their faces, body, and their hands by moving but everything in this piece is so good and this makes me cry.. everything about it.. it touched every part of my soul.

    • @ullakorpi-anttila88
      @ullakorpi-anttila88 Год назад +12

      You must then be wrong about being non-musical - you seem to understand the language of music...

    • @severinacappelletti8364
      @severinacappelletti8364 11 месяцев назад +1

      Il miracolo della musica...

    • @ullakorpi-anttila88
      @ullakorpi-anttila88 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@severinacappelletti8364 thank you for your comment. Yes, Vladimir Horowitz plays incredible beautifully - there is such tranquility.

    • @severinacappelletti8364
      @severinacappelletti8364 11 месяцев назад

      @@ullakorpi-anttila88
      Grazie Ulla per la tua gentile risposta. Io sono una nonna di 80 anni e scrivo da Brescia (Italia) e tu di che Paese sei? Scusa la curiosità ma io studio tedesco e spagnolo all'università della terza età però conosco anche il francese e l'inglese.
      Un caro saluto e buona domenica 🙏💕🖐

    • @ullakorpi-anttila88
      @ullakorpi-anttila88 11 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you for your reply. Sorry, I don't much understand your language. But as much: we both love this music - Vladimir Horowitz is, in my opinion, one of the greatest pianists, and he plays this music with such sensitivity and tranquility I'm 79 years, and I live in Finland, Turku city. My warmest regards to you!

  • @Strakos0
    @Strakos0 7 лет назад +283

    Without hesitation the best interpretation.

    • @michaelsegelman3796
      @michaelsegelman3796 5 лет назад +2

      The pure musician always hesitates... Of course Vladimir Samoylovich is great...but such a firm statement without listening to the Great Russians (or even Great Soviets) like Boshniakovich, Sofronitsky is a bit exaggeration:)

    • @pietrospano78
      @pietrospano78 5 лет назад +1

      "Capriccio" ruclips.net/video/W4VngotB6XE/видео.html

    • @richardbautista503
      @richardbautista503 5 лет назад +1

      Until khatia buniatishvilli came along

    • @patrickheurley2686
      @patrickheurley2686 5 лет назад +2

      @@richardbautista503 NON ...

    • @patrickheurley2686
      @patrickheurley2686 5 лет назад

      Et pourtant j'adore K. Buniatishvili ..

  • @reallynotpc
    @reallynotpc 3 года назад +32

    There is a microscopic delay before the third beat of the second bar that wraps the performance firmly around my attention and doesn't let go until the piece is at an end. Beyond mastery!

    • @kikinc32
      @kikinc32 3 месяца назад

      YES! Exactly this! 👆🏼

  • @gabriella2742
    @gabriella2742 2 года назад +9

    Water weight sent me here.. Thanks Niko! Beautiful music 🎶

    • @EruannaArte
      @EruannaArte 3 месяца назад +1

      Nikocado? is he doing violin content? 😃

  • @delaruemichel1796
    @delaruemichel1796 Год назад +36

    sublime interprétation de M. Horowitz qui nous transporte dans un si bel univers musical -merci beaucoup ❣

  • @professordodo1
    @professordodo1 9 лет назад +21

    Schubert is sublime in many pianists hands but here Horowitz is unique with his very own unsophistcated interpretative skill which nobody can criticise. The fingering, the beauty of sound in the most pianissimo parts sends a shiver down the spine, Rubinstein was my idol for years, but the more I hear Horowitz the less I listen to Rubinstein, I love both but..........

    • @turalf.9039
      @turalf.9039 9 лет назад

      .

    • @cosmofox
      @cosmofox 9 лет назад +3

      professordodo1 That you say "unsophisticated" is interesting. I don't know the difference between pianists but this word suggests a rare quality that transcends technical skill, in any art. "Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication." - Da Vinci

    • @raceputin2738
      @raceputin2738 7 лет назад

      ,

  • @BoringWhisper
    @BoringWhisper 3 года назад +22

    This is pure magic...brings tears every time I hear it...

  • @carmenl9280
    @carmenl9280 Год назад +29

    This rendition of this beautiful Schubert impromptu is so full of emotion and so powerful and calm at the same time. I find it difficult to put into words. Simply the best recording of this piece I have ever heard. I absolutely love his tempo.

  • @sabina0816
    @sabina0816 Год назад +10

    경건한마음으로 삶을되돌아보게하네요
    워낙좋아하는곡이기도하지만
    연로한 호로비츠가 연주하는걸보며
    나도모르게 많은눈물을흘렸습니다
    종소리마저 성스럽습니다.

  • @liedersanger1
    @liedersanger1 3 года назад +58

    He seems to be playing this in heaven, and somehow communicating it to our earthly ears.

    • @interviewsfortheworld3076
      @interviewsfortheworld3076 3 года назад

      Exactly right! Just as Schubert wanted to!

    • @bobosally
      @bobosally 3 года назад

      YES David, indeed! I had been listening to several other exquisite performances of this piece, then moments into this one, I said to myself outloud "The difference is,... this guy is already in heaven." Takes my breath away.

  • @ElenaVDL
    @ElenaVDL 5 лет назад +15

    O, Боже, какое одухотворенное исполнение Шуберта, словно музыка рождается из небытия и
    овладевает душой, наполняя ее светлой радостью и мечтой блаженства.

    • @gregciach1920
      @gregciach1920 Год назад +1

      Правда! А всё таки вы напали на Укрину...

  • @danasumova6581
    @danasumova6581 Месяц назад +2

    Jak citlivě a něžně podáno - jako pohlazení od dítěte... Neuvěřitelné s ohledem na jeho věk.... Díky za nahrávku a pozdravuji všechny z Rakovnicka v České republice.

  • @MrThrond
    @MrThrond 2 года назад +7

    Le contrôle absolu de son Art: une précision millimétrique derrière une apparente simplicité, la beauté et l'émotion délivrées en cadeau.

  • @estherszalay5921
    @estherszalay5921 8 лет назад +115

    Fabulous. Horowitz was the best, we miss him. Thank you.

    • @MegaCirse
      @MegaCirse 7 лет назад +2

      You probably want to say ....... We miss it is'nt it ?! :-)

  • @joyli8007
    @joyli8007 4 года назад +79

    I like how he plays music. It's like the music is just playing out of the piano. I don't actually know how to put it, but he plays so smoothly. And the fact that he can play without much movement makes it even better because it's like we could only focus on the piece.

    • @rafalolz1
      @rafalolz1 3 года назад +4

      He asks the piano to sing for him, and it does. His fingers sculpt the piece like a potter with clay, gently molding and coaxing the melody to perfection. This might be a little out there but it's like he never plays a single note, only entire phrases. The notes meld into the background to let the phrase and emotion take center stage

    • @ElliotIddon18
      @ElliotIddon18 3 года назад +1

      Rafael Hoek Gay

  • @sheer_coolness
    @sheer_coolness 2 года назад +6

    Came from nikocado avocados video, all I want to say is thank you nik for this wonderful piece of music, it’s a nice break from the noise of popular music now a days.

  • @darknightfawkes1028
    @darknightfawkes1028 9 месяцев назад +6

    I imagined I was watching from the audience as I listened to this and it brought tears to my eyes. Still crying now after it has finished, mourning the beauty that had passed.

  • @lucasg8960
    @lucasg8960 6 лет назад +57

    When Horowitz plays, time, space and matter is inexistent and everything is neutralized by so much sincerity and simplicity. God bless his soul.

  • @johnirvingbenson
    @johnirvingbenson 4 года назад +17

    There is some magic that Horowitz has, where he is IN the moment, and one is pulled in continuously because there is nothing "abstracted" or rote-predictable in the unfolding of note and phrase. After decades and decades, I am usually still sitting on the edge of my seat for this fresh unfolding of the musical moment. There are a few, older European, I think, vinyl recordings where I do not sense this "in the moment quality." My first Horowitz album was Chopin Sonata in B flat minor, at age 12. Years later, after a tour in the Army, and living as a civilian in Germany for 3 years, I got to hear him in Dallas, Texas; I was finishing undergrad and Pre-Med. I had no idea what he would be playing that day, but my heart lept with the opening bars of that Sonata. It was utterly fresh!!! That lucidity and endless variety of tone rang and pulsated in the concert hall. Reading the Wikipedia article on Vladimir H. recently (I had not ever looked it up before), it cited his "direct emotional connection with his hearers." Limbic system and heart intelligence of the artist resonating and creating sympathetic resonance in the limbic systems and heart-minds of many hearers over place and time. A wonder, I ween.

  • @kathleencook3060
    @kathleencook3060 Год назад +20

    Makes my spirit soar every time I hear the Maestro perform this divine Serenade!
    Sincere thanks.
    Again!

  • @metteholm4833
    @metteholm4833 2 месяца назад +21

    My mother played this - very beautiful - and close to this. She was very musical and very sensitive. It sounded like this - more or less. She´d be flattered, if she knew, I was saying this.
    She said her goodbye on January 6th in 2006.

    • @Ernesto7608
      @Ernesto7608 Месяц назад +3

      Your mother was blessed indeed. Schubert didn't write this composition to be performed only by Horowitz. Wherever he is, Schubert must be smiling wherever any of us plays his music with some competence. The BEAUTY is primarily in the COMPOSITION.

    • @FoxyJohn
      @FoxyJohn 16 дней назад

      Do you have a recording of her? I play it too. I love it.

  • @tims2697
    @tims2697 4 года назад +7

    This is my first, maybe also my last comment on youtube.
    Normally I feel like comments dont make sense. However, I just wanna say: Life is beautiful.
    Happiness is only real when shared. This old man knew that.
    Thank You

  • @louisalexandre9571
    @louisalexandre9571 4 года назад +16

    Quel maître! Je suis toujours impressionné par le positionnement de ses mains et forcément la force développée par ses doigts pour obtenir un rendu aussi sublime.

  • @orangesporanges9949
    @orangesporanges9949 2 года назад +10

    Nik sent me to you. I will love him forever for that. So beautiful! 🧡🧡🧡

  • @HeliNoir
    @HeliNoir 2 года назад +11

    The first 10 seconds listening to this my teardrops are just flowing.
    This was so beautiful. Horowitz has no equal.

  • @Nicish77
    @Nicish77 4 года назад +170

    From Horowitz's wikipedia page - Horowitz's hand position was unusual in that the palm was often below the level of the key surface. He frequently played chords with straight fingers, and the little finger of his right hand was often curled up until it needed to play a note; to Harold C. Schonberg, "it was like a strike of a cobra."[1] For all the excitement of his playing, Horowitz rarely raised his hands higher than the piano's fallboard. His body was immobile, and his face seldom reflected anything other than intense concentration.

    • @erwinschrodinger2546
      @erwinschrodinger2546 3 года назад +7

      It's interesting that Art Tatum frequently had his palm below the key surface level with his fingers rather flat. I bet that both Horowitz and Tatum could have been really good if they had only learned how to play properly.

    • @ExEnTriK
      @ExEnTriK 3 года назад +10

      Erwin Schrödinger Horowitz is literally one of the greatest of all times. Just because he can’t play 12 notes a second, or some flashy, high brow triumphant Liszt garbage the way a show pianist like Lang Lang would doesn’t mean he’s not “playing properly”.

    • @murdo_mck
      @murdo_mck 3 года назад +4

      @@ExEnTriK He was being ironic.

    • @arturobelano6243
      @arturobelano6243 3 года назад

      @@ExEnTriK >is called chopin

    • @javascriptkiddie2718
      @javascriptkiddie2718 2 года назад

      @@ExEnTriK youre a moron

  • @evangalyen6402
    @evangalyen6402 4 года назад +23

    I love how his hands lay at the keys and such beautiful music emerges so effortlessly

    • @sneddley
      @sneddley 3 года назад

      Yes, with his hands calm and flat on the keys, he looks and sounds to me like one conjuring up spirits on a quija board.

  • @analegon5739
    @analegon5739 2 года назад +9

    Beautiful Nick Avocado sent me here and it's amazingly beautiful ❤️

    • @EruannaArte
      @EruannaArte 3 месяца назад

      really? thats nice to hear, hope he is ok God bless him

  • @lufangahlkus1313
    @lufangahlkus1313 9 месяцев назад +7

    every single time I hear this recording I feel the first tears in my eyes after 8 seconds. from another world.

  • @brianmcdonagh4499
    @brianmcdonagh4499 4 года назад +69

    A student admirer said to Horowitz, ' I'd give my life to play like you'. Horowitz replied 'I did'.

  • @thomasgibson4577
    @thomasgibson4577 5 лет назад +38

    Softly played at times, gentle, and emotionally strong at other times: Horowitz is very sensitive in his heart.

  • @cindylovestone1459
    @cindylovestone1459 2 года назад +9

    Nick…. Your love of beautiful music is a wonderful gift to share with us idiots. It feels like he is weeping through his fingers. Thank you!!!!
    ❤️🥑❤️🥑❤️🥑❤️

  • @mattknotts6128
    @mattknotts6128 Год назад +13

    Indeed that piano is an extension of him. A true master of not only himself but his art as well. ❤

  • @meredith218461
    @meredith218461 5 лет назад +28

    I have never heard a piano sound so incredibly beautiful as this!

  • @minchuandong219
    @minchuandong219 7 лет назад +135

    This piece is truly from the heaven.

  • @miralazic9621
    @miralazic9621 11 месяцев назад +11

    SCHUBERT...veličanstven i nenadmašan u svemu!!!🌏🕊️🌞✨🦜🌻

  • @alessiofagioli9235
    @alessiofagioli9235 11 месяцев назад +9

    Sublime Horowitz ancora una volta ai massimi livelli.

  • @DMaso001
    @DMaso001 10 лет назад +136

    I played this at my grandmother's funeral, as it so perfectly expresses both celebration and sorrow. Such a beautiful song.

    • @MrMattouven
      @MrMattouven 7 лет назад +5

      Derrek Mason astonishing Derrek...but its a piece, a work of art.

    • @youtubeepicuser4209
      @youtubeepicuser4209 6 лет назад +7

      rest in peace

    • @truiteteam3428
      @truiteteam3428 6 лет назад +1

      Rip your grandmother dude :'(

    • @ViewLT
      @ViewLT 5 лет назад

      RIP your grandmother :’ ‘(

    • @solea59
      @solea59 5 лет назад

      I wish I'd known you when my dad died, you could have played it at his funeral.