Liszt's Strangest Masterpiece: Vallée d'Obermann

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • 00:20 Liszt’s most enigmatic piece
    02:28 Compositional history of Vallée d’Obermann
    03:15 Experimental style of the young Liszt
    05:20 Literary connection
    05:58 The Valley of the title
    06:39 Obermann’s personality and quotations
    09:28 The isolated and itinerant romantic hero
    10:08 Quotation from Schubert’s “Der Wanderer” song.
    12:20 Influence on Tchaikovsky
    13:04 Programmatic outline
    13:45 Allusions to Classical sonata form and Beethoven
    15:13 Performances of this piece
    17:35 “Better than it can be played”
    18:25 Piano Trio version
    21:00 Complete performance
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Комментарии • 50

  • @robertdyson4216
    @robertdyson4216 2 месяца назад +1

    I started playing this is the early 1960s. It has never lost its magic for me.

  • @pawdaw
    @pawdaw 29 дней назад

    My feeling about the sempre animando section at the end is that you have to feel as though you've earned it; you've climbed the mountain, now you can see the horizon. But then, after the moment of exultation, the nagging doubts return - hence the strange, precipitous ending. One of Liszt's most inspired works.

  • @pandude53
    @pandude53 2 года назад +16

    Best description of this piece that I've heard. Truly you get this and the style. Wonderful work

    • @TheIndependentPianist
      @TheIndependentPianist  2 года назад

      Thank you!

    • @gergelykiss
      @gergelykiss 2 года назад

      If you want to delve into Vallée d'Oberman even deeper, here is a 30-minute analysis: ruclips.net/video/hg_5VE67lUA/видео.html

  • @nickk8416
    @nickk8416 2 месяца назад +1

    What an exceptional video! This piece is new to me. The story behind the piece is so deep. It's amazing that a person who has seemingly everything can experience these deep depths. This will take several more listenings for it to sink in. I loved the final 1/3 rd of it at first listen. The finale was so Liszt. This piece gives one much to think about.

  • @peterchan6082
    @peterchan6082 3 месяца назад +1

    Great analysis and underlying stories!
    Am a huge fan of Liszt's original works. I was madly in love with this work ~20 years ago. My debut all-Liszt recital in Feb 2005 contained this work as the opening piece.
    Haven't been playing it for a long, long time ever since, though.
    You made me sort of want to re-visit and pick up this piece again!
    And Bravo, well-done, great playing!

  • @mvmarchiori
    @mvmarchiori Год назад +2

    For me Liszt is the master at motivic transformation. Great video, thanks!

  • @AfroPoli
    @AfroPoli 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for this video. The piece fascinated me as a teenager, and I learned it when I was 15. But back then, I played it only to get to section B and following. The first section didn't make any sense to me. Now, that I'm older and have tasted some of life's bitterness, I love section A the most. Its darkness and crushing despair, however, almost make it unplayable. I'm curious how it'll feel at 70 if I ever get there.

  • @petermccutcheon6261
    @petermccutcheon6261 2 года назад +8

    Fascinating as always, Cole. The melodic motive in Section B reminds me of the first movement of his first piano concerto.

    • @TheIndependentPianist
      @TheIndependentPianist  2 года назад +2

      I never thought of that before! I need to go and take a look right now….

    • @petermccutcheon6261
      @petermccutcheon6261 2 года назад

      @@TheIndependentPianist I was thinking of the brief passage in the concerto, approx. 3 mins. in, when the clarinet transitions to Amaj. and plays a theme echoed by the piano and solo concertmaster. Rachmaninov would have smiled!

  • @iianneill6013
    @iianneill6013 Год назад +2

    The definitive online analysis of d'Obermann. Grateful for your work in producing this!

  • @NSKS52
    @NSKS52 2 года назад +2

    What an in-depth analysis and fantastic performance! A few days ago, I was in a car listening to a local classical music station. They played a piece I didn't recognize, but clearly heard Lensky's aria theme in it, so I figured it must be either Tchaikovsky's or someone else's arrangement. Toward the end, I was sure it was not Mr. T. When it ended, they announced that it was Liszt's Vallée d'Obermann! Thank you, Cole, for another wonderful journey in good music! Enjoy your stay in the south!

  • @ruramikael
    @ruramikael 2 месяца назад

    I think the piece is closely related to Marie d'Agoult, that is why the 2nd version is much darker and Liszt didn't want to hear the 2nd part of the piece which ends in a relatively happy mood.

  • @josephhapp9
    @josephhapp9 Год назад +1

    Loved this, thank you.
    1st heard this on Horowitz Tribute Highlights Carnegie Hall compilation, live 27th November 1966.
    Magic.

  • @michaelwaterworth9899
    @michaelwaterworth9899 3 месяца назад

    What an extraordinary piece. I've never heard it before until now. You did well to play such a contrasting and complex work.

  • @samsontarpeh6157
    @samsontarpeh6157 2 года назад +1

    Goodness, what a piece. The ending is remarkable-my kind of ending😊. 🎩🎩🎩🎩 off Cole👏👏👏

  • @richardwhitehouse8762
    @richardwhitehouse8762 Год назад

    Wow!
    I can see why the piece was mauled by the critics. It is very enigmatic and yet marvelous. This was new to me. Thank you so much for the analysis and the commentary and also the annotated score which helped a lot. Having lost my father last year, I can see why he would have felt a bit unmoored and it certainly shows in the piece. The very ending was a complete surprise. I'll have to listen again but bravo for your performance. I found it subtle and probing and extremely beautiful.

  • @user-fu7zf4ck9z
    @user-fu7zf4ck9z Год назад +1

    You absolutely nailed the final two bars!! Very satisfying recording. Just from the performance alone one can tell that you did your research on this piece

  • @EElgar1857
    @EElgar1857 Год назад

    I have loved this piece for years, but without a lot of the background that you have brought to it in this video. Now I'm sure that I didn't take it seriously enough! I have some favorite recordings of the piece - Arrau & Bolet spring to mind - but yours is the equal of both of them.
    Really, a superb performance!

  • @dirkschneiderheinze
    @dirkschneiderheinze 2 года назад +1

    I feel Tchaikovsky also used ideas from this piece in his Romeo and Juliet fantasy overture such as the brooding chorale section as well as the repeated chords in the climax.

  • @mazeppa1231
    @mazeppa1231 Год назад

    I really love your interpretation at 35:00 to the end. I've heard a lot of vallee d'obermann, but I've never heard anyone play it that way, and it makes so much sense for that part to be played like this. It's very satisfying.

  • @johnrock2173
    @johnrock2173 Год назад

    Absolutely great episode and performance. Thank you as always. Your interpretation really allowed the piece to rise through. Thank you for caring about Liszt's pieces that are less played.

  • @grahamtwist
    @grahamtwist 2 года назад

    A fascinating commentary, Cole, followed by an exquisite performance of Liszt's 'Vallée d'Oberman' (and as it is the first time I have heard this work, I can see why you reference the music as his "strangest masterpiece"). The music intrigued me and I was compelled to read more about the piece. I found some programme notes that resonated with my initial reaction to the music: "Throughout the work . . .dense, gritty dissonances, weakly resolved, bear witness to the intensity of the emotional struggle being portrayed" - which explains why I found it both wonderful as well as deeply unsettling! B R A V O !

  • @M.Arsenault
    @M.Arsenault 2 года назад

    Great video and well researched. I'm glad you mentioned the forgotten Trio version "Tristia". Also that ossia passage is very nice, I don't think I've ever heard it be played!

  • @mohammadbayazid5064
    @mohammadbayazid5064 2 года назад +2

    Bravo! Do one of Schubert’s sonatas next, if you please

  • @tomh888
    @tomh888 Год назад +1

    Such a deep and profound analysis!

  • @gergelykiss
    @gergelykiss 2 года назад

    Wonderful performance. I don't understand how you aren't signed with some major classical label.
    Special thank you for playing the ossia - I never found a recording that opted for that before.
    I was really glad to hear the "Wo bist du?"-esque motif at 31:20 in the middle voice (D#-G-F#) - for me it's clear Liszt meant that to stand out, and you never really hear piansts giving it the prominence you did here.
    Another nice touch is in mm. 212-213 (35:46) where the rhythmic play between the two hands is often osbcured by fff and pedal, but you bring it out really clear and crisp, the right hand really adds to the underlying syncopation with your approach (which seems more in line with Liszt's score in any case:).

  • @pauchalo
    @pauchalo Год назад +1

    Thanks a lot!!! I have always loved this piece and also performed the ossia passage jist because I felt it was much better and fitting. Somehow I felt comforted by someone else also feeling the same way. I’ll follow your channel, GREAT and inspiring discovery. You have got a new fan from Barcelona. I just have one question about the sound, it feels you are not using an acoustic piano but an electronic one because the sound drops in long chords and also the keyboard moves when playing octaves. Is that so because of technical issues? Thanks a lot

  • @franzurjisorabliszt
    @franzurjisorabliszt Год назад +2

    I watched this again after I heard nyiregyhazi's interpretation on this piece, what an analysis!

    • @TheIndependentPianist
      @TheIndependentPianist  Год назад +5

      Thanks! Oh I could say a lot about Nyiregyhazi's version-I'm not sure if I should though. I love your user name by the way.

    • @nandovancreij
      @nandovancreij Год назад

      @@TheIndependentPianist lmao there certainly is a lot to say about that performance. i do think korstick's recording is valid.

  • @davidclemensen8952
    @davidclemensen8952 2 года назад +1

    Bravo!

  • @angelmeneg6507
    @angelmeneg6507 2 года назад +1

    Thanks

  • @bloba6969
    @bloba6969 2 года назад +4

    Once I heard Nyiregyhazi's recordign i couldn't go back to other performances. I think that he pays tribute to Liszt.

  • @Birbeniho
    @Birbeniho Год назад

    Great analysis

  • @rogerevans9666
    @rogerevans9666 5 месяцев назад

    The version by Nyiregyhazi is the best by far, although some hate it!!!

  • @AlotusNine
    @AlotusNine 2 года назад +2

    Learned 5 minutes into it. Wasn’t able to do the physically demanding part. I got exhausted

    • @TheIndependentPianist
      @TheIndependentPianist  2 года назад

      I can certainly get that. Even just the first 5 minutes is great stuff.

    • @AlotusNine
      @AlotusNine 2 года назад

      @@TheIndependentPianist no I started from the first main theme all the way till the cadenza, after that I got fatigue with the tremolo. The beginning was too depressing for me.

  • @einberteinbert
    @einberteinbert 2 года назад +1

    😍

  • @iianneill6013
    @iianneill6013 Год назад

    Have you come across the Zoltan Kocsis orchestration of d'Obermann? It's quite sumptuous ... ruclips.net/video/jyR4wgk5kz0/видео.html

    • @TheIndependentPianist
      @TheIndependentPianist  Год назад

      I haven't-that sounds fascinating! Thanks, I will add it to my listening list.

  • @arts1902
    @arts1902 2 года назад

    33:11

  • @rogerevans9666
    @rogerevans9666 Год назад

    Schnabel's dictum @17:42

  • @penrodcrystal6022
    @penrodcrystal6022 2 года назад

    🙈 𝖕𝖗𝖔𝖒𝖔𝖘𝖒

  • @foljamb
    @foljamb 4 месяца назад

    wonderful...wonderful channel and wonderful tech that this artist can use to make these amazing lecture-demos