A Brief History of Clementi, the Underrated Innovator

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  • Опубликовано: 10 мар 2017
  • Happy 2023! 😃I'll be releasing some new videos this year, so be sure to subscribe to the channel for updates!
    I also host monthly teaching webinars, which are free to join. You can sign up for the PianoTV mailing list to receive details on upcoming webinars here: pianotv.ck.page/49bf70e8eb
    In addition to the approximately 500 free videos I've created here, and the free monthly webinars, I also offer step-by-step paid courses (Complete Piano Path) with weekly group feedback sessions, video tutorials, technique/sight reading/piece downloads, checklists, and more. These courses typically open once or twice per year, so hop on a waitlist if you're interested! www.pianotv.net/ptvschool/
    Be sure to visit the website www.pianotv.net for any downloads associated with this video.
    Happy practicing!
    -Allysia

Комментарии • 123

  • @oniuqasaile
    @oniuqasaile 7 лет назад +18

    WHAT??? Clementi indirectly taught my two absolute favorite composers?!!

  • @lydiabrindley1944
    @lydiabrindley1944 2 года назад +11

    Hes rarely ever mentioned. I always play his music to warm up my hands at the end I play his sonatas. He makes playing easy with the notes you play. You don't have to fanny about finding the notes. Beethoven held him in very high esteem

    • @dorothytrent6978
      @dorothytrent6978 2 года назад +1

      My piano teacher told me today “unless if you play piano, it’s pretty rare for people to know about clementi”

  • @BeautifulDreamerK
    @BeautifulDreamerK 3 года назад +7

    CLEMENTI! My favorite! I always loved playing his pieces because they were always upbeat and happy 😊

  • @canman5060
    @canman5060 4 года назад +5

    Mozart doesn't have good comment on Clementi. He said his music is plain 'mere mechanics' ! But his many piano works are greatly admired by Beethoven and MYSELF who is a dedicated follower of Clementi.

  • @CanelonVegano
    @CanelonVegano Год назад +3

    There are some awesome Clementi sonatas. Op 40 is REALLY good. (Especially no 2 and 3)

    • @CanelonVegano
      @CanelonVegano Год назад +1

      It is a shame that he's only really know for his op 36 (great for beginners tho)

  • @Stu228
    @Stu228 3 года назад +6

    Thank you for making this video! Clementi is often written off, but his works have had great longevity.

  • @canman5060
    @canman5060 4 года назад +11

    His set of 6 op.36 sonatinas is a must play and learn worldwide.

  • @mutantbaby1672
    @mutantbaby1672 4 года назад +13

    "Vladimir Horowitz"
    The arrow was pointing at Rubinstein. lol

  • @celsodimov.
    @celsodimov. 7 лет назад +29

    Hi from Brazil!
    Your channel deserves waaay more views than it has, I particularly like your history videos the most, please, keep them coming!
    And just for your knowledge, around 12:00, when you talk about Horowitz your picture actually points out Rubinstein!

    • @PianotvNet
      @PianotvNet  7 лет назад

      +Septobus, maybe make a note of it? :)

    • @DanielVega-nu6ye
      @DanielVega-nu6ye 7 лет назад

      Celso Eduardo Soares Dimov Quantity vs Quality, that's the question. We are few but we are strong!

  • @loganfruchtman953
    @loganfruchtman953 2 года назад +2

    Chopin also assigned Clementi sonatas to his students and he also had similar opinions of him to Beethoven seeing his works as essential to piano students.

  • @canman5060
    @canman5060 4 года назад +6

    I think Clementi great great grandson is also a piano teacher himself living in Canada.

  • @classicalvintagecollector
    @classicalvintagecollector 3 года назад +3

    I can trace my piano teacher letting it back to Clementi. My piano students generally study five out of six of his sonatinas from opus 36.

  • @adrianscreaton6354
    @adrianscreaton6354 4 года назад +2

    They should make a film of his life,I knew nothing about him till I started playing piano at the age of 55,I did have lessons at 7 and passed my grade 1 then,but at 55 my grade 1 introduced me to Clementi and again in grade 3,I have his OP36 and am planning to be able to play all of them,they are so beautiful he was a great human being someone we should all aspire to be like,he has left behind so much to benefit us all.Adrian
    Thanks for this video

  • @mannydain
    @mannydain 4 года назад +1

    thank youuu, love your enthusiasm

  • @sarahhallyburton7428
    @sarahhallyburton7428 2 года назад

    Wonderful video. Thank you!🌟

  • @marioescabi2529
    @marioescabi2529 7 лет назад +31

    I really like these types of videos
    can you do one on paganini or Antonio Vivaldi or saint seans

    • @garethbowes4161
      @garethbowes4161 7 лет назад +3

      well 2 of those didn't write for piano at all

    • @kibumlee3336
      @kibumlee3336 7 лет назад

      Mario Escabi And meeee!!

    • @lechoro5229
      @lechoro5229 6 лет назад +3

      A brief story of Saint-säens is a pretty good idea

  • @samrogers9515
    @samrogers9515 7 месяцев назад

    Very good! Thank you!

  • @robinlawrence2438
    @robinlawrence2438 Год назад

    Love the history! These are so fun, thanks!

  • @tomcat193
    @tomcat193 5 лет назад +1

    Awesome! thanks.

  • @ymaysernameuay1113
    @ymaysernameuay1113 3 года назад

    Love these vids! You've taught me so much!

  • @rugbyjefe710
    @rugbyjefe710 3 года назад +3

    Sampling was a thing back then apparently. Also John Field was Irish.

  • @johnkiunke5617
    @johnkiunke5617 7 лет назад +12

    The magic flute was actually in 1791, and Op. 24 no. 4 was played at the duel, so it was probably written in 1780 or 81.

  • @arseniykunin3423
    @arseniykunin3423 7 лет назад

    Amazing!

  • @MarsLos10
    @MarsLos10 7 лет назад +1

    Allysia you are awesome

  • @petrahaller1454
    @petrahaller1454 7 лет назад

    I loooove your channel!!!

  • @lisakowalchuk4660
    @lisakowalchuk4660 3 года назад +1

    really informative! You're so knowledgeable!

  • @GabrieleDeiana
    @GabrieleDeiana 4 года назад +1

    Amazing! thank you :)

  • @gabrielrodriguez9413
    @gabrielrodriguez9413 3 года назад +1

    These videos are great!

  • @rajanpiano2011
    @rajanpiano2011 2 года назад

    Very informative and well presented. Thanks for everything.

  • @ZachBonnell
    @ZachBonnell 4 года назад +1

    I'm a couple years late to these videos but I love them. I guess a couple of years late is nothing compared to when all this actually took place.

  • @manusmacgearailt667
    @manusmacgearailt667 3 года назад +2

    I thought John Field was Irish last time I checked, hence why there's a concert room named after him in the National Concert Hall in Dublin?

  • @mixertanka2539
    @mixertanka2539 Год назад +1

    Most of the classical musical forms are of Italian mind. From modern opera, to the concerto, to the sonata, to the symphony, the piano, the violin and many other things, (it is no coincidence that the technical language of classical music is still Italian today, tempo, andante, staccato, allegro etc. ..). So if you want to discover the roots of most modern classical music, listen to Italian classical music...

  • @MrGreencheetah
    @MrGreencheetah 3 года назад +1

    I also love the musical history and am delirious with joy after enjoying this video!!! . . . also, I'm looking forward to some improvement with your "sprinkler" dance moves.

  • @ginasmit5559
    @ginasmit5559 4 года назад +3

    Great episode, thank you! A small point (12:08) you are talking about Vladimir Horowitz, but the arrow points at the picture of Arthur Rubinstein.

  • @canman5060
    @canman5060 3 года назад +4

    Without Clementi Beethoven may not be able to get the great inspiration of all the rapid running broken octaves in many of his piano sonatas.

  • @thepianoplayer416
    @thepianoplayer416 Год назад +1

    As technical as Clementi pieces can be, many of his piano sonatinas are relatively easy to sight-read and became common student pieces. Students have varying degree of technical abilities and tend to play under-tempo. In the latter part of the 18th century, the piano was not a well developed instrument and didn't have 88 keys. His pieces may have big jumps but still limited to the # keys on the pianos at the time.
    When it comes to violin pieces, Clementi rarely comes up. People who learned violin or have gone to student recitals would find sonatinas by the German Friedrich Seitz more common than pieces by Clementi.

  • @nourmousli8242
    @nourmousli8242 7 лет назад +2

    I really love your history videos, they always remind me that I should listen more and I end up discovering new music ! I only know a few sonatas of Clementi and the only one I played is op34 n2, an amazing sonata ( Horowitz interpretation of this one makes me wanna sleep though) ,, thanks :)

    • @PianotvNet
      @PianotvNet  7 лет назад +1

      They're my favorite videos to make! :)

  • @KeepingOnTheWatch
    @KeepingOnTheWatch 7 лет назад

    @13:36 "I really like doing these history videos..." and I really like watching these as well. I haven't started Level 1 RCM yet but I already bought all the books (hehehe... can't wait) so I checked out the list of repertoire and I'm happy to see that the second piece, 'Pyrenese Melody', is by Clementi. Also, not that it matters but if Clementi moved to England when he was 14 he likely had an English accent by the time he was a young adult. Just an interesting thought.

  • @dracorex6876
    @dracorex6876 7 лет назад +1

    Thank you for making a video on Clementi's history and contributions to the piano! Many of my personal favourite sonatas by him include Op. 7, No 3, Op. 13, No. 6, Op. 24, No. 2, Op. 25, No. 5, and Op. 34, No. 2, just to name a few. They;re all a bit more technically demanding than Mozart's, but are a lot of fun to play and are highly recommended as they're not as difficult as Beethoven's sonatas. The fact that he's the first composer to compose almost exclusively for the piano makes him a forerunner of Chopin in that sense.

    • @PianotvNet
      @PianotvNet  7 лет назад

      I never thought of the comparison to Chopin, thanks for your wisdom! And I'm excited to check out more of Clementi's music, since I'm less familiar with his sonatas compared to Mozart and Beethoven.

    • @dracorex6876
      @dracorex6876 7 лет назад +1

      They aren't too hard to find. Sheetmusicplus.com is a good place to find Clementi's sonatas. Surprisingly, many of his sonatas share similarities to Haydn, which strengthens the kinship with Beethoven. Since you mentioned Ludwig Berger and John Field, it's worth noting that Clementi's sonatas gives away the influences on Mendelssohn and Chopin, and even other composers like Hummel and Brahms, so that's quite a legacy. Believe it or not, Clementi also composed a few symphonies, all of which are charming, if not as groundbreaking as Beethoven and Schubert, and one of them, known as "The Great National," has a slow movement which are variations on the British national anthem God Save The Queen, hence the nickname. They're worth listening to, so check them out when you can.

  • @bettanies5864
    @bettanies5864 7 лет назад +1

    first like and comment! great video- I can already tell!

  • @Dreymonn
    @Dreymonn 7 лет назад +1

    When are we starting Grade 4 piano?

  • @walkaboutarts
    @walkaboutarts 7 лет назад

    yoyoyo!! awesome and informative video. I love your channel, especially all the pictures and funny captions :)
    but afaik the magic flute was composed in 1791 - or did Mozart compose the overture 11 years earlier?
    anyway, keep those videos coming. best wishes from Vienna

    • @mfernandez5743
      @mfernandez5743 3 года назад

      Mozart usually composed overtures at the end

  • @kanyekubrick5391
    @kanyekubrick5391 7 лет назад

    music teaching lineage is indeed cool.

  • @dorothytrent6978
    @dorothytrent6978 2 года назад

    I’m actually learning pieces by both clementi and Chopin

  • @JoydeLeonGabriel
    @JoydeLeonGabriel 7 лет назад +2

    i totally love clementi..! it makes me really furious to the fact he's always overlooked.

  • @f.gornandt8701
    @f.gornandt8701 7 лет назад

    Hey, thanks for this Video. I'm not sure, if your sources are right. The Magic Flute was published 1791. And I don't think, that he wrote the Ouverture 11 years before, even with the fact, that the libretto includes ideas of works around 1785 - 1788.

  • @gillesstanek335
    @gillesstanek335 4 года назад +1

    Years back, after hearing some of Clementi's symphonies published by Naxos, I felt at the time that they tediously lacked originality and were repetitive like a few other contempories' compositions. Yet your numerous historical testimonies provided and unwavering stamina make me feel like giving it another try, were it but to listen to Clementi's piano works. Thank you for sharing such enthusiasm!

  • @Digibeatle09
    @Digibeatle09 3 года назад +3

    Excellent video - but please note John Field was an Irishman - not an Englishman !

  • @HowardS185
    @HowardS185 2 года назад

    Great video, but Gina, I caught that mnistake too (Rubinstein vs Horowitz)

  • @user-iu9ob7wv3z
    @user-iu9ob7wv3z 9 дней назад

    Didn't his piano company merge with Collard, later to become Collard & Collard? I have this in the back of my mind. I like Clementi's music and listen to it quite frequently.

  • @memedreams8558
    @memedreams8558 7 лет назад

    Could you do a brief history on Mendelssohn or Saint-Saëns?

  • @booduh11811
    @booduh11811 6 лет назад +1

    I love your videos!!!! But your arrow @ 12:08 doesn't look like Horowitz, it looks like Artur Rubinstein

  • @armhan
    @armhan 7 лет назад +1

    When I saw "San Lorenzo" on the map I said "WHAT!?", that's near where I live O_o
    ...but unfortunately that's another San Lorenzo :D
    He was in San Lorenzo in Damaso (Rome, central Italy), the map you showed is San Lorenzo (Reggio Calabria, south of Italy).
    Anyway interesting video! :)

    • @PianotvNet
      @PianotvNet  7 лет назад +1

      Oh no! I wasn't aware of that, thanks for pointing it out. I'll maybe ask the editor +Septobus to make a note of it.

  • @ChinaAl
    @ChinaAl 6 лет назад +2

    Yes great series. Problem is kids today are into punk rock and rap. GOD I hate rap!

  • @HardluckHutch
    @HardluckHutch 3 года назад +1

    Can you do one on Salieri?

  • @mfernandez5743
    @mfernandez5743 3 года назад +3

    There is no evidence Mozart used Clementi’s sonata. The Magic Flute was composed in 1791 not 1780. John Field was Irish not English.

  • @eatlom
    @eatlom 7 лет назад

    Great video!!
    Could you do a brief history of Liszt? :)

  • @PaulMelia
    @PaulMelia 6 лет назад +6

    John Field was Irish, not English. He moved to England, doesn't make him English.

  • @bikkies
    @bikkies 4 года назад +1

    Very interesting, always amusing to hear the transatlantic pronunciation of Worcestershire. Believe it or not, it's like "wusster share". That's because here in England we like to confuse.

    • @phychemnerd
      @phychemnerd 3 года назад +1

      That you do really well.

    • @bikkies
      @bikkies 3 года назад

      @@phychemnerd We do indeed. It gets worse - for such a small nation we have a really diverse set of accents, colloquialisms and other quirks. I was born in Liverpool. If I travel just 30 miles in any direction I'll hit regions with differences that can take me off guard. Travel 60 miles to Yorkshire and the differences become far wider. To my English ear I can only really differentiate maybe 4 or 5 American accents such as Bronx, a fairly generic drawl that may or may not be Texan, some differences with Boston if I listen carefully, west coast, and everybody else. I'm sure there's a load of regional variation there too, but I can't detect it.

    • @phychemnerd
      @phychemnerd 3 года назад +1

      @@bikkies Actually I think some dialects are cute. Might confuse the shit out of strangers but it adds keeps things interesting.
      Regarding North America, I like how some Canadians says "about", "out", "house", etc. Look up Canadian raising.

    • @phychemnerd
      @phychemnerd 3 года назад +1

      @@bikkies I meant to say accents in my previous comment.

  • @jimjohn2652
    @jimjohn2652 5 лет назад +1

    9:22 Christ, that got me unguarded

  • @jasondoyle7202
    @jasondoyle7202 7 лет назад

    Can you do something on John Field? If you can :)

  • @UniversalDirp
    @UniversalDirp 3 года назад +1

    clementi is childhood
    so is kuhlau, czerny, and burgmuller

  • @DanielVega-nu6ye
    @DanielVega-nu6ye 7 лет назад

    A brief history of A. Kerney, please.

  • @roastedlion1
    @roastedlion1 7 лет назад

    can you do a video about Johann Strauss Jr.

  • @920Marko
    @920Marko 6 лет назад +2

    You should do a brief history of Sergei Rachmaninoff please❤️

  • @piano1937
    @piano1937 7 лет назад

    Brief history of Scriabin pls

  • @misssarahashplant31
    @misssarahashplant31 5 лет назад +1

    I've heard a few of his pieces but I'm not overly familiar with his music.

  • @Joeyboiification
    @Joeyboiification 7 лет назад +1

    Warchestershire? Never heard of that county before

    • @lordbyrondj
      @lordbyrondj 5 лет назад +1

      Think sheeant Worcestershire

  • @Kcire17
    @Kcire17 7 лет назад

    I am trying Fantaisie Impromptu, but I'm having a little trouble with 3 vs 4 on hands coordination, could you give me any advice? (PD; I love your videos :D)

    • @392023001
      @392023001 7 лет назад +2

      117progamer few options, try one hand at a time and then putting both hands together or try very slow and get the right rhythm, notes in the right place and slowly speedup. also you can try 3v2 first and then just double your right hand notes...

    • @PianotvNet
      @PianotvNet  7 лет назад +1

      We addressed polyrhythm as one of the topics in this Q&A:
      ruclips.net/video/-sHXgvawVlg/видео.html
      Hope that helps!

    • @Kcire17
      @Kcire17 7 лет назад

      thaaaaaaaanx a lot

    • @Kcire17
      @Kcire17 7 лет назад

      ill try that. thnx :)

  • @janettehorton7885
    @janettehorton7885 3 года назад +1

    Janette Horton

  • @mhaxen4081
    @mhaxen4081 7 лет назад

    Request: A Brief History of Georges Bizet
    Great video btw :)

    • @garethbowes4161
      @garethbowes4161 7 лет назад

      did he write for piano?

    • @mhaxen4081
      @mhaxen4081 7 лет назад

      Aye. Here's a list of his piano works: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_compositions_by_Georges_Bizet#Works_for_piano

    • @mhaxen4081
      @mhaxen4081 7 лет назад

      But he's most famous for his operas.

    • @garethbowes4161
      @garethbowes4161 7 лет назад

      It doesn't seem like his piano output was important enough to get a video out of.

  • @Opoczynski
    @Opoczynski 6 лет назад +2

    Love your programs. But, please, try to learn pronunciation of foreign names, like Leipzig =Laiptzig. I'll be happy to be your tutor, free.

  • @jgrab1
    @jgrab1 2 года назад

    "Mee-yuu-zee-oh?"

  • @MarcelloSevero
    @MarcelloSevero 7 лет назад

    You said San Lorenzo, Rome, and then proceeded to zoom in on Calabria…

  • @telephilia
    @telephilia 6 лет назад +1

    Who listens to Clementi? Not many. You might have to learn one of Sonata/Sonatinas as a student. Beyond that, he is almost never played.

  • @TheInternetFan
    @TheInternetFan 7 месяцев назад

    2:13 S. Lorenzo in Damaso as you correctly say is a basilica in Rome, so how come you're then pointing at a place in Calabria, in Southern Italy?
    Old Indro Montanelli was right when he wrote: "Americans know the Pope is in Rome. They just don't know where Rome is." 😂

  • @magisterparsons
    @magisterparsons 3 года назад +1

    Parnassus was sacred to Apollo, the god of music.

  • @MarsLos10
    @MarsLos10 6 лет назад +1

    Wow, not even mentioned his love life, like she did with other composers. Didn't he get married? Or this is something lost in history so we're not sure?

  • @chrissinger24
    @chrissinger24 6 лет назад

    Con tab bee lee

  • @joyliu9527
    @joyliu9527 Год назад

    1:30

  • @communismwithgiggles2515
    @communismwithgiggles2515 7 лет назад +1

    I thought Bartolomeo Cristofi was father of the piano

    • @gerardgag
      @gerardgag 7 лет назад

      Hes its creator

    • @Opoczynski
      @Opoczynski 6 лет назад

      Bartolomeo Cristofori, I believe.

  • @garethbowes4161
    @garethbowes4161 7 лет назад +6

    John Field was Irish not English ;)

  • @Gguy061
    @Gguy061 Год назад

    Leopold Kozeluch is an under-rated master who is less well known than Clementi. I would argue his sonatas are of a much better quality, especially the minor key ones. Both he and Edelmann wrote amazingly expressive minor key sonatas in the 1780s/90s that hint strongly towards Romanticism! They both deserve videos more than Clementi does!

  • @emiliyk4747
    @emiliyk4747 3 года назад +1

    Did he have a wife or kids?

  • @richardnineteenfortyone7542
    @richardnineteenfortyone7542 Год назад +1

    John Field not "English". He was IRISH !

  • @SteveHacker
    @SteveHacker 3 года назад +1

    I don’t understand why there is SO MUCH mispronunciation on this channel; not just of names and places, but just basic English language words. Is English the second language here? I hear no accent, so I’m at a loss for understanding this...

  • @ilmaurizetazetaerre
    @ilmaurizetazetaerre 2 года назад

    actually it's pronounced Moot-seeo 8-)

  • @joserobertodossantosvieira2320
    @joserobertodossantosvieira2320 6 лет назад +1

    HATE 99!!!

  • @vaslav4171
    @vaslav4171 11 месяцев назад

    We hate him... If you study piano.