Ravel. Gaspard de la Nuit - Martha Argerich (Live Saarbrücken 1972)

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024

Комментарии • 104

  • @rigel48
    @rigel48 9 месяцев назад +17

    No one plays Maurice Ravel's Gaspard de la Nuit better than Martha Argerich. This version in particular is outstanding.

    • @davidsheriff9274
      @davidsheriff9274 4 месяца назад

      Have you heard Pascal Roge? He's pretty darn good.

    • @NHO12209
      @NHO12209 2 месяца назад

      Svjatoslav Richter

    • @gsherlock
      @gsherlock 26 дней назад +1

      Ivo Pogorelic

    • @rigel48
      @rigel48 2 дня назад

      @@gsherlock There are a lot of good things in Pogorelich's version, but he still takes a little too much liberty with Ravel's score.

    • @rigel48
      @rigel48 2 дня назад

      @@NHO12209 To my knowledge Richter only played Le Gibet. Not Ondine or Scarbo.

  • @atxpianist
    @atxpianist 2 месяца назад +2

    I thought I knew this song but now I have to rethink the whole thing.

    • @hrh4961
      @hrh4961 Месяц назад

      This is not a "song." A song is a free-standing poem set to music for singer and, most often, piano.

  • @Jeffdoggydavis
    @Jeffdoggydavis 2 года назад +21

    Marta Agerich's musical capacities are beyond belief. Her Scarbo is just the most thrilling of all time. And you have no choice but to love her musical personality. She - like may artists - teaches us to love a person we have never met.

  • @LrLi
    @LrLi 4 года назад +30

    I. Ondine 0:00
    II. Le gibet 6:35
    III. Scarbo 13:06

  • @pietalpha2
    @pietalpha2 10 лет назад +62

    Just heard Khatia B. play this live and it was a travesty. I had to come back home and play this to re-affirm the genius of Ravel!

    • @vladibaby79
      @vladibaby79 8 лет назад +19

      Oh yes, it was probably a bad idea to listen to K.B. Let me guess: too fast, too confused, too must virtuoso allure, bad taste. But I suppose you will not do the same mistake again

    • @Hervinbalfour
      @Hervinbalfour 7 лет назад +12

      vladibaby79 I can only laugh at your comment because you summed her up! LMBO! I once heard her Prokofiev War Sonata (7th) and was appauled!

    • @andresguillermoalvarezlope418
      @andresguillermoalvarezlope418 4 года назад +5

      i do have to disagree, martha's version is exquisit and yes it does not compare to any other interpretation. but kathia's rendition wasn't bad at all if that's what you're implying

    • @jonbaum
      @jonbaum 3 года назад +9

      I heard Pogorelich play this once, years ago before he went mad. It was miraculous.

    • @jonbaum
      @jonbaum 3 года назад +1

      @@dzordzszs He went completely off the rails. I few years after the Gaspard concert I heard him again - the pieces were unrecognizable because of ridiculous tempos (3 times faster or slower than they should be). The music was literally distorted beyond recognition and was almost impossible to listen too. About half the audience left in the intermission.

  • @johnmusic1923
    @johnmusic1923 Год назад +6

    The best Scarbo I've ever listened

  • @brunitocoso
    @brunitocoso 11 месяцев назад +5

    es la interpretación más linda que hay, no hay con que darle. que grande que sos, marta!! gracias por tanto

  • @789armstrong
    @789armstrong 4 года назад +16

    Martha, as usual, is in a class by herself.

    • @karlakor
      @karlakor 2 года назад

      I had always considered Argerich's performances of Gaspard to be unrivaled until I heard her great friend Nelson Freire. There are at least two performances on RUclips by him of this work, and they are no less fabulous than hers. My only regret is that one of his recordings suffers some audio distortion, but the fire and virtuosity come blazing through.

    • @789armstrong
      @789armstrong 2 года назад +2

      @@karlakor Yes you are referring to Pogorelich who is superb, but do hear Michelangeli and especially Benjamin Grosvenor

    • @Ace-dv5ce
      @Ace-dv5ce Год назад +1

      @@789armstrongGrosvenor is surprisingly good, all three are top tier; although I sometimes wish he had that same intensity as pogorelich in Scarbo especially

    • @789armstrong
      @789armstrong Год назад

      @@Ace-dv5ce Yes, Grosvenor is excellent and comparable to Michelangeli who owns this piece.

    • @drrabner47
      @drrabner47 11 месяцев назад

      ⁠@@789armstrongMichelangelo was one of Argerich’s teachers

  • @pierreguinot9238
    @pierreguinot9238 Год назад +1

    Martha Argerich is stronger than her piano. And Ravel is stronger than his sensibility. Something needs we are stronger as ourself to hear that masterpiece,

  • @howdefufu
    @howdefufu 8 месяцев назад +2

    There are other great performances of this work : Benjamin Grosvenor is spectacular as only one example.

  • @orvillewrightjr.6119
    @orvillewrightjr.6119 6 лет назад +18

    Martha Argerich's performance has such clarity and precision. She's such a consummate artist to her very fingertips that she opens new vistas to the listener, through her dynamics and technical control over the material here. Ravel's Gaspard de la Nuit, after Bertrand's poems, is certainly one of the most difficult and demanding pieces ever written for piano. Ms. Argerich's performance here
    transcends the material and gives me great joy, when I listen to it.

    • @photo161
      @photo161 3 года назад +1

      ...clarity and precision and grace...wonderfully expressive...every note has meaning...

  • @Ace-dv5ce
    @Ace-dv5ce Год назад +1

    3:53 I’ve never heard a piano in so much sorrow and pain. I’ve heard no one yet who plays the ondine this way

  • @piapla8415
    @piapla8415 2 года назад +5

    My favorite performance~

  • @hector67000
    @hector67000 10 лет назад +19

    Her Ondine is the best!

  • @chaimgogol
    @chaimgogol 8 лет назад +16

    The recent recording by Benjamin Grosvenor is one of the most extraordinary things I have ever heard.

    • @republiccooper
      @republiccooper 4 года назад +4

      He is one of the best performers of our generation. I prefer to hear him over many more better-known pianists.

    • @howdefufu
      @howdefufu 5 месяцев назад +1

      Yes the Grovsner performance is a miracle

  • @Janaceks_Dad
    @Janaceks_Dad 12 лет назад +17

    This is simply magical; and for a live recording, the sound is even better than her famous version on DG. And I prefer this to even that outstanding performance.

  • @dad9447
    @dad9447 10 лет назад +9

    La letra mata, mas el espíritu vivifica. Que interpretación!!!. Gracias por compartir este registro de la divina Marta!!!

  • @jomamma1750
    @jomamma1750 2 года назад +6

    An actual musician....

  • @cmonman7947
    @cmonman7947 Год назад +2

    Die Kommentare führen zu einem sprichwörtlichen Schluss, weil schier jede Person eine(n) Lieblingsaufführung bzw Aufnahme und
    Künstler/in hat:
    *Über den Geschmack lässt sich nicht streiten.*

  • @guytanoparks
    @guytanoparks 10 лет назад +7

    ...definitive. With a capital DEFINITIVE!...

  • @remsan03
    @remsan03 8 лет назад +12

    From 03:15 onwards. Her build up of the Ondine is orgasmic. So so satisfying.
    I'll have what she's having, but then again I can't play the Gaspard... damn

  • @marcetor8290
    @marcetor8290 Год назад +2

    Maravilla total, dedos de hada. Esplendor.

  • @robertehle1316
    @robertehle1316 2 года назад

    The half diminished seventh chord pervades this work. Gives it a special flavor.

    • @davidsheriff9274
      @davidsheriff9274 3 месяца назад

      What do you mean by "half diminished seventh chord"? A half diminished chord is not a dominant seventh chord.

  • @horowitz96
    @horowitz96 10 лет назад +3

    The BEST.

  • @starlodear2987
    @starlodear2987 9 лет назад +10

    I have a question for all you musos out there: How many piano players in the world actually manage to play all three movements of this masterpiece? How many hours a day do you practice to play like this?

    • @whitbywv
      @whitbywv 9 лет назад +4

      Depends on what you mean by play it? Some folks audition with it to get into music school, its painful to see, but again if you mean recordings of it? MANY.......as to decent recordings, I can think of about 6 that are NICE to listen to I believe Richter did a version I liked ALOT, Lisitsa, etc etc BUT again, its not the speed its the atmosphere, you invoke

    • @starlodear2987
      @starlodear2987 9 лет назад +1

      Thanks. How long does it take to figure out what notes to hit? I play the guitar and can read music but the sheet music fot gaspard is sick!

    • @whitbywv
      @whitbywv 9 лет назад

      oh, you mean transcribing it??? Well, you do have the rest of your life...BUT if you are serious, get a copy of the score...NOT easy

    • @starlodear2987
      @starlodear2987 9 лет назад

      No I mean reading the sheet music and then figuring out the notes to play.

    • @michelleong2762
      @michelleong2762 7 лет назад +8

      It really depends on your skill level and whether or not you're ready for the piece technically and emotionally. Valentina Lisitsa took 3 days to learn the entire Gaspard. As an amateur I took over a year just for Ondine without touching le gibet and scarbo, nowhere near a pro's level of course (but then I just play for fun in my free time, I practiced about 1-2 hours a day. Lisitsa has said that she practices up to 12 hours a day!) . And even if you can play the notes themselves, you also need the emotional maturity and time to understand what you're playing, and to figure out a good interpretation of the piece that delivers the expression you want. Really difficult but not impossible to conquer one bar at a time.

  • @MatthewDovetail
    @MatthewDovetail 11 лет назад +2

    Chef d'œuvre! Mercì Maurice!

  • @garyrobinson8665
    @garyrobinson8665 5 лет назад +3

    The best version of this piece is by Vlado Perlemuter recorded in 1955 it's mind blowing.

  • @renelicht
    @renelicht Год назад

    😍😍😍😍😍

  • @janicezany
    @janicezany 7 лет назад +5

    I love Argerich's version - all three movements. But if you haven't heard Ivo Pogorelich's recording, you have not yet heard Scarbo! I'm a big Argerich fan and will usually go with her in just about anything (she plays), but I think she, herself, would say that Pogo OWNS Scarbo! If I remember correctly (I haven't listened to it in years), he uses NO (damper) PEDAL - which seems to aid greatly in delineating the score, and in 'pictorializing' the Imp in lucid, vivid coloration. [Not many - if any - pianists would try Scarbo without an 'active right foot.']

    • @rigel48
      @rigel48 7 лет назад +3

      What do you find so exceptional in Pogorelich's Scarbo? At the very beginning the repeated notes must be "très fondu en trémolo". This is not the case with Pogorelich: they crackle like a submachine gun. And on the following pages many notes are not bonded enough according to the score. Of course this gives a greater clarity but was it Ravel's will ? It does not help for a mysterious and unreal atmosphere, a kind of hallucination. Also the big arpeggios which go from top to bottom of the keyboard crescendo and then go up to the top vanishing are not vanishing at all with Pogorelich. And I could point out other details where Pogorelich does not respect what Ravel wrote, even if his dynamique control his remarkable (his pianissimo trills!). The target in Scarbo is not to play as fast as possible, but to give an atmosphere of anguish and fear. Of course Pogorelich does that, but also many others (Gieseking, Michelangeli, Argerich, Grosvenor, Debargue, ...)

    • @manueladevilliers5301
      @manueladevilliers5301 6 лет назад +4

      I like Pogorelich's playing. Really amazing pianist, but Argerich is also superb. I think one of the world's best pianists ever. Each pianist brings something special to a piece of music. Makes one see it and experience it in a different shade

    • @MartyNemko1
      @MartyNemko1 3 года назад

      I agree--Argerich--for the Ondine, Pogo for Gibet and Scarbo

  • @Grazpop
    @Grazpop 11 лет назад +2

    I will soon be uploading this, just for you. I'm making the video right now.

  • @gnikcohs
    @gnikcohs 11 лет назад +5

    Deep, dark mysterious music, appropriate to the dark mysterious writing of the inventor (always arguable no doubt) of the prose poem: Aloysius Bertrand (1807-1841-another poete maudit who died too young)) author of the strange collection of prose poems Gaspard de ls Nuit (published posthumously in 1842).
    The prose poems are available for free from the usual suspects.

  • @HTFilms7
    @HTFilms7 4 года назад +10

    Why would this even have even 6 dislikes

    • @nohaylamujer
      @nohaylamujer Год назад +1

      Pogorelich and Perlemuter fans

  • @lucylucy1722
    @lucylucy1722 4 года назад +1

    Շատ լավ է նվագում

  • @WJfkrhdj
    @WJfkrhdj 8 лет назад +1

    She also played Schumann's second piano sonata in this recital. It used to be on RUclips but I can't find it anywhere. Do you happen to have it? Thank you~

  • @Esperluet
    @Esperluet 11 лет назад +2

    May this recording be purchased on CD ? Can't find the live in Saarbrücken 1972 on any plateforme.

    • @vladibaby79
      @vladibaby79 8 лет назад +7

      Probably not available. But, you can buy her famous recording by Deutsche Grammophone, it is really an important reference recording, even if she was very unhappy about; she told in a documentary that she was then pregnant and played not the way she used to, and afterwards heard the master tape and was crying and found that I sounded like a pregnant housewife. In my opinion, she was then the most talented pregnant housewife of all times! LOL

    • @drrabner47
      @drrabner47 Год назад

      @@vladibaby79You are right. That quote is from her daughter’s documentary on her entitled Bloody Daughter. Excellent film about Martha and her fame, family and her life.

  • @ronromano4796
    @ronromano4796 Год назад

    I’m going to attempt to learn this. Can anyone tell me where middle C is?

    • @daigreatcoat44
      @daigreatcoat44 Месяц назад

      I believe most pianos are provided with one. Any helpful piano dealer would help you to find it. It's more or less opposite the piano-stool.

  • @Grazpop
    @Grazpop 11 лет назад +2

    It's here: 6gCqByCNKSw
    Still processing, but should work in just a bit.

  • @rafffa26
    @rafffa26 23 дня назад

    interrupted by ads about chocolate

    • @Facconti
      @Facconti  22 дня назад

      My videos are not monetized, so blame belongs to youtube.

  • @jasperpabroa4737
    @jasperpabroa4737 5 лет назад +2

    Genius!! But I've listened to michaelangeli's live performance and I say that the statement of Argerich to Michaelangeli is true
    By the way Michaelangeli is one of her teachers

  • @coadour1
    @coadour1 10 лет назад +3

    Like many interpreters often MA plays Ondine a bit too fast. So the irregular tremolo played by the right hand which at the right speed call to mind the light sound of some water falling down from a fountain remains an ordinary filling tremolo according to me. To understand what I mean the better is to listen the outstanding rendition of Gaspard de la nuit by Samson Francois also on You Tube..

    • @whitbywv
      @whitbywv 9 лет назад +5

      She plays it far better than most and her playing of the third movement Scarbo is pretty much the standard...As to the too fast, I cant see it, you could see the score online, the tempo is a ball breaker yes, but the piece is incredible fr its interpretation. I was a bit let down by Lisitsas performance, there are a few others out there, There isa GOOD recording of Argerich playing this on Deutsche Grammaphon

    • @Hervinbalfour
      @Hervinbalfour 9 лет назад

      whitbywv Perlemuter was one of Ravels students and he learned Gaspard (as well as all his works) directly from Ravel. He doesn't play it as fast and as a result you can hear more colors coming from his interpretation. Perlemuter has the best interpretation hands down as close to what the composer wanted.

    • @davidherz9968
      @davidherz9968 4 года назад

      I'm so glad Ravel let you know this firsthand, what luck we have to be surrounded by so many knowledgeable people, who seem to have always been 'there'...

    • @wzvarick
      @wzvarick Год назад +1

      personally I dislike the rubato, self-indulgent versions of Ondine. Argerich's tempo is spot on, allowing the phrases to spin out without mannerism.

  • @bibba2
    @bibba2 10 лет назад

    Or Deszo Ranki, which plays the ideal Gaspard in my opinion.

  • @davisatdavis1
    @davisatdavis1 4 года назад

    22:42 click this to get rid of the ads.

  • @enzomanueldelloglio1595
    @enzomanueldelloglio1595 2 года назад +1

    ruclips.net/video/IAR8bpvBnFk/видео.html
    In questo video parliamo di questo gioiellino di Ravel ispirato all’omonimo Gaspard de la Nuit di Aloysius Bertrand.
    Vedremo come Bertrand ha rubato questa raccolta di poemi al Diavolo in persona👹, di come la critica lo abbia sempre snobbato e come Ravel con questo capolavoro abbia contribuito alla sua rivalutazione alla faccia dei critici d’arte ❤️

  • @christinehorand-haberecht5843
    @christinehorand-haberecht5843 9 лет назад +6

    I admire Martha Argerich a lot and she plays this piece very,very well, but Arturo Benedetti Michelangelis version is still the best.

    • @norabuschmann
      @norabuschmann 9 лет назад

      Kennst du "Bloody daughter", den FIlm über MA von einer ihrer 3 Töchter? Ich hab ihn auf Dvd, falls es dich interessiert!

    • @christinehorand-haberecht5843
      @christinehorand-haberecht5843 9 лет назад

      Aber natürlich besitze ich dieses Video schon längst, aber trotzdem vielen Dank für das Angebot ,liebe Nora.

    • @tomtriffid
      @tomtriffid 8 лет назад +5

      +Christine Horand-Haberecht I think I prefer Argerich's version to the Benedetti. She makes every note sing, and few others accomplish that. This is especially startling because -- until I heard this performance -- I'd always assumed that Argerich didn't much care for Ravel's music. There's a really dreadful performance on youtube of one of her performance's of Jeux D'eau. (To be fair, there are other performances by her of the same piece that are really splendid.)

    • @drrabner47
      @drrabner47 11 месяцев назад

      Arturo was one of Martha’s teachers

  • @whyyeon
    @whyyeon 2 года назад

    13:07

  • @handledav
    @handledav Год назад

    b

  • @lunarman29
    @lunarman29 11 лет назад

    Go listen to Werner Haas.