Kreisler-Vaneyev - Praeludium and Allegro in the style of Pugnani - Cyprien Katsaris Piano
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- Опубликовано: 9 фев 2025
- Originally composed for violin and piano by Fritz Kreisler (1875-1962) and published in 1910, N. Vaneyev arranged it for solo piano in 1954. This piece was released as a World Premier Recording in 2008 on Katsaris' "Piano Rarities - Vol. 1: Transcriptions" album.
Amazing how Katsaris just plays with the already difficult music by playing extra octaves, passing tones, trills and everything :D
This is the song of God. Melody, harmony and emotions in this peace brings tears to my eyes and I am grateful to be able to listen to this. I have to mention also that Katsaris is great performer with good articulation, excellent musicality and capability of playing very fast and making the music to sound natural with such ease. Big bravo.
I think we can all agree there
Incredible voicing.
And who better to bring out those inner voices and contours that Katsaris? He's the master of that.
There's no such thing as voicing in playing the piano. 🤣 That's only for tuning.
@@AlessioAndresoh this is cringe 😭
A heavenly melody indeed.
The allegro works perfectly as a fugue
Exactly what I thought!
Those first 5 bars of the allegro sound a lot like Bach too!
@@BourkeKristian1 totally agree
Isn't it more like a canon in the beginning?
For those who are confused by the markings, “n. p.” is actually “п. р.”, “right hand (m. d.)” (Правая Рука), and “л. р.” is “m. d.” (Левая Рука). It is Muzgiz, after all.
Second one should be "m.s."
What is Muzgiz?
@@minnieyuyantung Soviet State Music Publishing House (former ‘P. Jurgenson’), implying that the markings might be in Russian (supposedly to make music more accessible to the masses who had no idea about ‘mano destra’, ‘mano sinistra’, i.e. music learners, although it is very confusing due to the presence of tempo and expression markings in Italian, and a person playing pieces of this level should have learned all these notation abbreviations). Frankly, no idea. Sometimes, tempo markings would be translated or printed in two languages because those are hard (even Scriabin butchered the Italian translations of what he wanted to express and reverted to French), but m.d. or m.s. alone-very strange.
@@f1f1s Thanks
just want to conform(the printing of the score is hard to read)
0:23 bottom left hand the first bar , that "l.p" thing is left hand, 1:12 top right the np thing is right hand ?
@@minnieyuyantung Absolutely correct. Maybe if I type it in uppercase, it will become clearer: Л.Р. = Λ.Р. = M.S. = left; П.Р. = n.p. = M.D. = right hand.
Bravo, Maestro!!!!
Bravo!bravo!..... 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼thank you for this!
I'm glad you enjoyed it. Thank you for watching!
Супер, отлично, наконец нашла
How beautifully you have played Katsaris,bravo.
Qué belleza !
Fantastico l'accordo finale dell'Amen.
nice! thanks for uploaded this
Glad you enjoyed it. Thank you for watching!
Pianifico one of my favourites
Pianifico fantastic I'd love to be able to play this even if I couldn't play anything else!
Mágico 💟👌💎🎶
Oh god the ending, you had to do it to em
0:19 to 0:30 sounds just like the start of Autumn Leaves! Or the other way around, rather.
It is just descending fifths. It is the most common pattern in western music. That is why it is sounds like autumn leaves
This video was inaccessible a few months back (to me, not sure about the other viewers) - I remember someone commented below that the chord progressions can be heard in every Korean Drama (from 0:19 - 0:54) LOL.
the piece I'm looking for. I will learn this. I will
I've learnt it a la katsaris
How hard have you found it to be?
@@juanpablogonzalez5409 it’s pretty chill. but ive been studying piano for over 7 years extensively so that’s probably why
I just adore the additional notes, chords, octaves that he adds. Has someone a score with it??
Just listen to it and you can guess the extra notes
The piano version looks even harder.😳
This is great. Thank you for your upload. But it's very difficult from the sheet music being shown. Anyone has the real scorea?
What is Vaneyev's first name? Searched forever on the internet and I only get the initial N !
Hi, the music is really good
Where can I buy this version of the score?🙏
1:00 I know this chord from somewhere but I can't remember!
RazzerRaw first chord in “i will survive”, Gloria Gaynor
I think it is one of the last broken chords of the first movement of Rachmaninov’s second piano concerto
ballade no 1 of Chopin? ruclips.net/video/nW5po_Z7YEs/видео.html just in min 1:09?
@@guillemartinhidalgo6684 No, I think I'm over it now lol
Chopin Concerto 1???
4:09 Damn...
gosh the melody sounds really familiar.
Autumn Leaves
@@wellerday7370 I see similarities, but I don't think it's what I'm thinking of.
If I could play only one thing on the piano I would choose to play this
악보좀구할수있나요
3:49
can i have the PDF?
me too?
Do you guys know where I can buy the score?
And I as well?
Would you give me this score??
This link should take you to the PDF on IMSLP.org: goo.gl/3JLzRS
@Pianifico 2:16. That page,how to deal with it,the 3lines thing
oh, this arrangement is too difficult that it couldn't bring out the mechanical excitement in Kreisler's original, a pity, always wanted to play the alone on piano
some of the parts in that piece similar to la la land's soundtrack's general chord progression. is there anyone notice that before or is it just me? maybe la la land reffering to that piece in a way. if there is anyone know about it please comment,regards.
Do you refer to the sirceuel of fifths?
Harmonic progression by fifths in the root is very common in all of Western music, has been since the 1600s, and can still be seen and heard in non-classical music today
Pugnani? Who's that?
Gaetano Pugnani (27 November 1731 - 15 July 1798) was an Italian composer and violinist.
So toe clenching
Halo?
The best piano transcription ever with the absolute worst, un-proofed score ever. It's painful to look at in some places. Grouping, stemming, barring: F-
Too rough for me😮
I really dislike both this transcription and interpretation in some parts, especially the ending. A great, elegant piece ruined with senseless „virtuosic” voicings and unnecesary octave shifts. Katsaris is a great pianist, but this version just does not strike me the same way the original piece does, there’s no continuity.
All the more reason for you students to gain your expertise on music theory first & foremost.
al least its still has musicality unlike ravel lmfaoo
@@randiey95 Why do you claim Ravel has no musicality?
@@FranciszekCiuk dissonance everywhere making his musicality lost within them
I agree the ending is quite ruined, but I wouldn’t blame Kataris, the original music is altered. But overall I quite enjoyed his performance and the transcription. The voicings are quite pleasing.