Anatoly Lyadov - Barcarolle for Piano op. 44 [With score]
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- Опубликовано: 21 дек 2024
- -Composer: Anatoly Konstantinovich Lyadov or Liadov (May 12 1855 - August 28 1914)
-Performer: Tatiana Nikolayeva
Barcarolle in F# Major, op. 44, written in 1898
Fantastic performance! I wish I was still alive to hear it "live".
Anatoly Liadov speaks himself !!!
Family Account speaks himself !!!
Belle invitée poétique...très bien jouée . Merci Tatiana.
It is the more beautiful version I've ever heard of the Barcarolle!!! Can't stop listening to this amazing performance. I can literally pictures sceneries from the playing!
Величайшая пианистка. Потрясающее исполнение! Браво! Татьяна и спасибо!
Such a dream. I wish he composed more than he did
So underrated
God bless you, Tatiana
❤Wonderful! Thanks
Magnificent!!
Beautiful!
Bravo!
Very pretty.
Замечательно ❤
There is a bit of Chopin Barcarolle here
De toute beauté !
Прелесть просто.
The beggining reminds me of another piece, can someone help? Maybe Mendelshonn
Chopin op. 27 n. 2 mabye
@@michelecalia6882 I also thought about Chopin op 32 no 1 but is not any of those ones, I swear there's a piece which is like the same
Mendelssohn op 30 no 6 in f sharp minor
MERVELUZZ !!
I'm on a Russian composer kick today.
Chopin op 60 :D
This is a pastiche at this point ye
@@Yannoux3000 It is literally not even similar except for being a barcarolle.
@@SpaghettiToaster and the tonality is the same, that's why some people get confused
not only, also has some Berceuse - the baby's lullaby - thrown into the BoatRide
He really just changed it from G flat major to F sharp major hoping nobody would notice that this is just a poor man's Op. 60 Barcarolle
Op. 60 is already in F sharp major.
This piece would be SOOOO good if Chopin didn't already do it better. Still, maybe I'll put it in the rotation for my repertoire.
Quite different experience listening to this, in my opinion.
@@Stukov16 Different strokes. But you can definitely loosely "graph" onto this piece (in a general sense) The harmonic outline of Chopin's Barcarolle op. 60, along with snippets from his Nocturnes op. 15 no. 2, and op. 32 no. 1. Mildly derivative. Not saying it's bad, just that it's going to live in the shadow of the much more beloved and renown music already written by Freddy.
there's almost nothing about this piece that resembles Chopin's barcarolle aside from the title 'Barcarolle' and the key sig...
@@dyoneffcennedie2939 That's exactly my point, thanks. "Almost nothing" is not the same thing as "nothing".