Ludwig van Beethoven - Piano Sonata No. 23 "Appassionata", Op. 57 [Complete] (Piano Solo)

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024
  • Ludwig van Beethoven's Piano Sonata No. 23 in F minor, Op. 57 (colloquially known as the Appassionata) is a piano sonata.
    The sonata, in F minor, consists of three movements:
    0:00 1. Allegro assai
    11:05 2. Andante con moto
    17:34 3. Allegro ma non troppo - Presto
    Among the three famous piano sonatas of his middle period (the others being the Waldstein, Op. 53 and Les Adieux, Op. 81a). It was composed during 1804 and 1805, and perhaps 1806, and was dedicated to Count Franz von Brunswick. The first edition was published in February 1807 in Vienna.
    Performed by Emil Gilels.

Комментарии • 846

  • @rodrigomanzano4650
    @rodrigomanzano4650 9 лет назад +581

    Lenin once said: "I know of nothing better than the Appassionata and could listen to it every day. What astonishing, superhuman music! It always makes me proud, perhaps with a childish naiveté, to think that people can work such miracles! … But I can’t listen to music very often, it affects my nerves...If I continue listening to it, I won't be able to carry on with the Revolution." In my opinion, one of the deepest and best examples that music can reach out to everyone.

    • @MarcoGDaz
      @MarcoGDaz 9 лет назад +124

      Rodrigo Manzano Unfortunately Mr Lenin didn't own an i-Pod.It could have saved thounsands lifes.

    • @ferozaleeming6906
      @ferozaleeming6906 9 лет назад +3

      MarcoGDaz nice one. we are learning about him in History!

    • @VesChrist
      @VesChrist 9 лет назад +16

      MarcoGDaz + iPod wouldn't have helped. Comrade Lenin got STD - syphilis and had brain damage (half his brain is believed to be rotten) - from the years he spent in Western Europe and the prostitutes there.

    • @primitivac603
      @primitivac603 7 лет назад +14

      I Am the Walrus?

    • @nekocekoBiHMK
      @nekocekoBiHMK 7 лет назад +2

      Not the bloody walrus

  • @e.hutchence-composer8203
    @e.hutchence-composer8203 4 года назад +645

    It’s crazy to think that Beethoven was writing master piece after master piece. Even if we look at Op. 50 - Op. 60 we have the Waldstein Sonata Op. 53, Eroica Symphony Op. 55, Appassionata Sonata Op. 57 and the 4th Piano Concerto Op. 58. How Beethoven managed to write such great music over and over again consistently throughout his life is a wonder to the world of art.

    • @Solon_2
      @Solon_2 4 года назад +34

      Ha only at the begining, when he was older he was considered a genius

    • @mikhailsungurov2472
      @mikhailsungurov2472 4 года назад +22

      I agree greatest composer of all time to me. Bach is 2nd.

    • @dradenhaven1549
      @dradenhaven1549 4 года назад +37

      @@mikhailsungurov2472 Bach-Mozart-Beethoven the holy trinity of classical music.

    • @afriendlymusician3829
      @afriendlymusician3829 4 года назад +17

      @Mr. H Definitely not. He kept getting commissions and by the time he was in his 20s, he was already considered to be the best pianist in Vienna

    • @afriendlymusician3829
      @afriendlymusician3829 4 года назад +2

      @Mr. H www.quora.com/Was-Beethoven-recognised-during-his-lifetime

  • @bennyboost
    @bennyboost 4 года назад +168

    there is something deeply magical and astoundingly beautiful about the 2nd movement.

    • @anthonyfromsiny
      @anthonyfromsiny 2 года назад +5

      The 2nd movement brings tears to one's eyes - even though it is written in a major key.

    • @DaviSilva-oc7iv
      @DaviSilva-oc7iv 2 года назад +7

      @@anthonyfromsiny Because it's tears of a sweet melancholy, tears which the more they are shed the more they create hope in one's heart.

    • @ignacioclerici5341
      @ignacioclerici5341 2 года назад +2

      @@DaviSilva-oc7iv exactly how i feel, it gives me hope and makes me feel Alive again, it makes me weep like a baby

    • @anthonyfromsiny
      @anthonyfromsiny Год назад

      @@DaviSilva-oc7iv Hope that is shattered in the 3rd movement.

    • @FrederickTheGrt
      @FrederickTheGrt Год назад

      🧙🏻‍♂️✨

  • @crispydog_
    @crispydog_ 2 года назад +43

    Straight up this masterpiece of music is my favorite. It has helped me throughout my darkest points in my life and has influenced me as a person. It will always amazing me how someone 200 years ago can live on through his work and still change peoples lives.
    Bless this man Beethoven and all of his works.

  • @CanelonVegano
    @CanelonVegano 9 лет назад +185

    I cannot express in words how perfect, excellent this sonata is. It makes me Live Beethoven a lot. I mean come on the ending of the second movement gives the perfect start to the third one.
    And the best part is that I can understand the musical decisions Beethoven does and makes me feel identified with him.
    I guess I will express how much I love this piece when I'll be able to play it...
    Since today, Beethoven is my favourite composer ever.

    • @CanelonVegano
      @CanelonVegano 9 лет назад +2

      love*

    • @nickoik24
      @nickoik24 9 лет назад

      +Apetecan7 TRULY DISGUSTING! ONE OF THE WORST MOST MAINTREAM PIECES OF CLASSICAL MUSIC!!! -.-

    • @CanelonVegano
      @CanelonVegano 9 лет назад +7

      SvartHal don't take him seriously please xD.
      Btw i loved your comment but I forgot to tell

    • @nickoik24
      @nickoik24 9 лет назад

      +SvartHal oh god.you dont understand

    • @KenNickels
      @KenNickels 9 лет назад +14

      +Apetecan7 He is a composer who wants you to hear (see) the decisions made. That's why he starts with small vaporous ideas, not really fully made melodies like Chopin. Because he wants you to see how the material is developed. Like a seamstress who says, Look at this seam, and look and this seam and look at THIS seam. LOOK at how it's made!

  • @astailgonsama7852
    @astailgonsama7852 3 года назад +68

    Primary theme: 0:00
    Transition: 1:10
    Secondary theme: 1:36
    Extra theme: 2:18
    Essential Expositional Closure: 2:40
    Development begins: 2:53
    Retransition: 5:31
    Recapitulation begins: 5:41
    Primary theme: 5:41
    Transition: 6:17
    Secondary theme: 7:17
    Extra theme: 7:58
    Essential Structural Closure: 8:20
    Coda to end: 8:32 - 10:07

    • @micoveliki8729
      @micoveliki8729 Год назад +3

      Can you do this for the second and third movement?

    • @1103-g3k
      @1103-g3k Год назад +11

      @micoveliki8729 I know this is like four months late but no one has replied to you so I thought I would.
      Movement 2 - Theme and variations - Db Major
      11:05 - Theme Part 1.
      11:50 - Theme Part 2.
      12:42 - Variation 1 Part 1. Theme with syncopation
      13:22 - Variation 1 Part 2.
      14:06 - Variation 2 Part 1. The theme becomes more melodic and lyrical
      14:47 - Variation 2 Part 2.
      15:24 - Variation 3. For the first time in the sonata, there is joy. The theme takes on a sense of playfulness and remedy and while the joy isn't overbearing or anything, it does give the slight sense that there is still hope left. There are also no exact repeats in this variation
      16:29 - Variation 4. For the most part, with some minor changes such as the melody jumping up an octave at some points and the removal of the repeats, this variation is really just a repeat of the theme. It brings us home and gives a sense of comfort and resolution.
      17:19 - As the music winds down, it prepares for a cadence to end the movement in the tonic key of Db Major. But instead, Beethoven pulls one of the best tricks of this sonata. At first it seems the movement will end in a standard ii-V-I progression, perfectly cadencing the movement and ending it peacefully. But the V chord doesn't go to the tonic, instead, a rolled diminished 7th chord is played. The bliss and hope of the second movement is abruptly halted as mystery and tension takes over. The 7th chord is played again, now violently in fortissimo, and without pause, the music transitions into the finale.
      Finale - Sonata Form - F minor
      INTRODUCTION
      17:34 - The diminished 7th chord is repeated
      17:39 - A 16th note figure appears as it works its way down to the bass where theme 1 will be presented.
      EXPOSITION
      17:51 - Theme 1 in F minor. Theme 1 introduces two important motifs. Motif 1 is the change to Neapolitan harmony (using the key a half step above the tonic) at 17:55. And motif 2, is the dotted rhythm, first heard in the bass of the theme but is first heard quasi melodically above the theme at 17:58.
      18:05 - Theme 2 in F minor. Note motif 2 in the middle voice and then in the top voice at 18:17.
      18:29 - Transition, based on theme 1, going from F minor to C minor
      18:39 - Theme 3 (subordinate theme) in C minor. Note how the theme begins on Neapolitan Db (motif 1).
      18:55 - Theme 4 (cadential theme) in C minor. The 4th theme begins with using a canon version of theme 1 and then transitions to an echo like phrase at 19:01
      DEVELOPMENT
      19:14 - Theme 1 built from a diminished 7th chord
      19:21 - Theme 1 in Bb minor
      19:34 - A new, nervous theme in Bb minor.
      19:48 - Theme 1 in a cannon that goes from F minor to F# Major (motif 1), to diminished 7th harmony, to Bb minor.
      19:57 - Shift to C minor which sets up the cadenza
      20:03 - Cadenza using Neapolitan (motif 1) and diminished 7th harmony
      20:31 - The harmony has shifted to a dominant 7th chord preparing us for a return to F minor.
      RECAPITULATION
      20:37 - Theme 1 back in F minor with theme 2 following suit at 20:51
      21:15 - Transition going from F minor to, uh… F minor.
      21:24 - Theme 3 in F minor
      21:42 - Theme 4 in F minor
      21:51 - Here Beethoven does another neat trick. As the momentum and intensity builds you’d expect the movement to reach its climax but instead, it veers off to a different path and repeats the development and recapitulation as the music attempts to maintain control over itself.
      24:33 - Finally, after the repeat, the music begins to spin out of control, catalyzing into the coda.
      CODA
      24:39 - The tempo jumps to presto and a new, violent, dance of death theme is introduced.
      24:59 - Theme 1 at rapid speed, crawling up the keyboard.
      25:09 - Ending material
      25:17 - The music cascades down the keyboard, violently closing out the sonata in the darkness of F minor.

    • @micoveliki8729
      @micoveliki8729 Год назад

      @@1103-g3k God bless you man ❤️

    • @Orange782
      @Orange782 Год назад

      ​@@1103-g3kdude thank you so much for doing this, im studying appassionata mvmt 3 right now and it's nice to see the different transitions and build ups like this

    • @johndoe4202
      @johndoe4202 Год назад

      @@1103-g3kthanks

  • @JimJam23618
    @JimJam23618 8 лет назад +187

    That coda of the last movement...Just wow, I grew up listening to Beethoven's sonatas but they still shocks me. I always hear and learn something different every time I listen to them.

  • @maxdaae
    @maxdaae 9 лет назад +678

    Anyone completely pissed off that RUclips ads can interrupt 10+ minute long videos now? It's ridiculous. Especially when they're in the middle of amazing music pieces like this.

    • @andrjuska9556
      @andrjuska9556 9 лет назад +92

      meenadaae AdBlock to the rescue!

    • @JakeParent
      @JakeParent 9 лет назад +59

      +meenadaae Seriously. Adblock. I forgot RUclips even has ads.

    • @jamesonspencer7562
      @jamesonspencer7562 9 лет назад +8

      +meenadaae AD BLOCK PLUS

    • @KKIcons
      @KKIcons 8 лет назад +3

      +Jake D. Parent RUclips has ads?

    • @joephilips7265
      @joephilips7265 8 лет назад +4

      +KK Icons
      No, professional youtubers don't monetise their videos and don't make an income doing it.

  • @ObeyTheMuse
    @ObeyTheMuse 9 лет назад +34

    hands down one of the greatest pieces ever writtien

  • @DanleyBWolfe
    @DanleyBWolfe 11 месяцев назад +6

    Emil Gilels performance is magnificent ... one of the greatest pianists of all time.

  • @LudwigvanBeethoven2
    @LudwigvanBeethoven2 5 лет назад +49

    I love how he kept all that speed for the end 24:30

  • @carlkohweihao9584
    @carlkohweihao9584 4 года назад +41

    The sonata sounds like a galop at 24:39. That is my favorite part of the piece. The second goes to the theme of the variation in the second movement. Beautiful.

  • @boreltub
    @boreltub 11 лет назад +37

    Gilels is among the all time greats. This beautifully controlled performance demonstrates just how good he was.

  • @buttercubbb1996
    @buttercubbb1996 3 года назад +23

    the last movement was absolutely magical. a great masterpiece!

    • @anthonyfromsiny
      @anthonyfromsiny 2 года назад +1

      It is similar to Rossini's "Siege of Corinth" overture - the way it threatens to "break through" twice - and then does the third time (into the "presto" coda).

  • @alterI4
    @alterI4 6 лет назад +93

    Second movement doesnt get enough love. It's such a beautiful theme and variation. Of course its competing with arguably one of the most incredible 1st and 3rd movements ever created. But still haha after listening to both of those so much the 2nd is always nice to hear.

    • @dappiano1
      @dappiano1 5 лет назад

      alterI4 someone should have made it into a pop song like Billy Joel did with Pathetique 2nd movement.

    • @Numberonesorabjifan
      @Numberonesorabjifan 3 года назад

      @Forty Three tbh i only prefer hammerklavier and sonata 32 over appasionata

    • @klop4228
      @klop4228 3 года назад +2

      It's amazing how good it is, given the melody is, on its own, fairly uninteresting - look at all those repeated notes! But he made it work.

    • @anthonyfromsiny
      @anthonyfromsiny 2 года назад

      The 2nd movement is reminiscent of the D-flat major trio section of the third movement of Chopin's Piano Sonata #2.

    • @Trooman20
      @Trooman20 2 года назад

      @@Numberonesorabjifan any movement from sonata 26 to sonata 32>>>appasionata

  • @Morfee
    @Morfee 9 лет назад +31

    That first movement is seriously well play. I felt on edge for the entire piece - the exact emotion you should have.

    • @anthonyfromsiny
      @anthonyfromsiny 2 года назад +3

      The first movement conjures up an image of a ship getting tossed by a storm - and at the end, getting wrecked on the shore.

  • @ryan2128
    @ryan2128 5 лет назад +15

    One of my absolute most favorite pieces in all of music just simply because of the presto section about a minute before the end of the piece. It is so powerful.

  • @cedricrlongreen
    @cedricrlongreen Год назад +9

    In my opinion the finale movement is 1 of Beethoven's greatest works for piano. So ahead of it's time🔥

  • @GamerGuyMatt1892
    @GamerGuyMatt1892 8 лет назад +27

    This is truly wonderful. Beethoven was a complete genius. This movement is very like Rachmaninoff in character. It is so completely dark and mesmerizing. .

    • @ruthtalley242
      @ruthtalley242 5 лет назад

      Agree. I was gonna tell the "it's too dark and violent" commentators that they should listen to Rachmaninoff, especially Opus 32 preludes. Then they'll see Beethoven as tame as a little kitten. Rachmaninoff was the Led Zeppelin of his era.

    • @ignacioclerici5341
      @ignacioclerici5341 2 года назад

      @@ruthtalley242 but rachmaninoff notes are not beautiful and perfect like Beethoven
      His music is technichal but not profound

    • @eliasss8229
      @eliasss8229 2 года назад

      don t compare masters with shit

  • @김태양-k7m
    @김태양-k7m 5 лет назад +132

    1.Allegro assi 0:00
    2.Andante con moto 11:05
    3.Allegro, ma non troppo 17:34

    • @shaukatbhatti2554
      @shaukatbhatti2554 4 года назад +1

      thank you.

    • @한다됐다
      @한다됐다 4 года назад +1

      이 영상에서는 어느분 연주인가요? 바렌보임 인지요...

    • @ryanchen8741
      @ryanchen8741 4 года назад +2

      @@한다됐다 피아니스트의 이름은 에밀 길렐스이에요

    • @오리-l5v
      @오리-l5v 4 года назад +1

      2악장만 듣는 사람은 나밖에 없나?

  • @Boubouteam
    @Boubouteam Год назад +2

    The rhythmic motif at 10:05 foreshadows the 5th symphony

  • @taputapuu9487
    @taputapuu9487 6 лет назад +43

    The best version ever. I love how he doesnt rush 10:25. Epic

  • @TrollMeister_
    @TrollMeister_ 2 года назад +6

    This represents the pinnacle of Beethoven’s sonata writing.

  • @GamerNRetro
    @GamerNRetro 9 лет назад +205

    At the beginning of the first movement, I always thought those random loud measures were Beethoven being pissed about something.

    • @zacktodd7390
      @zacktodd7390 8 лет назад +9

      SAME

    • @cristinamaiapm
      @cristinamaiapm 6 лет назад +4

      GamerNRetro maybe he was

    • @hoid8069
      @hoid8069 6 лет назад +13

      Cristina Probably about going deaf.

    • @LouieBeethoven
      @LouieBeethoven 6 лет назад +20

      Cold Soup. Soup should NEVER be cold.

    • @hikaru8731
      @hikaru8731 6 лет назад +3

      @SalaxAscPhx or just laughing about something

  • @brucesavell8843
    @brucesavell8843 7 лет назад +13

    Beethoven's piano works are my favorite, so soothing to the soul and mind. He was a true genius. Thank you so much for sharing this masterpiece

  • @laurenceesposito3393
    @laurenceesposito3393 8 лет назад +20

    This is such an inspired interpretation. Gilels had everything at his command and the piece is displayed to perfection. Such dynamics and tone. What a remarkable pianist. I am in awe of him. And what he brings out. I can understand how Lenin said, "If I keep listening to Beethoven's Appassionata, I won't be able to finish the revolution." I wonder what was going on for Beethoven at the time of the composition of this piece.

    • @bulgarianprincess
      @bulgarianprincess 7 лет назад +1

      Laurence Esposito I was just reading about this! The chilly quote: " it moves me to stroke the heads of my fellow beings for being able to produce such beautiful things in spite of the abominable hell they are living it. It is necessary to smash those heads, smash them without mercy."

    • @anotherdepressedmusician
      @anotherdepressedmusician 4 года назад

      Well, he was losing the ability to hear at the time of composing this, but that's nothing too important, right? Probably not. haha

  • @elizabethdavis7922
    @elizabethdavis7922 5 лет назад +57

    Who's still banging this classic in 2019? Represent!

    • @francescoc
      @francescoc 5 лет назад +5

      Me! This is one of the best piano pieces I've ever heard. This is an artwork! (Greetings from Veneto, Italy)

    • @ronm4051
      @ronm4051 5 лет назад +1

      @@francescoc Me too. I agree!

    • @philiplazarev3054
      @philiplazarev3054 5 лет назад

      Here always

    • @Murtaskegg
      @Murtaskegg 4 года назад

      Now in 2020!
      #Beethoven4ever!

  • @laurenceesposito3393
    @laurenceesposito3393 4 года назад +9

    Emil Gilels. I could speak volumes about this wonderful pianist, how I had a chance to hear him live and never did. I am sure that live would have been even more impressive. The recording only gives us so much. He was great. Impassioned, dramatic, meticulous and just plain great.

    • @tj-co9go
      @tj-co9go Год назад

      He is a great pianist, no doubt

  • @ludwigvanbeethoven61
    @ludwigvanbeethoven61 2 года назад +4

    If this piece doesn't prove the insane genius of this man, what else?

    • @johnvalentine4720
      @johnvalentine4720 4 месяца назад

      No way was Beethoven insane. He was, however, a colossal genius who revolutionised Western music.

  • @amafu5632
    @amafu5632 4 года назад +4

    le deuxième mouvement est une merveille de beauté et de lyrisme...

  • @larespo1
    @larespo1 Год назад +3

    The best performance of this piece I have ever heard. A dramatically lyrical reading with such dynamic range. Excellent.

  • @Rafa-1903
    @Rafa-1903 4 года назад +300

    Classical music is boring
    Beethoven : what I dont hear you

    • @nick5515w
      @nick5515w 4 года назад +16

      *Can't

    • @laurenceesposito3393
      @laurenceesposito3393 4 года назад +12

      At the moment, you don't get it, that's why. The Appassionata is a very complex work of Beethoven's. Perhaps if you listened more, you might be a little less inclined to call it boring. Listen to the last movement to Mozart's Jupiter Symphony at least once and see if it doesn't get to you. And don't think of it as wall-paper music. It should be more easily accessible to you. After that, then move to Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata - especially the last movement.

    • @saifnakhleh3351
      @saifnakhleh3351 4 года назад

      به

    • @brunow.calabria786
      @brunow.calabria786 4 года назад

      kkkkk

    • @iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiivy
      @iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiivy 4 года назад +3

      I'm sure the joke was intentional, but yeah, he really wouldn't have heard you. And you're comment is definitely right!

  • @TheCasicasicasi
    @TheCasicasicasi 5 лет назад +7

    I'm 16 years old and I'm obsessed with this

    • @therealrealludwigvanbeethoven
      @therealrealludwigvanbeethoven 3 года назад +1

      Why does your age matter? I'm 12 and I can still appreciate this. Heck, there are 80 year olds who enjoy it!

    • @FrederickTheGrt
      @FrederickTheGrt Год назад +3

      I am 10 years old and 5'4" and I love it. My sister has curly hair and she loves it also.

    • @katttttt
      @katttttt Год назад

      Me too, I'm 17 and I hope more young people listen to this

  • @bluesky0316
    @bluesky0316 3 года назад +2

    This is a lifesaver for both my piano skills, and mental status

  • @scattershotjd9823
    @scattershotjd9823 4 года назад +5

    For the final third movement of this song, I have only one word to say:
    *"GRIIIIFFFFIIIIIITTTTHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!"*

  • @DressedForDrowning
    @DressedForDrowning 9 лет назад +79

    Oh, so sound and clear ...you can follow every single note! Bravo, Emil Gilels! (And, of course, Bravo Beethoven!) ;-)

  • @penjamfilms
    @penjamfilms 4 года назад +2

    One of those genius pieces that keeps getting better the more you listen to it. The raging inspiration and beautiful ideas in this music only keep getting clearer.

  • @tpiskor
    @tpiskor 5 лет назад +9

    Okay that left hand at 18:30 is crazy. Great performance.

    • @arieltabbach4946
      @arieltabbach4946 4 года назад

      thomas piskor honestly I thought so at first too and when I tried it I failed miserably, but after like 2 days it really isn’t that hard to me

    • @Numberonesorabjifan
      @Numberonesorabjifan 3 года назад

      not really

  • @CanelonVegano
    @CanelonVegano 8 лет назад +21

    After listening to barenboim's version many times, I came back here and I just realised this performance by Emil Gilels is MUCH better than barenboin's. Wow this is much more powerful and passionate. I am downloading this video!

    • @Makenor13
      @Makenor13 8 лет назад +2

      +Apetecan7 Of course! Gilels is one of the best pianists who ever lived, Barenboim is not. He's much better as a salesman and a "marketing-man", and for this he will not be remembered as a great pianist. If you want to listen very good versions of the Beethoven (and Mozart) sonatas, don't listen Barenboim. There are many huge pianists (Sokolov, Gilels, Brendel, Pollini, Schnabel, Zimerman, Pogorelich and others... even Benedetti Michelangeli recorded some sonatas).

    • @weixiong1.0
      @weixiong1.0 2 года назад

      I feel that during the 20th century, pianists were not pressured by showmanship to over interpret the music. Speak as how Beethoven would speak. That'd be sufficient and plenty.

    • @KingstonCzajkowski
      @KingstonCzajkowski Год назад

      @@Makenor13 Barenboim's Mozart sonatas are the best I've heard (other than maybe Uchida)

    • @Makenor13
      @Makenor13 Год назад +2

      @@KingstonCzajkowski You know what they say... only stupid people never change their opinions! :) In 7 years I've grown up as a person and as a pianist (heck, back then when I wrote that comment I was probably 18 or 19) and I started respecting Barenboim a lot more and seeing the things that actually make him great. I still don't consider him among my very favourite pianists overall, and I still think that some things about him are a little too hyped up, but he indeed is a great pianist without a doubt, and I was genuinely shocked at some renditions of his Mozart and Beethoven sonatas.

    • @KingstonCzajkowski
      @KingstonCzajkowski Год назад

      @@Makenor13 Huh, neat! I'm happy you've learned to appreciate his performances.

  • @Sozai-x8n
    @Sozai-x8n Год назад +5

    0:00 1ч головна тема
    0:36 1ч тема долі
    7:15 1ч побічна тема
    11:05 2ч тема варіацій
    17:51 3ч головна тема. перший елемент
    18:17 3ч головна тема. другий елемент
    18:37 3ч побічна тема
    19:34 3ч тема епізоду в розробці
    24:39 3ч тема коди

  • @sniprsprimordium5625
    @sniprsprimordium5625 9 лет назад +5

    This is why I listen to Beethoven.

  • @Highinsight7
    @Highinsight7 3 года назад +2

    I LOVE Giles's Beethoven... he might be my favorite Beethoven artist.. his 101 is kind of on steroids amazing!

  • @amafu5632
    @amafu5632 4 года назад +2

    Third movement, passion and fever......Fantastic music, wonderful.

  • @AkshatJha
    @AkshatJha 7 лет назад +21

    Fargo, anyone? This show doesn't cease to amaze me, so does Beethoven's music.

  • @MatematicaTel
    @MatematicaTel 7 лет назад +150

    Absolutely delicious!!

  • @gretchenvanwalterop1929
    @gretchenvanwalterop1929 3 года назад +1

    Thank you, for allowing the privilege to listen. Phasing is very good, and for this sonata, no easy task.

  • @tommytodatnguyen1413
    @tommytodatnguyen1413 9 лет назад +36

    its madness, trance outburst, Beethoven is all about emotion at its peak. Barenboim is exhausted and everybody playing this will be too.

    • @andrewolejarz5293
      @andrewolejarz5293 4 года назад +7

      This isn't Barenboim lol, it's Gilels! A better interpretation than Barenboim in my opinion

  • @anthonyfromsiny
    @anthonyfromsiny 2 года назад +4

    Of the "Big Four" - the other three being the Moonlight, Pathetique, and "Funeral March" (#12) sonatas - this was the most "devastating" of all, because of the coda of its final movement.

  • @mozartiano123
    @mozartiano123 8 месяцев назад

    As someone that loves the sound of piano, there is nothing in the universe compared to this

  • @lim3982
    @lim3982 2 года назад +1

    인생을 바꿔준 애증의곡이네요.
    한 20년 안듣다가 다시 들은지 7ㅡ8년 된듯하네요.
    고딩 3년동안 21번.23번을 대입입시로 준비했는데 이걸 선택하고 원하는 학교도 가고 꽃길만 가는줄 알았는데....여기까지만...
    난 88학번...
    50중반에 들어도 넘 조으네요.
    아마 죽을때까지 들어도 좋을꺼 같아요

  • @chriswanjhang6258
    @chriswanjhang6258 3 года назад +4

    19:34-19:49 and 22:19-22:33 are my daughter's favorite part!

  • @galahadyouknowwhat2224
    @galahadyouknowwhat2224 7 лет назад +4

    I'm here because this was used for Berserk movies.... thanks to that I've discovered how good the original stuff is and I'm getting more and more into sonatas

  • @Татиана-я9е
    @Татиана-я9е 4 месяца назад +1

    1 ч :
    0:00 ГП
    1:36 ПП
    2:18 связка
    2:53 разработка
    8:32 кода
    2 ч :
    11:05 тема
    3 ч :
    17:35 начало
    17:51 ГП
    18:39 ПП
    19:14 разработка
    24:39 кода

  • @Dylonely42
    @Dylonely42 Год назад +1

    One of my favorite piano sonatas.

  • @ВладимирБарабаш-л3б

    Два абсолютных гения, восторг и восхищение! Я счастлив тем что ещё студентом геологического факультета в шахтерском городе Горловка где был на практике в 1959 году Слышал там Гилельса и с той поры он мне самый любимый и нужный пианист , как Рахманинов, а Бетховен композитор вся музыка которого особая который создавал без смертные шедевры. которые ПОМОГАЮТ ЖИТЬ в самые трудные моменты жизни.

  • @rocketqueen2709
    @rocketqueen2709 8 лет назад +10

    I hope one day I can play this masterpiece

  • @marcosPRATA918
    @marcosPRATA918 8 лет назад +5

    Essa Sonata mostra bem como Beethoven fazia um jogo extraordinário entre os temas, acordes, harpejos, ritmos e dinâmica. Beethoven é essencialmente clássico mas já se expressa muito da passionalidade romântica.

  • @denzelabarquez9978
    @denzelabarquez9978 5 лет назад +13

    25:16 Even Mendelssohn was influenced by Beethoven. He used this in the third movement of his first piano concerto.

  • @tonycosworth
    @tonycosworth 8 лет назад +1

    Une fois admis le tempo bien lent de l'Allegro (même assai), l'impressionnante dynamique nous emporte dans l'histoire et nous fait revivre autrement l'œuvre même si c'est la 214° fois qu'on l'écoute; c'est là la performance d'un grand Beethovenien. Le 3° est aussi explosif, sans parler de la coda !!!

  • @constracted7331
    @constracted7331 4 года назад +4

    What a dynamic performance! Beautiful interpretation.

  • @Faidrs
    @Faidrs 8 лет назад +2

    One of my favorite versions of this sonata.

  • @mduftube
    @mduftube 3 года назад +2

    This is a thrilling performance. What a horrifying and wonderful masterpiece

  • @АлександраНикифорова-н4п

    1 часть
    гп 0:01
    пп 1:37
    з.п. 2:18
    придыкт 9:44?
    кода 10:06
    2 часть
    основная тема 11:06
    3 часть
    гп 17:51
    з.п. 18:58
    кода 24:40

  • @helioenriquesuarezgodoy2899
    @helioenriquesuarezgodoy2899 7 лет назад +1

    Es un ad las mejores sonatas del gran Beethoven...excelente oportunidad para escucharla en todo su expresión....

  • @chrismusix5669
    @chrismusix5669 Год назад +1

    Imagine being the first audience to ever hear such a thing; popcorn and drinks would have been spilled Everywhere!

  • @Khamomil
    @Khamomil 10 лет назад +67

    There is so much violence in Beethoven, which perhaps expresses the sufering of the composer.
    I don't know all the different interpretations but after hearing a few bars of it played by Barenboïm I stopped and looked for another one. I like this one very much..

    • @NoName-tf2et
      @NoName-tf2et 10 лет назад

      I believe the word you are looking for is referred as
      "Sfozando".

    • @Khamomil
      @Khamomil 10 лет назад +7

      No, I mean, not as a written interpretation instruction on the sheet music, but in the *spirit* of his music in general. Not all the time but in some places. It used to scare me a lot as a kid. It still raises goose bumps.

    • @spectryl6681
      @spectryl6681 9 лет назад +4

      Khamomil No matter what mode or form he's writing in, Beethoven always gives us at least one great outburst!

    • @nathanaelgeorge2940
      @nathanaelgeorge2940 4 года назад

      Yes. Barenboim's interpretation sucks

    • @Em-gp1yb
      @Em-gp1yb 3 года назад

      @@nathanaelgeorge2940 For me he just doesn't take as much risks when playing. Still n exceptional pianist though.

  • @kb597
    @kb597 10 лет назад +2

    it took away my breath, literally. What a great peformance!

  • @rebett0
    @rebett0 Год назад +1

    Didn't expect thouse last chords in the second movement 😯🤯

  • @Ayaron427
    @Ayaron427 8 лет назад +7

    I really like the part begins from 24:33

  • @urbinamdm
    @urbinamdm 8 лет назад +4

    Wonderful, thanks for posting. Some day, I'll be attempting this piece.

  • @DanteGuitarra
    @DanteGuitarra 10 лет назад +4

    Awsome... a great perfomance of one of the most beautiful pieces ever.

  • @danielalaura7304
    @danielalaura7304 11 лет назад +3

    One of the best performance of this sonata! Bravo maestro!

  • @rnnyhoff
    @rnnyhoff 6 лет назад +1

    Feel like a pianist on the granite kitchen top. I'm hitting all the right notes, too. It's truly amazing.

  • @paulzarvisMusicProducer
    @paulzarvisMusicProducer 9 лет назад +3

    Beautifully played. I've heard this piece much faster when played by Vladimir Horowitz but whomever is playing this has mastered it with respect to timing incredibly well.

  • @이혜진-u1g3q
    @이혜진-u1g3q 7 лет назад +1

    들을때마다 전율이 느껴지는곡..열정...대학입시때 친구가 이곡으로 시험본다고 정말 수도없이 연습했던기억이..

  • @GraceOh
    @GraceOh 5 лет назад

    The things you can't imagine to be true is why you love the things. And this is one example of it.

  • @issizinsan399
    @issizinsan399 8 лет назад +1

    best appassionata interpretation ever , by emil gilels

  • @Mattcai2004
    @Mattcai2004 3 года назад +1

    for some reason, the first and the second movement bring the outer space to my mind.

  • @lespook5966
    @lespook5966 5 лет назад +1

    "Ludwig van Beethoven's Piano Sonata No. 23 in F minor, Op. 57 (colloquially known as the Appassionata) is a piano sonata."Thanks bro, couldn't have worked that one out

    • @gwenshirebros4883
      @gwenshirebros4883 5 лет назад

      Le Spook shut up u arrogant piece of shit

    • @yombinome1174
      @yombinome1174 4 года назад

      Try with the Hammerklavier. You just need a Hammer and a handful of nails.

    • @bc_7644
      @bc_7644 3 года назад

      @@gwenshirebros4883 calm down troll

  • @MichalKuric
    @MichalKuric 10 лет назад +8

    beautiful, crystal clear

  • @stevenalbertbartlett2688
    @stevenalbertbartlett2688 4 года назад

    Steven..thanx 4 the notes...75yr & still learning...all praise 2 God...this is so beautiful..u have a new subscriber & r obviously well educated in classics.& enjoy teaching..I worked as a custodian for three piano stores in N Va..Md.& l loved 2 listen 2 Shaun Tirrell practice on the nine footers..He & Keith Kermit (fellow pianist) now own their own store in Rockville Md.I just discovered 2nite..Ciao...

  • @이준우-h9e
    @이준우-h9e 6 лет назад +3

    8:52~
    I love this part of first movement

  • @aliciadelmafotirodriguez9815
    @aliciadelmafotirodriguez9815 8 лет назад +2

    estamos siempre en conflicto con todas las bajezas de la condición humana y los únicos momentos en que sentimos que nos elevamos a la perfección y la belleza nos los regalan los genios del arte. gracias Beethoven por permitirnos disfrutar de estos momentos de pura delicia.

  • @rko2946
    @rko2946 2 года назад +2

    My friend is playing this today at a concert!!

  • @BrendaChavarriabc
    @BrendaChavarriabc 9 лет назад +12

    Maravilloso, arte pasión y poesía para mis oídos; pocos entienden la perfección en esta sonata simplemente una maravilla.

  • @dunerman2533
    @dunerman2533 6 лет назад

    I can’t get enough of this whole song !

  • @buttercubbb1996
    @buttercubbb1996 3 года назад +4

    I remembered someone said 'Beethoven's pieces were meant to play hard and suffer'

  • @fadisoueidi4127
    @fadisoueidi4127 Месяц назад

    A sublime work!

  • @daenja84
    @daenja84 9 лет назад +5

    17:34 III movimiento Allegro ma non troppo, es sublime

  • @benbroverman5150
    @benbroverman5150 7 лет назад

    People who say Beethoven couldn't write a good melody baffle me to this day

  • @chasebaldwin7801
    @chasebaldwin7801 9 лет назад +9

    I'm curently working on this and wow I tell ya. It's hard but very rewarding, I already feel like my fingers a much more limber than before :)

    • @memedreams8558
      @memedreams8558 5 лет назад +2

      Chase Baldwin I just started today, and I’ve only gotten like 3/4 through the first page, and that’s not hard. I’m sure that’s about to change soon.

    • @nikolasnielsen9751
      @nikolasnielsen9751 2 года назад

      @@memedreams8558 I know might be little late, but were you "victorious"?

  • @py4839
    @py4839 8 лет назад +16

    10:27~10:43i love this interpretation.

    • @ruthtalley242
      @ruthtalley242 5 лет назад +1

      Actually Beethoven wrote it with those exact accents, at some times syncopated. This was not the artist's interpretation, but the score shown here leaves out all the accents that Beethoven had included to make it sound like that.

  • @krkMuse
    @krkMuse 9 лет назад

    Wow, that was a man. These are notes that testify the grandeur and beauty of (classical) music.

  • @kyv979
    @kyv979 7 лет назад +39

    For the 26 people who disliked this video, appears that you have no taste in music.

    • @kyv979
      @kyv979 7 лет назад +2

      lohrasp1337 A lot of other classical pieces

    • @EminAnimE1
      @EminAnimE1 7 лет назад +18

      Or maybe they don't like it because they prefer other type of music? I swear every fanbase of every thing ever made is cancer. "Don't like what we like? You have no taste!!!!!"

    • @ninoambardanishvili4142
      @ninoambardanishvili4142 4 года назад +3

      @@EminAnimE1 i mean i get it but why are they listening if the don't like it? i always have this question then i see some "haters" like if you don't like it click away.

    • @EminAnimE1
      @EminAnimE1 4 года назад +2

      @@ninoambardanishvili4142 Because maybe they didn't know?? Maybe they didn't know this Beethoven piece? Maybe they prefer Mozart? How should I know? The dislike button is there for a reason. If they come here and don't like it, they have the right to click dislike.

    • @anotherdepressedmusician
      @anotherdepressedmusician 4 года назад +1

      @@EminAnimE1 I get your perspective. It's a great thing to know what you like and don't like. But rather than reaffirming one or the other, I believe it's good to find ways to appreciate something. I think the other person's point makes sense in a context that we are putting in effort to show dislike, which often doesn't serve any purpose. Neither does saying they have no taste - they're both toxic.

  • @JFNolet
    @JFNolet 2 года назад +2

    This is the Best version of all time! Epic!!

  • @facebotter
    @facebotter 9 лет назад +55

    I am appassionata for this song.

  • @ernesthoven
    @ernesthoven 3 года назад +1

    Gilels is the BEST playing sonates Beethoven...

  • @DeadlyPoet1
    @DeadlyPoet1 7 лет назад +1

    This music is healing!

  • @ManAetherslime14
    @ManAetherslime14 4 года назад +3

    24:39 My favorite part

  • @brosephjames
    @brosephjames 9 лет назад +1

    finale of 1st movement is sick