The Impossible Virtuosity of Yuja Wang

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  • Опубликовано: 16 дек 2024

Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @calliopeclimate2275
    @calliopeclimate2275 10 месяцев назад +393

    I'm the third generation of professional classical musicians, my father was a concert pianist and I've heard many of the best. When I first heard Yuja play live what stood out was every note was perfectly weighted for the moment - no matter how fast or slow, the articulation and clarity was perfect and sensitive. She's something else.

    • @Pablo-gl9dj
      @Pablo-gl9dj 9 месяцев назад +5

      No reason for you to listen to anyone else ever again

    • @brucewatts4439
      @brucewatts4439 8 месяцев назад +8

      She is a savant!!

    • @nickk8416
      @nickk8416 6 месяцев назад +7

      I've heard all the greats and Yuja is right there with them. She is a true artist in every way.

    • @filosofiahoy4105
      @filosofiahoy4105 5 месяцев назад +3

      She can translate the intentions of interpretation poiesis to the most minimal aspects of human anatomic apparatus it's like a very native language for her, imagination, poetic, intention, composition, musculature, movements, sound, hearing, audition, emotions, and start again every milisecond.

    • @aljoschalong625
      @aljoschalong625 3 месяца назад +1

      Hm, have you heard Rachmaninoff or Horrowitz play it? To me their interpretations sound MUCH better.

  • @DrKCLam-ym8me
    @DrKCLam-ym8me 9 месяцев назад +581

    Yuja Wang is not just incredibly fast and accurate with her playing, she also maintains clarity and musicality plus striking rhythm. Her hand jumps & hand crosses come to the audience as if the playing is a simple matter of fact. Her music does not come across as an overlapping blur, but really extreme clarity and fantastic musicality. She deserves to be among the best pianists in history.

    • @toSirius
      @toSirius 9 месяцев назад +4

      another variation...fom many any many pianist ...

    • @billwrinkle9662
      @billwrinkle9662 7 месяцев назад +12

      Exactly. I'm an amateur but pretty skilled pianist. The primary difference between me trying pieces like this and her performance is that while I could play 8 notes per second like she does, you wouldn't hear each individual note. My fingers couldn't get on and off the keys fast enough. THAT is the big skill where I come up short.

    • @anitagendler3812
      @anitagendler3812 7 месяцев назад +2

      Totally agree! ❤

    • @2204JCM
      @2204JCM 6 месяцев назад +2

      Yeah Yuja has the ability to play it perfectly but musically not like a robot/ software program.

    • @johnwilkinson4683
      @johnwilkinson4683 5 месяцев назад +2

      I'm not always a fan of "speedsters" as much as how the music is interpreted. Valentina Lisitsa and others have similar mastery - and yet they could play the same piece in a way that does not seem exaggerated or boastful.

  • @pattierichards7391
    @pattierichards7391 Год назад +295

    Not just her speed and virtuosity but also her clarity

    • @frankgradus9474
      @frankgradus9474 8 месяцев назад +1

      "Who loves not wine, women and song remains a fool his whole life long."

    • @jasonkrick1614
      @jasonkrick1614 5 месяцев назад +3

      Fast playing is impressive but the real artistry, and mistakes, show up when playing slow pieces. That’s what a typical concerto typically has three movements.

    • @strafer8764
      @strafer8764 4 месяца назад

      ⁠@@jasonkrick1614 what slow piece would you use as an example?

    • @hemmojito
      @hemmojito 4 месяца назад

      pure water

    • @魚-c3d
      @魚-c3d 17 дней назад

      Isn't clarity part of virtuosity though? If someone plays insanely fast but with poor sound quality and drowns everything under the pedal I wouldn't call it virtuosity. That's just me though

  • @onelovemon1784
    @onelovemon1784 11 месяцев назад +82

    This is an encore!!! After a full concert. Astounding. Another universe.

  • @JS45678
    @JS45678 Год назад +1499

    May I speak on behalf of the 3.3M subscribers when I say that we’d love to see Yuja Wang interviewed right here in your studio. 😊

    • @eldergeektromeo9868
      @eldergeektromeo9868 Год назад +11

      👋👋👃

    • @Iwasaqt
      @Iwasaqt Год назад +13

      YES PLEASE!

    • @cooldebt
      @cooldebt Год назад +40

      Or perhaps Hiromi Uehara - for those of us also into jazz. Both are techinically brilliant pianists and captivating performers.

    • @duwomaiishgabrielle9498
      @duwomaiishgabrielle9498 Год назад +5

      😁😁😁😁

    • @Eysc
      @Eysc Год назад +6

      no

  • @danielbogos263
    @danielbogos263 Год назад +941

    I don`t know if anyone realized that she played the flight of bumblebee with all the intensity and soft notes on point. The parts where you should only barely touche the key she does it at that speed. It ridiculous how she manage to play super soft notes and really hard ones in a split second apart. JUst mind blowing

    • @HawthorneHillNaturePreserve
      @HawthorneHillNaturePreserve Год назад +26

      Yes, with multiple voices in that arrangement it’s beautiful and impossible to believe that she can do it

    • @anim8torfiddler871
      @anim8torfiddler871 Год назад +42

      That is indeed one clear sign of a master, to be able to play fantastically fast passages delicately. It requires superlative agility and control, much more than just pounding the keys at triple forte.

    • @maryyueil
      @maryyueil Год назад +13

      She is a master.

    • @jamesbeard
      @jamesbeard Год назад +21

      It's incredibly impressive, although it felt too fast to me - i.e. you can't actually appreciate the musicality of the original piece. She could have taken it down a few notches and it would have still been just as impressive but possibly easier to enjoy and listen to ...

    • @lucabernardini3975
      @lucabernardini3975 Год назад +3

      Agree with James Beard.
      Also I want to add that this superlative mind control she has... I'm pretty sure is also due to a healthy balanced lifestyle, in regards to body, mind and soul.

  • @rmac1042
    @rmac1042 Год назад +523

    What’s astounding to me was that Carnegie Hall marathon Yuja did a few months ago where she performed all four Rach piano concerti and the Rhapsody IN ONE CONCERT! Plus two encores! Most pianists who do say the Rach 3, that’s it for the week! Amazing! Yuja’s spoiled me; I have trouble listening to other pianists after her! As an 80 year-old jazz pianist and classical and jazz composer, I’ve heard many pianists in my time (in jazz, Bill Evans and Keith are my greatest influences. I spent 3 hours with Bill one-on-one in L.A. in 1962). Anyway, I’ve heard many classical pianists during 65 years in music and my humble opinion is Yuja is unsurpassed!

    • @AlexFillios
      @AlexFillios Год назад +3

      yeah mac,, she has the strength of a he! listen to others and keep her to one side to sprinkle hot tabasco over some steaming hot tamales...

    • @S0ulinth3machin3
      @S0ulinth3machin3 Год назад +13

      I'll second that. I'm not as experienced as you, only been playing for 50 years and she's the best I've ever seen/heard. I'll watch her play something that I've got 20 years into and her version compared to mine is that of a master to a rank beginner. Her playing is sublime in every way.

    • @devinneiss4198
      @devinneiss4198 Год назад +2

      Wow - you actually had the opportunity to spend time with Bill Evans? That’s awesome. But honestly do you think Yuja Wang is on the same level as Evans? No way! She hasn’t really learned to emote yet - let alone compose. I think you folks are listening with your eyes.

    • @S0ulinth3machin3
      @S0ulinth3machin3 Год назад +9

      @@devinneiss4198 Technically, she's better. She's a better player. He is a better musician. He's a far more complete musician. There is a difference between the two.

    • @rmac1042
      @rmac1042 Год назад +18

      @@devinneiss4198 What does emoting have to do with anything?! Lang Lang emotes and all it does is distract in a negative way from the music! If you can’t feel the emotion being expressed from the music itself, you need some sensitivity training! And regarding Yuja’s appearance-I find that suggestion simply insulting!

  • @albertlevert2988
    @albertlevert2988 Год назад +87

    And she’s a wonderful young woman, beautiful, full of humor and energy. I had an opportunity to see her and talk to her at the Verbier Festival after her concerts. Unforgettable!

  • @housepianist
    @housepianist Год назад +741

    As a professional pianist, no one would understand the amount of strength it takes to play like this. It certainly looks relaxed and effortless but the amount of strength needed in your arms and shoulders (and upper back to an extent) is quite high. You have thousands of micro adjustment to make in everything - hands, arms, shoulders, etc. - to make this happen, and the muscles and tendons have to response to the slightest movements at breakneck speeds while varying the level of dynamics and other nuances at the same time.
    She basically has a Marvel superhero level of speed and ability.

    • @Chiller01
      @Chiller01 Год назад +3

      I’m sure it’s repetitive strain injury waiting to happen.

    • @davidcurtin3481
      @davidcurtin3481 Год назад +38

      @@Chiller01 if that was going to happen, it probably would have happened already. She's 35 and has been playing at this level for over 20 years.

    • @Chiller01
      @Chiller01 Год назад +5

      @@davidcurtin3481 Sorry, the aging process in the collagen that forms tendons and ligaments makes them more prone to injury with age. Ask Leona Boyd, Leon Fleisher, Gary Graffman, Jimmy Amade etc. Though repetitive strain injuries are currently better recognized and mitigated by professional musicians no one that uses those structures repeatedly over time is immune to injury.

    • @LAK_770
      @LAK_770 Год назад +9

      It’s not strength. Any 10 year old technically has enough “strength” in their arms alone to literally break the keyboard. What you’re pointing out is the coordination and efficiency to deliver focused force repeatedly without fatigue or locking up

    • @housepianist
      @housepianist Год назад +20

      @@LAK_770 you're confusing strength with power. One doesn't always have to do with the other. And no, a 10 year old does not have the "strength" to break a keyboard. I described strength in terms of finesse and control, which is exactly what this pianist used.
      Strength is sustainability and endurance. Power is about force and impact. Your point has no credibility. I've been playing piano for over 50 years and taught it for 30 and I understand the physics of this from a functional perspective.

  • @TendaiMhlangaZW
    @TendaiMhlangaZW Год назад +193

    What's incredible about this lady is how she stays so relaxed no matter what she's playing. And her fingers never falter, they always find their place on the keyboard no matter how large the jumps she makes may be (as we saw with the stride passage). What's even more insane is that even at that blistering speed she still incorporates a sensitivity to dynamics and feeling. A true virtuoso.

    • @alisonbamford6723
      @alisonbamford6723 Год назад +1

      Whaaaat! That’s ADHD on speed…….! Encroyable!

    •  Год назад +2

      fingers can move when the palm and body is relaxed... that, probably, is one of the most important thing to learn for years. With opera singing, for example, it is also very inportant to relax the throat, and only that can trully "relax" the quality of te voice....with no amplification.

    • @daviddoan68
      @daviddoan68 Год назад

      @@jacobostapowicz8188 this is the most intelligent comment ever.

    • @jacobostapowicz8188
      @jacobostapowicz8188 Год назад +1

      @David Doan Ai CAN easily replicate Yujas achievements, and will probably replace her soon.

    • @jackjonesisme
      @jackjonesisme Год назад +4

      @@jacobostapowicz8188 that's not what this is about.. pianolas can easily best Yuja, and do we care?

  • @hiddenbunny7205
    @hiddenbunny7205 Год назад +312

    The most amazing thing about Yuja Wang is that it doesn't matter what she is playing, you can tell she enjoys every second of it. She has fun every time she sits in front of a piano, that itself is insane.

    • @johnhasso8908
      @johnhasso8908 Год назад +2

      What?

    • @1masterfader
      @1masterfader Год назад +9

      @@jimellis1810 Don't hate she is still great! Some can play and some people can write. They're two different beast. Pick one.

    • @hlcepeda
      @hlcepeda Год назад +6

      There's a great video of her at the 2009 Lucerne Festival with that annual venue's hand-picked world-class orchestra and with the great (now departed) Claudio Abbado conducting. 22 years old at the time, she made Prokofiev's Piano Concerto No.3 her own and not just with her superb technique, but in her interpretation. Another thing that stood out was --- yes --- the joy she energetically expresses when she plays. So much fun seeing her having fun playing demanding pieces.

    • @reallynotpc
      @reallynotpc 11 месяцев назад

      She generally seems happy whenever she is being interviewed as well. She gives the charming and delightful impression of being the person in the room who is having the most fun. I always hope that is actually the case.

    • @Aka_daka
      @Aka_daka 9 месяцев назад

      @@1masterfader That's why I'm not impressed by a lot of modern day classic pianists they can't write own music to a high technical level that is on par with classic era pianists.
      ask yourself this is it really that impressive if people did it 200-250 years ago?

  • @tedl7538
    @tedl7538 Год назад +76

    Rick should have mentioned that Yuja was only 21 years old when she tore through that version of Bumblebee, just at the outset of her adult career back in 2008. Her playing has continued to grow in maturity and emotional complexity with each passing year 🎹

    • @2204JCM
      @2204JCM 6 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah, she doesn’t even play this anymore. I’d like to see her do some of the Transcendental Etudes (List).

    • @samanjj
      @samanjj 4 месяца назад

      YAY! I can’t believe it - i have a chance to watch her perform live

    • @nickk8416
      @nickk8416 3 месяца назад

      That's right! She was right out of the egg at Curtis. I saw her in 2008 do this just after her Carnegie Hall debut and she blew everybody away with her fingers AND artistry.

  • @TK-mf3vx
    @TK-mf3vx Год назад +389

    I love how this is not a breakdown or analysis of Yuja's virtuosity, but just 6 minutes of pure admiration.

    • @sarcastaball
      @sarcastaball Год назад +1

      You love that huh

    • @PeterStrider
      @PeterStrider Год назад +37

      @GoodKinoman [Kolya Evgrafov] you are wrong. Speeding up the video would alter the pitch as well. Watch it again - the music matches the notes at the correct pitch. The piano hammers have enough time to fall because she is hitting different keys. Just accept she is a phenomenal talent - perhaps the greatest ever - which is no insult to the great Russian virtuosi!.FYI This performance was early in her career (still had long hair) and her encores then were often flashy demonstrations, but if you are really a classical connoisseur this cannot be your first encounter with Yuja Wang and you must know she is a deep and musical interpreter of the piano repertoire. Read the reviews of the recent Rachmaninov concert in NY and Philly and appreciate the range of he musical talent is far from fast playing.

    • @zoulou-zomba1
      @zoulou-zomba1 Год назад +1

      I can’t agree more

    • @malcolmwhitehead7225
      @malcolmwhitehead7225 Год назад +1

      @@goodkinomankolyaevgrafov6412 RUBBISH, ! MW

    • @ryankramer
      @ryankramer Год назад +9

      @@goodkinomankolyaevgrafov6412 Outside of the incorrect observation that the video has been sped up, you also misunderstand the reason the piece is played the way it is. It’s a one off ‘lark’ performance. It’s literally a tacked on for fun piece at the end of the show for an audience that keeps clapping. At the at point, it’s less emotional playing and more just strutting your stuff for fun.

  • @kennywood6434
    @kennywood6434 Год назад +190

    Yuja's technique is otherworldly and, quite honestly, THE best/strongest I've ever witnessed. What she's able to do is truly mind-blowing. I've had the good fortune of hearing and meeting her several times over the years. She's completely down to earth and a lot of fun.

    • @georgehaigh2276
      @georgehaigh2276 Год назад +3

      She is a gift sent by god to this world 😊

    • @InXLsisDeo
      @InXLsisDeo Год назад +4

      She might very well be the strongest pianist technically who has ever existed. And by this I am comparing her with giants like Horowitz, Rachmaninov, Argerich and Liszt, who have other worldly technical levels.

    • @colinjames2469
      @colinjames2469 Год назад

      @@InXLsisDeo hmmm

    • @mariodisarli1022
      @mariodisarli1022 Год назад

      @@colinjames2469 Male pianists are engaged in bringing music to people. This "beauty" brings vulgarity to people and excites animal instincts in people.

    • @stevenmeyer9674
      @stevenmeyer9674 Год назад +1

      @@mariodisarli1022 Hey Cancan! How ya doing? Trolling is so much fun, isn't it?

  • @jimwilt4944
    @jimwilt4944 Год назад +437

    We are recording all four Rachmaninoff concerti and the Paganini Rhapsody with her over the next two weeks. She is a force of nature. Extraordinary.

    • @dainhuston
      @dainhuston Год назад +4

      As a big Yngwie Malmsteen fan cool can’t wait to hear it
      The lady can SHRED that’s for sure

    • @DavidVerch
      @DavidVerch Год назад +4

      Just wondering what it is like working with someone so talented. In my industrial career the best days have been when I had the opportunity to work with super knowledgable people. Especially rewarding is when someone I look up to compliments me on my knowledge. Is it like that in the music business?

    • @jimwilt4944
      @jimwilt4944 Год назад +18

      @@DavidVerch Like pretty much everyone that solos with us, she is immensely talented, absolutely prepared, professional and consistent. With Yuja there is also extraordinary technique even at world-class concert pianist standards that allows her to play at breakneck speed if she chooses to do so, and the “wow factor”, which she has in spades. She is also stunning in the outfits she chooses. She’s always a joy to work with, too. I can’t say the same for a few others, but yeah, zero complaints here.

    • @matthewclarke5008
      @matthewclarke5008 Год назад +3

      You should show this video to Yuja, he's giving her such high and much deserved praise, she's a musical giant.

    • @volvo945
      @volvo945 Год назад +2

      You must be recording the LA Phil concerts? Will it be video as well?

  • @johnps30
    @johnps30 Год назад +68

    Emile Gilels was my go to for speed and dynamics gradations! I didn’t think we’d ever hear anyone to rival his touch with inner voicing. Yuja plays EVERYTHING with such refinement it takes your breath away. Her partnerships with conductors and orchestras is unparalleled; I believe they all step up their game when she solos - it seems like they know they’re in the presence of greatness. And she’s a hoot during her interviews ❤❤

    • @paulovianna1882
      @paulovianna1882 7 месяцев назад +1

      Im a Gilels fan also! he's unbeatable, Yuja doesn't come close yet

  • @LouisHansell
    @LouisHansell Год назад +118

    Rick, we were at the Philadelphia Orchestra last Friday night ( January 27) to hear Yuja Wang perform two piano concerto by Sergei Rachmaninov.
    She was awesome. The audience stood and called her back several times, and she did an encore (after her full concert) with the same level of energy and excitement she bought to the piano concertos. She would be still taking curtain calls today if the audience had had their say.
    The next night she performed at Carnegie Hall playing five Rachmaninov piano works. Unbelievable.
    It is the 150th anniversary of Rachmaninov's birth, and there are many celebrations. Hers is the best.
    She will be back in Philadelphia on February 4.
    Everyone should hear her perform once in their life.

    • @sparklegirl7544
      @sparklegirl7544 Год назад +5

      WOWSERS!! Excellent commentary! My husband and I were there too! As a fairly accomplished classical pianist myself, I was in the bathroom during intermission and said this to the lady in front of me..."She's not human!"

    • @Rodrigo3261
      @Rodrigo3261 Год назад +4

      It was extraordinary. I was there too

    • @MartianTom
      @MartianTom Год назад +1

      Just caught up with her playing this. My favourite piano concerto - next to Grieg's No. 1. Really the best I've ever heard. Amazing.

  • @harmony331000
    @harmony331000 Год назад +210

    I’ve seen her play where they’ve kept track and followed along with her with the actual sheet music running below her playing and she is accurate, she does not miss or mistake a single note…she’s really something special

    • @adrianwright8685
      @adrianwright8685 Год назад +4

      No that's not special. 100's of pianists do that!

    • @marcusonesimus3400
      @marcusonesimus3400 Год назад +12

      @@adrianwright8685
      I've heard a few exceptions in my time, even among the 'greats'. But in principle, yes, that is what one is supposed to do. Just as politicians never lie or slander, business people never cheat, spouses never stray, children never disrespect their parents, etc.
      Insofar as it does not violate any of the ten Commandments, playing a wrong note may be a less serious offense than any of these.
      Nor are the speed and accuracy of Yuja Wang's of any eternal consequence.

    • @azaleaheinrich9877
      @azaleaheinrich9877 Год назад +4

      ​@@adrianwright8685Okay Sherlock. Whatever u say.

    • @jhsemoxitha3821
      @jhsemoxitha3821 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@adrianwright8685sure 😂

    • @adrianwright8685
      @adrianwright8685 10 месяцев назад

      @@jhsemoxitha3821 it's not a matter of opinion - just try going to some piano recitals - or watch a few on youtube - nearly all play from memory. In piano competitions it's compulsory.

  • @kennethyeung5399
    @kennethyeung5399 Год назад +82

    She's definitely one of the greatest pianist ever.

  • @sandradwettig2925
    @sandradwettig2925 6 месяцев назад +2

    I am from Louisville KY. I studied 14 yr classical and jazz piano. I love Yula. I love to hear her. She never runs out of energy. I just listened to her 16min+ performance of Rhapsody in Blue.I love her beautiful dresses and shoe too❤

  • @SuperChaoticus
    @SuperChaoticus Год назад +61

    I just spent about an hour watching some of her live performances. Aside from her obvious ability to 'shred', her playing was so expressive that it brought me to tears. I've never heard of Yuja Wang until watching this vid, but now, I'm a true fan forever. Thank you Rick.

  • @paulrucker1889
    @paulrucker1889 Год назад +56

    I'm so glad you bring her up. Artistry from all directions, from emotional interpretations to stellar virtuosity. I don't think anyone has brought more freshness and excitement to the piano! As a 69 year old jazz pianist, she completely inspires me. (To burn my piano to the ground and find another way to enjoy myself with the insurance money...)

  • @azazelreficulmefistofelicu7158
    @azazelreficulmefistofelicu7158 Год назад +302

    Yuja Wang is unbelievable, pushing the limits of human skill to a higher level. As a metal head with a passion for all types of virtuosity I share some of her performances when I some friend tells me "classical" music is boring. Seeing the shock on their faces and the smile on their lips after a bit of Wang's magic never gets old.

    • @bronxemail7180
      @bronxemail7180 Год назад +9

      Yes. Have watched many of her vids. Barely possible to believe a human can do that. But, she does.

    • @arcimboldo696
      @arcimboldo696 Год назад +8

      More Speed but...less music imho

    • @TheDirge69
      @TheDirge69 Год назад +3

      best comment..

    • @safje2005
      @safje2005 Год назад +5

      yes not human indeed, where is the music, the emotion, the humanity? Tori Amos is much nicer to hear on piano..

    • @ac1646
      @ac1646 Год назад +2

      @@safje2005 she's still young though. That side will mature. Agree about Tori though 🙂

  • @crfdln
    @crfdln 10 месяцев назад +4

    Rick, I'm glad that you included Yuja in one of your videos --- amazing genius!

  • @WarhawkBeyond2040
    @WarhawkBeyond2040 Год назад +210

    Yuja Wang is the Hiromi of classical music, she is an absolute beast on the piano and packs a lot of energy into her playing. One of my favourite piano players. I love her so much!

    • @microtubules
      @microtubules Год назад +30

      I was just about to add the comment "Hey Rick, what do you think of Hiromi Uehara?"

    • @SVI_999
      @SVI_999 Год назад +3

      Hiromi is a robot. Jazz needs soul

    • @Thom726
      @Thom726 Год назад +2

      Hiromi hands are a blur as well!

    • @michaelgarza8271
      @michaelgarza8271 Год назад +29

      @@SVI_999 Not a robot. I saw her in concert. She was very soulful. Look at her face to face duet with Chic Corea on Spain on RUclips.

    • @muffinamy83
      @muffinamy83 Год назад +13

      @@SVI_999 I thought she played soulfully when I saw her live with the harpist Edmar Castaneda. They were emotive and communicative musically; the call-and-response section was incredible.

  • @manliozaninotti9627
    @manliozaninotti9627 Год назад +358

    Wang is one of the best pianists hitting the stage right now. As a lover of classical music, however, I can say that speed is not the greatest quality of a pianist or of Yuja. She is a great interpreter and her pianissimos or fortissimos can be just as intense and difficult as her prestos. Evaluating a pianist by speed is like measuring the goodness of a piece of food per kilo.

    • @CarlMCole
      @CarlMCole Год назад +22

      Excellent point. It's the same way many guitar lovers mistakenly evaluate who is a better guitar player merely in terms of speed of playing or technical proficiency. There is a lot more to music than just technical skill. Some of the most beautiful compositions ever written or played are actually quite simple and slow !

    • @sparkplugbarrens
      @sparkplugbarrens Год назад +1

      I was gonna write something similar regarding the limited notion of virtuosity.

    • @donmcw5678
      @donmcw5678 Год назад

      I agree wholeheartedly.

    • @DaveJ6515
      @DaveJ6515 Год назад +5

      I just finished listening to her Rach II. A great live exhibition, great touch, great personality, and I love her tempo. I don't want to make comparisons, too complicated. I love Ashkenazy and Argerich versions, and to some extent I also enjoy Pollini's and Matsuev's. I can't place Yuja's interpretation with respect to the others under a technical point of view. All I can say is that I found it as engaging and emotionally significant as my favorite ones.

    • @ahiele5996
      @ahiele5996 Год назад

      @@DaveJ6515 ⁹8

  • @__Philip__311
    @__Philip__311 Год назад +114

    Yuja is one of the greatest pianists to have ever lived. I was blessed to see her live in Germany years back. I am not proud to admit I only discovered her when I searched ‘Wang’ on YT once.

    • @jonathanpelphrey4549
      @jonathanpelphrey4549 Год назад +6

      lol

    • @madbrowndog4887
      @madbrowndog4887 Год назад +7

      Come on, no need to be ashamed of being a Wang Chung fan (Everybody Have Fun Tonight). [There's your alibi right there, you should stick to it.]

    • @EyeLean5280
      @EyeLean5280 Год назад +1

      Just goes to show, follow your dreams!

    • @piteusx8440
      @piteusx8440 Год назад +1

      Yuma practices 40 hours a day. Speed only matters if you hit every note flawlessly. Wish she didn't play bumblebee.

    • @eschelar
      @eschelar Год назад +5

      @@piteusx8440 lol. She didn't play bumblebee. She played a much more complex and difficult version. And if my ear is not deceiving me, at about 10bpm faster than bumblebee is usually performed...
      Asians practice 40 hours a day. Yuja does 42.
      That might just make her the answer to Life, the Universe and Everything if you believe the hype.

  • @habdenkanalvoll8489
    @habdenkanalvoll8489 11 месяцев назад +7

    She's definitely from a different Galaxy equipped with an unbelievable technique. How she's able to emphasize all the various melody phrases. I highly recommend that you also check out Yuja Wang - Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 3 - Zubin Mehta. There you can see how she breathes every phrase and lives the entire piece to its minute details. Just brillant and absolutely amazing.
    On top of those incredible skills she NEVER hits one single wrong note EVER. Watching interviews with her also shows how intelligent and higly educated this young woman is. In sports they call people like her GOAT because it not only requires a lot of stamina to play the most difficult piano concerto of all time but it also takes an incredible amount of mental capacities and focus!

  • @MarkMaxwell-author
    @MarkMaxwell-author Год назад +47

    What amazes me is most that not only is she perfect in execution, she is able to play full of emotion and expression!

    • @YaYousef5
      @YaYousef5 Год назад +3

      Yeah. Speed doesn't mean people don't have emotion. Only boomers think playing slow and doing lots of bends means emotional. There's emotion in explosive precise speed and it's moving.

    • @bobgriffith1810
      @bobgriffith1810 Год назад +5

      @@YaYousef5
      Only boomers, ? So that’s according to the voices in your head

    • @YaYousef5
      @YaYousef5 Год назад +2

      @@bobgriffith1810 Damn Bob, you got me! 👏👏

    • @CorbCorbin
      @CorbCorbin Год назад +4

      @@YaYousef5
      Boomers are all over 65 years old now. Boomer is a lazy person’s term for “anyone who doesn’t agree with me, who may or may not like blues based soloing…etc.”

    • @ThomBoecker
      @ThomBoecker Год назад +2

      @@YaYousef5 Given that boomers invented punk rock and thrash metal, your observation may not be quite as astute as you believe it is.

  • @chucooney
    @chucooney Год назад +66

    Amazing technique, but also unbelievable musicianship. I saw her live here in Chicago -- she played some very dense Schoenberg with such clarity, insight, and beauty. It takes real intellect to do that.
    You have to see her live.

    • @demef758
      @demef758 Год назад +2

      She is one of those extremely rare "savants" when it comes to the piano. She was born with her chops whereas we mortals have to spend decades trying to be one-onehundredth as good as she is. It's as simple as that.

  • @derekbaker2665
    @derekbaker2665 Год назад +325

    As a side note the piano has to be impeccable to allow these fast passages. Hats off to the piano technician.

    • @markbaum9615
      @markbaum9615 Год назад +9

      It's not the gear....
      I bet she could do most of that riffage on my grandmother's
      Samick upright...

    • @haroldsdodge
      @haroldsdodge Год назад +1

      Good point

    • @davidchan7531
      @davidchan7531 Год назад +17

      It’s a lot easier playing fast on a top level piano.

    • @haroldsdodge
      @haroldsdodge Год назад +29

      @@markbaum9615 Well, it's not JUST the gear, that's for sure, but having a top piano is a prerequisite for that level of virtuosity. In other words, your gran must have a pretty awesome Samick. There are Steinways that wouldn't sustain Yuja's playing. The action has to be absolutely perfect, for starters.

    • @donbishop6994
      @donbishop6994 Год назад +4

      ​@@markbaum9615 it's not the gear. True she could play anything and make it sound amazing, but her talent wouldn't be able to be shown without a perfectly tuned piano. It takes many years to learn to do that.

  • @shumiatcher
    @shumiatcher 11 месяцев назад +7

    Yuja is a virtuoso but with such refinement and depth of musicianship. Thank you for posting 🎄

  • @aritina8379
    @aritina8379 Год назад +176

    The AMAZING thing about her: not only does she have the most flawless, super human technique, and makes the most difficult pieces sound easy as pie, but she also has the musicality, the expressiveness that are also out of this world!!
    And yes, let’s mention her stamina also!! Just crazy, nuts!!!
    And her personality rocks!!❤❤❤❤

    • @paulprocopolis
      @paulprocopolis Год назад +4

      I totally agree - the ultimate all-rounder!

    • @rdgrow
      @rdgrow Год назад +2

      And she's nice to look at.

  • @eldenjr
    @eldenjr Год назад +33

    These people are from another planet……and the fact that it’s blazing fast, you still can here the melody in every note! Insanely beautiful!

  • @jaygatz4335
    @jaygatz4335 Год назад +108

    Yuja is an inspiration. She actually played all the Rachmaninov concerti in one night at Carnegie Hall. Another great young pianist is Dmitry Shishkin. Great music lives on!

    • @musiclover148
      @musiclover148 Год назад +7

      Four full concerti? I didn't know any orchestra or concert hall would program something like that. That would be an extremely long concert.

    • @jaygatz4335
      @jaygatz4335 Год назад +10

      @@musiclover148 It was a marathon performed in late January, in the afternoon and evening. She wore a different outfit for each piece!

    • @choboutube
      @choboutube Год назад +3

      @@musiclover148 I think someone collapsed during the second and had to be taken to hospital.

    • @musiclover148
      @musiclover148 Год назад +1

      @@jaygatz4335 When I watched this video, I thought it should have mentioned her sartorial reputation, as well! These are not Alfred Brendel's outfits that we see her performing in.

    • @piteusx8440
      @piteusx8440 Год назад +1

      Check out Yunchan as well. The dude is incredible.

  • @mdoctor69
    @mdoctor69 Год назад +4

    As a huge fan of rock, I discovered you a few years ago on U Tube and absolutely LOVE your Top 20 Lists.. rock anthems, guitar solos, drum intros. Especially love the way you break down a song piece by piece. Always gives me a fresh perspective and appreciation for the song and the engineering behind the music. That said..... this classical artist you highlighted here blew my mind. Watching this has opened my eyes to an entirely different world of music. Thank you so much for this and keep doing what you do!!!

  • @danielmccar
    @danielmccar Год назад +83

    I am so glad that you featured Yuja. It isn’t just her chops but her musicality. Dynamics, phrasing, expression- she has it all. Hey, when you do interview her, ask her when she is going to do Beethoven!

    • @scottwheeler2679
      @scottwheeler2679 Год назад +5

      She has done quite a bit of Beethoven. I think she has done all five concertos, at least the first four and she did the Hammerklavier sonata

    • @JohnnyBrook
      @JohnnyBrook Год назад +4

      It's Bach that I want to hear! We need a Yuja Wang Goldberg Variations!

    • @siamcharm7904
      @siamcharm7904 Год назад +2

      her rendition of the hammer is superior to all others, esp in that astonishing adagio. she has sad she needs to read and think more to do justice to beethoven. cant wait for bach.

    • @dougthomson9052
      @dougthomson9052 Год назад

      She played Hammerklavier at Carnegie Hall, there’s a NY Times review of it available online

  • @Jarcademis
    @Jarcademis Год назад +119

    She is a gifted pianist. You can feel the emotional content expressed in her playing. Thank you for posting, Rick!

    • @rik-keymusic160
      @rik-keymusic160 Год назад +3

      She was already very good at a young age. Combine talent with tons of practice ant that is the result. I do thing she lived more lives to pull this of 😅

    • @seanbaines
      @seanbaines Год назад +2

      That's the amazing thing about these clips, and others. She's not just ripping it as fast as she can go. There's tremendous touch and feel in there as well. Those arrangements are expressive, accented, with volume swell and reduction. She does all of that bang on.

    • @WhiteMetal_
      @WhiteMetal_ Год назад +1

      I think artist don't appreciate being called "Gifted"

    • @meimei117
      @meimei117 Год назад

      It's less being gifted and more being drawn to something. The more you're drawn to something, the more you'll want to practice it. Now combine that with her high intelligence and great work ethic and there ya go.

    • @drumsforlife
      @drumsforlife Год назад +1

      @@meimei117 It's both. Being passionately drawn to something is a gift. High intelligence is a gift. A great work ethic, whether genetic or instilled, is a gift. Great musicianship comes from a constellation of gifts - and hard work, of course.

  • @duncanmacpherson2013
    @duncanmacpherson2013 Год назад +10

    I saw her at the Albert Hall in London back in the summer when she played Liszt's first piano concerto and two encores. I thought she enjoyed herself as much as the audience members. It was a memorable evening

  • @willmac4u
    @willmac4u 9 месяцев назад +1

    Rick u r the absolute man man! YOU ARE AWESOME! The people you find , that you interview , that you talk about is so right! U R da MANN, MAN!

  • @mikevanneste
    @mikevanneste Год назад +10

    Thank you! Great post. This lady is not only, probably, the most technically gifted pianist of all time, but an accomplished interpreter and performer of classical piano that continues to attract the highest praise. We are lucky to share time with a legend.

  • @shredvenom
    @shredvenom Год назад +26

    Yuja is amazing, I'm so glad you presented her playing ability. She is so, sooo awesome!!!!

  • @auntyshakira747
    @auntyshakira747 Год назад +352

    She is not just an artist, she is an athlete!

    • @atagadol
      @atagadol Год назад +7

      Exactly, she is an athlete. But not the artist

    • @donl1876
      @donl1876 Год назад +7

      Yuma Wang is world 1st Pianoathlete

    • @John_Smith2302
      @John_Smith2302 Год назад +8

      She is also a very attractive woman. Her dresses almost make her performances adult entertainment.

    • @atagadol
      @atagadol Год назад

      @@andyschultheiss5128
      Not at all.

    • @cassandragarcia5548
      @cassandragarcia5548 Год назад +11

      @@atagadol Explain to us ..why she is NOT an "artist". Furthermore, explain to us....who is (give examples please) an "artist".
      And lastly, are you an "artist"? Yes or No?

  • @wallygator369
    @wallygator369 10 месяцев назад +3

    Rick, this is a long time coming. Classical piano music has a place in a musician's life. She is a great talent.

  • @soap2663
    @soap2663 Год назад +36

    Her musical memory is what amazes me - the ability to faultlessly memorise a large amount of impossibly detailed pieces of music. And not only that, play them with feeling. Obviously that example is delerious technique mania, but she does play beautifully........what you don't realise obviously is that while playing that she is also flying around the world as superwoman dealing with all the problems as well, too fast for the naked eye to perceive etc......

    • @wakingtheworld
      @wakingtheworld Год назад

      As someone learning the violin, the memory side of things is the easy bit! By the time you've practiced a piece like this for months on end your fingers know where to go! But she's quite some pianist; in a league of her own...

    • @Joshflemin
      @Joshflemin Год назад

      It's practice, no biggie

    • @wakingtheworld
      @wakingtheworld Год назад

      @@Joshflemin There's a young Korean violinist called Sohyun Ko (aged 17 now) who said she practiced 11-12 hours a day when she was younger... Still not LingLing though! Lol. She met up with a new tutor in America (Zukerman) who advised her to practice less and 'live' more which she did. But blimey 12 hours a day...

  • @Apriluser
    @Apriluser Год назад +198

    Not only is her playing technically brilliant, but it’s also musical. You can have all the technique in the world and have very little musicality. Then it’s just noise. But when you combine virtuosity with musicality, something magical happens.

    • @uraniumcranium2613
      @uraniumcranium2613 Год назад +5

      What good is technique when you haven't the compositional skills to fully utilise it? Technique has come a long way in the modern age, lots of technically impressive players, but the compositional side is lacking - I mean just listen to the radio lol.

    • @mikevanneste
      @mikevanneste Год назад +3

      I was going to post something similar. Technique at this level is probably way above anything we have ever seen or heard. OK great. What matters is how she performs the actual music. Her ability enables her to perform as the composers could only dream. I have never read a negative review, despite easy targets of dress, youth etc. She is outstanding and we are lucky to have her in our lives.

    • @Ken5244
      @Ken5244 Год назад +3

      @@mikevanneste What? The composers played their pieces exactly as they wrote them. Ms. Wang doesn't play them better than they did. Rachmaninoff was a virtuoso pianist. So was Prokofiev. So was Bach. So was Mozart. So was Chopin. Someone might cite Beethoven's compositions after he went deaf, but he was also a virtuoso before that happened.
      As for her technique being "way above anything we have ever seen or heard," I take it you've never seen/heard Martha Argerich? Ms. Wang isn't on that level yet. Nobody else is either.

    • @brianwhittemore9091
      @brianwhittemore9091 Год назад +9

      @@Ken5244 Lots of performers have performed pieces better than the composer. Of course many of the composers you listed were virtuosos. However, they were dedicated to the craft of composition as much or more so than the art of performance. The fact that they could play their music doesn't mean they were the best at playing it. The recordings of Prokofiev, Ravel, or Rachmaninoff at the piano offer insight into what they had in mind, but I would much rather hear Martha Argerich's or Yuja Wang's Prokofiev 3rd than the composer himself. (And yes, I own all 3). Bob Dylan admitted that he might have written "All Along the Watchtower", but that Jimi Hendrix "owned" the performance of it.

    • @Ken5244
      @Ken5244 Год назад +1

      @@brianwhittemore9091 I don't know that I agree that there are "lots" of performers who performed pieces better than the composer in terms of their technique. I suspect such performances are the exception rather than the norm. Of course, I'm referring to the elite players I mentioned in my first posting, rather than some of the 'lesser' composers/players throughout history. Modern performers, certainly from the 20th Century forward, have had the luxury of playing the great works on amazing grand pianos that Bach and other composers never had at their disposal, so of course those more modern performances will sound better overall than, say, a Bach prelude & fugue played on a clavichord or harpsichord. But any list of players who've had better technique than Bach did would be extremely short.
      I agree that many of the great composers were dedicated to the art of composition, but they were also virtuoso players. Their composition skills didn't come at the expense of their playing virtuosity. In fact, some of them grew to almost resent their own virtuosity when demand for their performances sometimes exceeded the popularity of & demand for their compositions. Prokofiev, as you probably know, was one of them for awhile. A lot of those guys would've been among the most renowned and respected players even if they didn't also compose.
      It's interesting that you mention Argerich and also Prokofiev's 3rd Piano Concerto, because her version of it from 1977, with Andre Previn conducting, is one of my favorite pieces of all time. I don't think Wang comes close to that Argerich performance, but that's just my personal taste. I have never heard a recording of Prokofiev himself playing it, so I can't comment on the comparison. That said, Martha Argerich is one of the aforementioned exceptions rather than the rule. She's better than 99.99999% of humans that have ever played a keyboard, so saying that her version of any piece is better than the composer's itself wouldn't be hard for me to believe.

  • @Dominicwylai
    @Dominicwylai Год назад +45

    I saw her quite a few years ago in Hong Kong and she played another stride piece as her encore piece, and the audience (myself included) were audibly stunned! You could hear everybody gasp as her left hand jumped side to side.... It was unbelievable...

    • @christopherczajasager9030
      @christopherczajasager9030 Год назад +1

      Saw her?..HOPE YOU HEARD HER

    • @stringsvirtuoso3521
      @stringsvirtuoso3521 Год назад +1

      @@christopherczajasager9030 "saw her" means seeing her playing on stage in a concert hall.

    • @christopherczajasager9030
      @christopherczajasager9030 Год назад

      @@stringsvirtuoso3521 I do speak, read and understand English...and know a but about podium life as a concert pianist.

  • @eldergeektromeo9868
    @eldergeektromeo9868 6 месяцев назад +4

    Yuja is simply sublime!All the time, every time!

  • @jeffreymiller4814
    @jeffreymiller4814 Год назад +116

    I saw the Feb 5 Philly concert: the 4th, the rhapsody, and then she closed with the Rach 3. It was absolutely breathtaking. Virtuoso playing for sure (it’s impossible to play the Rachmaninoff 3rd piano concerto without virtuosity), but also GORGEOUS tone, subtle dynamic shadings from ppp to fff, stunning legato line, and a PERFECT tempo for the huge soaring melody at the end. We cheered till we were hoarse. She then played the famous Horowitz version of the Carmen Gypsy Song for an encore. Again pandemonium in Verizon Hall. I stopped criticizing her 5 years ago and now simply try to hear her every chance I get. She always delivers. She’s a bona fide treasure.

    • @timshank3328
      @timshank3328 Год назад +5

      Wife and I were at that concert also. Only concert of hers we've been to, and it was FANTASTIC! Yuja is coming to Philly again, next year, for a recital.

    • @d1p70
      @d1p70 Год назад +2

      damn! i am so jealous of you. i HAVE to hear (and see) her live once.

    • @EF-fc4du
      @EF-fc4du Год назад

      Just curious, what were the criticisms you had of her prior to 5 years ago?

    • @valeriebuffet8259
      @valeriebuffet8259 Год назад +1

      Aucune âme, de l'IA....

  • @DustyChalk
    @DustyChalk Год назад +17

    Yuja Wang is one of my favourite pianists ever, and I've had the pleasure of seeing her live. I'm so glad you branched out and made a video about her. Cheers.

    • @sparklegirl7544
      @sparklegirl7544 Год назад +1

      He also made one awhile ago about Martha Argerich!!!!

  • @xiaofengli4426
    @xiaofengli4426 Год назад +17

    Yuja Wang: Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor Op. 18 is the best I have ever heard. Absolutely amazing.

  • @Robopup325
    @Robopup325 Год назад +6

    Something that is even more insane than the pure speed and accuracy is the volume control. Naturally, lower registers are louder and higher are softer, but you can hear every note with the same exact clarity. Insane volume control mixed with perfect clarity and control.

  • @EyeLean5280
    @EyeLean5280 Год назад +23

    Just saw her in Philly and was fortunate enough to have a box seat above and a little to her right - perfect for watching her hands and could also see their reflection in the piano. She played two hours' worth of extremely complex Rachmaninoff pieces with no sheet music.

    • @thepianocornertpc
      @thepianocornertpc Год назад

      NOOOH!!!

    • @EyeLean5280
      @EyeLean5280 Год назад

      @@thepianocornertpc Yesssssssss!! At first I was sad about our view but it turned out to be a fantastic experience.

  • @bobbysmac1009
    @bobbysmac1009 Год назад +8

    OK, Rick, I did watch 5 videos of this woman playing. She's so good I was in tears. Thank you for sharing this video.

  • @pianogeekdan4621
    @pianogeekdan4621 Год назад +17

    As a pianist i can't fathom how u can get to that level... It's absolutely insane

  • @dalestaley5637
    @dalestaley5637 9 месяцев назад +1

    I too have been following her for years. I'm so glad you're focusing on her.

  • @FabioLovaglio
    @FabioLovaglio Год назад +14

    My first time seeing her, she's not just fast, the musicality of her playing is really beatiful, the smoothness and the transition between very different dynamics is insane, particularly remarkable whe she plays "piano" or "pianissimo". Real gem!

  • @rhf-ol
    @rhf-ol Год назад +43

    I can't help it, but tears come to my eyes when I hear Yuja play all 4 Rach. Unbelievable. She must be given to us directly by God.

    • @flylooper
      @flylooper 11 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, and a lot of practice, too!

  • @dwe4
    @dwe4 Год назад +34

    I have seen her in concert several times and usually try to buy my tickets on a stage side box so I can see the keyboard during the performance. Not the best acoustic location in a concert hall, but it enhances the show of watching her perform. She’s great.

    • @cooldebt
      @cooldebt Год назад +2

      I like this idea. (My kids once complained that the tickets I bought - late - for the ACO and Tawadros brothers were terrible because they couldn't see the fingers of the performers!

    • @debrawhited3035
      @debrawhited3035 Год назад +1

      Agreed. Why anyone would long for front row seats at that kind of performance, I can't imagine. Worst position, can't see anything.

    • @kwizzeh
      @kwizzeh Год назад +1

      Saw her twice and I want to see her again from the side just for this idea. Would love to see her do her magic at that angle.

    • @xyzyzx1253
      @xyzyzx1253 Год назад

      @@georgescancan7503 lol

    • @jeffjenicek2435
      @jeffjenicek2435 Год назад

      @@georgescancan7503 Wow you are really looking for attention🤣 aren't you

  • @martinoliemuller5628
    @martinoliemuller5628 25 дней назад +1

    I,ve seen her two times in Amsterdam, and she walked along me after the concert, and I say the only Chinees words that I know, Pialo Liang, that means Beautiful, and i get a big smile from her

  • @mfgobbi
    @mfgobbi Год назад +35

    Saw her live here in brazil a few years ago. She left the audience in trance.

    • @nahtaivel93
      @nahtaivel93 Год назад +2

      I saw her too when she visited our country. I attended her concert in Curitiba. It was amazing.

  • @suzannedawson6330
    @suzannedawson6330 Год назад +41

    Yuja is one powerful pianist. Represents 7 - 8hrs of hard core and carefully thought out practice daily. She’s a monster artist!

    • @conannanoc8768
      @conannanoc8768 Год назад +1

      she used to say that she only has been playing 1 hour a day since she was 6. After seeing her alla turca encore, i call her a liar!

    • @suzannedawson6330
      @suzannedawson6330 Год назад

      @@conannanoc8768 hmmmm.

    • @Nickxis
      @Nickxis Год назад +1

      I dont think you can get this good with just a lot of practice

    • @cozmicpfunk
      @cozmicpfunk Год назад +2

      I was friends with 2 DMA students years ago at UT Austin- Dohee and Claire. The both practiced insanely. I video taped their recitals and would hang out in the practice rooms and one thing I recognized was a Passion and Love for the music. You have to love something so much to injure yourself through the hours of practice- pretty much bruised fingers and hands. The maintenance they had to go through to keep this up, It looks effortless but is not. And yes, 8 hours of playing a day for years and years. It pays off, but is a sacrifice...

    • @suzannedawson6330
      @suzannedawson6330 Год назад +1

      @@cozmicpfunk Agreed. Your love and passion for music spurs you on, so much so that you don’t realize how much time you’ve spent accomplishing each goal. But truly, if someone is leaving a practice session bloodied and bruised, he or she is not practicing correctly. Carpel tunnel, tendinitis, spine and back pain can be death to a musician.

  • @foxandscout
    @foxandscout Год назад +21

    I am looking forward to your words, Rick. I have been a huge fan of Wang for years. She’s so astonishing. Often, I can’t follow the blur of her fingers. Plus she’s such a down to earth person, living a fun life, dressing against old stodgy rules…. I love her so much!!!

  • @RCCola979
    @RCCola979 Год назад +34

    The most interesting part I saw from this was switching effortlessly from the "interlocking octaves" that Rick talked about around 3:53 to the traditional double-handed chromatics you normally see from Bumblebee. Great composition, great playing. Love this channel endlessly. I listen mostly to classical music, so I greatly appreciate Rick sharing from this world as well as the popular music world. Keep up the great work, Rick.

  • @Snipely
    @Snipely Год назад +22

    She played 7 encores at Orchestra Hall in Chicago, all with equal exuberance. Spectacular performer.

  • @parissimons6385
    @parissimons6385 Год назад +21

    Thank you, Rick! Yuja Wang is a fantastic artist. You're right, she's not merely a brilliant technician...
    We are lucky to live in a time when there may be more 'classical' music virtuosos, in a real and artistic way, playing concerts all over the world than there ever were in the past. Whether people find them on RUclips, on recordings, or on broadcasts, I would encourage everybody to please go and hear them play live and in person.
    Usually the same is true for any music genre, although there can be something said for the wonder of studio wizardry, too. Thinking of the studio magic of classical pianist Glenn Gould, who stopped playing concerts and focused exclusively on recording...

    • @terryp3034
      @terryp3034 Год назад +1

      So true!! And an amazing surfeit of incredible women pianists - Helene Grimaud, Khatia Buniatishvili, Beatrice Rana, Valentina Lisitsa, and Alice Sara Ott (who sadly is battling MS). And in the jazz world, Hiromi Uehara is surreal.

  • @michaeldarmody9919
    @michaeldarmody9919 8 месяцев назад

    Rick I learn so much about music from your work. You not only know the subject but your passion for music is infectious. And Im thrilled you’re now including classical musicians like Yuja. Astounding talent. She channels the music!

  • @donavandean1078
    @donavandean1078 Год назад +17

    That's gotta be one of if not the most talented pianist in the world. Absolutely incredible!

  • @999gremlins
    @999gremlins Год назад +66

    Speed for speed's sake has never impressed me... but my God this woman is mind blowing. On the Flight of the Bumblebee it makes it sounds lie and entire orchestra is backing her up. Thank you Rick for sharing this....just when you think you've seen it all eh? :)

    • @marcusonesimus3400
      @marcusonesimus3400 Год назад +1

      She is amazing. Objectively speaking. But i can't stand listening to her because, for all her intellectual curiosity, for all the transcendence of her virtuosity, which you describe so well, she remains chained to the ideal of speed for speed's sake. I'm sure that she knows exactly why people want to see her and hear her. I've heard amateurs play slow and simple passages much better than she does.

    • @loreeclary
      @loreeclary Год назад

      I feel the same way you do. It’s impressive but it is just TOO fast!

    • @DrJanLindberg
      @DrJanLindberg Год назад

      About as wrong as it could be! @@marcusonesimus3400

    • @S0ulinth3machin3
      @S0ulinth3machin3 Год назад +1

      @@marcusonesimus3400 FYI, Rimsky Korsakov scored the original at 200bpm.
      The composer intended for it to be played extremely fast. Yuja seems to be in the neighborhood of 200bpm, she's doing what Rimsky Korsakov intended.
      think of bees or flies. Think of how hard it is to swat a fly. They're always faster than you.

    • @JAP42
      @JAP42 Год назад

      Watch her Rach 2, & then talk to me about speed for speed's sake. The tempo is +/- epsilon relative to other recordings -- including Rachmaninov's!
      This is a solo show piece, but when she's playing with an orchestra the tempo is the conductor's to set, not by her.

  • @radiradev2387
    @radiradev2387 Год назад +40

    So glad to see Yuja in a Rick Beato video, she has been my favorite piano player since 2014. Saw her in Vienna couple of years back. She is amazing, but not because of the speed, but because she feels the music and it lives through her playing, is so emotional to see and hear her play.

  • @dr.davidgerstenaminoacidth2421
    @dr.davidgerstenaminoacidth2421 Год назад +2

    Thank you for posting this . I’ve watched hours of her the past few days and she is just amazing. I don’t think I’ve heard another pianist who is that fast, technically flawless, and who delivers emotionally like she does. I sat 2 feet from world class classical guitarists who can play 16-20 notes per second…effortlessly. But Wang is beyond words. I did watch one version of her playing Flight of the Bumblebee l. It was incredibly fast. I felt like “This is what a bumblebee really sounds like.

  • @jefforjo
    @jefforjo Год назад +72

    Yes, she is insanely fast but most impressively, the melody is clear, dynamic, expressive, perfectly weighted and enjoyable among all the other note’s being played. So much control and musicality despite going at break neck speeds. Going fast without control, tempo or clear direction is just not enjoyable

    • @marcusonesimus3400
      @marcusonesimus3400 Год назад

      Correct in all respects. But the centre of attention remains Yuja Wang.
      That is why the tempo is chronically, needlessly fast. I dislike sluggish tempi. I also don't want to be pushed relentlessly, as a listener, unless the music is supposed t express a feverish state of mind. But who needs a fever all the time?
      The main legitimate reason for playing fast is to show larger pulses with fewer (or subtler) subdivisions. A conductor can only beat so quickly without looking pretty stupid.

  • @kjake1
    @kjake1 Год назад +23

    She was so fast, but also somehow brought out the melody, and accented in places that made the music come alive. It wasn't muddy. It's not just the amount of practice time, but being so relaxed and comfortable with the instrument to be able to make it musical. So amazing.

  • @GP-ss4hn
    @GP-ss4hn Год назад +19

    This weekend I listened several times to Yuja Wang playing in the amazing album, The American Project, which was one of the best classical albums I have ever experienced. Yes, her playing is precise, but she strikes the keys with just the right amount force and time that one can feel the emotion of the piece such that it overwhelms you. Ms. Wang’s performance is breathtaking.

  • @joe-nautilus-nauticus
    @joe-nautilus-nauticus 10 месяцев назад +1

    Phenomenal! What a treat. Loving the piano references and interviews Rick. Thank you

  • @MorganBallardWheeler
    @MorganBallardWheeler Год назад +17

    I appreciate you made a video highlighting Yuja Wang, and you should have mentioned that she recently played all 5 of Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerti in ONE CONCERT at Carnegie Hall! A feat never before attempted by a pianist!

  • @johndemola1608
    @johndemola1608 Год назад +21

    Thank you Rick for continuing to expose to those of us who do not have the vast eclectic taste in musical genres that you do, these amazing humans who are at the top of the list of virtuosos on their instruments.

  • @scottrowe533
    @scottrowe533 Год назад +10

    I've been a dedicated music fan for 40+ years, and Yuja Wang is quite simply the most astonishing performer I've seen with my own two eyes. She can play virtuosically for hours and never miss a single note, while at the same time expressing herself with deeply felt passion and emotions. Please go see her live if you ever get the chance. Her playing will blow your mind!

  • @exceptionaltalentspc4954
    @exceptionaltalentspc4954 Месяц назад

    Just mind blowing. Listenning to her playing I cannot help but think she's really out of this world. Then I listen to her talking and she sounds and looks so human and so down to earth but I cannot even begin to reconcile the two.

  • @brandonmartin5650
    @brandonmartin5650 Год назад +7

    Thank you Mr Beato for opening up the world to all of music. When I watched your vid on Beethoven's deafness and his spirit to overcome that adversity, I honestly shed a tear, he has been my hero in good times and ill. In saying all this I adore Yuja. She is an absolute goddess.

  • @deoncruywagen5191
    @deoncruywagen5191 Год назад +10

    I am going to look up and listen to more of this artist. I must admit that one of my favorite classical pianists is Khatia Buniatishvili. She puts so much emotion into her playing it is stunning. I first heard her perform Rhapsody In Blue, and man, what a performance. The way she played off of the orchestra, playfully coaxing them deeper and deeper into the music. Awesome.
    Another piano player that sounded like he had two pairs of hands was Oscar Petersen. He played blisteringly fast at times, but always in service of the music.

  • @stillsearchingforsanity4332
    @stillsearchingforsanity4332 Год назад +62

    I've been following Yuja for a few years. There are no words to adequately describe what she does at the piano.

    • @gregs3580
      @gregs3580 Год назад +1

      Another one to watch is Marc Andre Hamelin.

    • @asdi234
      @asdi234 Год назад +1

      Superhuman comes to mind..

    • @llwydanwyl
      @llwydanwyl Год назад

      you could use insane, ridiculous, crazy, like everyone else who lacks vocabulary.. at least you admit to it

  • @Ryosuke324
    @Ryosuke324 Месяц назад +2

    i don't know why i came up with the idea of changing the playback speed on the video setting to 1.5, i saved time,i got the whole point of it,starting from 1:34.

  • @tedtombling2770
    @tedtombling2770 Год назад +11

    Wow! I came across your Channel quite by chance. I've seen Ms Yuja Wang live, either in London or in Europe five times. She is mesmerizing and always shows great humility towards her audience at the end of a concert. I like listening to her chat on RUclips, too, she comes across as someone quite ordinary and chilled, until you here her play a piano. I remember the first time I heard her in my Flat in Stirling, Scotland on the radio when her first album was being 'pushed', and have followed her ever since. Great listening to what you had to say.

  • @POK2008
    @POK2008 Год назад +8

    As someone who is just starting to play piano, that was insane!! Her hands move unbelievably fast and every note is perfect. Mind boggling!

    • @2204JCM
      @2204JCM 6 месяцев назад

      That’s not the right way to think about it. Instead think about how relaxed / efficient she is and try to play like that AT ALL TIMES.

  • @jonh901271
    @jonh901271 Год назад +12

    She was just featured at Carnagie Hall for a "Rachmoninoff Marathon", a 3 1/2 hour concert featuring four concertos and a Rhapsody.

  • @oernepower
    @oernepower Год назад +7

    Her live rendition of the Prokofiev Toccata is INSANE

  • @intrinsicsmiler
    @intrinsicsmiler Год назад +16

    Quite obviously Yuja is technically perfect, actually even compared to the old masters like Rubinstein, Horowitz, and the alikes, if one bothers to compare at all.
    What I find increasingly fascinating is how she emerges as an incredible chamber musician also. You already feel it her being 21 year old in the recording from 2008 with Lynn Harrell playing the Rach Sonata, and her more recent recording of the same piece with Gautier Capucon sets the gold standard for this piece. Have a listen also to the Brahms op 8 with Capucon and Kavakos in Verbier 2022, or the Brahms Violin Sonata with Kavakos. This is what chamber music is all about, can't get better.
    On all those combined aspects, YW is unequaled by anyone alive - at age 36. What an amazing perspective.

  • @JohnNiemsMusic
    @JohnNiemsMusic Год назад +10

    Great video Rick and I would like to add she turns 36 this Friday February 10th! She started her studies of piano at the age of 6! I am a piano tuner-technician for 47 years and have tuned for many Chinese families who have their kids learning at 6 and younger and they all play brilliantly!

  • @dirtysouth5038
    @dirtysouth5038 Год назад +13

    Rick, I appreciate your bringing us technique and passion from genres we might not be familiar with.

  • @MrMountainJohn
    @MrMountainJohn 7 месяцев назад +1

    I saw Yuja Wang live twice. Absolutely unbelievable performer.

  • @cajuncrackerranch7990
    @cajuncrackerranch7990 Год назад +20

    Not complete insanity Rick, complete mastery of the body, mind, spirit, the moment, and the instrument. It is a gift!
    Thank you 🙏 for making this video. Yuja is an amazing human being.

    • @thomasp9075
      @thomasp9075 Год назад

      A gift yes, but it would be uselessly undeveloped without a lifetime of constant, intense mental and physical work. People always forget about the hard part.

    • @marcusonesimus3400
      @marcusonesimus3400 Год назад

      And Who made this human being? Worship the Creatoe, not the creature.
      Do not be an idolater.
      You do not know what you are talking about when you use the word 'spirit', do you? If you think you know, please define it according to your understanding. A lot of people confuse aesthetic and spiritual experiences, which are not the same. Or they confuse 'soul' with 'spirit'. But what we call the 'soul' is a composite of mental and emotional exeriences, modulated by electrochemical processes in the brain.
      Ms. Wang does not have complete control over the electrochemical processes in her brain, let alone whatevver immaterial portion of her humanity will survive beyond death. Sorry, man.
      When a person begins to exercise faith in Jesus Christ and is saved from his/her sins, the Holy Spirit of God also begins to indwell that person. But this is a mark of God's ownership. The person is not a 'free agent'.
      A Christian who is obedient to the Holy spirit is not under his or her own control, but submits to His gracious will.
      Do you have any evidence that Yuja Wang has become a Christian? I hope so, but frankly I am skeptical.
      The Holy Spirit can help a person in career matters, but His main agenda is far more transformative than that. Above all the Holy Spirit directs believers to tell others about Jesus, so that they may also be saved.
      On the other side, there are many evil spirits in the world, demonic forces. It says:
      "But if you have bitter jealousy and selfish ambition in your heart, do not be arrogant and lie against the truth. This wisdom is not that which comes from above, but id natural, earthly, demonic."
      I hope that you will research the matter more thoroughly. All the best to you.

  • @stephenramirez4441
    @stephenramirez4441 Год назад +60

    Her performance of Beethoven piano sonata no. 29 was a lifetime achievement. Beethoven may not have expected anyone to be able to actually play this monster and of course there are many concert artists who have played and recorded it, but as far as I know it hasn't been fully realized in the age of recorded music except by Yuja. I read that she spent two years preparing it. Hearing her play this sonata is like hearing this late Beethoven masterpiece for the first time.

    • @siamcharm7904
      @siamcharm7904 Год назад +1

      stronglyagree. i have compared her carefully to richter, barenboim, braudel, goode, others. none come close, esp in that incredible adagio.

    • @anewjourneywithbertie5290
      @anewjourneywithbertie5290 Год назад

      It is masterful love that one

    • @moinlabs
      @moinlabs Год назад +1

      This work is relevant insofar, that one of my atfs, Glenn Gould, who incidentally recorded op.109/110/111 in his early twenties, said about his recording of no.29 (done in his 40s) that he struggled in various sections to get it right.
      Wang Yuja's interpretation is completely mindblowing, and I'm not talking chops (pretty much everyone among today's famous pianists can play this stuff), it's intellect. Whow. And while I really love Rick's channel, sadly he didn't grab the opportunity to show us one of her recordings displaying her intellectual virtuosity (with the technical aspect as a mere sidedish).

    • @siamcharm7904
      @siamcharm7904 Год назад +1

      @@moinlabs agree, and that intelligence will only grow. she's said she has to read more philosophy and literature to do justice to late beethoven. cant wait for bach,

    • @AlexLifeson1985
      @AlexLifeson1985 Год назад +1

      If Beethoven could do it, I don't see why someone else couldn't. Practise practise practise.

  • @JDCareyMusic
    @JDCareyMusic Год назад +11

    Dang, it's not just the speed, but the dynamics at speed. Also, it doesn't sounds like robotic technical performing. The music still has character!

  • @AffordBindEquipment
    @AffordBindEquipment Год назад +8

    One has to give a shout out to the pianos she plays. The key has to return to the up position for her to play it again and somehow, these pianos keep up. Amazing.

    • @bl3313
      @bl3313 Месяц назад

      There are supposed to be Czerny etudes that can't be played at their maximum recommended speed for that reason - the keys would never rebound in time.

    • @AffordBindEquipment
      @AffordBindEquipment Месяц назад

      @@bl3313 It's like some of the stuff that is written for player piano. way faster than a human can play but somehow the piano keeps up.

  • @talexb
    @talexb Год назад +13

    I took piano lessons for eight years and was pretty good at that point. I continue to play today, almost fifty years later. These performances are breath-taking -- it seems impossible that her arms, wrists, hands and fingers can possibly move that quickly, and that accurately. I'm also bloody impressed at the original mechanical design of pianos -- that it can sound a note, then be ready to play another note after that, in what looks like a quarter of a second. Magic.
    PS Also, love your videos. Kudos.

    • @EnFuego79
      @EnFuego79 Год назад +1

      A quarter of a second is 16th notes at 60 bpm, she is playing 32nd and 64ths at 250 bpm - that's ~ 16.6 notes/second or 1 note every 6/100ths of a second. At that speed she is relying on the physical rebound of the key off of the stop to bring it back to her finger in time - like someone playing ping pong against a wall standing 2 feet away. In short - practically super human. And she's doing it with CHORDS. I think she is pushing the limits of physical and neurological possibility. It would be fascinating to hook her up to an EEG and see if she is in some sort of trance-state to pull this off.

    • @eldergeektromeo9868
      @eldergeektromeo9868 Год назад

      Really does not matter HOW she does it....its THAT she does it. She has been a prodigy since age 9.......

  • @Beckola44
    @Beckola44 Год назад +6

    Simply astounding!!!! Yuja Wang is an incredible pianist. Her hands are a blur playing Flight of the Bumblebee and her other piece. She is entirely on another planet when she plays. As a musician, she is a huge mountain while I am just a tiny grain of sand.

  • @TucsonBillD
    @TucsonBillD Год назад +6

    Rick, I have been to several of her concerts and she’s every bit as amazing in person. Recently, to honor the 150th anniversary of the birth os Russian pianist Sergi Rachmaninov, she played in a single three and a half hour concert of all four of his piano concertos as well as his Rhapsody on a theme of Paganini. That encompasses 400 pages of music. I have a hard time remembering just four…

  • @hakankursunmusic
    @hakankursunmusic 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you very much!!! Wonderful information and music!!!

  • @ImNotHereEither
    @ImNotHereEither Год назад +6

    Only obsession will get you to that level. It is insane. The precision. The speed. And the intonation. Truly astounding.