Mark Hambourg the 5 Recorded Chopin Etudes 1929

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  • Опубликовано: 26 авг 2024
  • No copyright infringement is intended if any still exists. Posted solely for the artistic exposure of Mark Hambourg's 5 recorded Chopin Etudes, op 25 # 1, # 2 , # 3 and op 10 # 6 and # 5 ( order of presentation on this video )
    These recordings originate from my own personal collection.
    Op 25 # 1, # 2 , # 3 recorded December 1929
    HMV C1779
    Op 10 # 6 and # 5 recorded November 1929
    HMV C1778
    *There is another recording of op 10 # 5 from 1916 but am unable to locate it at this time.

Комментарии • 20

  • @davisatdavis1
    @davisatdavis1 2 года назад +20

    You have to remember, this guy was one of the true romantics; the greats we categorize with liszt, chopin, etc. He was one of them. Despite all recordings of him being in his later years it's unbelievable that we could even hear this type of playing. This is the forgotten sound of what we lost after the romantic era.

    • @michaelreich2306
      @michaelreich2306 Год назад +4

      Er war Schüler von Leschetizky, der wiederum Schüler von Czerny war.

    • @Fritz_Maisenbacher
      @Fritz_Maisenbacher 4 месяца назад

      We lost this marvelous sound because the pianists AND their audience of today wanted it to be lost.
      The pianists have to make some money, and obey to the stupid crowd, what is normal, but the AUDIENCE OF TODAY, they are the real piece of sh.. , just read the comments on YT, these complete morons, these robots.
      I hate my time with utter passion.

  • @Fritz_Maisenbacher
    @Fritz_Maisenbacher 2 месяца назад +4

    0:01 the sheer and pure beauty of his phrasing, inner cantabile and legato, moved by this dancing energy ... a dream .... a dream ... some moments ..; (remembers me to the most precious moments of my life)

    • @TB-us7el
      @TB-us7el Месяц назад

      I often see your comments, Fritz and think how wonderful they are in describing what I, too, am hearing. I couldn't have said it better myself.

    • @Fritz_Maisenbacher
      @Fritz_Maisenbacher Месяц назад +1

      @@TB-us7el
      Thank you !
      (even if english is not my native language and with all faults ....)

  • @kimdoomin
    @kimdoomin 2 года назад +9

    1:54 Op.25 n.2
    3:15 Op.25 N.3
    4:55 Op.10 N.6
    7:15 Op.10 N.5

  • @andreasneumann
    @andreasneumann 3 года назад +6

    So much liberty for the middle voices, fabulous!

  • @kasyapa
    @kasyapa 6 лет назад +12

    The always-and-ever-fascinating Hambourg.

    • @pianomaly9859
      @pianomaly9859 3 года назад +2

      So fascinating in fact, that I ordered am reading his second book The Eighth Octave. Have watched the three films of him available, too. Six decades after his death, he can still get purist's shorts in a bunch, and he can even twitterpate me sometimes. - MM

  • @MrInterestingthings
    @MrInterestingthings 5 месяцев назад +1

    Everytime i hear this imaginative man i just wanna scream out. I wish we had more from him. Such music! He makes the old NEW! So special. I cant imagine him n a concerto.So spontaneous !

  • @user-gu3iy1vl9u
    @user-gu3iy1vl9u 6 лет назад +8

    thank you so much for your constant posting. I really appreciate the recordings of Hambourg, he was such a genius.

  • @Fritz_Maisenbacher
    @Fritz_Maisenbacher 5 лет назад +11

    7:15 each of us knows that in Chopin's Etudes, Lhevinne was Perfect .
    And the "problem" with perfection , is that you know at every second what will follow ......
    Hambourg .... is making it different . Just like a beautiful girl dancing in a meadow , who can tell what will happen in only one second ................ ??

    • @adriaencoorte2094
      @adriaencoorte2094 Год назад +2

      Lhevinne plays from the existence of the music. Hambourg plays out of its essence. "Perfection" isn't "perfect."

    • @MrInterestingthings
      @MrInterestingthings 5 месяцев назад +1

      Everytime I hear these the new spontaneous effects have been forgotten and it's a new pleasure. Op.25 in F has never sound so quicksilver!

  • @piano345
    @piano345 6 лет назад +4

    Fascinating 'interpretive touches' and the Black Keys etude is amazingly fleet fingered although he opts out from playing the final octave descent in tempo and as written.

    • @tobiolopainto
      @tobiolopainto 8 месяцев назад +1

      Rosenthal plays a glissando in both hands. Friedman adds a couple of octaves to the gliss.

  • @Fritz_Maisenbacher
    @Fritz_Maisenbacher 5 лет назад +12

    The man seems not to play for the glory of the piano in itself ..... there is something MORE ..............

    • @shenhe6281
      @shenhe6281 Год назад +1

      Most like Anton Rubinstein!

  • @angelobonacci461
    @angelobonacci461 6 месяцев назад +1

    Paragonarlo a Liszt mi sembra azzardato,ma comunque molto bravo particolare e leggero,non mi piace l'interpretazione della polacca militare, troppo veloce