András Schiff on the recording of Bach's „The Well-Tempered Clavier"

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 121

  • @edmundfrench8532
    @edmundfrench8532 10 лет назад +46

    Schiff is quickly showing himself to me to be a truly feeling, thinking master of his craft, more so than so many. That sounds far more vacuous than I would like, but it's when you get that feeling of being moved or educated or amused by everything he says or plays, and you wish the video was far longer. And that closing line: "Bach was one of us. The best of us, but one of us." Very beautiful indeed.

  • @Kitsua
    @Kitsua 12 лет назад +4

    It was Andras Schiff who originally opened up my world to the beauty of Bach and I think he's still my favourite interpreter of his music. His insight, clarity, respect and profundity of his playing is exquisite but I could also happily hear him talk about these works all day.

  • @daucuscarota6602
    @daucuscarota6602 7 лет назад +3

    It is always a joy to listen to András Schiff in his explanation of Bachs music. He has really thoroughly reflected the music he plays.
    Es ist immer ein Genuss, die Ausführungen von András Schiff zu hören. Erstaunlich, wie tief und reflektiert er die Musik durchdrungen hat.

  • @antonellomascarello4698
    @antonellomascarello4698 4 года назад +2

    This kind of videos are a treasure !!!!

  • @martinstremlow2997
    @martinstremlow2997 3 года назад +2

    It is always interesting to listen to Andraa Schiffs comments, one of the greatest pianists of our time and highly experienced ! Thanks for posting

  • @aegeanbo
    @aegeanbo 11 лет назад +2

    For me Schiff is a great teacher. I enjoy every posting of his on the RUclips. Most young people have no idea what lucky we are with all these available learning opportunities.
    I am very grateful. For example, I would have walked two miles to just listen to this RUclips when I was 16.

  • @mtv565
    @mtv565 11 лет назад +11

    “Bach is the supreme genius of music... This man, who knows everything and feels everything, cannot write one note, however unimportant it may appear, which is anything but transcendent. He has reached the heart of every noble thought, and has done it in the most perfect way.”
    - Pablo Casals

  • @alyoshaproductions
    @alyoshaproductions 5 лет назад +15

    Interviewer: "Let's talk about the elephant in the room..." *Schiff looks around the room amusedly...*

  • @lintflas1183
    @lintflas1183 5 лет назад +3

    "For Bach it was not so important to listen to this or that it should be played. It's just there .. sheer perfection"
    Schiff nailed it as usual!

  • @mtv565
    @mtv565 11 лет назад +17

    “Any composer, even the most gifted, takes a place second to Bach's at the very start.” - Paul Hindemith
    “If one were asked to name one composer who came closest to composing without human flaw, I suppose general consensus would choose Johann Sebastian Bach...” - Aaron Copland
    "to make divine things human and human things divine; such is Bach, the greatest and purest moment in music of all time.” - Pablo Casals
    “...the greatest music in the world.....” - Felix Mendelssohn

    • @georgesmelki1
      @georgesmelki1 4 года назад +1

      "The old Bach, who contains all of music..." C. Debussy

    • @lotharlamurtra7924
      @lotharlamurtra7924 4 года назад

      Cioran: "Bach disait tout devoir à Dieu alors que c'est Dieu qui doit tout à Bach"

    • @douglasdickerson5184
      @douglasdickerson5184 2 года назад +1

      💙💙💙

    • @L1102
      @L1102 Год назад

      The one by Pablo Casals is so accurate and well said, it is excactly how i feel.

  • @JazzAnswer99
    @JazzAnswer99 12 лет назад +3

    I've heard Bach played on a steel drum. I have heard Bach played on a marimba.
    No matter what instrument you play, Bach is beautiful and accessible to all.

  • @w3sp
    @w3sp 6 лет назад +5

    Haha, he's clearly referring to Arie Vardi. Check out the interview he had with Schiff and talking about the usage of Pedal in Bach's music.

  • @FirstGentleman1
    @FirstGentleman1 12 лет назад

    I am very excited to hear the new recordings.

  • @AlejandroSanAntonio
    @AlejandroSanAntonio 11 лет назад +5

    In recent Henle Editions of Bachs Wohltempetierte Klavier, Schiff writes how to execute... I recommend it!!!

  • @AntPDC
    @AntPDC 8 лет назад +6

    Happy to see that he's been knighted by the Queen. I'd be very happy indeed to address him as "Sir András" - he's given much to music.

    • @ChollieD
      @ChollieD 6 лет назад

      They say "Sir Schiff". You don't address people you don't know somewhat by their first names, especially if you are acknowledging their membership in the gentry.

    • @AntPDC
      @AntPDC 6 лет назад

      + Dan Only ignorant people would say "Sir Schiff".

    • @ChollieD
      @ChollieD 6 лет назад

      Apparently you're right! I've been misled for decades by an interview I read with the actor Anthony Hopkins, who said (after being knighted) that "they say "Sir Hopkins"." So I looked up how to address British nobility, and according to Wikipedia (heh) you only use the last name if the title is really your spouse's, and only if it's a "lesser" title like "Lord" or "Sir". Otherwise, it should be "Sir Anthony", for example.

    • @igorjee
      @igorjee 6 лет назад

      @@ChollieD I reprimand you for not exercising due diligence before composing your first comment. But I commend you for your willingness to educate yourself and admit your mistakes.

    • @ChollieD
      @ChollieD 6 лет назад +1

      @@igorjee I reprimand you for being late. Very, very late. Also, for being Magyar. :P

  • @princehal4500
    @princehal4500 10 лет назад +7

    whether you agree with Schiff or not, I appreciate him for being a thoughtful and analytical about his craft. So many believe that "artists" are just born with talent and don't have to do anything. Not so. He demonstrates that his talent and love of his craft have driven him to engage deeply and meaningfully with his studies. I think it may be Barenboim who criticized him for not using the pedal. Barenboim believes that this movement to replicate the "original" sound is silly and doesn't ultimately do what it intends to do.

    • @brianeheads
      @brianeheads 6 лет назад

      Prince Hal Both arguments make sense to me actually. The way they execute those ideas is what matters to me tho.

    •  5 лет назад

      Actually, I think that the one who criticized him might be Perahia. He always uses pedal in Bach.

    • @youmothershouldknow4905
      @youmothershouldknow4905 2 года назад

      Ah, Barenboim is the opponent. Well, I therefore cannot be on one side or the other. Both Schiff and Barenboim are artists reaching for infinity. Wherever each arrives, I cannot say what might be best.

  • @quinto34
    @quinto34 8 лет назад +2

    Very thoughtfully played, Schiff is grreat

  • @alipitogen
    @alipitogen 12 лет назад

    I nearly like as much listening to Andras Schiff talking about Bach as playing Bach. Also, why, oh why is it so unusual and so refreshing to hear that C Prelude at last played "Stylus Phantasticus"? I admire Schiff enormously.

  • @gerardbedecarter
    @gerardbedecarter 12 лет назад

    Interesting and thought-provoking, as Andras Schiff always is.

  • @roblingelbach
    @roblingelbach 9 лет назад +2

    One wishes Schiff would touch on the subject of keyboard tuning (in an historical sense). "Well Tempered" in Bach's time translates today to meantone temperament, which gave each key signature a character. These key-personalities were extremely important for the structure of each prelude/fugue, prescribing in many cases their harmony.

    • @georgesmelki1
      @georgesmelki1 7 лет назад

      Your comment, dear Rob Lingelbach, is just about the only one which is worth reading...And yes, he should have touched on this issue of utmost importance: "well tempered" is by no means equivalent to equal temperament!

  • @dhanirivai
    @dhanirivai 12 лет назад

    please upload the complete version of this valuable recording discussion

  • @shamsam4
    @shamsam4 11 лет назад

    Thank you for this video. It made my morning!

  • @EdwardWhelanPiano
    @EdwardWhelanPiano 10 лет назад +1

    Music is subjective, but not that subjective. It's just there, sheer perfection. Sheer subjective perfection, but not that subjective perfection.

  • @saapman
    @saapman 11 лет назад

    Wonderful! Thanks Klassik!

  • @FirstGentleman1
    @FirstGentleman1 12 лет назад

    Maestro Schiff uses the pedal also in the prelude of the english suite number six by bach.

  • @MaxLima1
    @MaxLima1 12 лет назад +1

    It's the F minor Prelude n° 12 from The Well-Tempered Clavier, book 2 :)

  • @MAAP2502
    @MAAP2502 11 лет назад

    So true, that's why they're called artists, all are different.

  • @marchmere
    @marchmere 12 лет назад

    Thank you for this!

  • @chrish12345
    @chrish12345 12 лет назад +2

    it would be nice to have talked about what/if he's doing different from the last recording

  • @martinadler73
    @martinadler73 12 лет назад

    Very interesting. Many thanks.

  • @Zephyrus47
    @Zephyrus47 4 года назад

    After all the interest in this, we still don't know where to find the full interview....

  • @shnimmuc
    @shnimmuc 4 года назад +1

    Most musicologist agree that there are three apex composers. Bach, Handel and Beethoven. Most Bach people will disagree and place Bach at the top. However I feel that both Handel and Beethoven belong aside Bach not on the mathematical aspects of music but in Handel`s case his unbelievable melodic and dramatic gifts. Likewise, Beethoven excelled on his innovative and other worldly explorations of new of sounds and structure . Thank goodness for all three.

  • @hardtothecorecoretot
    @hardtothecorecoretot 12 лет назад

    what a nice venue, would love to play that piano at night, when all that city lights would be on

  • @tuningmeister46
    @tuningmeister46 12 лет назад

    Thanks to all who have written to disagree with Schiff's comments about the harpsichord. Harpsichord music by many composers is filled with appoggiaturas. Yes, the second note is as loud as the first on a harpsichord. But harpsichordists used other aspects of articulation, plus of course some imagination, and it worked just fine. So the argument is ridiculous. Sad, because Schiff brings many fine qualities to his playing, and his lectures on Beethoven are very illuminating.

  • @VladimirMagalashvili
    @VladimirMagalashvili 7 лет назад

    einfach genial!

  • @gijsschubert7901
    @gijsschubert7901 6 лет назад

    Very nice how he plays BWV 881 Prelude at 3:00 with that slightly rubato on the repeated chord

  • @456er123
    @456er123 11 лет назад

    wunderful explanation

  • @alpspitz1
    @alpspitz1 10 лет назад +3

    Schiff is German for ship....
    Well he floats my boat
    A great German pianist playing a great German composer
    Gruss Gott

    • @adam2eve
      @adam2eve 10 лет назад +2

      i thought he is hungarian?

    • @alpspitz1
      @alpspitz1 10 лет назад

      adam2eve Yes,born in Budapest of Jewish descent.
      Maybe this is where the German name of Schiff comes from?

    • @richardpohl5367
      @richardpohl5367 10 лет назад +2

      DAVID LOCKWOOD I guess its not rare to have German name for anyone coming from countries of former Austro-Hungarian Empire, and for a Jewish person it is eve more expectable. But there is definitely something Germanic in his mindset. Without doubts one of the top Bach players ever, if not the best one.

  • @alexandervojdani9127
    @alexandervojdani9127 5 лет назад

    ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @shorty41gtoguy
    @shorty41gtoguy 12 лет назад +2

    I completely agree with you, Mr. Schiff is a bit too traditionalist for my taste, He does, however, play the piano in such a masterful way that I can overlook that. I do wish, though, that he would stop with this nonsensical notion of the harpsichord having these sort of limits he describes in all his interviews. He makes many blanket statements about the harpsichord, and what he perceives as its "limits", I feel most of these limits can be overcome with all be it very skillful play.

  • @SatanPanda
    @SatanPanda 11 лет назад

    DId you watch the video? He said he prefers the way the piano handles dynamics and does not like how overholding notes on the harpsichord effects the flow of the music.

  • @saapman
    @saapman 11 лет назад

    Right on bro :)

  • @metteholm75
    @metteholm75 12 лет назад

    Shiff makes one really understand why Bach is being called "the father of modern music".

  • @chrisczajasager
    @chrisczajasager 11 лет назад

    One can hear a clavichord in a hall, small!,or church.Erwin Bodky payed Pr & Fugues in the 30's in Amsterdams Concertgebouw ( I, too, at the end of my first Clavieruebung recital there in 1985.
    I would believe that the organ was the Master's favorite keyboard instrument., the summit of his Clavieruebung, the Third Book....

  • @madmad44444
    @madmad44444 12 лет назад

    very true

  • @davidbaker4593
    @davidbaker4593 12 лет назад

    Hej, from which piece was this again? (At 03:01)
    I just can't remember...

  • @gataca1976
    @gataca1976 11 лет назад

    schiff: i love you for ever. i'd love to meet you.

  • @Beach_comber
    @Beach_comber 11 лет назад +2

    Schiff certainly knows how to wind up harpsichord fans with his claim that some pieces in the 48 are not suited to that sublime instrument! I think that hearing an instrument a great deal makes one respond to it more strongly. Piano fans are going to prefer Bach on the piano and harpsichord fans are going to prefer harpsichord performances. It's deep down in what their brain's learnt and trying to rationalise the preference may be missing the point.

  • @Lkbjazz433
    @Lkbjazz433 12 лет назад

    Which organ fugue does he talk about at around 5 mins? anyone know the bwv?

  • @vnekliaev
    @vnekliaev 11 лет назад +2

    I respect Mr Schiff, but I also respectfully disagree with his evaluation of the harpsichord. The Well-Tempered Clavier can, and has been, played marvellously on this instrument. It is really a dead-end business to compare modern piano and harpsichord. They are different instruments, with different languages and different means of expression. One can do what the other can't and vice versa. Neither is better or worse. Neither is more or less expressive.

  • @brianeheads
    @brianeheads 6 лет назад

    I have a strong feeling that he's referring to Daniel Barenboim.

  • @Johannes_Brahms65
    @Johannes_Brahms65 4 года назад +2

    I don't agree. Pedal can be beautyfull in Bach! And he was certainly not one of us (at least not one of me, that's for sure!). I think Bach would have been happy to know that so long after his death people stil enjoy playing his works, perfectly or not. He meant his keyboard works for entertainment, after all!

  • @marieroth3940
    @marieroth3940 11 лет назад

    There are many great composers and I note you mention Palestrina a very early composer.Bach being a later Baroque composer had the benefit of earlier masters to learn from and if we judge the composers in their paradigm we can only be astounded at what they did but I will be controversial and say Bach was the greatest composer . But this of course is my opinion based on my unfailing admiration of his work. It constantly opens my mind to new aspects of his vast knowledge and creativity.

  • @Frode5
    @Frode5 7 лет назад

    For those who are curious about the pedal discussion he referred to:
    ruclips.net/video/MhDFq_MrOcE/видео.html

  • @edgarcostaneto
    @edgarcostaneto 12 лет назад

    what's the piece at 8'24''???

  • @DogAfraidOfUmbrellas
    @DogAfraidOfUmbrellas 12 лет назад

    Eh, in prelude 881, the thinning and thickening of the musical texture on harpischord accomplishes the "sospiro" as he calls it. It's built into the bass line, and is actually much more apparent on harpischord than on piano. See Kenneth Gilbert or Glen Wilson on lute stop for good examples, not with Schiff's exaggerated rhythm. What about touch and timbre and temperament of modern piano (conveniently his own instrument) being very different from any instrument which Bach would have known?

  • @digimaton
    @digimaton 11 лет назад +2

    am I imagining it or does this guy bear an uncanny resemblance to Bach?

  • @kwoksmusic
    @kwoksmusic 9 лет назад

    What is the piece at 12:56, does anyone know?

  • @JosephDunca
    @JosephDunca 11 лет назад

    What is the piece at 12:31?

    • @PiBiChristianus
      @PiBiChristianus 5 лет назад

      BWV 853. This is: musescore.com/classicman/scores/340831

  • @abz124816
    @abz124816 5 лет назад +1

    Bach would have been delighted if he had a grand piano. All these "would be musicians" who become interviewers miss this important point and ask banal questions to show off their knowledge of music. Yes piano, No piano, Yes pedal, No pedal.
    Bach was an innovator and if he had a chance to own a computer for writing his music, he would have jumped on it too.
    Lastly, Bach's music would sound good if played well by a kazoo orchestra. His genius was writing music with a mathematical perfection unlike any other composer. Just listen to the myriad of transcriptions from instrument to another... they all sound great. He himself transcribed his own music for different instruments. Grow up and leave Bach alone :)

  • @MrKlemps
    @MrKlemps 9 лет назад +1

    Who is the pianist whom Schiff does not name who disagrees with him about the use of the sustaining pedal? Please post if you know. Thanks!

    • @cyrilgoldstone1167
      @cyrilgoldstone1167 9 лет назад +2

      MrKlemps I think Andras Schiff is referring to Arie Vardi, the great Israeli pianist and teacher. Check out their fascinating dialogue on RUclips. In that same program, I also enjoyed hearing Schiff's comments regarding Glenn Gould's Bach playing.

    • @MrKlemps
      @MrKlemps 9 лет назад

      Cyril Goldstone Thank you for alerting to me that wonderful interview. How rare for a great musician to be interviewed by someone--apparently another great musician, previously unknown to me--who knows the right questions to ask!

    • @Shooshie128
      @Shooshie128 9 лет назад +1

      +Cyril Goldstone
      Actually, I think the pianist in question is someone about whom he and Arie were talking in that interview. They both agreed that the pianist is very difficult to debate, for he cannot be wrong and keeps on pushing well beyond the point where you've lost interest in trying. I can't remember his name, but they both knew what he was like. Skip through the interview again, and I'm sure you'll find it quickly. It was in the first part of the show, if I remember correctly, maybe 10 minutes in? -- [Edit] I went looking for it, and I must have misspoken. It apparently was not in that interview. I must be thinking of a different one, but I do not know which.

  • @AaronPetitPiano
    @AaronPetitPiano 12 лет назад

    Prelude in E major Book 1

  • @RollaArtis
    @RollaArtis 12 лет назад +1

    Funny he should mention that. Actually I find much of Bach's choral music interminable - is it just me or what?

  • @Johannes_Brahms65
    @Johannes_Brahms65 4 года назад

    5:37 it was probably Brendel. I hope not Sokolov!

  • @manfredfinch
    @manfredfinch 12 лет назад

    Who attacked him about the use of pedal?

  • @hoiho96
    @hoiho96 12 лет назад

    e major prelude, book 1 :)

  • @georgesmelki1
    @georgesmelki1 4 года назад

    Schiff knows infinitely more than I do about Bach, but how can one say that the WTC is not meant to be played on a harpsichord? It definitely sounds better on a modern piano, but Bach intended it for something else...
    On the other hand, Well Tempered for Bach did not mean equal temperament, a subject that Schiff doesn't even mention!

  • @hardtothecorecoretot
    @hardtothecorecoretot 12 лет назад

    should be bwv 865, here is a video of it /watch?v=tpz9Y_TUipk
    skip to 1:30 for the fugue

  • @Ockgehem1
    @Ockgehem1 11 лет назад

    New York

  • @papaicastor
    @papaicastor 11 лет назад

    What is the "pastoral" piece at 8:26?

    • @jimmynguyen227
      @jimmynguyen227 11 лет назад +2

      The prelude from the Prelude and Fugue in E major BWV 854

  • @Seligmann1992
    @Seligmann1992 12 лет назад +1

    I also very much enjoy his piano playing and have tried to learn from it. But as a harpsichordist, I feel insulted that he refuses to show the same kind of respect that many harpsichordists accord him.

  • @MAURICAFonenantsoa
    @MAURICAFonenantsoa 4 года назад

    2:57 Appogiatura

  • @edgarcostaneto
    @edgarcostaneto 12 лет назад

    08:24

  • @bratcheda1
    @bratcheda1 9 лет назад +1

    Interesting! He firmly believes that Bach's favorite instrument was the clavichord. This belief comes from CPE Bach but now some people believe that CPE Bach attributed his own preference to his father. Proof? We have a surviving inventory of Bach's music collection when he died. He had quite a lot of music instruments in his possession but NOT A SINGLE CLAVICHORD.

  • @mark-j-adderley
    @mark-j-adderley 5 лет назад +1

    “The elephant in the room” is not the modern piano. J.S. sounds superb on ANY instrument and at ANY time.
    ... the “elephant in the room” is the inappropriate question.

  • @victorkleinberg8575
    @victorkleinberg8575 11 лет назад

    ... also, a worse mistake you made was assuming that Schiff is more concerned about "playing exactly how" Bach wished (on ancient instruments) than what he himself as a musical interpreter wished (on progressively further developed instruments). An artist would be finished if he thinks that way as you think. Even a historian wouldn't be so pointlessly self-limiting.

  • @victorkleinberg8575
    @victorkleinberg8575 11 лет назад

    The limitation of harpsichord was a simple fact stated in comparison to today's instruments that Bach had no luck to witness in his life, therefore your claim of "a completely dynamic result" is simply a deliberate exaggeration in your false attempt at refuting Schiff. Yes there could be some "dynamic result" on harpsichord (which Schiff apparently knows since he used them professionally!), but by no means "complete" compared to today's instruments - and that's Schiff's point.

  • @AshThunor
    @AshThunor 9 лет назад +9

    Really knows his stuff. I think he makes Gould look like shit.

    • @blakan3
      @blakan3 7 лет назад +2

      Well, he doesnt.

    • @agamaz5650
      @agamaz5650 6 лет назад +1

      why?

    • @IOxyrinchus
      @IOxyrinchus 6 лет назад +1

      I really don't like the way Glenn Gould plays Bach, to me he ruins it. In general, I think the well tempered klavier should be played with pedal, however, I make an exception for András Schiff as I think he plays Bach incredibly without pedal. I don't like the way Gould plays Bach without pedal. Listen to Daniel Barenboim's Well tempered klavier album, that is how Bach should be played with pedal. This is my opinion of course, feel free to disagree, I respect other opinions. Fascinating topic nonetheless.

    • @Mike1614YT
      @Mike1614YT 6 лет назад +1

      You think wrong.

    • @igorjee
      @igorjee 6 лет назад

      @Ash Thunor I love Schiff. I think he makes gold look like shit.

  • @Seligmann1992
    @Seligmann1992 12 лет назад +1

    Is M. Schiff, great pianist that he is, totally unaware of how harpsichord technique works ? There is no need for any agogics, just a little overholding, a little décalage between the hands and clear musical projection and you can have a completely dynamic result. Would Bach have ever allowed the limitations of the harpsichord to prevent him from playing exactly how he wished ? I have lost all respect for Schiff.

  • @agamaz5650
    @agamaz5650 3 года назад

    I met a guy who did not like Bach / classical music, he died of a drug overdose, so yeah just some junkie. If you don't like Bach you don't know much about music :D

  • @Piratebreadstick
    @Piratebreadstick 4 года назад

    Can we please move on from the notion that playing Bach on the piano is somehow daring?! Have these conservative idiots heard of Wendy Carlos? Bach WORKS on the piano and just about every other instrument that has 12 semitones and few octaves to spread out on! End of story.

  • @gilgermesch
    @gilgermesch 8 лет назад +1

    About every word from his mouth is utter uneducated nonsense!
    - "What's the right instrument for Bach? It's impossible to answer! [...] You cannot say what [the WTC] was written for" is plain wrong. While many of the pieces work on other instruments, technical and stylistical elements clearly favour the harpsichord.
    - "[Clavier] is first and foremost the clavichord. [...] This was Bach's favourite instrument" Clavier does mean "keyboard instrument", but not first and foremost the clavichord, and there's no evidence anywhere to suggest otherwise. Besides, as someone else pointed out already, there's not a single clavichord listed in Bach's belongings (a number of harpsichords though), so it's highly doubtful it really was his favourite instrument.
    - He says "sospiri" when demonstrating an appoggiatura, alas, the term "sospiratio" describes something entirely different, a pause inserted into a melody, and only came to be associated with descending tones much later.
    - He claims the harpsichord is unable to properly play an appoggiatura and the only means of approximating it is by making "huge agogic changes". Again, wrong on both accouts. The harpsichord is not only capable of playing an appoggiatura, it also has many more means of doing so aside from "huge agogic changes". Besides, would so many people have written for the harpsichord music containing appoggiaturas, had they been convinced that the harpsichord was unable to play them?
    - "The a minor fuge from the WTC is an organ piece, as evident from the pedal point at the end, which is only playable by an organ". Only if you look at the score without ever playing it. Playing it on the harpsichord this is what happens: by the time you need to let go of that low A because your hand needs to move elsewhere, the note has already faded, so letting go of it is not noticable. Besides, why would Bach, the great organist, who wrote such devilish pedal parts in his organ music, write a piece for organ, in which the pedal is used for only a single note at the end? Surely, had this piece been intended for the organ, you'd be able to tell from more than one note!
    - His argument against using the pedal is "Bach didn't have a pedal, so why should I use the pedal?", which is a valid argument. However, he fails to apply that same argument to the modern piano as a whole. "Bach didn't have a Steinway, so why should I use a Steinway?" sounds like a reasonable thought to me.
    I could go on, but then I wouldn't get anything else done tday...

    • @quinto34
      @quinto34 8 лет назад +3

      'About every word from his mouth is utter uneducated nonsense!'
      I stopped reading here lol bloody drama queen..

  • @Mike1614YT
    @Mike1614YT 6 лет назад

    I prefer Chopin

  • @abz124816
    @abz124816 5 лет назад

    Who is this pretentious stuffed shirt asking these banal questions. First, since there are no recordings of Bach playing his own music, everything said about this and that about Bach is pure speculation. If Bach had access to a modern grand piano with a sustain pedal he would have been thrilled. If it were a digital piano he would have been even more thrilled. Had he heard jazz, he would have probably gone mad with excitement and written a great jazz 4 part fugue. Great musicians are always looking to expand their horizons. Who does not agree?

    • @Ichioku
      @Ichioku 4 года назад

      You are indulging in the same speculation that you berate others for. There's a word for that.

  • @agamaz5650
    @agamaz5650 6 лет назад

    everyone knows bach is the greatest. mozart and beethoven are so overrated imo. Gerschwin, Tatum, Chopin deserve it more imo