Eduard Bagdasaryan | Prelude No. 24
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- Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
- Eduard Bagdasaryan (1922 -1987) - Armenian council Russian composer, teacher, Honored Artist of the Armenian SSR (1963).
He received his secondary education in Tbilisi and graduated in1940.
At the same time he studied at a ten-year music school. In 1941 he entered the Tbilisi State Conservatory, and in 1946 he moved to Yerevan, where he continued his studies at the Yerevan State Conservatory named after Komitas, from which he graduated in1950.
In 1951-1953 he studied in Moscow, at the House of Armenian Culture. Upon returning to Yerevan, he taught at the conservatory. At the Romanos Melikyan Music School he was the head of the creativity class. He performed extensively as a virtuoso pianist and performer of his own music.
He is the author of numerous works -preludes and sonata for clarinet and piano, rhapsodies for violin and orchestra, 24 preludes for piano, Dance Suite for two pianos, etc.
Author of music for a number of plays and films: “Tzhvzhik” (1961), “Triangle” (1967), etc.
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Thanks for listening :-)
Gamma 1734, you are such a treasure. thanks for all you share.
Oh that Armenian melancholy ❤️
You always upload mesmerising pieces
@@carolaserafini thanks! always hunting for new pieces
This is Prelude no. 24 in D Minor
That's just your opinion
Beautiful shade of melancholy...thank you.
What a Gorgeous piece! I like your musical sensibilities, you play beautifully!
Wonderful piano music!🎹🎼🎵🎶
Like 230👍.
Thank you very much!💜
Have a great day! 🌅
Wonderful
A very challenging piece, yet you mastered it! It sounds wistful, but insistent, as of someone calling out to empty space, louder and louder, but unanswered.
The natural minor ending is the icing on the cake. Beautiful and terrific. There is no answer: you're on your own.
@@michaelclements5793 You're observations are always so spot on. It was indeed really challenging and the ending, I also noticed in particular. Thanks for listening!
I totally agree, there's this specific air of resignation here - similar in sentiment to the ending of Fauré's last nocturne in B-minor (different texture and key, but still). Wonderful rendition and such a nice composition, I always find the Russian school "Caucasian" harmonies so moving, whether's it this, or Babadjanyan or even Rachmaninov :)
Thank you for posting, another beautiful composer I was unaware of! I've been trying to find the score, I'm pretty sure this is prelude 24
I found the score on Scribd. Yes, it looks like it is No. 24. 😊
Gorgeous!
wow those grace notes and other little ornaments are so crisp, bravo!
Belle découverte pour moi. Merci beaucoup!
This is a GREAT! great music and great performance !!
@@KorundViolin thank you!!
Parabéns! Bela e apaixonada!
It sounds so russian and sublime! The part at 1:09 is really moving
❤❤❤❤❤
Wow!!!
Very romantic, thanks a lot! Where can we find the scores please? Kindly regards
@@JefWakeUp it is in pianophilia
Hello! These are a such great Works! Where could I download this underrated russian and soviet pieces?
Ale07. This is a russian website, but you can use Google to translate it
@@user-ic9ux2ht8k it is on pianophilia
Рахманиновский ориенталь)
Sort of an early ancestor to Alvin & the Chipmunks.
👍❤❤❤
So like Rachmaninoff.
@@tommywestbrook6470 i also thought of rach
Yes but with so much more slavic flavor.
Bagdasaryan was armenian not slavic@@jfpary7336
@@gmfrunzik yes excuse me...
May I have this score please?
Very interesting and rachmaninovish beginning, but to ms the central part loses a bit of that fairy mood...
@@azure5697 I do agree..
the notation of the rhythm in the first four bars is needlessly ambiguous...
@@AaronBreezeComposer didnt bother me that much
@@PianoScoreVidsCan confirm, pretty standard and quick-to-acquire.