György Cziffra - Rare Videos

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
  • Some rare videos of György Cziffra, which where once on RUclips, but sadly got deleted as Meloclassic closed its channel. This video also contains an Interview from french television from the 1970s, including a short improvisation on Gounods Faust waltz and a synchronised video of him playing an excerpt of Brahms' Variations on a Theme of Paganini
    - rehearsing Schumann Symphonic Etudes at his home
    - preparing his concert backstage
    - playing an excerpt of Paganini Variations by Brahms (synchronised)
    - Chopin 2nd Scherzo in 1987
    - Interview, 1975 (excerpt)
    - Interview French Television 1970s (including short Improvisation on Waltz; Cziffra at Chapelle Saint-Frambourg, Senlis; Finale of Liszts 1st Piano concerto and Finale of Liszts Hungarian Fantasy)

Комментарии • 183

  • @ivanatodorovic8073
    @ivanatodorovic8073 2 года назад +90

    Cziffra - the people's Pianist.
    Not a hint of haughtiness or snobbery, just pure kindness, poetry and soul. Our lovely, noble Maestro.

    • @voraciousreader3341
      @voraciousreader3341 2 года назад +11

      Everything you say is true, and is true despite more suffering, hardships, and misfortunes than the large majority of musicians have ever faced, which culminated in the horrific death of his son (and only child) in an apartment fire. I’m so glad that Cziffra enjoyed so much financial success and public support and adoration from his audiences and peers, bc he was truly a most remarkable man and artist!

    • @ivanatodorovic8073
      @ivanatodorovic8073 2 года назад +9

      @@voraciousreader3341 Thank you for the complementary words to my spontaneous notion, that’s how I really feel about Cziffra.
      Some of the unimaginable sufferings he endured in his youth, whose shadows quietly weave certain moments of melancholy that can be seen with the sympathetic eye, to me become tragic when I remember him so fragile and silent after the death of his son. There were great musicians who were not at the same height of their talents as human beings. I live long enough that I'm not surprised by that dichotomy in human nature, not even saddened, not anymore.
      Cziffra was a musical genius and the most tender human being.

    • @user-ui8qf8df2u
      @user-ui8qf8df2u Год назад +2

      Absolutely true - hands of iron and a heart of gold.

  • @voraciousreader3341
    @voraciousreader3341 2 года назад +67

    Cziffra is clearly one of the most resilient people I’ve ever read about! Just get an idea of the unbelievable barriers he had to overcome from childhood by reading his Wikipedia article, and you’ll understand what I mean! It’s amazing that he was ever able to formally studied the piano at all, bc his parents were so poor, and you can see the leather band to support his right wrist after it was damaged in a Hungarian labor camp after WWII. As I look at his beautiful piano in a beautiful room in a gorgeous home, I think to myself that very few people deserve such things more than Cziffra!

    • @Chopin-Etudes-Cosplay
      @Chopin-Etudes-Cosplay 3 месяца назад +1

      His autobiography is free online and one of the best books I’ve ever read. You are totally right that his story is unbelievable and he deserves only the best after all that he went through!

  • @itslikeajungle
    @itslikeajungle Год назад +20

    There's plenty of virtuoso pianists these days, but not many have achieved the individual style of guys like Cziffra. To take a piece like grand galop chromatique and play it in such a way that no one has ever come close to rivalling, with the freedom to improvise and embellish the score in a way that's not contrived, but simply the result of putting personality to the notes. As he does with many other liszt pieces. One of a kind!

    • @alainspiteri502
      @alainspiteri502 Год назад

      In the " Crand Galop ' there is France Clidat listen her , unknown j can write great Lizst also !

  • @uralbob1
    @uralbob1 6 месяцев назад +4

    I am nearly 70 years old. I knew his name in decades past, but only now have I truly discovered this beautiful artist.

  • @Alix777.
    @Alix777. 3 года назад +34

    21:18 "We don't have to seek happiness, happiness is here, around us, inside of us"

  • @quaver1239
    @quaver1239 2 года назад +9

    Appears (and sounds) effortless. Have not ever heard Schumann’s Symphonic Études played like this. Wow.

  • @isabelhuszka1321
    @isabelhuszka1321 2 года назад +14

    Milyen jó, hogy felvették, hogy megmaradt, hogy hallható-látható! épp tegnap volt a 100. születésnapjának emlékére koncert a Müpában.

  • @db7sib7m
    @db7sib7m 7 лет назад +59

    He had a Jaguar Mk2!! Classy man

  • @Jasongy827
    @Jasongy827 5 лет назад +52

    so underrated. I don't play the piano, I have listen and deeply appreciate classical music. Never in my life that i heard a pianist play like him. Truly unique.

    • @voraciousreader3341
      @voraciousreader3341 2 года назад +18

      No. Cziffra was NOT underrated; you just didn’t know about him! To be underrated, he would have to have played in obscurity during his lifetime and afterward. Instead, he was internationally celebrated, even lionized, as a classical pianist and a jazz pianist, especially after his final escape from Hungary with his wife and son in 1956. As you can see from this film, his financial success is documented by his huge, beautiful home and his very pricey Jaguar, and still he remained humble and unassuming despite the respect he respect he received from famous musicians and composers such as Marcel Dupre. I won’t go into his life any more, although it is also fascinating in terms of all of the terrible difficulties he faced from childhood onward, but the 100th anniversary of his birth was recently celebrated internationally....all you have to do is look him up online to see that he isn’t underrated at all!

    • @bludika
      @bludika Год назад +5

      he's never been underrated...he's known as one of the greatest virtuoso pianists that has ever lived....

  • @elmiramuradova561
    @elmiramuradova561 2 года назад +20

    Величайший пианист нашего времени! Добрая,вечная память живёт в его музыке. Спасибо.

  • @vova47
    @vova47 7 лет назад +67

    True magician - Cziffra makes everything look so easy!
    He's so inspiring......

  • @Rudel23
    @Rudel23 7 лет назад +74

    It is the only video where you can see (10:30) Cziffra playing (in a fantastic way ) Rapsodie Espagnole by Liszt! Thank you

    • @nihilistlemon1995
      @nihilistlemon1995 3 года назад +5

      He goes so fast you can't really see it tho hahahaha

    • @Abuelitaofhvms
      @Abuelitaofhvms 3 года назад +5

      But dam those octaves

    • @loxpower
      @loxpower 3 года назад +3

      he's playing on a f**king upright piano my God!!! How's that even possibile...

    • @KenWangpiano
      @KenWangpiano Год назад +2

      @@loxpower Holy crap! I just realized that. That's absolutely insane

  • @cziffrathegreat666
    @cziffrathegreat666 Год назад +5

    11:35
    Yes cziffra was such a great man that we could watch him just walk around for one and a half minutes straight

  • @WalyB01
    @WalyB01 3 года назад +7

    I have seen things now, i can never go back... This is beyond

  • @sandorfarkas7898
    @sandorfarkas7898 Год назад +7

    Most abszolút nem gondolok arra rá hogy magyar vagyok hiszen Cziffra György Szerintem a világ legjobb zongoristája volt és az is marad A jó isten nyugtassa őt békében

    • @sziszi050
      @sziszi050 Год назад +2

      Az ilyen virtuóz zseniknek nem is szabadna meghalniuk, hogy minden élő, élőben élvezhesse a zongorajátékát. Mindemellett nagyon kellemes modorát, szerénységét.

  • @NoferTrunions
    @NoferTrunions 4 года назад +34

    What a force.... I'm convinced that "muscle memory" is a crutch that those with inferior brain speed, memory, and recall must employ. Watching Cziffra play is mesmerizing.

    • @alwaysacomplicatedaffair2407
      @alwaysacomplicatedaffair2407 4 года назад +7

      Nofer Trunions It’s not that simple

    • @NoferTrunions
      @NoferTrunions 4 года назад +4

      @@alwaysacomplicatedaffair2407 But I can say from personal experience it is so with me.
      EXAMPLE 1: I can play scale crossovers extremely fast when small groups of notes, even 7 notes with a crossover in the middle. But I fail to "reset" for the next crossover quick enough.
      EXAMPLE 2: I can only sight read so fast with Beethoven probably the easiest.
      EXAMPLE 3: I can rip a simple 1 thru 5 piece of a scale at correct speed (very fast) and I simply cannot hear the individual notes.
      NOTE: Interesting phenom with typing: I learned to touch type in high school (without a doubt, most useful course I ever took - maybe in all my education). I quickly learned to type "words" and not "letters". My "vocabulary" has become so great and enhanced with "groups" of letters that I rarely type a "letter." But it has come Full Circle: I have begun to forget where the "letters" are. So to find one, the quickest way is to recall a "word" with that "letter". And yes, I type a "word" as a "single motion" - so I think my "words" have become Muscle Memory.

    • @alwaysacomplicatedaffair2407
      @alwaysacomplicatedaffair2407 4 года назад +8

      Nofer Trunions I think you just illustrated what I mean: it’s not that “muscle memory is a crutch” it’s just that the more experience you have with the keyboard, the more specific your muscle memory is. For instance instead of having memory for just one melody in a given key, you have played so many different lines in that key that you have a muscle memory for almost every single minute transition from any one note to any other, and therefore a really observable display of muscle memory seems to recede, but in actuality you have a MORE extensive amount of muscle memory, not less. I think that’s an important distinction, but maybe I’m being semantic. Anyway I’m sure you’re far more experienced than me, but I’m trying to be more fluid and improvisational, so I’ve been thinking about this a lot :)

    • @NoferTrunions
      @NoferTrunions 4 года назад +2

      @@alwaysacomplicatedaffair2407 I understand what you're saying. I was thinking about my issues, I've learned small "memorization" segments, many up to speed, but I am terrible at transitioning from one to the next - takes my mind an extreme amount of tie to "switch gears."
      RUSSIAN SCALES drive me nuts so that is what I practice: transitioning to and from contrary motion is a major stumbling block even though I can play motions fast - and these are scales: structures I should have down cold!
      NOTE: from the violin camp, I'm also playing scales in 10ths instead of octaves too. (Russian 10ths are quite the exercise!)

    • @alwaysacomplicatedaffair2407
      @alwaysacomplicatedaffair2407 4 года назад +1

      Nofer Trunions I’ve started doing those as well as canon scales/chords recently, it’s tough! Do you practice improvisation also?

  • @piano345
    @piano345 7 лет назад +51

    Thank you very much for this genuine rarity. Thank you also to MELOCLASSIC for their wonderful film clips of Cziffra. Cziffra is like an addiction for me. Let's hope there are still more treasures hidden away in the French and Hungarian archives.

  • @SchlurmsOfficially
    @SchlurmsOfficially 2 года назад +5

    This man is my idol and I have been devoting a lot of my time to the piano thanks to him. So glad to see this video.

    • @soozb15
      @soozb15 Год назад

      Cziffra was amazing. Isn't it wonderful that these recordings endure, to inspire people to play the piano? His countryman Zoltán Kocsis has been my inspiration.

  • @arlettecorbeau8968
    @arlettecorbeau8968 6 лет назад +10

    Merçi M. Cziffra pour tout ce que vous avez apporté à la France . A cette chapelle St Frambourg j'y ai vécu des moments inoubliables . Merçi pour cette vidéo

    • @Will78137
      @Will78137 2 года назад +2

      Vous avez de la chance, j'habitais Chantilly dans les années 2000 et j'ai eu l'occasion de parler à sa femme. Etant fan de Lizst je me rendais souvent à cette chapelle. J'aurais tellement aimé rencontré cet artiste exceptionnel.
      Savez-vous à tout hasard ou ils habitaient à Senlis ? je me suis souvent posé la question ...

  • @valerieheinderyckx4506
    @valerieheinderyckx4506 10 месяцев назад +3

    Passionnant de voir un tel artiste au travail...Merci ❤

  • @farahmand4771
    @farahmand4771 5 лет назад +13

    Un homme d'une grande bonté, qui donne envie de jouer de la musique. Je l'aime beaucoup, l'homme comme l'artiste.

    • @Will78137
      @Will78137 2 года назад +4

      Oh que oui un homme au grand coeur trop souvent réduit à sa technique pianistique hors du commun. C'était bien plus que cela Cziffra et certaines de ses interprétations étaient remarquables car empreintes d'un romantisme et d'une sensibilité à fleur de peau. J'ai eu l'occasion de parler à sa femme à Senlis, que n'aurais-je donné pour échanger et écouter cet homme

  • @idaletegiga5786
    @idaletegiga5786 3 года назад +19

    É impossível esquecer este genial pianista. Ficaria horas sem fim , sem fim a ouvi-lo! Como Liszt adoraria ouvi-lo! Deve ser mesmo a reencarnação do próprio Liszt!

  • @christianedouschkadudan4322
    @christianedouschkadudan4322 4 года назад +8

    MERCI
    À CE GÉNIE
    EXCEPTIONNEL!
    JAMAIS NE MEURT L'AMOUR.
    ---

  • @england670
    @england670 3 года назад +4

    Incredible. His fingers are like a blur up & down the keyboard

  • @mona1976able
    @mona1976able 5 лет назад +11

    Thank you so much for sharing!

  • @jasienku
    @jasienku 7 лет назад +13

    And I naively thought I watched them all!!! THANK YOU! I do not want to say that it is the best recording of this piece... There are many excellent ones. But there is no one like Chiffra's. Thanks!

  • @rosge
    @rosge 7 лет назад +26

    Merci beaucoup pour ces videos.
    Je suis très toujours ému de revoir ce cher Georges Cziffra qui m'a tant émerveillé.

  • @arlettecorbeau8968
    @arlettecorbeau8968 6 лет назад +10

    Magnifique cette chapelle , il faut aller la voir . J'y ai vécu des moments inoubliables . Merçi mille fois cher Maître .Je suis heureuse car avec les enregistrements je suis dans le bonheur chaque jour qui passe de ma vie . Le plus grand bonheur de ma vie fut de pouvoir vous écouter jouer et de vous suivre dans bon nombres de concerts

  • @davisatdavis1
    @davisatdavis1 5 лет назад +12

    Thank you for sharing this with us! :D

  • @gayathriparthasarathy9099
    @gayathriparthasarathy9099 6 лет назад +15

    Does anyone have him playing any of the Liszt Piano Concerti? I heard him do the Totentanz of Liszt and it was mind blowing. Thanks for this upload. Huge fan of Maestro Cziffra. He makes everything 'sing'....

  • @luky46
    @luky46 5 лет назад +7

    Thank you for posting

  • @jimhendricks88
    @jimhendricks88 6 лет назад +8

    Thank you for posting this!!! Incredible, and most I haven't seen before. Blessings.

  • @Felix_Li_En
    @Felix_Li_En 7 лет назад +13

    I wish I could see him playing the complete Faust Waltz and Paganini Variations…

  • @johannabaloghCinematicBrain
    @johannabaloghCinematicBrain Год назад +1

    I was 14 years old when my dearest mother had me write a letter to him. I told her that we didn't know his address!
    She said... just address to Gyorgy Cziffra Famous Pianist, Paris France.
    I got a post card from him about a month later.
    So sad that I lost it!!
    He wrote, Sok szeretettel , György Cziffra... what a marvelous signature!!

    • @KenWangpiano
      @KenWangpiano Год назад +2

      What a lovely and sad story at the same time. At least you have the memories!

    • @Dylonely42
      @Dylonely42 11 месяцев назад

      Wow !

  • @cygnusne
    @cygnusne 7 лет назад +8

    Thanks for the wonderful upload!!

  • @MrPGOLIVEIRA
    @MrPGOLIVEIRA 3 года назад +9

    Mãos leves, dedos ágeis, sensibilidade. exatidão sem ser mecânico, sem dúvida um gênio do piano.

  • @violinstudyingpiano8352
    @violinstudyingpiano8352 11 месяцев назад +1

    This man is wonderful, thanks for this video, fabulous💗❣❤💗💗💗

  • @maisquevencedoresaloisiome8427
    @maisquevencedoresaloisiome8427 7 лет назад +12

    um verdadeiro gênio......monstro do piano. Sensibilidade sobrenatural.

  • @jackcurley1591
    @jackcurley1591 4 года назад +12

    Cziffra at 9:49 : “hmm thats a pretty neat progression I just came up with” XD

    • @blonda.bacoviana
      @blonda.bacoviana 3 года назад +4

      And his hands! They stopped looking human at some point.

    • @pianosenzanima1
      @pianosenzanima1 3 года назад +1

      @@blonda.bacoviana IKR!!!

    • @pianosenzanima1
      @pianosenzanima1 3 года назад +2

      @Felis Skalkotris Sorabjitus always and forever.

    • @vine2197
      @vine2197 3 года назад +1

      XD

    • @charlesthomas5956
      @charlesthomas5956 7 месяцев назад

      And then it turned into Spanish Rhapsody XD

  • @eduardoguardarramas
    @eduardoguardarramas 2 года назад +2

    Frightening! Just frightening1 Thank you for posting.

  • @diapasonabsolu
    @diapasonabsolu 6 лет назад +7

    Merci beaucoup pour ce vidéo très prenant voire même très poignant !

  • @josepalomogomez9865
    @josepalomogomez9865 3 года назад +5

    Que maravilla!! Gracias

  • @bugsan
    @bugsan Год назад +1

    small thing impresses me, but this is out of this world.

  • @arlettecorbeau8968
    @arlettecorbeau8968 6 лет назад +2

    je ne l'avais pas encore vu , quel bonheur pourtant je faisais parti de la fondation . je suis heureuse .

  • @user-cg1ih5ys6r
    @user-cg1ih5ys6r Год назад +3

    Неумолимо время. Короток человеческий век. Такие величины уходят... Архивный материал, сохранивший потрясающую виртуозную игру Дьёрдь Цифры - венгерского и французского пианиста.

  • @789armstrong
    @789armstrong Год назад +3

    The sound of genius times 10.

  • @tropicjam7343
    @tropicjam7343 Год назад +3

    i am absolutely haunted by his virtuosity at rehearsal and exemplary mankind;

  • @musical_lolu4811
    @musical_lolu4811 4 года назад +5

    I am finished. Thank you.

    • @pjbpiano
      @pjbpiano Год назад +1

      No more words need to be said after.

  • @GianfrancoCavallaro
    @GianfrancoCavallaro 7 лет назад +8

    thank you!!

  • @pianosenzanima1
    @pianosenzanima1 7 лет назад +5

    thank you so much for this!!

  • @Sahasrarasmi-Sancodite
    @Sahasrarasmi-Sancodite 10 месяцев назад +1

    We tend to forget that artists such as Gyorgy Cziffra are MORE than human. They are quasi-divine beings who have taken on a physical garment we call a body and which perhaps other cultures call a re-incarnation(s). These are advanced souls whose appearance on earth is a manifestation of a spiritual mission, the purposes and goals which are not obvious to others who are observers of these great, noble, and heroic souls.
    I have always believed,, via my intuition, that the soul and spirit of Franz Liszt came back (reincarnated) again into a Hungarian Roma ethnic individual to uplift the Roma peoples by having one of their own Roma citizens manifest enormous artistic musical talents via the instrument of the piano. Cziffra via the soul, spirit and heart of Franz Liszt, ( who manifested as a type of "saviour" for the ethnic hungarian peoples) demonstrated, by his enormous quasi-divine musical gifts, that humans like Cziffra have spiritual goals and a mission to be accomplished by their earthly but temporary existence.
    By achieving what he, Cziffra achieved, we, as humans on this planet, can believe what the Lord Saviour Jesus The Christ told us "even greater things than these shall you accomplish."

  • @mcrettable
    @mcrettable 6 лет назад +13

    there will never be another cziffra haha

  • @carmenrubio3786
    @carmenrubio3786 3 года назад +2

    Thanks

    • @vine2197
      @vine2197 3 года назад

      Denada ojalá te haya servido

  • @user-jc4kh1ts7k
    @user-jc4kh1ts7k Год назад

    Завдяки інтернету довелось познайомитись з цим чудовим піаністом з такою драматичною долею. Але зміг подолати всі негаразди. Браво!

  • @Bampaloudu64
    @Bampaloudu64 3 года назад +5

    Cziffra qui parle français, bon dieu ! Que c'est beau !

    • @Felix_Li_En
      @Felix_Li_En 3 года назад +3

      Certainement ! Il a obtenu la nationalité française en 1968.

    • @voraciousreader3341
      @voraciousreader3341 2 года назад +3

      Cziffra’s parents, who were Romani, lived in and were expelled from Paris as “enemy aliens” prior to WWII. Despite this, he became a French citizen in 1968. He spoke several languages.

  • @culturehorse
    @culturehorse 2 года назад +4

    @ 13:13 we could just as easily be looking at Liszt himself circa 1840..

  • @Highinsight7
    @Highinsight7 Год назад

    Of the greats... he's probably my favorite

  • @etiennedelaunois1737
    @etiennedelaunois1737 6 месяцев назад

    So from 16:12 the journalist explain that Cziffra had dislocated his shoulder and will not play Mephisto waltz... so in that video, that's him playing with a dislocated shoulder😂. Even with 20 fingers I would not even play half of a quarter as well as him!
    That man was so resilient! 🔥
    That's why Yuja Wang or any other pianist who want to play like him today will have the 8 hours of practice but not the will and the life that is feeding his music!

  • @rodrigoscheuer
    @rodrigoscheuer Год назад +1

    Gigante.

  • @1389Chopin
    @1389Chopin 8 месяцев назад

    Man that spanish rhap...*chef's kiss

  • @diapasonabsolu
    @diapasonabsolu 5 лет назад +4

    À 7.00 dans le deuxième vidéo, il me semble reconnaître la voix du narrateur, serait-ce BERNARD GAVOTY ? Le texte est magnifique .Merci pour tous ces vidéos de l'un des plus grand pianiste du XX ième siècle .

  • @ljumir
    @ljumir 7 лет назад +4

    Thank you for sharing it!!!!!!:_))))))))))))))

  • @davisatdavis1
    @davisatdavis1 5 лет назад +12

    Don't worry, beginner pianists, the pieces in here are eeeeeeasy. ;)

  • @mlaux72
    @mlaux72 11 месяцев назад +1

    at 13'36 I bet he was starting the Liszt Etude in F minor. Hands'position is quite typical :)

    • @PianoJFAudioSheet
      @PianoJFAudioSheet  11 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, he was! Here's the video: ruclips.net/video/KKIAqOTkfNY/видео.html

  • @bestpranks1884
    @bestpranks1884 3 года назад +3

    It was Cziffra and the others...

  • @Dylonely42
    @Dylonely42 11 месяцев назад

    Legend himself.

  • @rtxa
    @rtxa 6 дней назад

    What sound is that 9:24? By the way, 14:55 is the 11th Paganini Variation by Brahms from Book 2

  • @eloipimor8925
    @eloipimor8925 5 лет назад +3

    Does the Ravel’s Jeux d’eau video played at 20:07 exist un full ? Thank you !

    • @user-ui8qf8df2u
      @user-ui8qf8df2u 5 лет назад +3

      Chopin's impromptu no.2, which seems like the other part of the his Jeux d'eau exists on youtube, but unfotunately hard to find full version. Hope to be uploaded in youtube or else soon.

  • @FranzLiszt0904
    @FranzLiszt0904 2 года назад +1

    this is like when Cziffra has a youtube account.

  • @crux314
    @crux314 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for sharing. Do you know if Mr. Cziffra ever played the kreisleriana? Thanks again.

    • @pianisthenics
      @pianisthenics Год назад

      I’ve never heard him with Kreisleriana and have never seen it on any of his concert programs.

  • @blezz9715
    @blezz9715 7 лет назад +2

    Hello, could someone tell me what's the final piece of the video ? (piano & orchestra 26:50)
    Thank you really much for your responses :)

    • @blezz9715
      @blezz9715 6 лет назад +2

      Mark L. Ferrer Thank you !!

  • @dustovshio
    @dustovshio 7 лет назад +4

    so did he just basically look at it and once and then he has it mastered?

  • @GeorgesDume
    @GeorgesDume 11 месяцев назад

    à 4:40 il me semble que c'est sa maison à Cormeilles en parisis près de Paris. Cette maison sera rachetée au début 1980 par Bernard Tapie.

  • @kostik62
    @kostik62 8 месяцев назад

    Great video! But I don't understand French......would be good to have English subtitles!

  • @Hyde2997
    @Hyde2997 7 лет назад

    Merci

  • @MrPianomonster
    @MrPianomonster 5 лет назад +2

    Please add some english or russian subtitles

  • @png866
    @png866 3 года назад +3

    what is it he's playing at 15:00? anyone know❓

    • @witsukyai1685
      @witsukyai1685 3 года назад +4

      Brahms variations in a theme by Paganini

    • @png866
      @png866 3 года назад +1

      @@witsukyai1685 thankyou!

    • @AAsperitas
      @AAsperitas 11 дней назад

      ​@@png866 second book

  • @vaseva93
    @vaseva93 6 лет назад +5

    Virtuóz.

  • @user-ui8qf8df2u
    @user-ui8qf8df2u 5 лет назад +1

    Can anyone translate what he is talking about before practicing Symphonique Etudes?

    • @caleblauber1441
      @caleblauber1441 3 года назад

      No. I like the way you look when you’re confused!

  • @TJ-md5zh
    @TJ-md5zh 6 лет назад +1

    Track list please anyone ☺

  • @lockjiang
    @lockjiang 6 лет назад +1

    did he lose a lot of weight in his later days, during the period when he played the Paganini Variations he was in a bigger size

    • @pjbpiano
      @pjbpiano Год назад

      Most humans seem to do so.

  • @vine2197
    @vine2197 3 года назад

    Cziffra videos raros buscar

  • @alainspiteri502
    @alainspiteri502 Год назад

    For all biginners-pianist , take a good look at the position of the hand : the hand accompagnies the fingers , it's the fingers that push the keys and not and not the weight of the hand pressing the keys , very important great mistake of biginners pianists on Y Tube ; also the hand is above the keyboard , the thumb also biginners pianists play often thumb out of the Key-board ; no better with Cziffra to understand what j mean

  • @Bozzigmupp
    @Bozzigmupp Год назад

    What is he playing at the 5 minute mark?

  • @gabelonguinhos
    @gabelonguinhos 3 года назад +1

    What's that on his wrist at 13:48?

    • @CatkhosruShapurrjiFurabji
      @CatkhosruShapurrjiFurabji 3 года назад +5

      It's a wrist band, he uses it because of a ligament tear. He got the tear because he was tortured in a prison in Gulag after facing the Soviet Partisans, he supported the Axis powers through Hungarian military...

    • @vine2197
      @vine2197 3 года назад

      @@CatkhosruShapurrjiFurabji p

    • @voraciousreader3341
      @voraciousreader3341 2 года назад +2

      @@CatkhosruShapurrjiFurabji While it’s true that Cziffra originally fought with Germany against the Russians on the Eastern Front, he and many other soldiers were ignorant about Nazi war crimes. He learned enough to desert and was captured by the Russians, spending the rest of the war in a Russian prison camp. He sustained his wrist injury after he was captured as tried to escape communist Hungary in 1950 bc of government abuses; he was in a labor camp until 1953 and severely damaged ligaments in his right wrist from being forced to carry 130 pounds of concrete up six flights of stairs. He, with his wife and son, finally escaped Hungary in 1956.

  • @pablos5463
    @pablos5463 2 года назад

    What is the sound of the minute called 18:37 ??

    • @GuntherWolfen
      @GuntherWolfen 2 года назад

      It's one of Liszt's Trancedental Etudes, "Apassionata", in F minor

  • @nihilistlemon1995
    @nihilistlemon1995 3 года назад

    The dude is so fast that in 10:30 , I can't see how he does the octaves lmaaooo

    • @gergelycsuzi8763
      @gergelycsuzi8763 2 года назад +2

      Not a Dude, Maestro! Respect him. I am also Hungarian like him, and very proud of it. Respect!

  • @pianosenzanima1
    @pianosenzanima1 5 лет назад +2

    8:25 ...

  • @HOUSEfulsoul
    @HOUSEfulsoul 7 лет назад

    What is he playing at 20:05 and at 22:25? Thanks for sharing if someone knows.

    • @piano1500
      @piano1500 7 лет назад

      20:05 - Ravel "Jeux d'eau"
      22:25 - Not sure yet

    • @db7sib7m
      @db7sib7m 7 лет назад

      The Maiden's Wish, a Chopin's lied that has been transcripted for piano by Liszt

    • @HOUSEfulsoul
      @HOUSEfulsoul 7 лет назад

      Thank you two, two wonders he is playing there;-)

    • @micheldavid6139
      @micheldavid6139 6 лет назад +1

      sonatine de Maurice Ravel et souhait d'une jeune fille de Chopin

  • @pianosenzanima1
    @pianosenzanima1 4 года назад

    Can somebody put subtitles in English, please! :(

    • @pianosenzanima1
      @pianosenzanima1 4 года назад +2

      I only understand like half of what he says, I want to understand every single word he says, please...

  • @Bozzigmupp
    @Bozzigmupp Год назад

    Is it hungarian he is speaking

    • @sziszi050
      @sziszi050 Год назад

      Természetesen. Családon belül mindig. Egy másik portré filmben ez kiderült.

  • @elijahj9902
    @elijahj9902 3 года назад

    Whats the name of this piece? 10:31

    • @Epdos
      @Epdos 3 года назад +2

      Spanish rhapsody

    • @vine2197
      @vine2197 3 года назад +1

      @@Epdos tru

  • @vine2197
    @vine2197 3 года назад

    21:20

  • @Mereaux
    @Mereaux Год назад

    a

  • @MegaPianogenius
    @MegaPianogenius 7 лет назад +3

    although a great pianist he seems to have a braggadocio smirk all the time as if 'look at me' i don't find all his interpretations convincing as he seems to add a bit of his showmanship to the score unlike marc andre hamelin whom i find a much more humble and erudite pianist and with a dare i say better technical and mental grasp of the music also playing relatively unknown composers works far exceeding difficulty of the time worn classics that cziffra et al plays

    • @wolfpsx6210
      @wolfpsx6210 6 лет назад +10

      This is art, not sports, there's no need for a ranking list.. I'd also have to disagree with your claim of Hamelin not adding his own to compositions.

    • @gaborcsordas
      @gaborcsordas 6 лет назад +8

      it's your preference. Hamelin sometimes sounds boring, Cziffra sometimes too "gypsy". They have a different technique. Hamelin is very soft and even, extremely controlled to the point of boredom, Cziffra has a more aggressive and dynamic touch, which is sometimes getting in the way of the melodical aspect.

    • @marcelmombeek5247
      @marcelmombeek5247 6 лет назад +10

      I also find hamelin extremely boring... i think you like cziffra much or you dislike him

    • @gaborcsordas
      @gaborcsordas 6 лет назад +6

      actually the piece that made Hamelin really famous was his extended cadenza on the 2nd Liszt Hungarian Rhapsody, which is pure showmanship.

    • @pianosenzanima1
      @pianosenzanima1 5 лет назад +4

      I will just say this: the life that Cziffra had...out of curiosity, have you ever bothered to read his memoirs?
      Actually I will say one more thing, Hamelin ( and Co.) plays like an aristocrat, as someone who lived all his life at the palace.
      Cziffra, the son of a nobody fucking gypsy cymbalom player, who lived WAR, DEATH, forced labour for 2 years in prison (I wish you to try 1 month of forced labour, the kind of which he experienced, 1 month, talk after about your experience, ok?) extreme poverty and away from his country, yet he achieved levels of playing that Hamelin and Co. will never even dream to accomplish. He always played like his life was at stake and it is my belief that he will be always immortal through his legacy, just like Liszt. In 100 years Cziffra will have statues all over, while Hamelin and Co. will long be forgotten.

  • @BoyevoyKabanStyopa
    @BoyevoyKabanStyopa 5 месяцев назад

    For any professional pianist, this is God. Or Liszt reincarnated.

  • @johnbauer7658
    @johnbauer7658 7 лет назад +1

    what is it he's playing at 1:13? anyone know?

    • @vova47
      @vova47 7 лет назад +3

      yutternutterbutter - part of one of the Symphonic Etudes by Schumann. He explains the difficulties bringing out the different parts of left and right hands together.

    • @liebestraum_
      @liebestraum_ 5 лет назад

      Posthumous variation I - Andante, Tempo del tema