3 Heartbreaking piano performance made audience cry, Pressler play Chopin, Horowitz play Traumerei

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  • Опубликовано: 15 май 2024
  • 0:00 1 Menahem Pressler play Chopin Nocturne in C sharp minor
    4:40 2 Vladimir Horowitz play Schumann Traumerei in Moscow 1986, this is his first time back to Russia in 60 years after he left Russia
    7:08 3 Born Blind pianist Nobuyuki Tsujii played at Carnegie Hall his own composition "Elegy for the Victims of the Tsunami of March 11, 2011 in Japan"
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Комментарии • 807

  • @jojoanggono3229
    @jojoanggono3229 Месяц назад +1440

    I feel the older we get the more this music touches us. The bitter sweet of life, things that could had been, things that should not had been, things that possibly had been. Those joy, grief, blood, sweat, tears.

    • @joang5841
      @joang5841 Месяц назад +13

      Absolutely!

    • @swagatpatra2139
      @swagatpatra2139 Месяц назад +27

      I feel the calmness of the music touches us, we become more composed, appreciate a slow, steady pace instead of the frenzy.

    • @vardangalstyan8673
      @vardangalstyan8673 Месяц назад +20

      Not the music but the memories that live in music.

    • @antoinepetrov
      @antoinepetrov Месяц назад +32

      I am barely 17 years old, but my eyes get sore from crying when I hear a great performance of Bach, Chopin, Schubert, etc.

    • @dustyking8851
      @dustyking8851 Месяц назад +10

      As a kid we were brought to the symphony twice a year. It was magical to me, I know how lucky I was to attend. All kids should be introduced to the classics early in life. It has always stayed with me, I have loved it since then.

  • @janeterry8236
    @janeterry8236 2 месяца назад +907

    Mr Horowitz sits at the piano so casually, as if engrossed in something utterly mundane. No theatrics, no extraneous movements. Nothing stands between him and the music. He is the music.

    • @maridaude2045
      @maridaude2045 Месяц назад +6

      Not Horowitz

    • @PS-su2si
      @PS-su2si Месяц назад +13

      @@maridaude2045 It's Horowitz

    • @jenhasken
      @jenhasken Месяц назад +4

      The greatest.

    • @maddannafizz
      @maddannafizz Месяц назад +9

      ​@@maridaude2045 2nd pianist is Horowitz, first is Pressler... he is right

    • @santysappia3576
      @santysappia3576 Месяц назад +1

      🎉🎉🎉😊😊😊😊

  • @Drowseesnorlax
    @Drowseesnorlax Месяц назад +465

    About two years ago, I walked into a church. My town has four churches, some large, some small. This was the smallest one I hadn't been to yet, and for once it was open outside of mass hours. Inside, a man sat at the piano playing Chopin's nocturne. The reverberation through the empty hall echoed so beautifully and made my eyes swim the moment I heard it.

    • @XRP747E
      @XRP747E Месяц назад +26

      You have painted a beautiful emotive picture.

    • @kgb691927
      @kgb691927 Месяц назад +20

      same with Jesus,your Eyes will swim when you see Him🌐

    • @emilioporro
      @emilioporro Месяц назад +2

      As the Metropolitan in Moscow said to the Holy Metropolitan in Kviv...I send you THIS with the love of the Saviour.

    • @pamdawson8598
      @pamdawson8598 Месяц назад

      All beauty reflects the One who created the mind and gifts.​@@kgb691927

    • @bellalexander1707
      @bellalexander1707 Месяц назад +4

      sounds like the start to a book 👍

  • @katanaki3059
    @katanaki3059 2 месяца назад +369

    Love the shots of the audience lost in a dream

  • @ilovehifi
    @ilovehifi Месяц назад +235

    When Menahem Pressler played this Nocturne from Chopin live in Berlin, he was aged 91. You will never find a better interpretation of this emotional piece from Chopin. Menahem Pressler was a real, but silent, World Class Artist. Menahem Pressler, rest in peace.

    • @renatabanach5486
      @renatabanach5486 Месяц назад +7

      please, listen this nokturn performed by Władysław Szpilman

    • @linalina8147
      @linalina8147 Месяц назад +3

      Wladyslaw Szpilman performance is unsurpassed

    • @linalina8147
      @linalina8147 Месяц назад +2

      With all due respect, WLADYSLAW SZPILMAN PERFORMANCE IS UNSURPASSED!!!!

    • @MimCotton
      @MimCotton Месяц назад +1

      Superb

    • @marilenapetrella5285
      @marilenapetrella5285 Месяц назад

      91? Now I understand why he needs the score.

  • @ThroneVaultProductions
    @ThroneVaultProductions Месяц назад +399

    I had a piano instructor back in the 90s who was from Kiev and Horowitz went to the same Kiev Conservatory she went to, she told me how senior recitals are a big deal and they're done in front of a panel of professors who do not show any emotion after your performance. Zero. no clapping, no nodding, nothing.
    Horowitz finished, they jumped to their feet and applauded for a minute straight. He was that much of a force.

    • @lisbetsoda4874
      @lisbetsoda4874 Месяц назад

      Go somewhere else with your preaching. This is not the place.​@@discepolidiYeshua93

    • @emilioporro
      @emilioporro Месяц назад +3

      In 1947-48 I had piano lessons at a pre prep in Brighton England by a Mr Horowitz...surely not ?

    • @lisbetsoda4874
      @lisbetsoda4874 Месяц назад

      @@emilioporro you have to google some old pictures and see for yourself.

    • @emilioporro
      @emilioporro Месяц назад +9

      @discepolidiYeshua93 the rambling of a poor disturbed soul...really sad !

    • @WitheredBreak81
      @WitheredBreak81 29 дней назад +8

      Stop wasting your time, you aren't gonna convert anyone

  • @LaurentPingaultLyon
    @LaurentPingaultLyon Месяц назад +97

    The blind japanese pianist playing his own composition is a true joy for the ears and the soul

  • @shubus
    @shubus 2 месяца назад +328

    At 6:10 ..the old Russian man with tears in his eyes.......How well I remember this moment as I saw this Horowitz broadcast LIVE some decades ago.

    • @user-dc1oq6hz8u
      @user-dc1oq6hz8u 2 месяца назад +30

      This moment made me cry… Probably this man went through something in his life…

    • @shubus
      @shubus 2 месяца назад +11

      @@user-dc1oq6hz8u Many of us had exactly the same thoughts. I sure did. One of the most unforgettable things i've ever seen.

    • @PeculiarPopCulture
      @PeculiarPopCulture 2 месяца назад +6

      i was in tears as well lmao

    • @user-nj5vu3yu4r
      @user-nj5vu3yu4r 2 месяца назад +14

      Probably WW2 vet

    • @shubus
      @shubus 2 месяца назад +11

      @@user-nj5vu3yu4r I think he heard Horowitz when he was young.

  • @andreast2168
    @andreast2168 Месяц назад +116

    The closer we get to that last day on earth, on this magical place that consists of bittersweet experiences, the closer we move towards the basics, poetry, philosophical thinking, music. It is a full circle someone might say, we go back to where our soul was guiding us all those years, but career, friends, family, that night out that we had to go out because everyone would attend kept us apart from our nature. And we lived in distance from our own soul for ages.

    • @patrickfreeman8257
      @patrickfreeman8257 Месяц назад +15

      Wow! That's pretty deep. I'm going to have to contemplate that for a while. In this day and age when everybody is talking but nobody is really saying anything, this actually speaks to me.

    • @Ryostg
      @Ryostg Месяц назад +7

      @@patrickfreeman8257 people need to hear the sound of silence.

    • @koustubhkabe1304
      @koustubhkabe1304 Месяц назад +2

      Well said.

    • @borisborissov9185
      @borisborissov9185 Месяц назад +3

      Beautifuly said.I maight just add that it is just the flow of presense we only have.

    • @flowerlovebyadrienne6340
      @flowerlovebyadrienne6340 16 дней назад

      How very very true!!

  • @kennethtalbott2233
    @kennethtalbott2233 2 месяца назад +186

    the chopin for me all day long, pure magic. stunning.

    • @cd-zw2tt
      @cd-zw2tt 2 месяца назад +8

      it's like listening to someone's train of thought go from familiarly dark to unexpectedly happy, and then back again

    • @kennethtalbott2233
      @kennethtalbott2233 2 месяца назад

      yep, they are not just notes to be played but how are you going to play them? the magic is in the mind of the soloist.@@cd-zw2tt

    • @novakgoatovic
      @novakgoatovic Месяц назад +9

      Polish composer. Best ever.

    • @kennethtalbott2233
      @kennethtalbott2233 Месяц назад +1

      i know what you mean, i love how simple and effortless it seems, the delicate cascading of notes from something to nothing. the sound is in the silence. magical.@@cd-zw2tt

    • @davidmurphy9351
      @davidmurphy9351 Месяц назад

      @@kennethtalbott2233 "..simple and effortless..' - yes and the paradox is that it's from rigorous practising many hours each day for many days and weeks and years. A true dedication 😊

  • @jmcsquared18
    @jmcsquared18 2 месяца назад +113

    2:58 I love how softly he went up to that higher octave. Made the descent feel ethereal and lofty. What a great interpretation of this piece.

  • @rumar4u
    @rumar4u 26 дней назад +69

    Finally - No fake face gestures from the piano player to make it look like "passion" or "emotion"

    • @moomin_2000
      @moomin_2000 19 дней назад +5

      So the performer is not allowed to show his/her emotions if he wants?

    • @rumar4u
      @rumar4u 19 дней назад +7

      @@moomin_2000 Been a piano player for 20+ years and sometimes I let my self go so I know what I'm talking about. I get that some piano players like Ray Charles, Stevie Wonder shake their heads because they felt the music inside them. But I've seen so many great artists perform without the need to fake emotions that frankly takes away from the performance itself. Fake tears, Fake Head movements, Fake Facial expressions (as if it were the hardest thing) even their their wardrobe all point out to draw attention towards them and not the music piece itself.

    • @ml-zj4oh
      @ml-zj4oh 19 дней назад

      @@rumar4u looooooooooooooool

    • @rizzoli7
      @rizzoli7 17 дней назад +1

      @@rumar4uvery teue

    • @thenamelessking375
      @thenamelessking375 13 дней назад

      He said fake ​@@moomin_2000

  • @rosaoddin4338
    @rosaoddin4338 2 месяца назад +234

    Wonderful to see children, young people in audience listening raptly, respectfully. Gee, no iPhones or texting - what a pleasure to see and to hear this simply beautiful music.

    • @johncater7861
      @johncater7861 Месяц назад +10

      You can add to that, no coughing, blowing your nose, rifling through your pockets only to drop a number of coins that go rolling down the aisle.

    • @mokmok5832
      @mokmok5832 Месяц назад +4

      上世紀80年代的表演,當時未有📱 iPhone!😅

    • @artharrison9586
      @artharrison9586 Месяц назад +4

      Yes, for once no one standing up with their back to the performance taking a selfie to show how cultured they aren’t….

    • @gwanlee
      @gwanlee Месяц назад +2

      It's because this is Germany
      People are altogether more respectful and thoughtful

    • @Franky..
      @Franky.. Месяц назад

      @@johncater7861 wtf are you saying "number of coins that go rolling down the aisle" are you a droid

  • @perryandthethreeamigos
    @perryandthethreeamigos Месяц назад +52

    Pressler played the cycle of life. For everybody to feel.

  • @RhiannonRaven
    @RhiannonRaven 2 месяца назад +163

    Lately I see lots of comments on social media about how amazing the latest pop star strumpet who is cavorting about on stage in a sparkly leotard is. About what an amazingly talented song writer she is. And I think to myself, the people making these comments must never have had their lives touched by genuinely beautiful music such as this. It makes me laugh, but it also makes me sad and a little bit upset. Thank God for Beethoven, Chopin and the talented musicians who keep their music alive.

    • @user-jr2ul6vi3j
      @user-jr2ul6vi3j Месяц назад +21

      you can enjoy this music without shitting over other people's music, everyone is touched in a different way by different sounds and words. i hope you aren't this ego centric in real life. i love classical, some of my friends love swift. it's going to be ok.

    • @vividly94
      @vividly94 Месяц назад +10

      @@user-jr2ul6vi3j Yeah, but there's certain music that is objectively shit. Of course, people can like it and it can make them 'feel' a certain way, but doesn't justify calling this person 'ego centric'.

    • @kevindecot186
      @kevindecot186 Месяц назад +8

      Spot on. The pop culture today including it's music is truly void of esoteric beauty. Can you imagine a world where classical music was the most popular music for all ages? Make Classical Music Great Again!

    • @zeth7109
      @zeth7109 Месяц назад

      @@vividly94 He is though

    • @portland9880
      @portland9880 Месяц назад

      ​@@vividly94 wrong

  • @billyv2210
    @billyv2210 Месяц назад +28

    It's difficult to remain Agnostic when listening to music like this. God bless those woe bring beauty into this world.

    • @ahboaz
      @ahboaz 27 дней назад +3

      Right. One becomes a complete atheist.

    • @va-ro
      @va-ro 25 дней назад +1

      @@ahboaz 😅

    • @lizzfrmhon
      @lizzfrmhon 20 дней назад

      Amén

  • @cs_fl5048
    @cs_fl5048 Месяц назад +73

    The old greats...Horowitz, Pressler, Arturo Rubinstein, even Rachmaninoff, when they played...they became the music... they didn't emote and gesticulate to detract from it...the music was the master, and they served it. A pleasure to watch, and a blessing to hear, a sublime pleasure.

  • @danutaromanowska7428
    @danutaromanowska7428 Месяц назад +92

    My Son played it in the memory of my Father, after my Father passed away.😢❤️🌹Mr Horowitz touches my heart.🌹

    • @williamtaittinger4529
      @williamtaittinger4529 Месяц назад +4

      grandkid is a G

    • @bora7920
      @bora7920 Месяц назад

      @@williamtaittinger4529 truly

    • @bora7920
      @bora7920 Месяц назад +1

      sorry for your loss

    • @SunAndMoon-zc9vd
      @SunAndMoon-zc9vd Месяц назад

      My condolences.
      In music there is sadness, joy, and many other emotions. Experiencing the death of somebody close, one's perception of music changes. I have experienced how playing the one and same melody before gave different meanings to me.
      All the best to you.

    • @Umitto
      @Umitto Месяц назад

      My condolences

  • @observer568
    @observer568 Месяц назад +81

    Fryderyk Chopin - a Polish composer, the best of all times!
    Thank you for this wonderful performance!

    • @Eyelash85
      @Eyelash85 Месяц назад +2

      Second, after Bach. But still amazing.

    • @TheDirtyLuke
      @TheDirtyLuke Месяц назад +8

      @@Eyelash85 I am sorry Bach is not even top 5

    • @davidsheriff9274
      @davidsheriff9274 Месяц назад

      Listen to a great orchestra playing The Mother Goose Suit by Ravel,it doesn't get better than that.

    • @user-wl7po9pg7r
      @user-wl7po9pg7r Месяц назад +2

      @@TheDirtyLuke Oh, you are so wrong. But...to each their own

    • @TheDirtyLuke
      @TheDirtyLuke Месяц назад

      @@user-wl7po9pg7r He is not, and never will be in top 5. Majority of people agree with me on this one, so no, I am not wrong

  • @James-ll3jb
    @James-ll3jb 2 месяца назад +117

    No one could channel Chopin like Rubenstein. His recording of the Chopin 1st concerto, 2nd movement, is beyond extraordinary.

    • @mlbhdk06
      @mlbhdk06 2 месяца назад +16

      He’s playing Schumann

    • @James-ll3jb
      @James-ll3jb 2 месяца назад +6

      @@mlbhdk06 Irrelevant. I was complimenting the man on his unassailable interpretation of Chopin's 1st. You must be American, ryt?

    • @JohnSmith-cg3cv
      @JohnSmith-cg3cv 2 месяца назад +23

      @@James-ll3jb Well, you could've at least prefaced your original comment then with "I know Horowitz is playing Schumann here, but..."
      There's no need to insult somebody on the basis of which country they were born and raised in, of which they have no control.

    • @marcosilvestri1011
      @marcosilvestri1011 2 месяца назад

      everything's ok? ​@@James-ll3jb

    • @James-ll3jb
      @James-ll3jb 2 месяца назад +2

      @@JohnSmith-cg3cv Why should I if I am talking about Horowitz and Chopin? Lol!

  • @kiimmaritz2827
    @kiimmaritz2827 2 месяца назад +60

    0:37 0:41 0:43 beautiful and beyond...I saw the Pianist movie .and it brings me to tears..this is awesome.being a pianist myself..this is every bit.... perfection

    • @melumarsa6561
      @melumarsa6561 Месяц назад +3

      This beauty envelopes me. I can't control my emotions. Glorious. Thank G-d for these moments of heaven on earth.

    • @moonshinesa8234
      @moonshinesa8234 11 дней назад

      Beautiful music, paintings, sculptures, even beautiful buildings bring tears to our eyes. I think it’s because we feel we are in the presence of something/someone that gives the gift of creating beauty, which also encompasses love, to the performer, composer, etc.
      I wish shopping malls would play this music and also some of the beautiful arias. I think/hope it would replace some of the hatred and cruelty that seems to be infecting some people today.
      There is more than enough beauty available to convince people that we are capable of achieving greatness. Even if I cannot produce a masterpiece I am able to appreciate that some people can and we should follow them and not those who produce vulgar, sloppy drivel.
      If that makes sense.

  • @williamsimonds5429
    @williamsimonds5429 2 месяца назад +76

    Sir Pressler has what it takes to play this music and, I am sure, A lot of other standards. Sir - You are a precious gem.

    • @curiouslyme524
      @curiouslyme524 2 месяца назад +1

      Oh my goodness. Being part of the Beax Arts Trio means he can play anything. Much respect to him.

  • @evertvanderhik5774
    @evertvanderhik5774 9 дней назад +5

    I've never heard someone playing a slow piece as good as Pressler. Unbelievable

  • @lewisedmundscomposer
    @lewisedmundscomposer 2 месяца назад +77

    Horowitz is my favourite pianist of all time, such a gem!

  • @pablolinan4861
    @pablolinan4861 13 дней назад +5

    I can't imagine how Choopin must have felt, what did he experience?, to compose pieces that evoke such deep feelings that one would think one would have after living for a long time to understand them.

  • @Labasedupilier
    @Labasedupilier Месяц назад +4

    Un de ces rares moments où l'espèce humaine mérite d'être encore là...

  • @BrandLmedia
    @BrandLmedia 12 дней назад +7

    As an music teacher for 20 years...I get the bumps...of what you say goose + bumps. Love this.

  • @Cinetyk
    @Cinetyk Месяц назад +54

    In all these, it is palpable the silence these performances create... The feeling of silence means you are truly listening. It's so hard to listen when there's so much noise about. I'm honoured and sad to be born in 1984 - that means I'm not old but just old enough I remember when we had silence and could make space and time to listen to things.
    This video reminded me of that. Cheers.

  • @maestroclassico5801
    @maestroclassico5801 Месяц назад +55

    Horowitz.....pretty much on everybody's top 5 list for greatest pianist of the 20th century. The audience is spellbound. Wish I couldve heard him live. He was alive until I was 23. I missed out.

    • @psforrest1
      @psforrest1 Месяц назад +1

      Pressler is amazing, too.

    • @maestroclassico5801
      @maestroclassico5801 Месяц назад +1

      @@psforrest1 He taught at Indiana University for many years. I've often thought I studied Music at the wrong school.

  • @RitaElaineHeltonBarker-uz4sz
    @RitaElaineHeltonBarker-uz4sz Месяц назад +15

    Of the three Noboyuki Tsujii was the only one that wrote his own music so yes I bow my head to him

  • @shawnandrew_artist
    @shawnandrew_artist 27 дней назад +4

    Chopin will tear your heart to pieces then gently place the broken pieces back together.

  • @yellowquantum4240
    @yellowquantum4240 Месяц назад +25

    So beautiful !! Chopin the Monet of music.

    • @psforrest1
      @psforrest1 Месяц назад +3

      A great description.

    • @antoinepetrov
      @antoinepetrov Месяц назад

      Although it is much harder to be so emotionally shaken by a Monet painting.

  • @cd-zw2tt
    @cd-zw2tt 2 месяца назад +26

    1:27 what a great break into a slightly happier mood until it falls back down, excellent writing by chopin

  • @MB-xq9hu
    @MB-xq9hu 23 дня назад +5

    A well educated on music audience. They felt every stroke to the core!

  • @josemariagarcia1099
    @josemariagarcia1099 Месяц назад +44

    How can humans create such beauty and at the same time be so evil to one another.

    • @Rinrincito
      @Rinrincito Месяц назад +4

      quite often I ask myself the same question.

    • @krzysztofakwapinska9520
      @krzysztofakwapinska9520 Месяц назад +1

      The same reason why some are healthy and the others - ill.

    • @lizzfrmhon
      @lizzfrmhon 20 дней назад

      @@Rinrincitosame

    • @erikgraveleau8320
      @erikgraveleau8320 16 дней назад

      Il me semble qu'en chacun de nous réside un ange ET un monstre

    • @marija1982CROSLONZ
      @marija1982CROSLONZ 16 дней назад

      Because being evil is part of humanity which we refuse to see

  • @martinmuller5006
    @martinmuller5006 2 месяца назад +34

    In these dark days with wars and fierce fighting music is like Shakespeare said "if music was the food of life play on"
    Good for the soul Gods gift to us let's enjoy every second of it. Thanks for this upload I feel good🎉

  • @katievernon5012
    @katievernon5012 Месяц назад +4

    These performances makes real the reality that music is an intangible intimacy.

  • @motogpfan46
    @motogpfan46 6 дней назад +2

    Sometimes the rabbit hole youtube sends you down opens your eyes like never before. Thank you for leading me here tonight.

  • @katiehughes5972
    @katiehughes5972 Месяц назад +7

    Goodness, that third pianist - what a beautiful, simple, spellbinding piece of music. Brought chills ❤

  • @user-vf7jg6cl3z
    @user-vf7jg6cl3z Месяц назад +6

    THIS MUSIC TAKES US TO A PLACE OF BEAUTY ❤️

  • @markox0505
    @markox0505 2 месяца назад +17

    Horowitz ... come lui nessuno mai🎹

  • @michaelhanrahanmoore1622
    @michaelhanrahanmoore1622 2 месяца назад +19

    I remember traumerei being played in song of love the biopic about schumann. It was played several times during the film but when clara played it at the end after roberts mind had broken down and he died the affect on me was devastating. I write music . I have mental illness. I feel this music very deeply.

    • @smixi100
      @smixi100 2 месяца назад +3

      I started playing the piano after watching this film

  • @Didda3
    @Didda3 9 дней назад +2

    The piano in its classical sense is the entrance to a new world when played with the passion of these amazing pianists. Chopin is my favourite.

  • @savitriwijesinghe3282
    @savitriwijesinghe3282 Месяц назад +20

    Oh what lovely music. Nobuyuki Tsuji's elegy so wonderful. ❤❤❤❤

  • @mariapap8962
    @mariapap8962 2 месяца назад +1225

    THIS is what music is about! Not half-naked bodies or flashy outfits to draw certain audiences to the concert - hall. Unfortunately, this is what the classical music industry is promoting for quite some time now...

    • @nessieness5433
      @nessieness5433 2 месяца назад +43

      Exactly, like Y.Wang e.g. showing off, technically astounding, but lacking in musicality.

    • @hxyjdn
      @hxyjdn 2 месяца назад +21

      @@bob7023You don’t need to say that. I’m Chinese and I’m not bothered by mariapap8962’s comment at all. I just smile and respect him. No need to overact and take it too seriously.

    • @LudwigVanBeethoven3000
      @LudwigVanBeethoven3000 2 месяца назад +50

      ​@@tzenkadianova2892Mariapap is not being racist or misogynistic. He gave his opinion on an artist, and you immediately and smugly decided it was because of race and gender. No one is free from criticism. So please stop fighting this imaginary villain that you created just to appear socially superior, it doesn't help anyone.

    • @nikb6176
      @nikb6176 2 месяца назад +24

      Yes, the playing is lovely, but his phrasing is noticeably laboured due to the advanced age. If you can't hear this, you are in denial or lack the musical experience. Pollini was once criticised for being too aggressive and lacking in the musical department, same of Horowitz and many others. Listen with your ears, not your eyes. Yuja's phrasing is far more interesting than this master-class in rheumatism.

    • @PS-kd1if
      @PS-kd1if 2 месяца назад +32

      @nikb6176 You can wait to make this comment when Yuja Wang is 70/80 years old and having rheumatism (and hopefully not half-naked on stage any more). Ridiculous comparison.

  • @user-cc8gz3yr7m
    @user-cc8gz3yr7m 2 месяца назад +19

    Non ci sono parole per questa belleza.

  • @akon1965
    @akon1965 26 дней назад +76

    I wept alone in my living, the children and my wife are asleep

    • @bobloblawlablabla
      @bobloblawlablabla 15 дней назад +1

      Solely because of the music?
      Or because things are rough?? 😮

    • @DougieBarclay
      @DougieBarclay 14 дней назад +2

      ​@@bobloblawlablabla😂

    • @lindaross783
      @lindaross783 13 дней назад +1

      Healing of the heart

    • @jorgecabrera1358
      @jorgecabrera1358 11 дней назад +1

      También lo hago en mi sala cuando estoy solo , las lágrimas por el placer de que estas notas pasen por mis oídos.

    • @christinecauseimanevilcar4073
      @christinecauseimanevilcar4073 10 дней назад

      Oh honey ❤❤❤

  • @mysticmian7931
    @mysticmian7931 28 дней назад +2

    During Horowitz's performance, you can visibly see each and every audience member is in their own imaginary world, quietly listening to the music, letting it flow through their minds and soul. Such is the beauty and power of music when presented by someone as legendary as Horowitz.

  • @jkadas2500
    @jkadas2500 2 месяца назад +46

    Both pianist are full with music and music! No show, simple but most beatuful sound, touch, phraising!! They are a greatest gift for humanity!

    • @thepianocornertpc
      @thepianocornertpc 2 месяца назад +6

      Both mean 2..there are 3

    • @glennbourque111
      @glennbourque111 2 месяца назад +2

      @@thepianocornertpcAlso - Pianists. But that's OK, not sure Jkadas2500 is native English speaking.

    • @s4cha286
      @s4cha286 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@glennbourque111 is a* native english speaker*

    • @glennbourque111
      @glennbourque111 2 месяца назад +3

      @@s4cha286I stand by my word choice.

    • @johnmartin650
      @johnmartin650 2 месяца назад +2

      Congratulations for writing the cringiest and most obnoxious comment on this video. (There was a lot of competition in this comment section but this is definitely the most nauseating)

  • @adriennebeecker5000
    @adriennebeecker5000 2 месяца назад +24

    VERY MOVING AND EMOTIONALLY CHARGED!

  • @beatricemarquez5861
    @beatricemarquez5861 Месяц назад +24

    This must be what music is like in heaven and Chopin heard it in his spirit and played it people on earth! The Lord revealed to me some time ago He is sending music from heaven to earth in this timing! It will be wonderful to hear new heavenly music!

  • @mariajosecarmoecunha7848
    @mariajosecarmoecunha7848 2 месяца назад +15

    Drops from spirituality falling on our souls! 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻❤

  • @marcobagut
    @marcobagut Месяц назад +3

    Menahem Pressler was truly amazing!

  • @enricochestri
    @enricochestri Месяц назад +7

    Agree with everybody about Chopin and Schumann, but also the third piece was really poignant and beautiful....

  • @petergraham8681
    @petergraham8681 2 месяца назад +21

    This is indeed an awesome emotional experience & speaking about another heartbreaking performance from a pianist there was Dinu Lipatti‘s last recital some 2 months before his death from Leukemia in 1950. This is available on CD & among his selections is perhaps the most moving Schubert G flat major IMPROMPTU that I have ever heard. You Tube has this likely as well. The entire recital is one to cherish even if a repeat section of one of his ChopIn pieces had to be cut due to Lipatti‘s physical condition.

  • @elainasaunt
    @elainasaunt 2 месяца назад +32

    A lovely selection of works and artists. I heard Pressler play the Chopin Nocturne on a few occasions in London and Paris. The limpidity of the runs at the end were just so characteristic of his inimitable technique. I miss him.

  • @bencelooney8686
    @bencelooney8686 2 месяца назад +5

    Thank you for wonderful video!

  • @KillberZomL4D42494
    @KillberZomL4D42494 Месяц назад +10

    This is just magical.

  • @marianmartinez1494
    @marianmartinez1494 2 месяца назад +18

    like teardrops, beautiful 🥲

  • @tonimikael
    @tonimikael 2 месяца назад +9

    Thank you very much for the video. 🙏❤️

  • @richardblake6781
    @richardblake6781 2 месяца назад +26

    This is so touching, heartfelt, and moving. Well done Sir!

  • @CostasV1768
    @CostasV1768 2 месяца назад +22

    Powerfull yet so soft....
    Touches your heart and soul.

  • @keys_cr3323
    @keys_cr3323 2 месяца назад +6

    Great video, Thank you!

  • @calinpuiu8501
    @calinpuiu8501 Месяц назад +1

    Just beautiful. Thank you.

  • @Kuspecibasi
    @Kuspecibasi Месяц назад +5

    What a special moment in someones life. To witness such great musicians in a lifetime. Really lucky people to have such memories.

  • @the12288
    @the12288 Месяц назад

    Wow , so beautiful! Thank you for the video

  • @markmartel1738
    @markmartel1738 22 дня назад +2

    I saw this performance of Horowitz live when I was young. I was affected by the shots of the audience back then. Now I understand them better. They had deep life experiences that were tapped into by Horowitz and the piece he played.

  • @chamellesway8424
    @chamellesway8424 2 месяца назад +7

    WOW! The little time pieces he waits till he plays the next note is just what music is all about. We all heard Chopin so many times, but like this … you need to dig deep, very deep. The world would need that kinda music, not boom tshap boom boom tshap

  • @vicferrari89
    @vicferrari89 Месяц назад +3

    7:08 3 Born Blind pianist Nobuyuki Tsujii original piece? WOW!

  • @freezingstorm001
    @freezingstorm001 Месяц назад +5

    Video has a clickbait title, but it's actually not a clickbait, it really delivers. 3 magnificient performances. A big thank you to everyone who made these possible. I am not done listening to this.

  • @jerrie1935
    @jerrie1935 2 месяца назад +10

    Wow! These pieces are so achingly beautiful ❤❤❤

  • @therainforest4314
    @therainforest4314 2 месяца назад +6

    Absolutely exquisite.

  • @gnamp
    @gnamp 2 месяца назад +29

    He slows down the faster runs so his arthritic fingers can manage them- and he's so good, it somehow seems as though that was how it was written.

    • @psforrest1
      @psforrest1 Месяц назад +2

      I think that is an assumption on your part. I studied with a renowned Polish teacher (teacher Emanuel Ax and others, and performer in the earlier 20th century) Mieczyslaw Munz. In my score of this, on that second run, he wrote "Slower." Anyway, it's gorgeous as Pressler plays it.

    • @gnamp
      @gnamp Месяц назад +1

      @@psforrest1 Oh- my account of his reason for slowing is certainly an assumption. However, unless it was Chopin himself indicating that those parts be played slower- which he does not- such assumptions, if not openly invited, will naturally follow. Certainly 'gorgeous' is right.

  • @katymcdermott2398
    @katymcdermott2398 Месяц назад +2

    Loved the 3rd piece. Such emotion in the music. Beautiful performance!

  • @wendylouisehall19
    @wendylouisehall19 18 дней назад +2

    It's wonderful how age only manifests how some musicians' insight and depth of musicality reaches immortal beauty!

  • @user-py5gy9ty9x
    @user-py5gy9ty9x Месяц назад +2

    Chopin has always been one of my favorites to play...❤❤❤

  • @GARYINLEEDS
    @GARYINLEEDS Месяц назад

    Thanks for sharing, shared.

  • @paulmoadibe9321
    @paulmoadibe9321 Месяц назад +23

    on march 11 2011, was working in a data center on a night shift. me and my team knew how to connect ourselves on international networks so we watched mostly in real time the horrific tsunami in Japan.... that pianist is a genius.... thank you.

  • @jameswright6955
    @jameswright6955 Месяц назад

    True masters at work. It makes me very emotional watching this on a screen. I can’t imagine what it was like to be there in the audience, watching these live

  • @RoboticsBay
    @RoboticsBay Месяц назад +1

    Every young pianist should listen to this video. Composed, slow and thoughtful play, as it always should be.

  • @mark.lawrence
    @mark.lawrence Месяц назад

    music never lies you see... that is what makes it so beautiful.

  • @benjaminstarks4071
    @benjaminstarks4071 Месяц назад +2

    Pressler playing Chopin is very touching.

  • @shivamumbai1
    @shivamumbai1 Месяц назад +1

    Communicating to heart through melodious vibes.

  • @DistinctiveThinking
    @DistinctiveThinking Месяц назад +1

    Pure. Exquisite. Mesmerizing. This was a spiritual experience!❤

  • @foodchewer
    @foodchewer Месяц назад +9

    That Chopin nocturne...my God, so tender and so sublime. Perfect music for the rain that just started outside my window.

  • @arnowaigel2844
    @arnowaigel2844 Месяц назад

    Such old hands and so brillant! When look on my own...

  • @jomc20
    @jomc20 Месяц назад +1

    All throughout my life my mother played Traumerei. It always takes me back to childhood..

  • @Shmeeby9411
    @Shmeeby9411 Месяц назад +1

    I will never get tired of either hearing or playing Chopin's Nocturne in C# Minor. I first heard it from one of the best movies of all time (The Pianist), it drove me to start learning multiple instruments rather than just drumset, it helped me read melodies far better than was able to before, and it showed me what classical piano is really about.

  • @ericleroy4953
    @ericleroy4953 Месяц назад

    Quelle virtuosité, magnifique, merci

  • @vidyasagar3624
    @vidyasagar3624 19 дней назад +1

    Are we still the people who could sit and watch the masters like the audience in the video? I am afraid to say no and I feel lonely when I am left teary eyed by ART, that might slowly be lost to this Scroll-World.

  • @robbstephenson5594
    @robbstephenson5594 Месяц назад +2

    This MUSIC deserves more respect than it's been given. I have been in country, rock and bluegrass music my whole life but when ever I listen to this music I am humbled to say the least. Sometimes we need to listen with not only our hearts but our souls too.

  • @michellekeith5602
    @michellekeith5602 26 дней назад

    A lifetime of memories lived in moments through songs that make the ones we lost become eternal in our hearts

  • @larswillsen
    @larswillsen 13 дней назад +1

    Amazing, just amazing!

  • @johnhenryruminski8662
    @johnhenryruminski8662 5 дней назад +1

    LOVE ALL !!!! Love John !!!!

  • @williamlamkin4053
    @williamlamkin4053 18 дней назад

    Absolutely Beautiful!

  • @almasriahmad81
    @almasriahmad81 Месяц назад +2

    Each melody is like a sad story, some artists I mean musicians can really talk to us through thier instruments.
    I'm amazed, such music can always talks to inner side of us, express things we didn't know how deliver or talk about.
    I'm so much amazed

  • @ElisPalmer
    @ElisPalmer Месяц назад

    Priceless 🌟

  • @elisaausberlin4838
    @elisaausberlin4838 Месяц назад

    Incredible. All of them. A feast for our fragile minds and souls.

  • @marcellino1956
    @marcellino1956 2 месяца назад

    Beautiful music !

  • @lindaross783
    @lindaross783 13 дней назад

    Presslers interpretation of Chopin reached straight into my heart. Breathtaking.