Movmt 1(Doppio Movimento in Grave):- 00:01 Movmt 2 (Scherzo in Eb minor):- 05:22 Movmt 3 (Funeral March in Lento) :- 11:11 Movmt 4 (Finale in Presto) :- 19:14
@@АнфисаТрушина-э8о нам в муз. школе умнейший музыкант говорил только про то, что в сонате 3 части, в симфонии - 4. Лично я ничего про 3 или 4 в сонате не слышал. А какие еще есть сонаты из 4 частей, кроме этой?
@@sanyaronetozero4058 Of course, I was being sarcastic, Chopin was as polish as it gets, even his father Nicolas Chopin wasn't very French as he learned Polish language as a kid and leave France at the age of 16 then in Poland he actively avoided being conscripted into the French army during the french revolution and even become a lieutenant in the Warsaw municipal militia. I don't get from where people gets the idea that Fryderyk Chopin was French, there is no single argument in favor of it.
Such an outstanding piece of music... the Trio portion of the Scherzo Movement is some of my favorite music of all time, I can't help but smile and feel all these pleasant emotions inside of me every time I hear that passage! Thank you for sharing this wonderful recording!
@@klavial we know for a fact from his letters, and from what others in his times wrote, that he was a very religious Christian and Christians believe in comming back to life in heaven not on earth so he did not believe that.
10K views let’s gooooooo But seriously, thank you all for the views! I hope that these videos improve your enjoyment of this great music! Edit 8/7/22: This video just hit 100k views. Y’all are crazy. Thank you so much.
Wait until you discover his two sets of etudes! :D Most of them are considered top-tier in the piano repertoire. (Famous examples: "Waterfall" (op.10 n.1), "Tristesse" (op.10 n.3), "Torrent" (op.10 n.4), "Black Keys" (op.10 n.5), "Sunshine" (op.10 n.8), "Revolutionary" (op.10 n.12), "Paganini" (op.25 n.4), "Cello" (op.25 n.7), "Butterfly Wings" (op.25 n.9), "Winter Wind" (op.25 n.11) and "Ocean" (op.25 n.12)) You definitely may have heard some them if not all!
I see why his name is Cho, because its a nickname for Cho-pin 😂😂😂, but the interpretation is so good that its better than the other recordings, Comparing Pogorelich and this recording (Cho) Pogorelich wants to play clearly so you can hear the notes properly, whereas Cho sustains just a right amount to give a very dark tone and it sounds like its actually he is telling a story
I like his sense of space, clarity, pacing, and subtle accenting----all attributes of a disciplined pianist. His musical maturity is astounding too, esp. considering he is still in his youthhood. What is there not to like of this near impeccable playing Chopin prize winner? On the other hand, being a picky music observer prone to issuing dismissive scathing comments that often turns the stomach of hard-working pianists, I do have something to ad. Firstly, I'm not buying his interpretation of the funeral march. My suggestion to him is that he go attend a funeral of a loved one, or better yet, wait till his hair turns grey to be convincible. Despite his ostensible excellent chops, there is something amiss about his Chopin. I do not feel a strong Slavic aesthetic sense such as that coming from Kissin, nor a strong emotion pull as that coming from Claudio Aurrau, nor does his imagination ever fly off into a land of the bizarre and pathos as from a Horowitz. As to his raved last movement, I am more impressed with Szymon Nehring's take. Cho's playing is contained. He abstains from throwing out a torrent of emotions. Some people find more beauty in being indirect and to abstain from speech. Frequently, he veers towards a continental taste, such as in the slow movement, and I, being, a purist, must reject his playing as a valiant approximation of Chopin's soul but, nevertheless, an inauthentic one.
I always imagined the last movement to be - or did I read it somewhere? - people having left the funeral, the grave is there by itself, alone, it is windy and leaves are waving in the wind uncalmly
@@CMario73 im tilting more at the harmony. I get what you mean, the rhythm resembles jazz, or more like ragtime tbh but other than that the harmony doesn’t
I've always wondered how long it takes an average graduated pianist to learn an "average" piano Sonata. (I know it varies according to difficulty levels, technique, duration/size of the sonata and movement(s) count) I just want to know the most average, more or less/ give or take time that it takes to learn (not master it) let's say... a Beethoven's sonata movement, or even this Chopin Sonata 1st movement. Does anybody knows the answer??? (Very appreciated!) 🌻 😊
악보가 있는 연주로 들으니까 더 좋고 대단해보이네용... 2악정 어떻게 저 속도로 치면서 표현을 하는지 몸의 구조가 궁금할 따름 중력의 저항을 안받는건지... 특히 쇼팽 소나타는 테크닉,표현 둘다 너무 어려운데 1-4악장 모두 해석이 정말 충격적으로 좋은 것 같고 테크닉도 사기라서 듣는 사람도 편안한 연주인듯 이게 그렇게 떨었던 콩쿨에서 나온것도 대단하다
Chopin : need to add the 4rt movement... uhh yep extremely difficult hanon scales that have the main melody hidden in them and its nice for a pianist who is tired after 20 min😊😊
@TheRealRealLudwigvanBeethoven At least I like you. Your sonatas are pretty damn cool. But for Chopin, he barely interests me. Other than his etudes, scherzos, sonatas, ballades, and a few of his nocturnes and waltzes, I just find him to be a little boring.
Oh, quit complaining, please. If you're going to listen to professional romantic music, you're going to hear shifts in tempo. It's Romanticism, deal with it.
@@hyperactiveofficial8096 To be fair, Chopin himself kept tempo very strictly and practised with a metronome by the music rack, meticulously keeping the rubati in time and only changing the tempo where indicated, expecting the same from his students. But we do a lot of things playing his music that he wouldn't like and like the sound of them ourselves, so you're right.
@@leoribic1691 Yeah, I see where you're coming from. I always hate getting mad at people like this, but I really think strict tempo can kill a piece of music if it's not leveled out with rubato enough. That isn't always the case, but sometimes it really is lol.
@@hyperactiveofficial8096 True, I still haven't figured out how Chopin was able to play in such strict time and make his music so free and spontaneous in feeling, or how we can do the same when we play him. There has to be a way, I just have no idea what it is either.
@@leoribic1691 I think Arthur Rubinstein's recordings are the closest you'll get to what you're describing. A sort of punctual obedience to the tempo but a free spirit, nonetheless.
Movmt 1(Doppio Movimento in Grave):- 00:01
Movmt 2 (Scherzo in Eb minor):- 05:22
Movmt 3 (Funeral March in Lento) :- 11:11
Movmt 4 (Finale in Presto) :- 19:14
Thank you.
The transition from 3:24 to 3:44 is just so uniquely Chopin
Man, Cho and Chopin is a dream combination. Never disappoints.
There is no difference! Chopin just has a pin added to it
LGTB zzzzzz
u don’t realize just how impressive this performance is until u learn this piece
true
It's perfect.. And live. This guy is from another planet
Agreed 😍🤗
So hard to play just started 😊
if u can
1 часть:
Вступление 00:01
Главная партия 0:10
Побоченая партия 0:50
Разработка 2:14
Реприза: 3:43
Кода 4:59
2 часть:
Скерцо 5:22
Тема трио 6:35
3 часть:
Траурный марш: 11:11
Трио 13:49
4 часть:
Начало 19:14
One of the best mov. 1
1ч
0:00 - Вступление
0:12 - ГП
0:47 - ПП
1:47 - ЗП
2:14 - Разработка
3:43 - ПП в репризе
4:39 - ЗП в репризе
4:59 - Кода
2 ч
5:23 - Крайний раздел
6:35 - Средний раздел
8:13 - Середина среднего раздела
9:29 - Общая реприза
10:47 - Кода
3 часть
11:12 - Тема марша
4 часть
19:14 - Финал
Не судите строго, я может чего-то не понимаю, но почему в сонате 4 части вместо 3? Это какое-то нововведение Шопена?
@@kerya35 это стандартное наполнение, в сонате обычно 3 или 4 части
@@АнфисаТрушина-э8о нам в муз. школе умнейший музыкант говорил только про то, что в сонате 3 части, в симфонии - 4. Лично я ничего про 3 или 4 в сонате не слышал. А какие еще есть сонаты из 4 частей, кроме этой?
Храни Вас Бог!❤
My favorite Chopin sonata!
The voicing in 20:23 is just speechless... It really gives me goosebumps every time I heard it. Simply amazing!!!!
This sonata is one of my favorites pieces by Chopin. Really beautifull. And what a great performance!
Sir Fryderyk Chopin is the pride of Poland! The whole country is very proud of him! 🇵🇱
Not france?
@@johannsebastienbachabsolutely not, despite him living most of his life in france
@@johannsebastienbach of course, all the traditional french pieces he wrote like mazurkas and polonaises are a proof of that
Mazurkas are not French they are common Polish folk music@@ekstrapolatoraproksymujacy412
@@sanyaronetozero4058 Of course, I was being sarcastic, Chopin was as polish as it gets, even his father Nicolas Chopin wasn't very French as he learned Polish language as a kid and leave France at the age of 16 then in Poland he actively avoided being conscripted into the French army during the french revolution and even become a lieutenant in the Warsaw municipal militia. I don't get from where people gets the idea that Fryderyk Chopin was French, there is no single argument in favor of it.
🎧 Викторина по Шопену. Таймкоды:
• I часть (Grave, Doppio Movimento):
0:01 - 1. Вступление
0:11 - 2. Экспозиция, Главная Партия (b-moll)
0:50 - 3. Экспозиция, Побочная Партия (Des-dur)
1:47 - 4. Экспозиция, Заключительная Партия (Des-dur)
2:13 - 5. Разработка
3:43 - 6. Реприза, Побочная Партия (B-dur)
4:39 - 7. Реприза, Заключительная Партия (B-dur)
4:59 - 8. Кода (B-dur)
• II часть (Scherzo):
5:22 - 9. Тема Скерцо (es-moll)
6:35 - 10. Тема Трио (Ges-dur)
8:13 - 11. Тема середины Трио
10:47 - 12. Кода
• III часть (Marche funèbre, Lento):
11:11 - 13. Траурный марш (b-moll)
13:47 - 14. Тема Трио (Des-dur)
• IV часть (Finale, Presto):
19:14 - 15. Тема Финала
국뽕이 차오른다네🥹🥹
Thank you Cho for performing such a brilliant performance
Such an outstanding piece of music... the Trio portion of the Scherzo Movement is some of my favorite music of all time, I can't help but smile and feel all these pleasant emotions inside of me every time I hear that passage! Thank you for sharing this wonderful recording!
5:57 ayo heroic polonaise intro
1. Birth
2. Life
3. Death
4. Oblivion
the first movement starts wtith the death motive so its not birth
@@ioiomichalicki2911maybe he believed in reincarnation
@@klavial we know for a fact from his letters, and from what others in his times wrote, that he was a very religious Christian and Christians believe in comming back to life in heaven not on earth so he did not believe that.
My favourite lovely Chopin 💙
11:10 for Pray For The Dead And The Dead Will Pray For You.
10K views let’s gooooooo
But seriously, thank you all for the views! I hope that these videos improve your enjoyment of this great music!
Edit 8/7/22: This video just hit 100k views. Y’all are crazy. Thank you so much.
A beautiful sonata amazingly performed👏🏻✨🎶
00:01 Вступ 1 ч.
00:11 Г.П 1 ч.
00:50 П.П 2 ч.
2:15 Розробка 1 ч
5:22 Тема скерцо 2 ч.
6:35 Тема вальсу 2 ч.
11:11 Тема маршу
13:49 3 частина В
19:14 Фінал
благодарю
Викторина Мурова
1 часть
0:12 - ГП
0:47 - ПП
2 часть
5:23 - Скерцо
6:35 - Трио
3 часть
11:12 - Тема траурного марша
4 часть
19:14 - Тема финала
Main theme (Bb minor) 00:15
Second theme (Db major) 00:50
Development of the main theme 2:13
Development of the second theme 3:43
The trio section of the scherzo is among the most beautiful music I have ever heard
My favorite sonata 🌺🎵
Cho is one of the greatest pianists among the youngest artists.
heheheha
You can't spell Chopin without Cho.
AWESOME
обожаю этого парня
6:06 ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
frfr❤❤
Rach 2? 1:30 (not that similar but the few notes just reminded me of it since in the concerto rach liked to extend the melody with an extra note)
2nd mov severely underrated
Yeah definitely, it reminds me of bombs plummeting down and exploding.
Amazing!
3:03
No one really intensifies the bass drops in the climax as much as Cho does. Perhaps Katsaris and Cziffra are the only others.
@@CatkhosruShapurrjiFurabjiyou are right
I only knew Chopin because of his famous waltzes. This one is a huge surprise to me!
Wait until you discover his two sets of etudes! :D
Most of them are considered top-tier in the piano repertoire.
(Famous examples: "Waterfall" (op.10 n.1), "Tristesse" (op.10 n.3), "Torrent" (op.10 n.4), "Black Keys" (op.10 n.5), "Sunshine" (op.10 n.8), "Revolutionary" (op.10 n.12), "Paganini" (op.25 n.4), "Cello" (op.25 n.7), "Butterfly Wings" (op.25 n.9), "Winter Wind" (op.25 n.11) and "Ocean" (op.25 n.12))
You definitely may have heard some them if not all!
Also fantasia-improptu
I see why his name is Cho, because its a nickname for Cho-pin 😂😂😂, but the interpretation is so good that its better than the other recordings, Comparing Pogorelich and this recording (Cho) Pogorelich wants to play clearly so you can hear the notes properly, whereas Cho sustains just a right amount to give a very dark tone and it sounds like its actually he is telling a story
sound is more loud and clean 💗
Quelconque mélodiquement.
The thirst movement is like it’s begging for it to end already
March first is Chopin's birthday fellas and it's a hospital date for me as well ❤️🩹
Piękno muzyki Fryderyka Chopina to fenomen graniczący z cudem. Chopin to najpiękniejsza spuścizna dla ludzkości ❤️
I like his sense of space, clarity, pacing, and subtle accenting----all attributes of a disciplined pianist. His musical maturity is astounding too, esp. considering he is still in his youthhood. What is there not to like of this near impeccable playing Chopin prize winner? On the other hand, being a picky music observer prone to issuing dismissive scathing comments that often turns the stomach of hard-working pianists, I do have something to ad. Firstly, I'm not buying his interpretation of the funeral march. My suggestion to him is that he go attend a funeral of a loved one, or better yet, wait till his hair turns grey to be convincible. Despite his ostensible excellent chops, there is something amiss about his Chopin. I do not feel a strong Slavic aesthetic sense such as that coming from Kissin, nor a strong emotion pull as that coming from Claudio Aurrau, nor does his imagination ever fly off into a land of the bizarre and pathos as from a Horowitz. As to his raved last movement, I am more impressed with Szymon Nehring's take. Cho's playing is contained. He abstains from throwing out a torrent of emotions. Some people find more beauty in being indirect and to abstain from speech. Frequently, he veers towards a continental taste, such as in the slow movement, and I, being, a purist, must reject his playing as a valiant approximation of Chopin's soul but, nevertheless, an inauthentic one.
Wasnt he on his Death Bed writing this piece?
@@thegelik4967 No this is way earlier.
1:55
2:35 THAT second reminds me of mephisto waltz
I thought it was mephisto waltz for a second
The first movement and second movement sounds like anxiety
the third movement sounds like depression
the fourth movement sounds like suicide.
The last movement surely doesnt sound like suicide to me:)
Anxiety perhaps.
Although this is highly subjective and personal...
I always imagined the last movement to be - or did I read it somewhere? - people having left the funeral, the grave is there by itself, alone, it is windy and leaves are waving in the wind uncalmly
@@modolucciI imagined it like a emptiness after dead
6:20
10:27
Anyone notice how Rachmaninoff uses the same chord progression from movement 3 ( 11:12 ) in the last movement of his piece The Bells?
Rach had great respect for Chopin!
@@ethancolmancomposer I like to call him Chopin Premium sometimes! (A la “RUclips Premium” or “Disney+” etc haha)
2:03 chopin invented jazz
nope, it was previously invented by beethoven in his sonata nr 32 op 111, second movement
@@CMario73 im tilting more at the harmony. I get what you mean, the rhythm resembles jazz, or more like ragtime tbh but other than that the harmony doesn’t
@@CMario73 he maybe "invented" swing, not jazz as a whole.
Also obviously @jonathan130 is wrong, there is almost nothing jazz here
13:47
13:46
Bellissimo
I've always wondered how long it takes an average graduated pianist to learn an "average" piano Sonata. (I know it varies according to difficulty levels, technique, duration/size of the sonata and movement(s) count)
I just want to know the most average, more or less/ give or take time that it takes to learn (not master it) let's say... a Beethoven's sonata movement, or even this Chopin Sonata 1st movement.
Does anybody knows the answer??? (Very appreciated!)
🌻 😊
악보가 있는 연주로 들으니까 더 좋고 대단해보이네용... 2악정 어떻게 저 속도로 치면서 표현을 하는지 몸의 구조가 궁금할 따름 중력의 저항을 안받는건지... 특히 쇼팽 소나타는 테크닉,표현 둘다 너무 어려운데 1-4악장 모두 해석이 정말 충격적으로 좋은 것 같고 테크닉도 사기라서 듣는 사람도 편안한 연주인듯 이게 그렇게 떨었던 콩쿨에서 나온것도 대단하다
11:11 The Batman
I watched the movie and immediately came here to look for this comment
Haha
my butt clenched so hard for so long
Is someone able to explain why the end is the beginning of scherzo 2?
성진 형님 사랑합니다 제자로 받아주세요
11:12 3악장
Forever Chopin! He is the only musician who composed single instrument music in the world.
??
??? :D
?????
13:49 трио в 3ч
0:12
16:26
Il king
11:00
💘❤
第四小節那邊只是單純的雙節號,並不是反覆記號,這影片的樂譜是錯誤的😅
is this piano steinway?
Chopin : need to add the 4rt movement... uhh yep extremely difficult hanon scales that have the main melody hidden in them and its nice for a pianist who is tired after 20 min😊😊
2
Léo
💘💘💘💘💘💘💘💘💘💘❤️🥰
Obrigado Rasta, agora minha mulher me odeia 🙏
Pdf
I think this would have been better as a fantasie instead of a sonata
I’m curious as to why you think that? The piece has a very defined 4-movement structure that to me suits sonata form quite well
@@benana_3melodically, it sounds more of a fantasy than a sonata
Maybe because I listen to classical sonatas than romantique ones
Frederic fucking Chopin
Who's Frédéric, and why is he fucking Chopin?
The GOAT
Actually, I don't like Chopin very much.
@@yuk_notkim7658 I'm sorry for you.
@TheRealRealLudwigvanBeethoven At least I like you. Your sonatas are pretty damn cool. But for Chopin, he barely interests me. Other than his etudes, scherzos, sonatas, ballades, and a few of his nocturnes and waltzes, I just find him to be a little boring.
Chainsaw Man opening?
He skipped a lot of repeats.
I know it's highly romantic but ffs just keep the pace the SAME for THIRTY ******* SECONDS ARGH
Oh, quit complaining, please. If you're going to listen to professional romantic music, you're going to hear shifts in tempo. It's Romanticism, deal with it.
@@hyperactiveofficial8096 To be fair, Chopin himself kept tempo very strictly and practised with a metronome by the music rack, meticulously keeping the rubati in time and only changing the tempo where indicated, expecting the same from his students.
But we do a lot of things playing his music that he wouldn't like and like the sound of them ourselves, so you're right.
@@leoribic1691 Yeah, I see where you're coming from. I always hate getting mad at people like this, but I really think strict tempo can kill a piece of music if it's not leveled out with rubato enough. That isn't always the case, but sometimes it really is lol.
@@hyperactiveofficial8096 True, I still haven't figured out how Chopin was able to play in such strict time and make his music so free and spontaneous in feeling, or how we can do the same when we play him. There has to be a way, I just have no idea what it is either.
@@leoribic1691 I think Arthur Rubinstein's recordings are the closest you'll get to what you're describing. A sort of punctual obedience to the tempo but a free spirit, nonetheless.
I want my gf like this ( she needs to B flat minor)
Cho , pssss....ti manca la femmina. compreso. cercala.
Chopin shouldn't be played like that. Voices are mixed. Pedal use is excessive.
Vim parar aqui pelo story do @pergunteaorasta
13:47
1:53
0:12
6:20 10:26
💘❤
13:48
1:28
13:48
3:03
1:47
13:48
2:00
13:47