@sibarit101 , no, I am just his biggest fan.😁 He's descendants did some important musicological things about him (in 2004, I think). I am a Serb, and he was Croat (The Croatian Mozart), and I am so proud of him and his violin concertos. He is quite forgotten, so I am trying to change things... I am a pianist, but Jarnović composed primarily violin music, there is a small number of his piano works (just few of them are for piano solo, the rest are violin sonats with piano accompaniment). So, if I can't play his music, I can promote him by writing, talking, sending RUclips links to my friends... Thanks for asking. I was honored that you asked me that. 😁 Велики поздрав из Београда!
@Composer Ivan Mane Jarnovic ... thanks for the reply! I like his violin concerts, I've already posted two of them, but there are so few recordings! Maybe you will be able to do something from this point of view as well ... anyway, I wish you a lot of success in everything you do, including in composition, of course!
@sibarit101 thank you, I wish you success with your channel. It is one of my favourites! I watched your videos with his concertos (no 1 and no 5) . I'm glad you've posted them.
Thanks so much Sibarit. Somehow I missed out on discovering Ries, until now, thanks to you. This concerto is really beautiful. I'll have to explore more of his works, I notice you have quite a few on your channel.
Every time I listen to Ries I discover new things, new details and nuances This time I believe I heard these new things 1) In mvt#1 a citation of LvB second theme of violin concerto. A fragment citation, less than a beat, but it's there 2) genial winds opening of mvt#2, mwllow and virile at once 3) OK, middle movement cadenzas I noticed after your footnotes....not my merit...... 4) Mvt#3 is very much piano oriented with orchestra playing a minor role vs mvt#1 & 2. And its rhapsodic character stems from Daddy Haydn directly into Kid Liszt (Liszt of Hungarian national music) passing through Brother Hummel .... All in all Ries is .... Ries .... son of his time and sometimes projected into the future of full romanticism
Thank you very much, Pietro Landri. You wrote here something that sums it all up: "All in all Ries is .... Ries." That's how he will be for me - RIES! And I will always enjoy listening to his music and at certain passages I will feel a tear on my cheek.... Anyway, he will remain my big favorite (I know this sounds like a pleonasm ... :) ) Thanks again!
Ries was one of my first discoveries way back when I'd just started to explore the unjustly lesser-known Early Romantics; and I've loved his music ever since. The one concerto that gets a little exposure on radio and even in the concert hall is No. 3 in C sharp minor. My own favourite is No. 8 in A flat major whose opening invokes the broad sweep of the Rhine. And by the way, his Concerto No. 1 is for violin, not piano: curious numbering.
Thanks for the comment, Ries is my favorite composer, as a result I know all his recorded music. All music is masterful, regardless of the genre - concerts (violin and piano), symphonies, chamber music and other pieces for piano and orchestra. My regret is that although I posted all his piano concertos, concerto no. 9 was blocked by the record label. But I will try again. And I have another regret: although his music is well received, even very well, in our times, there are very few recordings. Do contemporary instrumentalists consider this music below their level of interpretation or does this music still remain unknown to them? Thanks again, I'm glad you like Ries' music.
@@sibarit101 I agree completely! I've listened to and thoroughly enjoyed his impressive No. 9 in D minor, too: I must have caught it here on RUclips before it was taken down 😠.
Thanks for comment. Ries was Beethoven's pupil and secretary, I think it's absolutely normal to take over some of Beethoven's orchestration style. Any diligent and talented student would have done that. Even Beethoven took something from his teachers and so did, for example, Pleyel with Haydn's music.
Fantastique concerto, énergique comme le laisse supposer le visage du compositeur talentueux. 🎶💓🎶✨
Велика подяка за можливість слухати маловідомих авторів! Сподіваюсь і надалі на такі зустрічі. Дякую!
Many thanks from me too!
I came across this at WCPE one evening and I loved it! Thank you for sharing!
Glad you enjoyed it!
This is one of his very best.
Ries!!! As usual! Fantastic was that day when I discovered him while searching for german composers from Romanticism. Wonderful music.
I agree with you, all his compositions are wonderful!
Fantastic concerto!
Thank you very much, I'm glad you liked it! (excuse me for asking: are you a descendant of composer Ivan Mane Jarnović from the 18th century?)
@sibarit101 , no, I am just his biggest fan.😁 He's descendants did some important musicological things about him (in 2004, I think). I am a Serb, and he was Croat (The Croatian Mozart), and I am so proud of him and his violin concertos. He is quite forgotten, so I am trying to change things... I am a pianist, but Jarnović composed primarily violin music, there is a small number of his piano works (just few of them are for piano solo, the rest are violin sonats with piano accompaniment). So, if I can't play his music, I can promote him by writing, talking, sending RUclips links to my friends... Thanks for asking. I was honored that you asked me that. 😁
Велики поздрав из Београда!
@Composer Ivan Mane Jarnovic ... thanks for the reply! I like his violin concerts, I've already posted two of them, but there are so few recordings! Maybe you will be able to do something from this point of view as well ... anyway, I wish you a lot of success in everything you do, including in composition, of course!
@sibarit101 thank you, I wish you success with your channel. It is one of my favourites! I watched your videos with his concertos (no 1 and no 5) . I'm glad you've posted them.
The text description was very helpful.
Thank you!
@@sibarit101 happy new year to you and thank you for your channel
@@miteme Thank you again!
Happy New Year for all of us!
Повторно слушаю все 8 концертов Фердинанда Риса и хочу выбрать лучший на Ваш вкус
Thank you very much!
@@sibarit101 Не все блогеры реагируют на комментарии Вы всегда отвечаете это приятно и достойно уважения
@@valeriykhasyanov9011It seems natural to me to thank and show gratitude when someone appreciates the music I post. So thank you again!
Thanks so much Sibarit. Somehow I missed out on discovering Ries, until now, thanks to you. This concerto is really beautiful. I'll have to explore more of his works, I notice you have quite a few on your channel.
Thank you! I am very happy that you will enter the world of Ries music!
Every time I listen to Ries I discover new things, new details and nuances
This time I believe I heard these new things
1) In mvt#1 a citation of LvB second theme of violin concerto. A fragment citation, less than a beat, but it's there
2) genial winds opening of mvt#2, mwllow and virile at once
3) OK, middle movement cadenzas I noticed after your footnotes....not my merit......
4) Mvt#3 is very much piano oriented with orchestra playing a minor role vs mvt#1 & 2. And its rhapsodic character stems from Daddy Haydn directly into Kid Liszt (Liszt of Hungarian national music) passing through Brother Hummel ....
All in all Ries is .... Ries .... son of his time and sometimes projected into the future of full romanticism
Thank you very much, Pietro Landri. You wrote here something that sums it all up: "All in all Ries is .... Ries." That's how he will be for me - RIES! And I will always enjoy listening to his music and at certain passages I will feel a tear on my cheek.... Anyway, he will remain my big favorite (I know this sounds like a pleonasm ... :) ) Thanks again!
Ries was one of my first discoveries way back when I'd just started to explore the unjustly lesser-known Early Romantics; and I've loved his music ever since.
The one concerto that gets a little exposure on radio and even in the concert hall is No. 3 in C sharp minor. My own favourite is No. 8 in A flat major whose opening invokes the broad sweep of the Rhine.
And by the way, his Concerto No. 1 is for violin, not piano: curious numbering.
Thanks for the comment, Ries is my favorite composer, as a result I know all his recorded music. All music is masterful, regardless of the genre - concerts (violin and piano), symphonies, chamber music and other pieces for piano and orchestra. My regret is that although I posted all his piano concertos, concerto no. 9 was blocked by the record label. But I will try again. And I have another regret: although his music is well received, even very well, in our times, there are very few recordings. Do contemporary instrumentalists consider this music below their level of interpretation or does this music still remain unknown to them?
Thanks again, I'm glad you like Ries' music.
@@sibarit101 I agree completely! I've listened to and thoroughly enjoyed his impressive No. 9 in D minor, too: I must have caught it here on RUclips before it was taken down 😠.
👏👌
/ very beethovenic to my ears,
esp. in first two minutes /
Thanks for comment. Ries was Beethoven's pupil and secretary, I think it's absolutely normal to take over some of Beethoven's orchestration style. Any diligent and talented student would have done that. Even Beethoven took something from his teachers and so did, for example, Pleyel with Haydn's music.
@@sibarit101 / Thanx for your scholastic view^^ /