What is interesting is that she is not compromising technique for speed which a lot of players do and mess up the piece . Every note is clear in her playing.
It's way to slow. Also she makes a blatant mistake at 1:59 despite how slow it is. 10 4 is standard at Chopin competitions to perform and 100% of contestants perform it faster and better. I do think Yuja is currently the world's greatest pianist. However, I think you're incapable of judging her objectively because of her current star power. THE ABOVE PERFORMANCE IS TRASH!
@@debussy843 You're an id.. The original commenter made the greatest comment on this page. This is a child playing this performance is wonderful and very very impressive.
I disagree. I don't think there's much of a point comparing her performance here to more mature musicians. The thing I find really cool about this video is that we see the technical foundation being laid for what will later become awesome virtuosic ability. Say what you will about Yuja Wang, I don't think anyone can deny that her playing is anything short of incredible.
The foundation is already there, i practice and learn this etude and she is at the level of a 17 year very good student here, but she is 11 and her technique is already without flaws while some people will play it faster with less advanced technique which is actually worth much less.
the rhythm the tempo is amazingly superb!even better than most of the mature players...despite it can be played a little faster, for a child to play the hard piece effortlessly with musicality is something very touching. A Yuja fan
I love how its played with "simplicity". I can't really think of a better term. Its not blazing fast or flowy or "pointy". Lots to appreciate in this performance
@@eduard6266 Yes the simplicity that still underlies her playing to today; I believe this simplicity contributes to the incredible clarity of her notes which is such a trademark of her playing nowadays.
Her musical perception was amazing for someone at her age. I think you need to have learnt the piece yourself in order to fully appreciate her performance here.
I was recently intoduced to Yuja playing piano by a very special person in my heart. Seeing her here so young and talented as touched my heart more through her passion.
Here, we see an old soul in the person of a young and gifted child. Here, we see the making of what would later become a great pianist, and, more importantly (thank God!), a fine musician. Yuja, I pray you NEVER lose that wonderful fidelity and sensitivity you have toward the music. You are a true mistress of the art, and always such a joy to listen to!
I think it's quite admirable that she chose to perform it at a slow speed with complete control... Many performers of her technical abilities (at the time) would have chosen to butcher it faster.
Yes, almost all pianists butcher it by prioritizing speed over clarity and musicality. For example Annique Gottler. I in fact consider this slower performance much better because it does not destroy the composition.
the first time i heard this etude was on a cheap supermarket CD played by Sylvia Capova. It turned out to be my favourite interpretation, and Yuja Wang here plays it in the same manner.
@Rebecca627 She mainly studied with Prof LING Yuan. Prof ZHOU Guangren also gave her guidance. Both are from the Central Conservatory of Music, Beijing, China. Wang Yuja is born to an artist family. Her mother is a dancer and her father a musician (Chinese folklore).
Yes i am practicing this very etude and was surprised at the level of detail she put in dynamics. I know which passages are difficult and she already had a better technique than me then, i am particularly impressed by the amount of clear sound she can produce. i am learning from this twelve year old.
Chopin wrote his 24 etudes specifically to challenge future pianists to prove, or fail to prove, that they were "complete pianists". Each etude forces the pianist to demonstrate one or or more different skills. This is one of them - one down, 23 to go.
@@camitful I agree with you, but Chopin in-comprehensively screwed up by putting impractically fast tempo markings in his etudes that destroy the musicality of the pieces. 99% of pianists feel obliged to sacrifice clarity and anything to get to the marked tempo. Here this twelve year old understood the music itself tells the correct tempo cannot be break neck speed. I personally believe Chopin did this because of career breaking competition from rivals, and certainly did not play it at destructive tempo. Like putting a deadlock on his Etudes to keep others away from it. It didn't work with Liszt, and my guess is that Liszt ignored the tempo markings and found the tempo that suited him, probably fast but not the incorrectly fast marked tempi from Chopin that destroy the music.
@brtn460y any type of "talent" or skill can be trained. She's young but that doesn't mean she hasn't spent as much time learning this piece as anybody else who can play it.
Les 30 qui n'aiment pas osent juger un enfant de 11 ans alors que secrètement ils auraient "rêver" de faire pareil à cette âge... Quelle dommage qu'il y a tant de jalousie dans ce monde !... The 30 who do not like dare to judge an 11 year old child while secretly they would "dream" to do the same at this age ... What a shame that there is so much jealousy in this world!
Oui c'est déplorable. Moi je suis ravi de voir cette vidéo et qui est un exemple de bon jeu au piano sans vouloir griller un feu rouge avec la vitesse. J'aime beaucoup comme elle joue ici mieux que certains adultes, la vitesse ne fait pas le bon pianiste. Et j'ose dire que j'espère pouvoir jouer cette étude même aussi bien car je suis en dessous de ce tempo et je suis bien plus agé que Yuja Wang aujourd'hui.
I want to see her play today--with those same pigtails, but as an adult--and--TO HELL with the CRITICS. (They can'y even play "chopsticks" well, heh-heh).
@xAnonymousss indeed true...well i am 16,i started real practising a year ago and that means every day at min. 2 and half to four hours with breaks...and i enjoy everyday of practice...
@xAnonymousss yes,main isnt the too much practicing,all piano legends were practicing from childhood,but its the MENTALITY of asian people. They are taught to no showing of emotions from childhood.
Anyone knows who her piano teacher was in China? Are her parents musicians as well? The interpretations, techniques, pedaling, all are very good! She probably showed her talent in very young age. Her teacher at that time should have been given half of the credit!
She spent a lot of time right her teacher since age 7. Her mother was a dancer. Her father would weird transcriptions of music from listening to audio. So he was musically trained.
Your comment is 11 years old, recent interview give the answers to these question. Her father was a musician percusionist and her mother a ballet dancer. He mother wanted her to be a dancer too. She said she had to be very careful how she played when her father was around especially on rythm, she said he was kind of a 'nazi' in a laughing way. She doesn't mention her teacher but for sure whoever taught her first deserves recogniztion. Speed is not the goal, clarity is.
Este video muestra lo importante de la tecnica para poder llegar a ser un gran pianista, no es lo principal la velocidad con que pueda tocar, sino que cada notita sea ejecutada perfectamente para tener una limpia ejecución. Esto requiere de mucha paciencia pero vean los resultados, vean a Yuja ahora=D!!
Though i agree great talent in an instrument can only be achieved by practicing. Interpretations however is a different topic. In order to play an outstanding interpretation you need musical talent. That's why there are so few legendary interpreters out there...
@xAnonymousss I'm glad you practice an hour or 2 and have good techniques, that's why Asians like Yuja gives recitals at Carnegie Hall while no one cares about you.
No, this is the right speed, i disagree with Chopn's tempo markings, they were meant to discourage rivals (but it didn't work for Liszt, haha. Even so i think Liszt just ignored the tempo and played at whatever tempo he found suitable = slower). Chopin had strong rivals and he had to protect his niche, and i completely believe he put these incorrectly fast tempi on his Etudes to sabotage rivals getting interested. Nothing worse than having his etudes played by rivals, and think of it, this strategem would keep them off them. We'll never know which etudes he played in concert, (except we know he played Op 25 n1 in Scotland). Almost quasi certain not at the crazy marked tempi. It's not a problem of possible or not possible, but all who think the tempo is mandatory destroys the piece and turn it into bad pianism.
I'm thinking: "Awesome!! I can play this piece faster than Yuja Wang!!"... but then I realize she was 10 and I'm 22 lol. She is amazing; just listened the the Prok3 on youtube... damn.
Also speed is a mistake. So many pianist think playing faster puts them on top, it doesn't. Interpretation is more important than speed. Speedsters often hide lack of talent. Here she plays slower and better than many adult recorded pianist, in my honest opinion. I am not born yesterday, i'm over twice your age.
So clean! Every note is fully realized, and the musical architecture is rock solid. Of course she plays at a slower tempo that a grownup. Her hands are barely big enough to handle the piece. What impresses me the most is the absolute musical honesty, the intelligence, the clarity.
uliwidmaier, quote: «Of course she plays at a slower tempo that a grownup.» Unfortunately, we find some exceptions. There are a number of pianists who flirt with the whole beat theory. Take a closer look at «AuthenticSound.» Wim Winters plays several of Chopin’s etudes, but much slower than many children. Compare Wim Winters’ version of Chopin opus 10 no 2 with Michael Andreas Hearinger, 8 years old, and with a teddy bear on the piano! Version 1:52. Sure, there are some minor mistakes, but still! We find a great version with Michael Andreas, 9 years old, and the teddy bear is home. You can also compare Wim Winters’ opus 10 no 4 with Umi Garrett, age 11, version 2:17, she also with a teddy bear on the piano! «It is from children and drunk people that we hear the truth.» Let’s skip the alcohol, and watching a number of kids play Chopin’s etudes much faster than whole beat tempo. The virtuosos of 200 years ago had 10-15 more years to practice to a virtuoso level, then it is illogical that children play mch faster than the virtuosos of that time.
@brtn460y you can't say she might turn out to be the best, b.c there are so many ways to define a great pianist. some are known for their technique like berezovsky, others for their passion like lang lang, and some who just try to attempt the impossible like hamelin and his circus gallop. it's very unlikely she will be best in technique and emotion.
@Axotrotl yes, they were, but you, honestly, don't need 5hours+ per day to play good. i practice about an hour or 2. but not straight. i take 5mins to eat something, i take 5mins to smoke a cigarette, i take 5mins to just hang around, i take 5mins to listen the the music i'm playing and still i have quite good technics and rubato, with quite some feeling. the thing is, it's HOW you practice not how long. and that's the thing asians will never understand.
In her masterclass Wang Yujia concluded her lesson to a pianist: don't repeat the piece too much to end up shitting. Before, think a lot what you want to deliver, and then play it well
@hanxikongfu Not to be rude but how many people inhabited the world when Mozart was a wunderkind? At that time western music had not spread to the east. It is only in our time that every major city in the world sports a symphony orchestra, and RUclips postings reach nearly household. It should not be surprising that there are a great deal more prodigies amazing we ordinary folk not only from China but even from Pittsburgh, Chicago, and LA. (Evancho, Bear, and Garrett.)
Can we stop talking about Yuja Wang as if she has been tortured by her parents in piano just because she is really good and asian? If this kid was white or any other race except Asian people wouldn't jump to this conclusion so quickly! Sure there are horrible parents in China, there are horrible parents everywhere. Asians are not all the same! People are not all the same!
I've read that Heifetz was exploited by HIS "Asian" parents. And I think it accounts for his moroseness. Seems Yuja got over it somehow: I've never seen a more joyful performer
@ofiterpunte huh but NO child has to play such a diffcult piece,or any chopiin piece,which is tough for all adults....theres really small chance for asian that he will once play normally
@@canon5789 That is not a shallow comment because she is playing her sexuality big time to attract audience, even though she does not need that extra but i love her beautiful dresses and colors. I just regret she pushes it quite explicitely, i admit i've thought of making love to her because of it. She is probably copying the georgian French pianist doing it. Some might see nothing wrong with that except that it's not part of the music.
What is interesting is that she is not compromising technique for speed which a lot of players do and mess up the piece . Every note is clear in her playing.
It's way to slow. Also she makes a blatant mistake at 1:59 despite how slow it is. 10 4 is standard at Chopin competitions to perform and 100% of contestants perform it faster and better. I do think Yuja is currently the world's greatest pianist. However, I think you're incapable of judging her objectively because of her current star power. THE ABOVE PERFORMANCE IS TRASH!
Very very good point, that's no doubt her teacher's accomplishment and an important point to take away for students. Clarity not speed.
@@debussy843 You're an id.. The original commenter made the greatest comment on this page. This is a child playing this performance is wonderful and very very impressive.
@@debussy843would you do it better at 10? I’d love to see it! And even the greatest pianists play wrong notes in this piece.
@@debussy843 It's not too slow. Chopin would have been proud! I'd bet she plays it better than you even at age 11.
I get tears of joy in my eyes when I listen to her. She was fantastic then, she is georgous today. I like her and her play.
This is the type of performance that defines natural talent! She just might turn out to be the best in the world!
I think she is...
She is. 😎🎹
Yeah…
she is...
Joke ... Swing and a miss (unfortunately).
I disagree. I don't think there's much of a point comparing her performance here to more mature musicians. The thing I find really cool about this video is that we see the technical foundation being laid for what will later become awesome virtuosic ability. Say what you will about Yuja Wang, I don't think anyone can deny that her playing is anything short of incredible.
The foundation is already there, i practice and learn this etude and she is at the level of a 17 year very good student here, but she is 11 and her technique is already without flaws while some people will play it faster with less advanced technique which is actually worth much less.
the rhythm the tempo is amazingly superb!even better than most of the mature players...despite it can be played a little faster, for a child to play the hard piece effortlessly with musicality is something very touching.
A Yuja fan
I love how its played with "simplicity". I can't really think of a better term. Its not blazing fast or flowy or "pointy". Lots to appreciate in this performance
@@eduard6266 Yes the simplicity that still underlies her playing to today; I believe this simplicity contributes to the incredible clarity of her notes which is such a trademark of her playing nowadays.
Why thumbs up???
She is the very best pianist in the world!
This rendition shows a level of understanding very uncommon for a twelve year old.
Her musical perception was amazing for someone at her age. I think you need to have learnt the piece yourself in order to fully appreciate her performance here.
i would like to hear how she plays it today
piano0b Go on Twitter & ask her. She might include it in another programme.
Search for her name she playes so goooooood
For real???? She’s a first class pianist, you don’t know Yuja Wang???
I’d also like to hear her playing Chopin Etudes today!
I was recently intoduced to Yuja playing piano by a very special person in my heart. Seeing her here so young and talented as touched my heart more through her passion.
Here, we see an old soul in the person of a young and gifted child. Here, we see the making of what would later become a great pianist, and, more importantly (thank God!), a fine musician. Yuja, I pray you NEVER lose that wonderful fidelity and sensitivity you have toward the music. You are a true mistress of the art, and always such a joy to listen to!
I think it's quite admirable that she chose to perform it at a slow speed with complete control... Many performers of her technical abilities (at the time) would have chosen to butcher it faster.
Yes, almost all pianists butcher it by prioritizing speed over clarity and musicality. For example Annique Gottler. I in fact consider this slower performance much better because it does not destroy the composition.
Crystal clear! One of her hallmarks.
O absolutely love the fact that unlike other prodigies who would rush through everything she actually picked a good tempo.
Speed was appropriate for this child. Wonderful ...
the first time i heard this etude was on a cheap supermarket CD played by Sylvia Capova. It turned out to be my favourite interpretation, and Yuja Wang here plays it in the same manner.
@Rebecca627 She mainly studied with Prof LING Yuan. Prof ZHOU Guangren also gave her guidance. Both are from the Central Conservatory of Music, Beijing, China.
Wang Yuja is born to an artist family. Her mother is a dancer and her father a musician (Chinese folklore).
Out of this world talents! More than amazing!
When I saw the thumnail I was expecting her to play twinkle twinkle litte star stuff..
Yuja, you truly are amazing!
Keep up the good work.
Love from Anna.
Definitely the best of the world!
So amazingly clean and strong!!!!
This is excellent.
PERFECTION!!!! BOOKMARKED!
every single note is under her total control. genius!
Yes i am practicing this very etude and was surprised at the level of detail she put in dynamics. I know which passages are difficult and she already had a better technique than me then, i am particularly impressed by the amount of clear sound she can produce. i am learning from this twelve year old.
just perfect
suddenly im twelve years old yuja wang
...sei grande Yujia ....grazie di esistere!!!!
Yuja got my admiration !!!
Superbe jeu, très juste.
Chopin wrote his 24 etudes specifically to challenge future pianists to prove, or fail to prove, that they were "complete pianists". Each etude forces the pianist to demonstrate one or or more different skills. This is one of them - one down, 23 to go.
Chopin don't wanted to run to much speed.
He sayed : i don't understund why some pianist play to much speed the my music
Claudio Arrau don't played to much speed the music of Chopin , so we can understund really the music of Chopin.
The true hard core of piano literature is clememti etude
@@camitful I agree with you, but Chopin in-comprehensively screwed up by putting impractically fast tempo markings in his etudes that destroy the musicality of the pieces. 99% of pianists feel obliged to sacrifice clarity and anything to get to the marked tempo. Here this twelve year old understood the music itself tells the correct tempo cannot be break neck speed.
I personally believe Chopin did this because of career breaking competition from rivals, and certainly did not play it at destructive tempo. Like putting a deadlock on his Etudes to keep others away from it. It didn't work with Liszt, and my guess is that Liszt ignored the tempo markings and found the tempo that suited him, probably fast but not the incorrectly fast marked tempi from Chopin that destroy the music.
wow!!!!!
אין לי מילים רק 5! וואו מדהים אהבתי איך עשיתת!!!!!
she is a prodigy ! amazing !
Omg, es realmente increíble
@brtn460y any type of "talent" or skill can be trained. She's young but that doesn't mean she hasn't spent as much time learning this piece as anybody else who can play it.
OMG This is... wonderfull... a child... woooww excellent
Les 30 qui n'aiment pas osent juger un enfant de 11 ans alors que secrètement ils auraient "rêver" de faire pareil à cette âge...
Quelle dommage qu'il y a tant de jalousie dans ce monde !...
The 30 who do not like dare to judge an 11 year old child while secretly they would "dream" to do the same at this age ...
What a shame that there is so much jealousy in this world!
Oui c'est déplorable. Moi je suis ravi de voir cette vidéo et qui est un exemple de bon jeu au piano sans vouloir griller un feu rouge avec la vitesse. J'aime beaucoup comme elle joue ici mieux que certains adultes, la vitesse ne fait pas le bon pianiste. Et j'ose dire que j'espère pouvoir jouer cette étude même aussi bien car je suis en dessous de ce tempo et je suis bien plus agé que Yuja Wang aujourd'hui.
I want to see her play today--with those same pigtails, but as an adult--and--TO HELL with the CRITICS. (They can'y even play "chopsticks" well, heh-heh).
Beautiful!!!
@xAnonymousss indeed true...well i am 16,i started real practising a year ago and that means every day at min. 2 and half to four hours with breaks...and i enjoy everyday of practice...
I think Yuja should stun the audience by wearing this dress again...😉
fantastic sei veramente eccezzionale
Grande già da bambina!!!!
@xAnonymousss yes,main isnt the too much practicing,all piano legends were practicing from childhood,but its the MENTALITY of asian people. They are taught to no showing of emotions from childhood.
Little racist, no? Are we to assume that all Slavic people are taught from childhood to adore dictators? 🙄
Потрясающая!!!!!
Wow
Wow.. disregarding the tempo everybody else plays this at, this is a perfect performance O.O And I know someone named Yuja who plays piano too...
Anyone knows who her piano teacher was in China? Are her parents musicians as well? The interpretations, techniques, pedaling, all are very good! She probably showed her talent in very young age. Her teacher at that time should have been given half of the credit!
She spent a lot of time right her teacher since age 7. Her mother was a dancer. Her father would weird transcriptions of music from listening to audio. So he was musically trained.
Your comment is 11 years old, recent interview give the answers to these question. Her father was a musician percusionist and her mother a ballet dancer. He mother wanted her to be a dancer too. She said she had to be very careful how she played when her father was around especially on rythm, she said he was kind of a 'nazi' in a laughing way. She doesn't mention her teacher but for sure whoever taught her first deserves recogniztion. Speed is not the goal, clarity is.
perfect!
Este video muestra lo importante de la tecnica para poder llegar a ser un gran pianista, no es lo principal la velocidad con que pueda tocar, sino que cada notita sea ejecutada perfectamente para tener una limpia ejecución.
Esto requiere de mucha paciencia pero vean los resultados, vean a Yuja ahora=D!!
I wish Wang Yuja will wear the same dress when she plays the piano today.
Genius
Though i agree great talent in an instrument can only be achieved by practicing. Interpretations however is a different topic. In order to play an outstanding interpretation you need musical talent. That's why there are so few legendary interpreters out there...
Just remember - no one ever went broke underestimating the taste of the American public!
wow what a great pianist, she should become a professinal
She is a professional, one of the best and most famous in the world. Check out some of her current videos.
Base on her age. She is really good! 👍👍
@xAnonymousss I'm glad you practice an hour or 2 and have good techniques, that's why Asians like Yuja gives recitals at Carnegie Hall while no one cares about you.
She's come so far :')
Try the speed of 1.25x. I love it.
No, this is the right speed, i disagree with Chopn's tempo markings, they were meant to discourage rivals (but it didn't work for Liszt, haha. Even so i think Liszt just ignored the tempo and played at whatever tempo he found suitable = slower). Chopin had strong rivals and he had to protect his niche, and i completely believe he put these incorrectly fast tempi on his Etudes to sabotage rivals getting interested. Nothing worse than having his etudes played by rivals, and think of it, this strategem would keep them off them. We'll never know which etudes he played in concert, (except we know he played Op 25 n1 in Scotland). Almost quasi certain not at the crazy marked tempi. It's not a problem of possible or not possible, but all who think the tempo is mandatory destroys the piece and turn it into bad pianism.
@@ericastier1646You disagree with the composers tempo marking of which he composed it to be?.. .
@@Thomas11611 Is your IQ < 50 ? Do you think you can change what i wrote with one stupid sentence ? lol think again.
I'm thinking: "Awesome!! I can play this piece faster than Yuja Wang!!"... but then I realize she was 10 and I'm 22 lol.
She is amazing; just listened the the Prok3 on youtube... damn.
😂🤣
Also speed is a mistake. So many pianist think playing faster puts them on top, it doesn't. Interpretation is more important than speed. Speedsters often hide lack of talent. Here she plays slower and better than many adult recorded pianist, in my honest opinion. I am not born yesterday, i'm over twice your age.
@ericastier1646 agree completely. Also I just realized my comment is over a decade old.. insane haha
@@npelletier89 oh wow, it didn't notice. i guess you've changed. I am glad you agree.
So clean! Every note is fully realized, and the musical architecture is rock solid. Of course she plays at a slower tempo that a grownup. Her hands are barely big enough to handle the piece. What impresses me the most is the absolute musical honesty, the intelligence, the clarity.
uliwidmaier, quote: «Of course she plays at a slower tempo that a grownup.» Unfortunately, we find some exceptions. There are a number of pianists who flirt with the whole beat theory. Take a closer look at «AuthenticSound.» Wim Winters plays several of Chopin’s etudes, but much slower than many children. Compare Wim Winters’ version of Chopin opus 10 no 2 with Michael Andreas Hearinger, 8 years old, and with a teddy bear on the piano! Version 1:52. Sure, there are some minor mistakes, but still! We find a great version with Michael Andreas, 9 years old, and the teddy bear is home. You can also compare Wim Winters’ opus 10 no 4 with Umi Garrett, age 11, version 2:17, she also with a teddy bear on the piano! «It is from children and drunk people that we hear the truth.» Let’s skip the alcohol, and watching a number of kids play Chopin’s etudes much faster than whole beat tempo. The virtuosos of 200 years ago had 10-15 more years to practice to a virtuoso level, then it is illogical that children play mch faster than the virtuosos of that time.
10 years old, I am pretty sure
***** I am Chinese and I know that, 14? She was in USA when she was 14...
She was 11 in that video, and that was recorded in Vienna in 1998, she was born February 10 1987 in Beijing !..
神童ですね…。素晴らしいです😀
@Sophiestelle I never said i put the time in I don't own a piano
@brtn460y you can't say she might turn out to be the best, b.c there are so many ways to define a great pianist. some are known for their technique like berezovsky, others for their passion like lang lang, and some who just try to attempt the impossible like hamelin and his circus gallop. it's very unlikely she will be best in technique and emotion.
good
Of course this is brillant. But it's nothing compared to what she does today!
and that's not the point..
imagine how she can play it now
Как эта умница играла ещё ребенком!
I must destroy my piano now!
😂🤣
brillant comment, even if funny.
He played "Music".
Sviatoslav Richer in slow motion hahahah xD!!!! =D!!!
@brtn460y I think she probably is now!
probably practicing 40 hours a day
Anyone know what year this was recorded?
Jim Hendricks 12
maybe
1998
11 yo
@Sophiestelle And what is there to be jealous of? I do not understand
How old was this? WOW. lol
She devoured that..
小时候像个乖乖女,长大了更像桀骜不驯的叛逆者🤣
I think this girl is genetically engineered.
genetically engineered..she just has it all..
Just genetically gifted with perfect ears, brain, hands, body and deep soul as a bonus
@Axotrotl yes, they were, but you, honestly, don't need 5hours+ per day to play good. i practice about an hour or 2. but not straight. i take 5mins to eat something, i take 5mins to smoke a cigarette, i take 5mins to just hang around, i take 5mins to listen the the music i'm playing and still i have quite good technics and rubato, with quite some feeling. the thing is, it's HOW you practice not how long. and that's the thing asians will never understand.
In her masterclass Wang Yujia concluded her lesson to a pianist: don't repeat the piece too much to end up shitting. Before, think a lot what you want to deliver, and then play it well
Bosendorfer 290
@hanxikongfu Not to be rude but how many people inhabited the world when Mozart was a wunderkind? At that time western music had not spread to the east. It is only in our time that every major city in the world sports a symphony orchestra, and RUclips postings reach nearly household. It should not be surprising that there are a great deal more prodigies amazing we ordinary folk not only from China but even from Pittsburgh, Chicago, and LA. (Evancho, Bear, and Garrett.)
Just a little little little bit to slow :D
Too
This is closer to chopins original tempo
Can we stop talking about Yuja Wang as if she has been tortured by her parents in piano just because she is really good and asian? If this kid was white or any other race except Asian people wouldn't jump to this conclusion so quickly! Sure there are horrible parents in China, there are horrible parents everywhere. Asians are not all the same! People are not all the same!
I've read that Heifetz was exploited by HIS "Asian" parents. And I think it accounts for his moroseness. Seems Yuja got over it somehow: I've never seen a more joyful performer
Does anyone know how old she was here?
At the time she was dressed decently
Put in 1.25 speed sounds normal
@WJE37FCSM Yeah, so she's merely one in a million not one in a billion. One in a million are a dime a dozen. (according to you).
@ofiterpunte huh but NO child has to play such a diffcult piece,or any chopiin piece,which is tough for all adults....theres really small chance for asian that he will once play normally
that's what all people say..
i mean transcendental etude at 11 is just sickly ridiculous (in a good way)
transcendental etudes are over rated. Some pianist that play them positively cannot perform the difficult Chopin Etudes.
What beautiful piano toucher, i think natural talent really exists after i have seen this
@goaliedude32 So, Mister, why you don't play it by your self, and put your video in youtube? ...I think you are jealous!
www.gettyimages.at/detail/nachrichtenfoto/yuja-wang-nachrichtenfoto/541093148?adppopup=true - so schnell wird aus einem Kind eine Frau!
Are we looking at the new Martha Argerich? (this is beyond the credible. Put her in the Guiness Book of Records.)
ASIANS ROCK AT PIANO! lol
Her dresses have less than half the fabric now than they did when she was 12...
Jesus Christ, dude. Don't be so evil. He was making a joke....and honestly he was probably right.
shallow comment
@@canon5789 That is not a shallow comment because she is playing her sexuality big time to attract audience, even though she does not need that extra but i love her beautiful dresses and colors. I just regret she pushes it quite explicitely, i admit i've thought of making love to her because of it. She is probably copying the georgian French pianist doing it. Some might see nothing wrong with that except that it's not part of the music.
wow, a prodigy but arrau played transcendental etude at age 11
so what ?! many Chopin Etudes are harder than liszt transcendental etudes.
How old was she then? o___o
About 11 years old