Mozart - Piano Sonata No. 18, K.576 (1789) {Ingrid Haebler}

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  • Опубликовано: 23 июл 2024
  • Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (27 January 1756 - 5 December 1791), baptised as Johannes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus Theophilus Mozart, was a prolific and influential composer of the classical era. According to Bartje Bartmans one of the greatest and brightest stars on the firmament.
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    Piano Sonata No. 18 in D major, K.576. Vienna, July 1789
    1. Allegro (0:00)
    2. Adagio (5:28)
    3. Allegretto (10:41)
    Ingrid Haebler, piano
    Description by James Manheim [-]
    Pity the pianist who relies on Mozart's designation of K. 576 as a "leichte Klaviersonate" -- an easy piano sonata. The work was written in 1789, shortly after the composer's return from a largely unsuccessful concert tour of Potsdam, Leipzig, and finally, Berlin, where the sonata may have been aimed at a princess at the Prussian court. Little came of Mozart's journey in the way of fresh commissions, and small wonder: some have suggested that this D major sonata is actually the most difficult of the composer's 18 in technical terms. The technical problems come not in the sprightly thematic material, but in its thoroughly contrapuntal treatment, perhaps inspired by Mozart's visit to Leipzig and his reacquaintance with the dormant but still enormously influential masterpieces of J.S. Bach. The sonata has three movements in the usual fast-slow-fast configuration. The first movement, an Allegro in a jaunty 6/8 time, abounds with imitative entrances that, taken individually, might have come from Bach inventions, but they resolve themselves into chordally accompanied scale material; the music never loses its graceful, Classical flow. This sonata, owing to its horn-call opening, has sometimes been given the nicknames of "Trumpet" or "Hunt," and the work's basic intellectual attraction is established at the outset when this stereotypical figure is unexpectedly subjected to imitation. The second subject area of the exposition is extracted from the opening material in a way Haydn would have been proud of, and the development section is an especially dense contrapuntal essay. The Adagio middle movement, in A major, is a limpid melody gently darkened by chromatic runs, and the Allegretto finale, nearly as contrapuntal as the first movement, sandwiches forte, chromatic, and virtuosic treatments of its main material between the seemingly meek statements of that material that mark off the movement's basic divisions. This was Mozart's last piano sonata, and it perennially appeals both to pianists seeking a Mozartean challenge and to those interested in the point of counterpoint in Mozart's late works.
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Комментарии • 185

  • @matthewclarke5008
    @matthewclarke5008 Год назад +53

    It's scary how much control this requires.

  • @lucasfilipe7664
    @lucasfilipe7664 2 года назад +145

    "Mozart's last piano sonata. Baroque-like counterpoint reminiscent of Bach. It's a challenging piece. The main theme pops out in places where you'd expect a new melody. And when you think there's finally a new melody, it vanishes right away. He makes you wonder how he's going to end it, and then closes the piece with grace. That sense of balance. Mozart isn't someone who can be understood by way of reason." (Chiaki senpai)

  • @aramkhachaturian8043
    @aramkhachaturian8043 3 года назад +102

    Mozart’s music is perfect to listen to in the morning

    • @lubosschelepak7032
      @lubosschelepak7032 3 года назад +9

      Here are so many famous composers in this chat :-)

    • @lubosschelepak7032
      @lubosschelepak7032 3 года назад +8

      Yes. For example Khachaturian or Mozart..🙄 these guys come here very often which is nice from them..

    • @anthonyfromsiny
      @anthonyfromsiny 2 года назад +2

      The third movement of this sonata is awesome to listen to if you are walking along a beach - in the winter, when you are likely to be all alone!

  • @allanfuller1155
    @allanfuller1155 Год назад +18

    We are inundated with all kinds of supersonic Mozart but in my humble opinion Ms. Haebler is the greatest of them all. Her tone, overall sound, pacing and sublime playing is incomparable. There is little ego, but massive Mozart...I do believe that Alfred Brendel has concurred on her Mozart being incomparable as well. Some things are just not meant for mass consumption.

  • @vivaseussonhos
    @vivaseussonhos 3 года назад +686

    This is so good - Because I wrote it.

    • @idkidk1831
      @idkidk1831 3 года назад +47

      I don't remember Mozart being Russian HMMMMMMM

    • @giorgiabuladze772
      @giorgiabuladze772 3 года назад +7

      @@idkidk1831 i agree with you👍

    • @therealrealludwigvanbeethoven
      @therealrealludwigvanbeethoven 3 года назад +29

      @@idkidk1831 Didn't you hear? Even I did. Mozart visited Russia and I came with him last Thursday!

    • @idkidk1831
      @idkidk1831 3 года назад +18

      @@therealrealludwigvanbeethoven how delightful of Mozart! Can he speak Russian though? Was he making ass jokes and simultaneously composing a canon while drunk with vodka?

    • @therealrealludwigvanbeethoven
      @therealrealludwigvanbeethoven 3 года назад +11

      @@idkidk1831 I'm not sure.

  • @jaydenfung1
    @jaydenfung1 3 года назад +113

    So beautiful. I feel like some people don’t like the Classical Era as much as, say, the Romantic Era because it can be less outwardly emotional. I wrote a couple of pages for a class once relating the music of the Classical Era to Beowulf. We were having a discussion about Beowulf as a hero-a perfect hero, that is. No flaws. It makes sense why he is not so relatable, which makes a good story, but I made an argument that while we may not find his story most interesting at first, it is a great highlight of humanity; the perfect hero symbolizes our desires and what we strive to be. What could be more human than that?

    • @jamjam9253
      @jamjam9253 2 года назад +7

      Every era of music is the same expressive in terms of emotions because that's the essence of music. But the romantic era is closer to our 21.st century understanding of music than the classical or baroque era

    • @ruperttmls7985
      @ruperttmls7985 2 года назад +3

      I actually love baroque (Handel, Rameau, Scarlatti, etc)… LOL

    • @jaydenfung1
      @jaydenfung1 2 года назад +1

      Rupert Tmls The Baroque Era is my favourite.

    • @bercaferca4554
      @bercaferca4554 2 года назад

      Yeah we talked about literary romanticism in AP Lang too

    • @maravillaromerojoseadolfo164
      @maravillaromerojoseadolfo164 2 года назад

      I hate Romantics, most of their works, are incomprehensible to me.

  • @aarondrayer548
    @aarondrayer548 3 года назад +14

    My favorite 2nd movement! Thank you !

  • @EGMusic12
    @EGMusic12 Год назад +10

    1:04 Such a beautiful melody!

    • @user-yg5qd8lz7q
      @user-yg5qd8lz7q 2 месяца назад +1

      Я, образно говоря, схожу с ума от музыки МОЦАРТА.. Она небесно~прекрасна!!!!

  • @rjuttemeijer
    @rjuttemeijer 7 месяцев назад +8

    The most beautiful performance of this sonata I have ever heard. Brava!

    • @guitz7418
      @guitz7418 Месяц назад +1

      Also love it very much... So gracious !! Funny flow...

  • @user-xo3ok7kp8i
    @user-xo3ok7kp8i 3 года назад +15

    Прекрасная музыка.! Гениальный Вольфган Амадей Моцарт! Как красиво и легко играет музыкант такое сложное произведение! Огромное спасибо за счастье Вас слушать!

  • @bloodycinnamon2056
    @bloodycinnamon2056 3 года назад +14

    I really like this! Thank you for the thorough description which really helps understand this piece and puts it in context.

  • @mmbmbmbmb
    @mmbmbmbmb 3 года назад +12

    Such joy to listen . . . thank you !!!

  • @cesarleiva2443
    @cesarleiva2443 3 года назад +7

    I like this sonata a lot. The first movement was played by jerry in one of the musical chapters of tom and jerry kids. Good child memories

  • @Pantera1001
    @Pantera1001 3 года назад +6

    great uploads, thank you Bartje

  • @eliaswendel7257
    @eliaswendel7257 2 года назад +5

    My favourite Sonata from Mozart!

  • @aniruddhvasishta8334
    @aniruddhvasishta8334 2 года назад +2

    The phrasing in all of your videos is just superb

  • @grace_pianist
    @grace_pianist 3 года назад +23

    Figure 2-3 00:07
    Figure 4 00:44
    Figure 5 second theme 01:05
    Figure 6-8 development 02:54
    Recapitulation 03:53

    • @ryanbearse8831
      @ryanbearse8831 2 года назад +1

      Elmo's World: Birthdays, Games & More!

  • @letsschubertiad1966
    @letsschubertiad1966 Год назад +3

    Imagine a meeting of these two geniuses

  • @ManneVonM.
    @ManneVonM. 2 года назад +9

    The Adagio is the best waltz I would dance under it 😌

    • @rishikde5346
      @rishikde5346 2 года назад +1

      Did you mean the Adagio?

    • @ManneVonM.
      @ManneVonM. Год назад

      @@rishikde5346 yea, I changed, thanks.

    • @wingcap1448
      @wingcap1448 3 месяца назад

      I would like to see you try! It‘s not a waltz at all.

  • @anthonyfromsiny
    @anthonyfromsiny 2 года назад +37

    In stark contrast to Beethoven, Mozart was such an optimist - yet both of their music resonates.

    • @segmentsAndCurves
      @segmentsAndCurves 2 года назад +6

      I don't think he himself was an optimist, his music certainly is, but in favor of the audience. But again, I'm not that into Mozart, so :v

    • @bercaferca4554
      @bercaferca4554 2 года назад +6

      But they just shouldnt be compared in that way, i just hate when people do that, it’s just- infeeeeerior lol. I MEAN ITS their SONATAS - thats not what u compare when speaking on Moz and Beet, at all.

    • @tahaouhabi3520
      @tahaouhabi3520 2 года назад +7

      Mozart's Sonatas are my favourite , couldn't find anything better

    • @charlescxgo7629
      @charlescxgo7629 2 года назад +4

      Not at all, Beethoven is arguably the greatest optimist of all time. His music almost always ends in triumph, or die trying, whether in struggle or victory. He never wrote anything that truly ended in grief. Give his major works a listen from beginning to end rather than just one small snippet. It's much more relatable to the human experience but gives one the energy to tackle all the hardships in life and more importantly it's about hope. Mozart meanwhile is much more of an escapist, when he suffers he retreats to a childhood fantasy of perfect scenery, pretty flowers, princes and princesses. His music is therefore often 'perfect' in such an imperfect world. When Mozart writes grief in his music however brief, it's a religious almost spiritual type of grief that's embroiled in mystery and pure hopelessness. Not something you can walk away from without being impacted by a feeling of other worldliness.

    • @charlescxgo7629
      @charlescxgo7629 2 года назад +1

      @@segmentsAndCurves Mozart was no optimist, and it shows in his music, if you peel just beneath the surface, a very terrified and traumatized child, suffering the most insufferable, refusing to face the realities of a harsh world. Beethoven owned his suffering, fate and took it by the head and wrestled his difficulties to the ground with him. He never goes down without a fight and leaves one with moments of pure hope and triumph.

  • @StanObirek
    @StanObirek 3 года назад +42

    Did Mozart compose this sonata for Ingrid? Her performance is flawless.

  • @aramkhachaturian8043
    @aramkhachaturian8043 3 года назад +21

    Gosh I love it when I listen to a nice piano piece and realize I could play most of the right hand on my violin!

  • @fiandrhi
    @fiandrhi Год назад +4

    RIP, Frau Haebler.

  • @fredericchopin7538
    @fredericchopin7538 2 года назад +2

    Marvelous!

  • @chopin65
    @chopin65 3 года назад +20

    This is so spritely and impish. It's like a juvenile Mozart is pranking the stuffy old people. Pure Mozart. And a perfect breakfast music.

  • @christinacudarobertson2996
    @christinacudarobertson2996 3 года назад +14

    Quite fortuitous to find this RUclips recording. So clean, and I do love Ingrid Haebler's interpretations and tone production. For the past month I have been looking all over for a clean digital recording of her playing the Chopin nocturnes. My LP is so scratchy anymore that I really wish I could listen to a cleaner version. Any ideas, other than going through the UK which insists that I have a UK address in order to purchase the digital download?

  • @altoclef6688
    @altoclef6688 3 года назад +11

    I like Ingrid Haebler's Mozart. No nonsense, but still full of life. Didn't know much about her, but a google search told me she is famous for her Mozart sonata recordings - I can understand why! Curious of the piano, sounds a little Bechstein-like. Fits very well. Thank you!

    • @bartjebartmans
      @bartjebartmans  3 года назад +2

      She also recorded the complete Mozart violin Sonatas and Schubert 3 Sonatinas with Henryk Szeryng, also superb quality.

    • @altoclef6688
      @altoclef6688 3 года назад

      @@bartjebartmans That must be very good - Szeryng is my favourite violinist among the masters of his time.

    • @ruperttmls7985
      @ruperttmls7985 3 года назад

      I prefer M. Joao Pires’ recording

  • @notaire2
    @notaire2 3 года назад +8

    Wunderschöne Interpretation dieser kompakten und fein komponierten Klaviersonate im lebhaften Tempo mit kalrem doch elegantem Anschlag und mit perfekt kontrollierter Dynamik. Der zweite Satz klingt besnders schön auch lieblich. Einfach wundervoll!

  • @jenniferkim6090
    @jenniferkim6090 3 года назад +17

    00:07 1악장
    05:28 2악장
    10:41 3악장

  • @canman5060
    @canman5060 2 года назад +4

    Popular exam piece for performance diploma.

  • @timward276
    @timward276 3 года назад +21

    This was described as easy?!? The first movement is *hard as hell*, and the last movement's no picnic either.

    • @abbeyekrut9528
      @abbeyekrut9528 3 года назад +3

      LOL I’m learning the whole sonata!!! Wish me luck

    • @timward276
      @timward276 3 года назад +3

      @@abbeyekrut9528 Good luck! It's one of my favorite Mozart sonatas.

    • @Fumozart
      @Fumozart 2 года назад +4

      Yea counterpoint is no joke

    • @FirstGentleman1
      @FirstGentleman1 15 дней назад

      I cannot imagine this Sonata was ever described as easy. Maybe they meant not easy to play but easy on the ears and light-hearted or something like that.

  • @_PROCLUS
    @_PROCLUS 3 года назад

    💝💝💝 TY

  • @adelheidgeist6206
    @adelheidgeist6206 9 месяцев назад +2

    Kein Pianist spielt die Werke
    MOZART's so wie die begnadete
    INGRID HAEBLER !
    Das kann ich als Salzburgerin wirklich SO feststellen !!

    • @user-yg5qd8lz7q
      @user-yg5qd8lz7q 2 месяца назад

      Простите, не поняла. Вы пишете, что никто не играет произведения Моцарта. Это вообще или касается кого-то конкретно..? Но, всё же, кто-то играет??

  • @MorganHayes_Composer.Pianist
    @MorganHayes_Composer.Pianist Год назад +3

    He main theme of the last movement makes an appearance in the finale of Mozart’s 14th Concerto . Not sure if WAM was deliberately quoting the earlier work here or not. Maybe coincidence .

    • @bartjebartmans
      @bartjebartmans  Год назад +6

      He always used melodies, fragments of works he was working on at at the same time, even older works he not consciously remembered as he mentioned once or twice in his letters. That part the movie Amadeus got right. In the Divertimenti for instance themes from the Violin Concertos appear but also in the Symphonies. I think that was common practice in those days, Beethoven did it, Haydn etc. etc.

    • @user-yg5qd8lz7q
      @user-yg5qd8lz7q 2 месяца назад

      Я тоже это заметила в некоторых произведениях. Тем не менее они прекрасны! Всем добра и любви!

  • @howardchasnoff208
    @howardchasnoff208 2 года назад +1

    Some oddities in form. In the first movement the recap isn't verbatim with the expo. M uses some development here.
    In the second movement there is a developmental section whose transition to the theme 1 is rather strange in terms of harmony. The third movement is a rondo but it has many aspects of Sonata form. In the first section there is a secondary theme exactly like the primary theme with a small difference.Also one of the episodes is a development.

    • @howardchasnoff208
      @howardchasnoff208 2 года назад +1

      On second look the third movement is actually in sonata form. Normally in the exposition we get theme group 1 and theme group 2 contrasting in dominant, a repeat of entire section followed by development and then the recap.
      Here we have exposition 1st time normal with TG 1 and TG2. And then a repeat. But the repeat has a development inserted between the two TG's. Then there is a recap which has TG 1only and a closing.
      It is sonata allegro form with some reorganization. Also Theme 2 is so similar to theme 1 we can say its monothematic.

    • @howardchasnoff208
      @howardchasnoff208 2 года назад

      In the second movement as I mentioned in the first comment, there is an abrupt change from f#m to dm.
      This is done by abruptly inserting an f natural in bass with a d in treble. dm then goes to AM ( minor iv
      to a I). Mozart could have easily gone from f#m to AM since they are relative. This is done in the interest of providing new color and making it less predictable.

  • @sharonsummers
    @sharonsummers Год назад

    l have a badly damaged LH 4th finger and l'd like to learn the Adagio movement in order to return to playing the piano again. l wondered if anyone could advise me if this might be possible? Does anyone know what grade this would be performance wise? Many thanks 🫒

    • @kaleidoscopio5
      @kaleidoscopio5 Год назад

      Just listen and play, and see what your left hand can do....there is no grades in music, just music you love and play 🙂

  • @blindcanseemusic
    @blindcanseemusic Год назад +1

    is the final scene Mozart's house?

  • @AddisRipoll
    @AddisRipoll 2 года назад +1

    Hi, im a University student of cinema at Uruguay, can i use this for an exercise?, it wouldnt be published at internet as public. ¡Thanks!

    • @bartjebartmans
      @bartjebartmans  2 года назад +3

      You can use anything you want.

    • @AddisRipoll
      @AddisRipoll 2 года назад +3

      😘@@bartjebartmans Thanks for your quickly response, im very glad. ¡Have a good day!

  • @kelechi_77
    @kelechi_77 Год назад +2

    Week-end (1967) by Jean-Luc Godard!

  • @leonhardeuler6811
    @leonhardeuler6811 3 года назад +3

    I hear Jupiter sympohny in the first movment

    • @chateauferret
      @chateauferret 2 года назад +1

      A lot of what he does in the first movement seems to touch on the Haydn E minor Hob 1: 34 written a few years earlier.

  • @guitz7418
    @guitz7418 Месяц назад

    Mozart, le prince charmant des nuances équivoques (la joie, la tristesse)... et le démon sublime des métaphores enjouées... Tenez, là, par exemple : qui ne verrait un garnement courir après les fesses toutes roses d'une fille -- sinon ceux qui voient un jeunot rosir les joues rouges d'une fillette...

  • @playtimeallthetimecbeebies2272

    From On the Go

  • @lizasirenko6989
    @lizasirenko6989 3 года назад +1

    01:30

  • @stewartmair3995
    @stewartmair3995 7 месяцев назад

    Is it just me or does the last movement not have a development section?

  • @ArcoirisRaimbow
    @ArcoirisRaimbow 3 года назад

    😇🌹❤🎹🎼🎵🎶

  • @user-yd7zr7ib3x
    @user-yd7zr7ib3x 3 года назад +1

    13:53

  • @opticalmixing23
    @opticalmixing23 Год назад +1

    Don't sweat the small stuff!

  • @beethovenlovedmozart
    @beethovenlovedmozart 2 года назад +4

    Mozart had such an imagination because he remembered everything he ever heard. He didn't have to rework or go back to old notes. If he was writing in d minor, he would pull from his brain all the d minor works he heard. That was one of his main talents that separated him from Bach, Beethoven. It paid off. Multiple masterpieces in every genre of his time. We know Beethoven can't even say that and I question whether Bach could too.

    • @therealrealludwigvanbeethoven
      @therealrealludwigvanbeethoven 9 месяцев назад +1

      Nonsense. Where are you getting this information from?

    • @beethovenlovedmozart
      @beethovenlovedmozart 9 месяцев назад

      @@therealrealludwigvanbeethoven lots of info on Beethoven about his endless notebooks and how much work he spent on certain pieces. Notes on your 9th symphony go back 20 years before his death. Not to mention, the main theme from the final movement of his 9th is a variation of mozarts theme k222 which not coincidently is also in d minor. Which part do you question, and I will do my best to answer?

    • @therealrealludwigvanbeethoven
      @therealrealludwigvanbeethoven 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@beethovenlovedmozart The part you conveniently ignored, and which comprised the majority of your comment: that Mozart could remember "everything he ever heard," pulling from his brain every single work in d minor he had ever listened to.

    • @beethovenlovedmozart
      @beethovenlovedmozart 9 месяцев назад

      @@therealrealludwigvanbeethoven there is plenty of evidence out there of it. Nobody documented much about it, but when you read the letters, stories, and study his music it's obvious to come to that conclusion. On the other side of it, there is nothing that suggests Beethoven had that ability as he pretty much wrote down every idea he ever had and always had it with him. I'll give you one such example on mozart. When he was in his young teens, he played in the orchestra of Michael Haydns requiem. I think he played a woodwind but not sure. He loved the requiem and only went to 2 performances. There is no record of him ever having the score of it yet , 16 years later when he wrote his last requiem he paid tribute to Haydn, and did many passages in which you think he was copying his requiem. It is my belief, that he knew he was going to die, and paid tribute to his friend Joseph Haydn by incorporating his brothers requiem because he remembered it. That's just one example. How else can a man write a masterpiece in 3 weeks time which he did several times? It's because every piece, experiment he did , stayed in his memory. He didn't have to go back to endless notes to write something. I've given you examples that most people don't know about. I won't even go to the documented church example where they wouldn't let him take a copy of music he had just heard, and a week later he wrote down note for note on paper. That's what separated him from most.

  • @user-tg3lg6ci6b
    @user-tg3lg6ci6b 3 года назад

    3:50

  • @Hwoochu
    @Hwoochu 2 года назад +1

    11:49

  • @chodanyeong
    @chodanyeong 2 года назад

    0:07

  • @dragintaquat
    @dragintaquat 2 дня назад

    It's a very dificult sonata. I wonder if there is a De Larrocha's version. She would be great on this.

    • @bartjebartmans
      @bartjebartmans  2 дня назад

      Not better than Haebler. I have all Larrocha's recordings as well, they are very good.

  • @kelvinsianzwiworks
    @kelvinsianzwiworks 7 месяцев назад

    You must remember what you saw, Mortals !! ✍️✍️✍️✍️✍️✍️✍️✍️✍️

  • @thegoalfather9922
    @thegoalfather9922 3 года назад

    8:15

  • @user-wy8ys8ho9o
    @user-wy8ys8ho9o 3 года назад +1

    왜 알고리즘에 이게 뜨지

  • @bmois9578
    @bmois9578 3 года назад +5

    Maybe too focused on the “Mozart sound”?

    • @bartjebartmans
      @bartjebartmans  3 года назад +3

      who? you? lol

    • @bmois9578
      @bmois9578 3 года назад +2

      ​@@bartjebartmans Apologize if I said something rude. I was thinking about how to play this piece most musically, and I think there are moments which can be treated in a better way. It might be because I have a different taste, so I wonder if you could explain to me how you feel the recording?
      The A staccato at mm. 2 weakens the upward motion and the forte mood(hunting call mood) of the opening. This diminishes the mood change at mm. 3 with the slurs. And the diminuendo at mm.6 weakens the sudden darker color of E minor, as well as the color shift at mm. 7, which I think is more surprising, melancholy and questioning, like a quiet response to the interjection of E minor arpeggio(mm.5). And this moves the piece back to A major so gently and gracefully. So this color shift is very dramatic and important. From my opinion, all these important details unite this part into flowing developing music.
      At mm. 9 is the return of the opening AM arpeggio. It is like a more vibrant and joyful reiteration of the opening mood. But the decrescendo at mm.11 reduces this mood a bit too soon so it loses the strength and development, which is crucial in connecting the two reiterations and let the music flow into the alberti bass part.
      Especially at mm.16. This is a surprising and important change in character. I think it deserves more emphasis. It is also again a change from E minor's darker color back to A major's warmth. This place elevates the piece so much!!! Like gentle sunlight making everything around me friendly and warm, which is something new and significant at this moment.
      And mm.24. It is after this repeated warm section that the music grows and moves forward into this jubilant descending line. It is leaking out from the music uncontrollably. From my taste, a sudden forte disconnects such flow.
      There is still a lot to talk about, but the place troubles me the most is at 3:29, where the music shifts to F# minor. This exact place, which has stayed in my memory for 10 years since I first played it, deserves more emphasize(this is also why it is marked p, and in some editions there is an mf before the F# minor section). It is the place where the music breaks the "polite, joyful" mask with an outburst of lament. How could one bear the grief and loneliness from this place? From my opinion, it is this exact place that made this sonata a great music. It adds so much depth into the music, although every detail inside this piece is worth analyzing.
      I am really a naive young music learner, and I am not thoroughly trained in a conservatory. So I would be really grateful if you could teach me how you understand this piece and the recording from a different meaningful perspective.

    • @bmois9578
      @bmois9578 3 года назад +2

      LOL found an article talking about similar things I noticed by gramophone on Ingrid Haebler and the "Mozart sound": It is light and pleasing to listen to but sometimes lacks the color and drama. I am glad that I had these discoveries on this recording, trusted my feelings, and put it into words. And I am glad that there are people who may share my feelings.

  • @kkr1738
    @kkr1738 2 года назад +1

    EASY--

  • @jesusmanriquezsantana1590
    @jesusmanriquezsantana1590 3 года назад +8

    The first movement is so hard 🥴

  • @dummag4126
    @dummag4126 2 года назад

    Elegante, ma a me non piacciono i trilli a 4 note nel secondo e terzo movimeno, preferisco sostituirli a due note. Non mi piace il pianissimo della mano destra nel finale del terzo movimento.

  • @andrelove7821
    @andrelove7821 3 года назад +4

    Adorable song

  • @nathanieltakao2023
    @nathanieltakao2023 8 месяцев назад

    Glider
    Parasail
    Hang Glider
    Hot Air Balloon

  • @sikroboskop3121
    @sikroboskop3121 3 года назад +13

    So this is his hardest sonata? Mozart be using 1% of his power

    • @authenticmusic4815
      @authenticmusic4815 3 года назад

      Is*

    • @therealrealludwigvanbeethoven
      @therealrealludwigvanbeethoven 3 года назад +6

      @@authenticmusic4815 *Was

    • @HowardTse
      @HowardTse 3 года назад

      @@therealrealludwigvanbeethoven *used instead of was using

    • @therealrealludwigvanbeethoven
      @therealrealludwigvanbeethoven 3 года назад +1

      @@HowardTse Well, we could write it either way. Either 'Mozart was using 1% of his power' or 'Mozart used 1% of his power'. In the case of the former, we are speaking in the past tense, when he composed his last piano sonata.

    • @jb1980ist
      @jb1980ist 3 года назад +5

      It's very difficult to play it well.

  • @A8.Z
    @A8.Z 2 месяца назад

    My sonate not right no.19 d maj no.18 f maj

    • @A8.Z
      @A8.Z 2 месяца назад

      Prove me right!

  • @Alessandro90933
    @Alessandro90933 3 года назад +6

    I love Mozart but i am not crazy about his piano sonatas, except maybe for the k310. Still, this piece is nice.

    • @erezsolomon3838
      @erezsolomon3838 Год назад +1

      The opposite for me. K310 may be my least favorite Mozart sonata as of now (although it changes quite frequently)

  • @jonggunmu
    @jonggunmu 2 года назад +9

    어서와라 경희대 보는 자 들이여…

  • @lav1444
    @lav1444 3 года назад +1

    just tryna study for a test tmrrw XD

  • @ryanbearse8831
    @ryanbearse8831 3 года назад +1

    Pets

  • @svetlanagrinstein8944
    @svetlanagrinstein8944 2 года назад +1

    Отточенно. И никаких колебаний ритма,темпа,с почти ровной динамикой.

  • @AlessioAndres
    @AlessioAndres 6 месяцев назад

    200 years later after Mozart wrote this, a genius was born.

  • @marylancelot
    @marylancelot 3 года назад +4

    I hate this Mozart piece but was given this as homework once upon a time. Didn't finish it because we ended up focusing on a larger romantic piece with my teacher instead.
    I had to quick lessons for a few years and am planning on going back. Decided to learn this after all in case she wants me to learn it, obviously before resuming lessons. Also it's good practice to make my fingers quick and nimble again after all this time

    • @FrostDirt
      @FrostDirt 3 года назад +7

      Sorry to heat that, Mozart is my all-time favourite

    • @paolo.s1756
      @paolo.s1756 3 года назад +2

      e chi se ne fotte....

    • @CatkhosruShapurrjiFurabji
      @CatkhosruShapurrjiFurabji 2 года назад +2

      And all of you people on the dislike section please stop being ignorant, he deserves to have his taste, he wasn't being biased.

    • @CatkhosruShapurrjiFurabji
      @CatkhosruShapurrjiFurabji 2 года назад

      Its absolutely fine that you hate this, but it's an amazing sonata in my opinion.

    • @fredrodriguez3913
      @fredrodriguez3913 2 года назад

      Yes, I absolutely HATE this sonata too! I am so ashamed that I once believed Mozart to be a pretty good composer. Of course, this all ended the day I first listened to K576, and its malodorous cacophony of random pseudo-classical! percussion, which any child could produce in its sleep.
      In short, Mozart murdered this composition with its…too many notes!

  • @wingcap1448
    @wingcap1448 3 месяца назад

    What‘s up with this interpretation? It’s so lethargic.. Everything sounds soft, gentle, kind. No accents, no forte, no rough edges. It just doesn‘t seem to be saying anything to me.

  • @JanCarlComposer
    @JanCarlComposer 3 года назад +1

    Surprisingly slow

  • @VernusC
    @VernusC 2 года назад

    02:53