Zarebski, le passionné, sous les superbes doigts de Martha. Elle a tout compris de l'âme du compositeur polonais, disparu à l'âge de 32 ans. De très beaux interprètes aux côtés de Madame Argerich!
Not only Quintett.....my old love in chambermusic is piano with strings : Trios Quartetts Quintetts......specially Brahms but we have a great number of wonderful unknown or forgotten pieces ......
This is a awesome piano quintet of a Composer I have never heard but not surprised that he is from Poland the land of incredible musical talent! Having said that this is a outstanding performance with my favourite Pianist Martha Agerich! What Joy it is to listen to these lesser known but talented Composer's!
One of the comments said they looked for originality in vain..... I don't understand such a comment; as I listen, I find this piece absolutely DRIPPING with originality. Completely brilliant quintet by a composer I've never heard of. Superb music, beautifully played. Thank you for uploading.
In some cases, it may be a matter of not finding something which is lacking in the seeker. In other cases, it may be a matter of the criteria they are using which, for them, defines originality. My guess is that, in this case, it is the latter.
What an incredible moment it must have been to witness this performance live. What an brilliant and inventive composer, ahead of his time, so incredibly underated. Deep thanks to these five amazing musicians.
What a sumptuous piece of musical expression ! This speaks to the soul. Many thanks to the marvelous performers. And to think I waited 70 years to discover this.
La virtuosité incontestable de Martha me touche particulièrement et jongle délicieusement avec la sensibilité des émotions de l'âme. Merci infiniment pour ce pur bonheur
Qué maravillosa pieza musical desconocida para mí. Brillante composición y magnífica interpretación del quinteto, qué riqueza musical ! Martha Argerich es una excelente pianista !
what an impressive work ! I am overwhelmed and awed by its beauty , power and mastery . What a huge talent ! Both Argerich and the string players are to die for ,so passionate, subtle , enormous dynamic range, you name it: its all there !!
Wow! Who brought this music to Argerich's attention. Amazed that she learned it . Fabulous playing with this quartet arranged for this concert .Scherzo is memorable !
Cette version-ci, avec l'incomparable Martha Argerich au clavier, est *exceptionnelle*. Ce musicien si doué, disparu comme tant d'autres, dans la fleur de l'âge, était un vrai poète, sensible et touchant...
An interesting and powerful 'unknown' piece! Thank you for uploading it! Wonder how it's remained outside the repertoire, but at least Argerich can't be accused of not putting in her brilliant support to making it known, hopefully together with the name of the composer (b. 3 March 1854 - 15 September 1885, also a student and friend of Liszt in Rome).
This quintet is Zarębski's last composition. Shortly after completing it, he died of tuberculosis at the age of 31. The quintet was not published until after 1930. Much of Zarębski's output remained unpublished in manuscripts and was burned during the Warsaw Uprising (1944).
Zarebski wrote this piece shortly before his death aged 31 and to judge by the quality of the music, he might well have been a household name by now if he had lived and composed for a few more decades. The performance is also outstanding:)
I am Polish and even a musician. I remember the name Zarębski was mentioned at school but none of his music was played at that time. Two days ago I was driving a car and heard this on the radio.
Russia and Poland were the land of unlimited musical talents in the 19th to 20th century. Such great compositions stand out among the traditional dime-a-dozen Western piano repertoire, even if coming from a lesser known Polish composer, Zarebski. Many other lesser known Polish composers also wrote such spectacular works as with Zelenski, Noskowski, Maliszewski, Lipinski, Kurpinski, Radziwill, Zywny, Jankiewicz, Karlowicz, Dobrzynski, just to name a few.
maybe you should realize when you start mentioning so many no-name composers that maybe all of them are equally terrible and your tastes are just trash
Why comparing apples and oranges? Also, this composition by Zarebski sounds rather schumannesque than brahmsian, if we ought to compare composers and their styles
Unfortunately, while I really appreciate the performance, I'm utterly disturbed by the noise of clapping at the end when I just want to listen to music. A huge advantage of listening to CDs and other outside drive methods compared to this kind of videos (and this one is not even a video).
@@brkahn Normal, when I'm sitting in the audience. But it's not without a reason when reports tell us about such profound effects that even those present didn't begin applauding for a small while. And when I listen to a recordings, originally on the radio, I much prefer silence to disorganised noise. This is the point - disorganised, rackety, nothing to do with music, not the 'normality' of applause.
...i just discovered this author right this evening. Particularly shocked by the Scherzo.... i am a better person than yesterday.. thx
Zarebski, le passionné, sous les superbes doigts de Martha. Elle a tout compris de l'âme du compositeur polonais, disparu à l'âge de 32 ans. De très beaux interprètes aux côtés de Madame Argerich!
The more I listen to piano quintets, the more I am mesmerized by this form. It has almost the power of an entire orchestra.
Rightly said!
I find the power almost similar too. If not, the same feeling.
Not only Quintett.....my old love in chambermusic is piano with strings : Trios Quartetts Quintetts......specially Brahms but we have a great number of wonderful unknown or forgotten pieces ......
This is a awesome piano quintet of a Composer I have never heard but not surprised that he is from Poland the land of incredible musical talent! Having said that this is a outstanding performance with my favourite Pianist Martha Agerich! What Joy it is to listen to these lesser known but talented Composer's!
Niezwykłe, nie ma nic przyjemniejszego niż usłyszeć polskie kompozycje w najlepszych wydaniach.
One of the comments said they looked for originality in vain..... I don't understand such a comment; as I listen, I find this piece absolutely DRIPPING with originality. Completely brilliant quintet by a composer I've never heard of. Superb music, beautifully played. Thank you for uploading.
In some cases, it may be a matter of not finding something which is lacking in the seeker. In other cases, it may be a matter of the criteria they are using which, for them, defines originality. My guess is that, in this case, it is the latter.
@@MJSpangleMay I add that this work was completed in 1885. The slow romantic section of the scherzo is phenomenal for any age.
@@acuriousergeorge There is no argument from me on that part. Such music feeds something deep within.
What an incredible moment it must have been to witness this performance live. What an brilliant and inventive composer, ahead of his time, so incredibly underated. Deep thanks to these five amazing musicians.
What a sumptuous piece of musical expression ! This speaks to the soul. Many thanks to the marvelous performers. And to think I waited 70 years to discover this.
Dear Martha God bless you and keep you ! ♥️
Wow! Argerich and friends decided this unknown is worth being heard! We need to listen and open up to this experience!
Two world class musicians! Young and old generations met together!
La virtuosité incontestable de Martha me touche particulièrement et jongle délicieusement avec la sensibilité des émotions de l'âme. Merci infiniment pour ce pur bonheur
Sickeningly incredible - haunting, magical and touching down to the depth of the soul.
I agree! What a treat to find this piece decades into listening to classical music!
I could not agree more
Nauseatingly nice!
It really does have that. It never leaves u.
Qué maravillosa pieza musical desconocida para mí. Brillante composición y magnífica interpretación del quinteto, qué riqueza musical ! Martha Argerich es una excelente pianista !
@norahscianca7325 -- Exactamente......BRAVI TUTTI desde Acapulco!
what an impressive work ! I am overwhelmed and awed by its beauty , power and mastery . What a huge talent ! Both Argerich and the string players are to die for ,so passionate, subtle , enormous dynamic range, you name it: its all there !!
I stumbled on this piece today and have spent my entire lunch hour with the score and this recording! So good!
Very happy you liked it, dear Brian :)
@@emseasz -- Adored it here in Acapulco as well......BRAVI TUTTI!
Wow! Who brought this music to Argerich's attention. Amazed that she learned it . Fabulous playing with this quartet arranged for this concert .Scherzo is memorable !
Hi. It had always been a quintet.
Cette version-ci, avec l'incomparable Martha Argerich au clavier, est *exceptionnelle*.
Ce musicien si doué, disparu comme tant d'autres, dans la fleur de l'âge, était un vrai poète, sensible et touchant...
An interesting and powerful 'unknown' piece! Thank you for uploading it! Wonder how it's remained outside the repertoire, but at least Argerich can't be accused of not putting in her brilliant support to making it known, hopefully together with the name of the composer (b. 3 March 1854 - 15 September 1885, also a student and friend of Liszt in Rome).
This quintet is Zarębski's last composition. Shortly after completing it, he died of tuberculosis at the age of 31. The quintet was not published until after 1930. Much of Zarębski's output remained unpublished in manuscripts and was burned during the Warsaw Uprising (1944).
@@andrzejnowak7 Thank you!
really good... Bravo!
Zarebski wrote this piece shortly before his death aged 31 and to judge by the quality of the music, he might well have been a household name by now if he had lived and composed for a few more decades. The performance is also outstanding:)
I completely agree with your opinion.
@@emseasz -- .......and I with yours......BRAVI TUTTI from Acapulco!
Silence! Genius at work!
Splendido quintetto: accuratissimo il movimento lento!
Only a genius could compose such a work...
And I didn't know not even about his existence
I am Polish and even a musician. I remember the name Zarębski was mentioned at school but none of his music was played at that time. Two days ago I was driving a car and heard this on the radio.
Russia and Poland were the land of unlimited musical talents in the 19th to 20th century. Such great compositions stand out among the traditional dime-a-dozen Western piano repertoire, even if coming from a lesser known Polish composer, Zarebski. Many other lesser known Polish composers also wrote such spectacular works as with Zelenski, Noskowski, Maliszewski, Lipinski, Kurpinski, Radziwill, Zywny, Jankiewicz, Karlowicz, Dobrzynski, just to name a few.
You omitted Buttinsky, who was the first to introduce stretto to fugue writing.
maybe you should realize when you start mentioning so many no-name composers that maybe all of them are equally terrible and your tastes are just trash
Love it!
The Adagio is so fukcin great!
Allegro reminds me of The Swan from Saint Saenz and The girl in the drawing from the anime Durarara
The entire repertoire of regularly-performed piano quintets should be replaced by the unknown ones--including this brilliant, original work.
Your entire family should be replaced by people you don't know. Including unknown brilliant scientists.
interesting they played the scherzo for an encore haha. maybe they weren't happy with it
Damn, that was some applause at around 40:00 to 47:30.
Yes....very impressive! I wonder how well they knew this obscure ingenious composer? Wonderful! Greetings from San Agustinillo!
nice
10:06-10:50
i think this is better than brahms `-`
Hurbii yeah it's more emotionally raw and powerful than Brahms, but still beautifully composed
there's so much other things in the world that are better than brahms get over it
Why comparing apples and oranges? Also, this composition by Zarebski sounds rather schumannesque than brahmsian, if we ought to compare composers and their styles
@@Viktorvelat95 Agree on both counts!
Yes, totally agree, far more interesting.
Beautiful Romantic piece. Though I looked in vain for a touch of originality.
The way the movements are constructed with unexpected contrasts, the melodic material are quite distinct from the romantic run-of-the-mill
Unfortunately, while I really appreciate the performance, I'm utterly disturbed by the noise of clapping at the end when I just want to listen to music. A huge advantage of listening to CDs and other outside drive methods compared to this kind of videos (and this one is not even a video).
I was about to say the same thing! I wanted to listen to this on "loop" but alas...
They applaud at the end: what is more normal? You also have live performances on CDs.
@@brkahn Normal, when I'm sitting in the audience. But it's not without a reason when reports tell us about such profound effects that even those present didn't begin applauding for a small while. And when I listen to a recordings, originally on the radio, I much prefer silence to disorganised noise. This is the point - disorganised, rackety, nothing to do with music, not the 'normality' of applause.