Комментарии •

  • @SonataSecrets
    @SonataSecrets 2 года назад +3

    Check out my EASY ARRANGEMENT of this piece:
    sonatasecrets.gumroad.com/l/debussy-flaxen
    💲 Get 15% off with the discount code: "secretseeker"
    More SIMPLE SOLUTIONS arrangements: sonatasecrets.gumroad.com/

  • @juanwehinger4457
    @juanwehinger4457 2 года назад +36

    The first time I listened this piece: I'm in heaven.
    The first time I red it's music sheet: I'm in hell.
    What a masterpiece indeed.

  • @wasariogames5482
    @wasariogames5482 4 года назад +49

    I can’t believe I never stumbled across this channel until just now. I came here from your Stenhammer Fantasy video and holy cow are these educational and informative. I’ll definitely be using these videos to help me increase my musical understanding and analysis skills. Great work my friend!

    • @SonataSecrets
      @SonataSecrets 4 года назад +6

      Thanks so much, welcome to the channel! :)

  • @Sk8nLn
    @Sk8nLn Год назад +1

    Thank you for this insight. At 52yo I will be playing this piece for our small town conservatory spring recital ❤️🎹❤️

  • @johnnylee3565
    @johnnylee3565 3 года назад +5

    Just pure relaxation

  • @Loreeza1
    @Loreeza1 3 года назад +27

    Dude...you are freaking awesome. Love how your passion for the subject comes out in these videos. Makes me glad I am pursuing music as a career and get to encounter people just as in love with it as me!!

    • @SonataSecrets
      @SonataSecrets 3 года назад +4

      Thanks Lorena! Music is a passionate endevaour.

  • @sitarnut
    @sitarnut 2 месяца назад +1

    Bro.. you're knocking it out of the park with brilliant, cogent analysis. Very lucid and enjoyable. Great touch on the keys too. Peace out.

  • @marcoevans2155
    @marcoevans2155 Год назад +1

    I get an very church like gospel vibe from this piece. Balancing Melancholy, Bittersweet and uplifting. Thanks 😊

  • @landrydavis8449
    @landrydavis8449 4 года назад +12

    Thanks for analyzing all of my favorite pieces! Really nice stuff here

  • @susansykes9110
    @susansykes9110 3 года назад +3

    Excellent breakdown of the chordal structure, while at the same time not making it seem so mathematical. Debussy kept the romance of the piece on par with the intelligence of the composition. He was ahead of his time in chordal voicing. I love the richness of his works. And, speaking as a woman....what a man-and I bet what a lover. Those French!

  • @migueljayme4614
    @migueljayme4614 4 года назад +10

    I just recently discovered this channel and I am amazed (more shocked actually) at how little viewership you have so far! And I mean that 100% as a compliment (and perhaps disdain at other "classical" channels that get more viewership). It's channels like these that preserve the value of RUclips. What a treasure trove- and i'm quite excited to dive in your videos. Keep up the good work please, if only for your hundreds of viewers! (which I hope only continues to grow)

    • @SonataSecrets
      @SonataSecrets 4 года назад

      Thanks so much Miguel for the compliments! The channel is growing a lot at the moment, and in a way it's been good to have had a year for me to get more comfortable making videos before going to the next level (if that happens).

  • @elevate7612
    @elevate7612 4 года назад +4

    Amazing analysis and great channel! I look forward to your new videos.

  • @PianoStopcom
    @PianoStopcom 4 года назад +4

    Another great tutorial and performance at the end!
    Thanks

  • @AnaPaula-np5rq
    @AnaPaula-np5rq 3 года назад +13

    The French poem is very romantic. Who was that lucky girl from the poem ??! Certainly love was in the air. And Debussy with her charm, delicacy and romanticism made this Prelude for lovers of good music. Great video.

    • @AnaPaula-np5rq
      @AnaPaula-np5rq 3 года назад

      Ich habe vergessen, mein ♥️ und 👏👍

    • @SonataSecrets
      @SonataSecrets 3 года назад +1

      I'm not sure about the French poem, but it definately is about love yes :)

    • @AnaPaula-np5rq
      @AnaPaula-np5rq 3 года назад +1

      @@SonataSecrets The prelude named after the poem by Leconte de Lisl. Was Debussy inspired by poems to compose or?

    • @SonataSecrets
      @SonataSecrets 3 года назад +1

      Yes, probably :)

  • @lucilaberrotaran6368
    @lucilaberrotaran6368 3 года назад +2

    Your explanation really helped me with my analysis and understand better this piece, great video!!

  • @duk2k
    @duk2k 2 года назад +1

    Your explanations got me goose bumps! This piece is absolutely beautiful. Sound simple yet so complex.

  • @gregswanson5069
    @gregswanson5069 3 года назад

    I've been working on this piece for a month or two. This video is so incredibly helpful! Thank you.

  • @rayorzechowski7035
    @rayorzechowski7035 Год назад

    Very nice description. Excellent tutorial. Good work.

  • @caterscarrots3407
    @caterscarrots3407 4 года назад +11

    This piece sounds more like the Romantics such as Chopin and Liszt than the typical modal ambience of Debussy that I hear in for example Reverie which sounds to me like it is in a mode of Bb major.

  • @Hailey_Paige_1937
    @Hailey_Paige_1937 4 года назад +3

    Thank you so much! This is the highlight of my week! ☺️❤️

  • @julian65886
    @julian65886 Год назад

    This tune is a two minute masterpiece with everything on it. Including a magical climax.

  • @jackcarter2767
    @jackcarter2767 Год назад

    I've played this piece for 10 years now. That climactic moment can still make me cry even to this day. It's why I had to learn it back then for my juries even though I was not at that level yet. I put in so many hours to be able to play this, and my then-teacher, Dr. Gregory Partain, helped me tremendously to play this piece. I love hearing your analysis -- it's like understanding the magic behind the notes.

  • @Ascendsean35
    @Ascendsean35 Месяц назад

    I loved hearing all the background / history of the song. THanks!

  • @jchurchjr
    @jchurchjr Год назад

    Your incredible videos always help me pick my next piece to learn~ Thank you

  • @martingoldstein1
    @martingoldstein1 Год назад

    I am so grateful for your channel. It helps me to prepare material for my lectures for my students.

  • @WheresMyFlyingCar
    @WheresMyFlyingCar 3 месяца назад

    Wonderful analysis! The piece is relatively simple, yet it is so full of longing and emotion. And I really love your enthusiasm, Henrik!

  • @mohhingman
    @mohhingman 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you Henrik. I've been slowly learning this piece. It is my second piece I'm learning. The first piece was Satie's Gymnopedie 1. It is a truly inspiring piece. I love the mixture of traditional harmony with Debussy's extended chords. It gives a lush and beautiful feeling, serene.
    Thanks for your videos.

  • @sofiamorales9586
    @sofiamorales9586 3 года назад

    Thanks for this analysis! Love your videos :D

  • @MichaelMomohara
    @MichaelMomohara 2 года назад +1

    I’m delighted to have discovered your channel! Thank you for the lovely analysis! 😊

  • @tanja5867
    @tanja5867 Год назад

    Beautiful! Thank you for this, it will be the next piece I work on. Very helpful tips.

  • @dainty1dainty
    @dainty1dainty 2 года назад

    Nicely explained with passion. Well done!

  • @pheobemadison3909
    @pheobemadison3909 2 года назад

    So wonderful, thank you so much for this beautiful and fun video.

  • @margarethansen7480
    @margarethansen7480 10 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks, Henrik, your Chanel is a pearl, and I never be tired of seeing a new episode, even though it’s from two or three years past❤❤❤

    • @SonataSecrets
      @SonataSecrets 10 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks Margaret, I'm so happy to see that you make your way through the catalogue of videos, it's what there for! :)

  • @martinfinnmusic
    @martinfinnmusic 2 года назад

    I love this analysis because you describe so much of the music as pop which I most relate to. Thank you. :)

  • @Powerslider
    @Powerslider 3 года назад +1

    Hi Henrik, i really wanted to thank you for your amazing content! I watch your videos nearly every day and have learned so much from your views on all these pieces. Thanks again and greetings from The Netherlands!

    • @SonataSecrets
      @SonataSecrets 3 года назад +1

      Thank you Powerslider, I'm so happy to hear that :)

  • @wasfuerkeksigkeit
    @wasfuerkeksigkeit 6 месяцев назад

    The second time i have watched this video as i have started to learn this piece. This video is so gorgeous and your performance sublime.

  • @Lynkevmusic
    @Lynkevmusic 3 года назад +1

    It is a gorgeous piece of music. I agree with your assessment, it is an innocent playful piece.
    Thanks for a great analysis, really enjoyed it.

  • @mattiascross1417
    @mattiascross1417 4 года назад +3

    This is great!

  • @AbnerBorges
    @AbnerBorges 3 года назад

    Congrat my friend. The way that you explained and the ludic form of the emos along the music are awesome. Very clear and amusing.

    • @SonataSecrets
      @SonataSecrets 3 года назад

      Thanks, I'm glad you enjoyed it! :)

  • @AustenGer
    @AustenGer 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you for this wonderful analysis! It helps me understand and play the piece much better. Hi from Germany!😃

  • @heatherduthie9609
    @heatherduthie9609 Год назад

    Love this piece. Played it in my Grade 7 exam a few years ago. ❤

  • @marioncarson6666
    @marioncarson6666 2 года назад

    This is beautiful. I love Debussy. Will certainly subscribe and join.

  • @micheldupaul7768
    @micheldupaul7768 Год назад

    Merci ! Ce fut très plaisant et vous faites une belle interprétation de ce bijou musical.

  • @logotrikes
    @logotrikes 2 года назад

    The climax indeed. The run up to this part at 8:25 and the crescendo is intensly satisfying and spine tingling....
    I'm not familiar with the wording, but this small part is mesmerising. Makes the entire piece worthwhile...

  • @Maja-uq5uw
    @Maja-uq5uw 4 года назад +4

    I was really looking forward to the ravel/ debussy episodes, since i dont know much about their music, and these pieces are so beautiful, thank you for uploading this! Would love to see more of it 😊

    • @SonataSecrets
      @SonataSecrets 4 года назад

      Thanks Luwuki, I'm happy you like them!

  • @thesiliconvalleypianoteach9468
    @thesiliconvalleypianoteach9468 3 года назад +1

    Wow, so thankful for all these videos. My student is playing this piece, and I am referring to this video as I learn how to play the piece myself. Thank you!

    • @SonataSecrets
      @SonataSecrets 3 года назад

      Thanks for the referral! I'm so happy the videos can be used like this, that has been an ambition since I started!

  • @gozdeusfekes
    @gozdeusfekes 3 года назад

    Your explanations are very good. You are great. Thank you!

  • @pablovasquez2166
    @pablovasquez2166 2 года назад +1

    amaazing content man.....keep doing these

  • @gtair711
    @gtair711 Год назад

    So lovely

  • @josephososkie3029
    @josephososkie3029 2 года назад

    Wow, I just painted a picture with the last stanza of wordsworths poem in mind. But I interpreted more death with the poem. The song reflects the helpless falling, while “ mounting up the hill”. It gets dizzy trying to keep track of what’s literal. Love and death. I can see now why of all artists, poets seem to see the world transparently.
    Thanks for the catch on “ The Solitary Reaper”.

  • @musobri
    @musobri Месяц назад

    Great channel, Thanks.

  • @truBador2
    @truBador2 2 года назад +1

    Very musical analysis. Bravo.

  • @shin-i-chikozima
    @shin-i-chikozima Год назад

    You are a prodigious pianist
    Be insatiable❗
    This masterpiece wears well
    From
    A corner of Debussyist of dazzling Tokyo

  • @Dparrey
    @Dparrey 3 года назад +1

    A good friend sent me your video and its excellent .What a great analysis. It's a bit difficult as im playing it as accompanied solo on cello so without reading all the accompaniment its hard to feel my place but this really helped me outline the foundational notes and a lot of the key moods and changes throughout the piece. I've taken a lot of notes for myself :)

    • @SonataSecrets
      @SonataSecrets 3 года назад +1

      Happy it was helpful! Love the cello.

  • @TheGenesect10
    @TheGenesect10 3 года назад +1

    This is a very nice video and analysis! I am learning this piece at the moment by myself, and it's nice for me to get an analysis of the pieces I try and play!
    Hopefully, I can soon play this piece, I probably have around 2-3 measures left!😃

    • @SonataSecrets
      @SonataSecrets 3 года назад +1

      Thanks, I'm happy it was helpful!
      You're almost there then!

  • @johnnylee3565
    @johnnylee3565 3 года назад +2

    I love this channel, this video and the fact that there are no dislikes

  • @sychg3448
    @sychg3448 2 года назад

    Amazing

  • @DannyVFiddler
    @DannyVFiddler 3 года назад +1

    Amazing pedagogy job, you are a huge teacher, I am using this for my harmony's students now. I am a violinist but theory is really important for my students to understand the whole in this. Regard from Ecuador my apologies for my English

    • @SonataSecrets
      @SonataSecrets 3 года назад

      Thank you so much, nice to see people all the way from Ecuador here :)

  • @samuelechiarelli9594
    @samuelechiarelli9594 3 года назад

    Best channel

  • @tomarmstrong1281
    @tomarmstrong1281 2 года назад +1

    That piano has a wonderful resonant tone.

    • @SonataSecrets
      @SonataSecrets 2 года назад

      I agree, I like it very much :)

    • @tomarmstrong1281
      @tomarmstrong1281 Год назад

      I really envy your mastery of the keyboard. I am an old man who ought to have acquired those skills many generations ago. Life in its various iterations intruded. Now, with an air of desperation, a patient and talented teacher and a decent instrument I am trying to make up lost ground. Your simplified arrangements are much appreciated. By your skill in rendering beautiful pieces of piano works into a format where the less skilled operate, it is possible to capture some of the essence of the composers original intents. Thank you.

  • @kristinajohansson5099
    @kristinajohansson5099 3 года назад +1

    I work with this piece now. It´s beautiful. Thanks for great help. Alldeles särskilt stort tack för dikten och bakgrundsinformationen. Och beskrivningen av andan och själen i detta stycke. Precis vad jag behöver höra när jag sitter med noterna framför mig och försöker lära mig detta ljuvliga stycke som jag förälskat mig i.

    • @SonataSecrets
      @SonataSecrets 3 года назад

      Tack så mycket Kristina. Lycka till med stycket!

  • @logotrikes
    @logotrikes Месяц назад

    The magic starts at 8:12...

  • @jodyreadettmusic9287
    @jodyreadettmusic9287 3 года назад +3

    Hello, Henrick. Thank you for your interpretation and analysis of this lovely work I played many years ago and enjoy teaching now. I was interested in your idea that the upbeats at the end of bar 4 belong more to the following phrase at bar 5. I tried that after listening to your explanation but I feel they belong to the previous phrase for two reasons; the new phrase in bar 5 imitates the opening melody in rhythm and so the upbeats are unnecessary, and secondly the Eb and Gb work with the previous tonic chord in bars 3 - to 4 with the pedal sustained and not nicely with the Db chord. So I see them as a little 'Debussy' extension to the first line so that we have a strong Db chord at bar 5. Also, would you recommend any una corda pedal for a student with this work? Thank you, Jody

    • @SonataSecrets
      @SonataSecrets 3 года назад +1

      Hello Jody, thanks for your question!
      First, the harmony changes after the "upbeat" in any case so that shouldn't affect how one feels it regarding the phrasing. But my remark is more about how I find it hard to hold a melodic line over such a long sustained note that the Gb major chord is. If it was a melodic instrument that could keep the long note alive - no problem! But on a piano it dies out and we can do nothing about it. But of course I know I'm in disagreement with Debussy because he clearly writes it as belonging to the first phrase. In the end it shouldn't matter so much, I think the resulting music would not be that much different.
      For the Una corda, I think it's a great idea to use it at the pianissimo sections.

  • @dansihvonen8218
    @dansihvonen8218 4 года назад +5

    So, why is Snowden explaining classic music?

  • @jonathanpluto4362
    @jonathanpluto4362 3 года назад +1

    At 9:20 that A flat major chord is a dorian sound for e flat minor. And at 10:17 it's not a pentatonic scale, the A flat is missing from those chords, there's only the Gb Bb Rb Eb notes before the IV V and ii V respectively, so I think it's a Gb major chord with an added 6th. Very nice video and interpretation by the way.

  • @anon0105
    @anon0105 2 года назад +3

    One very small correction: the name Hebrides (the archipelago off the north west of Scotland) is pronounced heh-bri-dees, not heh-brides. The correct pronunciation fits the rhyme and meter of the poem better. Yours is a wonderful channel. It inspires me and brings me joy. It might be my favorite in all of RUclips. Thank you and please keep giving us more.

    • @SonataSecrets
      @SonataSecrets 2 года назад

      Ah, that makes perfect sense, thanks for mentioning it!
      It's my pleasure :)

  • @ashwinjarman6210
    @ashwinjarman6210 2 года назад

    09:13
    modal mixture mate

  • @mike-df3qo
    @mike-df3qo 26 дней назад

    deBUSSSYY

  • @gloriacidyanez6125
    @gloriacidyanez6125 3 года назад +1

    Hola, me suscribí, sería genial que pongas subtítulos en español. Gracias y saludos desde Argentina!!!

    • @SonataSecrets
      @SonataSecrets 3 года назад

      Thank you Argentina! I will look into subtitles some time soon, and probably add it to my most popular videos at least, but it will be auto-translated then...

  • @gazzamuso
    @gazzamuso 2 года назад

    When you played the stumbling theme, were you playing C naturals rather than C flats?

  • @gatesurfer
    @gatesurfer Год назад

    Very nice. But can you explain the very end? No one plays those final two notes, but they’re written in the score. Are you supposed to keep them held from the previous measure and lift the rest of the fingers and the pedal? Let them ring a bit? I don’t understand the notation.

  • @truthform
    @truthform 9 месяцев назад

    I don't understand the giant leap without the sqiggly?

  • @youdidntseeanything5970
    @youdidntseeanything5970 2 года назад

    Doesn't anyone remember this piece from the Windows 7 music gallery ?

  • @shin-i-chikozima
    @shin-i-chikozima 2 года назад

    My emotion is unfathomable depths
    FromTokyo

  • @originalstarwalker21
    @originalstarwalker21 2 года назад

    girl hair flaxen

  • @Silly.Old.Sisyphus
    @Silly.Old.Sisyphus 2 года назад +1

    oh no, not at all !.... this poem (and Debussy's poetic score) is NOT about innocence - it's about experience! About sensuality written large, written deep, yet painted softly and lightly with the colours of Spring. It's a homage to the flower of woman.

  • @GloriaRodriguez-cy2ux
    @GloriaRodriguez-cy2ux 2 года назад

    cái gì vậy trời?

  • @alandougan4689
    @alandougan4689 2 года назад

    hebrideees

  • @jessevallejo8797
    @jessevallejo8797 Год назад

    Lol, the dolt that wrote the captions decided that a plagal cadence is called a playgirl cadence.