Shostakovich - Preludes and Fugues, Op.87, Book II - Tatiana Nikolayeva

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  • Опубликовано: 28 авг 2024
  • Dmitri Shostakovich
    Preludes and Fugues, Op.87, Book II
    Tatiana Nikoayeva, piano
    00:09 13. in F-sharp major Moderato con moto - Allegro
    08:13 14. in E-flat minor Adagio - Allegro non troppo
    14:54 15. in D-flat major Allegretto - Allegro molto
    20:18 16. in B-flat minor Andante - Adagio
    31:21 17. in A-flat major Allegretto - Allegretto
    37:25 18. in F minor Moderato - Moderato con moto
    42:47 19. in E-flat major Allegretto - Moderato con moto
    47:48 20. in C minor Adagio - Moderato
    56:40 21. in B-flat major Allegro - Allegro non troppo
    01:01:17 22. in G minor Moderato non troppo - Moderato
    01:08:50 23. in F major Adagio - Moderato con moto
    01:15:07 24. in D minor Andante - Moderato
    Broadcast 21-30 December 1992

Комментарии • 95

  • @ChollieD
    @ChollieD Год назад +10

    I'm 53 and this is my first time listening to these tunes. My god it's great music. "Where has it been" etc. What a composer! And what a great pianist.

  • @garyscheele5118
    @garyscheele5118 3 года назад +31

    And I was there in San Francisco in Nov of 1993 when she completed the 16th prelude and fugue, and then she had to take a break, but that was her last performance ... turns out she had a brain hemorrhage and then about a week later she died. Doing what she loved. RIP

    • @davidfloren5339
      @davidfloren5339 3 года назад +4

      The 16th P&F is very special.

    • @bryancatanzaro441
      @bryancatanzaro441 2 года назад +1

      @@davidfloren5339 Mind blowing.

    • @ep4314
      @ep4314 2 года назад +1

      A friend of mine from Japan wanted to know what her last performance was and you gave me the answer. Thank you.

  • @thomasb9225
    @thomasb9225 4 года назад +85

    One year before she died - all played without notes - more power and depth then the most younger players - I am absolutely flashed by her play

    • @aldorossi3177
      @aldorossi3177 4 года назад +5

      she plays piano simply ... marvelous

    • @alohadan3511
      @alohadan3511 3 года назад +6

      Really amazing. She brought me to shastakovich

  • @jorgeurzuaurzua4011
    @jorgeurzuaurzua4011 4 года назад +59

    This extraordinary recording has two main themes. The superb playing of Tatiana Nikolayevna and the splendid composition of Dmitri Shostakovich. Tatiana's playing needs no further analysis: she is a world class piano player and Shostakovich selected her to premiere and first record his 24 preludes and fugues. In the other hand, the preludes and fugues are marvelous music, molded in the wohltemperierte Klavier, and this recording and Tatiana's playing are quite up to the challenge. All in all, a superb recording, historic video, and a monumental tribute to good old JSB. Thanks Vladivostok 1969 for posting this jewel.

    • @adriancameron8665
      @adriancameron8665 4 года назад +5

      Agreed. These are wonderful compositions and beautifully played. Extraordinary too that she can play all 48 pieces from memory.

    • @julianmanjarres1998
      @julianmanjarres1998 2 года назад +1

      Idk how to feel about Shostakovich using parallel fifths in his fugues though. Huge over sight, or maybe deliberate.. either way, kinda weird. Then again it's Shostakovich

    • @jorgeurzuaurzua4011
      @jorgeurzuaurzua4011 2 года назад +4

      ​@@julianmanjarres1998 Thanks for your comment. I am not technically qualified to answer your question. My subjective feeling is that neither Nikolaeva nor Shostakovich are capable of huge oversights. On the contrary, they seem to me to be highly disciplined.

    • @aguador67
      @aguador67 Год назад +3

      @@julianmanjarres1998 My guess is that it was deliberate. It forms part of Shostakovich's "language" :S

    • @babsboonzaaier4621
      @babsboonzaaier4621 Год назад

      ​@@jorgeurzuaurzua4011 8m

  • @nicolasmaillouxorgue
    @nicolasmaillouxorgue Год назад +3

    The n° 13 fugue is utterly beautiful...

  • @fmrtao56
    @fmrtao56 2 года назад +10

    Tatiana Nikolayeva truly demonstrates how Shostakovich was first and foremost a pianist. It is no wonder that she won the first prize at the first Bach Leipzig competition in 1950 and that she she inspired DSCH to write his own preludes and fugues, inspired by Bach and, I am sure Tatiana Nikolayeva‘s astonishing playing of Bach on a modern piano.

  • @user-xg1wb7dn9g
    @user-xg1wb7dn9g 3 года назад +10

    Слушала, не могла оторваться. Спасибо.

  • @sneddypie
    @sneddypie 4 года назад +12

    the 15th fugue is crazy. i love it so much

  • @user-nd6gf7sy6g
    @user-nd6gf7sy6g 2 года назад +7

    Была на концертах Татьяны Николаевой .
    Это надо слушать в зале и видеть ее игру.
    Великая была пианистка.
    Земля пухом!

  • @MultiSORDO
    @MultiSORDO 2 года назад +4

    Magnifica pianista y magnifico compositor soviéticos.

  • @pablobarrazaleemhuis221
    @pablobarrazaleemhuis221 7 лет назад +26

    thank you vladivostok, the second book is totally new for me, and the film maker made a incredible job, he made posible to enjoy the music as much as the film (tatiana)

  • @sebastian-benedictflore
    @sebastian-benedictflore Год назад +2

    An invaluable contribution to music.

  • @kathrynmcmorrow7170
    @kathrynmcmorrow7170 7 лет назад +12

    Thank you. I feel it under my skin.

  • @adrianoseresi3525
    @adrianoseresi3525 2 года назад +6

    She has such a remarkable touch. That’s the thing that astonishes me about great pianists in their dotage: they might lose some technique to old age but they retain that wonderful, wonderful touch that takes decades to acquire!

    • @aguador67
      @aguador67 Год назад +2

      Maybe, along the years, the technique becomes less important than the message or spirit of the work. However, Tatiana Nikolayeva not only seems to have lost absolutely none of her technique, but has improved it over the years, to the degree of mastery we hear in this recording.

  • @deanedge5988
    @deanedge5988 3 года назад +3

    It is an act of artistic history thought that her fantastically beautiful brain effectively switched off whilst she was actually playing the op 87 live in America. They always make me cry: joy, sadness awe everything it is to be human and to think and feel.

  • @lucianobonomi5291
    @lucianobonomi5291 Год назад

    Grande l'autore, grande l'interprete, magnifica la presentazione.

  • @persidedesaintpierre7367
    @persidedesaintpierre7367 7 лет назад +6

    Merci beaucoup Vladivostok pour cette vidéo de qualité.

  • @richardjx5442
    @richardjx5442 2 года назад +1

    This entire presentation is captivating and enchanting‼️The music AND the visuals add up to a wonderful mixed media marvel‼️👍🎹

  • @Poetry_SP
    @Poetry_SP 2 года назад +2

    Спасибо

  • @modernmozart813
    @modernmozart813 4 года назад +4

    Invincible brain that’s exactly what am I looking for 💐💐

  • @crispusattucks4007
    @crispusattucks4007 3 года назад +3

    She is awesome 😎

  • @morganmartinez8420
    @morganmartinez8420 4 года назад +8

    N. 15 is absolutely amazing!

    • @timward276
      @timward276 3 года назад +5

      bonkers, isn't it? I love the way the serene #16 follows the manic #15. After all the tumult of the fugue in 15, you get to relax and listen to Fugue 16 drift across the night sky for ten minutes.

    • @VassilikiKravari
      @VassilikiKravari 27 дней назад

      It is incredible, yes! The prelude reminds me of a well-known Christmas carol, I can't help it. Am I crazy?

    • @morganmartinez8420
      @morganmartinez8420 27 дней назад

      @@VassilikiKravari nope, it's quite similar to the incipit of "we wish you a Merry Christmas", if I'm not mistaking it's not a random coincidence, Shostakovich actually wrote this prelude during the Christmas period in which he heard that song over and over again

    • @VassilikiKravari
      @VassilikiKravari 26 дней назад

      @@morganmartinez8420 Thank you! I did not know it, very interesting!

  • @BrucknerMotet
    @BrucknerMotet 5 лет назад +8

    The #16 fugue transports me. But I'm a fan of nearly all 24 of these P&Fs.

    • @timward276
      @timward276 4 года назад +4

      That's my favorite one. And it's nicely placed in the set: after the chaos of #15, the wildest, most atonal piece in the whole set of 24, you get to hear #16 float through the night sky for ten minutes.

    • @BrucknerMotet
      @BrucknerMotet 3 года назад +2

      @@timward276 the #16 fugue is quite meditative in its character. Its length, tempo, basic melodic/harmonic structure, and dynamic markings all combine to make it so.

  • @skywb
    @skywb 2 года назад +2

    an absolute master

  • @tencuidado4640
    @tencuidado4640 3 года назад +1

    Secillamente hermoso, extraodinariamente íntimo, aquí se encuentra a Dmitri Dmitrievich antes que a Shostakovich. Gracias por compartir esto.

  • @cismoll_
    @cismoll_ Год назад +2

    31:57 "Бдительность! Бдительность! Всегда везде..." из "Антиформалистического райка"

  • @modernmozart813
    @modernmozart813 4 года назад +24

    How could she possibly memorize all the book 1 and😱2 !!!!!!Savage

    • @wirag4680
      @wirag4680 4 года назад +13

      Well, Shostakovich literally dedicated this whole 24 Preludes and Fugues to her!

    • @modernmozart813
      @modernmozart813 4 года назад +2

      Wirayuda Gunawan How do they know each other?

    • @luizg8034
      @luizg8034 4 года назад +15

      @@modernmozart813 every russian knows each other

    • @patrickleterme5217
      @patrickleterme5217 4 года назад +4

      @@luizg8034 hahahaha you got me on that one

    • @johnapple6646
      @johnapple6646 4 года назад +13

      Shostakovich and Nikolayeva met at a piano competition where she played the whole Bach 24 preludes and fugues. Shostakovich got real inspired and met with her, after which he wrote his own preludes and fugues dedicating it to her. It was quite a risk at the time to publish this work because of Stalin, Shostakovich had been under his artistic oppression all the time but for this piece, he just didn't give a shit and published it for the world to see. Nikolayeva recorded it a bunch of times entirely.
      Ted talk over

  • @steveegallo3384
    @steveegallo3384 Год назад

    Dazzling! BRAVA from Acapulco!

  • @laspiano765
    @laspiano765 5 лет назад +3

    Musica transmite muita tranquilidade nas maos de Tatiana Nikolayeva, eleva quem ve e ouve a musica muito bem interpretada de Shostakovich, gostei do que vi e senti quanto a musica para piano, muito diferente de partituras convenciionais, grato por postar, 09-12-2018-D-13:50hs.-Laspiano.-

  • @eusebiutihan5048
    @eusebiutihan5048 2 года назад +1

    Splendid 🙏

  • @jonyorg1294
    @jonyorg1294 7 лет назад +5

    these are so nice.

  • @taomont
    @taomont Год назад +1

    A message from eternity...

  • @timward276
    @timward276 3 года назад +10

    Hard to believe the fugue in 19 is actually in a major key. It's so atonal.

  • @lamodernista
    @lamodernista 3 года назад +1

    No.21...WOW

  • @ld_blue4348
    @ld_blue4348 2 года назад +1

    Tatyana Nikolaeva plays one of the most piercing and subtle interpretations of the prelude in B-flat minor (sorry, perhaps even better than Shostakovich in audio recordings)

  • @piengiess
    @piengiess 3 года назад +6

    Please explain the setting chosen by TN - the Lamp and particularly translate the words on the tape-surround seen at 8 minutes in # 14. Surely integral with the deeply considered performance ? Thank you.

    • @dima.jiharev
      @dima.jiharev 3 года назад +1

      Translates to "Caution low ceiling", I think it was just a nice montage, nothing more

  • @BrucknerMotet
    @BrucknerMotet 5 лет назад +4

    The #13 fugue seems the most Bachesque to me.

  • @culturehorse
    @culturehorse 4 года назад +5

    In this F# M, almost sounds like Bill Evans ballade.

    • @BrucknerMotet
      @BrucknerMotet 3 года назад +1

      the #13 F # M fugue is one of my top 3 in Opus 87

    • @nymbusDeveloper86
      @nymbusDeveloper86 2 года назад +1

      You are right. It does sound Bill-Evansy.

  • @muninta5493
    @muninta5493 Год назад

    💫

  • @pianistegolfeur
    @pianistegolfeur Год назад

    Ne pas oublier que si elle fut compositrice, elle fut aussi la professeur de Nikolai Lugansky en particulier....

  • @aaronjacobs9913
    @aaronjacobs9913 Месяц назад

    What piano is she playing??

  • @17zm
    @17zm 3 года назад +1

    37:20 прелюдия и фуга f moll

  • @thedemocraticfilipino6417
    @thedemocraticfilipino6417 4 года назад +6

    33:08

    • @vittoriomarano8230
      @vittoriomarano8230 4 года назад +2

      ..yes indeed, the a flat fugue is made of gold...endless beauty. I can' t stop thinking about it.

    • @thedemocraticfilipino6417
      @thedemocraticfilipino6417 3 года назад +1

      @@vittoriomarano8230 definately a favorite of mine

    • @stanleygrove3705
      @stanleygrove3705 3 года назад

      @@vittoriomarano8230 Nothing in Shostakovich has a deeper hold on me than this so happy, so melancholy fugue

  • @cappycapuzi1716
    @cappycapuzi1716 Год назад

    I adore this music which I prefer to J.S. Bach's. This is a super, super special post. She died in fact while playing this music.

  • @hyeonyoungnam405
    @hyeonyoungnam405 6 лет назад +1

    15,22

  • @user-xx6hb7lm4k
    @user-xx6hb7lm4k 6 месяцев назад +1

    ВООБЩЕ - ТО РЕДКО ПИАНИСТЫ ИСПОЛНЯЮТ ПРОИЗВЕДЕНИЯ ШОСТАКОВИЧА, ПРЕДПОЧИТАЮТ БОЛЬШЕ КЛАССИКУ , РОМАНТИКОВ, ИМПРЕССИОНИСТОВ !!!

  • @RobertShayovitz
    @RobertShayovitz 5 лет назад

    1:18:50

  •  4 года назад +1

    18:11

  • @nantetoev1188
    @nantetoev1188 Год назад

    23:16

  • @Adrianomarino
    @Adrianomarino 2 года назад +4

    Tatiana rimane un punto di riferimento obbligatorio è meraviglioso scoltarla

  • @militaryandemergencyservic3286

    He only did one book of preludes and fugues. Why call it 'book 2' as if there is another book (like Bach did) of 24 preludes and fugues? His other set is ONLY preludes (op 34)

  • @militaryandemergencyservic3286
    @militaryandemergencyservic3286 2 года назад

    why call them book 1 and 2 ? To try to be like Bach? But Bach had 48 in total - not 24!

  • @Lwmyoun
    @Lwmyoun 5 лет назад +1

    56:40

  • @iijang1150
    @iijang1150 4 года назад +1

    1:15:02