Brings back memories. When I was about fourteen, my cello teacher assigned me this work. It made me very proud, because it was the first time that I'd been given a piece entitled "sonata"!... In the present excellent performance, I appreciate in particular the surprising way in which the players have resolved the question of the problematic character of the finale (although 'notes inégales' are.more characteristic of French music than they are of Italian). And by the way, who ARE these performers? It would have been nice -- and only fair -- to know their names!
Very well done with rich tone from the violoncello and good accompanimento from the harpsichord. I see you are a group from Puebla, Mexico. Felicidades por su linda y fina presentacion tan directa y bien realizada. Un saludo sentido y de sincero respeto desde San Antonio, Texas.
The phrasing is soooo beautiful and the trills and mordents are so musical, I'm learning the Suzuki version right now so I can play this for an All-State excerpt (Adagio). But I'm not good at Allegro though haha
Can anyone enlighten me on why the first note of the last movement is soo stressed? I'm playing from the G. Shirmer transcription only showing a slur over the first three eighth notes followed by three slurred staccato eighths also under the slur. Much appreciated.
The player is playing "inégal," that is, he or she is swinging the rhythm. This was a common stylistic approach for a run of notes in the baroque period. But perhaps it was more characteristic of French music than of Italian. Nevertheless, it sounds nice here.
We are all itching to know! I don't have this particular sonata on CD but I have 6 sonatas op. 1, played by Antonio Pocaterra, Benito Ferraris, & Maria Isabella De Carli, and I am so disappointed in it (modern cello and played in the old plodding, boring style). But it was the only one I could get. Incidentally, op. 1 wasn't composed for cello. Benedetto Marcello was a bassoonist, so Op. 1 was originally written for bassoon. I would hazard a guess this present work was too.
this is very beautiful! there were, however, a couple squeaks i could pick out. other than that, great! i mean, i could never play it this good...but i would encourage you pick some nature-y pictures for us to look at instead of Marcello's face the whole 8 or so minutes! xD
Before the Classical era, there wasn't much consensus with a standard frequency for tuning, though most back then would go with A415Hz before the world agreed on A440Hz. Good ear, though! I said the same thing when I discovered perfect pitch.
Чудовий діамант серед коштовностей світового мистецтва,,,який демонструє і моя одинадцятирічна донька from Ukraine
I am playing this on my cello for 3 months and it´s so difficuld! Wonderful!!!
AFJ2 TV i play too you hace reason ist very difficult
Victor, go looking for some cello sonatas by Barrière. They are wonderful, but full of absolutely hair-raising virtuosity.
I'm playing this currently on Bassoon. I absolutely adore it.
Es un compositor que realmente con estas seis sonatas demostró que de una manera sencilla se puede lograr una hermosa melodía ! #musicabarroca
Una caricia al espíritu como toda la música clásica!!
I would like this music to stay forever in my heart !!! Tepper Michael.
If you wish it Michael...it will be so. Peace to you.
Learning this on upright bass
4:48 Largo
6:06 Allegretto
i m playing + learning this song, i long it so much, especially Allegro!
the Allegro section starts at 2:34
the Largo section starts at 4:47
the Allegretto section starts at 6:07
Thank you I needed to practice the allegro section at 2:34
Que belleza !❤❤
Brings back memories. When I was about fourteen, my cello teacher assigned me this work. It made me very proud, because it was the first time that I'd been given a piece entitled "sonata"!... In the present excellent performance, I appreciate in particular the surprising way in which the players have resolved the question of the problematic character of the finale (although 'notes inégales' are.more characteristic of French music than they are of Italian). And by the way, who ARE these performers? It would have been nice -- and only fair -- to know their names!
@ David Steven Tabbat you said something similar in "Marcello Adiago and Allegro played by Susane Beer and David Hancock" - just saying that
@@victoriawu3289Maybe because those are the same sonatas.
with viola + piano so very beatiful live of classic music
Corrección! Es música Barroca y eso no es una viola es un Violoncello.
Saludos.
This is baroque music
This is a cello not a viola
This is harpsichord, not piano
How many misconceptions in those very few words, amazing
Beautiful. Taking so much time with the dotted rhythm... sounds great. No rush.
gostei muito da interpretação, me parece perfeito...
BRILLIANTLY !!! Tepper Michael.
I'm gonna play this on my trombone recital. adorable largo sections...
Very well done with rich tone from the violoncello and good accompanimento from the harpsichord. I see you are a group from Puebla, Mexico. Felicidades por su linda y fina presentacion tan directa y bien realizada. Un saludo sentido y de sincero respeto desde San Antonio, Texas.
This brings me old memories! one of the first pieces I've ever learned! :)
WOW!! This causes me to reexamine this piece.
The phrasing is soooo beautiful and the trills and mordents are so musical, I'm learning the Suzuki version right now so I can play this for an All-State excerpt (Adagio). But I'm not good at Allegro though haha
Huh , i had to play that with a trombone , Allegro is really fast for us. It was a lot of fun and suffering
Who are these marvelous musicians? It is only fair to tell us.
Who are the musicians? Nice playing!
How a wonderful music !
when using baroque instruments, they have gut strings and the tunning is lower... its the A in 415 Hz...
Que belleza
this sonata is the first I learned
¿Es Juan Diego Rodriguez el que toca? ¡Maravilloso!
I second the other users - who are these wonderful musicians??
Can anyone enlighten me on why the first note of the last movement is soo stressed? I'm playing from the G. Shirmer transcription only showing a slur over the first three eighth notes followed by three slurred staccato eighths also under the slur. Much appreciated.
The player is playing "inégal," that is, he or she is swinging the rhythm. This was a common stylistic approach for a run of notes in the baroque period. But perhaps it was more characteristic of French music than of Italian. Nevertheless, it sounds nice here.
Je serais reconnaissante aux experts de me dire qui sont les musiciens jouant si parfaitement cette belle pièce. Merci.
Benedetto Marcello (Veneza, 31 de julho de 1686 - Bréscia, 24 de julho de 1739) foi um compositor, escritor, advogado e magistrado italiano.
Hello! Does anyone know where can I find the sheet music of the piece? I play the viola but I can read F clef if it's only in that one. Thanks :)
Me :)
I'm playing this piece too
this is awesome
baroque tunning, lower pitch but it is E minor
What is this recording? Who is the cellist and what album, label, etc... Thanks! I love it!
is called gangster rap music from the past
Which recording is this? Do you know who is playing? Is it a viola da gamba, or a cello? Thank you!
It's a cello I should know cuz I'm an 11 year old and I'm playning this piece
Hermosa....
Why great composers as so sad ...
splended!
I also want to know who plays.
Tanuki
We are all itching to know! I don't have this particular sonata on CD but I have 6 sonatas op. 1, played by Antonio Pocaterra, Benito Ferraris, & Maria Isabella De Carli, and I am so disappointed in it (modern cello and played in the old plodding, boring style). But it was the only one I could get. Incidentally, op. 1 wasn't composed for cello. Benedetto Marcello was a bassoonist, so Op. 1 was originally written for bassoon. I would hazard a guess this present work was too.
Is it just me, or is this in Eb minor, not E minor?
this is very beautiful! there were, however, a couple squeaks i could pick out. other than that, great! i mean, i could never play it this good...but i would encourage you pick some nature-y pictures for us to look at instead of Marcello's face the whole 8 or so minutes! xD
i know that because i play the cello
My exam on trombone ;)
This is in E flat...
Beauty
podrias decirme quienes tocan este arreglo por favor???
2:34
the main is the cello
: )
Il joue en 415
ah merci!
Bellisimo
it's not an allegretto but an andante
this is not in EM
+wild 72 probably tuned lower than modern frequency
@@phillippark1213 probably A 415hz
hes not playing in e minor
Before the Classical era, there wasn't much consensus with a standard frequency for tuning, though most back then would go with A415Hz before the world agreed on A440Hz. Good ear, though! I said the same thing when I discovered perfect pitch.
Thanks (different account and username but same person
technically wuld be e♭minor
In baroque tuning it's e minor
2:34
3:23