It's amazing how he usés the contrasting tonal nature of the pianos extrémités His rhythms vary so much and he usés flowing éléments of classical romantic piano music
This guy is amazing Never heard lv him or hud music before Must be russian Very busy music Irs jazz like but not tol répétitions and really sophisticated and complex
@@ThepianistinUSA Yes, he was Ukrainian by nationality, but I believe that he was ethnically half-Russian Jewish from his dad's side and Russian from his mom's side.
I can distinctly hear some echo of Prokofiev's piano music heaviness in "Toccatina" (owing I think to the repeated notes that become a motive in themselves), beside the jazz influences. My only regret is most of these pieces are so demanding (they are so light sounding I'd love to try my hand at them, alas I lack the required technique).
I could classification this as countrrpoint jazz or contrapunral jazz Each hand is doing it's own part The left hand doesn't merely play chords or keep harmony
Schott score, see how long it lasts hehe
Hehe schott aint last schott
It's amazing how he usés the contrasting tonal nature of the pianos extrémités His rhythms vary so much and he usés flowing éléments of classical romantic piano music
Thanks so much for opening up my musical horizons
The more I taste Kapustin, the better it gets.
godam jew music
@@growlkinz1233 LMAO i wanna hear more about this elaborate
Kapustin's last name literally comes from ukrainian/russian 'капуста' (cabbage) :)
He's à phenomen
The contrapunral nature of the music,makes ih complex,which engagés the mind and provides variety
This guy is amazing Never heard lv him or hud music before Must be russian Very busy music Irs jazz like but not tol répétitions and really sophisticated and complex
Ukrainian 💛💙
@@ThepianistinUSA Yes, he was Ukrainian by nationality, but I believe that he was ethnically half-Russian Jewish from his dad's side and Russian from his mom's side.
1:13 He actually plays an A# which is not written in the score. IMHO it actually sounds much better that way
bruh whos alex bizannes and why does he comment like 10 times in this one video
He's going through the "discovering Kapustin for the first time" experience.
덕분에 손가락 번호 잘 배워갑니다 고맙습니다~~
Where can I buy this score please?
He's à genius
I can distinctly hear some echo of Prokofiev's piano music heaviness in "Toccatina" (owing I think to the repeated notes that become a motive in themselves), beside the jazz influences. My only regret is most of these pieces are so demanding (they are so light sounding I'd love to try my hand at them, alas I lack the required technique).
can you please tell me where I can find these exact sheet music?
Schott Music
Where did you get the audio? It’s way less saturated than the most viewed video on RUclips of this, way better. Curious where you found it
from the CD
@@mdr-bs8jy what's the CD called? I can't find it
@@CyysVideos
Kapustin : Eight Concert Etudes
That’s the name of the album.
@@mdr-bs8jy ah, simply that! Thanks a lot.
I could classification this as countrrpoint jazz or contrapunral jazz Each hand is doing it's own part The left hand doesn't merely play chords or keep harmony
I would say the etude where this is most true is No 8, the Finale, followed closely by Nos 1&3.
Based
W composition
🙏
Wow
1:09
That's impossibly fast