Medtner: Forgotten Melodies III, Op.40 (Arimori, Tozer)

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  • Опубликовано: 26 июл 2024
  • Two strikingly beautiful but very different performances of Medtner’s third set of Vergessene Weisen, more commonly known as the Forgotten Melodies. Arimori is transparent, intimate, Tozer pungently dramatic. It’s a pity that this particular set of pieces is not more often played - it features Medtner at his most subtle and rhythmically creative, and the pieces have that odd Medtnerian quality of being full of both tranquillity and disquiet.
    Arimori:
    00:00 - Danza Col Canto
    04:06 - Danza Sinfonica
    12:49 - Danza Fiorata
    15:44 - Danza Jubilosa
    18:40 - Danza Ondulata
    21:41 - Danza Ditirambica
    Tozer:
    28:32 - Danza Col Canto
    32:48- Danza Sinfonica
    41:42 - Danza Fiorata
    44:36 - Danza Jubilosa
    47:31 - Danza Ondulata
    50:37 - Danza Ditirambica
  • ВидеоклипыВидеоклипы

Комментарии • 96

  • @Medtnaculuss
    @Medtnaculuss 7 лет назад +185

    Glad to see some more love for Medtner.

    • @vietanho1661
      @vietanho1661 5 лет назад +1

      could you please tell me, what does "culus" in your name mean?

    • @10mimu
      @10mimu 5 лет назад +5

      Culus is latin for asshole...

    • @Aaron-hq4bu
      @Aaron-hq4bu 5 лет назад +1

      @@10mimu Nota bene: ass, not asshole

    • @10mimu
      @10mimu 4 года назад

      Aaron Not at all. Culus is "anus". Ass properly
      would be nates or glutes.

    • @felixmladenov5428
      @felixmladenov5428 3 года назад +5

      Actually "-culus" is the Latin suffix which is used for masculine diminutive forms.

  • @nicol8282
    @nicol8282 7 лет назад +61

    Medtner is a quite unknown composer but his melodies are strikingly beautiful

  • @sama.4471
    @sama.4471 2 года назад +9

    Danza ondulata aka "Dance of the Waves" (the fifth piece of the set) is absolutely fucking brilliant. What an amazing composer

  • @djnka0
    @djnka0 6 лет назад +18

    I’m loving the complex meters going on in some of these sections, adds a whole other layer of musicality onto an already stunning harmonic and rhythmic work

  • @conan2717
    @conan2717 5 лет назад +4

    I watched and listened to this video often in the last weeks. And I see more and more how gorgeous it is. So thank you.

  • @jacksongrant15
    @jacksongrant15 Год назад +5

    For some reason I've been slow to get to know op 40 and have known op 38 and 39 quite well this last decade. The time is ripe now.

  • @classicalmusiclover4029
    @classicalmusiclover4029 5 лет назад +4

    The beginning tears my heart apart.

  • @TiticatFollies
    @TiticatFollies 6 лет назад

    I love Medtner, and both of these performances.

  • @Roger-hc3pu
    @Roger-hc3pu 3 года назад +7

    Had a very bad romantic-life-related moment today but this is helping.

  • @dedikandrej
    @dedikandrej 7 лет назад +16

    the part at 33:30 is beautiful, that trill gives me goosebumb every time i hear it :D

    • @AllValiant
      @AllValiant 7 лет назад +4

      I feel your pain, it happens to me too, I get shivers. Medtner is definitly one of my favorite composers, I was very happy when he uploaded this!

  • @markdowding1371
    @markdowding1371 2 года назад +1

    Unforgettable!

  • @orgyenzopa
    @orgyenzopa 7 лет назад +86

    Can't understand why Medtner isn't better known.

    • @orgyenzopa
      @orgyenzopa 7 лет назад +2

      I see. Why can't the folks understand him tho'? It couldn't be easier.

    • @orgyenzopa
      @orgyenzopa 7 лет назад

      Brady Dill granted.
      Do you have a FB a/c or email? I'm fascinated by your words.

    • @harryandruschak2843
      @harryandruschak2843 7 лет назад +24

      With the advent of You Tube, and the hard work of uploaders, more and more people have a chance to listen to Medtner. It may take some years, but I am sure Medtner will finally be given his due.

    • @orgyenzopa
      @orgyenzopa 7 лет назад +1

      Yes, of course.

    • @wiggityp
      @wiggityp 7 лет назад +9

      Some of his things are much more accessible than others. I've learned his music piece by piece in general order of descending accessibility, which I guess is how I've learned everyone's music. Certainly some of Beethoven and Bach is pretty tough to get through the first few times. Also, I think that because basically everything Medtner wrote is for solo piano that gives him a much narrower appeal (shouldn't!) than a more comprehensive (genre wise) composer like Rachmaninoff. The only exception to that popularity trend is Chopin...I think.
      The first few Medtner pieces I got in to were; the skazka Op.26 No. 2; the 2nd of his Trois Nouvelles, Op.17; the "primavera" section from his Op.38 Forgotten Melodies and of course the Sonata reminiscenza. I think anyone who isn't pretty much immediately hooked by those (particularly the Reminiscenza) is tripping foo.
      I'd say his sonatas which is what a lot of people might instinctively turn to first when they're just getting in to him are probably his densest LEAST accessible pieces. Particularly that Sonata minacciosa which is DOPE but I'd say pretty much impossible except for serious listeners who would likely have to be musicians to penetrate it.

  • @marco119w7
    @marco119w7 4 года назад +70

    Is it weird that I hear some similarities to Brahms in Medtner? They are both are not afraid to use dense textures in the lower registers, and most of their music is very strict in tempo (in a classical manner), with occasional moments of intense melodic beauty. They also use counterpoint very obsessively. Regardless, I love them both.

    • @realnigga19
      @realnigga19 4 года назад +24

      the counterpoint is the best part of medtner. It's just so stimulating for some reason. More so than any other composer to me for some reason

    • @StevenPJames-fl1un
      @StevenPJames-fl1un 2 года назад +2

      Medtner, though Russian, had German roots, and was steeped in the German tradition from his days in Moscow Conservatory. Some could consider him a true successor of the German school (alongside Schoenberg and Strauss).

    • @segmentsAndCurves
      @segmentsAndCurves 2 года назад +8

      He has Brahms counterpoint and Schumann rhythmic wizardry.

    • @segmentsAndCurves
      @segmentsAndCurves 2 года назад

      @@StevenPJames-fl1un Would that observation is valid for Rachmaninoff and Scriabin?

    • @musimedmusi8736
      @musimedmusi8736 Год назад

      The Danza Sinfonica has definite references to Schumann, especially Carnival.

  • @teodorb.p.composer
    @teodorb.p.composer 4 месяца назад +1

    Medtner supremacy!

  • @sama.4471
    @sama.4471 3 года назад +19

    Medtner is absolutely brilliant, an all-time great piano composer yet he's unfortunately discredited in the same way Schumann is, especially Schumann's later works. I actually see many parallels between the two composers, when I see Medtner dubbed as the "Russian Brahms" I'm like no he is nothing like Brahms! He is more the Russian Schumann, both are misunderstood geniuses who may not be immediately accessible to the ear but whose music reveals it's rich secrets over repeated listening

    • @connorrichardson368
      @connorrichardson368 2 года назад +3

      Completely agree, I always get reminded of Medtner especially when I listen to Schumann's third sonata

    • @steveegallo3384
      @steveegallo3384 10 месяцев назад

      @@connorrichardson368 -- Indeed......BRAVO from Acapulco!

  • @allenptc
    @allenptc Год назад

    Each time I hear this it like more

  • @GICM
    @GICM 2 года назад

    hm this has got to be one of the prettiest medtner sets

  • @user-sh4bh2xe9z
    @user-sh4bh2xe9z 4 года назад +7

    32:48 danza sinfonica

  • @mohammadhamzahidris5319
    @mohammadhamzahidris5319 5 лет назад +1

    I would really love to read your writings about Medtner first piano sonata in f minor
    All the best

  • @segmentsAndCurves
    @segmentsAndCurves 2 года назад +4

    2:45 Jacob Collier exposed?

  • @789armstrong
    @789armstrong 3 года назад +2

    I wish Volodos would do an all Medtner CD.

  • @SpaghettiToaster
    @SpaghettiToaster 6 лет назад +10

    Is the sonata tragica part of the forgotten melodies too? There are a lot of cyclical connections between these pieces and the middle section of that sonata.

    • @vietanho1661
      @vietanho1661 5 лет назад +9

      Yes, my friends, tragic sonata belong to the second set of Forgotten Melodies op. 39. Btw this is an extremely virtuosic Sonata to me >.

    • @varditersahakyan8695
      @varditersahakyan8695 5 лет назад

      Yes, op.39 no.5)

  • @rag2458
    @rag2458 2 года назад +4

    14:41 last bar of the page straight out of a late Scriabin sonata lmao

    • @p-y8210
      @p-y8210 2 года назад +2

      Maybe it's the other way around.

    • @mitchellhenderson3476
      @mitchellhenderson3476 Год назад +1

      @@p-y8210 Scriabin had been dead for 5 years by the time these pieces were published

  • @jamesruf1025
    @jamesruf1025 5 лет назад +5

    superb, on first listen can't decide which I prefer! Which has your vote :?

  • @conan2717
    @conan2717 7 лет назад +5

    So great! But here's just a little reminder from my side not to forget about fauré's piano music! :)

    • @atmplayspiano
      @atmplayspiano 6 лет назад +7

      Fauré is the other composer whose music is extremely difficult to understand at first, but becomes so clear and direct with close listening.

    • @feinburger5404
      @feinburger5404 4 года назад +3

      @@atmplayspiano I second this. I've seen this comment 2 times already and I finally decided to go check out his music -- excellent decision!

    • @p-y8210
      @p-y8210 2 года назад

      Fauré's music sadly leaves me cold.

  • @Schubertd960
    @Schubertd960 2 года назад +1

    Disappointingly, Medtner's works are mostly all Forgotten or at least Unfairly Little-known Melodies.

  • @Schubertd960
    @Schubertd960 2 года назад

    Danza Sinfonica sounds like Schubert Op 90 Impromptu 1

  • @user-cy1ch3wb9o
    @user-cy1ch3wb9o 4 года назад

    34:15 34:29 34:40

  • @tarikeld11
    @tarikeld11 10 месяцев назад

    3:36 very Schumann like!

  • @aronlescsinszky1127
    @aronlescsinszky1127 7 лет назад

    Hello, very nice video, can you tell me what does your name mean?

  • @lucasdelliosiv7493
    @lucasdelliosiv7493 3 года назад +5

    0:16 Rachmaninoff concerto 3 cadenza

  • @pablomestre
    @pablomestre 4 года назад

    La danza Fiorata es la base de "La gallina turuleta", parece, de los payasos de TVE años 70/80 ... ?

  • @kallehed6330
    @kallehed6330 2 года назад

    22:14 Beethoven sonata 15 "pastoral" be like

  • @gillespoilvet7088
    @gillespoilvet7088 6 лет назад +7

    It is obvious that Medter solo piano pieces are as interesting as Rachmaninoff ones, which are however much more known and played. This unbalance between the two composers is difficult to understand ... Maybe Rachmaninoff is favorized because of his Concertos, which are really at the top level of post-romantic concertos ...

    • @tomcarterpianist
      @tomcarterpianist 6 лет назад +7

      Perhaps, yet Medtner's piano concerti are also very beautiful and, I'd argue, relatively accessible (especially the second one).

    • @tomcarterpianist
      @tomcarterpianist 6 лет назад +2

      I personally think the disparity in fame between them is in part due to Rachmaninoff having a bigger platform upon which to present his works being already a famous concert pianist. Medtner seems to have been obstinate about playing his own music over standard repertoire in concerts from the beginning which may explain why he never 'caught on'.

    • @SpaghettiToaster
      @SpaghettiToaster 6 лет назад +11

      He never really had the active touring career that Rachmaninoff had, so he didn't nearly get the same exposure, especially in America.

    • @MegaPianogenius
      @MegaPianogenius 6 лет назад +2

      Oh dear what a load of pretentious tosh rach has far more appeal than medtner. These pieces are weirdly put together although well conposed they're still weird I play all rachs works but only a handful of medtner certainly not these

    • @tomcarterpianist
      @tomcarterpianist 6 лет назад +20

      @@MegaPianogenius Unfortunately, I completely disagree. We are talking about a highly subjective field and I happen to find much more appeal in Medtner's music than I do in Rachmaninoff's. An argument could be made that Rachmaninoff is a 'better' composer due to his increased popularity but then by that same logic you would have to concede that Logan Paul, for example, is a more appealing musician than Rachmaninoff is! After all, isn't his music viewed much more on RUclips than Rachmaninoff's music? In short, do not dismiss an unpopular opinion as "pretentious tosh" because your opinion has no more weight to it than mine does.

  • @hokomong
    @hokomong 3 года назад +1

    47:31