Horowitz TV Interview 1977

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 18 янв 2025

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @drewqq
    @drewqq 11 лет назад +611

    I didn't realize Horowitz was such a charming and entertaining man. A whole side of him I'm so happy to learn about.

    • @marthajane6617
      @marthajane6617 9 лет назад +10

      drewqq Yes, he was really a dear person.

    • @drewqq
      @drewqq 9 лет назад +4

      martha jane Did you know him?

    • @marthajane6617
      @marthajane6617 9 лет назад +19

      No, but from his history as a pianist and his interviews he seemed very approachable with a lovely disposition. Did you have the pleasure of meeting him?

    • @jazzerson7087
      @jazzerson7087 5 лет назад +11

      Indeed, what a brilliant, charismatic funny man, I can see why he captivated audiences, not just a musical genius!

    • @banjoboy01
      @banjoboy01 4 года назад

      now you learn

  • @Doug19752533
    @Doug19752533 9 лет назад +180

    "I tell you, i dont know it!" and then he playes it grandly from memory love it!

    • @TwelfthRoot2
      @TwelfthRoot2 8 лет назад +20

      his mind didn't know it during the question, but his hands did! I = mind, they = hands

    • @chaikhaneh
      @chaikhaneh 6 месяцев назад

      @@TwelfthRoot2 onika burgers

    • @SalyLuz-hc6he
      @SalyLuz-hc6he 2 месяца назад

      ⁠@@TwelfthRoot2 So very often we find in my family that many songs are this way. We may only remember the beginning or the chorus, but once we begin, often our mind remembers the pathway to the rest!

  • @kpeterson2011
    @kpeterson2011 10 лет назад +447

    "shes not always right but she talks" lol

  • @danacrawhall-duk791
    @danacrawhall-duk791 11 лет назад +172

    his smile is wonderful

    • @jaketang892
      @jaketang892 Год назад +2

      ur so gorgeous

    • @SiEmG
      @SiEmG 7 месяцев назад

      childlike? yes
      creepy but safe? yes
      joker / evil-clown-like? yes
      wonderful? not the adjective I would choose :P

    • @a.giwdaj4623
      @a.giwdaj4623 5 месяцев назад

      I literally just came here only to rewatch the moment at 1:15. :)

  • @Naomifaith4343
    @Naomifaith4343 10 лет назад +191

    I literally just fell in love with his personality. I would love to meet him, if only he were alive

    • @rothschildianum
      @rothschildianum 4 года назад +12

      He sounded so genuine not like typical musicians who are so politically correct and careful. He said as it is.

    • @ilovecats581
      @ilovecats581 4 года назад +1

      Me too!!

    • @milkismiruku
      @milkismiruku 3 года назад +2

      me too. Horowitz is the first maestro whom I've drawn into his life story too, not just his skills. Hope to meet him in Heaven one day.

    • @josac7602
      @josac7602 3 года назад +1

      He still is alive he hust turned into music

    • @zbigniewbrzezinski8869
      @zbigniewbrzezinski8869 2 года назад

      You still could meet him in Heaven!

  • @Lyonspiano
    @Lyonspiano 13 лет назад +28

    I was holding the sign at 1:53 in this video. I never saw the original broadcast and have been trying to locate it for 30 years. 60 minutes arranged stage passes for us courtesy of the Maestro. We sat in the risers shown on stage. This was one of the greatest days of my life. Thank you so much for posting this video!!!

  • @Klaverskolen
    @Klaverskolen 8 лет назад +146

    "You have no intention of retire?" - Horowitz: "Oh my God, no!" - Beautiful

  • @kf31paris
    @kf31paris 5 лет назад +29

    As a young pianiste I really really really wish I was born earlier just To meet him and his gorgeous smile....RIP MAESTRO !!!!

  • @SinAsTheTic
    @SinAsTheTic 9 лет назад +88

    the nuance in Horowitz's playing is unmatched. amazing touch! no wonder he demanded his piano be carted to every performance

    • @ericastier1646
      @ericastier1646 2 года назад +7

      That is the absolute key to such level of performance, you can't play like this unless the action is going to be exactly like your own piano.

    • @RaineriHakkarainen
      @RaineriHakkarainen Месяц назад

      Not True! Horowitz never was the greatest! More colorful beautiful piano sound than Horowitz=Wilhelm Kempff Emil Gilels Radu Lupu Artur Rubinstein Vladimir Ashkenazy Grigory Sokolov! More genius than Horowitz=Sviatoslav Richter Solomon Cutner Grigory Sokolov Maurizio Pollini Stanislav Bunin Maria Grinberg Murray Perahia Alexei Lubimov Dinu Lipatti Stanislav Igolinsky! More powerful louder than Horowitz=Mikhail Pletnev! The Second Loudest ever was Lazar Berman! The 3rd Loudest was Erwin Nyiregyhazi! Dimitri Bashkirov her teacher Anastasia Virsaladze teach saying to Bashkirov the most important lesson is the love of beautiful colorful piano sound! Beethoven wanted louder instruments piano fortes!!

  • @torqued666
    @torqued666 4 года назад +131

    I was at a concert with him in Orchestra Hall in Nov 1977. I paid $50 to sit on the stage next to him. I was 19 and was in the American Conservatory of Music in Chicago at the time. $50 was an incredible sum of money for a college student then. This concert changed my life. What this man did with the piano blew my mind. I remember riding the L afterwards to my studio apartment and thinking to myself, "You are looking at getting into the wrong business!" That turned out to be true. This man was not from the same planet as me. I was in the bleachers to the left at 49 seconds.

    • @islaadele1212
      @islaadele1212 3 года назад +7

      Wow. Would love to have seen him play in person, but I can understand that it would probably tempt you to burn your own piano!

    • @ericastier1646
      @ericastier1646 2 года назад +7

      It's funny but seeing him play must have made many young pianist give up their pianist career dream out of pure rationality. But in fact, i believe Horowitz when he say it's not true he could do things other pianist couldn't, the reverse is also true.

  • @Sidecarmachine
    @Sidecarmachine 13 лет назад +32

    The pure joy of a musician playing his instrument has no price, it's just the most profound feeling you can ever experience.

  • @DcKayb
    @DcKayb 11 лет назад +13

    Watching this just left me with a huge smile on my face. It's gems like this that I love about RUclips. Thanks for posting.

  • @GodGiftedMusician
    @GodGiftedMusician 12 лет назад +26

    I love his laughing at the end! 14:28. This guy really enjoyed playing! It is inspiring and very enjoyable to see this man play! So much love for his instrument!

  • @DanielMartinez-nw1pn
    @DanielMartinez-nw1pn 4 года назад +90

    The first time I saw 2:55 I thought the audience messed up and didn't let him finish the LIszt sonata, but now that I think about it... he's Horowitz. He's legendary. He can do whatever he wants and he definitely pretended to have finished on purpose. He probably was feeling tired that night and thought: "you know what, people? The sonata is over. Bring on the applause and good night!" lol

    • @christophersurnname9967
      @christophersurnname9967 2 года назад +20

      I think it was probably one of many many encores. He makes a comment when he comes off stage “I’ve worked enough tonight” lol. Hilarious. But he can do it.

    • @kaleidoscopio5
      @kaleidoscopio5 2 года назад +4

      He did finish the sonata....that is almost the ending where your stamina is getting over but you are to excite to quit 🤔

    • @ericastier1646
      @ericastier1646 2 года назад +13

      After he stopped, he put both arms stretched out resting on the piano rim in front of him still looking at the keys. That is strong body language for having enough humility to quit as he knew he did not have what it took that night out of respect for the art of performing. That is a masterful display of healthy ego that would not be possible in today's egocentric conventions.

    • @loui9710
      @loui9710 2 года назад +3

      He actually finished the Liszt sonata… you can listen to the recital here: ruclips.net/video/Y2Sziz6ec6s/видео.html

    • @kaleidoscopio5
      @kaleidoscopio5 2 года назад +1

      @@ericastier1646 no....he put the arms on the rim because he was exhausted....look at Yundi Li's video performing the Sonata at Baden Baden, almost the same attitude....

  • @JeremyTaylorPianoProgress
    @JeremyTaylorPianoProgress 4 года назад +57

    All these moans about the Interviewer... Horowitz is CLEARLY enjoying being interviewed by someone challenging, cheeky, and confident. Someone of Horowitz’s character and chutzpah will respect an interviewer for those qualities, not someone who’s going to put him on a pedestal and pander to him with gentle questions. It’s the reason journalists and interviewers like Stephen Sackur and Louis Theroux are so revered here in the UK. Really can’t understand people’s abuse of this interviewer.

    • @kaleidoscopio5
      @kaleidoscopio5 4 года назад +8

      Wallace obviously adored Horowitz, but he feels with enough moral to talk in a straight way. And you are right Horowitz was pleased with Wallace, like if he was an alter ego 🤔

  • @edgarallanlovecraft5485
    @edgarallanlovecraft5485 12 лет назад +3

    i remember this 60 minutes segment like it was yesterday, i was a senior in HS...when he pulled stars and strips forever out of his head after 32 years it just blew me away...now here it is 35 years later, and i get to see and hear mr horowitz again...wonderful! many TYs for the post!

  • @BenMcCormack91
    @BenMcCormack91 13 лет назад +335

    "You really love to play the piano, don't you, Maestro?"
    No, he hates it.

    • @DanielMartinez-nw1pn
      @DanielMartinez-nw1pn 4 года назад +16

      Dumb fucking question if I've ever heard one

    • @nowfela-r4161
      @nowfela-r4161 4 года назад +19

      @@DanielMartinez-nw1pn it is a beautiful question. It is a human question

    • @maago4533
      @maago4533 3 года назад +2

      Hatred is also a form of love

    • @Akhtar93
      @Akhtar93 3 года назад +9

      It was a rhethorical question you dumbass
      This journalism is better than 95% of todays BS

    • @schil_d
      @schil_d 3 года назад +3

      I MEAN, YOU REALLY LOVE TO PLAY THE PIANO

  • @jacquelinetillyer8666
    @jacquelinetillyer8666 4 года назад +4

    If I feel slightly down not only does Horowitz's music lift me but watching the interviews he made are sweet and charming and bring out a smile.

  • @thesenate933
    @thesenate933 4 года назад +241

    Damn interviewers in the 70’s were brutal

    • @ivarsandvik9838
      @ivarsandvik9838 4 года назад +10

      Wow you really did order 66 didn't you

    • @essencejoyclairv
      @essencejoyclairv 4 года назад +25

      Yeah, that interviewer really gets on my nerves with his arrogant and at times rude remarks. But maybe it's just interviewing style at the time.

    • @jaymccloy8979
      @jaymccloy8979 4 года назад +40

      @@essencejoyclairv People today are just incredibly sensitive and weak. This is how people used to talk to each other. I listen to this interview and there is nothing even mildly offensive here. The difference is that today an interview is really all about publicity and image. You interview someone to get them publicity and show that they are, 'important.' Interviews and the media used to be about information. Horowitz was a global sensation since 1920 - no one doubts his skill. They wanted to know about him. The interviewer is asking about him. That's only rude in a world where an interview ISN'T an interview. Media ISN'T about information anymore.

    • @רוןעשהאל-ג8ו
      @רוןעשהאל-ג8ו 3 года назад

      Lol

    • @licahutahaean1619
      @licahutahaean1619 3 года назад +1

      Agree

  • @Kennedy--tu4cf
    @Kennedy--tu4cf 5 лет назад +2

    Maestro Horowitz is phenomenal on 13th November in his second recital in Chicago's Orchestra Hall in two weeks in row here in CBS 60 Minutes. Thank you for posting this gem.

  • @piagiani5914
    @piagiani5914 8 лет назад +3

    Che meraviglia! Non solo dotato di grandi virtù musicali ma anche straordinariamente divertente e ironico. Un grande!

  • @moonstarr8053
    @moonstarr8053 10 лет назад +65

    I wish I could have seen him.

    • @cesare1906
      @cesare1906 10 лет назад +1

      i wish i could see you...:-))

  • @ajayajath
    @ajayajath 5 лет назад +142

    "You tell one other pianist who gets 80% of the gross"
    That statement was uncalled for, its none of his business!

    • @kaleidoscopio5
      @kaleidoscopio5 5 лет назад +7

      Actually musicians fee is like a tabboo, and it is not bad to have some idea about it.

    • @RockinTheDub
      @RockinTheDub 4 года назад +18

      He replied, "after 50 years of hard work I finally got 80%"
      "No I'm not proud, but I guess that is so.."
      For some reason the interviewer is trying to downplay how humble Horowitz was...

    • @jameslorenz3718
      @jameslorenz3718 4 года назад +4

      @@RockinTheDub it is okay. The interviewer doesn't have half the super cool accent Horowitz has.

    • @sebengkoh
      @sebengkoh 4 года назад +1

      @@jameslorenz3718 Russian Jews?

    • @jameslorenz3718
      @jameslorenz3718 4 года назад

      @@sebengkoh Russian-jews missed a great opportunity to be movie stars (;

  • @ClassicalJams
    @ClassicalJams 11 лет назад +7

    Great interview between two legends! This was very entertaining and showed Vladamir Horowitz both as a brilliant musician and interesting man. Mike Wallace was also a great interviewer. May they both rest in peace. Thanks for sharing this wonderful video :-)

  • @1911olympic
    @1911olympic 5 лет назад +6

    I think the interviewer is very respectful and empathic, but not afraid to ask critical questions. Furthermore, he is not groveling, which, in these times, is very refreshing. We need more of these journalists. For instance for interviewing central bankers.

  • @mysterytrain3
    @mysterytrain3 9 лет назад +37

    The age of pianism died with Horowitz. It's just not the same anymore, and never will be. He was the last in the long line of truly great pianists. I don't mean to imply that there aren't truly accomplished pianists today. But the spirit of piano as a solo or featured instrument has been diminished by a lack of connection with the era that brought the piano to its height. Very few pianists even come close to knowing how to handle a Chopin mazurka or polonaise these days. There's an ethnicity to the music that is lacking. I can't do it either, but pianists like Horowitz and Rubinstein could. It makes me sad knowing they're gone.

    • @bennemann
      @bennemann 9 лет назад +2

      mysterytrain3 I'm not so sure about that. Try listening to Daniil Trifonov, now that's one guy that could very well become a Horowitz in a couple decades.

    • @marthajane6617
      @marthajane6617 9 лет назад +3

      mysterytrain3 I think Yefim Bronfman is a great interpreter, in a class by himself, however i agree most of today's pianist are just classical clowns, it's about them not the composer, just living for the fame and money and it shows in their playing(if you call it that) that i resent with the prices they charge, however at least you know they will never get another cent of your money.

    • @etiennedelaunois1737
      @etiennedelaunois1737 9 лет назад +10

      its because today the most important things are speed and no mistakes. Today you have pianist who at 27 years have nearly all the repertoire in their fingers. Like the Liszt sonata for exemple, that piece was written by a mature and advanced Liszt, and today, the best way of playing it is faster as you can... leraning it as fast as you can, without the deep thought about the piece. Rubinstein was saying about young pianists, "they don't take any risk anymore. They try too much to be accurate".
      I listen about a study of Chopin played by Lang Lang and Yuja Wang, I was amazed by the sound and the easiness of their playing. then i saw a link to rubinstein playing the same study, bad sound, bad recording, but after few bars, I was in the piece with him and totally forgot about the technic. I was just on the musicality. That pianist make you forgot about technic. Rubonstein was saying "if someone says about my playing, What an incredible lzft hand technic, so fluid, then I feel hurt because its mean that he did not been touched by my playing !"

    • @etiennedelaunois1737
      @etiennedelaunois1737 9 лет назад

      But I choose to speak about the big star, but you also have very good pianist out there with an incredible musicality. Just not the star of youtube unfortunately...

    • @mysterytrain3
      @mysterytrain3 9 лет назад +2

      Olga Kern hits close to the mark. If she had been born a couple of generations before, she would be up there with the "old school" pianists. She's still young and has time to secure her position among the ranks of the finest. I can actually feel the heritage of the great Russian pianists in her playing. I state this as my opinion, only. But like everyone else, I'm entitled to mine, too. :-)

  • @ticklemepurple86
    @ticklemepurple86 12 лет назад +3

    omg!?....the way he just banged out "stars and stripes" after 20+ years like it was nothing where before hand he was telling the interviewer he doesn't remember...such a humble, modest and gracious pianist. A virtuoso! RIP Horowitz...

  • @KingJorman
    @KingJorman 4 года назад +9

    I loved the comment about how he always scheduled his concerts for 4PM Sunday afternoon so that attendees would be relaxed and I suppose mentally and emotionally available. He goes the extra mile. He's devoted to the music and the experience of the music.

  • @weavethehawk
    @weavethehawk 6 лет назад +57

    Okay, Horowitz fluffs the occasional note, he's also in his 80s when this was filmed, but his comment on his lack of perfection "I don't seek perfection, I am Horowitz, not a typist" IS perfection. The all-time greatest, Vladimir Horowitz.

    • @beatlessteve1010
      @beatlessteve1010 3 года назад +2

      Not Heifetz

    • @theothererik1128
      @theothererik1128 2 года назад

      @@beatlessteve1010 Gesundheit !!

    • @RaineriHakkarainen
      @RaineriHakkarainen 2 года назад

      Horowitz not the Greatest! More beautiful colorful piano Sound than Horowitz=Wilhelm Kempff Emil Gilels Radu Lupu Artur Rubinstein Vladimir Ashkenazy! More powerful Louder than Horowitz=Mikhail Pletnev The Supernova Explosion Power!( Prokofiev piano concerto no 1 by Pletnev!) The Second Loudest was Lazar Berman! More Genius than Horowitz=Sviatoslav Richter Solomon Cutner Grigory Sokolov Maurizio Pollini Alexei Lubimov Stanislav Igolinsky!

    • @sebastian-benedictflore
      @sebastian-benedictflore Год назад +3

      @@RaineriHakkarainen 🙄

    • @funklover24
      @funklover24 Год назад +1

      ​​​​​@@RaineriHakkarainen Pollini more genius? 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
      If we want to get serious, we might talk about Hofman, Friedman, Moisewitsch, Backhaus, Koczalski, Siloti, Cortot, Katchen and others. But I don't like to rank in this category.

  • @logannslm1593
    @logannslm1593 5 лет назад +40

    13:52 😂 I love this man so much!
    Joke aside, he is favorite pianist when it comes to interpret my favorite piece "Mozart - Sonata No.13 in B flat major, first movement".
    RIP Horowitz, you are truly missed.

  • @kaleidoscopio5
    @kaleidoscopio5 7 лет назад +21

    Behind Wanda's "witch" face, we can see a woman completely devote and in love with her husband. And she was very proud of him.

    • @pianoman551000
      @pianoman551000 3 года назад +2

      She was in love with Horowitz the MUSICIAN, not the man!! It's difficult to be married to an avowed homosexual and claim him as her husband.

    • @kaleidoscopio5
      @kaleidoscopio5 3 года назад +1

      @@pianoman551000 there is a lot of theories around Horowitz. Unlike Shura Cherkassky, for example, I can't find any element or behaviour that denotes some desviations.....who knows. The fact is they were a couple strange, bizarre and neccesary for each other....🤷‍♂️

  • @jnmusic9969
    @jnmusic9969 2 года назад +4

    It’s amazing to hear him speak about the things that he is unable to do, and how he sometimes messes up. Even when he wasn’t playing technically perfect, he was making beautifully art.

  • @xspiritdannyx
    @xspiritdannyx 12 лет назад +6

    Just watching him smile and laugh while playing the piano near the end puts a smile on my face knowing that this was a man who TRULY loved to play the piano. He didn't just play for wealth or money, he embraced music and the piano as his passion to the very last day of his life. It's a shame I never could have attended his concerts.

  • @piano345
    @piano345 12 лет назад +4

    Fascinating interview - fabulous pianist and personality.

  • @zofiapaasz3462
    @zofiapaasz3462 4 года назад +16

    12:29 what's this piece called?

    • @carson8422
      @carson8422 3 года назад +3

      Die Csardasfürstin: Sylvia, ich will nur Dich

    • @carson8422
      @carson8422 3 года назад +2

      its from an operette

  • @samuelguzmann
    @samuelguzmann 5 лет назад +35

    "Sometimes i'll do it better sometimes less good like any human being" the last romantic 👏👏👏

  • @musical_lolu4811
    @musical_lolu4811 5 лет назад +71

    4:06 dang straight, Horowitz. American news is so damn unbearable today.

    • @michaweinst3774
      @michaweinst3774 4 года назад +1

      Georg Solti said the same about Claudia Cassidy

  • @joshlockhartnetwork
    @joshlockhartnetwork Год назад +2

    I wish we got so much more of this side of the maestro as well. His personality is beaming! I love it.

  • @jtsmizzack
    @jtsmizzack 12 лет назад +3

    God! With the unexplainable expressiveness of music, imagine the pleasure he must have been able to feel...being able to play any song he ever wanted to..to express any mood he wanted to...anytime he wanted.

  • @Highinsight7
    @Highinsight7 5 лет назад +7

    THE TRUE... last GREAT romantic..... WE LOVE and adore you Maestro... RIP

  • @stacyblue1980
    @stacyblue1980 9 лет назад +9

    The march. He was SO right on! I wish the Stars and Stripes Forever was slower. He blew my mind with what he said and its great to hear someone understand this

  • @emilycheng5127
    @emilycheng5127 9 лет назад +37

    "I tell you, I don't know it! It's too difficult!"
    *plays perfectly*

  • @jamesten
    @jamesten 13 лет назад +6

    Interviewer Mike Wallace was a friend of the Horowitz's. He did this piece for "60 Minutes" at CBS News. It was hard for him to 'attack' this legend, as was his normal routine. But his admiration was genuine. As TV journalism on a news magazine during Prime Time, this was a great interview. As a deep music interview, it was not a great interview. He captured Horowitz's personality for a public which might not know anything about him.

  • @jonnarobinson7541
    @jonnarobinson7541 3 года назад +1

    Years ago I went to see Horowitz perform the theater in Pasadena. The time was the Sunday at 4 PM. So glad I was able to see him play.

  • @Lemontech74
    @Lemontech74 9 лет назад +218

    10:50
    Horowitz is the only pianist I know who can make THAT MANY mistakes and still have it sound good hahaha

    • @brendanhall3265
      @brendanhall3265 9 лет назад +5

      +Lemontech74 Just like in his rach g minor prelude xD

    • @Mike1614YT
      @Mike1614YT 8 лет назад +73

      +Lemontech74 . perfection is boring. watch a midi and find out

    • @Ahelphand
      @Ahelphand 5 лет назад +28

      Hope you're that good at 87

    • @mensabs
      @mensabs 5 лет назад

      nonsense Lemonade

    • @not2tees
      @not2tees 5 лет назад +18

      He's a bit like a mountain - you don't look at the scree but the peak, and it is towering.

  • @DavidBozek92109
    @DavidBozek92109 11 лет назад +4

    Thank God I found this. I remember seeing this on 60 Minutes.
    How wonderful for him to still have had that absolute unbridled joy in playing.
    Start watching at 12:56 and you'll see that he can barely contain himself.

  • @annjeanmillikan
    @annjeanmillikan 9 лет назад +4

    Phenomenal interview and HOROWITZ HIMSELF! Superbly enjoyable and knowledgeable.

  • @stelun56
    @stelun56 4 года назад +2

    What an invigorating and endearing couple. Listened to his Scarletti cassette, as I wandered around Rome many years ago. He's still a part of my life. See you on the other side maestro and his dear wife

  • @BOCELLIRITTER
    @BOCELLIRITTER 2 года назад +4

    How fun person he is! And a wife! I am so glad I watched this video!

  • @sheana2005
    @sheana2005 Год назад

    What a gift this man is to music! Thank you, Mr. Horowitz, for bringing so much beauty and joy into my life.

  • @markharris8254
    @markharris8254 6 лет назад +7

    Love that smile of his when Wanda describes his pranks.

  • @drovid008
    @drovid008 9 лет назад +79

    The last true maestro... The last romantic

    • @BenjaminGessel
      @BenjaminGessel 9 лет назад +6

      +drovid008 Na. Mahler thought romanticism would end in the early 1900's. It didn't. There are still plenty of virtuoso romantics out there... :)

    • @Numbers624
      @Numbers624 8 лет назад +3

      +drovid008 check out Daniil Trifonov

    • @Numbers624
      @Numbers624 8 лет назад +1

      +drovid008 check out Daniil Trifonov

    • @leviwhite3464
      @leviwhite3464 8 лет назад

      +BenjaminGessel no, the last individualist, as he had put it. he didn't believe he was the last romantic

    • @echorrhea
      @echorrhea 5 лет назад

      BenjaminGessel Where are these Rachmaninoffs, Godowskys, and Friedmans of our day?

  • @anthonyneyrot5107
    @anthonyneyrot5107 4 года назад +4

    Powerful playing, despite the few blue notes. Even the ragged edges made it more real. Excellent.

  • @bastionunitb7388
    @bastionunitb7388 4 года назад +25

    so you see that's where the trouble began
    9:34
    that smile
    that dammed smile

  • @stack0413
    @stack0413 8 лет назад +56

    He seems cool 😎 like you can actually be yourself around him and not feel uncomfortable...

    • @Pathy1
      @Pathy1 8 лет назад +2

      totally agree

  • @Qee7en
    @Qee7en 10 лет назад +2

    Interesting relationship Horowitz and Xanthip- sorry Wanda have. She must have helped him a lot, and it's cool to see that bit and the way the interact after so many many years... thanks for the upload!

  • @dinorivera9153
    @dinorivera9153 6 лет назад +11

    His smile inspires me

  • @MegaMusicNotes
    @MegaMusicNotes 11 лет назад +5

    Witty!
    Wow! I bring my food with me too. and aromatherapy.
    What a beautiful marriage!
    The best interpretation of Stripes I ever heard!!!
    What a treat, this interview is!!!

  • @9thvalkyrie
    @9thvalkyrie 12 лет назад +3

    A great interview with one of the best pianists of all time.

  • @kewkabe
    @kewkabe 12 лет назад +43

    Mike Wallace is a master interviewer. He knows "older" people with as many accomplishments as Horowitz are not insecure and don't take offense at direct questions, but instead find humor in it. He was actually being very respectful. You people who think he's being a dick will understand when you're older yourself!

    • @chickenflavor9880
      @chickenflavor9880 3 года назад +1

      Very interesting

    • @plekkchand
      @plekkchand 3 года назад +9

      Nonsense. He's using a pretense of frankness as an excuse for being rude. It's a familiar ruse of television interviewers which others imitated because they found it enhanced their sense of self importance and mollified their envy. And you've evidently been taken in by it .

    • @ericastier1646
      @ericastier1646 2 года назад +11

      I can't stand any TV interviewers today who start a sentence on the Imperative style of speech : "Tell me this or that.. " instead of using the polite form "Could you tell us about.."
      To me that is extremely rude, just because they provide the platform for the interview they think they can drop polite forms. I'd kick them with a boot.

    • @1fattyfatman
      @1fattyfatman 2 года назад +1

      golden comment!

  • @Itsandy22
    @Itsandy22 3 года назад +5

    That growing smile from 9:30 is probably one of the best things I've seen in a long time

  • @jamaalstewart2531
    @jamaalstewart2531 8 лет назад +21

    the joy on his face is amazing

  • @jnmusic9969
    @jnmusic9969 11 месяцев назад +3

    8:36 my favourite moment, that smile is priceless

  • @karlakor
    @karlakor 12 лет назад

    It is great to see footage here that did not air in 1977. Thanks for this treasure!

  • @legojack7711
    @legojack7711 4 года назад +6

    Oh my. Now I realise I’ve only heard Horowitzes music up to now. Seeing him being just as charismatic while talking really warms my heart

  • @MrAlmebo
    @MrAlmebo 8 лет назад +1

    Horowitz ist eine Legende, Nicht nur als Pianist, sondern als Mensch mit seinem Humor, und seiner Menschlichkeit. Und Wanda, seine Frau, hat einen guten Einfluss auf das Genie!

  • @nerilcatte0931
    @nerilcatte0931 Год назад +4

    I love him so much! Such a precious soul!

  • @liltick102
    @liltick102 8 месяцев назад +1

    Dude I have not watched his interviews, idk why, I LOVE him even more.

  • @mauriciobeltre14
    @mauriciobeltre14 4 года назад +5

    Wow.....bless youtube that I could watch epic moments like these. Viva Horowitz!!

  • @animatormark
    @animatormark 12 лет назад

    You are the one who needs to chill. I didn't start this, you did. And thank you for correcting my spelling teacher. I had a few a couple of typos, which happens when you are typing quickly and do not proofread, because it doesn't freaking matter. But alas, you have truly humbled me and have given me something to think about. I guess really need to examine my life and its meaning, especially my typographical errors.

  • @brianrussel6012
    @brianrussel6012 5 лет назад +4

    (guest)
    ".....you have no intention of retiring?"
    "Oh my god, no !"
    What a sil!y question...to a phenomenal pianist who has loved and played music all his life ?!
    You might as well ask him to retire from breathing....
    Bless dear Vladimir. 😊🎼❤🇬🇧🎼😊🎼

  • @musicofthepast8539
    @musicofthepast8539 2 года назад +2

    Could someone please tell me what the Maestro plays at 12:58 ?

  • @albertsarkozi8162
    @albertsarkozi8162 7 лет назад +22

    The best pianist in the world! Horowitz❤❤

    • @ericastier1646
      @ericastier1646 2 года назад

      No such thing. Every pianist has different qualities. Horowitz excelled in some areas and not in others. But without a doubt he reached his own ultimate potential and that is only what matters.

    • @Ace-dv5ce
      @Ace-dv5ce 2 года назад +1

      @@ericastier1646 That and what resonates with you mostly.

    • @RaineriHakkarainen
      @RaineriHakkarainen Месяц назад

      Horowitz never was the greatest! More colorful beautiful piano sound than Horowitz=Wilhelm Kempff Emil Gilels Radu Lupu Artur Rubinstein Vladimir Ashkenazy Grigory Sokolov! More genius than Horowitz=Sviatoslav Richter Solomon Cutner Grigory Sokolov Maurizio Pollini Stanislav Bunin Maria Grinberg Murray Perahia Alexei Lubimov Dinu Lipatti Stanislav Igolinsky! More powerful louder than Horowitz=Mikhail Pletnev! The Second Loudest ever was Lazar Berman! The 3rd Loudest was Erwin Nyiregyhazi! Dimitri Bashkirov her teacher Anastasia Virsaladze teach saying to Bashkirov the most important lesson is the love of beautiful colorful piano sound! Beethoven wanted louder instruments piano fortes!

  • @gabombisabajombi7371
    @gabombisabajombi7371 2 года назад +5

    12:25 Does anyone know what this piece was?

    • @IrishGoat2828
      @IrishGoat2828 2 года назад

      I want to know the waltz but don’t

    • @IrishGoat2828
      @IrishGoat2828 2 года назад +1

      Just found it here u go
      ruclips.net/video/ix_J95pWwqM/видео.html

  • @jgesselberty
    @jgesselberty 11 лет назад +44

    The real eye opener about this interview is that few major networks pay any attention at all to serious music today. They'll do hours and hours on no talent pop singers and ignore what is lasting.

    • @Ferda1964
      @Ferda1964 4 года назад

      today the news and culture in the mainstream seem to be completely driven by political agenda

  • @mogomarkas3187
    @mogomarkas3187 7 месяцев назад +1

    ♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️ I remember watching this interview with my Uncle George and his comment that Horowitz laughs at one point while playing , only because he made a little error. An error which at the time I didn’t hear, but my Uncle, who studied the violin, did.

  • @michaelhayes6887
    @michaelhayes6887 5 лет назад +4

    What a joy. He scheduled his concerts at 4pm for the working man. Nice!

  • @milkismiruku
    @milkismiruku 3 года назад +3

    Love it when he is saying that 0:55
    He's always learning and inspiring by others (above) him

  • @NKolarovski
    @NKolarovski 11 лет назад +44

    Damn...I love that guy! Horowitz was one heart of a man :D Smart, honest, realistic and modest. By the way, screw that interviewer, he could have made the whole thing sound more interesting, instead, he remained one cold bastard and kept asking stupid questions and didn`t even smile

    • @MadonnaImperia
      @MadonnaImperia 10 лет назад +2

      I agree on both Horowitz and Wallace (the interviewer). There's a video here on RUclips where he interviews Callas - he's very rude to her.

    • @jameslorenz3718
      @jameslorenz3718 4 года назад +1

      If only Wallace was around to interview Brahms. That would be a much more fair interview. (:

  • @hypnotika
    @hypnotika 5 лет назад +5

    Interviewer: "You're still learning, you're still..."
    Horowitz: "All the time" - The man was a class act.

  • @Kylefassbinderful
    @Kylefassbinderful 4 года назад +3

    This was Mike Wallace's favorite interview he ever did, his words. And after watching it umpteen times and listening to Vladimir on Spotify a bunch more I've concluded that I genuinely agree.

  • @luiszavala6018
    @luiszavala6018 9 лет назад +10

    Maravilloso! Amazing! to see and listen this great artist! Being so kind and seeing him laughing like a child...a true artist!
    Thank you maestro!

  • @rightnote1
    @rightnote1 9 лет назад +4

    he played so deep on the keys. Amazing....

  • @brianrussel6012
    @brianrussel6012 5 лет назад +2

    At 2 mins 46, I was afraid he was going to break the piano !
    Wonderful pianist, one of my great favourites.
    😊🇬🇧❤🎼🇬🇧😊

  • @znamoperu
    @znamoperu 11 лет назад +127

    In those times, it was apparently normal to talk to these great people in such a dismissive manner. This interviewer is just arrogant. It is freaking Horowitz you are interviewing, you small man!

    • @rmirabelle
      @rmirabelle 11 лет назад +18

      Well that was part of who Wallace was - I always felt uncomfortable with his tone, which was clearly intentionally dismissive. At the same time however, I have little fear that he did truly respect Horowitz. And pushing buttons, for better or worse, is and effective strategy for helping to reveal someone's character - almost certainly Wallace's intent.

    • @marthajane6617
      @marthajane6617 9 лет назад +11

      znamoperu Mike Wallace was ghetto to the core, he didn't have a clue he was being an insufferable asshole.

    • @Will_DiGiorgio
      @Will_DiGiorgio 6 лет назад +15

      Mike Wallace's style is what got him the great interviews, these soupy fluff pieces we get today have become the standard... It's time we go back to throwing the hardball questions. You notice Horowitz didn't have a problem with it..... Most entertainers/public figures today would have had ego trips and walked out, because God forbid they answer the tough honest questions. Smh!

    • @G3Number
      @G3Number 5 лет назад +12

      Im sure horowitz prefer someone who treats him normal than someone who is being Seen as a god

    • @zdogg8
      @zdogg8 5 лет назад +1

      @@G3Number exactamente!

  • @bryanpayne3793
    @bryanpayne3793 2 месяца назад +1

    What's the piece called he's playing at 12:28

    • @aaaaaaa7697
      @aaaaaaa7697 Месяц назад

      Die Csardasfürstin: Sylvia, ich will nur
      Dich

  • @TomKrcmar
    @TomKrcmar 11 лет назад +3

    What is the waltz he plays at 12:28? Does anyone know? It's gorgeous...

    • @Busdriver10122
      @Busdriver10122 10 лет назад

      I want to know too but no one seems to know :(

    • @chochoyalla
      @chochoyalla 9 лет назад +1

      +Matt O Lehar's Czardas Kiralyno--The Csardas Princess.

  • @SiljanPanovski
    @SiljanPanovski 12 лет назад

    Thank you sooo much :D

  • @hugod327
    @hugod327 5 лет назад +5

    What is he playing at 12:58?

    • @carson8422
      @carson8422 3 года назад +2

      is it Die Csardasfürstin: Sylvia, ich will nur Dich

  • @nevillehough4191
    @nevillehough4191 3 года назад +2

    Wow, great pianist,great personality too.

  • @Junglesmells
    @Junglesmells Год назад +4

    Funny, I’m reading the Schoenberg biography of Horowitz and he says this interview was seen as hugely embarrassing for Horowitz amongst his circle. Personally I love it. I like seeing the childish side of him. He’s just a human like everyone else. Trying to maintain some mysterious, serious aura is a waste of time. We are all lost children.

  • @clarification007
    @clarification007 12 лет назад +1

    Like this interview very much. It is now part as an important document on Horowitz. Wallace he did the interview the right way. He know that great pianist was interview many time as he was a porcelain man. The comments from his wife make the document a different touch of secret.

  • @fin9281
    @fin9281 4 года назад +10

    I don't think reporter realizes how good Horowitz's playing, hearing him play some excerpts was actually breathtaking. The speed was insane but still controlled with obvious emotional incentive. Dude he's on another level

  • @wassup_-ku5ty
    @wassup_-ku5ty 3 года назад +2

    What the name of the piece he played at 12:30?

    • @pianomasters3752
      @pianomasters3752 2 года назад

      Kalman: Csardasfurstin, Sylva ich will nur dich
      ruclips.net/video/ix_J95pWwqM/видео.html at 1:39

  • @Will170392
    @Will170392 9 лет назад +428

    Horowitz is lovely.
    That interviewer, however, is utterly insufferable.

    • @CanelonVegano
      @CanelonVegano 9 лет назад +28

      Absolutely insulting...

    • @scitchyrooroo
      @scitchyrooroo 9 лет назад +63

      +Will Shaw Yes, interesting to see how obnoxious, classless, and stupid Wallace's questions and whole interviewing demeanor are, especially when he's trying to jump on every sentence or even phrase that sounds the least bit "controversial." I didn't realize that style of interviewing, practiced by everyone today, went back as far as 1977.

    • @nikolauswilliams3124
      @nikolauswilliams3124 8 лет назад +14

      +Will Shaw Yeah, the interviewer made it hard to really get to know Horowitz.

    • @MrFuchsiamagic
      @MrFuchsiamagic 6 лет назад +14

      I would have knocked him out!

    • @Bampaloudu64
      @Bampaloudu64 6 лет назад +18

      I agree. The interviewer is an asshole, his questions are the worst i've ever heard.

  • @mssuziquzi
    @mssuziquzi 8 месяцев назад

    The camera can’t keep up with his hands as he plays the piano. Such a personality and an amazing man as well as being the most brilliant pianist. Don’t you just love his wife?❤️

  • @jackgedzelman5314
    @jackgedzelman5314 10 лет назад +7

    It's so great to have this conversation between Mike Wallace and Vladimir Horowitz from thirty years ago. It is genuinely funny and entertaining.

  • @ranadeau
    @ranadeau 12 лет назад +2

    All of you who bash Mike Wallace are jerks. I love horowitz and had the opportunity to see him in concert many times. Wallace was able to show the personality of Horowitz and his genuineness and sincerity. Horowitz is very honest and I am thankful that Wallace gave all of us a better understanding of this amazing artist...there will never be another Horowitz!

  • @YellowTieGeezer
    @YellowTieGeezer 13 лет назад +5

    What an absoloutly splendid man!

  • @beatlessteve1010
    @beatlessteve1010 3 года назад +2

    This was a moment in time and a gem...of a musical genius..there was such a mystique about him...will there ever be another?

    • @RaineriHakkarainen
      @RaineriHakkarainen 2 года назад

      NOT TRUE! Come on Steve! Horowitz not The greatest Best Pianist ever! Better than Horowitz=Artur Rubinstein Grigory Sokolov=THE GIANT OF THE PIANO!) Emil Gilels=THE REAL KING PIANIST EVER!) Wilhelm Kempff Mikhail Pletnev ( The most Powerful Ever) Sviatoslav Richter Alexei Lubimov The Genius no 1 Mozart piano concerto no 27) Maurizio Pollini (The Genius no 2) Solomon Cutner=! The perfect structure of music! Solomon Cutner The Highest IQ points Ever) Radu Lupu=The most colorful piano sound Ever=Brahms piano concerto no 1 with The Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra video RUclips! Lupu a class of his own! Horowitz his Brahms piano concerto no 1 recording a trash Art!) Vladimir Ashkenazy The most colorful volcanic piano sound Ever! Horowitz not Had The Good concertos Recordings! The Best Greatest Beethoven piano concerto no 5 players Are really=1: Wilhelm Kempff The most beautiful piano sound Ever for Beethoven concerto no 5! 2: Vladimir Ashkenazy The most colorful volcanic piano sound Ever for Beethoven concerto no 5! THE TITAN OF THE PIANO! THE GIANT OF THE PIANO Grigory Sokolov The Best rhythmic vital beat! Unbeatable vitalness) 4: Solomon Cutner The highest IQ points Ever! The Perfect Structure of Music! 5: Mikhail Pletnev The most Powerful Ever! Pletnev The Best crystal clear Bright sharp perfect Beethoven piano concerto no 5! 6: Maurizio Pollini The Genius playing Beethoven piano concerto no 5! The Best greatest Brahms piano concerto no 2 players Are Really=1: Grigory Sokolov The Best piano sound Ever! Sokolov The most TITANIC EVER! Rhythmic Vital Beat!!! 3: Edwin Fischer The Recording from 1942! Sviatoslav Richter The Best greatest Rachmaninov piano concerto no 2! Dimitri Bashkirov Mendelssohn piano concerto no 1 with The most beautiful piano sound Ever!! Sokolov The Best Chopin Piano Concerto no 2+Mozart piano concerto no 24! Saint-Saens piano concerto no 2! Brahms piano concerto no 2!!