Krystian Zimerman - Ballade No 1 in G minor, Op 23 • Frédéric Chopin [HQ] Reaction!
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024
- * ROAD TO 100k SUBS**
Join the Discord here:
/ discord
Donation Methods :
ko-fi.com/high...
This uses Paypal but removes all fees!
Got a request? Make it here!
bit.ly/HxCReac...
Other Channels you May Enjoy!
Simple Reacts - @itrSIMPLE
Texan Reacts @TexanReacts
Contact Me:
Instagram: / hxcombustible
LIKE AND SUBSCRIBE SO WE CAN CONTINUE TO GROW TOGETHER!
Original Video Link:
• Video
Show @VadimShinnik some love!
#KrystianZimerman #reaction #reactions
highly combustible reacts,highly combustible,highly,reactions,reaction,hxc,combustible,krystian zimerman,ballade no 1,ballade № 1 op 23,frederic chopin,piano,classical,concerto,frédéric chopin (author),ballades (composition)
I am a pianist who is actually going to perform this piece for a university audition next week and I must say that I learnt something out from your reaction to this composition & performance. You reminded me of my mom (who is not a musician either) a few weeks ago when she heard me practice this piece and told me that it deeply touches her heart and soul...
I laughed so hard when you were confused about many notes Zimmerman memorized haha
At some level and at some stage of performance, you don't think about notes anymore when performing or even when reading a score... The same way stand-up comedians don't think about letters they say on stage.
Chopin's music and his ballades in particular are really not about how many notes or how fast your fingers can go... It's about storytelling and taking your listener through a deeply emotional journey.
Did you enter that uni?
Hey! any updates?
UPDATE PLEASE
Chopin composed this masterpiece at 21. Such a young age to bring together as many emotions as pain,sorrow, grief but also joy in a single piece in perfect harmony. I won’t lie to you.Ballade no 1 is the piece that made me want to discover the world of classical and romantic music. I’m 16 years old, and because of this piece, I just learned that telling a story doesn’t have to be with words. Hope someone feel similar.
I discovered Chopin as a teenager. I'm 68 now and still wonder at the genius of his music.
Ballades 3 and 4, the second Scherzo and in different ways the concertos, are some my other loves.
I hope Chopin adds as much to your life as it has to mine.
@@chipesh oh yeah be sure of it :)! And yeah, I just found out about ballade 4 and scherzos…. Masterpieces
I Enjoy Chopins waltzes i like the Romantic emotions
@@kyoko9986 you would probably enjoy his nocturnes aswell... very simple technically speaking but just as incredible musically. can recommend op9 no1, op48 no1 & op 55 no1. Chopin is the greatest to do it...
It's actually pretty rare for a professional musician to have to expend effort specifically to memorize a piece, at least one of this difficulty. Getting a piece to performance standard involves a ton of polishing. Settling on a coherent interpretation and perfecting the phrasing and intonation enough to realize it usually takes way longer than just learning the notes. By the time this process is finished, the performer will have invested so much time and thought into the piece that they'll have memorized it naturally.
there is no intonation a pianist has worry about. the notes are tuned for him
@@batboy5023 Right you are, I used the wrong terminology there. Tone/timbre is what I meant.
@@Cornix94I was just being a smart ass lol. You're absolutely right tho about how the abundance of technical practice in order to just physically be able to play the notes correctly, inevitably leads memorizing.
Yeah, agreed. It's so hard to play it with all its technical difficulties, that memorising is a secondary concern. Actually while you practice a piece, notes are memorized by themselves
Perfect pitch plays a huge part in remembering it as well, not to say it's a requirement for a professional to have perfect pitch, but having it definitely makes remembering easier.
I'm saying this biased opinion because I'm one of those who has perfect pitch.
The memorization element is actually one of the least things pianists have to worry about since it comes with time as you practice. There are pieces that are way longer than this and can even be longer than an hour long! Welcome to classical music ;)
Not only playing this, but can you imagine composing something like this (no software, no aids, nothing!)?? Art and genius on another level, ppl like Chopin, Beethoven, Mozart, etc. This is complex artistic work, that reaches deeper emotions even soul. Compared to "art" today in pop culture, this is far more advanced. We may have more advanced technology nowadays, but trust me, artistically and culturally they were far more advanced/complex & intelligent 200+ years ago...this is the heights of Western civilization artistic achievements that will continue to last the test of time. Our "(f)art" nowadays is fairly dumbed down, even regressive (thanks to postmodernism mediocrity), compared to these masterworks from centuries ago.
The nice thing about modern day is we can still take out time in our day to enjoy this art and culture left for us-it’s all right at our fingertips. True, it’s not the predominant culture anymore but we can still enjoy our little slice of paradise by listening to people like zimerman, who really channel the spirit of Chopin.
Modern music is shit, they only use one or two different melodies and 3 or 4 chords at the best situation
ok boomer
@@impostor8984 ok pleb.
I'm Gen Y btw ("Millennial") merely expressing my admiration of artistic excellence and beauty.
He says in the beginning that he is not a "music person" for not knowing the opus number but he really gave this Chopin ballade a shot.
He picked out minute details only us piano practioners would notice and demonstrated that he is, truly, a *music person* indeed.
I love to watch these reaction videos where genuine people listen to classical for the first time and truly enjoy it. It's really great.
Ps. If you liked this piece, the same pianist performs the other three ballades very good, as well as Schubert's impromptu(s).You should also give a chance to some Beethoven sonatas such as "Tempest", "Waldstein" and "Apaasionata"
PS. Chopins 4rth ballade must be one the best compositions ever written for any keyboard instrument 😉
Well he is a master concertpianist. Very high level. Few ever reach that level.
Ive been playing the piano since i was 10 years old.I am 20 now and i am currently learning this piece. I must say the piano
is the best invention , manking has ever created💜Also you are awesome!
I strongly recommend ballad no 2 by Frederic Chopin played by either Zimmerman or Traum piano
He is one of the best concertpianist in the world. He makes love with the panio. Chopin lived in the 1800. This peace comes from that time. He was a great composer.
Yes he had fun with piano on da bed a
FYI Chopin dates are 1810 - 1849
@@Mereauxpanio
It makes me so happy to see the appreciation you show for the piano
Oh God, PLEASE MORE OF THESE VIDS!!! Chopin especially! THANK YOU!!
Welcome to classical music. This is a fantastic world full of mesmerising music.
Your face was a picture as you listened to this piece. Your choice of Chopin was excellent, thank you.
If you fancy another trip into classical piano this is a gem: ruclips.net/video/0-czNkyPQDA/видео.html Your heart will sing... as your brain melts!
This is a perfect example of what all the people who say „I don’t like classical music“ are missing.
I love your reactions to classical music. You are quite a sensitive person.
2 years late, but as a classical pianist, i love this video and similar ones you've done. don't know if you'll ever read this but it's very entertaining.
When he got surprised at the trill at 3:10 I could tell he would be in for a treat, when he was taking about the kids walking through the park at 8:20 it is a story, because ballade means a story Chopin (show pan) said you must listen to a ballade from start to finish
Beautiful! His hands are like playing butterflies.
I just visited Chopin's tomb last Thursday, it was such a special moment, he's one of my favourite composers if not my favourite. Great reaction man , I really enjoyed the video
Is he really at Père Lachaise in Paris?
@@gautierhelen1650 yes, if you go I recommend you to google pere lachaise map with names and take your time to walk all around the cemetery👌 its a great experience, even better if its raining in my opinion lol
I listen to this entire song every day at least. It's a song that never gets old. It can make you feel so many different emotions in every section. It's a true masterpiece. Once our piano is tuned this is the song I am going to make my way to learning. I will probably cry when I do finally get to the level where I can learn it.
ABout memorizing all those notes.
It's about muscle memory and keeping the music somehow in your head.
At some point when you practice, notes will come out of your fingers, but you have to imagine the sound you want to give in your head.
When you listen and practice a piece a thousand times, at some point you just know the notes.
Human brain is a mystery but a true gift :)
Certainly one of the best songs I listen to usually friends make fun of me for listening to classic songs(quiet kid in the class) but what do they know?😌 i always remember the opening sequence of the movie “Pianist” where Adrian Brody played this song in the beginning and the end of the movie
You definitely should react to Adam Gyorgy's interpretation of the Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 by Liszt.
This has to be my favorite channel in RUclips. I appreciate you!!
I really like this piece it has everything in it. Drama, Sensability, tempochanges,a journey...
First came into contact with this specific piece through the brilliant short programmes to this music by figure skater Yuzuru Hanyu. He so lives the music in the performances it's been breathtaking for me.
Imagine trying to edit this beast of a piece down to 2:50min...they did a brilliant job with it though. If one doesn't know the whole piece one wouln't really notice the cuts (at least it was that way for me and I normally do notice cuts if they don't fit)...
If you haven't sean it yet do give yourself the chance a go watch a few of the SP versions Yuzuru has done for Ballade 1.
eg. this one from the 2018 Olympics ruclips.net/video/h-7rZ4G1f0w/видео.html
i loved your genuine reaction!
The moment he pronounced opus as “op”, I knew he wasn’t a frequent classical music listener lmao
Absolutely on point, a ride
Chopin (Show-pan) wrote very complicated stuff...notice...the guy's playing it from memory.
You should watch this exact piece of music in the movie the Pianist, its the scene with the German officer. Just incredible!
Chopin is so amazing, best ever.
It is amazing about the human body and mind but memorising the notes comes naturally to anyone who plays. Muscle memory. However the correct technique to be able to play the hardest pieces doesn’t . And then musical interpretation is the thing that also differs so much. Just like personality.
Nice, you chose the literal best cover of this song, which is also my favorite song
Not sure if it's been said already, but not only did he play this piece from memory, but he also played the other 3 Ballades immediately after this one. Maybe a break was involved, but still...you can't memorize a Ballade on a break.
It was a recording session, not a live performance. Lots of splicing and stuff like that
The A major section might just be one of the best sections in all of music history😊
Bro was Flabbergasted
I would love to see your reaction to the other 3 ballades! I’m working on the second one, the third is a beautiful melody, and the 4th is by far the hardest
No, coda of 1 is the most difficult. If you play 1 and 4 you l see 1 is at least as difficult as 4
@@Niemand3566 I've played both, actually! I've played 1, 2 and 4. Not to say that the first isn't super hard, because it is!
Krystian is the reincarnation of our beloved Frédéric.
He is playing and singing at the same time.
I love how he's genuinely appreciating the music and not just making pointless rambling comments
Imagine react to Ballade No 4
If you think this is nuts, watch someone perform Rachmaninoff's third piano concerto.
Does anyone else knows this song thanks to the anime "your lie in April"? For highly and everyone else I recommend to check it out
Its Fryderyk
Love when people are amazed at the beauty of classical music especially people who aren’t already exposed to it already
OP is short for opus, which is latin for work. Opus 3 is the third work (project if you will) of that artist.
In classical piano you really do have to put your whole body into because some passages call for that. To memorize piano pieces you have to practice and practice until you obtain that muscle memory and I would say auditory memory for memorizing the sequences of the note.
This is the best music of all times
7:33 ballade is french and translates into "a small walk through the park". you got it right haha
Omg cant believe u actually reacted to this my favourite piêc
Like you get pictures in your head listening to this, he has pictures in his head when playing, so that's how a pianist can remember all those notes. Like a story which has formed itself during years of study of probably at least 4 or 5 hours a day...
More Zimmerman playing Chopin: just to see your facial expressions!
Lovely, enjoyed it…❤️🌷❤️🌷🌷
Martha Argerich performing Rach 3 please?! It’s only a 40 min vid ;)
I love seeing non musicians react to classical music. I love seeing what they are missing out and hopefully continue to see these extraordinary pieces that pure out emotion and not let classical music die.
You can also check out anna fedorova's piano concerto no.2 (ii. adagio). It as a whole piece is very long you can divide each movement ( basically parts like i, ii, iii) to different video. My favouritr is ii.adagio. It is a mesmerizingly beautiful piece
There are timestamps to each movements under the comments
YES please. Or the third concerto hehe :)
8:15 the way you describe his playing is the best I've heard from classical trained and not ...
Fredreek show-pan
"Remembering all the notes is just as important as remembering which piano stool you started the piece on." - F. Chopin 11:33
Is that a real quote lol
Like most professional classical pianists, he has hundreds (if not thousands) of different pieces memorized. They usually only use music when accompanying another musician (like a singer, violinist, cellist, etc.) or playing in a chamber music group, mainly on the possibility the other musician gets lost and they have to quickly react. But it’s still as impressive to me as it is to you, even though I’ve played piano my whole life.
Just for future reference, the name is pronounced more like “Show-pan”.
The hardest thing for a classical musician is not to learn and memorize the piece. The hardest part is actually feel it, understand it inside of us and listen to it and that’s what makes a great pianist (musician). As I like to say as a classical pianist : we do not play music, we listen to it. A musician that plays music sounds robotic, harsh or boring but a musician that listens and understand the music is absolutely beautiful.
You should try opera. Real opera, not the crap stuff, but real "hard core pedal to the metal" singing would blow your mind. It is like Dutch Death Metal cranked up to 11. You cannot believe how much sound comes out of one person's head. It is like having your head next to a high sensitivity speaker. I know. I coach them. I enjoyed your giving this a serious chance. Its for everyone who lets it into their mind because no matter how much virtuosity, at the end of the day its about communication. Its meant to be felt, not just evaluated, if you know what I mean.
I love those type of reactions from the non professional pianist love it
It's always wonderful to see how a non musician will react to a true musician. Not these "so-called:" artists today who probaly don't even know how to read music. Yes, this piece is beautiful, I am a pianist and was supposed to be one of the best but I did not like the fame at an early age so I only decided to teach talented students when I saw them. Yes, I was very selective of who I taught. I have not played this piece but Chopin is my favorite composer, I play a lot of his Waltzes and Nocturnes. I have heard this piece and today I will find the music to buy for this and learn this piece because I always like it but never knew what it was named. So I thank you for expanding my musical selection with this piece. I will have to find the Ballades book of Chopin now, shouldn't be too hard to find. BTW, as a musician, once you play the piece long enough and learn to master it, it becomes part of your memory in case you wanted to know how you memorize a piece like this. It's more the process of learning it and the mind is the most wonderous thing on earth of it's capabilities
"was supposed to be one of the best" and you don't recognize one of the most recognizable classical pieces written? c'mon man stop the cap.
It's funny, the memorization part comes pretty naturally when you're learning the piece, you don't really have to expend any extra energy purposely trying to memorize it. It's hard to explain, but you're not really memorizing notes, it's a lot of muscle memory and your fingers kind of just know what to do. The only thing you're focusing on is conveying the emotion. If you were to ask me what notes I'm playing in the coda, I probably wouldn't be able to tell you, but if I sat down at a piano, I could play it. It's kind of like when you talk, you aren't remembering a sequence of muscle contractions in your mouth, or even on individual words you are going to say, you are just focused on conveying a message.
I feel like he’s singing through piano.
Would be greatttt if you could do Rachmaninoff piano concerto no. 3 op 30 allegro ma non tanto!!!
I played “waltz in b minor No.2 by Chopin” for a recital and I played without any sheet music
Did just say Frederik TSOPEN ?
Never pause the music
This is just a ridiculous comment! This is a reaction channel of course he needs to pause to react to the video come on...it's not rocket science. If you don't want any pauses just go and watch the original pfew
Yeah…. That’s not how it works around here. You lose me when you try to tell me how to run my channel. Don’t like it, don’t watch.
Why don't you just watch the recording yourself then? You are here for the reaction.