Jean-Efflam Bavouzet teaches Haydn E Minor Sonata, Hob.XVI/34

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  • Опубликовано: 21 май 2021
  • Watch celebrated French pianist Jean-Efflam Bavouzet's full hour-long lesson on Haydn's thrilling Sonata in E Minor, only on tonebase!
    ➡️ app.tonebase.co/piano/artists...
    'Presto' is an unusual marking for a sonata first movement, and Bavouzet draws your attention to the interplay between the brisk tempo and recurring pauses in momentum. The many fermatas throughout the first movement offer the opportunity to achieve an element of surprise, a trademark of Haydn's compositional style.
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Комментарии • 51

  • @pei-tzuchuang1766
    @pei-tzuchuang1766 3 месяца назад +1

    7:50-9:00, time freeze, “don’t move”, really! Very good reminder. Body and hands movements speak volumes!

  • @josephusk2787
    @josephusk2787 11 месяцев назад +9

    Wonderful to have such an analysis, and so clearly explained. The education we get from it in terms of how to interpret, and deal with the piece is beyond price. What a marvellous gift of understanding to us pianists, and a real tribute to the great Haydn. Thank you very much!

  • @barney6888
    @barney6888 3 года назад +36

    Haydn never ceases to amaze me. Thankfully his music gets discovered by true music lovers and preserved. Bach the foundation (plus so much more), Haydn the architect (plus so much more).

    • @carlcurtis
      @carlcurtis 3 года назад +5

      Nice metaphors for Bach and Haydn! Hmm. What would Mozart be? The interior decorator perhaps (and, yes, much more)?

  • @luckystarpiano
    @luckystarpiano 4 месяца назад +2

    Awww you left out one of my personal favorites- G minor, 44
    That first movement is just sublime❤

  • @davidlasson2558
    @davidlasson2558 Год назад +3

    It is so great that the magnificent Haydn has such a learned and musical advocate in Maître Bavouzet.

  • @maomaozai88
    @maomaozai88 3 года назад +10

    Amazing! Provides depth in the Haydn piano sonatas!

  • @thepianocornertpc
    @thepianocornertpc 3 года назад +4

    Brilliant Masterclass.Thank you Maestro.

  • @echristinebirzgalis6525
    @echristinebirzgalis6525 3 года назад +4

    Mentoring from one of the best. Thank you!

  • @ArmandHuangSaberi
    @ArmandHuangSaberi Год назад +2

    What a wonderful pianist!

  • @arongach7241
    @arongach7241 2 года назад +1

    I really enjoyed this video! I like watching it again and again, I always learn something new about this great piece!

  • @ursulagunther2635
    @ursulagunther2635 3 года назад +3

    Umwerfend gut! Alles paßt! Vortrag, Didaktik, Sprachmusik, Klarheit, Hilfe, danke!!

  • @kat6
    @kat6 2 года назад +2

    This is very helpful! Thank you!

  • @leithbouacida2483
    @leithbouacida2483 Год назад +1

    Utterly brilliant video 👏

  • @pianoista6464
    @pianoista6464 2 года назад

    Wow! So many important performance/practice tips! I will probably learn this piece soon! Thank you!

  • @da__lang
    @da__lang Год назад

    I love the practice techniques.

  • @ZTLChords
    @ZTLChords 2 года назад +6

    Mr. Jean-Efflam is the main pianist I put on to listen anything Haydn! His recordings are masterful and it is nice actually seeing him and hearing him speak of Haydn!

  • @elaineblackhurst1509
    @elaineblackhurst1509 2 года назад +10

    Essential listening for anyone learning this interesting and rewarding movement, from a performer whose recordings of Haydn sonatas are outstanding.
    Many thanks.

  • @meehwasong5717
    @meehwasong5717 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you! Amazing analysis!
    Helped me tremendously.
    I am really enjoying this sonata recently.

  • @johannesmarsovszky
    @johannesmarsovszky 2 года назад

    Wonderfully played...

  • @WalyB01
    @WalyB01 Год назад +1

    Great stuff, played this for over 25 years but never had a good teacher with it.

  • @StephenJackson1958
    @StephenJackson1958 2 года назад +2

    Absolutely bang on. Alfred Brendel once gave a wonderful talk on BBC Radio 3 on humour, expectation and surprise in music. He would have agreed with every word you say. All art is about structure and structure is about affirmation and astonishment, surprise. What was it Schnabel used to say about him (Schnabel) being the only musician who could do justice to the silences?

  • @madebyzheng
    @madebyzheng 2 года назад

    Great !very helpful ,merci maître.

  • @MzkAutumn
    @MzkAutumn 2 года назад

    thank you!!!

  • @yp6000
    @yp6000 3 года назад +3

    More!Svp!

  • @DrahomiraBiligova
    @DrahomiraBiligova 3 года назад +1

    👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼thank you .

  • @simonjensen5175
    @simonjensen5175 3 года назад +1

    brilliant

  • @williamsu5552
    @williamsu5552 2 года назад +2

    up till now i see the connection of Haydn to Beethoven. thanks maestro!

    • @JBorda
      @JBorda Год назад +2

      Beethoven sonatas are very inspired on Haydn

  • @izaacmasters2668
    @izaacmasters2668 Год назад +3

    Fantastic information here!
    With all due respect to Bavouzet-as I love his playing, especially his Debussy!-I’ve read the research and there is no account whatsoever of Haydn stating that he found the pianos of his time “lacking power” (9:37).
    Haydn approached his instruments (fortepiani) with much love, respect and adherence to their expressive capabilities.
    According to conversations with Haydn by A. C. Dies, and recent research by Bart van Oort; Mozart, Beethoven and Haydn successfully achieved their desired dramatic nuance and/or contrast in dynamics on the instruments of their time (being on either a Viennese or English piano).
    E. M. Ripin (1969) said that “English trebles were [known to be] particularly powerful” (remember this is from THEIR perspective and aesthetic preconceptions).
    Milchmeyer (1750, respected German pedagogue/musicologist of their time) said that the Viennese pianos had an “extremely strong” bass register. They were definitely not complaining about the lack of power in the instruments by the ‘great piano makers’.
    We live amongst modern pianos and are preconditioned to the loudness and power from our magnificent modern grand pianos. We cannot assume that the great composers thought their pianos were ‘weak’, it’s simply not true. Such an assumption was born out of our own aesthetic preconceptions and expectations of what volume and drama ‘should’ sound like.
    (To balance my argument, Beethoven as we know, composed music that pushed the boundaries of the pianos he was playing, he was always innovating. So yes, Beethoven towards his later works was wanting MORE from the instruments, but never in terms of sheer volume, more so in terms of quality of tone. [Skowroneck, Tilman. Beethoven the Pianist, 2010]).

  • @dannydiyitang2180
    @dannydiyitang2180 Год назад +1

    certainly there is another sonata in minor mode-g minor XVI:32 with 2 -mov structure

  • @qhumvee
    @qhumvee Год назад

    ❤❤❤

  • @madrigal1956
    @madrigal1956 Год назад

    Very interesting, thank you: (the - presumably automatic - translation into French is sometimes a bit quirky, but that must not deter anyone)

  • @horatiodreamt
    @horatiodreamt 2 года назад +1

    Excellent vid. Excellent teacher. Sometimes Haydn reminds me of D. Scarlatti.

    • @Itemtotem
      @Itemtotem 2 года назад

      except Haydn's music is good
      and Scarlatti is in reality how pitiful they portrayed Salieri's music to be in Amadeus

    • @horatiodreamt
      @horatiodreamt 2 года назад

      @@Itemtotem "Amadeus" was a complete distortion of the real people in Mozart's life.

    • @Itemtotem
      @Itemtotem 2 года назад

      @@horatiodreamt because films are literal depiction of reality with no hyperbole nor freedom for dramatic or entertaining purposes and they never say "based on" they always say "represents an accurate accounting"

    • @horatiodreamt
      @horatiodreamt 2 года назад

      @@Itemtotem The movie is based on a play. It's not a depiction of reality . It's a depiction of the author's mental concoction and re-arrangement of history.

  • @maniak1768
    @maniak1768 2 года назад +5

    Didn't he forget the g minor Hoboken XVI/44 or is that somehow proven to be by someone else?

    • @luckystarpiano
      @luckystarpiano 4 месяца назад

      ❤thank you!! One of my favorites

  • @borisfilanovsky
    @borisfilanovsky Год назад +1

    Well, there is also g-moll sonata, so six, not five.

  • @user-lt6rz7ws6k
    @user-lt6rz7ws6k Год назад

    하이든은 정말 위대한 건축가입니다~!!

  • @rayyoung7943
    @rayyoung7943 3 года назад +13

    Maestro, you forgot the great G minor sonata...

    • @nimrodshefer3649
      @nimrodshefer3649 3 года назад +1

      And c minor

    • @rayyoung7943
      @rayyoung7943 3 года назад +3

      @@nimrodshefer3649 I think he mentioned 'the great C minor'

    • @LouisPereraPianistConductor
      @LouisPereraPianistConductor 3 года назад +3

      Does it matter, though? He got his point across, didn't he?

    • @thepianocornertpc
      @thepianocornertpc 3 года назад +2

      @@LouisPereraPianistConductor Yours is not a correct argument, dear Louis. When you give classes like this, you provide correct and proper information. The E minor example at 1:57 is actually a Divertimento Hob.XVI:47, part of the Sonata Cycle. It is also used in the F major Sonata Hob.XVI:47/1 as a second movement, Larghetto transposed to F Minor. What was the point he wanted to get across?

  • @jneuwirth
    @jneuwirth 2 года назад +5

    “homeopathic pedal”..brilliant

  • @tomthumb2361
    @tomthumb2361 Год назад +1

    Pity, though, that he's using a Yamaha, which I find lacking in warmth.

  • @aquarius044
    @aquarius044 3 месяца назад

    Encore un Français qui se fiche de sa langue. Le tout à l'anglais me met hors de moi.

    • @Ziad3195
      @Ziad3195 2 месяца назад

      So you are against people speaking more than one language?