Brahms would have loved this. He once complained to his publisher that performers of his time had disregarded his articulation markings -- something that would have been unheard of during the 18th century.
As usual, very insightful remarks, and careful musical research from Mr. Lesser who is one of the finest cellist musicians and performers today, even at his age. His master classes are marvelous and force one do real critical thinking about the work at hand.
@@gustavoantoniacomi2483 It being in tune doesn't make it any more informative. The guy is 85, if I want to hear it in tune I'll listen to a recording of someone a third his age, but he knows more about the piece than anyone a third his age does.
Fr!! I dont play the cello, I play the violin, and when he goes to 2:26, and make that shift/position change, the 4th finger and 1st sound totally different ngl.
Brahms would have loved this. He once complained to his publisher that performers of his time had disregarded his articulation markings -- something that would have been unheard of during the 18th century.
So eloquently put! Laurence Lesser's lectures are almost as beautiful as his musical interpretations!
The last words:Just do it however you want just be sure it's beautiful.
The quotation by Joannes Brahms
I love the colour of his cello
Andrea Amati 1620
As usual, very insightful remarks, and careful musical research from Mr. Lesser who is one of the finest cellist musicians and performers today, even at his age. His master classes are marvelous and force one do real critical thinking about the work at hand.
And cool last quote
0:07 what is the quotation from Bach?
You can find it from the scroe the suits for cello solo from first page.
@@LOVELYCELLO Thank you but I did not understand. I thought he was referring maybe to a direct quotation by Brahms from a melody by Bach?
5:00 "Do it however you want just be sure it's beautiful."@@cxmxg
The quote is from Bach's The Art of Fugue - Contrapunctus 4
why so out of tune?
Lets hear you play when you turn 85
Not a single not was hit twice at the same pitch
Doesn't matter. We're here for insight, not a performance.
@@ryanschick9882 oh it does matter hahaha
@@gustavoantoniacomi2483 It being in tune doesn't make it any more informative. The guy is 85, if I want to hear it in tune I'll listen to a recording of someone a third his age, but he knows more about the piece than anyone a third his age does.
Fr!! I dont play the cello, I play the violin, and when he goes to 2:26, and make that shift/position change, the 4th finger and 1st sound totally different ngl.
Also, that first D (if im not wrong cuz he used 1st finger on C string), was not right.