Mozart - Piano Concertos No.20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27 + Presentation (Century's record. : Lili Kraus)

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  • Опубликовано: 31 май 2024
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    Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) - Piano Concertos 20-27.
    Click to activate the English subtitles for the presentation (00:00-05:43)
    A very big « THANKS » to Sony Music who authorized us to release this recording.
    Piano Concerto No.20 in D minor, K.466 Ⅰ. Allegro (00:00)
    Piano Concerto No.20 in D minor, K.466 II. Romance (13:34)
    Piano Concerto No.20 in D minor, K.466 III. Rondo: Allegro assai (22:31)
    Piano Concerto No.21 in C major, K.467 Ⅰ. Allegro maestoso (30:28)
    Piano Concerto No.21 in C major, K.467 II. Andante (44:27)
    Piano Concerto No.21 in C major, K.467 III. Allegro vivace assai (50:39)
    Piano Concerto No. 22 in E flat Major, K. 482 - 1. Allegro (57:47)
    Piano Concerto No. 22 in E flat Major, K. 482 - 2. Andante (1:10:53)
    Piano Concerto No. 22 in E flat Major, K. 482 - 3. Allegro (1:19:30)
    Piano Concerto No. 23 in A Major K. 488 - 1. Allegro (1:31:20)
    Piano Concerto No. 23 in A Major K. 488 - 2. Adagio (1:41:57)
    Piano Concerto No. 23 in A Major K. 488 - 3. Allegro Assai (1:47:30)
    Piano Concerto No. 24 in C Minor K. 491 - 1. Allegro (1:55:27)
    Piano Concerto No. 24 in C Minor K. 491 - 2. Larghetto (2:08:24)
    Piano Concerto No. 24 in C Minor K. 491 - 3. Allegretto (2:15:23)
    Piano Concerto No. 25 in C Major K. 503 - 1. Allegro (2:24:47)
    Piano Concerto No. 25 in C Major K. 503 - 2. Andante (2:39:38)
    Piano Concerto No. 25 in C Major K. 503 - 3. Allegretto (2:45:48)
    Piano Concerto No. 26 in D Major K. 537 - 1. Allegro (2:55:10)
    Piano Concerto No. 26 in D Major K. 537 - 2. Larghetto (3:09:18)
    Piano Concerto No. 26 in D Major K. 537 - 3. Allegretto (3:15:06)
    Piano Concerto No. 27 in B-Flat Major K. 595 - 1. Allegro (3:27:00)
    Piano Concerto No. 27 in B-Flat Major K. 595 - 2. Larghetto (3:40:29)
    Piano Concerto No. 27 in B-Flat Major K. 595 - 3. Allegro (3:48:17)
    Piano : Lili Kraus
    Vienna Festival Orchestra
    Conductor : Stephen Simon
    Recorded in 1965-66
    New Mastering in 2017 by AB for CMMR
    🔊 Discover our new website: www.classicalmusicreference.com/
    🔊 Download CMRR's recordings in High fidelity audio (QOBUZ) : bit.ly/370zcMg
    🔊 Follow us on Spotify (Profil: CMRR) : spoti.fi/3016eVr
    ❤️ If you like CMRR content, please consider membership at our Patreon or Tipeee page.
    Thank you :) / cmrr // en.tipeee.com/cmrr
    COMMENTAIRE COMPLET : VOIR PREMIER COMMENTAIRE ÉPINGLÉ.
    Nulle part plus que dans ses andantes, Mozart n'a montré combien son expression personnelle a su épouser la forme que l'usage de son époque lui présentait. Dans certains de ses allegros et rondos, il peut nous arriver de percevoir jusqu'à en souffrir la symétrie et la régularité d'une section, à tel point que la forme s'impose à notre attention plus que le sentiment. Dans ses andantes, inspiration et technique, lyrisme et construction, se fondent avec une telle unité que rien ne nous distrait de la beauté de la pensée elle-même. Les concertos ne mériteraient pas, dans l'œuvre de Mozart, la place hautement représentative qu'ils occupent si leurs andantes n'étaient pas les égaux des meilleurs de ceux des quatuors et des symphonies. Aucun autre groupe de mouvements chez lui ne les dépasse en variété.
    Lili Kraus a comparé son affinité avec Mozart à une mission : « Quand j'ai commencé à explorer Mozart, j'ai découvert la beauté infinie de cette musique, et d'une certaine manière il m'est donné de donner vie à cette beauté. Je trouve qu'il est de mon devoir, de mon privilège, et si vous voulez, de ma croix, de consacrer ma vie à cette musique. » Certains pianistes et compositeurs deviennent inextricablement liés aux yeux du public. Mentionnons Glenn Gould, par exemple, et les Variations Goldberg de Bach viennent à l'esprit. Artur Schnabel et Beethoven étaient pratiquement synonymes, tout comme Walter Gieseking et Debussy, Arthur Rubinstein et Chopin, Alicia de Larrocha et les impressionnistes espagnols. Lorsqu'il s'agissait de la musique pour piano de Mozart, plusieurs générations d'auditeurs et de collectionneurs considéraient les interprétations de Lili Kraus comme le dernier mot..
    Mozart - Piano Concertos 9 Jeunehomme,15,16,1,2,3,4,5,6,8 (Century's recording : Lili Kraus/Simon) : • Mozart - Piano Concert...
    Mozart - Piano Concertos No.11,12,13,14,17,18,19 (recording of the Century : Lili Kraus/Simon) : • Mozart - Piano Concert...
    Mozart - Piano Sonatas Nos.1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17 NEW MASTERING 2021 (Century's record.: Lili Kraus) : • Mozart - Piano Sonatas...
    Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart PLAYLIST (reference recordings) : • Wolfgang Amadeus Mozar...
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Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @classicalmusicreference
    @classicalmusicreference  7 лет назад +379

    ❤ Join us on our WhatsApps fanpage (our preview releases): www.whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va8GWC7ICVfrh2QjcM3y
    Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) - Piano Concertos 20-27.
    *Click to activate the English subtitles for the presentation* (00:00-05:43)
    A very big « THANKS » to Sony Music who authorized us to release this recording.
    Piano Concerto No.20 in D minor, K.466 Ⅰ. Allegro (00:00)
    Piano Concerto No.20 in D minor, K.466 II. Romance (13:34)
    Piano Concerto No.20 in D minor, K.466 III. Rondo: Allegro assai (22:31)
    Piano Concerto No.21 in C major, K.467 Ⅰ. Allegro maestoso (30:28)
    Piano Concerto No.21 in C major, K.467 II. Andante (44:27)
    Piano Concerto No.21 in C major, K.467 III. Allegro vivace assai (50:39)
    Piano Concerto No. 22 in E flat Major, K. 482 - 1. Allegro (57:47)
    Piano Concerto No. 22 in E flat Major, K. 482 - 2. Andante (1:10:53)
    Piano Concerto No. 22 in E flat Major, K. 482 - 3. Allegro (1:19:30)
    Piano Concerto No. 23 in A Major K. 488 - 1. Allegro (1:31:20)
    Piano Concerto No. 23 in A Major K. 488 - 2. Adagio (1:41:57)
    Piano Concerto No. 23 in A Major K. 488 - 3. Allegro Assai (1:47:30)
    Piano Concerto No. 24 in C Minor K. 491 - 1. Allegro (1:55:27)
    Piano Concerto No. 24 in C Minor K. 491 - 2. Larghetto (2:08:24)
    Piano Concerto No. 24 in C Minor K. 491 - 3. Allegretto (2:15:23)
    Piano Concerto No. 25 in C Major K. 503 - 1. Allegro (2:24:47)
    Piano Concerto No. 25 in C Major K. 503 - 2. Andante (2:39:38)
    Piano Concerto No. 25 in C Major K. 503 - 3. Allegretto (2:45:48)
    Piano Concerto No. 26 in D Major K. 537 - 1. Allegro (2:55:10)
    Piano Concerto No. 26 in D Major K. 537 - 2. Larghetto (3:09:18)
    Piano Concerto No. 26 in D Major K. 537 - 3. Allegretto (3:15:06)
    Piano Concerto No. 27 in B-Flat Major K. 595 - 1. Allegro (3:27:00)
    Piano Concerto No. 27 in B-Flat Major K. 595 - 2. Larghetto (3:40:29)
    Piano Concerto No. 27 in B-Flat Major K. 595 - 3. Allegro (3:48:17)
    Piano : Lili Kraus
    Vienna Festival Orchestra
    Conductor : Stephen Simon
    Recorded in 1965-66
    New Mastering in 2017 by AB for CMMR
    🔊 Discover our new website: www.classicalmusicreference.com/
    🔊 Download CMRR's recordings in High fidelity audio (QOBUZ) : bit.ly/370zcMg
    🔊 Follow us on Spotify (Profil: CMRR) : spoti.fi/3016eVr
    ❤ If you like CMRR content, please consider membership at our Patreon or Tipeee page.
    Thank you :) www.patreon.com/cmrr // en.tipeee.com/cmrr
    Les concertos que Mozart a écrits pour son instrument favori jouent dans l'histoire de leur genre un rôle comparable à celui joué dans l'histoire de la symphonie par les neuf chefs-d'œuvre de Beethoven. De même que la symphonie beethovénienne a déterminé la forme du genre pour près d'un siècle, de même les concertos pour piano de Mozart, par leur nombre et par la grande beauté de la plupart d'entre eux, sont à l'origine du concerto moderne et ont tracé les lignes selon lesquelles il s'est pendant longtemps développé.
    Le défi pour les compositeurs de la fin du XVIIIe siècle était de concilier les caractéristiques les plus fortes de la forme concerto baroque (contrastes timbraux distincts entre un instrumentiste soliste et un orchestre, plus une brillante écriture en solo) avec le nouveau style de sonate-allegro. Lui-même virtuose accompli, Mozart a élevé la fonction de pianiste soliste à de nouveaux niveaux d'expression, de technique et d'élan dramatique. Par conséquent, le piano et l'orchestre n'étaient pas simplement des partenaires égaux, mais des personnages distincts à part entière.
    Entre tous les grands compositeurs, Mozart est celui qui a enrichi la bibliothèque du genre du plus grand nombre de chefs-d'œuvre. Chez la plupart des maîtres, les concertos tiennent une place relativement petite, beaucoup plus petite, par exemple, que les symphonies ou les quatuors. Chez lui, au contraire, ils sont plus nombreux que n'importe quelles autres compositions, à l'exception des symphonies.
    Cependant, aux yeux du musicien qui se préoccupe moins de l'histoire de la forme que de la personnalité de chaque œuvre, de la pensée qui l'inspire et de la joie qu'elle peut procurer, ses concertos sont encore plus précieux, car ils constituent une source intarissable de jouissance artistique. Ils forment un groupe de chefs-d'œuvre qu'on pratique continuellement sans jamais s'en lasser.
    Dans leur diversité, ils correspondent aux états d'âme les plus variés, depuis le contentement où nous demandons l'art d'être une simple distraction, délicate plutôt que profonde, depuis la joie de vivre franche et animale, la santé physique et morale et le parfait équilibre de toutes les facultés, jusqu'à la mélancolie, la douleur et même la révolte, jusqu'à cette sérénité « olympienne » qui atteint l'air vivifiant des hauts sommets. Il y a peu de moments de notre vie intérieure qui ne retrouvent dans l'un ou l'autre le tonique dont ils ont besoin. C'est là la marque des plus grandes œuvres et elle permet de placer ces concertos parmi ce que la musique a produit de plus durable.
    L'uniformité relative qu'au premier abord on croit constater entre eux disparaît devant l'examen. L'émotion ne se reproduit jamais identique d'une œuvre à l'autre ; une physionomie particulière à chacune d'elles permet de les différencier, et la variété de leur inspiration se révèle toujours plus grande à mesure qu'on en approfondit l'étude. C'est grâce à cette variété que Mozart est parmi le petit nombre des compositeurs dont on peut faire son pain quotidien. Peu importe la diversité de la forme ; la diversité de l'émotion est celle qu'exige notre esprit et la seule qui prévienne l'ennui. Nombre de musiciens ont une forme plus variée que celle de Mozart, et leurs œuvres, néanmoins, lorsqu'on veut s'en repaître, provoquent bientôt un sentiment de monotonie que le Mozart des grandes œuvres ne cause jamais et dont on ne souffre chez lui que si on s'obstine à l'étudier dans les compositions où il n'a pas mis le fond de lui-même. Ce privilège qui leur appartient' de satisfaire d'une manière durable l'âme et l'esprit, plus encore que leur rôle historique, a valu à ses concertos pour piano leur place aux rangs des chefs-d'œuvre.
    Nulle part plus que dans ses andantes, Mozart n'a montré combien son expression personnelle a su épouser la forme que l'usage de son époque lui présentait. Dans certains de ses allegros et rondos, il peut nous arriver de percevoir jusqu'à en souffrir la symétrie et la régularité d'une section, à tel point que la forme s'impose à notre attention plus que le sentiment. Dans ses andantes, inspiration et technique, lyrisme et construction, se fondent avec une telle unité que rien ne nous distrait de la beauté de la pensée elle-même. Les concertos ne mériteraient pas, dans l'œuvre de Mozart, la place hautement représentative qu'ils occupent si leurs andantes n'étaient pas les égaux des meilleurs de ceux des quatuors et des symphonies. Aucun autre groupe de mouvements chez lui ne les dépasse en variété.
    Nous sentons, cependant, que certains mouvements s'apparentent l'un à l'autre, qu'il est des « familles de mouvements » et cela permet d'établir une certaine classification parmi eux. C'est ainsi que les andantes de Mozart, malgré leur richesse et leur diversité, et avec quelques exceptions, se laissent rapporter à quatre ou cinq types, que nous pouvons étiqueter, pour plus de commodité, l'andante galant, l'andante-rêve, l'andante ou adagio méditatif, l'andante cantabile ou romance, et l'andante élégiaque ou dramatique. Personne ne sera dupe de cette classification au point de la croire absolue. Mais elle peut nous aider à embrasser plus facilement l'ensemble de ces andantes où Mozart a livré ce qu'il avait de plus précieux.
    Les concertos de Mozart, cependant, étaient loin d'être des incontournables des salles de concert au début du XXe siècle. Pourtant, le vent a commencé à tourner. Une nouvelle génération d'éminents claviéristes classiques, parmi lesquels Wanda Landowska, Walter Gieseking, Edwin Fischer et Arthur Schnabel, a contribué à faire avancer la cause, tout comme Lili Kraus. Lili Kraus a comparé son affinité avec Mozart à une mission : « Quand j'ai commencé à explorer Mozart, j'ai découvert la beauté infinie de cette musique, et d'une certaine manière il m'est donné de donner vie à cette beauté. Je trouve qu'il est de mon devoir, de mon privilège, et si vous voulez, de ma croix, de consacrer ma vie à cette musique. »
    Certains pianistes et compositeurs deviennent inextricablement liés aux yeux du public. Mentionnons Glenn Gould, par exemple, et les Variations Goldberg de Bach viennent à l'esprit. Artur Schnabel et Beethoven étaient pratiquement synonymes, tout comme Walter Gieseking et Debussy, Arthur Rubinstein et Chopin, Alicia de Larrocha et les impressionnistes espagnols. Lorsqu'il s'agissait de la musique pour piano de Mozart, plusieurs générations d'auditeurs et de collectionneurs considéraient les interprétations de Lili Kraus comme le dernier mot..
    Mozart - Piano Concertos 9 Jeunehomme,15,16,1,2,3,4,5,6,8 (Century's recording : Lili Kraus/Simon) : ruclips.net/video/FHwmL8Md22w/видео.html&index=3
    Mozart - Piano Concertos No.11,12,13,14,17,18,19 (recording of the Century : Lili Kraus/Simon) : ruclips.net/video/ZntL9Y7vcDM/видео.html
    Mozart - Piano Sonatas Nos.1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17 NEW MASTERING 2021 (Century's record.: Lili Kraus) : ruclips.net/video/K2doJV0FR8Q/видео.html
    Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart PLAYLIST (reference recordings) : ruclips.net/video/EVPkfHD6b7E/видео.html

    • @iraidakim5902
      @iraidakim5902 6 лет назад +4

      Classical Music/ /Reference Recording Fi

    • @kaiambireid9456
      @kaiambireid9456 6 лет назад +4

      Baronbub
      Musicsic
      Musicto

    • @garydabrowski679
      @garydabrowski679 6 лет назад +13

      Lili Kraus...so glad there are musicians like you who put in the work to be able to perform and keep genius music like this alive!...I'm sure Mozart himself would approve of your, and the other musicians' performances of his works here...

    • @yvescrochet6320
      @yvescrochet6320 6 лет назад +6

      Classical Music/ /Reference Recording -

    • @yvescrochet6320
      @yvescrochet6320 6 лет назад +4

      Iraida Kim - - - - navigation

  • @MrYomino
    @MrYomino 2 года назад +140

    Ô Seigneur, merci de nous avoir donné Mozart.

    • @HenriHamel-tm9ej
      @HenriHamel-tm9ej 9 месяцев назад +1

      Je voudrai qu'il y ait que de la musique classique je vous l'ai signalé déjà ce matin vous n'avez pas tenu compte est ce sérieux??

    • @patriciasalis2160
      @patriciasalis2160 8 месяцев назад +1

      Dommage de l'avoir repris si tôt !

    • @marvinramosveiga5919
      @marvinramosveiga5919 7 месяцев назад

      Sa mort n'était pas dûe à quelque chose de très seigneur seigneur...

    • @daniserrat3150
      @daniserrat3150 6 месяцев назад +2

      No hay nada mejor en el mundo,ni siquiera el sexo.Ni ferraris ni mansiones,sólo la salud y tener lo básico para poder vivir lo cambio por el.Con esto quiero decir que si me dicen: tendrás mucho dinero pero jamás podrás escuchar a Mozart,prefiero quedarme como estoy, es decir justo de dinero pero poder escucharlo hasta el fin de mis días

    • @annegoudine7167
      @annegoudine7167 3 месяца назад +3

      Sans Mozart, la vie manquerait de charme. Anne

  • @mr.fredericchopin6214
    @mr.fredericchopin6214 11 месяцев назад +49

    The Lili Kraus and Stephen Simon complete Mozart Concertos were recommended to me when I read an article about where to find the best recordings of all these concertos. Wow! I hit the jackpot. The pianist and conductor understand Mozart more deeply than anyone else I have ever listened to in these concertos! Mozart can be so deep, bring out emotions in such a subtle way that you don't even know those emotions were even in you. There is also great humor and playfulness, simplicity and elegance, nuance... on and on. I think Lili Kraus understood Mozart better than almost any other pianist. She was so attuned to the composer, there is such color in every note and Lili searches the depths of touch and tone. Just as Mozart's concertos go where no composer can go, Lili Kraus and Stephen Simon go where no pianist and orchestra usually travel. What words can one use to describe these concertos? Sublime, gorgeous? Yes!

    • @panprezes1993
      @panprezes1993 7 месяцев назад

      You wrote: "Just as Mozart's concertos go where no composer can go, Lili Kraus and Stephen Simon go where no pianist and orchestra usually travel. What words can one use to describe these concertos? Sublime, gorgeous? Yes!"
      I will add that I have no words to describe this recording of the first concert here (in D minor). I have never known such an outstanding cadenza for the 1st movement of any piano concerto with orchestra...
      AND YOU??

    • @user-fd2cc5rm1e
      @user-fd2cc5rm1e 6 месяцев назад

      とても、心地よいピアノ🎹❤❤❤
      ゴージャス!…日本より🇯🇵

    • @mr.fredericchopin6214
      @mr.fredericchopin6214 2 месяца назад +1

      @@panprezes1993 I really adore the way Lili Kraus and Stephen Simon play the second slow movement of the 17th concerto (Their disc with the yellow jacket cover). Almost immediately I feel both the beauty and the depth of despair. Wow!

  • @ronaldopacifico9441
    @ronaldopacifico9441 3 месяца назад +1

    " it’s the D minor (K.466) I love the most. It is in resonance with my profound being. I sense each note deep in my heart… the music is breathtaking, majestic, tremendous, it fills my soul with beauty, and longing, and a bittersweet feeling that words could never explain" . W. A. Mozart

  • @yasamanderiszadeh902
    @yasamanderiszadeh902 Год назад +54

    What a beautiful 4 hour journey. How lucky are we to have had musicians like Mozart.

    • @Berley_1234
      @Berley_1234 2 месяца назад

      a man that probably would have been WOKED out of his job by our current culture. Mozart had a, um, let's say slightly perverted sex life that might not have been accepted today

  • @williammatthewjosephgenova9802
    @williammatthewjosephgenova9802 Год назад +26

    What wonderful music one which to reflect on Mozart's 267th birthday on 27 January 2023. Lili's piano is strikingly beautiful and pure, without any frills. Mozart's music will remain forever fresh and inspirational to all us who are lucky enough to be witnesses to his genius.

  • @user-kc5id1bg3d
    @user-kc5id1bg3d 7 лет назад +11

    Майже чотири години чудових фортепіанних концертів неперевершеного Моцарта, та ще й без реклами! Найщиріша подяка!

    • @claradereland7326
      @claradereland7326 5 лет назад

      Александр Измайлов c vbvbaareimboembggy

  • @beethovenlovedmozart
    @beethovenlovedmozart Год назад +18

    The more I listen to Mozarts #24, the more I realize what this piece was. This was Mozart for one month not giving a damn what people thought. This piece was Mozart coming out of a shell. This piece was to leave no doubt who the best composer in the world was. This piece was Mozart telling the world "I'm here and this is why I'm the best". He didn't just write another concerto. He crushed what a concerto was up until this point. He sounded like he was freeing himself , and he let the world know this is how good he is and how far he's come. If I were Haydn or Beethoven listening to this for tbe first time, I would be In complete awe, shocked, and would run and hide because this was like what Beethovens 9th did to the Romantics, it set the bar high in the genre and they knew any work they did would never measure up. Oh so many composers were happy and sad he left early because this man had skills, heart, photographic memory, taste, and knew how to take a melody and create endless possibilities. As Haydn cried the last 15 years of his life "If the world could only see his talent through my musical eyes, they would never let him go. He was an irreplaceable generational talent gone way too soon."

    • @BritinIsrael
      @BritinIsrael Год назад +1

      Just saw your great comment. The concertos 20-27 are absolutely mind blowing. I agree that # 24 is something special but all this last group are individually special in their own way. For me, the first movement of # 25 is Mozart on steroids. He is just laying out everything in his "tool box" .And the opening bars of # 27 makes me shudder . It's just an amazing opening. He certainly knew how good he was . Listening to these concertos you can see from where Beethoven's piano concertos germinated. Beethoven was 21 when Mozart died and he must have been aquainted with these concertos and loved them.

    • @beethovenlovedmozart
      @beethovenlovedmozart Год назад +2

      @@BritinIsrael nice post. Ironically, the opening bars of #27 ended up being very popular with the Romantics after Beethoven. The concept of briefly playing the strings before the piano was something the Romantics loved and it was one of mozarts many contributions to Romanticsm I guess. The opening of his 40th symphony was a similar thing.

    • @beethovenlovedmozart
      @beethovenlovedmozart Год назад +2

      To add more to #24, Beethoven used the melody a long with mozarts c minor fantasy as the basic for his final movement in his Pathetique sonata.

    • @beethovenlovedmozart
      @beethovenlovedmozart Год назад

      Listen to beethovens melody closely. He used the notes from mozarts c minor 24 final movement theme, but the structure from his piano fantasy in same key. Showing his respect and getting cute I guess. :)

    • @beethovenlovedmozart
      @beethovenlovedmozart Год назад

      ruclips.net/user/clipUgkxmyJMBl9SwbkHXTBV-Q-WZOtZwJXLOfsY

  • @user-vj5kx6gn7m
    @user-vj5kx6gn7m 3 года назад +13

    Как всё же прав был Чайковский, который сказал, что самая яркая звезда на музыкальном небосводе-это Моцарт!!!!!

  • @christopherchardt
    @christopherchardt 2 года назад +9

    The perfect union between composer, conductor, orchestra, pianist, and instrument. Exquisite. The language of the Gods.

  • @pinkcatstudios9824
    @pinkcatstudios9824 6 лет назад +5

    There is Mozart, and there's the rest of them. Not that they're all alike, but he is one of a kind.

    • @andrewrico8321
      @andrewrico8321 6 лет назад

      there few things im always agree with, this is one of them.

    • @kurtprader7517
      @kurtprader7517 5 лет назад

      Das ist Mozart in höchster Vollendung.

    • @MrPhil480
      @MrPhil480 5 лет назад +1

      non, il y Bach est le reste. faut pas exagerer...

  • @paulina3201
    @paulina3201 Год назад +10

    I am grateful to the people (the orchestra and the performer) who work so hard to revive this magnificent, brilliant music....thank you. You make this world a better place, you transform it.

  • @beethovenlovedmozart
    @beethovenlovedmozart 2 года назад +1

    It took me a long while, but I finally figured out mozart. No matter how hard you study, as Beethoven found out, you will never be him. Why? He remembered everything. It's really that simple. He had an unbelievable ear, math genius, and can remember everything he hears or touches. He could be extraterrestrial for all we know! Mozart reused his old melodies all the time because they were simply in his head and he was trying to make them better. Piano concerto #22 for example, 3rd movement is an example where only mozart could do it. Beethoven couldn't have that creativity to save his life. His memory was the main difference! You can hear it in his music. Every concerto gets better and better at something because he can always recall what he did. It's what made him tbe greatest ever.

  • @randalmata100
    @randalmata100 5 лет назад +29

    Lili Kraus (3 April 1903 - 6 November 1986) was a Hungarian-born pianist. Thank You Lili !!

  • @earlenehamner3433
    @earlenehamner3433 2 года назад +21

    I treasure Mozart’s music. A true
    Genius and his music is a treasure.

    • @miltongajardo9800
      @miltongajardo9800 2 года назад +2

      I agree totally

    • @beethovenlovedmozart
      @beethovenlovedmozart 2 года назад +1

      The real man who Kickstarted beethoven and romantic period. The guy that everyone says didn't write serious music. Mozart was the most gifted composer ever to breath on earth

    • @akirakanda7972
      @akirakanda7972 Месяц назад +1

      @@beethovenlovedmozart His music is the most serious and most beautiful music ever composed which came from his heart. When a music reaches to this level and depth, there is no need for the melodramatic Beethoven and his followers.

  • @mvo5450
    @mvo5450 4 года назад +1

    Превыше восторга.., превыше восхищения.., превыше слов.. Мятежное маленькое тело с огромной миссией - возвысить человечество, дав ему эстетику этих Божественных музыкальных композиций.

  • @odilefrankum2558
    @odilefrankum2558 2 года назад +2

    Je vais prier pour exulter ma joie auprès de notre Dame de la PAIX !!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @ingemarbjorklund3147
    @ingemarbjorklund3147 5 лет назад +5

    Tänk om Mozart hade fått leva ytterligare 35 år, vilken enorm musikskatt hade vi inte kunnat ha möjlighet att lyssna till?!
    Imagine if Mozart had lived for another 35 years, what enormous music treasure could we not have been able to listen to ?!
    Stellen Sie sich vor, wenn Mozart noch 35 Jahre gelebt hätte, welche enorme Musiksteuer hätten wir nicht hören können?!
    ¡Imagínese si Mozart hubiera vivido por otros 35 años, qué enorme impuesto musical no podríamos haber escuchado?

  • @lintelle2382
    @lintelle2382 3 года назад +9

    I always get emotional when I hear Piano Concerto No.20 in D minor, K.466 II. Romance (13:34). Takes me back to the credits of Amadeus and how wiped out I feel after watching that movie!

  • @seanmcconnell58
    @seanmcconnell58 2 года назад +11

    These concertos are what made me fall in love with classical music.

  • @SV_2000
    @SV_2000 2 года назад +25

    Украина, апрель 2022 года. Воздушная тревога, сижу в подвале, слушаю Моцарта. Очень помогает.

    • @amneris78
      @amneris78 Год назад +4

      Надеюсь, Вы живы.
      Храни Вас Бог!

    • @SV_2000
      @SV_2000 Год назад +2

      @@amneris78 Живой:) Спасибо вам.

    • @kclee1
      @kclee1 Год назад +3

      Ukraine will win! Long live Ukraine! - from Malaysia

    • @patriciabravoriscal6264
      @patriciabravoriscal6264 19 дней назад

      Ukraine should win ❤

  • @virginiabuhn9719
    @virginiabuhn9719 3 года назад +8

    Glorious music! Superb artist! Dear Lili Kraus, always gracious and beautiful whether performing her beloved Mozart, conducting a masterclass or sharing conversation over lunch. She spread joy wherever she went...and now it continues on RUclips. Thank you, Classical Music! We are much indebted to you!

  • @renatohauptmann5548
    @renatohauptmann5548 5 лет назад +15

    LILI KRAUS INCREDIBLE ONE OF THE GREATESTS PIANISTS EVER - MARVELOUS MOZART PIANO CONCERTOS RECORDINGS

  • @tepmich
    @tepmich 6 лет назад +12

    У Моцарта мы слышим Живой Поток Благороднейших Гармоний. И чем жизнь ощущается душой всё более и более опустошительной и тяжёлой, тем ярче удивляет и радует нас Небесное Искусство Моцарта!!! Теппер Михаил.

    • @user-em3rx7wr3j
      @user-em3rx7wr3j 3 года назад +3

      Браво, Михаил! Приятно почитать комментарий единомышленника. Всего вам самого наилучшего. Андрей. Украина.

  • @rodsalvador3608
    @rodsalvador3608 5 лет назад +83

    The Adagio to No. 23....one of the most beautiful pieces ever composed.

    • @gordonpepper1400
      @gordonpepper1400 2 года назад +4

      totally agree

    • @onkelmarvin8360
      @onkelmarvin8360 2 года назад +4

      It`s so beautiful words can hardly describe it. That was one of Mozarts talents, to put his feelings to music, and when he wrote " The 23rd " the adagio.......he was really really sad...he must`ve been. It was Stalins favorite piece of music, and though he was a coldblooded killer, it proves, that deep down in his dark soul.........there was still some genuine feelings, trying to get out.

    • @tng2022
      @tng2022 2 года назад

      he wrote it for his father... especially the adagio

    • @beethovenlovedmozart
      @beethovenlovedmozart 2 года назад +1

      One of my favorites as a kid. Mozart had a superb memory. He would experiment, and always remembered the result. He remembered everything he heard or studied. He was always experimenting. That was mozarts main gift. He also worked very hard on his craft and man it showed in his 30s. Beethoven would've had no chance if mozart lived another 15 or 20 years.

    • @tng2022
      @tng2022 2 года назад +4

      @@beethovenlovedmozart beethoven is also a beast. one of a kind. he has his own thing going on. they are just distinctly different my man, Art is not a competition. if we only have Mozart and no Beethoven or any other magnificent composers, the world would be poorer indeed.

  • @raularizabarca2238
    @raularizabarca2238 Год назад +3

    While today countries are torn apart in a fratricidal war, Mozart's music rescues the best of the human soul.

  • @FrancoiseRenaudind21ch50
    @FrancoiseRenaudind21ch50 4 года назад +3

    Juste fermer les yeux pour s'imprégner de la musique de se génie....... Mozart....

  • @luisdiazlopez3712
    @luisdiazlopez3712 3 года назад +5

    Los movimientos lentos de los conciertos para piano de Mozart nos muestran su faceta emotiva. Es la emoción que suscitan aquello que los hace tan queribles, en tanto que en los allegri y movimientos más rápidos está el Mozart genial, capaz de improvisar el movimiento en el mismo momento en que el concierto recibía su primera ejecución. Las grandes pianistas como Lily Krauss, Clara Haskill y Mitzuko Ushida nos entregan, con delicada sensibilidad femenina la emotividad de los movimientos lentos. La gran música, la de Mozart, la de Bach, la de Beethoven, la de Schubert, la de Brahms, la de Bruckner y la de muchos otros me han hecho llevaderos los confinamientos impuestos por la pandemia COVID19. Gracias a RUclips es posible, hoy, disponer de casi toda la gran música que se ha grabado. En 1960, en Chile, cuando los equipos de reproducción no estaban al alcance de la gente de ingresos bajos hubo un hombre que hizo a mi país uno de los regalos culturales más grandes que hemos recibido, creó la radio emisora Andrés Bello dedicada exclusivamente a la gran música. Ninguna calle de Santiago de Chile lleva su nombre civil, James Morrison, o su nombre de comunicador social, Jimmy Brown. Sí hay calles con nombres de futbolistas.

  • @Frankincensedjb123
    @Frankincensedjb123 Год назад +6

    Many years ago, Mozart was my introduction to great compositional music. What better place to start than with the versatile, inspired, and gifted master of melody and form.

  • @wise_up_dems.
    @wise_up_dems. 6 лет назад +6

    Every time I listen to No. 21, Andante, I have to listen to it at least 4 times and...... everything else in the world just fades away............ Mozart has the ability to do that.

  • @alexa-kimstone3656
    @alexa-kimstone3656 4 года назад +15

    Mozarts piano concertos are for me his best works

  • @zmi060200
    @zmi060200 4 года назад +15

    I love Herr Mozart so much! He's the number 01 between the classical composers I love more (and more). Greetings from Sao Paulo, Brazil, dear Mozart fans.

    • @mathieuguillet4036
      @mathieuguillet4036 4 года назад +1

      Mozart and Bach truly stand apart from the other great composers in their genius. The divine beauty which they left us for all time is astounding.

    • @laurahelenaxou1834
      @laurahelenaxou1834 4 года назад

      Vc precisa escutar a Alma Deutscher 😊

  • @user-si1hm1fu4k
    @user-si1hm1fu4k 7 лет назад +29

    Грандиозно! Огромное спасибо за бережное сохранение мирового культурного наследие. Ваш труд делает вам честь .

    • @user-em3rx7wr3j
      @user-em3rx7wr3j 3 года назад +3

      Прекрасна музика! Відчувається високий професіоналізм диригента і оркестру...

  • @simondalzell6108
    @simondalzell6108 4 года назад +17

    Lili was without a shadow of doubt simply a phenomenon. Completely and utterly awe inspiring. God bless her for the legacy she bequeathed to us.

    • @HenriHamel-tm9ej
      @HenriHamel-tm9ej 9 месяцев назад +1

      Je suis content d'écouter Mozart car comment peut-on vivre sans écouter Mozart?

  • @FlexingClassicalMusic
    @FlexingClassicalMusic 6 месяцев назад +3

    Classical music is an incredibly refined and wonderful form of art. It has the ability to express emotions and create a unique sonic experience that no other genre of music can compare to.

  • @sukrame5331
    @sukrame5331 15 дней назад

    I absoloutly love these versions . Kraus and her fellow musicians play Mozart because they love it. One can hear how much they enjoy to do so. They're not trying to impress any one 🙂

  • @shin-i-chikozima
    @shin-i-chikozima 2 года назад +1

    Listening to Mozart,
    troublesome affairs of the mundane world is washed away

  • @user-hk2oy6eo3r
    @user-hk2oy6eo3r 2 года назад +28

    Сердечная благодарность за несколько часов наивысшего счастья!!! 💓💓💓👏👏👏

  • @alexberlin154
    @alexberlin154 4 года назад +5

    This group of Mozarts Piano Concertos (20+) is the best music that has been vorever written.

    • @shnimmuc
      @shnimmuc 4 года назад

      Nonsense.

    • @cristobocarrin1746
      @cristobocarrin1746 4 года назад

      @@shnimmuc Absolutely! Just listen to Kanye West, now THAT's music

    • @shnimmuc
      @shnimmuc 4 года назад

      @@cristobocarrin1746 Silly

  • @oguzochka_dura
    @oguzochka_dura 5 лет назад +2

    Великолепно, одухотворенно...настолько, что кроме слуховых ощущений при прослушивании рождается масса других ощущений, вплоть до тактильных. Ощущение наполненности небесной гармонией и невозможность сдержать слезы от осознания прикосновения к Божественному. Какое счастье, что я могу жить в этом же мире, где жил и ты, Моцарт!

    • @minhtientran9292
      @minhtientran9292 5 лет назад

      Согласно

    • @user-em3rx7wr3j
      @user-em3rx7wr3j 3 года назад

      Эмили, Вы великолепно сформулировали свое видение творчества Моцарта. Будьте счастливы...

  • @shin-i-chikozima
    @shin-i-chikozima 2 года назад +2

    These music have the scent of Mozart's aesthetics and his unrivaled genius

  • @destineydevereux4722
    @destineydevereux4722 3 года назад +9

    Bon jour from Periguex France,, I play these through the whole house system everyday,,, life is so much enjoyable with Mozart,, merci💖🇫🇷💋

    • @akinsons
      @akinsons 2 года назад

      Bon jour from Whangarei, New Zealand! Ditto Adriana, I do the same, turn off all the bad news TV, listen to this wonderful music every day and all seems right again 🤗😊

  • @stephanebelizaire3627
    @stephanebelizaire3627 Год назад +3

    Wonderful Music Forever !

  • @mariaalfaro5870
    @mariaalfaro5870 5 месяцев назад +1

    the most beautiful mozart piano concertos

  • @user-xz6hj4cs9i
    @user-xz6hj4cs9i 2 года назад +2

    СПАСИБО ВАМ ЗА ВОЗМОЖНОСТЬ БЫТЬ ВСЕ УТРО СПРЕКРАСНОЙ МУЗЫКОЙ МОЦАРТА В ИСПОЛНЕНИИ ВЕЛИКИХ МУЗЫКАНТОВ МОЕЙ МЛОДОСТИ И СОВРЕМЕННОСТИ!!!

  • @alvarito45
    @alvarito45 4 года назад +4

    Love from the deepest of my heart 23 and 25. Thanks a million to Sony Music.

  • @PHANTOMZ0NE
    @PHANTOMZ0NE 2 года назад +7

    LILI KRAUS!!! Beautiful, crystal interpretation!

  • @mayamanign
    @mayamanign 2 года назад +5

    Mozart's music changed my life and enriched my existence. Gracias Maestro.

  • @adrianjames7968
    @adrianjames7968 5 лет назад +7

    (Wikipedia)
    Lili Kraus was born in Budapest in 1903. Her father was from Czech Lands, and her mother from an assimilated Jewish Hungarian family.
    She enrolled at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music, and at the age of 17 entered the Budapest Conservatory where she studied with Zoltán Kodály, and Béla Bartók. In the 1930s, she continued her studies with Severin Eisenberger, Eduard Steuermann in Vienna and Artur Schnabel in Berlin, who focused her interest in the classical tradition.
    Lili Kraus soon became known as a specialist in Mozart and Beethoven. Her early chamber music performances and recording with violinist Szymon Goldberg helped gain the critical acclaim that launched her international career. In the 1930s, she toured Europe, Japan, Australia and South Africa. In 1940, Kraus embarked on a tour of Asia where, while in Java, she and her family were captured and interned in a concentration camp by the Japanese from June 1943 until August 1945.
    After the war, she settled in New Zealand where she spent many happy years playing, performing, and teaching. She became a NZ citizen and resumed her career, teaching and touring extensively. In the early 1950s she performed the entire Beethoven sonata cycle with violinist Henri Temianka. From 1967 to 1983, she taught as artist-in-residence at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth. After that she made her home in Asheville, North Carolina, where she died in 1986.
    Kraus' husband was Otto Mandl (b. 1889 d. 1956), a wealthy Jewish (later converted to Catholicism) mining engineer and philosopher. They were married on October 31, 1930 and Mandl sold his business in order to devote himself to the furtherance of Kraus' career.[1]. The couple had two children, Ruth and Michael.[1]

  • @severinacappelletti8364
    @severinacappelletti8364 3 года назад +4

    Concerti meravigliosi, uno più bello dell " altro!@!
    Grazie a chi li condivide con l 'umanità intera.💕💥💚

  • @xavierbordes1373
    @xavierbordes1373 5 лет назад +7

    Excellente Lili Kraus d'admirable mémoire... Mozart toujours pareil et toujours nouveau !

  • @ondrejnovotny7628
    @ondrejnovotny7628 5 лет назад +13

    The 20th concert is just beyond beauty...

  • @alcidesduartefalcao2577
    @alcidesduartefalcao2577 4 года назад +32

    I have been listening to these concerts for many years and I have no words to describe its beauty. Perahia, Brendel and Lili Kraus are my favorite pianists to play it. Lili Kraus is simply wonderful: her playing is so impressive, unique. She was a great mozartian player, among the best genius I have been known!

    • @jameswidman2780
      @jameswidman2780 3 года назад +4

      So do agree of her performance quality! Murray Perahia is, for my taste, near perfect. He provides the most soft, slower and sensitive interpretation of 1 through 27! Again, my taste. Lili Kraus is a little quick which, to me, detracts a bit. To show you how critical I am, I consider Horowitz something of a key-banger.
      Taste! We all have our individually.
      I have not nor will I ever tell anyone how to listen to or enjoy any form of musical entertainment.
      Willie Nelson wrote the music his own lyrics to Angle Flying Too Close to the Ground. It is simply beautiful! Taste. The loveliest piece of music he ever composed or performed. Again, taste!
      We should all thank our lucky stars for the masters and contemporary composers, Mozart working in a virtual dungeon and those today in comfortable studios, well equipped electronically with a Black 7 Foot 2, Steinway and Sons Concert Grand Instrument.
      There will be agreement and criticism. Love to here it all.

    • @emilelaurent
      @emilelaurent 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@jameswidman2780 Lili Kraus somewhere described that she had learnt more from playing original Mozart-time pianos, more than from any teacher. Now the tone of this pianos showed a much faster decline during time than is the case with modern pianos. Therefore to link the melody and fill the space you need a slightly faster tempo, which makes also sense because then you get even in Mozart a Beethovenian drive.

  • @shin-i-chikozima
    @shin-i-chikozima 5 лет назад +5

    It is not natural for us to say that we are alive every day. Life and death may be reversed tomorrow. We are in such an unstable situation. These songs will relieve that kind of anxiety. Greetings from Japan. Sayonara❗

  • @gberchier
    @gberchier 3 года назад +7

    Magnifique, très belle interprétation. Écouter cette musique, me remplit de paix et de sérénité. Dans ce monde de folie, un moyen de retrouver un équilibre émotionnel. Merci

    • @j.snefrou9356
      @j.snefrou9356 2 года назад

      Savez qui a écrit les cadences de ces concertos que je trouve originales? Merci

  • @manolisfragaki
    @manolisfragaki 19 дней назад

    Tres bien, c'est magnlfic MOZART!!!!

  • @parenparsekhian352
    @parenparsekhian352 3 года назад +7

    This was uploaded on Mozart's birthday (January 27). Nice touch :)

  • @Waterboy2211
    @Waterboy2211 3 года назад +15

    Mozart's later piano concertos are spectacular. I could never pick a favorite.

    • @panprezes1993
      @panprezes1993 7 месяцев назад +2

      Very spectacular, yes, goodly!!!!!

    • @erichodge567
      @erichodge567 6 месяцев назад

      So true. Objectively, no one is greater than another. Just the same, the last movement of number 23 is like listening to a perfect story told by a perfect storyteller. I have listened to it hundreds of times over the last fifty years, and it has never ceased to amaze me. It's as close to perfection as anything I know.

  • @user-ry6pp3js2b
    @user-ry6pp3js2b 3 года назад +7

    I open the morning,
    the window of this day
    through Mozart

  • @user-gi8un4ig9j
    @user-gi8un4ig9j 2 года назад +2

    ЧУДО оркестр пианистка и чарующая музыка МОЦАРТА БРАВО

  • @user-cy6uf8rh2l
    @user-cy6uf8rh2l 2 года назад +13

    Божественные гармонии! Моя душа улетает в рай!

  • @guillermodelgado1468
    @guillermodelgado1468 3 года назад +59

    Escuchar a Amadeus es un viaje al espíritu.Gloria eterna a Mozart

  • @normanrichmond2127
    @normanrichmond2127 5 лет назад +179

    An honor to have studied with Lili. I listened to her recordings repeatedly as a child and finally got to be under her tutelage as a 31 year old.

    • @classicalmusicreference
      @classicalmusicreference  5 лет назад +19

      What a privilege, can we share an anecdote about his teaching?

    • @alainspiteri502
      @alainspiteri502 4 года назад +18

      @@classicalmusicreference For me an anecdote not with Lili Krauss-Teacher but Concertist Lili Krauss very far from to day and j remember very well : when she appears on stage she had a top black hungarian hat unforgettable on her head , a hungarian black dress with J dont'write in english ( une large écharpe blanche en dentelles sur les épaules ) In bis Lili Krauss pkayed " alla turca " and saluted the audience crossing hers hands : j remember fotever " alla Turca " by Lili Krauss it''s was in 1956 " Salle Pierre Bordes " à Alger where Samson François played his Concerto in 1957 , j was a young lover-music and j had already bought " alla turca " by Marcelle Meyer recording in a little 45 t vinyl . Many pianists recordings were in little vinyls vinyls as also : " The Harmonious- Black Smith " by Wilhem Kempff .

    • @mathieuguillet4036
      @mathieuguillet4036 4 года назад +5

      She plays Mozart beautifully! It is as though she was made for his music.

    • @alainspiteri502
      @alainspiteri502 4 года назад +9

      J don't see an other pianist in Mozart , all famous pianist have a composer , of course Rubinstein play all composers but not as a pianist who worked a composer during all in life . There is a particular Mozart in Adagios sonatas concertis by Clara Haskil with in more a melancolic , nostalgic , dreamer almost as a suffering of his soul . Haskil had a life more difficult by her difficult physical , during war 1940 ' not Lili Kraus . Except thoses differencz j can say there were two Mozart Haskil- Krauss the others pianists are all very good ( mostly Geza Anda ) but there us not this above the notes , there are no word , that is with Lili Kraus . Not possible to listen Mozart if we don't known thoses two pianists : same thing Rubinstein Cortot S Francois with Chopin

    • @aliveli-hq6zk
      @aliveli-hq6zk 4 года назад +2

      @@classicalmusicreference He's lying.

  • @yveswarhem9281
    @yveswarhem9281 Год назад

    sur mon lit d'hôpital, j'écoute Wolfgang Amadeus et la vie est plus belle: tant de légèreté et de finesse, tant de fantaisie et de joie rendent la journée moins longue...pur plaisir

  • @lepingstepp7401
    @lepingstepp7401 3 года назад +32

    Now I really understand what a person means by saying "I have Mozart in my heart"!

  • @thegoalfather9922
    @thegoalfather9922 Год назад +20

    You can't change any note in Mozart's pieces, it's just always perfect.

  • @gfweis
    @gfweis 5 лет назад +28

    Lili Kraus surely deserves, but doesn't really need, additional praise from me. I'd like to praise the often-unmentioned conducting by Stephen Simon here, so well paced, balanced, and dramatically phrased. This was a happy collaboration indeed.

  • @CaroleHoldem-lh4np
    @CaroleHoldem-lh4np Год назад +8

    Brilliant Pianist Love the Concerto Mozart is Pure Magic ⭐🎶🎶💞👏🎶

  • @catherinejones9396
    @catherinejones9396 9 месяцев назад +24

    Gorgeous, thank you. 4 hours of pure beauty starting with the operatic style opening of 20, and then on. Ms Kraus and this conductor and orchestra competently explore Mozart's incomparable works. I am sure that Mozart would have loved the fact that his music still delights people the world over and the way his piano has been developed over two or so posthumous centuries.

  • @user-lv9ki3eq1l
    @user-lv9ki3eq1l 4 года назад +11

    Composing such masterpieces, mozart is an absolute genius

  • @rpkrauss1
    @rpkrauss1 5 лет назад +10

    Stunning playing by Lili Kraus.....she makes the piano sing with beauty!!

    • @adrianjames7968
      @adrianjames7968 5 лет назад +2

      (Wikipedia)
      Lili Kraus was born in Budapest in 1903. Her father was from Czech Lands, and her mother from an assimilated Jewish Hungarian family.
      She enrolled at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music, and at the age of 17 entered the Budapest Conservatory where she studied with Zoltán Kodály, and Béla Bartók. In the 1930s, she continued her studies with Severin Eisenberger, Eduard Steuermann in Vienna and Artur Schnabel in Berlin, who focused her interest in the classical tradition.
      Lili Kraus soon became known as a specialist in Mozart and Beethoven. Her early chamber music performances and recording with violinist Szymon Goldberg helped gain the critical acclaim that launched her international career. In the 1930s, she toured Europe, Japan, Australia and South Africa. In 1940, Kraus embarked on a tour of Asia where, while in Java, she and her family were captured and interned in a concentration camp by the Japanese from June 1943 until August 1945.
      After the war, she settled in New Zealand where she spent many happy years playing, performing, and teaching. She became a NZ citizen and resumed her career, teaching and touring extensively. In the early 1950s she performed the entire Beethoven sonata cycle with violinist Henri Temianka. From 1967 to 1983, she taught as artist-in-residence at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth. After that she made her home in Asheville, North Carolina, where she died in 1986.
      Kraus' husband was Otto Mandl (b. 1889 d. 1956), a wealthy Jewish (later converted to Catholicism) mining engineer and philosopher. They were married on October 31, 1930 and Mandl sold his business in order to devote himself to the furtherance of Kraus' career.[1]. The couple had two children, Ruth and Michael.

  • @shin-i-chikozima
    @shin-i-chikozima 2 года назад +12

    Mozart's music invites me into the comfortable and fascinating world
    Mozart's works are the cradle of my nostalgic memories
    While listening to Mozart's piano works,
    it is special to see the shining famous autumn Moon over the bamboo grove In Kyoto's Sagano , Japan
    The autumn is around the corner

  • @beethovenlovedmozart
    @beethovenlovedmozart 2 года назад +3

    #22 is no joke either. The second movement was revolutionary and no one realizes it. :) His father attended the premier so you know mozart was going to do extra for his dad in the audience. His dad was in shock. Not of his sons extraordinary talent, but the audience gave a standing applause after the second movement. It was the first time in history that the audience begged for an entire repeat of the second movement in a minor key. Mozart could be himself with minor key. I've said this for the past 20 years. Twice mozart interrupted the minor themes with major themes showcasing woodwinds. Then he would explode back to minor on the piano. The perfect piece to show off to his dad. I'm sure that wad an extraordinary moment for him. That piece was revolutionary in many ways. Mozart elevated the piano with more power in the concerto. Something that later inspired Beethoven.

    • @karlheinzkirchmann6469
      @karlheinzkirchmann6469 2 года назад +1

      I’m on your side. The Rondo remains a miracle for me. It is so peaceful but melancholic. It’s so extraordinary.

  • @tepmich
    @tepmich 6 лет назад +5

    Моцарт жил и творил Верой в Триумфальную и Спасительную Власть Истинной Музыки !!! Теппер Михаил.

  • @danielarossi2946
    @danielarossi2946 Год назад +2

    ottime esecuzioni colto lo spirito di Mozart . brava lili

  • @jean-michelprillieux5012
    @jean-michelprillieux5012 11 месяцев назад +2

    Il n'y a rien de meilleur que Mozart ... Une musique inspirée par Dieu...

  • @ginevskyabe220
    @ginevskyabe220 5 лет назад +7

    No one has commented on Concerto 22; it was not familiar to me and the Andante is just stunning. Thanks.

    • @sergelachantee767
      @sergelachantee767 3 года назад +1

      ИДИОТ!!!

    • @beethovenlovedmozart
      @beethovenlovedmozart 2 года назад

      This #22 is another hidden gem. Interesting story about the andante movement. His father attended the premier of this concerto and he was shocked when the audience gave mozart a standing applause after the second movement. He was like "what's going on here?". It was the first time ever there the audience asked the performer to play the second movement over again. Unheard of at the time for a minor key work.

    • @beethovenlovedmozart
      @beethovenlovedmozart 2 года назад

      The second movement plays to mozarts strengths. Since its in a minor key, he could be serious without consequences. Also he was the first to really bring piano as tbe dominant instrument in a concerto. He was a top 10 pianist of all time.

    • @beethovenlovedmozart
      @beethovenlovedmozart 2 года назад

      I also believe when he went to two themes in a major key twice in this movement a s returned with thunderous piano in minor, it was really different for the time

  • @beatamarko4463
    @beatamarko4463 2 года назад +29

    this is the best recording of Mozart's piano concertos. I think I've been listening to all three records a milion time. 🧡🧡🧡

    • @akirakanda7972
      @akirakanda7972 2 года назад +1

      Yes, the essence of the entire life of the grandest composer is here performed by one of the grandest Mozart interpreter. It is divine.

  • @arunavalahari5484
    @arunavalahari5484 4 месяца назад

    An excellent post for the western classical music lovers.

  • @katalinpetho6467
    @katalinpetho6467 5 месяцев назад +1

    Kiváló lélekmelegítő, olvasás közben szeretem hallgatni. Köszönöm szépen ❤!

  • @reinhardmilz9192
    @reinhardmilz9192 2 года назад +4

    Thank you! Lili Kraus was the inspiration for me to play piano when I was a child. For me Lili Kraus is also today the reference how to play a Mozart concerto.

  • @isyborensztajn
    @isyborensztajn 3 года назад +21

    Thank you for posting these miracles! Thank you Mozart!

  • @EdgarFGirtainIV
    @EdgarFGirtainIV 3 года назад +2

    Thank you SO MUCH for NO ADS!!

  • @josephbourque5027
    @josephbourque5027 6 лет назад +17

    Thank you Lili Kraus/Simon for the nice recording.

  • @patriciabravoriscal6264
    @patriciabravoriscal6264 2 года назад +11

    Every Mozart's piano concert is a piece of art, but I feel number 20 is special, precious... and a little similar to Beethoven music style

    • @larisajeshe108
      @larisajeshe108 2 года назад +2

      It was written just before 18th-century French revolution 1789 year (2 or 3 years before) and yes, Beethoven wrote coding for 1st and 3d parts

    • @anne-lisebouvier128
      @anne-lisebouvier128 2 года назад +1

      Numéro 21 pour moi😊...

    • @matthewcoldicutt5951
      @matthewcoldicutt5951 2 года назад +3

      Yes, agreed. They transcend time and place, as does symphony No 40

    • @matthewcoldicutt5951
      @matthewcoldicutt5951 2 года назад +2

      I can't get over the recording quality. Combined with Lili's playing this has been an unforgetable find, right up there with Brendel, Perahia et al

    • @patriciabravoriscal6264
      @patriciabravoriscal6264 Год назад

      @@larisajeshe108 Amazing! Thanks for telling us

  • @michaelsomerville1319
    @michaelsomerville1319 Год назад

    Michael Somerville
    What a joy it is to have for posterity these beautiful recordings by masters of their art.

  • @odilefrankum2558
    @odilefrankum2558 2 года назад +2

    Il n'y a pas de mots pour exprimer ce que je ressens ... C"EST TROP FORT !!!! TROP BEAU TROP JUSTE ...............

  • @mariobaiocchi6366
    @mariobaiocchi6366 5 лет назад +44

    The Concerto No. 21 is actually one of the pinnacles of Music

    • @D1E9086
      @D1E9086 5 лет назад +5

      Totally agree pal. Lili Krauss is amazing but I prefer Yeol Eum Son's interpretation. Check it out if you haven't already.
      ruclips.net/video/fNU-XAZjhzA/видео.html

    • @mathieuguillet4036
      @mathieuguillet4036 4 года назад +4

      Mozart is one of the pinnacles of Music. ;)

    • @danielbetancourt1483
      @danielbetancourt1483 4 года назад +3

      20

    • @D1E9086
      @D1E9086 4 года назад +1

      @@danielbetancourt1483 21

    • @DanielLopez-zt4ig
      @DanielLopez-zt4ig 4 года назад

      Mozart is overrated.

  • @SilviaRamirez-rd6qn
    @SilviaRamirez-rd6qn 3 года назад +9

    W.A..MOZART Y SU MARAVILLOSA INTÉRPRETE LILI KRAUS, DIVINOS !!! INMORTALES 💖💖💖💖💖

  • @martinetanqueray4790
    @martinetanqueray4790 4 месяца назад

    Oui seigneur merci de nous avoir donné Mozart !!

  • @big1dog23
    @big1dog23 6 лет назад +59

    Best 4 hours of music ever written. Thanks!

    • @mathieuguillet4036
      @mathieuguillet4036 4 года назад +8

      But we haven't even touched the operas! Or the symphonies! Or the sacred! Or the... ;)

    • @DanielLopez-zt4ig
      @DanielLopez-zt4ig 4 года назад +1

      3:57:55 hours to be exact.

    • @PianomanRay
      @PianomanRay 3 года назад

      Daniel López Stop being so dam technical! Smh

    • @patriciabravoriscal6264
      @patriciabravoriscal6264 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@mathieuguillet4036 Or the Requiem, one of his best masterpieces.

  • @hwh1946
    @hwh1946 7 лет назад +50

    I mean, can it get any better than this? The personality of each concerto shines through. All by Mozart and all completely unique. Thank you.

    • @TimAllen7
      @TimAllen7 7 лет назад +2

      All by Mozart until you get to 10:20. Then you have more than 2 minutes of a pianist who thought she was a good enough composer to improve Mozart's concertos.

    • @ivopicco5922
      @ivopicco5922 7 лет назад +1

      lo dedico a mia moglie

    • @ivopicco5922
      @ivopicco5922 7 лет назад +2

      sublime

    • @urmorph
      @urmorph 7 лет назад +4

      Tim Allen: Sorry, you're way off base here. Mozart left no cadenzas for this concerto, as was often the case with those he intended for his own use. It was the custom of the time, until Beethoven's 5th concerto, to improvise, and many pianists still do, if they can (or play something they've prepared.) Ms. Kraus is playing those left to us by Beethoven, as many pianists still do. If you object, take it up with Wolfie and Louie.

    • @TimAllen7
      @TimAllen7 7 лет назад

      I'm not off base and I have no problem with "Wolfie and Louie". I said the cadenza was not written by Mozart. (BTW, it wasn't written by Beethoven either.) I implied that Ms. Kraus's cadenza is not as good as the rest of the piece and that it was too long and pretentious. If I'm wrong, show me a cadenza written by "Wolfie or Louie" that carries on for more than 2 minutes.

  • @luccailleaud
    @luccailleaud 2 года назад +3

    une vraie et belle référence . la quintessence de mozart !!!

  • @user-gi8un4ig9j
    @user-gi8un4ig9j 2 года назад +5

    КЛАССИКА обладает удивительным свойством успокаивать человеческую душу погружая ее В УДИВИТЕЛЬНЫЙ.мир гармонии впрочем как любая другая нужно уметь ее СЛЫШАТЬ

  • @BearHeart13
    @BearHeart13 4 года назад +9

    Mozart is my favorite composer. Such amazing genius and how he could create his compositions in his mind and write them down while "hearing" them mentally. The book, "Mozart in Vienna" mentioned this as well as that ability is mentioned in other sources as well.

    • @varolussalsanclar1163
      @varolussalsanclar1163 2 года назад +1

      the only explanation to his genius is that he was dictated to by God, or the God of music, Apollo, depending on what you choose to believe in.

    • @beethovenlovedmozart
      @beethovenlovedmozart 2 года назад +2

      Most evidence points that he had a photographic memory. Probably no other composer had this gift. IF He was going to write a new symphony in D, he literally can remember what symphonies he studied in d in his whole lifetime. From papa haydn to Michael haydb or whomever. He liked taking what others did in the same key and then see how he can expand it. His requiem had Michael haydn ideas from his requiem made 30 years earlier and mozart literally only heard it twice as a child.

  • @dzugaty
    @dzugaty 7 лет назад +82

    Thank you for this. Of course, "The Big Piano Concertos" are the climax of Mozart's work. Breadwinners or not, they were HIS and HIS only. He was the author, the conductor and the performer with them. Nothing else shows his personality as much, what he was both outside and inside. Sometimes, I can see his face, his posture, his movements in this music, his absolute enjoyment of playing it. They all reflect his persona, one way or another. But as much as I know about him, as much as I read in any language I could understand, I see his most precise selfportrait in #23-II. Sadness hidden behind a wide smile, wisdom in the shadow of a joke.

    • @johnsweeney8115
      @johnsweeney8115 4 года назад +6

      That was a lovely post Olga.

    • @ccsung9640
      @ccsung9640 3 года назад +3

      Lili's beautiful touch blends well with the delicate interpretation of the orchestra makes me listen on and on nonstop. I just cannot help it. I must stop now to do my work. No. I cannot stop. How can I stop now!

    • @sorousha19
      @sorousha19 2 года назад +6

      Like poetry. 23 II is one of the greatest compositions of all time...

    • @lymanmj
      @lymanmj 2 года назад +3

      @@sorousha19 Absolutely true. I believe Mozart composed that movement just for himself, not for any particular audience.

    • @beethovenlovedmozart
      @beethovenlovedmozart 2 года назад +3

      His #26 under the radar is thr beginning of a new era. Lots of Romantics loved this piece

  • @SilviaRamirez-rd6qn
    @SilviaRamirez-rd6qn 3 года назад +9

    MARAVILLOSO !!! MUCHAS GRACIAS !!! LILI KRAUS EXTRAORDINARIA!!! BENDICIONES !!! 🌹🌹🌹

  • @michaelletellier218
    @michaelletellier218 4 года назад +12

    This is a "Century's Record" without any doubt. This sublime recording of the Mozart Piano Concertos was perhaps the apex of a dynamic relationship between the gilded American Stephen Simon, and Lili Kraus through whose veins flowed the pianistic tradition of Central Europe. For her it was the culmination of a life's work and perhaps for Stephen Simon, who conducts with sensitivity and balance, it too, marks a personal highpoint. His influence no doubt created the mysterious Vienna Festival Orchestra, probably made up of the most able musicians freelancing from the Vienna Phil. The remastering reveals a glorious sound. I cannot recommend these recordings highly enough.

  • @alejandrogranadosseptien4572
    @alejandrogranadosseptien4572 6 месяцев назад +2

    Una colección de grabaciones maravillosas: la intérprete, Lili Kraus ,insuperable con las creaciones del Gran Mozart.

  • @jimcrawford5039
    @jimcrawford5039 5 лет назад +6

    Absolutely 1st class. She was brilliant!

    • @RaineriHakkarainen
      @RaineriHakkarainen 2 года назад +1

      Not true!! The Best Mozart piano concertos players Are really=Mozart 17 Dezo Ranki Mozart 18 Vladimir Ashkenazy Mozart 19 Radu Lupu Mozart 20 Vladimir Ashkenazy Mozart 21 Radu Lupu ( others like Artur Rubinstein Maurizio Pollini Vladimir Ashkenazy Murray Perahia) Mozart 23 Solomon Cutner ( others like Vladimir Horowitz Radu Lupu Vladimir Ashkenazy Murray Perahia) Mozart 24 Grigory Sokolov Maria Grinberg(.others like Wilhelm Kempff ( The most beautiful piano sound Ever). Mikhail Pletnev(.The most Powerful Ever!. Pletnev The Best.3th.mvt coda!!). Mozart 25 Murray Perahia Mozart 27 Alexei Lubimov (Lubimov number one! Others like Emil Gilels Natalia Trull Vladimir Ashkenazy).