Argerich plays Bartók - Piano Sonata, Sz. 80 Audio + Sheet music

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  • Опубликовано: 15 янв 2025

Комментарии • 321

  • @Ciaran55
    @Ciaran55 5 лет назад +197

    that cough/sneeze combination at 5:44 was done very tastefully, it fits the music

    • @accipiterignitus5123
      @accipiterignitus5123 5 лет назад +22

      They are paid actors maybe

    • @pianotalent
      @pianotalent 2 года назад +3

      Wow!!!!!! what an improvement to this music! . thank you!!!!

    • @KaterinaStamatelos
      @KaterinaStamatelos Год назад

      That's the downside of performing for a (stupid) audience.

  • @gergelykiss
    @gergelykiss 4 года назад +76

    At around 7:26 and 7:30 the score calls for a couple of bass notes below the range of the standard concert piano. A couple of G#s and an F below the lowest A. I've never seen it written in a score before - apparently Bartók composed this piece for an Imperial Bösendorfer with an extended bass range.

    • @sanjai_s
      @sanjai_s 2 года назад +8

      Yes, ofcourse, Bartók had written this piece specially for Bosendorfer Imperial, pianists using other than Imperial, can play the lowest note possible (pitch A0)

    • @visveee6678
      @visveee6678 2 года назад +1

      @@sanjai_s Or use a combination of A0 and Bb0 to give the illusion of a lower pitch.

    • @tompianohotmail
      @tompianohotmail Год назад

      @@KaterinaStamateloshe literally wrote it to be played on a Bosendorfer Imperial…

    • @tompianohotmail
      @tompianohotmail Год назад +1

      @@KaterinaStamatelosI mean if you’re going to override Bartok then there’s not much point discussing it, but “So what?” - so what if a composer has written a piece with a certain piano in mind? given that was the only maker producing extended compass pianos and he chose it, then it would suggest that the sound is appropriate for his music…! And if you have studied to any level, being interested in the composer’s intentions should be of interest to you? It is to me. If you disagree with Bartok fair enough, though that sounds more like an ego trip now that I’ve called you out. To be fair to you I’d definitely suggest trying some more Bosendorfers which have been set up differently (perhaps you played a tired one)? as they are generally not that mellow - I’ve played several and some I would go as far as saying sounded on the overly bright side (Bluthners are known for being more mellow for example) - Bosendorfers are actually known for their clarity and transparency and difference in registers, coming from the Viennese tradition - and Bartok would have known them well. Perhaps Bartok did not intend the music to sound quite as percussive as some people play it now and instead leaning more towards the folk-music and lyrical elements which are also there is important. Schiff’s version is interesting to listen to for that reason. I’m going to go with Bartok on this one and think you’re talking from a lack of experience, sorry!

  • @frankwit123
    @frankwit123 6 лет назад +276

    the piano is a percussion instrument. Bartok agrees

    • @accordiontv1
      @accordiontv1 5 лет назад

      😂

    • @nicolasantony310
      @nicolasantony310 5 лет назад +5

      It is actually, a percussion, keyboard and string instrument.

    • @Cosimo-composer
      @Cosimo-composer 5 лет назад +3

      This is why Bartok's music can only bring funny, while Scriabin's music is spiritual and elegant.

    • @nicolasantony310
      @nicolasantony310 5 лет назад +11

      @@Cosimo-composer They're both awesome

    • @Stephanidis
      @Stephanidis 4 года назад +8

      @@Cosimo-composer Funny? Do you know what of a sound material that he uses here?

  • @elisamartini1694
    @elisamartini1694 Год назад +7

    J'adore Bartok et Martha Argerich. Merci et Bravo Martita.

  • @crawfordviolin
    @crawfordviolin 12 лет назад +48

    I'm always amazed at what these guys could hear in their mind and then sit down and write

  • @stephenjablonsky1941
    @stephenjablonsky1941 3 года назад +7

    I first heard this piece sixty years ago and I still love it. Thank you Bela. Thank you Martha.

  • @camilorojas1744
    @camilorojas1744 7 лет назад +67

    For those who said that they find and hear Stravinskyan influences, I add that in an interview in 1924 Bartok said that Stravinsky was a genius and that he considered the Rite of the Spring the greatest piece written "in the past 30 years" (remember, he said it in 1924)

  • @adigozelov-enjoyer
    @adigozelov-enjoyer 2 года назад +5

    5:44 The timing.... is perfect, almost goes with the music!

  • @jamaalstewart2531
    @jamaalstewart2531 8 лет назад +104

    The last pic
    Bartok :Girl, you just slayed
    Argerich: I know I did

    • @angelinema4330
      @angelinema4330 8 лет назад +1

      LMBOOO

    • @MrElicottero
      @MrElicottero 7 лет назад +8

      hahahha sometimes martha has this look in her eyes after playing a piece that i translates pretty much as "i slayed it" :-)

    • @sziklaszilard8413
      @sziklaszilard8413 5 лет назад

      @@angelinema4330
      LMBTQ 😛

    • @Charlie-vf8hw
      @Charlie-vf8hw Год назад +1

      This comment was ahead of its time

  • @johndoily9407
    @johndoily9407 6 лет назад +3

    Listened to this again, and wow it is stellar. Very fluid- no matter how sonorous and loud, never sounds excessively brassy and ugly.

  • @davidrehak3539
    @davidrehak3539 5 лет назад +22

    Bartók Béla:Szonáta
    1.Allegro moderato 00:05
    2.Sostenuto e pesante 04:22
    3.Allegro molto 08:33
    Martha Argerich-zongora

  • @hmy1282
    @hmy1282 5 лет назад +4

    Mind blown. So this is music. I've been missing so much in my life. Thank you for uploading this!

  • @MarinaDobromyslov
    @MarinaDobromyslov 11 лет назад +31

    unbelievable rhythms!

  • @kropchik
    @kropchik 11 лет назад +6

    Following the score it is truly fascinating to see how wonderfully Martha is taking her liberty in phrasing, tempo and "rubati"...so true to her self yet in perfect harmony with the piece. A real master piece and performance!

  • @kwabzycomposer
    @kwabzycomposer 5 лет назад +201

    For the pianist who wants bloodstains on their keyboard after a concert:

    • @dariusellertklaus3799
      @dariusellertklaus3799 5 лет назад +22

      I come here after some people post on FB "bloodstains on keyboard" lol

    • @andRakoto7300
      @andRakoto7300 5 лет назад +8

      Indeed, I came here after seeing the pic. (not a pianist, though)

    • @Brandon-cz6cw
      @Brandon-cz6cw 5 лет назад +1

      @@andRakoto7300 same haha

    • @accordiontv1
      @accordiontv1 5 лет назад +1

      @@dariusellertklaus3799 yep, same here 😂

    • @kanecaba
      @kanecaba 5 лет назад +1

      gosh same haha

  • @xapacem1
    @xapacem1 13 лет назад +7

    Martha & Bartók!!!! thanks!

  • @BadPerson789
    @BadPerson789 2 года назад +3

    The raw bear like energy I hear in this piece is unlike any other

  • @MrUtanosuke
    @MrUtanosuke 9 лет назад +4

    Wonderful ! Bartok could get something delicate from the great nature.

  • @MrJazzProf
    @MrJazzProf 12 лет назад +3

    This is an astounding recording!

  • @nurrylee-piano2613
    @nurrylee-piano2613 4 года назад +10

    Bloody hell, this is amazing

    • @tedl7538
      @tedl7538 3 года назад +2

      Yes, and at age 80, Martha is STILL performing magnificently. Fabulous!

    • @nurrylee-piano2613
      @nurrylee-piano2613 3 года назад

      @@tedl7538 literally! 😍👏

  • @gennirgregg554
    @gennirgregg554 2 года назад +12

    I was so fortunate to study this piece with Joseph Kalichstein, who felt very strongly that it is a response to WW1, the musical equivalent of Picasso's Guernica. Whether widely understood or not it's a masterpiece.

  • @WarriorStatue
    @WarriorStatue 13 лет назад +6

    Very cool music. Thanks for uploading it with sheet!

  • @화이팅-b1g
    @화이팅-b1g 2 года назад +4

    피아노는 그냥 음높이의
    타악기일뿐
    그렇게 조합된 타악기들의
    울림의 아름다움은
    밤하늘의 별처럼 반짝입니다 파란별, 빨간별
    보라색별, 서로가 자랑합니다

  • @perjus
    @perjus 8 лет назад +93

    Moonlight sonata for the insomniacs.

  • @calebhu6383
    @calebhu6383 3 года назад +5

    11:00

  • @carlose.johansson739
    @carlose.johansson739 3 года назад +3

    Love this pieces!

  • @blackbrownbeige55
    @blackbrownbeige55 Год назад +1

    INCREDIBLE PERFORMANCE!! Brava

  • @xyloplax
    @xyloplax 9 лет назад +8

    I hear so much Rite of Spring in this, and I don't care. It's fantastic regardless.

    • @Soytu19
      @Soytu19 9 лет назад

      +xyloplax Do you think you can tell exactly which parts reminds you to Rite of Spring?

    • @Soytu19
      @Soytu19 8 лет назад

      +thetimpanikid Where exactly? Im so interested. i love both compositions, tell me please. it just pisses me off that i cant see them, even if i love both compositions lol

    • @Soytu19
      @Soytu19 8 лет назад +2

      +thetimpanikid The rhythm the first low D reminds me to rite of spring yes. But the rest... this is pure Bartok.

    • @MorganHayes_Composer.Pianist
      @MorganHayes_Composer.Pianist 2 года назад +1

      @@Soytu19 not much relationship.to the Rite of Spring. Closer(at times), to 'Les Noces' eg. 2nd subject of 1st Mvt.
      A bit further on ( 1:29).a hint of the Symphony in three movements. Unmistakably Bartok.

  • @elisamartini1694
    @elisamartini1694 3 месяца назад +1

    Il faut écouter plusieurs fois. Ce n'est pas facile. C'est une musique répétitive. Peut-être qu'elle efface ce qui est dur et difficile dans la vie ?

  • @edolivmo
    @edolivmo 4 года назад +1

    God inside a drop of true genius.

  • @vcortes409
    @vcortes409 4 года назад +2

    bravo , bravo , bravo !!!!!

  • @michaelkrestan5483
    @michaelkrestan5483 7 месяцев назад +1

    Absolute logic structures and the "barbaro"-emotions form a complex and fascinating unity! Bartok's compositions are like Bach concerning structure and motif-building, but they sound always like the enfant terrible that wants to shock the audience with "barbaric" and harsh dissonances and rhythms.

  • @yunsanglee5847
    @yunsanglee5847 6 лет назад +2

    Soooo goooood

  • @davidgurevich3462
    @davidgurevich3462 12 лет назад +2

    fantastic!

  • @cimmik
    @cimmik 11 лет назад +6

    I really liked the 1st mvt.

  • @MrElicottero
    @MrElicottero 12 лет назад +3

    That's interesting. I would never compare Bartok do a badly decorated room. Rather, to me, he is like a baroque building that is collapsing with enormous force, destroying everything around itself. And it's precisely why I like him so much. :)

    • @babygirl4169
      @babygirl4169 3 года назад

      Even tho, I understand shit in this music 😂 But still, I like his works a lot than I expected

  • @Paroles_et_Musique
    @Paroles_et_Musique 3 года назад +1

    Praising Lang Lang when is due is common sense, not heresy. Lang Lang is hated only by RUclips amateurs who only know to look instead of listening too.
    He can be controversial also, but in some repertory he is simply genius.

    • @zeteny8092
      @zeteny8092 5 месяцев назад +1

      This is argerich

  • @horaesilver1995
    @horaesilver1995 Год назад +2

    I also prefer the Kocsis version. While this recording is more virtuosic I think Kocsis' version is more sensitive emotionally. Not that this is not also impressive. Thanks for posting!

  • @stucoy1
    @stucoy1 7 лет назад +16

    I like the bit where it goes THWACK!-dur-THWACk-dur-!-THWACK!-OOF!-

  • @fabjanceka
    @fabjanceka 12 лет назад +4

    THIS IS WHAT THEY CALL A MASTERPIECE

  • @PhillyB702
    @PhillyB702 12 лет назад +2

    The first is subjective, I personally hold this work in high regard, same as I do Scriabin's 7 & 8, and Prok 6 & 7 and believe it to be one of the great works of Bartok. The latter can be debateable. This sonata is far from easy, and contains some real technical challenges including far leaps, octaves, and then there are sections in the third movement that are tricky to pull off including 10:05,
    10:49, and countless others all while maintaining the energy. Good recordings are hard to come by.

  • @jjshi2001
    @jjshi2001 4 года назад +7

    I really liked the loud parts....

    • @johnryskamp2943
      @johnryskamp2943 2 года назад +1

      What did you say? I can't hear you over the playing.

  • @minch333
    @minch333 12 лет назад +2

    madlovba03, you have an insanely good taste in music!

  • @Zaferando
    @Zaferando Год назад

    Ipek hanim Çok güzel çaliyorsunuz bende bu aksam bu parçayi ögrenim dedim siz karsima çikdiniz, basarilarinizin devamini diliyorum😊

  • @MrElicottero
    @MrElicottero 11 лет назад +2

    This is like saying that one language is better suited for poetry than some other language. It's just not possible to say something like that. Scriabin and Bartok write in very different languages. Essentially, what you are saying is that you think Bach is the best because you get the most pleasure from his pieces. Which is fine. But then there is no need to claim someone to be the best, it's enough to say "I prefer his expression of that of others."

  • @Dylonely_9274
    @Dylonely_9274 Год назад +2

    7:14

  • @yunsanglee5847
    @yunsanglee5847 6 лет назад

    I love twentieth century songs!

  • @PhillyB702
    @PhillyB702 12 лет назад +4

    Scriabin was only late romantic until around the turn of the century, then he began to develop his own harmonic language. They are comparable to a degree, maybe only his middle works. Although, I don't see how you could compare Scriabin's late works to any other works in the repertoire.

    • @visveee6678
      @visveee6678 3 года назад +1

      there are many less famous russian (and french) composers who composed like late scriabin.

    • @johnryskamp2943
      @johnryskamp2943 2 года назад

      Scriabin is a mediocrity. If you can't hear that, please enroll in the Helen Keller School of Wayward Listening.

    • @visveee6678
      @visveee6678 2 года назад

      @@johnryskamp2943 I wouldn’t agree. Though he was certainly a nutcase, his works shine beyond his personal self

  • @AdeleDusenbury
    @AdeleDusenbury 5 лет назад +4

    You can protest (file a dispute) with RUclips about EMI's claim that it's their music not yours. I have filed about five now and won every one. Naxos and some others like EMI and "third parties" are just trolling new content to stop competition, at least that's what strikes me as a motivation.

  • @avantgardeanthonyrikhter9843
    @avantgardeanthonyrikhter9843 8 лет назад +2

    of yeah, I hear the motiffs of Stravinsky's The Rite Of Spring

  • @markchentx
    @markchentx 10 лет назад +29

    I thought intelligent discussions don't exist on RUclips until I saw these posts. Well, with sporadic imperfections which is tolerable.

  • @lunchmind
    @lunchmind 11 лет назад +5

    Michael Shearman for your information ,Bartok was not aligned with any organized religion that I know of. from what I've read,he does not strike me as a christian.

    • @Maddolis
      @Maddolis 10 лет назад +5

      Not only that, but upon reading the collection of Bartok's Letters in study for my Masters thesis last year, he was quite critical of certain religion-inspired behaviors. If I still had the book (compiled by Demeny I believe) I'd find an exact page and quote.

    • @marevnaortega670
      @marevnaortega670 6 лет назад

      ruclips.net/video/UJUWPqmaGQI/видео.html I would like know your opinion. Thanks!!!

  • @MrStrav81
    @MrStrav81 12 лет назад

    I like Perahia's performance. It's also accompanied by his Out of Doors performance, which I think is the best one available.

  • @JanCarlComposer
    @JanCarlComposer 6 месяцев назад

    Interesting notation in the upper part of II, 5:09. He left out the break?

  • @stevebrady1089
    @stevebrady1089 12 лет назад

    Perhaps one of the best comments on RUclips. Thanks for your wit.

  • @Facconti
    @Facconti 12 лет назад +2

    This is a different recording from Tokyo 1976 in AddGravs channel. Do you know where and when was it recorded? I feel so frustrated now, after I have uploaded Martha's recording with Sinopoli of Beethoven's 1st piano concerto and discovered it was blocked in all civilized countries in the world. All recordings by DG I try to upload are blocked, and now, those that weren't by EMI are starting to get blocked in many countries, also those by Decca. But this has succeeded to cheer me up. Thank you!

  • @visveee6678
    @visveee6678 3 года назад +3

    Agitato assai 11:03

  • @benharmonics
    @benharmonics 2 года назад +1

    8:34
    9:42-11:39

  • @Dylonely_9274
    @Dylonely_9274 Год назад

    Wow…

  • @johndoily9407
    @johndoily9407 6 лет назад +11

    She serves this piece well. Her demoniac instinct, animal spirits are all welcome in bartok

  • @069fid
    @069fid 11 лет назад +2

    Is it my imagination or are there quotes from Rite Of Spring in this?

    • @bostonseeker
      @bostonseeker 4 года назад +1

      There are allusions in the main theme. Bartok was an admirer of Stravisky's earlier music, both "neo-primitive" and the "neo-classical" phases. Also the Bartok second piano concerto has a clear allusion to Petrushka.

  • @schizopiano42
    @schizopiano42 11 лет назад

    give it some welly,martha!thanks to mr bartok

    • @marevnaortega670
      @marevnaortega670 6 лет назад

      ruclips.net/video/UJUWPqmaGQI/видео.html I would like know your opinion. Thanks!!!

  • @biitter_sweet
    @biitter_sweet 2 года назад

    와!

  • @MrElicottero
    @MrElicottero 12 лет назад +1

    Has Bartok ever written about this any place?

  • @MarcusHK1
    @MarcusHK1 11 лет назад

    Actually Heinrich Ignaz Franz Biber (1644 - 1704) has composed some interesting stuff too!

  • @maxgregorycompositions6216
    @maxgregorycompositions6216 3 года назад +1

    Why is it "heresy" to like Lang Lang's performance of this sonata?

    • @johnryskamp2943
      @johnryskamp2943 2 года назад

      Because he's hammy, showy and shallow, darling.

    • @maxgregorycompositions6216
      @maxgregorycompositions6216 2 года назад +1

      @@johnryskamp2943 You need to open your ears, stop regurgitating what everyone else says, think for yourself and get your head out of your ass, darling. I had an epiphany about LL. I, too, once thought what you just said (until my epiphany). Sure, he's no Horowitz, but "shallow"?

    • @chloroxiphite
      @chloroxiphite Год назад

      I liked it, but the second movement was too slow for me.

  • @Patricio5093
    @Patricio5093 8 лет назад +1

    Marta Argerich genius

  • @RH98
    @RH98 12 лет назад

    Very funny and true... although I feel whichever of the two composers is analogue to "being shot in the face" gets a bit of a raw deal here.

  • @chrismontis
    @chrismontis 12 лет назад

    Argerich is exciting truly.

  • @arttranslation
    @arttranslation 12 лет назад +2

    It sounds like Stravinsky. Las bodas (1914/23)

  • @lzichon
    @lzichon 10 лет назад

    Part II reminds somehow Ustvolskaya's 4th Sonata.

  • @minch333
    @minch333 11 лет назад +1

    Did you reply to the wrong person mate? I said nothing about Beiber! I just complemented the uploader. If not, it would make your over reaction comment really ironic!

  • @ronwalker4849
    @ronwalker4849 9 лет назад +12

    I AM REMINDED BOTH OF STRAVINSKI AND GERSHWIN.
    THE BEST OF TWO DISTANT WORLDS.
    ONE OF BARTOK´S BEST WHEN THE WORLD IS FORGETTING BARTOK NOW.

    • @shelleyschmidt9256
      @shelleyschmidt9256 9 лет назад

      Gershwin was born of Russian and Lithuanian Jewish descent

    • @herbertwells8757
      @herbertwells8757 9 лет назад

      +Ron Walker The first is movement is a bit reminiscent of Gershwin, oddly, but this is likely mostly fortuity.
      I've just recently become aware of the existence of this sonata so I haven't examined it. I HAVE examined an earlier famous Bartok solo piano piece: "Allegro Barbara", and it's pretty obviously bi-modal (and bi-tonal in spots as well). Its bi-modality works similarly to how the bi-modality of the blues works, although it was presumably arrived at independently of the blues (written in 1911 in Hungary, as it was). Gershwin's classical music relies heavily on the blues but in this regard was certainly NOT arrived at independently of the blues.

    • @herbertwells8757
      @herbertwells8757 9 лет назад +2

      +Herbert Wells Sorry, that's "Allegro Barbaro". "Allegro Barbara" is what happens when Shaw's actors speak too quickly.

    • @jdiwkall
      @jdiwkall 9 лет назад +2

      +Ron Walker Bartok was never forgotten...most of his works are either in the repertoire or near its fringes.

    • @ronwalker4849
      @ronwalker4849 8 лет назад

      BARTOK LACKS HUMOR, CAPRICE, AND FANTASY. IT´S ALL SERIOUS SADNESS.
      THE BEST TRADGEDY HAS MOMENTS OF COMEDY.

  • @zai5426
    @zai5426 6 лет назад +2

    5:50
    咳が聞こえてて草

  • @elisamartini1694
    @elisamartini1694 3 месяца назад

    C'est un peu comme une peinture, avec des traits et des couleurs. Ca influence l'esprit, pour retirer le négatif, le toxique dans la vie.

  • @ebavfencer
    @ebavfencer 12 лет назад +3

    Hungary rules! Scary but astonishgly beautiful...

  • @Soytu19
    @Soytu19 8 лет назад +3

    This music should be played without any reverb or echo or whatever. There's like reverb or something at the bottom. BAD. You can't apply reverb to this sonata.

    • @Soytu19
      @Soytu19 8 лет назад

      I don't know, i find that (after being completely absorbed by Zoltan Kocsis version) there is like an unnecesary echo or reverb in this version. There is like an echo, isn't it? or is it only me? lol

    • @Soytu19
      @Soytu19 8 лет назад

      Yes, even the piano needs the reverb in some cases. It improves the pieces a lot, (for me actually it can be a danger to get used to the reverb, but hey). But the thing about this sonata is that it's strongly (violently) percussive, and the reverb somehow spoils that percussion i think. And also what you say, the dissonances are a bit spoiled aswell. Or perhaps in my case is that i'm too absorved by another performance (kocsis), this happens too sometimes. Anyway it's always good to pay attention to other performances to analyse the pieces from different perspectives.

    • @Soytu19
      @Soytu19 8 лет назад

      From the concert he gave at La Roque d'Anthéron, right? Yes, it's incredible. It's the official interpretation for me, he understands everything Bartók wrote on the score. It's a privilege have that performance here in RUclips.

    • @herbertwells8757
      @herbertwells8757 8 лет назад

      Re: "This music should be played without any reverb or echo or whatever." "PLAYED without reverb or echo"? How do you play a piano with reverb? Is there a fourth pedal I've never noticed? Presumably you mean "RECORDED without artificial reverb or echo", but artificial reverb or echo are meant only to simulate natural reverb or echo found in a spacious hall. Sometimes recordings are made with natural reverb from the place it's recorded, and other times a recording studio is purposely constructed to be artificially dry so that reverb will be entirely under the control of the recording engineer. This is a technical matter for the recording engineer and record producer and does not normally concern either the composer or the performer.

    • @Soytu19
      @Soytu19 8 лет назад

      Herbert Wells Oh, excuse me, sir. I meant, this sonata must be recorded (or presented to the listener, if you preffer) without reverb. I mean, if you are searching for one of those typical arguments here in youtube, having in mind that i'm so stupid as to believe that this sonata shouldn't be played (not recorded) without reverb, as if there were another pedal in the piano for it, this is not your place for it.
      But yes, in the studio recording there are the performer and the sound engineer, and if this recording has reverb or echo or another sound effect is because the performer allows it. Therefore it's the performers fault, in this case Martha Argerich (born June 5, 1941). Argerich was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina.[4] Her paternal ancestors were Catalonians based in Buenos Aires since the 18th century. Her maternal grandparents... blablabla, it's in wikipedia if you want more accuracy. But yes, she is an incredibly talented pianist, but she demonstrated that she does not understand this piece of music, among other reasons, because of the sound effect thing. After all it's a very complicate piece of music, and if you are used to play constantly romantic music and applying reverb to your piano, it will be a real challenge for you to be succesful with this sonata. So it's understandable.
      But we have Zoltan Kocsis living in the same time as we, so it's a privilege to listen to this sonata in it's fullest. Thanks to him and the internet of course, and those who invented the internet too, and the mothers of those who invented it who suffered the terrible pain in the birth in order to give us the internet, and also thank their fathers who were brave enough to talk to those future mothers also, and blablabla... Bartok's music has a lot to owe to the internet, and zoltan kocsis too. And yes of course, all the music in reality, thanks to the piracy and the mothers and so on...

  • @berkelandmccarrell
    @berkelandmccarrell 12 лет назад +1

    And what do you play? Yeah, didn't think so.

  • @taiye_lanzonbee2136
    @taiye_lanzonbee2136 7 лет назад +1

    楽譜を大きくして欲しい。ピアニスとの顔よりセクシー。スコアいいね☝

  • @RH98
    @RH98 12 лет назад

    Oh, sorry, I just saw what that was actually in reply to.

  • @DesertRose76
    @DesertRose76 Год назад

    I studied this piece and played on my graduation recital for my Bachelor's degree -- last time I played it and do not miss it. *Hated it*

  • @valererothan2397
    @valererothan2397 10 лет назад +1

    the third mvmt reminds me some hisaishi compositions from the myazki's films

  • @karlpoppins
    @karlpoppins 11 лет назад +1

    The point in comparing them would be their composing skills... For example, in my opinion, Bach was the best composer of all time since his skills in composing as well as the outcome of his work is the best I can find on earth.

  • @jeremiahsalyer7784
    @jeremiahsalyer7784 7 лет назад +10

    I strongly disagree with the term "barbarian sonata."

    • @camilorojas1744
      @camilorojas1744 7 лет назад +2

      Agree. I would say it is VERY intense. However, BB did write an Allegro Barbaro which is vey popular

    • @marevnaortega670
      @marevnaortega670 6 лет назад

      ruclips.net/video/UJUWPqmaGQI/видео.html I would like know your opinion. Thanks!!!

    • @johndoily9407
      @johndoily9407 6 лет назад +2

      Oh it is barbaric. Among the most extreme of Bartok's works. Let's not be squeamish about it.

    • @brkahn
      @brkahn 5 лет назад

      He wrote an Allegro barbaro: ruclips.net/video/FpoTxL-uOco/видео.html

  • @Mollusc_music_and_memes
    @Mollusc_music_and_memes 3 года назад +2

    You can hear the Asian influence

  • @lunchmind
    @lunchmind 11 лет назад

    so is EMI to blame for us having to deal wiht that vile and obnoxious ad,preceding the performance?

  • @karlpoppins
    @karlpoppins 11 лет назад

    I have to clarify something. These are my personal criteria for assessing music. According to my criteria, Liszt must be bullshit while Bach is top-rated. However, as I said, there are personal, subjective criteria, so the subjectivity does not lie on my direct superficial and sentimental opinion on music but on the criteria by which I objectively rate each piece. It is still subjective though...

  • @sarahkraus8247
    @sarahkraus8247 5 лет назад

    This sounds like it was not played on the intended instrument because the bass notes are played an octave higher in mvt 2 than written

  • @larrytherangerdog
    @larrytherangerdog 11 лет назад +1

    Bartok's harmonic and rhythmic language in this piece is very reminiscent of Stravinsky's earlier "Le sacre du printemps." hmm..

  • @BasileusR
    @BasileusR 11 лет назад +3

    lol? Chopin NEEDED a piano to compose. He's the opposite of other greats, say, Benjamin Britten, who sat at a desk (I'm not saying Chopin isn't great... he's a genius!)

    • @lunchmind
      @lunchmind 7 лет назад +3

      I'll listen to Chopin over Britten at any given moment.

  • @MrElicottero
    @MrElicottero 11 лет назад

    What would be the point in comparing Bartok to Scriabin? This is what I don't understand. I am quite certain that I prefer Bartok, but my preference is based on my general musical sensibility, and has no bearing to either of the two composers and says nothing about them at all. Only about me and what I think is good classical music. And who really cares about that?

  • @koshkaMeow5689
    @koshkaMeow5689 Год назад

    Am I the only one who came here because of homework? Or am I wrong?

    • @commentingchannel9776
      @commentingchannel9776 Год назад +1

      Nah, I'm here because this is a banger lmao
      (If only I could play the 3rd movement, and believe me, I've tried >.

  • @injunjoe6995
    @injunjoe6995 4 года назад +2

    Because of his obnoxious campaign ad I will absolutely not vote for Bloomberg.

    • @bostonseeker
      @bostonseeker 4 года назад +2

      Well, that's one less customer.

  • @Arctic3sword
    @Arctic3sword 11 лет назад

    Are you saying that the point of music is to show off, then?

  • @music-discovery
    @music-discovery 8 лет назад +2

    What is the provenance of this recording? The coughing in the background of this video suggests that it is an illegal concert recording. Did Ms Argerich consent to it?

    • @herbertwells8757
      @herbertwells8757 8 лет назад +2

      Barking Academy of Music: Because a professional recording would have edited out the coughers? Look, whether or not this is a bootleg, posting it on RUclips is plenty illegal all by itself unless the copyright owners themselves put it here, which seems to me highly unlikely.

    • @mwhite6522
      @mwhite6522 8 лет назад +3

      It's an authorized recording issued by EMI on CD in the early 2000s, now out of print.

    • @music-discovery
      @music-discovery 8 лет назад

      M White Thank you for your reply.

    • @mwhite6522
      @mwhite6522 8 лет назад +2

      Found it - it's actually still available. Here: www.amazon.com/Live-Concertgebouw-1978-Martha-Argerich/dp/B00004LCAR/ref=sr_1_4?s=music&ie=UTF8&qid=1481474422&sr=1-4&keywords=martha+argerich+live+recording

  • @eugenepashch5213
    @eugenepashch5213 6 лет назад +1

    Sounds like Bartok was making fun of Prokofiev's sonata style...

  • @DSM1G90
    @DSM1G90 12 лет назад

    Yet, not a fair comparison since Scriabin is late Romantic (like his fellow compadre'of Rachmaninoff), and Bartok is 20th century.

  • @BasileusR
    @BasileusR 12 лет назад

    i'll upload a video sound-only just for you my dear friend

  • @zeyadyang5643
    @zeyadyang5643 11 лет назад +4

    lol

  • @LudwigVanBeethoven3000
    @LudwigVanBeethoven3000 2 года назад

    Mephisto polka