Haydn: Sonata in C major for Keyboard, Hob. XVI:50

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  • Опубликовано: 7 фев 2025
  • Franz Joseph Haydn: Sonata in C major for Keyboard, Hob. XVI:50 (c.1794-95).
    Filmed live in the Daniel and Joanna S. Rose Studio on February 25, 2016.
    Video produced by Tristan Cook.
    Artists: Anne-Marie McDermott, piano.

Комментарии • 13

  • @bruce_c_in_nz
    @bruce_c_in_nz 2 года назад +6

    You might enjoy (as I did) watching John O'Conor giving a master class on this work - and then watch this video again, noting Anne-Marie's facial expressions. They seem to support what John was trying to get across. I did enjoy this, including the visuals.

  • @DavidDreebin
    @DavidDreebin 11 месяцев назад

    One of the best and cleanest interpretations of this wonderful Haydn sonata. Anne-Marie plays it as though she loves the work too. She brings out the fingery sparkle and more lyrical textures in equal measure. Certainly there is variety in touch, and indeed dynamics. My comments relate to the first movement as I haven't heard Anne-Marie play the other movements yet.

  • @horatiodreamt
    @horatiodreamt 6 лет назад +7

    Excellent performance. Her touch and phrasing makes me think of Horowitz playing Haydn.

  • @leo32190
    @leo32190 4 года назад +3

    Beautiful playing. A beautiful sonata too!

    • @leo32190
      @leo32190 Год назад

      Oh wow it’s me again 3 years later 😂

  • @Fryderyk_Franciszek
    @Fryderyk_Franciszek 2 месяца назад

    Adagio: 7:53
    Allegro molto 13:40

  • @lotusbuds2000
    @lotusbuds2000 7 лет назад +2

    Bravo

  • @carlhopkinson
    @carlhopkinson 10 месяцев назад +1

    Hadyn is great.

  • @andantecantabileandantecan4147
    @andantecantabileandantecan4147 6 лет назад +1

    Knowing that Haydn and Mozart were good friends, it's easy to see how Mozart could have gotten much inspiration from Haydns works

    • @elaineblackhurst1509
      @elaineblackhurst1509 4 года назад +3

      andantecantabile andantecantabile But not from this sonata which was written about three years after Mozart’s death.
      Additionally, this sonata really does not sound like Mozart, not least because it employs a more modern quasi-Beethovenian technique and was written for a much bigger sounding, more powerful and more advanced English fortepiano, very different from anything encountered by Mozart in Vienna.
      Your general point however is good; Mozart learnt much from Haydn, but as I explained, nothing at all from this particular sonata!

    • @nmanon4960
      @nmanon4960 2 года назад +2

      @@elaineblackhurst1509 I hear more CPE Bach than either Mozart and Beethoven. The tensions. Of course he was a contemporary.

  • @mikeyn7778
    @mikeyn7778 2 года назад

    Why does it say the artist is Glenn Gould?