Thank you so much for showing Scriabin's legacy to young people! He's a composer whose music needs to be revived, and luckily we are seeing that lately.
F# major is such a wonderful key and in some ways easier to play on the piano due to the use of the black keys fitting our hands better considering our thumb length. I think you are correct with "Scriabin's Clever Idea". Cool video!
Nice job! Please make more of these videos!! Etude in D# minor Opus 8 is nice. But IMHO, Etude #5 in C# minor Opus 42 is an absolute masterpiece and the one everybody SHOULD remember. Just my opinion.
3:18 not at all. As far as i remember he did some calculations for amount of bars in 7th sonata and even built whole theories around how his synesthesia works in tonal context. He was looking for new sounds because of theories about end of the world in mysterium(he was heavily influenced by Blavatskaya) I've read a lot about his life and commentaries but can not remember, at least i remember that a lot of things he had planned to write were buried with him, as he found no need in writing down all of his ideas on paper. He also talked about microtonality i think because i remember his words on how he felt "uncomfy" with the gap between semitones
Its a good question. I guess the main idea is that players prefer it without key signatures, due to the shifting keys (more of yester-year). It is tradition now.
Everybody cheering at this AI generated non-info-bestofwikipedia-junk - including a clickbaity title (I mean where is the clever idea???) - should be ashamed. Have a nice day
I think the clever idea is supposed to be trying to compose in "unfamiliar keys" like f-sharp major , so that he would be more inclined to think out of the box harmonically... Trotzdem ganz deiner Meinung ;)
Thank you so much for showing Scriabin's legacy to young people! He's a composer whose music needs to be revived, and luckily we are seeing that lately.
Scriabin fans
F# major is such a wonderful key and in some ways easier to play on the piano due to the use of the black keys fitting our hands better considering our thumb length. I think you are correct with "Scriabin's Clever Idea". Cool video!
Sweet! Another video already, loving these ty!
Nice job! Please make more of these videos!! Etude in D# minor Opus 8 is nice. But IMHO, Etude #5 in C# minor Opus 42 is an absolute masterpiece and the one everybody SHOULD remember. Just my opinion.
He's my guy.
3:18 not at all. As far as i remember he did some calculations for amount of bars in 7th sonata and even built whole theories around how his synesthesia works in tonal context. He was looking for new sounds because of theories about end of the world in mysterium(he was heavily influenced by Blavatskaya) I've read a lot about his life and commentaries but can not remember, at least i remember that a lot of things he had planned to write were buried with him, as he found no need in writing down all of his ideas on paper. He also talked about microtonality i think because i remember his words on how he felt "uncomfy" with the gap between semitones
I am curious. Why do we not write key signatures in modern film scoring anymore?
Its a good question. I guess the main idea is that players prefer it without key signatures, due to the shifting keys (more of yester-year). It is tradition now.
Everybody cheering at this AI generated non-info-bestofwikipedia-junk - including a clickbaity title (I mean where is the clever idea???) - should be ashamed. Have a nice day
I think the clever idea is supposed to be trying to compose in "unfamiliar keys" like f-sharp major , so that he would be more inclined to think out of the box harmonically...
Trotzdem ganz deiner Meinung ;)
@@yunushermann4873 bach did that
Can you do a video exploring how to use some of Scriabin's harmonic ideas in one's own compositions, your videos are great
@@composerjalen THX bruh!
I think you missed the point of the video