Thank goodness for Liszt Transcriptions, that over a seven year period he gave over a thousand concerts, traveling through every hamlet in Europe and Russia, performing everything from Bach to Chopin, to those who never had the opportunity to go to a concert or see a Opera.
Hi Ms Ching-Yun My Taiwanese Teacher who is also a Concert Pianist based in New York recommended me to watch your video of Barcarolle because we’re working on the same piece, you have no idea how much inspiration and hope you have resonated!!!! ❤️ Thank you so much Ching-Yu!!!!! 🥰
I just drop a line to say you are great, i've never heard someone playing Scriabin etude C-Sharp Minor like you did. It left me speechless and it was astounding! Hi from Italy, a land of great musicians
Being from Italy means nothing, talent isnt derived from the place of your birth, it is derived from hard work and dedication. This nationalistic bullshit is garbage.
So nice! As a musician, I'm curious about technique of other instruments, and it was super interesting to understand how is it possible to play those impressive repeated notes; your take on the expression of the piece connected to the chatacters makes the music so beautiful! Brava 👏
Just as you say, in terms of 8ve technique, it truly depends on what's comfortable for the pianist. For those who find the above method physically awkward, I would suggest playing them through the wrist like 8ve scales. Annique Gottler (Heart of the Keys RUclips channel) compares the movement to dribbling a basketball; as it gets closer to the ground it rebounds quicker and quicker, and one keeps it going by increasingly subtle, light, and relaxed wrist motion. If you try to muscle through, the basketball rebounds with increasing force, and in the end, one can't dribble with the necessary force to keep up the frequency of inpact, and you lose the coordinated movement between ball and hand. Anyways, to shorten this: Try playing through the wrist, perhaps with it slightly raised, and stay relaxed. The speed will increase over time. Fortunately, this piece sounds gorgeous at a slow tempo. As stated in the video, moving the hand back and forth towards the piano helps make things easier. Thank you for this video, I appreciate the time and effort that goes into producing this sort of thing.
This is a very underrated video, it really helped me learn this piece! I performed this at the music college in the University of Cambridge, and succeeded thanks to all your useful advice. Thank you so much!
You are a gem! Thank you, Thank you, Thank you, Thank you!!! You have such a remarkably brilliant and concise projection. You say so much with so little. Your demonstrations connect with me absolutely seamlessly. My cup runneth over.
Little hands learning octaves! I heard you from Josh Wright ,and you were incredible marvelous at these octaves ! Thank you so much ,I’ll pick up my self-esteem about technics and trying again.
Was looking for references for Schubert/Liszt 'Gretchen am spinrade' and stumbled upon this. A treasure! Also realised that I have liked your Scriabin op.42 no.5 in the past, and it is so so good!
I do not know if this is the correct technique for octaves. Watch Yuya Wang playing it. Her wrists are totally relaxed, arms are rather loose. The art serms to be an art of relaxation immediately after hitting the keys. Try to watch a slow motion video with Yuya. It is difficult to master, yes. But "tenseness" in the arms is not the secret here. The movement comes more from wrists even when the whole arm-shoulder mechanism is behind it.
Yeah this pianist is not even close to Yuja Wangs speed and clarity, but she is right about practicing in short bursts or beats and putting them together in measures.
Another thing is, if you feel like you are ready, try to voice a gallop from the single octaves to mimic horseback riding. Even though it might sound impossible. Remember that piano keys at the time of this score were much lighter
So grateful you connect the storyline with the music and explain that so nicely. One question about the Liszt pedal markings: IMHO Liszt wrote a pedal effect ms 1-3. Paderewski changed Liszt’s pedal. Really would like to hear Liszt’s actual intention. The Paderewski “clean” pedal seems wrong to me, just saying,,,,
Thank goodness for Liszt Transcriptions, that over a seven year period he gave over a thousand concerts, traveling through every hamlet in Europe and Russia, performing everything from Bach to Chopin, to those who never had the opportunity to go to a concert or see a Opera.
Hi Ms Ching-Yun
My Taiwanese Teacher who is also a Concert Pianist based in New York recommended me to watch your video of Barcarolle because we’re working on the same piece, you have no idea how much inspiration and hope you have resonated!!!! ❤️ Thank you so much Ching-Yu!!!!! 🥰
I just drop a line to say you are great, i've never heard someone playing Scriabin etude C-Sharp Minor like you did. It left me speechless and it was astounding!
Hi from Italy, a land of great musicians
Ciao, Valerio, thank you so much for your kind words! Hope you are keeping well and safe. :)
Being from Italy means nothing, talent isnt derived from the place of your birth, it is derived from hard work and dedication. This nationalistic bullshit is garbage.
@@nicholasbrown4109 Music history game weak. Reading comprehension game weak. Whiny Emo game strong.
So nice! As a musician, I'm curious about technique of other instruments, and it was super interesting to understand how is it possible to play those impressive repeated notes; your take on the expression of the piece connected to the chatacters makes the music so beautiful! Brava 👏
Thank you! I am glad you enjoyed the video. :)
Just as you say, in terms of 8ve technique, it truly depends on what's comfortable for the pianist. For those who find the above method physically awkward, I would suggest playing them through the wrist like 8ve scales.
Annique Gottler (Heart of the Keys RUclips channel) compares the movement to dribbling a basketball; as it gets closer to the ground it rebounds quicker and quicker, and one keeps it going by increasingly subtle, light, and relaxed wrist motion. If you try to muscle through, the basketball rebounds with increasing force, and in the end, one can't dribble with the necessary force to keep up the frequency of inpact, and you lose the coordinated movement between ball and hand.
Anyways, to shorten this:
Try playing through the wrist, perhaps with it slightly raised, and stay relaxed. The speed will increase over time. Fortunately, this piece sounds gorgeous at a slow tempo. As stated in the video, moving the hand back and forth towards the piano helps make things easier.
Thank you for this video, I appreciate the time and effort that goes into producing this sort of thing.
Thank you! I'm learning this piece right now, and the second Erlkonig section is definitely a challenge...
This is a very underrated video, it really helped me learn this piece! I performed this at the music college in the University of Cambridge, and succeeded thanks to all your useful advice.
Thank you so much!
You are a gem! Thank you, Thank you, Thank you, Thank you!!! You have such a remarkably brilliant and concise projection. You say so much with so little. Your demonstrations connect with me absolutely seamlessly. My cup runneth over.
We should feel honored and grateful that you share all these things with us, thank you!❤️
Thanks for sharing this! ❤
Wonderful video! I'm trying to pick American universities to apply to and I'm going now to add your college because I love your teaching! :)
Thanks ! Great tutorial!
You're very welcome!
Little hands learning octaves! I heard you from Josh Wright ,and you were incredible marvelous at these octaves ! Thank you so much ,I’ll pick up my self-esteem about technics and trying again.
You are absolutely incredibile. Thanks for sharing your talent.
Thank you very much :)
Was looking for references for Schubert/Liszt 'Gretchen am spinrade' and stumbled upon this. A treasure! Also realised that I have liked your Scriabin op.42 no.5 in the past, and it is so so good!
Thank you very much! I am so glad you enjoyed this clip and the Scriabin Etude video. :)
I do not know if this is the correct technique for octaves. Watch Yuya Wang playing it. Her wrists are totally relaxed, arms are rather loose. The art serms to be an art of relaxation immediately after hitting the keys. Try to watch a slow motion video with Yuya. It is difficult to master, yes. But "tenseness" in the arms is not the secret here. The movement comes more from wrists even when the whole arm-shoulder mechanism is behind it.
Yeah this pianist is not even close to Yuja Wangs speed and clarity, but she is right about practicing in short bursts or beats and putting them together in measures.
You explain your methods and tips very clearly! Thank you for this and I hope you're staying healthy :D
Thank you! I am glad you enjoyed the video. :)
Thank you for this tutorial!
Another thing is, if you feel like you are ready, try to voice a gallop from the single octaves to mimic horseback riding. Even though it might sound impossible. Remember that piano keys at the time of this score were much lighter
You are fantastic 🔥
Incredible video! Thanks for the masterful tips ❤
So grateful you connect the storyline with the music and explain that so nicely. One question about the Liszt pedal markings: IMHO Liszt wrote a pedal effect ms 1-3. Paderewski changed Liszt’s pedal. Really would like to hear Liszt’s actual intention. The Paderewski “clean” pedal seems wrong to me, just saying,,,,
This is awesome!!!
This really helped me a lot ! Thank you very much :)
I love you 😍
I shame myself,you show like very easy.You tricky :) thanx much...
What about wrist?
没人懂英文啊!老外又不学钢琴 ,讲给老外听,人家都说你英文听不懂,
老外不學鋼琴?這什麼世界觀?