András Schiff discusses Bach

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  • Опубликовано: 23 апр 2022
  • Recored in April 2013
    Jeff Spurgeon, host
  • ВидеоклипыВидеоклипы

Комментарии • 192

  • @RuoshiSun
    @RuoshiSun Год назад +42

    All music examples are taken from Bach's compositions except the last one is by Beethoven. (I omitted the Symphony No. 5 motif.)
    01:53 Minuet in G major, BWV Anh. 114
    04:12 Sinfonia No. 6 in E major, BWV 792
    08:40 English Suite No. 3 in G minor, BWV 808: 1. Prelude
    16:26 Prelude in B minor, BWV 869 from Well-Tempered Clavier, Book 1
    17:04 "Buß und Reu" from St Matthew Passion, BWV 244
    17:34 "Gloria in excelsis" from Mass in B minor, BWV 232
    18:28 "Kommt, ihr Töchter, helft mir klagen" from St Matthew Passion, BWV 244
    24:37 Variation 5 from Goldberg Variations, BWV 988
    27:26 Overture from French Overture, BWV 831
    28:12 Allegro from Italian Concerto, BWV 971
    31:02 Contrapunctus I from Art of Fugue, BWV 1080
    39:19 Presto from Italian Concerto, BWV 971
    43:48 Allemande from French Suite No. 5 in G major, BWV 816
    48:45 Theme: Vivace from Diabelli Variations, Op. 120

    • @jhummelgaard9310
      @jhummelgaard9310 Год назад +2

      No not the first one little Minuet, many piano pieces from the notebook for his wife was not composed by J.S. Bach

    • @qianxinwang9083
      @qianxinwang9083 Год назад +3

      @@jhummelgaard9310 Yes, that's right. BWV Anh. 114 is actually composed by Christian Petzold of the same era and it is included in Notenbuchlein fur Anna Magdalena Bach right now

  • @andreslka
    @andreslka 2 года назад +55

    Unfortunately this doesn't last a million hours.. How fortunate we are to have such videos. Thank you very much

    • @darrylschultz9395
      @darrylschultz9395 Год назад

      You'd need to be one of only a couple of dozen people in history-that's approximately 114 years.

    • @martinstremlow2997
      @martinstremlow2997 6 месяцев назад

      Yes it is wonderful to listen to Andras Schiff 's explanations!

  • @NYCBG
    @NYCBG 2 года назад +61

    One of those rare geniuses who is in a league all his own as a pianist AND as an intellectual.
    Andras Schiff - a gift to us all.

    • @rrrrrr-kb9sb
      @rrrrrr-kb9sb 7 месяцев назад

      Schiff is a joke as a pianist; nothing new, nothing profound. He put his audiences to sleep. He has nothing to say. He uses way too much peddle. He has harmed the art of music so much.

    • @thelostartofcounterpoint8648
      @thelostartofcounterpoint8648 4 месяца назад

      ​@@rrrrrr-kb9sbwhat?????

  • @davidschestenger3366
    @davidschestenger3366 2 года назад +61

    Absolutely FANTASTIC, the knowledge, the sense of humor, and the humanity of this men,
    Got me glued to the chair, a lesson in all directions, Bach, music and loving understanding
    Thank you for sharing beauty

    • @cindytartt4048
      @cindytartt4048 Год назад +5

      Yes, he truly is god’s gift to us: not just his musical talent or intellectuality but his gentle & self deprecating humour & kindness. He’s always _very_ kind to his students in master classes, too. A real gent.

  • @michaeltaylor4752
    @michaeltaylor4752 2 года назад +43

    A brilliant and humble human being, an incredible artist. What a joy to listen to this conversation!

  • @dorotheasluik3578
    @dorotheasluik3578 2 года назад +77

    Thank you so much for this wonderful discussion! I can listen to András Schiff again and again when he speaks about music and ... when he gives masterclasses!

  • @evanofelipe
    @evanofelipe Год назад +16

    It’s a great privilege to listen to Andreas Schiff talk about his discovery of Bach, the man and his music as they evolved throughout his life. His humility and recognition that he is a mere servant of the composer is very interesting and that it is his job, as a performer to play and for audience to listen and appreciate. Modesty and greatness are rarely found together. He’s the exception.

  • @fredhoupt4078
    @fredhoupt4078 2 года назад +15

    9 years ago! Schiff is simply wonderful. I listen to his Beethoven sonata lectures repeatedly and with great joy. He remains one of the great performers as well as teachers. A treasure, really.

  • @Amywithlove148
    @Amywithlove148 Год назад +5

    Love you a lot sir andras when u said we r small servant of great composers …..that’s how humble you are

  • @tedgrant2
    @tedgrant2 2 года назад +14

    My mother sent me for piano lessons and I thought Bach was boring.
    Only later, when I heard the Italian Concerto, did I think he was worth some serious consideration.
    I regularly play Bach now, never tiring of his amazing inventions and Inventions.
    I'm really glad that Mendelssohn resurrected Bach.

  • @KorkutOzkan
    @KorkutOzkan 2 года назад +62

    indications of his common sense and insights:
    08:06 life of a note
    08:41 creating an illusion of a crescendo
    13:50 the reason of creativity
    21:44 ghetto vs mainstream (museum) art
    26:55 developing inspiration
    41:20 care and love creates responsibility
    43:00 spiritualism and music

  • @davidhertzberg
    @davidhertzberg 2 года назад +18

    Thank you for this footage, which I have never seen before. Andras Schiff is always value added. A musical titan.

  • @philltadman
    @philltadman 2 года назад +19

    What a pleasure to listen to a great musician talk about the greatest music

  • @pavaomrazek
    @pavaomrazek Год назад +4

    My teacher once said that there will never be such a great composer like Bach anymore. I believe her more every day.

  • @danielholmqvist2713
    @danielholmqvist2713 2 года назад +8

    8:17 This passage is so very interesting. I've always been a fan of analysing and appreciating different voices entering in fugues for example, but never thought of them in their power to serve as an illusion of a crescendo, and Schiff explains and plays this as good as any. Thank you, András

  • @ozziegal1
    @ozziegal1 Год назад +7

    It is so delightful to watch and listen to Andreas Schiff talk and play Bach. It is a shame the interviewer was so poorly informed. He was embarrassing. But Schiffs dedication, musicality and intellectual understanding on top of his playing is a gift.

  • @evalechuga1593
    @evalechuga1593 2 года назад +6

    This man is great! thank you for such a wonderfull and iluminating discussion!

  • @quaver1239
    @quaver1239 Год назад

    Always a pleasure, and more, listening to András Schiff talk or play. Preferably both. All he plays and says is with deep intelligence and knowledge. Each time I hear or see him, my mind says, “Oh, how I do love this man!” Thank you very, very much for sharing this discussion with us.

  • @PhilChavanne
    @PhilChavanne 10 месяцев назад

    Wonderful interview. Interesting questions, drawing enlightening answers. Thank you for the program.

  • @jamesghani
    @jamesghani Год назад +1

    First time I've seen/heard an interview with the great man. Never realised his talents are matched by his charm.

  • @TheOrdener
    @TheOrdener 2 года назад +3

    Wow! Very informative and very inspiring! Thank you for posting this.

  • @harryjoseph1802
    @harryjoseph1802 Год назад +1

    I have a voracious appetite for Bach so a concert featuring all Six English Suites of an evening? I wouldn't mind that at all! Mr. Schiff's recordings of JSB's Keyboard Partitas are among the best. Privileged to catch this interview with such a humble and consummate artiste.

  • @espressonoob
    @espressonoob Год назад +1

    thanks for uploading these, any more you ever find of him from the past or in the future I would love to see. absolutely love hearing his philosophy on music, assuming you do too!

  • @stevebrown5597
    @stevebrown5597 2 года назад +4

    What a blessing!

  • @Ukiyo-e-sama
    @Ukiyo-e-sama 2 года назад +5

    I love his performances but I didn't know he is so charismatic.

  • @alexanderscutt654
    @alexanderscutt654 2 года назад +3

    When Schiff was in Australia in 2017(?) we not only had a full concert in Melbourne, but also an inside look into the master at work: we had, inter alia, the entire Italian Concerto as an encore. It was like we were in his studio listening to a master making music because he loves it and it's part of him. It was a wonderful and memorable evening which included Mendelssohn and Brahms as well as Bach.
    I also attended his masterclass a few days later. He is an inspirational, direct, honest and wonderful teacher who was encouraging as well as probing in his questions of the students.
    Watching this, however, I feel that the interview is a somewhat slow and stilted - it is honest and well-intentioned on the part of the interviewer and he appears to have done his research well - but I can't help feeling the whole thing would have had much more nuance and flow had there been a music broadcaster in the chair - or another musician.
    But this gentle mannered but firm approach on the part of the artist which we saw at the Melbourne masterclass comes through in spite of that, and in his gentle way does not mince words.
    A very fulfilling and enjoyable 50 minutes on a subject that is dear to the heart of every musician!

    • @SandWolf_
      @SandWolf_  2 года назад +1

      Thank you for sharing. I can attest to the sentiments about the concert. I went to see his concerts on three occasions. Not once was I disappointed. Inspired and moved by the music, excited by the fantastic atmosphere which he generally created in the hall and awed by his enormous musical talent. In my opinion, An accomplished musician and he would deny it, a solid virtuosic player.
      I was amazed at how well he spoke. he has a wealth of musical knowledge and insights and he articulates them so well (it boggles the mind that his recent memoir is more of script of an interview with him than his actual writing since he’s so articulate and must write well). Unlike some musicians, he share his ideas and insights quite generously. Some remarks I don’t agree with but he is honest and can only talk straight.
      On those occasions, he spoke amusingly and fascinatingly that we were wishing he wouldn’t stop. But then of course he went on to play and he played brilliantly and we thought why even bother talking in the first place!

    • @taracochran-patrick784
      @taracochran-patrick784 2 года назад +1

      @@SandWolf_ agree with your sentiments:)

  • @ArfonOwenOfficial
    @ArfonOwenOfficial 2 года назад

    Fantastic insights.

  • @stuartwilliams4898
    @stuartwilliams4898 Год назад +1

    Thank goodness J. S. Bach was not totally forgotten after his death. I cannot imagine life without his music.

  • @morozowvlad6363
    @morozowvlad6363 Год назад

    I wish I could be able to visit any of Andras Schiffs concerts, not even Bach, anyway listening to he’s masterpieces at home every day , it’s pure joy to explore Bach . Goldberg Variations would be dreams come true hehehe

  • @ericwilhelm2941
    @ericwilhelm2941 Год назад +1

    Very funny Man. Great sense of Humor. reminds me of a Pianist also from Ungarn, Josef Letmany . my father had Josef in his Bands 60's and 70's . Josef had the very same style being funny . My father and Josef played a lot of classical Pieces.

  • @fredlifsitz7411
    @fredlifsitz7411 Месяц назад

    Sorry Andras gave a three and a half hour recital in San Francisco. From start to finish it was pure gold.

  • @Wolfgang1782
    @Wolfgang1782 2 года назад +3

    As Catharina Dorothea was the eldest child and remained unmarried I’m sure she was an invaluable help to her father and Anna Magdalena.

  • @mirandac8712
    @mirandac8712 2 года назад +1

    Really spellbinding. It is fascinating, what he says about Kurtag

  • @druidsongevergreens
    @druidsongevergreens 2 года назад +4

    How many of us were entirely taken into the world of Bach by “the great Chaconne)? 🙌💛

  • @Rombizio
    @Rombizio 2 года назад +5

    He knows so much about the music of Bach and music in general that it is scary. He is extremely good as a player but he is an expert on Bach to the point where maybe only Bach could confirm his points or not.

  • @Quim141
    @Quim141 Год назад +1

    This man is a fountain of witness.

  • @associazionemusadistefanog2058
    @associazionemusadistefanog2058 9 месяцев назад

    Very Nice. THANK YOU

  • @franciscoespinozagamboa6490
    @franciscoespinozagamboa6490 2 года назад +1

    ...maestro Schiff, talentoso y docto

  • @michaelstutzman6285
    @michaelstutzman6285 2 года назад +2

    42:48 Beautifully said.

  • @hoon_sol
    @hoon_sol Год назад +1

    _«Even in the secular works you feel the spirit.»_
    _Contrapunctus VIII_ from _The Art of Fugue_ certainly is a testament to this.

  • @kelinwang720
    @kelinwang720 Год назад

    I love the way he says E major then start playing at 4:08. It’s like an transitional theme from now to his childhood.

  • @peter5.056
    @peter5.056 Год назад +3

    Sir Schiff is, I believe to my bones, the best pedagogue in the world.

  • @nohisocitutampoc2789
    @nohisocitutampoc2789 2 года назад

    Amazing.

  • @gretareinarsson7461
    @gretareinarsson7461 2 года назад +17

    Bach, much like Beethoven, is always modern.

    • @jaikee9477
      @jaikee9477 2 года назад +8

      I get your point but Bach certainly is more modern than Beethoven.

    • @eduardoguerraavila8329
      @eduardoguerraavila8329 Год назад +1

      @@jaikee9477 absolutely not

    • @canman5060
      @canman5060 Год назад

      @@jaikee9477 Not modern in time.

  • @richardwebb2348
    @richardwebb2348 2 года назад +1

    A long time advocate for the performance of baroque music on instruments of the period.

    • @Claude_van_Kloten
      @Claude_van_Kloten 10 дней назад

      Bach on synthesizer really sounds good!👍🏿

  • @YuanJane
    @YuanJane Год назад

    Thank you for sharing this, do you know where and when did it take place?

  • @gastonflatulenza1276
    @gastonflatulenza1276 2 года назад

    Is there anyone who could tell us what the little samples he plays throughout his talk are? I would like to look some of them up so I can listen to them further. If anyone would do this, thank you.

  • @VolodiaLukianov
    @VolodiaLukianov 5 месяцев назад +1

    Спасибо.

  • @xper2xper
    @xper2xper Год назад +2

    Ludicrous questions asked, but the answers are from a wonderful musician making the program worth listening to.

  • @nyckolaus
    @nyckolaus 9 месяцев назад

    András Schiff is magnificent.

  • @SpontaneityJD
    @SpontaneityJD 3 месяца назад

    This was gold

  • @robertbrown7470
    @robertbrown7470 5 месяцев назад

    Can you imagine what Bach would do if he was alive now. Just take a performance keyboard like the Casio Privia PX-560 with it's hex layers, splitting the keyboard into four distinct and separate sounds, 256-note polyphony, the ability to create his own sounds, 16 track recorder, 17 types of temperments, a 5.3-inch color touch screen, etc. It would be amazing to see what he could do with that.

    • @gazjaz2010
      @gazjaz2010 3 месяца назад

      indeed. tho, there are keyboards available today far more profound than a Casio. despite your sales copy 😂 hilarious

    • @robertbrown7470
      @robertbrown7470 3 месяца назад

      @@gazjaz2010 The PX-560 is a stage keyboard. As powerful as any keyboard in the lower $1,000 range. Just FYI. Or actually other people's information as I'm wasting my time with you. LOL

  • @douglasdickerson5184
    @douglasdickerson5184 2 года назад +1

    💙💙💙

  • @ClassicalMusic-ds9yt
    @ClassicalMusic-ds9yt 2 года назад +1

    🌹🌹

  • @BjoernTempl
    @BjoernTempl Год назад

    what a pianist.

  • @charlottemarceau8062
    @charlottemarceau8062 2 года назад +2

    I can't believe no one laughed at "Brought Bach bach to life"

  • @Renshen1957
    @Renshen1957 2 года назад +2

    The first piece played isn’t by J S Bach. It’s by Christian Petzold.

  • @david203
    @david203 2 года назад

    Don't forget virginals, intermediate between clavichords and harpsichords. A friend built a clavichord from a kit: it is a small box that sits on a table.

  • @Enad700
    @Enad700 Год назад +1

    "If art is a fight between reason and heart, in Bach we find the two in perfect balance." I don't remember the name of the musician who said it.

  • @MathieuPrevot
    @MathieuPrevot Год назад +1

    Liszt's and Busoni's transcriptions are great examples of updates of JSBach works on modern or different instruments, and are no less valuable than the originals. Pedal can be very much welcome too here.

  • @rainerausdemspring894
    @rainerausdemspring894 Год назад +1

    The famous minuet was *not* composed by Bach. The composer is Christian Petzold (1677-1733).

  • @felixdevilliers1
    @felixdevilliers1 7 месяцев назад

    Bach was neglected for a while, but it was not only Mendelssohn who brought him back, By then he was the daily bread of Schumann and Chopin and had a profound influence on them , Brahms when he was asked to play ofter played Peludes and Fugues by Bach

  • @canman5060
    @canman5060 Год назад

    The little minuet in G in the Anna Magdalana Notebook is not by J S Bach.

  • @Quim141
    @Quim141 Год назад

    I'm impressed how he is able not to memorize a ton of Bach's keyboard music but also make reductions of great works like the passions and the Bm mass

  • @user-sv9yk2vy4d
    @user-sv9yk2vy4d Год назад

    この人ほど、デビュー当時と今と演奏が変わらんのは珍しい。

  • @felixdevilliers1
    @felixdevilliers1 7 месяцев назад

    I am for using the pedal in Bach - very discreetly - and I am sure he would have used it. I was told once that Mozart had to be played without the pedal and then I read that as soon as the pedal was invented he gave a concert to illustrate its use-. I like the fact that Pianists like Barenboim use the pedal in Bach and sometimes even create a cluster of overlapping notes to createa touch of dissonant harmonies.in the prelude in B falt minor in Bk 1 I feel I have to use tthe pedal to sustain the harmonies.

  • @renzo6490
    @renzo6490 Год назад

    The piece Schiff mentions around 2 min 35 sec...is this it?
    Chaconne, Partita No. 2 BWV 1004

  • @ChristianJoannes
    @ChristianJoannes Год назад +1

    Does someone know which piece Andreas play at 24:37 ?

    • @SandWolf_
      @SandWolf_  Год назад +2

      Goldberg Variation BWV988 no.5

    • @ChristianJoannes
      @ChristianJoannes Год назад +1

      @@SandWolf_ Thks a lot . Wonderful

    • @khaledyaghi64
      @khaledyaghi64 8 месяцев назад

      You have excellent taste.
      You'll find a beautiful dance to the "variation 5" here.
      ruclips.net/video/HIf__OR91HY/видео.htmlsi=2vC_XesEklArcbXb

    • @khaledyaghi64
      @khaledyaghi64 8 месяцев назад

      And to the "Variation 1"
      ruclips.net/video/LK2Vm7WaSDQ/видео.htmlsi=DLn7txicNQ4Rs8OD

  • @lindacowles756
    @lindacowles756 2 года назад +1

    19:19 Re: musicians and dancing -- I've read that Mozart was a very GOOD dancer.

  • @AaronGlenn88
    @AaronGlenn88 Год назад

    every score of bach has hidden gems of how to unlock the work! they also teach baroque improvisation! he is my friend and he's been dead for 300 years. lol

  • @bengatss
    @bengatss 4 месяца назад

    is there any impro heard or song composed by Mr. Schiff? What He would do without Bach, and what Bach would do without Him?

  • @soebredden
    @soebredden 2 года назад +8

    None of his words are without meaning - you dont wast a second of your time. Think about that next time you listen to listen to someone from television -a politician for an example...!

  • @roddykennedy9476
    @roddykennedy9476 9 месяцев назад +1

    I haven’t finished watching this but….I take what such people say with a pinch of salt. Schiff contradicts himself in another RUclips video (a masterclass on the Italian Concerto) where he says something like “people say I frown on pedalling Bach….not so”. I have also heard Barenboim say in a Beethoven masterclass that you can crescendo on a single note on piano (artistic licence but he meant it).

    • @peev2
      @peev2 21 день назад

      It was a joke.
      Edit: I'm also watching this right now.

  • @coralreef909
    @coralreef909 2 года назад

    Harpsichord MasterClass.

  • @neosannyasin8022
    @neosannyasin8022 Год назад

    🙏

  • @TalibanSymphonyOrchestra
    @TalibanSymphonyOrchestra 2 года назад

    very good, sound quatlity not so much

  • @user-kz1cb6tk2e
    @user-kz1cb6tk2e 2 года назад +2

    🤣🤩😘🤩😍🥰😇

  • @milestsue5215
    @milestsue5215 2 года назад +1

    I don't know, an 8 year old Chinese boy playing King Lear would be kinda cool! Anyways, great thoughts by this great pianist. Personally, I'd love to be that 8 year old kid, even though he's seen as a joke :( 47:13

    • @concentusmusicus8714
      @concentusmusicus8714 2 года назад

      I think you misunderstood a little.Schiff was referring to youth and inexperienced-ness. Doesn’t matter if the kid is Chinese or English.
      It would be awesome to see an 8 year old doing King Lear to me too but I doubt kids understand anything of it or all of it because of their youth and inexperienced-ness. And some master works do require cumulative experiences and studies to perform them effectively and spiritually which is a fair point, I think.

    • @milestsue5215
      @milestsue5215 Год назад

      @@concentusmusicus8714 I understood him actually. I agree with him and yourself. However, to choose the specific adjective "Chinese" is very telling in my opinion. He could have very easily said "8 year old kid" without said adjective. I forgive him: he is not Chinese himself. I do know exactly what he was referring to with regards youth and inexperienced-ness. However, he may not respect the amount of blood sweat and tears that 8 year old Chinese kid put into it, nor, perhaps, does he know much about Chinese culture. I may be mistaken though! And yes, the ethnicity doesn't matter, agreed. Thanks for your reply!

    • @concentusmusicus8714
      @concentusmusicus8714 Год назад +2

      @@milestsue5215 I don't know if he is familiar with Chinese culture. But he's married to a Japanese and quite familiar with Japanese one. It may be that on the look of things, China does produce a substantial amount of child prodigies than any other country (personally, taken into account the size of population and the blooming of western culture I don't see why it should be regarded as an unusual trend at all) and that's why he said a Chinese 8 year old I think. Thanks for the reply too!

    • @milestsue5215
      @milestsue5215 Год назад +1

      @SW II thanks very much! This clarifies my doubts and I appreciate the info! I actually talked to my pianist partner and she further clarified Schiff’s comment, giving deeper context to it. It seems that I had nothing to worry about :)

    • @justiny6607
      @justiny6607 Год назад

      His special reference to “Chinese” kids is racist in nature. That discounted him as a good musical scholar. Sorry, with all due respect, remark like this only reveals how narrow his mind is.

  • @kees-wimjobse-9485
    @kees-wimjobse-9485 Год назад

    Some seem to think the interviewer is badly informed. But then Mr Schiff explains to us 9:43 that a clavichord plucks the strings…
    Most certainly a slip of the tongue, of course he knows the difference between a harpsichord and a clavichord.

  • @Vic9994546
    @Vic9994546 Год назад +1

    Well he has wonderful advice about Bach deconstruction and analysis however I can’t agree with the pedal ideal. You cannot play Bach without pedal that is extremely dry. On older instruments as the harpsichord and clavichord the tunings and the nature of the instrument is what gave characteristic sound but the piano does not have these and has its own ability to enhance his works. You practice without pedal yes that is correct but in some spots you should definitely use pedal as sustain did not exist back then often Alberti bass and he HAS to use pedal for fugues and bach counterpoint otherwise you would most certainly have gaps in some of the voices. Pedal is like a spice you use is sparingly and at different amounts depending on the dish or piece in this case. The correct way is to practice without pedal and using the fingers to sustain as much as possible and appropriately sustain certain notes and color but the pedal further enhanced that. I think he uses pedal but there’s just so many people that do abuse the pedal and use it as a crutch which is incorrect technique but I see it all the time.

  • @leonardoesparza2605
    @leonardoesparza2605 2 года назад

    6:10 xD

  • @ALoonwolf
    @ALoonwolf Год назад

    Hmmm interesting. I'm at that point where I love Bach but I'm not such a big fan of Beethoven. Some of his stuff that I've heard sounds great but other stuff isn't very appealing to me. I wonder if when I get older I also will start to appreciate it more...
    And I'm not surprised most music students want to be told exactly which fingers to use when they play. As in all things they don't want to figure things out for themselves, they want to follow the popular leader. But in many cases the popular leader is a fool who leads them all astray. :/ This man here of course doesn't seem to be one of them though. :)

  • @MathieuPrevot
    @MathieuPrevot Год назад

    Well, no, heart has its reasons and it may or eventually should override reason, and in general is no less valuable than classical logic (and here I'm very careful not to claim that emotions are not decribable by logic). Toccate (BWV91x) are for example a great example of improvisations and we can feel that they are a lot lead by emotions, much more that Die kunst der fuge for instance.

  • @undinia
    @undinia Год назад +1

    Schiff is wonderful. He’s articulate, knowledgable and offers far more than is asked for….thank goodness. It’s clear the interviewer is out of his depth. Good interviews are conversations but these questions are just bland, no bouncing of ideas or development of themes.

  • @C.Hawkshaw
    @C.Hawkshaw Месяц назад

    What l like about Bach is his music is always flirting with the limbic system but he never lets it take over; he always has the PFC in control.

  • @TheMuston
    @TheMuston Год назад

    15:55 To state it differently, there is maybe no God for the universe, but for sure there is one for Music, his name is Bach, and all do believe and belong to his Church.

  • @sibionic
    @sibionic 2 года назад

    Is there *any* evidence Bach knew Rameau and Couperin's music?

    • @andrewsappel
      @andrewsappel 2 года назад

      Yes. He wrote out Les Bergeries for Anna Magdelana in her notebook. But Bach's familiarity with French keyboard music was from the previous generation...Marchand, Le Roux, d'Anglebert. There is reason to believe that Bach did not like Rameau's harmonic and structural concepts.

    • @sibionic
      @sibionic 2 года назад

      @@andrewsappel That's fascinating, thank you. What leads you to think Bach didn't like Rameau's harmonic structural concepts? (I am guessing you mean Rameau's Treatise on Harmony rather than his actual music scores?)

    • @andrewsappel
      @andrewsappel 2 года назад

      I have a memory of CPE Bach or someone saying that Bach was unpleased with Rameau's ideas but I would have to get to my books to be credible. That said...comparing the D major partita's allemande and Rameau's A minor allemande from 1724? they are similarly sensuous, extended...I think they would like each other...

    • @Renshen1957
      @Renshen1957 2 года назад +1

      @@andrewsappel C P E Bach’s comments to Rameau, had to do with his theory of Harmony vs Figured Bass.

  • @scrunchymacscruff1244
    @scrunchymacscruff1244 2 года назад

    Rachmaninov ripped Partita for unaccompanied violin to piano. Glad he did!

  • @chester6343
    @chester6343 2 месяца назад

    2:09 rightly so because it wasnt composed by bach

  • @andrestruus5475
    @andrestruus5475 8 дней назад

    He is Bach's reincarnation!

  • @roddykennedy9476
    @roddykennedy9476 9 месяцев назад

    Schiff tells us here that the clavichord “has plucked strings”….oh dear 🫤

  • @felixnauta
    @felixnauta 2 года назад

    No entiendo porque hablan tanto de interpretar a Bach al piano, si ese instrumento no existía en la época de Bach.

  • @ALoonwolf
    @ALoonwolf Год назад

    Like the sustain pedal on modern pianos it seems that this constant use of heavy vibrato on bowed instruments is a modern invention. I am a beginner viola player and I have no desire to learn to use it. I would rather concentrate on making the notes sound good just as they are.

  • @elsondeo
    @elsondeo 2 года назад +2

    One of USA's top classical "DJ"s comes to a Bach discussion not knowing know what a clavichord is. He should have traded seats with an informed audience member at that point.

  • @riverstun
    @riverstun 11 месяцев назад

    Andras. Play the Art of Fugue. If you play it, the audience will come.

  • @jalapablocrypto
    @jalapablocrypto 8 месяцев назад

    How can you interview a great Bach pianist like Schiff and not have knowledge about clavichords? This was a missed opportunity to really probe Schiff's erudition of Bach.

  • @margix1172
    @margix1172 2 года назад +2

    Schiff is Bach reincarnated even aesthetically

  • @neo5982
    @neo5982 5 месяцев назад

    対位法の曲例が少ない 難しいんだな、弾くのが

  • @dreamsdreams9493
    @dreamsdreams9493 2 года назад +1

    In my opinion, the greatest Bach piano champion has to be Maestro Keith Jarrett.

  • @man0sticks
    @man0sticks 2 года назад +1

    Mr. Spurgeon’s habit of asking the same question two or three times, paraphrasing himself, suggesting possible answers, putting words into the mouth of the person being interviewed,is annoying.