Maestro Horowitz and his wife Wanda were very kind to me when i came to NYC as a young French horn player. Vlodya had tried playing the horn in his youth, but decided on piano (thank God!) and his wife Wanda was Toscanini's daughter & very familiar w/all our problems and needs. Oh well, there is much more to say---he was the greatest pianist known to me, and the kindest of human beings. RIP, maestro ~
I can't put this into words, the way I feel about Horowitz near his end.... I truly believe he was aware that the end of his life was approaching and his music at this stage was full of intimacy, serenity, and peace. We are overwhelmed with these emotions. And if you dare give yourself over, there will be tears.
I've watched too many animes since a child. Dubs were not my forte, instead subtitles were the best option ever to have in watching videos with foreign language
I must say: Horowitz is not only a pianist. He is an architect of many, many monumental musical adventures to the listeners. Nowadays, most of the listeners mostly look for virtuosity, flashy showmanship and crazy passages. They get bored when they listen to later works of Liszt, Beethoven, or even Schubert. It is very unfortunate, but that is the reality today. That's why when you listen to Horowitz, listening to LangLang just doesn't click with you - at least for me personally. I miss Horowitz very much. There's a reason why we constantly return back to these recordings of older legendary pianists from the 20th century: the honesty, humbleness, and musical craftsmanship which many of today's generation will never understand.
My all time favourite piano players are Horowitz, Argerich and Rubinstein. When Rubinstein plays Chopin my Heart explodes of love. In Martha’s, given that is a God level technical player, rigorous in terms of abilities, you can feel what being a woman can give to a great script in terms of sensibility. When you hear Horowitz... you simply hear what emotions, beauty and soul is All about. You see how life, even if it’s tough, is, and remains, wonderful.
And then there are certain artists who nail it with certain composers. I'm thinking for example of de Larrocha who evokes, IMHO, the very best from Albéniz.
of course you see it always what a sweet, gentle soul Vladimir is with his childlike smiles and expressions - he can play so purely because he is such a pure soul himself
I think he was protected from many things by his wife. He seems childlike. As if his innocence was protected. Or maybe it's just genius. The few I have known were fascinating when talking about their field, but when it came time to come in out of the rain, or peel a banana, they needed help!
His triple pianissimo phrases during the Chopin piece are _unbelievable!!!!_ You can just barely hear the notes, but at the same time, the notes are absolutely clear....how did he DO that, lol???
Sometimes you think he is searching for something, the next moment you realize, this is perfection. He understands every phrase better than anybody else.
I love his childlike nodding to the audience after each piece- before the sound has even ceased-, as if to say ‘I am just a vessel, and my transmission of this beauty from another world to you is now done’.
The best pianist ever, because he always felt what he played was for us all and to memory all the greatest that have passed. Feeling...love you big man!
it's like when your grandfather told you fairy tales. my soul lost in memory, floating in the enchanted forest or perhaps among the stars. pure fluctuation. Thank you Master.
Back in the 70's my pano instructor was known to say that Horowitz played from a composers point of view, but that the composer was always Horowitz. He takes enormous liberties, but his performance is always nonetheless enchanting. I love the scenes of the Soviet audience (This was 1986) - they are so engaged, leaning forward, as if not to miss a note.
It's called singing the song and making it your own... It's a damn shame more people don't know how to do that today. Instead, they play like dumb little computers. Who cares to hear a dumb little computer play a piano? I don't. The instrument is already mechanical enough. Go bloviate somewhere else.
When Horowitz is playing no comments from other pianists are needed. We know Martha admired Horowitz and was seeking lessons from him in New York. Unfortunately it never happened but I can imagine those two playing octaves for each other.
According to his biographer Glenn Plaskin, Horowitz didn't want to teach women and Asians in the 1950s and 1960s. He was old school misogynistic and racist.
As for Reverie, he came “home” to Moscow for the first time in I think more than 50 years. He is at the end of his life and plays a piece that has special meaning for these people since the end of World War Ii. Many of the people in the concert hall, like the older gentleman who is crying, still remember World War II and those who they have lost. And that’s the memory this piece evokes for everyone in the hall who is old enough to remember. And he plays it with absolute freedom, the memory and daydreaming it is supposed to be.
I love how you have him playing Liszt, Scriabin and Rachmaninoff and there's regular commentary over the playing, but you don't need to have any comments about him playing the Schumann because you can just see what his playing of this piece does to people, and then you realise that it doesn't matter what anyone says, the playing there speaks for itself and it's stunning.
Yeah... 10:05 was shattering. Here they featured one of the greatest moments of Horowitz' career - maybe life - when he had a chance to perform "Traumerei" from Schumann's "Scenes from Childhood" there in Moscow. The piece was played through its entirety, with soft video cuts to people who were weeping. They show the older gentleman, maybe a Soviet statesman; head leaned back, listening, eyes closed and a tear falling down his cheek. SUDDENLY there's some guy YACKING about how Horowitz knew how to put 'tension' in his pianissimo passages. THUD Why didn't the guy just tell us how he rebuilt his carburetor that afternoon?
Thanks a lot for sharing this jewel ! It is wonderful seeing a big piano monster expressing her opinion about another big piano monster. Maestro Horowitz and Maestro Argerich are ( and always be ) two of the greatest pianist in the whole world. I love both.
A perfect example of why we listen to great artists playing and not speaking, the inanity of the comments is spectacular, I heard Horovitz many times live and his skill was the strength of his melodic line over the harmony, and his rubato to tell the story and milk the emotional context. I would add he had unique instruments adapted for his playing, they were loud, extremely loud, dominating everything, not to mention his choice of repertoire. Whilst he always denied it, he had a music studio with several pianos in east Manhatten and would go everyday, like Lizst I suspected he practised 10 hours a day, he worked so hard and never took a day off, as he famously said, "If I take a day off, I notice it, if I take two days off, my wife notices it, and is I take three days off the world notices it".
Martha often said "I don't know or I don't know why", she gives me a feeling that she's the type of person that has a lot going through her mind but she doesn't really say it out. (I probably sound very weird and "cringy")
Sublime! Horowitz came from a heartbreaking past, hence why he had so much to say from the bottom of his heart. I first heard his Concert in Moscow (1986) in 1991, and I still marvel at his sensitive pianism and ineffable music...
I have a recording of Horowitz from 1941 with Sir John Barbirolli conducting playing the Rach 3 and Tchaikovsky 1st....just unbelievable....it's easy to see why Martha Argerich reveres him so much....
zhao chenxi the Tchaikovsky Horowitz with George Szell is mind blowing,,,the best,,,it was a 1st test for stereo broadcasts from Carnegie Hall,, They are all on youtube.
Say what you will, Horowitz was absolutely unique in every way. Today's pianists should emmerse themselves in Horowitz. One will never match Horowitz, but anything one can copy and use in their own way is a huge win.
I love at 14:40 and throughout this second movement of of the Mozart how Horowitz keeps the fifth finger of the right hand curled/tucked away until it's needed to play a note, then he rolls/curls the pinkie back toward the palm again. Most pianists keep the fifth finger arched but never rolled back toward the palm.
God, I love this. The greatest living pianist displaying such unremitting joy and admiration for one of the the greatest of his time, perhap the greatest of his time. I read that Horowitz had no hesitation in declaring Martha the greatest when she was taking the world by storm, and here we have Martha returning the accolade. Such humility warms the heart of we lesser mortals.
What can words convey? His brilliance is unmatched in soft passages, which are the hardest to pull off. What a personality and player! This must have been an emotional happening, with nostalgic regret all around. Mr. H handles it with the utmost dignity and aplomb. Thank you, Will. These are treasures for posterity. Horowitz is a memory. Martha won't be here forever, though still beyond amazing. Thanks for capturing these moments for us. Very important, gravitas.
Don't even need subtitles. Just watch the expressions of joy, appreciation, and wonderment of each commentator. The same feelings transcended many members of the audience, who were fortunate to have been present. Horwitz shares his own joy and admiration at the end for the opportunity to return to Moscow and play this beloved music.
I always felt that his piano play is talking to my deepest inner self. I don’t know how I explain this exquisite feeling… I’m relieved to see Argerich somehow appreciate the preciousness of his piano play, which I imagined slightest before I watch this.
0:35 --- love it. He just looks like relaxed as anything, as if chewing on bubblegum, and playing excellently. He doesn't need to move around and do unnecessary inefficient things. Just gets on with it, and focuses on getting the desired result. He's amazing.
I love Horowitz and Argerich both for different musical reasons and by far they are two of the greats of the 20th century however, though there were dozens and dozens of top tier titans of the instrument in the last 100 or so years from Busoni to Rachmaninov to Brendel to Serkin to Rubenstein to Richter, I must say that the pianist who, in my humble opinion communicated dutifully the integrity of the great composers' music of the piano most faithfully, with beauty, fluidity, line of melody, nuance, fire, tender subtlety and gentleness, dynamics, passion and with perhaps unsurpassed ease of technique, no matter the difficulty level of a composition was.....Arrau.
people back then really understood what classical music is and knew its true value! the girl with the binoculars looking at Horowitz reminded me of the movie : a song to remember
Trifonov is so beautiful listening to the Träumerei. Argerich and he are two giants, two generations following in Horowitz's line of a few great pianists. Nuance, imagination, surprises.
Will thank you for this very interesting post..I always wondered what great pianist think if each other...if one can make Martha get goosebumps from your playing .. nothing more need be said !
@Charles-Valentin Alkan music IS a language... Solfeggio perhaps... And it is like numbers... Man made notation and language rooted in mathematics... And we accord to the three cultures and their languages that have most importantly contributed to this tradition...
@Charles-Valentin Alkan you either understand math or you don't... Math exists in any language... Both in several notations and languages some may qualify as Western...
Interesting listening to a genius (Argerich) comment on and admire another genius (Horovitz). Wish there was more of the Scriabin Etude Op8No12 - that was truly one of the most extraordinary performances of this piece.
a pianist for pianists. difficult to appreciate. first time i heard him, i was struck how odd he sounded. didnt even sound like the piano. definitely the greatest i ever heard in concert.
I can tell you that Martha is very restrained her reactions here. Aware of the camera. I sat pretty close to her in a Chopin Competition in Warsaw, where she was a judge. She was much more animated in her head movements, very involved, dancing to the music. She was wonderful to watch.
saw him once om a cold Sunday afternoon in Chicago. What you dont get on recordings is the tremendous dynamic range, down to a whisper. You could have heard a pin drop. And it seemed he could crescendo a sustained chord, although I know that is not physically possible. The subtitles would have been nice, but I got the gist of it.
It was said that Horowitz always held concerts on sunday afternoons. Because people were well rested and could really enjoy the performance. Your comment made me smile. Thank you for sharing.
Classical musical symbolizes respect, union, freedom, tranquility. The message of Horowitz is a universal one, music unites us all together. I believe a souls like Horowitz come to this world to makes us remember of the incredible miracle that is to be alive.
Pianists have to realise Horowitz had his piano's prepared especially for him. He travelled with two grands of his own and never played anything else. Their keys had been weighed much lighter than on ordinary stage piano's. This was revealed to us when he arrived in Amsterdam for his concert in the grand Concert Hall. He did not touch any of the five grands prepared in the basement. He had brought his own. And when you touched the keys, they felt very different. It was one of his secrets. Perhaps he had found that the keys used to be much lighter in the early 1800's. I don't know.
The actual touch of a piano is highly important. Most pianos have poor regulation. They even come out of the factory unregulated or poorly regulated. Just a touch up will do, then they are put in a box and shipped. My new 7 foot Kawai ( 2008) was apparently quite dysfunctional ( the master piano technicians words) when he worked on my piano for 3 days under the warranty. So one can only imagine the state of some stage pianos.
To be able to control a piano with lightened keys like that takes a godly technique. It sounds "easy" and like its cheating, but it's far more difficult to pull off than it sounds.
This is a wonderful video... to hear Martha Argerich voice her feelings and opinion of Horowitz' other-worldy interpretations and performances of these classic compositions is so enriching. One of the greatest, giving her opinion of 'the' greatest. Horowitz' interpretation of "Traumerei" here in Moscow 8:26 is the most moving performance I've ever witnessed amongst all the videos of any field of art. To think he waited all those years and finally had the opportunity to give a recital in his homeland - and perform this 'Scene from Childhood' - should pierce the heart of anyone with a pulse.
When I was first listening to pianists as a young boy in Ohio, I rapidly undestood Horowitz as from another dimension. The 1966 Carnegie Hall record is still my favorite . I once had a friend who had met Horowitz in NY under rather, um, louche circumstances.
Hi Fredrick I’m surprise, I visited your RUclips web, and find treasures didn’t expect, but the surprise was not to find Sviatoslav Richter, this is one of the most intimate and deep concept in my humble believe Richter interpretation of Schubert sonatas are, an statement, a landmark Thank you for answering. Love to share beauty
I graduated music school in 2010, and for some reason, it was becoming very popular to criticize Horowitz to the point where most of the students were beginning to look down on his playing. The consensus was that he is not technically accurate enough nor stylistically sensitive enough except to romantic music. We are entering strange times, my fellow artists and Horwitz fans!
I tend to think there is technical execution of a given pianist, and then there is personal preference of the listener. While I certainly acknowledge the remarkable abilities in his reading of Mozart, for example, I personally prefer less pedal and a bit more brightness, rather the way Glenn Gould did it. On the other hand, I've never heard anyone play Scriabin and Schumann the way Horowitz did. Incredible. Overall his immense and yet relaxed control over every detail seems to deliver his trademark. I do think it's possible, by the way, to over-praise a person.
His playing of Mozart (with rubato, pedal etc) was the style of his generation, before more authentic performance practices. (ditto Scarlatti). Sounds heavy to modern ears, but taken on its own, very beautiful music making. His flat fingered style also looks strange but it all made him a unique artist. In Scriabin, and Rachmaninoff he is without equel
@@pneron2032 There was a movement (which has died down quite a bit) to perform music on instruments used whencit was composed. The modern piano didnt exist in Mozarts time. Harpsichords and early fortepianos were the keyboards of the day. They didnt have the sustain or soft pedals like modern pianos. So it was decided they shouldnt be used. Pitch was lower, tempi usually faster. Rubato was more a Romantic era concept. "Authentic instruments and performances practices". Those in the movement picked the word "authentic". I think "historic" would be more accurate. Its interesting to hear, but instruments, styles, and tastes have moved on.
@@jefolson6989 the nonsense you talk makes my brain hurt! Holy moly! You Sir, truly mastered the art of sounding full of knowledge without apparently knowing a thing about the things you talking about!
Martha is right "He is the best". Horowitz is not just the best pianist, he is also the best musician. In his playing you can hear everything in music, both technical and emotional, that every serious musician strives to achieve in their own playing. No matter what instrument you play, you won't find a greater role model than Horowitz.
I knew I wasn't wrong about him...I have listened to at least 30 of the top pianist of the last 100 years and there is something special and more appealing about Horowitz's playing that stands head and shoulders above the rest.I wish they would have commented on his 1968 Carnegie Hall Television concert or his Chopin Bm Sonata
What a wonderful opportunity to share the reaction of one great artist to the playing of another. And not surprisingly. Martha Argerich's comments are remarkably astute and so very heartfelt..."He's the best lover a piano can have. The best!" Indeed!
Schumann was Horowitz’s soulmate. He seemed to get his sheer power, agony, Love, complexity and genius better than anyone. This particular performance of this piece is lengendary. Stunning and incomprehensibly beautiful like his friend Robert Schumann.
Amazing beauty...
Deutsche Grammophon it’s real....
Lol hi DG
🙌
Agreee!!!
Wow
I love that Martha still performs (she turns 80 tomorrow, June 5th) incredible! Love them both, peace!
Fascinated by his fingers….like butterflies hovering over the keyboard 🎹
Maestro Horowitz and his wife Wanda were very kind to me when i came to NYC as a young French horn player. Vlodya had tried playing the horn in his youth, but decided on piano (thank God!) and his wife Wanda was Toscanini's daughter & very familiar w/all our problems and needs. Oh well, there is much more to say---he was the greatest pianist known to me, and the kindest of human beings. RIP, maestro ~
I can't put this into words, the way I feel about Horowitz near his end.... I truly believe he was aware that the end of his life was approaching and his music at this stage was full of intimacy, serenity, and peace. We are overwhelmed with these emotions. And if you dare give yourself over, there will be tears.
Also full of nostalgia, tinged with melancholy. The effect of this was especially notable in his Mozart.
Don't you hate it when there's a voiceover over a language that you actually speak
It sucks so bad hahaha
I had exactly the same thought my friend
When is a voiceover of two languages you speak and you end up not understanding either
@@ezequielstepanenko3229
Fam, I can literally understand both.
I've watched too many animes since a child. Dubs were not my forte, instead subtitles were the best option ever to have in watching videos with foreign language
My two most loved pianists Martha n Vladimir. Thank you from deepest part of my heart. It’s so wonderful to watch Martha’s responses to his playing.
I must say: Horowitz is not only a pianist. He is an architect of many, many monumental musical adventures to the listeners. Nowadays, most of the listeners mostly look for virtuosity, flashy showmanship and crazy passages. They get bored when they listen to later works of Liszt, Beethoven, or even Schubert. It is very unfortunate, but that is the reality today. That's why when you listen to Horowitz, listening to LangLang just doesn't click with you - at least for me personally.
I miss Horowitz very much. There's a reason why we constantly return back to these recordings of older legendary pianists from the 20th century: the honesty, humbleness, and musical craftsmanship which many of today's generation will never understand.
How emotional it is to see Mrs Argerich listen to Horowitz, just as we now listen to her, it touches the Soul.
He's the pianist's pianist.
“To play a wrong note is insignificant; to play without passion is inexcusable.”
-Beethoven
Horowitz doesn't do a wrong note.
@@matmm75006 He definitely does have wrong notes sometimes
Beethoven never said that.
Thank you for that invaluably insightful comment...and to realize it was made by Beethiovan himself...incredible!
This sounds like a quote from immortal Beloved
« Martha Argerich, Pianist. » Mmh quite an understatement.
yes, that was my feeling watching this 😂 . It should be something like "Martha Argerich | THE f*cking pianist"
Yea Martha needs no title. Should just be Martha Argerich.
My all time favourite piano players are Horowitz, Argerich and Rubinstein. When Rubinstein plays Chopin my Heart explodes of love. In Martha’s, given that is a God level technical player, rigorous in terms of abilities, you can feel what being a woman can give to a great script in terms of sensibility. When you hear Horowitz... you simply hear what emotions, beauty and soul is All about. You see how life, even if it’s tough, is, and remains, wonderful.
Glad you stated it as you did. Rubinstein is truly magical. Horowitz too.
I couldn’t agree with you more!!
I adore Argerich and Rubinstein. The greatest!
My all time favourite is Emil Gilels
And then there are certain artists who nail it with certain composers. I'm thinking for example of de Larrocha who evokes, IMHO, the very best from Albéniz.
of course you see it always what a sweet, gentle soul Vladimir is with his childlike smiles and expressions - he can play so purely because he is such a pure soul himself
you got it
I think he was protected from many things by his wife. He seems childlike. As if his innocence was protected. Or maybe it's just genius. The few I have known were fascinating when talking about their field, but when it came time to come in out of the rain, or peel a banana, they needed help!
His triple pianissimo phrases during the Chopin piece are _unbelievable!!!!_ You can just barely hear the notes, but at the same time, the notes are absolutely clear....how did he DO that, lol???
I noticed that too. Is this why he liked to perform on his own piano? (Because he had such mastery of it).
He had lighter keys on his own piano, that's one of the reasons he always played on it, but nevertheless it's awe inspiring.
Argerich herself can do that too, I don't know how it is even possible physically
Sometimes you think he is searching for something, the next moment you realize, this is perfection. He understands every phrase better than anybody else.
I had the exact same three steps of thought. Inspiring.
His playing is so beautiful, it makes me want to cry. 🥺
I just noticed that Horowitz has an ability that really makes you feel the slower passages because of his style of playing
I love his childlike nodding to the audience after each piece- before the sound has even ceased-, as if to say ‘I am just a vessel, and my transmission of this beauty from another world to you is now done’.
Touché. 👌🏻👍🏻🙌🏻
Yes I enjoy this. It’s his heartfelt appreciation and love of the audience and his way of saying thank you!
Horowitz is just wonderful to watch and listen to. It’s so great that we have RUclips to enable us to see these great artists!!
I have finished, thank you!
@@musical_lolu4811 yes. He was a very humble and appreciative man.
The best pianist ever, because he always felt what he played was for us all and to memory all the greatest that have passed. Feeling...love you big man!
it's like when your grandfather told you fairy tales. my soul lost in memory, floating in the enchanted forest or perhaps among the stars. pure fluctuation.
Thank you Master.
"He's the best lover a piano can have. The best!" 💗
More like a soul mate.
Perfect. Said by one of the most beautiful women (and powerful pianists).
Back in the 70's my pano instructor was known to say that Horowitz played from a composers point of view, but that the composer was always Horowitz. He takes enormous liberties, but his performance is always nonetheless enchanting. I love the scenes of the Soviet audience (This was 1986) - they are so engaged, leaning forward, as if not to miss a note.
It's called singing the song and making it your own...
It's a damn shame more people don't know how to do that today. Instead, they play like dumb little computers. Who cares to hear a dumb little computer play a piano? I don't. The instrument is already mechanical enough. Go bloviate somewhere else.
@@BestAmateurViolinist "The instrument is already mechanical enough". I agree fully. A very important point.
I met him briefly in the 1980s. He was a wonderful person, modest. A giant, a one of a kind, like Nilsson.
Like Nilsson? How can you compare these two? Both great artists indeed. But from very different worlds!
@@michaelsmith697 he is comparing them as human beings, not as artists, please sir.
Who is nilsson
@@michaelsmith697 i just did compare the two--that's how
@@michaelsmith697 Horowitz Schmorowitz.
When Horowitz is playing no comments from other pianists are needed. We know Martha admired Horowitz and was seeking lessons from him in New York. Unfortunately it never happened but I can imagine those two playing octaves for each other.
Hahaah😂😂!!!! Nailed it with the Octaves reference!!! They both play them extremely fast and with lots of power!!! Anyhow, nicely said sir!
Why didn't he teach her?
@@pneron2032 No contact between the two pianists. It was during a period Horowitz did not perform.
@@hansdekorver7365 that would be the perfect time to teach Martha!!!!!
According to his biographer Glenn Plaskin, Horowitz didn't want to teach women and Asians in the 1950s and 1960s. He was old school misogynistic and racist.
We're waiting for you Martha this season!
Wonderful video. I grew up listening to Horowitz and his album of Scriabin is a great treasure to me.
As for Reverie, he came “home” to Moscow for the first time in I think more than 50 years. He is at the end of his life and plays a piece that has special meaning for these people since the end of World War Ii. Many of the people in the concert hall, like the older gentleman who is crying, still remember World War II and those who they have lost. And that’s the memory this piece evokes for everyone in the hall who is old enough to remember. And he plays it with absolute freedom, the memory and daydreaming it is supposed to be.
I love how you have him playing Liszt, Scriabin and Rachmaninoff and there's regular commentary over the playing, but you don't need to have any comments about him playing the Schumann because you can just see what his playing of this piece does to people, and then you realise that it doesn't matter what anyone says, the playing there speaks for itself and it's stunning.
Probably the most maddening mix of audio voice-over pudding I've ever heard.
Yeah... 10:05 was shattering. Here they featured one of the greatest moments of Horowitz' career - maybe life - when he had a chance to perform "Traumerei" from Schumann's "Scenes from Childhood" there in Moscow. The piece was played through its entirety, with soft video cuts to people who were weeping. They show the older gentleman, maybe a Soviet statesman; head leaned back, listening, eyes closed and a tear falling down his cheek.
SUDDENLY there's some guy YACKING about how Horowitz knew how to put 'tension' in his pianissimo passages.
THUD
Why didn't the guy just tell us how he rebuilt his carburetor that afternoon?
Thanks a lot for sharing this jewel !
It is wonderful seeing a big piano monster expressing her opinion about another big piano monster.
Maestro Horowitz and Maestro Argerich are ( and always be ) two of the greatest pianist in the whole world. I love both.
I love Martha, a huge talent who is humble enough to enjoy another
Martha with her Monalisa smile! One of the greatest pianists! The best I like playing Rachmaninoff! Watch her playing the 3 concerts!
A perfect example of why we listen to great artists playing and not speaking, the inanity of the comments is spectacular, I heard Horovitz many times live and his skill was the strength of his melodic line over the harmony, and his rubato to tell the story and milk the emotional context. I would add he had unique instruments adapted for his playing, they were loud, extremely loud, dominating everything, not to mention his choice of repertoire. Whilst he always denied it, he had a music studio with several pianos in east Manhatten and would go everyday, like Lizst I suspected he practised 10 hours a day, he worked so hard and never took a day off, as he famously said, "If I take a day off, I notice it, if I take two days off, my wife notices it, and is I take three days off the world notices it".
Martha often said "I don't know or I don't know why", she gives me a feeling that she's the type of person that has a lot going through her mind but she doesn't really say it out. (I probably sound very weird and "cringy")
No you don’t :). I think she doesn’t know how to put her complicated thoughts and emotions into words
yeah, she's a "seeker" I think
She doesn't because she can't. It would take an Argerich or Horowitz of language to put it into words. But...it is possible!
@@rravvia she does
Through music
Merci beaucoup from Paris 👍👍👍👍👍👍.
These extraordinary musicians are part of the saving grace of humanity in terms of the music they produce..
Sublime! Horowitz came from a heartbreaking past, hence why he had so much to say from the bottom of his heart. I first heard his Concert in Moscow (1986) in 1991, and I still marvel at his sensitive pianism and ineffable music...
I have a recording of Horowitz from 1941 with Sir John Barbirolli conducting playing the Rach 3 and Tchaikovsky 1st....just unbelievable....it's easy to see why Martha Argerich reveres him so much....
Michael Corcoran where can we get our hands on such a thing? I would very much like to have a listen
zhao chenxi the Tchaikovsky Horowitz with George Szell is mind blowing,,,the best,,,it was a 1st test for stereo broadcasts from Carnegie Hall,,
They are all on youtube.
His range and control over the dynamics is incredible. His Mozart and Schumann are exquisite!
Say what you will, Horowitz was absolutely unique in every way. Today's pianists should emmerse themselves in Horowitz. One will never match Horowitz, but anything one can copy and use in their own way is a huge win.
absolutely
Immerse
Ok
Best reaction video so far
I love at 14:40 and throughout this second movement of of the Mozart how Horowitz keeps the fifth finger of the right hand curled/tucked away until it's needed to play a note, then he rolls/curls the pinkie back toward the palm again. Most pianists keep the fifth finger arched but never rolled back toward the palm.
Do you mean 4:40?
@@funnyfranz Sorry, Franzman! My error with the counter. It actually begins around 5:40.
God, I love this. The greatest living pianist displaying such unremitting joy and admiration for one of the the greatest of his time, perhap the greatest of his time. I read that Horowitz had no hesitation in declaring Martha the greatest when she was taking the world by storm, and here we have Martha returning the accolade. Such humility warms the heart of we lesser mortals.
What can words convey? His brilliance is unmatched in soft passages, which are the hardest to pull off. What a personality and player! This must have been an emotional happening, with nostalgic regret all around. Mr. H handles it with the utmost dignity and aplomb.
Thank you, Will. These are treasures for posterity. Horowitz is a memory. Martha won't be here forever, though still beyond amazing. Thanks for capturing these moments for us. Very important, gravitas.
Don't even need subtitles.
Just watch the expressions of joy, appreciation, and wonderment of each commentator. The same feelings transcended many members of the audience, who were fortunate to have been present. Horwitz shares his own joy and admiration at the end for the opportunity to return to Moscow and play this beloved music.
I love her so much! Mrs. Martha, I became to love your country you were born in and thank .
When Horowitz plays I can hear all those years of experience and the result is sublime.
I always felt that his piano play is talking to my deepest inner self. I don’t know how I explain this exquisite feeling…
I’m relieved to see Argerich somehow appreciate the preciousness of his piano play, which I imagined slightest before I watch this.
A lifetime of expression in one concert.
0:35 --- love it. He just looks like relaxed as anything, as if chewing on bubblegum, and playing excellently. He doesn't need to move around and do unnecessary inefficient things. Just gets on with it, and focuses on getting the desired result. He's amazing.
I love Horowitz and Argerich both for different musical reasons and by far they are two of the greats of the 20th century however, though there were dozens and dozens of top tier titans of the instrument in the last 100 or so years from Busoni to Rachmaninov to Brendel to Serkin to Rubenstein to Richter, I must say that the pianist who, in my humble opinion communicated dutifully the integrity of the great composers' music of the piano most faithfully, with beauty, fluidity, line of melody, nuance, fire, tender subtlety and gentleness, dynamics, passion and with perhaps unsurpassed ease of technique, no matter the difficulty level of a composition was.....Arrau.
Exquisite! He caresses those keys and draws out such tenderness and emotion. I’ve never heard such beautiful playing. Wow!
This a very nice documentary, thank you.
I get goosebumps when I hear Martha play, too 😌
Thank you for uploading this valuable video!
All my favorite pianists❤️
Thank you!!☺️🥰
This is hugely interesting. For the piano lover (or music buff), beyond words. Thank you very much!!!
people back then really understood what classical music is and knew its true value! the girl with the binoculars looking at Horowitz reminded me of the movie : a song to remember
I don't know why each time Martha smiles, I smile with her. I loved only her comments 😉.
C'est beau d'entendre Martha Argerich, immense pianiste, aussi modeste devant Horowitz.
Trifonov is so beautiful listening to the Träumerei. Argerich and he are two giants, two generations following in Horowitz's line of a few great pianists. Nuance, imagination, surprises.
I am fangirling over Martha Argerich "fangirling" over Horowitz. I love so much when people I admire lavish their praise over other people I admire!
I guess it makes your world whole. Affirms your views… huh?
Will thank you for this very interesting post..I always wondered what great pianist think if each other...if one can make Martha get goosebumps from your playing .. nothing more need be said !
My brain had to process three languages and it hurts...
The three languages of music are Italian, French and German!
@Charles-Valentin Alkan music IS a language... Solfeggio perhaps... And it is like numbers... Man made notation and language rooted in mathematics... And we accord to the three cultures and their languages that have most importantly contributed to this tradition...
@@JK-xz6mj and Russian
@Charles-Valentin Alkan you either understand math or you don't... Math exists in any language... Both in several notations and languages some may qualify as Western...
Wonderful dialogue between artists across generations
Interesting listening to a genius (Argerich) comment on and admire another genius (Horovitz). Wish there was more of the Scriabin Etude Op8No12 - that was truly one of the most extraordinary performances of this piece.
His playing remind me of the fluency and poetry of notes like Claudio Arrau. Two legends of a bygone era.
When you are in trouble facing the existence Horowitz gives you an answer. Eternal sens of life is inside him..
I am lossed for words to describe this man . Just lets say Horowitz is at the key board so a grand times is guaranteed from this very unassuming man.
I remember seeing clips of Horowitz giving this recital.
a pianist for pianists. difficult to appreciate. first time i heard him, i was struck how odd he sounded. didnt even sound like the piano. definitely the greatest i ever heard in concert.
I can tell you that Martha is very restrained her reactions here. Aware of the camera. I sat pretty close to her in a Chopin Competition in Warsaw, where she was a judge. She was much more animated in her head movements, very involved, dancing to the music. She was wonderful to watch.
saw him once om a cold Sunday afternoon in Chicago. What you dont get on recordings is the tremendous dynamic range, down to a whisper. You could have heard a pin drop. And it seemed he could crescendo a sustained chord, although I know that is not physically possible. The subtitles would have been nice, but I got the gist of it.
It was said that Horowitz always held concerts on sunday afternoons. Because people were well rested and could really enjoy the performance. Your comment made me smile. Thank you for sharing.
Classical musical symbolizes respect, union, freedom, tranquility. The message of Horowitz is a universal one, music unites us all together. I believe a souls like Horowitz come to this world to makes us remember of the incredible miracle that is to be alive.
Pianists have to realise Horowitz had his piano's prepared especially for him. He travelled with two grands of his own and never played anything else. Their keys had been weighed much lighter than on ordinary stage piano's. This was revealed to us when he arrived in Amsterdam for his concert in the grand Concert Hall. He did not touch any of the five grands prepared in the basement. He had brought his own. And when you touched the keys, they felt very different. It was one of his secrets. Perhaps he had found that the keys used to be much lighter in the early 1800's. I don't know.
The actual touch of a piano is highly important. Most pianos have poor regulation. They even come out of the factory unregulated or poorly regulated. Just a touch up will do, then they are put in a box and shipped. My new 7 foot Kawai ( 2008) was apparently quite dysfunctional ( the master piano technicians words) when he worked on my piano for 3 days under the warranty. So one can only imagine the state of some stage pianos.
Yea man he’s an unbelievable player he deserves the best piano, even if it is different
What a revelation to me!
To be able to control a piano with lightened keys like that takes a godly technique. It sounds "easy" and like its cheating, but it's far more difficult to pull off than it sounds.
Your argument is stupid. You're going astray if you think that's why Horowitz reached so deep into the hearts of the audience.
This is a wonderful video... to hear Martha Argerich voice her feelings and opinion of Horowitz' other-worldy interpretations and performances of these classic compositions is so enriching. One of the greatest, giving her opinion of 'the' greatest.
Horowitz' interpretation of "Traumerei" here in Moscow 8:26 is the most moving performance I've ever witnessed amongst all the videos of any field of art. To think he waited all those years and finally had the opportunity to give a recital in his homeland - and perform this 'Scene from Childhood' - should pierce the heart of anyone with a pulse.
Such a kind face... A beautiful emotional face... I love it like I love him!!
When I was first listening to pianists as a young boy in Ohio, I rapidly undestood Horowitz as from another dimension.
The 1966 Carnegie Hall record is still my favorite . I once had a friend who had met Horowitz in NY under rather, um, louche circumstances.
In a gay nightclub?
Flat fingers is the way to go! It takes the jab out of piano playing (Leon Fleisher).
Horowitz did not play the piano. He played a magical musical instrument no one else has ever touched.
Great to finally find a video of someone other rhan myself, who is allergic to Horowitz.
Hi Fredrick
I’m surprise, I visited your RUclips web, and find treasures didn’t expect, but the surprise was not to find Sviatoslav Richter, this is one of the most intimate and deep concept in my humble believe
Richter interpretation of Schubert sonatas are, an statement, a landmark
Thank you for answering. Love to share beauty
I graduated music school in 2010, and for some reason, it was becoming very popular to criticize Horowitz to the point where most of the students were beginning to look down on his playing. The consensus was that he is not technically accurate enough nor stylistically sensitive enough except to romantic music. We are entering strange times, my fellow artists and Horwitz fans!
I tend to think there is technical execution of a given pianist, and then there is personal preference of the listener. While I certainly acknowledge the remarkable abilities in his reading of Mozart, for example, I personally prefer less pedal and a bit more brightness, rather the way Glenn Gould did it. On the other hand, I've never heard anyone play Scriabin and Schumann the way Horowitz did. Incredible. Overall his immense and yet relaxed control over every detail seems to deliver his trademark.
I do think it's possible, by the way, to over-praise a person.
@@FrankenBosey I can't really disagree with anything you outlined!
Maestro- V. H. - ABSOLUTLY GREAT Performance!
His playing of Mozart (with rubato, pedal etc) was the style of his generation, before more authentic performance practices. (ditto Scarlatti). Sounds heavy to modern ears, but taken on its own, very beautiful music making. His flat fingered style also looks strange but it all made him a unique artist. In Scriabin, and Rachmaninoff he is without equel
When you say "authentic"....What do you mean?
@@pneron2032 There was a movement (which has died down quite a bit) to perform music on instruments used whencit was composed. The modern piano didnt exist in Mozarts time. Harpsichords and early fortepianos were the keyboards of the day. They didnt have the sustain or soft pedals like modern pianos. So it was decided they shouldnt be used. Pitch was lower, tempi usually faster. Rubato was more a Romantic era concept. "Authentic instruments and performances practices". Those in the movement picked the word "authentic". I think "historic" would be more accurate. Its interesting to hear, but instruments, styles, and tastes have moved on.
@@jefolson6989 Ah I see what you mean. Glenn Gould had a few things to say about that movement...Very interesting. Thanks.
I subscribe to the way of him interpreting Scriabin.
@@jefolson6989 the nonsense you talk makes my brain hurt! Holy moly! You Sir, truly mastered the art of sounding full of knowledge without apparently knowing a thing about the things you talking about!
Adoro a Martha Argerich !!!
She is so beautiful.
Martha is right "He is the best". Horowitz is not just the best pianist, he is also the best musician. In his playing you can hear everything in music, both technical and emotional, that every serious musician strives to achieve in their own playing. No matter what instrument you play, you won't find a greater role model than Horowitz.
I knew I wasn't wrong about him...I have listened to at least 30 of the top pianist of the last 100 years and there is something special and more appealing about Horowitz's playing that stands head and shoulders above the rest.I wish they would have commented on his 1968 Carnegie Hall Television concert or his Chopin Bm Sonata
Agree. I had the same thoughts about him through the years.
I prefer Arrau for many reasons.
8:27 私の1番好きなホロヴィッツの演奏。
初めて聞いた時、あまりの美しさに、涙がこぼれました。
彼は、それをハープを弾くように奏でる。
遠くから響いてくる美しい波紋の様です。
Que maravilla, sus frases son tan bellas, expresivas, melancolicas,🇦🇷
Even the audiences at the concert look amazing
Man that schumann brought me to tears.
Yes, that was amazingly expressive!
Magnificent! Wish he could have lived forever.
13:07 Horowitz's genius lies in the fingering, in the subtlety of the intensity
i don't care about no subtitles. All that matters is the beauty of Horowitz playing, always.
An audience with no smartphones between them and their full absorption in the performance. Like time travel indeed.
That's how it is nowadays too so
George deMan and no incessant coughs...
Big big fan of Horowitz ....can't explain my feelings better
Horowitz acaricia el piano como se acaricia a una persona amada.
So true Horatio!!!
What a wonderful opportunity to share the reaction of one great artist to the playing of another. And not surprisingly. Martha Argerich's comments are remarkably astute and so very heartfelt..."He's the best lover a piano can have. The best!" Indeed!
Martha had a huge crush on Volodya. Still has, it seems. We understand.
Naw, she had a crush on ME. But I told her I couldn't give up my time playing the 5-string banjo. She was shattered.
@@easygoing2479 hahaha
9:50 - that's me right now.
Same because I will never reach near his level.
@@EvaggeliaZach But you ARE at his level, because you hear and feel him completely.
@@pillettadoinswartsh4974 This is very motivational of you to say thanks.
Schumann was Horowitz’s soulmate. He seemed to get his sheer power, agony, Love, complexity and genius better than anyone. This particular performance of this piece is lengendary. Stunning and incomprehensibly beautiful like his friend Robert Schumann.
3:36 wow Beethoven was watching Horowitz play 😱😱