@@alexanderbayramov2626 the op 119 number 1 (i think, i played it a long long time ago) NEVERMIND, it's the 116 number 5, my favorite late brahms piece
Lettberg is an average Scriabin interpreter at best, IMO. The only exceptions are her recordings of late-Scriabin pieces, which she excels at. Check out Scriabin recordings by Richter, Horowitz and Sofronitsky.
No. 1 is amazing harmonic! He lingers on subdominant sounds and it becomes such a unique mood! Such a different kind of maestoso
Superb playing, so alive to scriabin's mysterious world.
No. 1 is heaven
yes omg
it just tells how beautiful simple (of course it's not simple on the inside) diatonic music can be
reminds me of brahms haha
@@AsrielKujo which piece btw?
@@alexanderbayramov2626 the op 119 number 1 (i think, i played it a long long time ago)
NEVERMIND, it's the 116 number 5, my favorite late brahms piece
@@AsrielKujoвсё это растёт из Шопена😁🤝
Wow incredible. I love the Chopin influence. My favorite is 6
No. 5 reminds me of a beautiful little waltz
well, a beautiful little waltz is exactly what it is, no wonder it reminds you of it ;)
No.6 definitely is the best of set
Nice username
his b minor works are always destructive , just like chopins (etude op 25 no 10) (scherzo n1)
Number 5 is litterally Forgotten Melodies by Medtner LMAO
Do you know which one specifically?
The subtlety and sense of refinement that you only get with Lettburg.
Lettberg is an average Scriabin interpreter at best, IMO. The only exceptions are her recordings of late-Scriabin pieces, which she excels at.
Check out Scriabin recordings by Richter, Horowitz and Sofronitsky.
Oh no, Opus 13!
This is too scary!
Сегодня, конечно, Всемирный День Хэллоуина😅, но что же, по-вашему, в них настолько СТРАШНОГО?)
No. 5 is 😍😍
The first one is bascially an eargasm
Preludes close to op.11? In scriabin's chopinesque style? Yes please
Scriabin, a poet...
No 3 has the melody in the treble?? Wrong.
oh no how scary