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Daniel Fahimi
Canada
Приєднався 26 січ 2017
Welcome to my UA-cam channel! I'm an aspiring pianist/composer, sharing original compositions, piano performances, and music analysis. Experience captivating melodies and emotive compositions that resonate with the heart. Enjoy mesmerizing piano performances, from classical masterpieces to contemporary pieces, infused with unique interpretations. Gain insights through in-depth music analysis, unraveling the intricate elements of remarkable compositions. Join me on this enchanting musical journey, exploring the boundless beauty of music. Subscribe for transformative moments of tranquility and inspiration as we embark on this musical voyage together!
ISRAEL - John Carisi (First Jazz Piece)
It's been a long time! Time for more piano performances. I bring to you my first Jazz piece ever! That's right, I've gotten into Jazz!
Переглядів: 80
Відео
Orchestral Minuet in C Minor (original composition)
Переглядів 4904 місяці тому
Thank you to David Lilly for the rendition of the minuet! Also, I've added in a trio in the middle. The minuet and trio have have an awkward transition that feels halfheartedly put together with duct tape. This is because they were separate recordings. But I did my best.
Complete Piano Trio
Переглядів 1028 місяців тому
This is the completed version of my Piano Trio. I hope you enjoy! :)
My Piano Trio 3rd Movement (Nocturne)
Переглядів 498 місяців тому
This is the slow movement of the piano trio. It is written in ternary form. I think did a nice job here! What do you think?
My Piano Trio 1st Movement
Переглядів 678 місяців тому
This is the first movement of my Piano Trio. I think I did a good job. It needs some revision though. The slow movement remains to be completed.
Finale to my Piano Trio (Complete)
Переглядів 748 місяців тому
This is now the second movement of this work I've completed. The work is supposed to have four movements, and the tarantella scherzo is supposed to be the second movement. This is supposed to be the last. 0:00 Theme 0:38 Var. 1 1:14 Var. 2 1:40 Var. 3 2:00 Var. 4 2:19 Var. 5 2:39 Var. 6 3:03 Var. 7 4:17 Var. 8
My Piano Trio Scherzo (Tarantella)
Переглядів 668 місяців тому
This is a Tarantella, composed for the scherzo second movement. A tarantella is 6/8 lively Neapolitan dance. Beethoven's Scherzi are usually like minuets. I wanted to base mine off something more exotic.
Moonlight Sonata - 2nd Movement (Scherzo)
Переглядів 639 місяців тому
This is my performance of the second movement of the Moonlight Sonata. Sorry for the bad camera angle. I was too lazy to do it the other way.
Moonlight Sonata (First Movement)
Переглядів 779 місяців тому
This is my performance of Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata, first movement. The two other movements are coming soon.
Robert Levin Plays Mozart's Lost Allegro in G Minor
Переглядів 22310 місяців тому
Mozart's lost gem, played by Robert Levin
New Music Sketches
Переглядів 5410 місяців тому
Here are my new sketches. My priorities right now, is to finish the piano trio and the piano sonata.
First On-Stage Performance (Chopin's Revolutionary Etude)
Переглядів 13311 місяців тому
This was at my school winter talent show, with my performance being the opening act.
Tarantella in Eb Major (Original Composition)
Переглядів 147Рік тому
Tarantella in Eb Major (Original Composition)
Completing What Richard Atkinson Failed to Complete
Переглядів 374Рік тому
On June 22, 2016, Richard Atkinson released a video called ‘3 Hilarious Examples of Rhythmic Ingenuity in Lesser-known Haydn Symphonies”. Whenever Richard Atkinson makes a video discussing examples of compositional proficiency in Haydn, he almost always pairs it with examples from Mozart. This video strangely seems to be an exception, completely disregarding Mozart’s inventiveness. Witnessing t...
My Performance of Mozart's Sonata No. 14 in C Minor K. 457 (Walter Fortepiano)
Переглядів 441Рік тому
My Performance of Mozart's Sonata No. 14 in C Minor K. 457 (Walter Fortepiano)
My Performance of Mozart's Fantasia in D Minor K. 397 (Walter Fortepiano)
Переглядів 324Рік тому
My Performance of Mozart's Fantasia in D Minor K. 397 (Walter Fortepiano)
My Performance and Analysis of Bach WTC I - Prelude and Fugue No. 2 in C Minor (Clavichord)
Переглядів 200Рік тому
My Performance and Analysis of Bach WTC I - Prelude and Fugue No. 2 in C Minor (Clavichord)
My Performance and Analysis of Bach WTC I - Prelude and Fugue No. 1 in C Major (Harpsichord)
Переглядів 221Рік тому
My Performance and Analysis of Bach WTC I - Prelude and Fugue No. 1 in C Major (Harpsichord)
ASTOUNDING Fugal Improvisation by Robert Levin
Переглядів 845Рік тому
ASTOUNDING Fugal Improvisation by Robert Levin
Mozart's Fantasia in D Minor K. 397 (Robert Levin)
Переглядів 307Рік тому
Mozart's Fantasia in D Minor K. 397 (Robert Levin)
Including going fast, improvising is excellent. what a wonderful performance definitely best
Barenboim is the best pianist ever
Robert Levin true genius of fortepiano. His Mozart is stunningly beautiful!
Your understanding of harmony and intervals is very good. Also no mistakes. So hats off🎉🎉.
Genius piano soloist. An artist of high calibre!
Second movement is full of pathos, and folks have galls to call him facile.
I'm most curious about what Mozart does in 1:23-1:24 sounds like a break in rhythm.
Beatuiful.. I think it’s called hemiola
Mozart's prophetic lyrical style. No one developed his legacy.
I love Mozart. Some of his childhood works like Thamos King of egypt, piano sonata no 2 show that he already developed a mature style. The harmonies and chromaticisms in Kv 138 looks 200 years into the future. These are the teenage works. That time he just wrote what he felt.
Once you get Mozart's emotion aside from the sensuous intellectual edge, it becomes all the more glorious.
Sorry, this is not even close to Richter's interpretation. Barenboim is missing the "big picture." In fact, I find this performance boring--really dull--partly because of the slow tempo but also the lack of sparkle.
Then don't listen to it. lol
@@DanielFahimi I'll take your advice. Once was enough.
neither theory is right
I'm rather puzzled by this sonata. I haven't over the years followed Mozart's music closely, as he is not one of my very favourite composers - but this sonata seems new to me, appears to be a new addition to the canon of Mozart sonatas. When I was a boy, I had a Schirmer edition of 19 sonatas by Mozart which I naturally took to be the canon of Mozart sonatas, similar to the two volumes I had of the Beethoven 32 sonatas, and it never occurred to me that the situation with Mozart's sonatas might turn out not to be so fixed as it was with Beethoven's sonatas. For a start, I later learned that there was more than one ordering of Mozart's sonatas, and the ordering in my edition (which sonata was no. 1, which no. 2, and so on) appeared to be less standard. Next, I learned that the sonata no. 19 in my volume was not by Mozart at all, but probably by August Eberhard Müller. (I should have been suspicious of the sonata. It was the only one which had four movements, and its last movement modulates to distant keys - long enough to change key signatures a few times - in a way that Mozart seemingly never does in any of the other sonatas.) And I think another sonata disappeared from what I believed to be the canon, although I don't quite remember why - I think it was along the lines that it was discovered to have simply been cobbled together by someone from various other works Mozart had written, not for piano, and arranged into a piano sonata. Now I come upon this Sonata no. 17, and it is not familiar to me, and I am wondering where it has come from. And since the number of sonatas is still 18 (after the sonata by Müller was dropped), surely that must mean that another sonata has also been dropped from the canon. Which one? As I mentioned, it seemed when I was much younger that there were (at least) two different orderings of the sonatas. Is this still the case, or is there just one ordering of the sonatas that is accepted today? If anyone familiar with the history of Mozart's piano sonatas could please explain this to me, I would be glad. But overall, it seems to be much less clear what Mozart did and didn't write than it is for Beethoven, with whom I can think of only one or two small examples of works possibly by him, but it's not certain.
The piece was played so well by Robert Levin, why the hell does it get 400 views only?
This reminds me of some ancient Chinese literature's description of music
@@Canufindnow Can you elaborate on the that Chinese writing?
@@DanielFahimi ancient Chinese music was kind of special, it was mostly single instrument, even single voice, you know? melodies were like a line, no parts involved. there were many literature pieces about music tho, saying the music was like “high mountain and flowing water”(Lie Zi), or “quarrel and whispering”(poem by Li Bai about pipa music). I just wanted to say the fantasia was relatively simple, yet full of changes and detail.
Sublime
1- 00:08 2 - I - 5:37; II - 7:01 3 - 9:31
You're in good hands with this guy
Cool.
Is it an error in the original recording or something that makes the 3rd movement sound like the first note is cut off a little?
No, it's just due to my editing tools. Sometimes glitches happen.
Genius.
Now THAT is genius!
Possibly the worst performance I have ever heard
9:53 loved this fughetta. I will play this!
Quite interesting, I like the orchestration here.
Yeah, I think I did a good job on that front.
Really well done! I thought the orchestration was super interesting and I liked how you employed each of the instruments. I though this was a very well put together work.
Thanks dude!
Wow! It's insane how much more views this video got than any of previous ones!
Whose great painting is that, perhaps a Turner orWinslow
I just looked up paintings of seas, and picked this one because I thought this evoke the exact feeling I was going for. So I don't know who. I have to check again.
Marvelous mastery! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️🎹
Get a proper piano. With a digital piano you will develop wrong touch by practicing this technical piece. More harm than good.
¡Muchas gracias, Maestro Barenboim!
Yeah, and Chopin had a broken metronome, Czerny had a broken metronome, Liszt had a broken metronome, Brahms had a broken metronome, Schumann had a broken metronome, Schubert had a broken metronome, Moscheles had a broken metronome, etc. Doesn't there come a point where waggling out the broken metronome excuse just becomes ridiculous?
Double beat advocates = retarded. The broken metronome theory isn't a point used by many people in support of single beat (it's not well supported by evidence - Beethoven's own metronome was actually shown to be accurate). Just go listen to recordings made in the early 1900s. NOBODY plays at half the tempo of today's standards - bear in mind musicians of that time had direct relations to Chopin, Brahms, Liszt etc. For example, listen to Frederic Lamond (a pupil of Liszt) playing Liszt. It is a well known phenomenon that composers often envision their pieces a lot faster than others, as there is are no limitations of the performer when it is conceived in the mind.
Wenn das Klavier nicht so unglaublich scheppern würde wäre es eine tolle Aufnahme. Schade.
Really great work!
Thank you! :)
Just out of curiosity, which movement did you feel was the strongest?
@@DanielFahimihmm probably the third and finale for me
nice work :)
Listening to this I have felt it... the touch of a great composer
Thank you bro! :)
@@DanielFahimi I mean it more than any other comment I have left on your channel. You have made something great
we eatin' good tonight!
0:00 1. Allegro 6:37 2. Andante 13:12 3. Allegro
I tought this is a joke, then I realised its a channel I follow, good job man!
Whose interpretation of this piece do you like best?
I haven't listened to that many, but I like Barenboim's.
W
Great job on this! Will you record the other movements?
Yes! All three!
i’m itching for another finished fahimi composition 😭
The Presto is great
Of the piano trio, piano sonata, or the clarinet sonata?
@@DanielFahimi the Trio
1:53 wtf
I'm just sitting here thinking, it doesn't hurt if we wrote the 2nd and the 3rd movement for this work, beside completing the 1st movement like Prof. Levin did.
It would hurt because we are adding movements that have nothing to do with Mozart.
Was this movement also on the Complete Mozart Sonatas CD (with Levin's completion)?
I forgot he played his own completion on his album lol. This was from the Cambridge lecture, but yes, Levin did do this one too.
0:10 What