Ravel: Miroirs (Lortie, Bavouzet)

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  • Опубліковано 1 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 527

  • @aldoringo439
    @aldoringo439 2 роки тому +184

    the barque sur l'océan is probably one the most beautiful things I've ever heard. It's horrible to think that one day you'll never be able to hear it again.

    • @nealgold4927
      @nealgold4927 2 роки тому +26

      Oh but you will. It will remain in your soul forever.

    • @Wuozlinga
      @Wuozlinga 2 роки тому +8

      Yes barque and ondine are two of my favorite Ravel pieces as well, along with Prelude from tombue de couperin (French is hard). Recently I learned to love Noctuelles from this here, such wild and vivid imagery.

    • @steveegallo3384
      @steveegallo3384 Рік тому +1

      @aldoringo439 --- True....”They are not long, the weeping and the LAUGHTER, Love Desire HATE; I think they have no portion in us AFTER we reach The GATE; they are not long, the days of wine and ROSES; out of a misty dream our path emerges for a while, and then CLOSES....within a dream...." Cheers from Acapulco!

  • @HedrixGaming
    @HedrixGaming 4 роки тому +828

    I love it when ads play in the middle of a performance.

    • @delko000
      @delko000 4 роки тому +27

      AdBlocks

    • @n2g747
      @n2g747 4 роки тому +12

      Use uBlock Origin bro

    • @Andriale
      @Andriale 4 роки тому +54

      nobulle you can’t use adblocks on mobile and sorry if you guys are all pc master race but sometimes (most of the time) it’s just more convenient to play music on your phone than a massive desktop

    • @delko000
      @delko000 4 роки тому +8

      @@Andriale i know, i downloaded something equivalent on mobile but it never worked quite as well

    • @siremaiponpe
      @siremaiponpe 4 роки тому +8

      Guys: Brave browser

  • @Ivan_1791
    @Ivan_1791 5 років тому +277

    Everytime I listen to Ravel I notice more and more how complex hidden harmonies are.

    • @nicolajpiemonte8907
      @nicolajpiemonte8907 4 роки тому +38

      I'm always amazed at how he utilises little elements each time and make sound them so unique from each other, and how he develops them, Ravel was a genius of form, harmony and writing.

    • @nicb4589
      @nicb4589 4 роки тому +13

      Nicolaj Piemonte An extraordinary amount of craft goes into each phrase in his music. In other words, he was a little short of being plain OCD. Out of the popular great composers, Beethoven was probably the last person before Ravel to craft music so meticulously...

    • @nicolajpiemonte8907
      @nicolajpiemonte8907 4 роки тому +9

      @@nicb4589 You are right! He defined himself like a Swedish Clock! Precise and perfecr to work properly. This meticolous working, and his great fantasy, really made him one of the greatest voices of Music history.

    • @reizencraezua6454
      @reizencraezua6454 4 роки тому

      What element/s he used?

    • @pleasecontactme4274
      @pleasecontactme4274 4 роки тому

      atonal composers...

  • @ronwalker4849
    @ronwalker4849 7 років тому +366

    One of the BEST recordings of anything I have ever heard. Aftter attending 3 music accademies of great note, this pianist playing Ravel is sublime, supurb. It has been an experience worthy of all spiritual and artistic merit. I first heard it when I was about 70 years old, and it is still growing on me. It is almost like a religious devotion to beauty and spirituality. Even in our old age, we can find joys, and this has been one of the best. rw

    • @samwst56
      @samwst56 7 років тому +53

      Yew ain't old till yer cold, Ron.

    • @asourpo1yphony
      @asourpo1yphony 5 років тому +20

      I first heard this piece when my family visited me in the nursing home for my 92nd birthday and showed me my grandson's beautiful performance of it for his music college. Merci!

    • @asourpo1yphony
      @asourpo1yphony 5 років тому +6

      🙃

    • @annulrsolformrkelse4023
      @annulrsolformrkelse4023 5 років тому +7

      Which recording do you mean?

    • @leesiheon8013
      @leesiheon8013 5 років тому +6

      Which one?

  • @angelob.1089
    @angelob.1089 4 роки тому +795

    You know you're massively screwed when these impressionists write pp.

    • @evslol1153
      @evslol1153 4 роки тому +100

      fr, and that pppp at the end of une barque....

    • @kirklurkpu4470
      @kirklurkpu4470 4 роки тому +55

      it's hard to execute, because pressing the key itself needs to sacrifice some volume to able to produce a ringing sound. Very pp

    • @alejandrom.4680
      @alejandrom.4680 4 роки тому +10

      @@reidmartin6209 Nah fam, he didn't. But yeah, complicated to interpret.

    • @everythingtheone6110
      @everythingtheone6110 3 роки тому +1

      @@reidmartin6209 u wanna see some crazy dynamic markings? go check out de la nuit by sciarrino or somink its nuts

    • @vadim4252
      @vadim4252 3 роки тому +6

      @@everythingtheone6110 Morton Feldman has probably the most stupid dynamics.

  • @BlindObedienceBrutal
    @BlindObedienceBrutal 3 роки тому +22

    I cannot decide what is more astonishing: that anyone could have written this piece or that anyone could have played it.
    It really borders on the supernatural.

  • @StephenGottPianist
    @StephenGottPianist 4 роки тому +36

    These pieces are so hauntingly poetic. Not given an outing as often as Gaspard but still as technically difficult non the less. Both pianists interpret the work magnificently.

    • @alexs1504
      @alexs1504 Рік тому

      Ravel is pure poetry, a mix of Edgar Allan Poe and Mallarmé

  • @oceancheung6139
    @oceancheung6139 6 років тому +243

    Ravel was a genius😭

    • @darrylschultz6479
      @darrylschultz6479 3 роки тому

      😝 or 🥳 when Genius.😭 if moron.

    • @dickjoe
      @dickjoe 3 роки тому +2

      still is

    • @darrylschultz6479
      @darrylschultz6479 3 роки тому +13

      @@dickjoe Yes, but these days it's just underground music from the Rav-that only his fellow corpses get to enjoy!

    • @segmentsAndCurves
      @segmentsAndCurves 3 роки тому +2

      @@darrylschultz6479 Nah, that's stupid.

    • @darrylschultz6479
      @darrylschultz6479 3 роки тому +10

      @@segmentsAndCurves Okay, Ravel "still is"(a genius). Can't wait for his next major work to appear out of the ground in the not-too-distant future.🤟😂"Was" was correct.

  • @christianvennemann9008
    @christianvennemann9008 2 роки тому +49

    37:02 Absolutely ethereal. I don't think I've ever heard the beginning of this section played with such soft, delicate, masterfully drawn-out fingerwork. And the 1901 piano makes it sound even better!

  • @Xyriak
    @Xyriak Рік тому +3

    The evocations that Ravel pulls off with these pieces are outstanding.

  • @coulton-davisjazz2872
    @coulton-davisjazz2872 5 років тому +27

    Ravel is an inspiration to us lowly jazz pianists. Thanks for helping me learn about this amazing piece and brilliant performances.

    • @MrCinemuso
      @MrCinemuso 4 роки тому +37

      Nothing lowly about a pianist who can improvise well, play with great time with/against other players, while drawing on a harmonic language that includes Ravel!

    • @nohaylamujer
      @nohaylamujer 4 роки тому +13

      Ravel was very fond of jazz!

    • @coulton-davisjazz2872
      @coulton-davisjazz2872 4 роки тому +14

      @@MrCinemuso Absolutely. Ravel's harmonic ideas are a rich vein to mine. I hear him in Herbie Hancock's best piano improvisations, going back to when he was with Miles, who also loved Ravel.

    • @MrCinemuso
      @MrCinemuso 4 роки тому +9

      @@coulton-davisjazz2872 Bill Evans too - Ravel had a big impact on him which you can hear.

    • @coulton-davisjazz2872
      @coulton-davisjazz2872 4 роки тому +8

      @@MrCinemuso Yes, and Evans influenced everyone.

  • @mrbrianmccarthy
    @mrbrianmccarthy 2 роки тому +7

    Simply marvelous music. Ravel and debussy are two of my favorites. i always find beauty and new things to hear in their music. Both of these pianists did a nice job on these pieces as well.

  • @lucasa4301
    @lucasa4301 7 років тому +289

    An amazing, underrated piece. Ravel often gets accused of adopting other composer's styles and ideas. Obviously there's some influence from Debussy and Liszt, but this is one of his most original works when you consider that Debussy had only written "Pour le Piano", "Estampes" and Book I of "Images" (from the same year, 1906). Ravel goes above and beyond in his effects for the piano, with an intricacy and imagination that Debussy wouldn't achieve for another 6-7 years in his Preludes and Etudes.

    • @PaulVinonaama
      @PaulVinonaama 7 років тому +17

      L'isle joyeuse also (1904, I think).

    • @lucasa4301
      @lucasa4301 7 років тому +12

      True, I wasn't considering the smaller pieces. Even in that though there's a certain amount of repetition and procedural layering at the expense of a more colorful sound. Ravel frees things up here.

    • @johannsebastianbach3411
      @johannsebastianbach3411 7 років тому +22

      Actually, It was Debussy who often got accused of "adopting" other composer's ideas. When the Sites Auriculaires was being performed, Debussy was the one to "borrow" the manuscripts from Ravel and then used some ideas in the Estampes...

    • @lucasa4301
      @lucasa4301 7 років тому +15

      I guess it's trite by now, but I feel like this falls categorically in the 'good composers borrow, great composers steal' mantra. Debussy's music is basically a collection of other people's ideas - non-Western scales and modes mixed with harmonies taken from Faure and Wagner. But Debussy worked through these stolen items to develop a highly personal idiom, while Ravel was adopting new styles to the end of his life. Coming in a long chain of solo piano works, Miroirs feels like a rare instance of Ravel working through his influences and shedding the more superficial attraction of pieces like La Valse, Bolero, Violin Sonata, String Quartet, etc.

    • @organfreak
      @organfreak 7 років тому +46

      To me there is nothing "superficial" about the String Quartet. Don't forget, during the controversy about it, Debussy wrote to Ravel, "Don't change a single note of your wonderful quartet."

  • @btceth4714
    @btceth4714 2 роки тому +16

    I love Ravel. Very difficult to play I must say, BUT once you get the hang of how he wrote-- wasn't too bad.... very unique composer. He wrote "water" in music form. A total badass. I would have loved to hear him play in person...

    • @MiScusi69
      @MiScusi69 4 місяці тому

      He actually wasn't a great pianist and couldn't play a lot of his works

  • @tuberobotto
    @tuberobotto 4 роки тому +11

    Wonderful Ravel music played so exquisitely. Both versions, both pianists gave very tasteful renditions. Such a wonderful upload. Thank you.

  • @davekenney1874
    @davekenney1874 5 років тому +13

    Amazing composition, he just knew how to get the colors and effects from the piano. Kudos to the performer

  • @NewEnglandFish
    @NewEnglandFish 3 роки тому +12

    deadass printed out 3 and 4 because I wanted to learn both, now I want to learn 5 so I'm buying the music for the whole set

  • @underthesine
    @underthesine 8 місяців тому

    Your description of Ravel in the opening statement is perfectly stated. That captures the essence. I'm going with Lortie on this one. The better recording sound makes for some small bias, but the way that it is played feels more majestic and fantastical. Subtle dynamics, flow and delicate timing makes it a winner.

  • @giuseppemasini9023
    @giuseppemasini9023 2 роки тому +6

    I discovered Miroirs only today thanks to my piano teacher, they are something out of this world, absolutely fantastic works. I absolutely have to listen to valses nobles at sentimentales, I really don't look forward to falling in love with them!

  • @ormpi1
    @ormpi1 Рік тому +3

    I love ravels love of Spanish music. Its so pure and unique

  • @androidkenobi
    @androidkenobi 8 років тому +25

    That is quite the video description. Regretfully, much of which is over my head -- you know that kid who starts playing as soon as he sits down, and once the last note is played gets up and walks away? That was me, and now here I am ~20 yrs later still wondering what "interpretation" means when all the notes, tempo, and crescendos are on paper... I'll definitely be returning over and over hoping I absorb something :)

    • @waysmeans3774
      @waysmeans3774 7 років тому +8

      Love your description of that kind of playing. Relatable. I know exactly what you mean.

    • @abelcisneros7531
      @abelcisneros7531 3 роки тому

      thats usually how liner notes are on any album, but with digital music we have lost all the liner notes to stuff, so you are right it is good to have
      , go to music school and you will get it easily

  • @sosoyo180
    @sosoyo180 8 років тому +27

    You have been on a roll with these uploads the last month, keep it up!!
    (Also Une barque sur l'océan is one of my all time favorite pieces so thanks!!)

  • @npelletier89
    @npelletier89 6 років тому +150

    Trying to work on a physics lab... it's 5:45AM... instead I'm bouncing my shoulders up and down to the rhythm in Alborada :S.... yikes.

    • @segmentsAndCurves
      @segmentsAndCurves 3 роки тому +9

      Just a reminder for your memory.

    • @npelletier89
      @npelletier89 3 роки тому +7

      @@segmentsAndCurves wow haha this made my day :D

    • @nathannguyen2041
      @nathannguyen2041 3 роки тому +3

      That was me freshmen year of college... Doing physics 1 lab the night/morning before it was due 😅

    • @BloodThirstyMedic
      @BloodThirstyMedic Місяць тому

      How's life now 5 years later?

  • @dayounglee_pf
    @dayounglee_pf 5 років тому +81

    00:00
    04:31
    08:32
    15:17
    21:55

  • @pianodan1608
    @pianodan1608 3 роки тому +3

    0:56 to 1:03; 9:59 to 10:34; 15:31 to 15:46; 16:34 to 16:49; 19:49 to 19:59; 20:40 to 20:56. This is what makes Ravel a genius!

  • @alanblackwood1
    @alanblackwood1 7 років тому +26

    More superb Ravel, and the commentary says it all perfectly.

  • @steveegallo3384
    @steveegallo3384 Рік тому

    The pure atmospheric fastness envelopes....mesmerizing......BRAVO from Acapulco!

  • @Lalala-wb5dm
    @Lalala-wb5dm 8 років тому +7

    I love reading your explanations! I've never heard of both pianists, but now that I listen they seem much more subtle and thoughtful with every move they make than Dinu Lippati's(though I love his the most!).

  • @avocatdenis
    @avocatdenis 5 років тому +6

    I really like your review of these two astounding interpretations. Very informative.

  • @OfficialWorldChampion
    @OfficialWorldChampion 6 місяців тому +3

    GOAT-level keyboard composer, who isn’t recognized as such (along with William Byrd). Yes I will die on that hill.

    • @WildJag4free
      @WildJag4free 5 місяців тому +2

      hum, no Ravel is knowned as one of the best piano composer ever, I don't know where you live, but definetly not near a music academy

  • @aldoringo439
    @aldoringo439 2 роки тому +10

    Ravel was an extremely unique composer, because you can hear in his music the horrors that we know he endured in his lifetime. The horrors of war, losing family, and probably much more. The barque sur l'ocèan is a good example of Ravel's hyper emotional writing. But there are many emotions in ravel's much that is often just attributed to "dissonance" or "impressionism", such as anger, grief, hardship, etc.

  • @kjbosma
    @kjbosma 7 років тому +17

    I love your description! Nice, now listening ;)

    • @orvillewrightjr.6119
      @orvillewrightjr.6119 7 років тому +1

      Orville Wright, Jr. I've always thought that Ravel's piano music has an etherial, almost shimmering quality. I always struggled mightily to evoke these qualities, when I've performed the pieces in "Miroirs";however my time and patience was always vastly rewarded, when I figured out certain nuances and idiomatic expressions in Ravel's piano works in general. The game has always been worth the candle. Thank you for this incredible post.

  • @shereegray7085
    @shereegray7085 2 роки тому +3

    I used to find it almost unbearable to listening to my relaxing peaceful music so I pay to not have any ads at all, so worth the money to not have to hear the annoying ads pop up and disrupt my peace.

  • @elrichardo1337
    @elrichardo1337 3 роки тому +10

    just like his gaspard de la nuit, ravel's sheer precision of composition is on full display here

  • @Forgetit2697
    @Forgetit2697 7 років тому +4

    My favourite work from Ravel is Oiseaux tristes, Bavouzet's interpretation is very captivating and hypnotizing, probably the best I have ever heard.

  • @adelinetom4662
    @adelinetom4662 5 років тому +9

    This is the only recording of Noctuelles I've enjoyed.

  • @migbers3247
    @migbers3247 8 років тому +6

    Great channel with great videos and descriptions. The inclusion of two interprations is an amazing resource! Thank you very much for the videos! Keep it up !! from Scotland ! :)

  • @MusicalRadiation
    @MusicalRadiation Рік тому +5

    That key change in Une Barque Sur L'océan at 11:13 is one of the most beautiful things I've ever heard

  • @cardboardhero2294
    @cardboardhero2294 4 роки тому +6

    Noctuelles and Alborada del Gracioso are eternal masterpieces.

    • @tobiaslim4709
      @tobiaslim4709 3 роки тому +5

      The other works should not be overlooked too

    • @AMoonShapedPoo
      @AMoonShapedPoo Місяць тому

      Une barque sur l'océan 😭

  • @vincentandrewsmusic
    @vincentandrewsmusic Рік тому +3

    Perhaps not the best video to put on during writing a paper because the score is distracting me so much! It's so beautiful. This work is astonishing.

  • @biggreenlzrd
    @biggreenlzrd 6 років тому +7

    Noctuelles is a brilliant and beautiful piece, but such a finger-buster to play. Sometimes I wish there was a shortcut I could take to develop the same touch these pianists make sound so easy.

  • @noiselesspatient
    @noiselesspatient 5 років тому +2

    Sublime. And wonderful to compare/contrast both astounding performances. Thank you.

  • @robbes7rh
    @robbes7rh Рік тому

    Superb performance. Piano mastery at its finest. Hard to imagine a better interpretation. An absolute delight to hear. Bravo!

  • @harryandruschak2843
    @harryandruschak2843 8 років тому +4

    Juneteenth 2016. Found your channel more or less by accident, and this was the work. Good enough for me to happily subscribe.

    • @brendonhester331
      @brendonhester331 4 роки тому +2

      Juneteenth 2020. Hope you are well, 4 years later.

    • @segmentsAndCurves
      @segmentsAndCurves 3 роки тому

      I mean "there is no accident". Be open, 5 years later.

  • @김용석-n8l
    @김용석-n8l 7 років тому +125

    My favorite is Mirror 3 , Une Barque sur l'ocean

  • @Bilal-lo1rk
    @Bilal-lo1rk 4 роки тому +38

    15:30 that heat came outta nowhere

    • @milgaru
      @milgaru 3 роки тому +4

      literally everyone loves that part (including me, of course)

  • @robertcohn8858
    @robertcohn8858 6 років тому +4

    A delightful candy box of music. It's incredible to see the notes on the page transformed into such ethereal sound...

  • @eriknestaas2270
    @eriknestaas2270 Рік тому +2

    the time signature on barque sur l'océan

  • @albertpeckham8708
    @albertpeckham8708 3 роки тому +1

    Such a stunning performance! Merci Mille fois!

  • @alexisdanielvaneskeheian2127
    @alexisdanielvaneskeheian2127 2 роки тому

    Obra maestra total, monumental. Muchas gracias por compartir. Saludos desde Buenos Aires, Argentina.

  • @qwj68boots
    @qwj68boots 6 місяців тому

    I'm going to learn French so I will know the translation for these wondrous titles by my Great Ravel. C'est Magnifique!❤

  • @viktor1845
    @viktor1845 5 років тому +3

    Very love Bavouzet, he's an excellent pianist

  • @nwalton125
    @nwalton125 8 років тому +7

    This is great, agree with your comments about playing Ravel. Would love to see you upload some Debussy.

  • @ronwalker4849
    @ronwalker4849 3 роки тому +6

    SAD BIRD, FOR SOME YEARS I DIDN´T UNDERSTAND THE MESSAGE IN THIS PIECE, AND NOW I IT IS ONE OF THE MOST EMBLEMATIC COMPOSITION FOR MODERN ART. IT IS ABSTRACT COMMUNICATION BY THE GENIUS RAVEL.
    HE DIDN´T HAVE AN EASY LIFE ENDING WITH DIFFICULTY, LIKE MANY GEATES (CHOPIN, MOZART,SCHUBERT ETC..

    • @donnytello1544
      @donnytello1544 3 роки тому +6

      Dude you don’t need to scream to get your point across, but yes he is genius, and it’s amazing to understand it

    • @segmentsAndCurves
      @segmentsAndCurves 3 роки тому +1

      ​@@donnytello1544 I mean sometime keyboard just doesn't work the way they should be.
      But even if this was intentional, I would scream on my friend's face about how good Ravel is (if I don't lose any friend in the process ;)

    • @donnytello1544
      @donnytello1544 3 роки тому

      @@segmentsAndCurves that’s true I didn’t consider that, it’s happened to me before

    • @segmentsAndCurves
      @segmentsAndCurves 3 роки тому

      @@donnytello1544 "it’s happened to me before"
      I'm listening.

    • @donnytello1544
      @donnytello1544 3 роки тому

      @@segmentsAndCurves oh nothing crazy my keyboard just gets stuck on caps sometimes and I’ll forget to take it off so I have to delete the sentence

  • @OutOfWards
    @OutOfWards Рік тому +2

    How tf did Ravel compose this?!?!?!?? It's incredible!!!!!!

  • @MegaCirse
    @MegaCirse 7 років тому

    Mon pianiste favori avec Satie. J'aime toutes sortes de musique, mais rarement quelqu’un n’a atteint une telle sensibilité sur les touches d’un piano. En marchant dans les rues de New York dans les années 1980, j'ai senti son esprit, sa présence. C'était intense, puis, fugitivement, il est parti.....

  • @jeffwatkins352
    @jeffwatkins352 Рік тому

    These are two mighty performances of amazing piano works which rank at the top of everything written for the instrument, and I bow in awe to these two brilliant performers. However...though a rank amateur who can't begin to approach their virtuosity in the suite's first movements, I humbly if egotistically submit my poor amateur skills surpass both these masters in its climax, La Vallee des Cloches. Both take the movement almost by rote with none of the passionate heart-rending rubato it demands. It's a pieces of unsurpassed hypnotic transcendence and both these interpreters approach it as an afterthought rather than as the soul-bending culmination of this virtuoso work. But that's just me. So sue me.

  • @Scriabin_fan
    @Scriabin_fan 3 роки тому +3

    Ravel and Debussy are just my absolute favs

  • @gearyg5649
    @gearyg5649 4 роки тому +7

    This the music I show my friends who aren’t trained classically. Because they can hear the moths fluttering or picture the waves around the boat on the ocean. You don’t need to have a knowledge of music to appreciate such an intricate wonder

  • @BeauJames59
    @BeauJames59 3 роки тому +2

    Thank you. Gorgeous midnight listening for me...

  • @benrubin8624
    @benrubin8624 8 років тому +3

    thank you for this post! great piece

  • @sfopera
    @sfopera 3 роки тому

    Fabulous music that is brilliantly played. I hope that someone other than me remembers the wonderful 1970s era PBS show "Lilias, Yoga, and You" that used the fifth movement of this, La Vallee des Cloches, as its theme. Magical!

  • @dncrystal
    @dncrystal 8 років тому +7

    The ending of Oiseaux (especially Lortie's version) gives rise to feeling inside I have yet to encounter with any other piece of music

  • @noahgilbertson7530
    @noahgilbertson7530 4 роки тому +8

    Louis Lortie was made to play Ravel. I’d kill for his talent 😵

    • @kronos2227
      @kronos2227 4 роки тому +2

      You should also listen to his Sonata in B-minor by Franz Liszt---out of this world--musically and technically.

    • @Ar1osssa
      @Ar1osssa 3 роки тому +3

      It's not a talent. It's thousands hours of professional work

    • @noahgilbertson7530
      @noahgilbertson7530 3 роки тому +1

      @@Ar1osssa I’d kill to have that dedication 😭

    • @Ar1osssa
      @Ar1osssa 3 роки тому +1

      Everything is in your decision

  • @jeffdawson2786
    @jeffdawson2786 Рік тому

    Absolutely spellbinding. And to think Satie said, alas Ravel’s music leaves me cold. He had to be joking.

  • @benmeitzen4184
    @benmeitzen4184 6 років тому +4

    Touching and dark. These interpretations aught to have more recognition.

  • @lflagr
    @lflagr 6 років тому +2

    Your description of interpreting Ravel is the most spot-on assessment I've ever come across. You should seriously write a book on interpretation and repertoire.

  • @georgeewells
    @georgeewells 2 роки тому +5

    Fun fact: All of Ravel's pianos have one key that is worn and terribly out of tune. Guess which one. 16:30

  • @tjulers
    @tjulers 4 роки тому +19

    7:14 that is mythical

  • @jonathaneffemey4892
    @jonathaneffemey4892 3 роки тому

    Thanks so much for posting.

  • @BenTrem42
    @BenTrem42 3 роки тому +1

    *_Ineffable_* ... we have only the most crude objective metrics.
    Ravel was ... brilliant genius.

  • @williamhicks2299
    @williamhicks2299 4 роки тому +2

    Lortie! The perfect pianist for Ravel. Sublime playing.

  • @samwst56
    @samwst56 7 років тому +3

    Thanks for the narration & the music, Ashish! CHEERS!

  • @pelodelperro
    @pelodelperro 7 років тому +1

    Wonderful renditions. Thanks!

  • @NGLiok
    @NGLiok Рік тому

    Lush, dreamy and evocative.

  • @fgbowen
    @fgbowen 3 роки тому +1

    I realize that you may have this video monetized, but it's likely that yt is taking advantages, because there was literally way too many commercials on this video. Couldn't actually get a good listen in before there was another C. So - yeah.
    Thoroughly agreed with all you said in the description.

  • @ferrantepallas
    @ferrantepallas 7 років тому +2

    Brilliant and beautiful

  • @POMAHOC
    @POMAHOC 6 місяців тому

    8:33 это, наверное, одно из лучших исполнений "Лодке в океане" из всех, которые я вообще когда-либо слышал.

  • @MrInterestingthings
    @MrInterestingthings 8 років тому +7

    We have Lipatti in some of these .Oh I can't believe it .This is piano music beyond piano but I find this music hard to play quietly and with wter effects.One must not think of notes but rather washes of sound and differing textures . Ravel ' imagination is beyond most of us . Debussy should have been jealous . So odd Horowits recorded some Debussy but no Ravel . I guess its not him or many early Russians .Though I've seen Lhevinne's programmes he played these ! Jeux d'eaux changed the world !

  • @mini1939
    @mini1939 4 роки тому +1

    This was posted on my birthday 4 years ago :3

  • @munnejael2982
    @munnejael2982 2 роки тому

    great recording, thanks

  • @borbalbuddy
    @borbalbuddy 4 роки тому +7

    That single E♭ held at 7:50 is among the most moving and depressing moments in music composed for the piano.

  • @Quotenwagnerianer
    @Quotenwagnerianer 6 років тому +7

    I really wished he had orchestrated more of those pieces and not just two. The Grainger version of La valleé des cloches is breathtaking.

    • @dennischiapello7243
      @dennischiapello7243 3 роки тому +2

      Ravel was a master orchestrator, of course, and his orchestral versions of Alborada and Barque are successes. But I almost always prefer his piano originals. There's something especially about Une Barque sur l'ocean that can't be bettered.

    • @rogerknox9147
      @rogerknox9147 2 роки тому

      @@dennischiapello7243 Colin Matthews orchestrated Oiseaux tristes, 2016

  • @SheerHumid
    @SheerHumid 5 років тому +6

    ラヴェルすこ💛

  • @limesquared
    @limesquared 8 років тому +2

    Lovely...From the comments here I should definitely try to hear more interpretations...I love the modern feeling instead ol
    old classical for right now at least...

  • @nealgold4927
    @nealgold4927 2 роки тому

    Absolutely magnificent

  • @meredith218461
    @meredith218461 Рік тому

    These are wonderfully descriptive compositions on a par with other works such as the Piano Trio, Daphnis et Chloe, only to mention two examples. Ravel not only demands great interpretive insight but also superlative technical mastery to allow the music to speak unhindered.
    Both of these fine virtuosi give highly rewarding accounts, if I have to cherry pick I slightly prefer Lortie in Une barque sur l'Ocean and Osieaux tristes. However with playing of this calibre my preference is purely subjective.

  • @JonathanIgnarski
    @JonathanIgnarski 6 років тому +1

    "His approach is less down-to-earth tahn Lortie’s"
    A beautifully written description, and...
    Well, it happens.

  • @user-pp2is9jk6i
    @user-pp2is9jk6i 6 років тому +5

    Exalted pleasure!

  • @katt_matt
    @katt_matt 4 роки тому +2

    Ravel is very special composer

  • @kaitokuroba8727
    @kaitokuroba8727 4 роки тому +3

    Sa mga taga HCA nga naminaw ani tungod sa activity. Hit the like button haha

  • @NoahJohnson1810
    @NoahJohnson1810 6 років тому +10

    31:50 this note is so delicious. I can almost taste it.

  • @EthanWattsMusic
    @EthanWattsMusic 6 років тому +12

    I want to learn Une Barque... But it's way too hard! 😂

    • @nicb4589
      @nicb4589 4 роки тому +2

      Florian Hass I would say its one of the easier miroir to memorize, but one of the most awkward to play for me...

    • @akselpelkonen9637
      @akselpelkonen9637 3 роки тому

      @FloHaKey yeah definitely not as hard as you would think but still, as a piece of Ravel, definitely stupidly hard lol. The piece is really amazing though so learning it will definitely be worth it!

    • @EthanWattsMusic
      @EthanWattsMusic 2 роки тому +1

      Three years later, been there done that… Not too bad but I still can’t quite do it justice

    • @stynway59
      @stynway59 Рік тому

      It's almost an etude for the left (well, really, both), hands, the shy guy would never have said that. But it's way fun to explore!

  • @markelliottdriver
    @markelliottdriver 16 днів тому

    exceptional

  • @ziegunerweiser
    @ziegunerweiser 7 років тому +2

    les jeux d'eaux a la villa d'este by Liszt has this kind of sound, a precursor to Debussy Ravel Lekeu Franck and Faure's brand of impressionism I think

    • @ziegunerweiser
      @ziegunerweiser 7 років тому

      Scriabin later took this sound and mutated it into something from a different universe

    • @gerardbegni2806
      @gerardbegni2806 7 років тому

      Perfectly exact. In addition, the harmony sustaining the very first arpeggios is prophetic.

  • @theofficiallobst6592
    @theofficiallobst6592 2 роки тому +5

    ravel: "I'm not an impressionist."
    also ravel: 0:00

  • @DonutSurprise
    @DonutSurprise Рік тому

    Bavouzet is also more distant+clear from the audioengineering, which plays a huge role.

  • @skimask7776
    @skimask7776 7 місяців тому

    What wonderful sounds. What would Chopin's music sound like had he lived long enough to discover these whole tones.
    Maybe i'm wrong, maybe he did discover them.

  • @YL-kl5iv
    @YL-kl5iv 5 років тому +2

    if you are here for the glissando part:48:16。 starts here

    • @emada5582
      @emada5582 4 роки тому

      Yuhe Lu
      Well, how can I do that with just one hand? 😮

    • @user-pf5nb9tu6n
      @user-pf5nb9tu6n 4 роки тому

      @@emada5582 not that hard

  • @Umurhan999
    @Umurhan999 8 років тому +3

    What do you think about Richter's interpretations of the Miroirs?

    • @AshishXiangyiKumar
      @AshishXiangyiKumar  8 років тому +3

      Superb, but a bit too well-known.

    • @jagareco
      @jagareco 8 років тому +5

      richter its the gold standard in my opinion. at these days i really do not prefer perfection, over expression. then richter performances from hungary in the 60s, and others from 70s are marvelous, but one of the last lectures, in 1994, its absolutely unique

    • @ivanaraque
      @ivanaraque 7 років тому +2

      The best Barque I've ever heard - Richter was a painter, too, and he makes this Barcarolle the most visually arresting I've ever seen, the little boat at the mercy of the waves and the calm seas afterwards. Can't get enough of it. :))