Rachmaninov 3rd concerto - 10 famous pianists play the ossia cadenza

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  • Опубліковано 6 жов 2024
  • Rachmaninov wrote two different cadenza at the end of his first movement : the regular one, and another one called "ossia", longer and more difficult than the first one. Here, among about 50 versions tested, I selected 10 pianists (names below, chronological order) who play the ossia cadenza.
    0:07 Van Cliburn
    Moscow - 1958 - Moscow SO - Kirill Kondrashin
    2:53 Cyprien Katsaris
    French TV - 1980 - ? - Ohan Durian
    5:36 Arcadi Volodos
    Braunschweig - 1999 - Israël PO - Zubin Mehta
    8:15 Olga Kern
    Fort Worth, US - 2001 - Fort Worth SO - James Conlon
    11:09 Yefim Bronfman
    Tokyo - 2004 - Wiener PO - Valery Gergiev
    13:48 Lang Lang
    ? - 2005 - ? - Charles Dutoit
    16:42 HJ Lim
    Barcelona - 2014 - Barcelona SO - Pablo Gonzales
    19:17 Natasha Paremski
    Bergen - 2015 - Bergen SO - Andrew Litton
    22:14 Alexander Gavrylyuk
    London - 2017 - BBC Scottish SO - Thomas Dausgaard
    25:16 Seongjin Cho
    Moscow - 2011 - ? - Alexander Dmitriev

КОМЕНТАРІ • 590

  • @zestofpiano3509
    @zestofpiano3509  4 роки тому +44

    Details (timestamps, year, conductor, Orchestra,...) in the description of video.
    Similar video with the regular cadenza : ua-cam.com/video/2f0VXVH_hnk/v-deo.html

    • @grandcollins5557
      @grandcollins5557 3 роки тому +1

      Annamarie 💘 you!!happy ☺ birthday have a great summer at the lab!! Enjoy and learn, then tell us about all your adventures at the lab!!!! Can't wait to see you!! You played the butterflies with such expression,Love and emotion. God bless!

    • @grandcollins5557
      @grandcollins5557 3 роки тому +1

      TAlk to you soon

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    • @samuelneil7490
      @samuelneil7490 3 роки тому +1

      @Samuel Connor Instablaster :)

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      @samuelconnor2670 3 роки тому +1

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  • @stephenkristan853
    @stephenkristan853 Рік тому +138

    One of the most cataclysmic, terrifying passages in the entire piano literature. I love it! Who cares if it's "too much" for the movement! I'm always let down when performers opt for the standard cadenza. A little excess once in a while ain't a bad thing.

    • @trustedtarget7534
      @trustedtarget7534 Рік тому +10

      I totally agree. One must grow fangs when approaching this cadenza.

    • @kevinroylancephotography9437
      @kevinroylancephotography9437 Рік тому +6

      Ossia Cadenza is the point of the 1st movement. It's the contrast to that absolutely beautiful part that follows.

    • @doandadrestarahma5290
      @doandadrestarahma5290 Рік тому +5

      It's Rachmaninoff! The perfect chance to be extra

    • @franksmith541
      @franksmith541 8 місяців тому +1

      The cadenza of the Prokofiev 2nd is both more challenging and terrifying. A section of pure vehemence.

    • @dka5631
      @dka5631 7 місяців тому +5

      If you play the standard cadenza like Argerich it is by no means easier nor boring. The build up to the D major chords becomes much more logical. but i also like big fat chords... conflict!
      source: i've played both

  • @streamspring6814
    @streamspring6814 3 роки тому +245

    0:07 Van Cliburn
    2:53 Cyprien Katsaris
    5:36 Arcadi Volodos
    8:14 Olga Kern
    11:08 Yefim Bronfman
    13:46 Lang Lang
    16:41 HJ Lim
    19:17 Natasha Paremski
    22:14 Alexandre Gavrylyuk
    25:15 Seongjin Cho

    • @judynelson5038
      @judynelson5038 3 роки тому +24

      Lang Lang nailed it. Cliburn was off.

    • @mr2loser
      @mr2loser 3 роки тому +8

      Not to open a debate about definitions or semantics, but I thought the title was "famous pianists"? Not sure half of this list are famous. Anyway, great complication. Thanks for putting it together!

    • @birgirkarl
      @birgirkarl 3 роки тому +15

      @@mr2loser If you only go by fame in art, you're in trouble.

    • @mr2loser
      @mr2loser 3 роки тому +16

      @@birgirkarl Check the title of the video. I'm merely commenting on that. Not artistry. Cheers!

    • @charlesbluett8195
      @charlesbluett8195 3 роки тому +7

      mr2loser I haven't heard of Lim or Paremski before, but the others certainly are or were all famous pianists

  • @Sathrandur
    @Sathrandur 3 роки тому +222

    For all who may not know:
    Rachmaninov composed the ossia cadenza first, but later wrote the standard cadenza as he felt that what became the ossia cadenza created too much of a climax that he thought architecturally less desirable in the first movement. Nonetheless, he must not have minded too much as he did leave it as an ossia.

    • @itamarbar9580
      @itamarbar9580 3 роки тому +41

      Hmm, interesting! This ossia cadenza shows what Rachmaninoff is best at: climaxing.

    • @99wntr
      @99wntr 2 роки тому +5

      I’ve also heard he felt it may have been to difficult to play on a regular basis and created the standard cadenza to play when he had off nights during touring?

    • @ythanzhang
      @ythanzhang 2 роки тому +18

      @@99wntr I guess that's a benefit of being your own composer. If you don't feel like it, you could just change the piece, and no one can really say anything about it.

    • @lczq6737
      @lczq6737 2 роки тому +4

      @@99wntr Well maybe, it is also known that he made several cuts that performers can take to their discretion. I believe it was to make it easier to play as well

    • @harbinguy1
      @harbinguy1 2 роки тому +3

      Do all of them play slightly different versions?

  • @annettefallon1652
    @annettefallon1652 2 місяці тому +9

    Volodos and Lang were the 2 most powerful and convincing.

  • @dang5874
    @dang5874 3 роки тому +6

    Lol, all those people complaining about Lang Lang's exaggerated movements, hopefully you never get to see a jazz pianist play, a genre which Rachmaninoff greatly appreciated.

  • @mr2loser
    @mr2loser 3 роки тому +143

    14:36. "Oh crap I just broke the fourth wall!"

    • @EASYTIGER10
      @EASYTIGER10 3 роки тому +11

      Its a bit unsettling. Here I am in my underwear listening to UA-cam when Lang Lang slowly turns and looks right at me.....

    • @chickeringfoundation1866
      @chickeringfoundation1866 3 роки тому +3

      @@EASYTIGER10 Perfect!

    • @dolalafontaine
      @dolalafontaine 2 роки тому

      What an absolute clown.

    • @Calaf368
      @Calaf368 2 місяці тому +5

      Lang Lang's Ostia is monumental. If you close your eyes, as I did, it's the most dramatic and impressive Ossia of the lot.

  • @ThatWasLoud
    @ThatWasLoud Рік тому +29

    Time to add Yunchan Lim to this compilation

    • @RaineriHakkarainen
      @RaineriHakkarainen Рік тому +6

      Yunchan Lim colorless cold piano sound! This student Yunchan Lim should study next 6 years with a goog teacher! The best Rach no 3 really Horowitz in 1930! Evgeny Mogilevsky in 1965! Vladimir Ashkenazy! Marta Argerich Andrei Gavrilov in 1978! Natalia Trull in 1989! Yunchan Lim will be next Zimerman or Kissin boring with cold colorless sound! And crazy people will claiming Zimerman Kissin Yunchan Lim the Greatest!

    • @vlastimil-furst-gc
      @vlastimil-furst-gc 7 місяців тому +5

      @@RaineriHakkarainen From the newer performances, you kinda left out Arcadi Volodos, he's actually in the video.
      Anyway, yeah. It's quite a difference if you put any passion it it. I could hear it from Olga Kern, Alexander Gavrylyuk, Sengjin Cho or Van Cliburn, but not as much from the others in this video. A largely Slavic lineup, but for instance, Natasha Paremski didn't make it to my list.

    • @AhbibHaald
      @AhbibHaald 6 місяців тому +6

      ​@@RaineriHakkarainen what kind of mental illness do you have to call kissin cold? Just because he isn't using annoyingly excessive rubato, he is cold?

    • @orizoref
      @orizoref 5 місяців тому +3

      True! He plays the regular cadenza though

    • @alessandropelizzoli6613
      @alessandropelizzoli6613 5 місяців тому +1

      I agree completely with Raineri...

  • @jacquesprevert1902
    @jacquesprevert1902 3 роки тому +220

    Bronfman. Simply awesome

    • @katbullar
      @katbullar 3 роки тому +17

      I agree... Bronfman has something very special...

    • @makaan699
      @makaan699 3 роки тому +17

      Yes, his whole performance... He played this a lot of times and probably has consistently the best Rach 3 in the game.

    • @marksmith3947
      @marksmith3947 Рік тому +8

      Bronfman is possibly the greatest living pianist. While he gets recognition, it's not as much as he deserves

    • @pamelaweaver9983
      @pamelaweaver9983 Рік тому +3

      Hands down, Bronfman. Had the great fortune of attending 3 of his concerts. Twice for the Rach 3 and once for the Rach 2.

    • @franksmith541
      @franksmith541 8 місяців тому +2

      I saw Bronfman play this with the Vancouver Symphony in the early 90's. A big bear of a pianist who plays with crushing power.

  • @billmarrufo
    @billmarrufo 3 роки тому +42

    Volodos hands down! Though Bronfman and Lang Lang are also top notch.

    • @vlastimil-furst-gc
      @vlastimil-furst-gc 7 місяців тому +4

      I think Bronfman wasn't gentle enough in the passages where he should be. Lang Lang did quite well from this point of view, but I still appreciated the Eastern-Slavic pianists: Olga Kern and Alexander Gavrylyuk. The feeling was there, perhaps it resonates with a Slavic soul a bit more.

    • @KarenDesantissCat-uv9hd
      @KarenDesantissCat-uv9hd 2 місяці тому +5

      I agree on all accounts. Volodos was the most passionate and threw everything into it. Lang Lang did the hardest part the fastest.

    • @Tubbknuckles
      @Tubbknuckles Місяць тому

      Check out Ashkenazy 78 with Ormandy. My fave.

  • @jackpipi7170
    @jackpipi7170 15 днів тому +2

    A million Taylor Swift songs combined would not be able to replicate the musical complexity and emotional depth portrayed in those 2 minute and 30 seconds.

  • @iankemp1131
    @iankemp1131 3 роки тому +26

    Absolutely fascinating comparison. For me, this cadenza needs both dynamic and rhythmic variety, but also a sense of struggle when the main theme returns and in the final climax - not the pianist struggling to play it, but the music struggling to fight its way through. Some come closer to "my ideal" than others, perhaps Cho most of all marginally, but all of them brought something different and individual. In particular, despite sonic limitations, a great reminder of how fine Van Cliburn was before he gave up regular playing too early.

    • @spiritualatheist1
      @spiritualatheist1 2 роки тому

      I have to agree with you about Cho. He has a controlled mastery, he sounds less like all the devils in Hades are after him and more like he's totally in control. There are recording problems with Cliburn and some of the others that makes them sound a bit blurred together. And I think Cho's piano was tuned a bit brighter. I like Evgeny Kissin better than any of these - playing the ossia does not seem to be a stretch for him. His piano is also brighter. On the other hand, if you're into Ponderous and Scary, as I am sometimes, go with Cliburn.

  • @temorxavi5400
    @temorxavi5400 4 роки тому +67

    Everybody is really good at palying the cadenza but Bronfman each every note is so clear and neat you can hear them all

    • @equilibrio823
      @equilibrio823 3 роки тому +5

      The only truth I have read in these comments !

    • @MattSmith-il4tc
      @MattSmith-il4tc Рік тому +7

      Not everybody. HJ Lim absolutely butchers it. She misses more notes than she hits... I don't know how that performance is even in this video. It's unlistenable.

    • @KarenDesantissCat-uv9hd
      @KarenDesantissCat-uv9hd 2 місяці тому +1

      Actually, he overused the pedal. I say this as a huge fan of his Rach 3.

  • @МоскальРоссийский-з2ы

    Все пианисты пытаются что-то выразить, в основном собственные эмоции и только Lang Lang рассказал в каденции историю автора. За эти 2 с небольшим минуты у меня перед глазами промелькнула вся история Рахманинова, как началась в России революция, как он уезжал в Америку и как он всю оставшуюся жизнь тосковал по родине. Lang Lang эту тоску прекрасно выразил в колокольном звоне, чего не сделал ни один другой исполнитель. Собственно, эта каденция в исполнении Lang Lang открыла мне "глаза" и на музыку Прокофьева, который мне стал понятен и близок после этого концерта Рахманинова. Lang Lang один из очень немногих исполнителей, которые представляют нам автора в каждом исполняемом им произведении, его интерпретации всегда указывают на какие-то вехи жизни автора, это слышится в его музыке. В каждом произведении у него есть особая точка зрения на произведение, он видит в нем то, чего другие не замечают. Возможно, кто-то начнет критиковать гримасы Lang Lang, его экспрессивность за роялем, для меня же это все неважно. Он ни на кого не похож и его легко узнать среди сотен других исполнителей, что и составляет его соврешенство, показывает его интеллект и глубокую эрудицию.

  • @dhwu1619
    @dhwu1619 3 місяці тому +6

    langlang was just 20 th, iT was amazing

  • @florianeichenberger7354
    @florianeichenberger7354 3 роки тому +141

    Is nobody going to mention Kissin? His version is sensational and underrated!

    • @TrevorduBuisson
      @TrevorduBuisson 3 роки тому +12

      Exactly what I was thinking; although I wouldn't say he's underrated. I think people are fully aware of who he is. His cadenza with Ozawa is perhaps the most dynamic, nuanced and certainly flawless. He recorded it at age 21, I believe.

    • @partituravid
      @partituravid 3 роки тому

      YES!!!

    • @fridagarbati5383
      @fridagarbati5383 3 роки тому

      Florian Eichenerger, I ask the same question. Kissin’s version is superb!

    • @神元匡
      @神元匡 3 роки тому

      yes,yes,yes!!!

    • @Joshua_Hershensohn
      @Joshua_Hershensohn 2 роки тому +1

      Agreed even other brilliant interpretations were left out like Trifonov and Ashkenazy!

  • @PianoBangBang
    @PianoBangBang 3 роки тому +2

    I clicked for the thumbnail, stayed for the music

  • @StijnDefrancq
    @StijnDefrancq 3 роки тому +32

    Thanks for this nice video!
    I prefer Bronfman and Lang Lang.
    Do you know the version played by Trifonov? For me the best ever.

  • @undisclosedmusic4969
    @undisclosedmusic4969 3 роки тому +43

    Say what you want about Lang but DAMN that was good

    • @fareshajjar1208
      @fareshajjar1208 3 роки тому +8

      So many dropped notes. No clarity. Shortcuts everywhere. The worst of the lot...

    • @Gardis72
      @Gardis72 3 роки тому +9

      Any pianist with those absurd facial expressions loses me....it detracts from the music....

    • @adrianchewygum
      @adrianchewygum 3 роки тому +11

      @@fareshajjar1208 I have extreme perfect pitch and I couldn't hear all pitches written on the complicated score. You must be a genius to catch the missing notes!

    • @fareshajjar1208
      @fareshajjar1208 3 роки тому +5

      @@adrianchewygum Perfect pitch would add no special ability to hear dropped notes (neither would "extreme perfect pitch"...whatever that is.) I am referencing many years of listening to cLang cLang perform, both love and recorded. My views are shared by thousands. His shortcomings have been widely discussed by critics. It is nothing new.

    • @adrianchewygum
      @adrianchewygum 3 роки тому +1

      @@fareshajjar1208 so you're saying "last time"... but based on this performance, you should not be biased...

  • @TwelfthRoot2
    @TwelfthRoot2 Рік тому +2

    from this video: gavrylyuk, bronfman, lang lang, volodos. i also think sgouros at 15 years old makes top 3 and matsuev is top 4.

  • @GregLile
    @GregLile 3 роки тому +12

    I'm not a Lang Lang fanboy, but his was the only one I wanted to go back and hear again.

    • @eggizgud
      @eggizgud 2 роки тому +1

      I like his pacing from the slow quiet start but then the climax didn't seem right. Too soon, too fast somehow... the story disappeared.

  • @auzziePRlDE
    @auzziePRlDE 3 роки тому +44

    I don't know how many times I have watched Olga Kern play the whole piece. Truly brilliant.

  • @paolobozano4125
    @paolobozano4125 Рік тому +1

    If I'm not wrong recently also Yeol Eum Son and Yuja Wang play the ossia cadenza, Yeol Eum Son in the final round of the Tchaykoski competition and Yuja Wang I dont remember when;

  • @garysandiego
    @garysandiego 3 роки тому +6

    I’m not going to pretend I know who is best. But Volodos is a beast! I was quite amazed. Bronfman was very good, smooth and balanced. I liked Cho too although I cannot pinpoint why. I like Lang Lang generally and I don’t go along with the haters at all but...I sure am glad he’s not doing the Bugs Bunny at the piano routine anymore. Maturity has its benefits.

  • @rmpelnilschen130
    @rmpelnilschen130 4 роки тому +11

    How long have I been looking for a video of that kind xD
    Thank you very much

  • @DerekLowePianist
    @DerekLowePianist Рік тому +12

    Lang Lang's expression is golden. Oh yes, including his facial expressions.

  • @cdestrib
    @cdestrib 6 днів тому

    Je suis personnellement très ému par l’engagement et la cohérence architecturale de Gavrylyuk. Je trouve cela magnifique.
    J’aime aussi Lang Lang, pareillement par son engagement qui sert sa vision, quels que soient les risques instrumentaux.
    Merci, c’était très intéressant de pouvoir écouter toutes ces interprétations de la première cadence que Rachmaninov avait écrite (la seconde n’est venue qu’ultérieurement, sur les conseils d’Horowitz).
    Je crois que j’aime plus la première.

  • @i9avici7a5
    @i9avici7a5 3 роки тому +15

    Volodos causes me to water up. His emotions are so transparent...

  • @barney6888
    @barney6888 3 роки тому +22

    I quite liked the clarity of Seongjin Cho

    • @FrostDirt
      @FrostDirt 3 роки тому +7

      And he was only 17 (2011 in the video) at the time, I think he got better. Check out his 2018 recording of Rach 3.

    • @garysandiego
      @garysandiego 3 роки тому +6

      He resolves very well to the theme.

    • @yimeizi2648
      @yimeizi2648 3 роки тому

      I thought his bass line was not clear at all

    • @barney6888
      @barney6888 3 роки тому +6

      @@yimeizi2648 no you didnt

    • @KarenDesantissCat-uv9hd
      @KarenDesantissCat-uv9hd 2 місяці тому +1

      But he has no dynamic range. He needs more passion.

  • @JOHNDOE-fr2jw
    @JOHNDOE-fr2jw 3 роки тому +17

    CHO WAS AWESOME!!!

  • @PuPuSin
    @PuPuSin 3 роки тому +26

    Ciburn and Volodos is my fav , every notes shine with life forces.

    • @class87srule
      @class87srule 3 роки тому +2

      Yeah, Cliburn succeeds in lyricism and savagery in equal measure. Why he doesn't play the repeats at the climax is baffling

    • @TrevorduBuisson
      @TrevorduBuisson 3 роки тому +3

      Volodos is just something out of this world.

    • @KarenDesantissCat-uv9hd
      @KarenDesantissCat-uv9hd 2 місяці тому +5

      I love Lang Lang's.

    • @PaulPrice-nr7gp
      @PaulPrice-nr7gp 2 місяці тому +2

      My favorite is Lang Lang. He had it all in...Technique, Passion, pathos, dynamic range, power, precision, touch and musicianship!

    • @justintimetoclashandbrawl3348
      @justintimetoclashandbrawl3348 Місяць тому

      @@class87sruleRachmaninoff also does this, I don’t know why… Horowitz too

  • @andreassorg7294
    @andreassorg7294 Рік тому +4

    You need not like Lang Lang's facial expressions and physical movements, but maybe they show what Rachmaninov might have felt when he composed this cadenza

  • @swanee9599
    @swanee9599 3 роки тому +16

    HJ Lim's playing of this cadenza is unworldly. Pure bold virtuosity.

    • @765lbsquat
      @765lbsquat 3 роки тому +2

      sloppy more like it. roast beef sloppy

    • @alis1637
      @alis1637 2 роки тому +2

      No it’s probably the worst of this bunch

  • @goatlps
    @goatlps Рік тому +3

    I like #LangLang, in the studio, but when I listen to him play the rest of this live I'm fairly sure he makes up half the notes as he goes along.

  • @partituravid
    @partituravid 3 роки тому +17

    No Kissin!?!? For me, Gavrylyuk blows away everyone else - the transitions between sections are carefully thought out and paced. The harmonic outlines and areas are clear, with delineation of the chords'relationships, progressions and significance. The melodic line is sustained by de-emphasizing chords that, while massive, support the melody. Everyone else's massive chords all have equal importance.
    This is impressive for the beautiful transitions as well as architecturally, tonally, musically, conceptually. With beauty AND strength - actual music- the only place most of these people think about dynamics is the shift to C minor - too little too late. Gavrylyuk is dynamically shaping all the time so there are arcs.
    I think the conductor for Olga Kern might be James Conlon?

    • @alis1637
      @alis1637 Рік тому

      Agreed, but keep in mind he has the benefit of a more modern sound recording system

  • @geuros
    @geuros 3 роки тому +29

    In this list, Volodos and Bronfman share the #1 for me, Van Cliburn #3, Cho #4.

    • @billmarrufo
      @billmarrufo 2 роки тому

      Agreed, in the same order you mention!

    • @rr4tb4rtr46
      @rr4tb4rtr46 2 роки тому

      you have to try Lazer Berman

  • @Chima4289
    @Chima4289 Рік тому +21

    I have listen to many renditions of this famous Ossia, but was stunned by Cyprien Katsaris. Actually, never heard of him… Bravo!!!!

    • @gixelz
      @gixelz 9 місяців тому +3

      never heard of katsaris after listening to a bunch of classical? what has youtube done to you

  • @stevenvinson1615
    @stevenvinson1615 9 місяців тому +15

    Volodos is just wild. There is nobody that posseses the power he has. It's crushing.

    • @stevenvinson1615
      @stevenvinson1615 9 місяців тому +2

      And Bronfman. He still pours it out, but he maintains the rhythmic integrity like nobody else.

    • @franksmith541
      @franksmith541 8 місяців тому +1

      I saw Tzimon Barto play this live. I swear the piano moved a bit under the weight of his playing. His chords in the ossia were like cast bronze. Big fellow with huge hands. I also saw Volodos play this in concert, and both his power and virtuosity were not on the scale of Tzimon Barto.

    • @EttorealbertoGelli-vr6sz
      @EttorealbertoGelli-vr6sz 5 місяців тому

      Volodos Is a giant but 1 only SCHUBERT Impromptus Is more than all the works of Rachmaninov

    • @niek024
      @niek024 Місяць тому

      I saw Volodos perform a Rach 2 in the 90s. It was an amazing experience.

  • @kikotecla
    @kikotecla 3 роки тому +16

    Volodos and Cliburn are the best, but Lang Lang is also incredible

  • @evifnoskcaj
    @evifnoskcaj Рік тому +8

    Olga Kern and Arcadi Volodos hold nothing back and I love that. This passage requires passion, a willingness to absolutely crush the piano and yet have these beautiful and soaring melody lines, and have huge dynamic range. Rachmaninoff also demands for sweeping rubato, which was all over his playing and interpretations as well, so you can't simply blow through this.
    Of these selections, I agree with the crowd on this one: Yefim Bronfman absolutely crushed it. Wondeful sense of style, great phrasing, good dynamic range and control, excellent clarify for such a rich and chordal section, and wonderful passion, not some cartoonish animation like the person that followed. 💯😂❤

    • @evifnoskcaj
      @evifnoskcaj Рік тому

      Seongjin Cho deserves very high praise as well, especially under the gaze of Tchaikovsky. 😂 He played very well in all aspects of the piece. I hope he won that Tchaikovsky comp. Oh...3rd prize? Well, a performance like that is well deserving of a high place!

  • @davewalker9926
    @davewalker9926 Рік тому +5

    omg, I love Natasha Paremski's interpretation! I love how she hits the low and high notes hard at the extreme ends of the range.

  • @daniloberaldo570
    @daniloberaldo570 3 роки тому +4

    Excellent video! For me, HJ Lim was the best!

  • @jacklindahl
    @jacklindahl 3 роки тому +7

    Ok. Volodos for the sheer animal ferocity, Bronfman for the precision, and Lang Lang who played with all the schmaltz this piece deserves. And more.

  • @JanetESmith-er8sk
    @JanetESmith-er8sk 3 роки тому +23

    That pause at the end of the Ossia sealed the deal! Heartbreakingly beautiful! Oh Maestro Van Cliburn it’s you!!

    • @oriolsolano3946
      @oriolsolano3946 Рік тому

      Totally agree. The only one of them that gave deep expression to the closing of the phrase preceding the pause, and consequently to the pause too. Won by a narrow margin to Volodos

    • @saikalyan3966
      @saikalyan3966 5 місяців тому

      Cliburn is out of the world, the coda of rach3 by him is also by far the best, feels like falling down a large bell tower's staircase

  • @LavaMLG
    @LavaMLG 4 роки тому +25

    Bronfman will always be my favorite

  • @seangallagher1465
    @seangallagher1465 3 місяці тому

    Videos like this--and, even better, attending concerts in person--show that beautiful music is very much a visual experience as well as an audible one.

  • @FrostDirt
    @FrostDirt 3 роки тому +8

    Unbelievable to think that Cho was only 17 here... (and to my knowledge, 5 years of piano study)

    • @stravinskyfan
      @stravinskyfan 3 роки тому +5

      He started studying piano at 6 and gave his first public performance at 11. So, 11 years of piano study to achieve that level.

    • @eduardovera8162
      @eduardovera8162 3 роки тому +5

      @@stravinskyfan wow even like that is a crazy level

  • @CuratorOfRealities
    @CuratorOfRealities 3 роки тому +11

    I've been hooked on this cadenza ever since I first listened to Vladimir Ashkenazy's Decca recordings as a teenager.

    • @botezmi
      @botezmi Рік тому

      ...same here but with Lazar Berman-Claudio Abbado recording ua-cam.com/video/jgjsBAmedw8/v-deo.html

  • @goatlps
    @goatlps Рік тому +3

    I did the whole video. My favourite is 8:15 #OlgaKern. I like her hair and dress - she then proceeds to play the cadenza like she wants to kill you with it. 22:14 #Gavrylyuk is also extremely aggressive, and yet very accurate and great.
    16:41 #HJLim sounds like a saloon bar pianist, playing whilst cowboys a fighting.

  • @PersnicketyRed
    @PersnicketyRed 2 роки тому +10

    Van Cliburn is all I will ever need. My heart still holds this beautiful Texan, so close! 🥰

  • @rainchen7846
    @rainchen7846 3 роки тому +13

    The thumbnail with Lang Lang made my day lol

    • @fareshajjar1208
      @fareshajjar1208 3 роки тому +4

      He's a circus act.

    • @rainchen7846
      @rainchen7846 3 роки тому +10

      @@fareshajjar1208 I'm really confused about why people hate Lang Lang, he's a really good pianist

    • @fareshajjar1208
      @fareshajjar1208 3 роки тому +4

      @@rainchen7846 He plays notes and makes faces. He does not make music.

    • @rainchen7846
      @rainchen7846 3 роки тому +7

      @@fareshajjar1208 at the end of the day everyone has different definition of what is "musical", it's just his way of expressing music

    • @fareshajjar1208
      @fareshajjar1208 3 роки тому +4

      ​@@rainchen7846 cLang cLang ignores the intentions of the composer in many instances and changes notations in the score to suit his "interpretation." He seems to have little respect for the pieces as composed. Nuanced voicing is often replaced by percussive antics. Why do great pianists like Horowitz and Rubinstein seem so stiff and upright? It's because excessive movement like the childish flailing arms and legs of cLang cLang inevitably transmits to the fingers. There is no control in the jumping clown. He should wear a gold cape and play in Las Vegas with dancing girls. He is not a serious classical artist. He is a novelty act.

  • @vinylisland6386
    @vinylisland6386 3 роки тому +13

    Volodos and Cliburn. Bronfman is also magnificent. Gavrilov's first recording with Fedoseyev had the most stupendous ossia cadenza I have ever heard.

  • @mytake3692
    @mytake3692 Рік тому +1

    My favorites are Cliburn #1 and Bronfman #2. The others are odd.

  • @rigel48
    @rigel48 3 роки тому +23

    For me the keyword of this cadenza is grandeur. No flashy technical displays with unsteady tempos but a constant majestic flow with a mastered virtuosity which leads to a grand and powerful climax.
    In this respect I find Van Cliburn and Bronfman the best and HJ LIm the least convincing.
    I would add that if this ossia cadenza taken alone is extremly impressive, I think that the regular cadenza suits far better the spirit of the concerto.

    • @joegoetz2024
      @joegoetz2024 3 роки тому +2

      Andre Watts did a hybrid cadenza...starts out with the regular one, then switches to the Ossia before the huge chords come in

    • @swanee9599
      @swanee9599 3 роки тому +3

      I have to disagree. I believe HJ Lim's performance was very controlled and perfectly captured the boldness of this concerto. Its exhilarating, fiery, and courageous - as the cadenza should be. I don't believe Rach's 3rd concerto is one to be played lightly. Perhaps you are not used to seeing female pianist display such assertiveness.

    • @rigel48
      @rigel48 3 роки тому +7

      @@swanee9599 Martha Argerich has displayed plenty of assertiveness for much longer than HJ Lim.

    • @mlaux72
      @mlaux72 3 роки тому

      This why Sergei put this one in the "ossia" and not viceversa :)

  • @petergoldstein1075
    @petergoldstein1075 Місяць тому

    Just heard Van Cliburn . How can anyone be better?

  • @tiamia7139
    @tiamia7139 4 роки тому +9

    Cliburn absolutely! Such power and passion. Brilliant!!

  • @jinlee506
    @jinlee506 11 місяців тому +3

    Bronfman. Nothing to add or subtract. The perfect one.

  • @byfrax2371
    @byfrax2371 2 роки тому +1

    listening to how pianists play the ossia cadenza is one of the best ways to get a feeling for their character when interpreting

  • @brightclassics
    @brightclassics Рік тому +2

    The Paramount Interpreter of the Third Piano Concerto by Rachmaninoff is VLADIMIR HOROWITZ and nobody else. Including thr composer himself.

  • @theenglishalpinist5031
    @theenglishalpinist5031 9 місяців тому

    Lang Lang goes up in my estimation somewhat. That's what he can do when gets serious.

  • @David-mq5sl
    @David-mq5sl 3 роки тому +10

    Lang Lang is a genius of whole new caliber in comparison to anyone else on this video. Perhaps his interpretations are more theatrical but you know it’s what you want to hear. He has no need to even use his eyes, effortless expression..

  • @EASYTIGER10
    @EASYTIGER10 3 роки тому +1

    To me Bronfman is the king of Rachmaninov 3. No Yuja Wang here, but to be fair I've not seen a recording of her playing Ossia which is surprising given her technique

  • @MicoAquinoComposer
    @MicoAquinoComposer 2 роки тому +10

    Katsaris's playing is breathtaking. Beautifully played.

  • @Gardis72
    @Gardis72 3 роки тому +21

    And none of you commented on Alexander Gavrylyuk? I thought it was astonishing!

    • @GianfrancoCavallaro
      @GianfrancoCavallaro 3 роки тому +6

      The best. For me.

    • @poetmale
      @poetmale 3 роки тому +3

      Me too. Flesh, blood, and this third ingredient - spirit. Hope for mankind ❤️

    • @TrevorduBuisson
      @TrevorduBuisson 3 роки тому +3

      It was amazing, although watching him I was just waiting for a stroke. He looked strained, although the music was astonishing.

    • @alis1637
      @alis1637 Рік тому

      Van cliburn doesn’t rush too much but I love gavryluk’s interpretation. Perfect balance of power, sensitivity and detail where required

    • @sarovah1
      @sarovah1 Рік тому

      I agree😊

  • @ilikechopin8112
    @ilikechopin8112 6 днів тому

    From 58:00 to end reminds me of the cadenza of 3rd piano concerto!

  • @chrisknowles7889
    @chrisknowles7889 3 роки тому +8

    Yefim Bronfman. That is all

  • @militaryandemergencyservic3286
    @militaryandemergencyservic3286 4 роки тому +13

    as someone who has played this version, I can say that Freddy Kempff's version is the best I've heard (it's not on this list but it is on youtube). However, I prefer the other cadenza which is apparently harder. I studied this version with Muza.

    • @LC-ig2jm
      @LC-ig2jm 4 роки тому +13

      As a classical pianist, I know this cadenza well. Bang Bang(Lang Lang) played it the fastest and accurately. While Van Cliburn made a lot of mistakes.
      Yekim Bronfman is my favorite pianist for the complete Rach3 (the poster misspelled his name as Bronstein). Bronfman also ranks among the best for his interpretation of the Tchaikovsky 1.

    • @lucaslorentz
      @lucaslorentz 4 роки тому +1

      @@LC-ig2jm no, orozco had played it faster then lang lang

    • @judynelson5038
      @judynelson5038 3 роки тому +4

      @@lucaslorentz
      In this video, Lang Lang, by far. I'm not even his fan. But there's no competition.

    • @lucaslorentz
      @lucaslorentz 3 роки тому +1

      @@judynelson5038 no bruh just like at the time of lang and orozco , despite orozco made some mistakes he played it faster and btw im not comparing whos better

  • @chrisiu1369
    @chrisiu1369 3 роки тому +34

    katsaris's voicing in 4:40 absolutely beautiful

    • @fareshajjar1208
      @fareshajjar1208 3 роки тому +4

      Rachmaninoff has so many inner voices for a gifted interpreter to bring out.

    • @jfpary7336
      @jfpary7336 3 роки тому +1

      Yes!!

    • @InfiniteClouds
      @InfiniteClouds 2 роки тому +3

      Glad someone else noticed - best of the bunch for me.

    • @herobrine1847
      @herobrine1847 Рік тому

      He brought out the red on the edges of the video

  • @neilmillensted7723
    @neilmillensted7723 3 роки тому +1

    They are all wonderful in their own ways but for unmatched hugeness of sound go to Lazar Berman with Abbado ( audio only ): its quite overwhelming.

  • @efghabcd4126
    @efghabcd4126 3 роки тому +4

    weissenberg is my most favorite.

  • @igorkronaveter2428
    @igorkronaveter2428 Рік тому +1

    Valentina Lisitsa, Rachmaninoff Concerto No 3 (solo)
    ua-cam.com/video/EhEpvIpe-6s/v-deo.html

  • @Leopold_Godowsky
    @Leopold_Godowsky Рік тому +2

    이부분만큼은 최애가 랑랑이다…물론 표정은 웃기지만 음악성은 결코 웃기지 않음. 빌드업부터 서서히 올라가다가 무너지는 듯한 느낌이 와닿음

  • @Entertainer114
    @Entertainer114 3 роки тому +9

    Rafael Orozco needed to be included in this list. This was a great lineup and a cool video nonetheless. But I think Orozco did this ossia cadenza so well. Not sure if there's video footage of his recording with the Rotterdam orchestra, but I think he made a stupendous recording of this with them (I know he did Rach 2 with that orchestra, but someone can correct me if he didn't record Rach 3 with them).

    • @MrYupsilon
      @MrYupsilon 3 роки тому

      Yeah, his Rach 3 is my favorite one.

  • @francescoelia.marino
    @francescoelia.marino 2 роки тому +4

    I would have never left out Argerich - possibly the best cadenza from the last century

  • @Tubbknuckles
    @Tubbknuckles Місяць тому

    Love the ossia so much better. Need to add Ashkenazy 78 with Ormandy.

  • @mimo-le3ik
    @mimo-le3ik Рік тому +1

    i think you should add Trifonov too he plays it beautifully

  • @alexandrebeauharnais6849
    @alexandrebeauharnais6849 3 роки тому +2

    I like Gavrylyuk. Katsaris is clever, but I think he is inferior to other players in terms of an explosion of passion.

  • @robertjason6885
    @robertjason6885 11 місяців тому +2

    Katsaris points out so much left hand detail. They are all just so wonderful.

  • @MMB.__
    @MMB.__ 2 місяці тому

    HJ Lim's interpretation has the most musical sense of all.

  • @javascriptkiddie2718
    @javascriptkiddie2718 2 роки тому +3

    14:55 This is terrifying!!

  • @alexandershamonin7476
    @alexandershamonin7476 Рік тому

    Great thanks You for sowing greatest masters of piano, but we've got - Peter Donohoe, Alfred Cortot, Walter Gieseking; please, listen his Cadenza ossia!!! Yours sincerely, Alexander Shamonin)))

  • @emilyhutjes
    @emilyhutjes Рік тому +2

    Alexander Malofeev, you genius, where were you ?? 😊🌷🌷🌷 (Amsterdam N.L. )

  • @wonyang6052
    @wonyang6052 3 роки тому +2

    Amazing video, thank you for making this.

  • @markahmadieh7003
    @markahmadieh7003 3 роки тому +10

    Lazar Berman is still the absolute best at this cadenza

    • @cicir423
      @cicir423 2 роки тому

      Yes, Berman's interpretation (my fave) is like being steadily engulfed in a dense, overwhelming wave. Bronfman is a close 2nd. I had never heard Gavrylyuk - I like the predatory intensity. And Malofeev, at 16 years, has a hair raising, terrifying ossia!

  • @jeffmuenster5131
    @jeffmuenster5131 Рік тому

    While both cadenzas have their golden moments, I think the other one is, structurally speaking, more interesting to my ear. More like quicksilver, and builds way better to the climax.

  • @pianonine
    @pianonine Місяць тому

    Not a fan of all these choices (except Volodos, Kern and Bronfman). However, each was outstanding in their own feat. Sadly, you omitted Sviatoslav, Stephen, Khatia, Yuja, Garrick and still waiting to hear Liu who'll be fresher and tighter than some of these pianists...Lang doesn't even belong here! Imagine sitting in the best seat in the house (violine chair right across from the genius) watching these magnificent feats of humanity...millions of notes, each played with intelligence, feeling and artistry that can never be compared or measured. Rachmaninoff must be glowing with pride at his prodigal masterpiece.

  • @georgenorris2657
    @georgenorris2657 3 роки тому +5

    For me definitely Brontman. lovely clean playing and he sustains the sense of line and good tone throughout. Olga Kern is good too. There is a strange edition alteration in the version played by Cliburn and Katsaris: the thrice repeated phrase near the end of the climax is cut down to just one and it really doesnt work this way. Also to make the dominant A bass note before the d minor fortissimo theme staccato sounds really odd.

  • @Phi1618033
    @Phi1618033 2 роки тому +5

    Hey, concert pianists, if I'm paying a couple hundred dollars for tickets and parking and whatever else to come to your concert, I expect to hear the ossia cadenza, okay? Don't be a wimp.

  • @Franz_Liszt_Korean
    @Franz_Liszt_Korean 3 роки тому +3

    Great thumbnail

  • @MrPGOLIVEIRA
    @MrPGOLIVEIRA 3 роки тому +37

    Van Cliburn aos 23 anos, um fenômeno de talento.

  • @mamakokonao
    @mamakokonao 10 місяців тому

    カチャリスの演奏が圧倒的にすごい!まさにマジック!手の形がいいし、力を入れていないようでもfffがすごい。

  • @rjlblg
    @rjlblg 11 місяців тому +2

    Did you put Lang Lang? Strange. Why didn’t you put Sokolov, Malofeev, Lugansky, Argerich, Yuja Wang, Trifonov, Buniatishvili, Shishkin????

  • @jofrehortaantoniou5724
    @jofrehortaantoniou5724 4 роки тому +6

    Volodos and Cliburn....lang the best actor in piano history

  • @ganchinho
    @ganchinho Рік тому +12

    Bronfman immediate goosebumps, sublime

  • @fgattorno
    @fgattorno 3 роки тому +2

    Very interesting work! congratulations!, I will include RAFAEL OROZCO, from my point of view the clearest and at the same time virtuosity Rachmaninoff Third. Enjoy it.

  • @kimsahl8555
    @kimsahl8555 3 роки тому +8

    You forgot the very best - Ashkenazy.

  • @waynerisman8257
    @waynerisman8257 2 роки тому +5

    Rafael Orozco has the most dramatic inspirational version of the ossia cadenza in less than 2 minutes of unrestrained fury, a controlled madness, and a sense of inner rage.

  • @andream.464
    @andream.464 3 роки тому +10

    No Orozco? That’s like a must have in these compilations!

    • @OhioTropics
      @OhioTropics 3 роки тому

      They’re missing Argerich 😱

    • @pandude53
      @pandude53 3 роки тому +1

      @@OhioTropics She plays the original cadenza not this ossia one.

  • @michaelowens5394
    @michaelowens5394 3 роки тому +6

    Nice work! I collect Rakh 3 recordings and half of these I've never heard of. My all-time favorite is Dimtris Sgouros' age 14 recording (which also took the ossia cadenza, and ossia everything). But Olga Kern's cadenza strikes me as even more musical than Sgouros'. She brought out things I've never noticed. I'll be checking out her whole recording. Thanks!!

    • @edwinwelch1393
      @edwinwelch1393 Рік тому

      Have you a link to this recording?

    • @kosmosyche
      @kosmosyche Рік тому

      @@edwinwelch1393 Just type in Olga Kern Rach 3 into the search bar.

  • @nannerbenahs
    @nannerbenahs Рік тому

    A nice compilation. All great and passionate performances. The top three of course are Bronfmann, katsaris and Volodos.

    • @nannerbenahs
      @nannerbenahs Рік тому +1

      Bronfmann, Katsaris and Volodos. These are just Gods of the piano, let's face it. Such control, such grand legato phrasing even at the moments of greatest difficulty. Lang Lang looks foolish here, technically brilliant, but totally misinterpreting this passionate Russian music.