Wunderschöne Interpretation dieses perfekt komponierten Konzerts mit klarem doch elegantem Klang des genialen Soloklaviers sowie gut harmonisierten und perfekt entsprechenden Tönen der anderen Instrumente. Der zweite Satz klingt besonders schön und echt beruhigend. Im Kontrast klingt der dritte Satz echt lebhaft und auch überzeugend. Der intelligente und unvergleichliche Dirigent leitet das ausgezeichnete Orchester im veränderlichen Tempo und mit perfekt kontrollierter Dynamik. Wunderbar vom Anfang bis zum Ende!
This is one of only two piano concertos that Mozart wrote in a minor key; the other one is #24, K491. #20 though still ends in a major key (D major in its case); #24 starts and ends in C minor .
С большой благодарностью и любовью земляки, коллеги, соседи и друзья Юрия Александровича Егорова. Всегда помним и гордимся. Казань, Татарстан, Россия. 🇷🇺
My mind cannot grasp how you can put together a long piece of music with all these moving parts on a piece of paper. Mozart only had a piece of paper and a pen to put down his ideas. Not like today that you can use computer programs that save your work and replay what you’ve written so far so you can hear it.
Computer programs are great but I still prefer the piano to check my work with pencil and paper. It goes much quicker that way and way less cumbersome than scrolling, finding your place etc. etc. Plus playing your work on the piano gives you new ideas, often you would never have gotten those while working on your computer. And there is also this innate knowledge a composer like Mozart had, he didn't need a computer, he had one, his brains. Bach's system of composing has to my knowledge never been cracked, not even by computers.
I had been always wondering why every time I listen to that cadenza I felt it’s a Beethoven concerto until I learned it was actually written by Beethoven.😂
the eerie "ghostlike" feeling the beginning of this concerto creates the first time you listen to it could never be matched again by any other piece
The first time I hear this piece was so unique, I was so impressed, I love it so much
This might just be the most perfect piece of music ever created, all three movements, begining to end.
Wunderschöne Interpretation dieses perfekt komponierten Konzerts mit klarem doch elegantem Klang des genialen Soloklaviers sowie gut harmonisierten und perfekt entsprechenden Tönen der anderen Instrumente. Der zweite Satz klingt besonders schön und echt beruhigend. Im Kontrast klingt der dritte Satz echt lebhaft und auch überzeugend. Der intelligente und unvergleichliche Dirigent leitet das ausgezeichnete Orchester im veränderlichen Tempo und mit perfekt kontrollierter Dynamik. Wunderbar vom Anfang bis zum Ende!
I still can not comprehend how can you be so genius and sit down and write perfect concerto with straight 30mins stunning piece.
Beautiful, sensitive performance! I'm impressed. Mozart, always so full of emotion, mostly positive , even in a bit of darkness! Youthful exuberence!
I've always loved the transition from the cadenza to the coda (13:10). Synergy of two geniuses.
Yes, Beethoven was quite good with writing cadenzas
Tétrico. Sublime. Perfecto.
This is one of only two piano concertos that Mozart wrote in a minor key; the other one is #24, K491. #20 though still ends in a major key (D major in its case); #24 starts and ends in C minor .
С большой благодарностью и любовью земляки, коллеги, соседи и друзья Юрия Александровича Егорова. Всегда помним и гордимся. Казань, Татарстан, Россия. 🇷🇺
Last movement hits so hard what🥴
In the last movt it's back to some turmoil but the very end of it is lots of joy 🥴
Thanks!😊
the first part could be an instrumental intermezzo in the Requiem, it has the fear of death and Papa smell over it
XD
Mozart was a real genius!
Очень талантливый пианист.... жаль рано ушедший. .❤
My mind cannot grasp how you can put together a long piece of music with all these moving parts on a piece of paper. Mozart only had a piece of paper and a pen to put down his ideas. Not like today that you can use computer programs that save your work and replay what you’ve written so far so you can hear it.
Computer programs are great but I still prefer the piano to check my work with pencil and paper. It goes much quicker that way and way less cumbersome than scrolling, finding your place etc. etc. Plus playing your work on the piano gives you new ideas, often you would never have gotten those while working on your computer. And there is also this innate knowledge a composer like Mozart had, he didn't need a computer, he had one, his brains. Bach's system of composing has to my knowledge never been cracked, not even by computers.
@ I agree. His mind was buzzing with so many musical ideas he had to put them down on paper. He was a true musical genius. ❤️
So immensely satisfying
❤️
I need this with fingering. Can smb help me?
Me too
I had been always wondering why every time I listen to that cadenza I felt it’s a Beethoven concerto until I learned it was actually written by Beethoven.😂
20:10
19:19