Liszt and Chopin (Chopin un amor imposible) scenes

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 4 лют 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,1 тис.

  • @theyhaventfedmesince
    @theyhaventfedmesince 5 років тому +5212

    Liszt and Chopin. Thank you for making our life as pianist harder

    • @teufelhunden8308
      @teufelhunden8308 5 років тому +300

      I probably would’ve never become a pianist without listening to Chopin

    • @zesty7736
      @zesty7736 5 років тому +176

      And ya boy Rachmaninoff stretching our hands

    • @gabriel8553
      @gabriel8553 5 років тому +46

      Beethoven cof cof

    • @Incog2k6
      @Incog2k6 5 років тому +103

      Liszt, Chopin and Rachmaninoff: the triumvirate of pianist trolls

    • @tamartsomaia7751
      @tamartsomaia7751 5 років тому +6

      Lol

  • @GATTAPADRE
    @GATTAPADRE 7 років тому +5994

    This is one of a few stories about what happened when Chopin and Liszt met. How accurate I can't say, but it was from living memory of their lifetimes: One evening, while assembled in a salon, Liszt played one of Chopin’s nocturnes, to which he took the liberty of adding some embellishments.
    Chopin’s delicate intellectual face, which still bore the traces of recent illness, looked disturbed; at last he could not control himself any longer, he said, “I beg you, my dear friend, when you do me the honor of playing my compositions, to play them as they are written or else not at all.”
    “Play it yourself then,” said Liszt, rising from the piano, rather piqued.
    “With pleasure,” answered Chopin.
    At that moment a moth fell into the lamp and extinguished it. They were going to light it again when Chopin cried, “No, put out all the lamps, the moonlight is quite enough.”
    Then he began to improvise and played for nearly an hour. And what an improvisation it was! Description would be impossible, for the feelings awakened by Chopin’s magic fingers are not transferable into words.
    When he left the piano his audience were in tears; Liszt was deeply affected, and said to Chopin, as he embraced him, “Yes, my friend, you were right; works like yours ought not to be meddled with; other people’s alterations only spoil them. You are a true poet.”
    “Oh, it is nothing,” returned Chopin, gaily, “We have each our own style.”
    (Nowakowski, in Karasowski, Semptember 1874)

    • @200644600
      @200644600 7 років тому +575

      sounds as real as dragon ball story

    • @jvirg
      @jvirg 7 років тому +319

      My Great Great Great Great grandfather was there an in he confirms this story. It was passed down never changed. He also said that sometime Chopin would only shave one side of his face the side that faces the crowd for his own pleasure of knowing that know knew except him. He got off on doing stuff like that.

    • @Blkchevy98
      @Blkchevy98 7 років тому +85

      If that is how it went down I would have loved to be there to live it :)

    • @MushroomHouseStudio
      @MushroomHouseStudio 7 років тому +50

      That's him. From his music can tell his soft gentle personality.

    • @Someonece
      @Someonece 7 років тому +142

      I never read about that anywhere in a biography, but that is very possible. He would improvise for hours all the time, in fact it was how he usually performed for people at soirees, rather than playing his own compositions. He also liked playing in the dark.

  • @RSTAR2009
    @RSTAR2009 5 років тому +982

    Listz and Chopin playing in the same room would have been a divine concert

  • @encode2745
    @encode2745 7 років тому +3499

    Chopin never played the nocturne no. 20 for anybody, it was a private piece that he never published.

    • @lefinlay
      @lefinlay 7 років тому +305

      You can still play a piece publicly, which you wrote without publishing it

    • @encode2745
      @encode2745 7 років тому +165

      A Man Has No Name like I said this piece was private for Chopin, and side note, Chopin actually didn't play that much for others because he was known for his brilliant playing. ;)

    • @encode2745
      @encode2745 7 років тому +63

      A Man Has No Name oh and I believe he wrote this piece for his sister.

    • @hirams.g.2284
      @hirams.g.2284 6 років тому +89

      exactly, that nocturne was published after his death, being his posthumous work

    • @Svit.S
      @Svit.S 6 років тому +62

      He was playing in salons and to royalty. In those times you could play for royalty but not for money, you could go on a walk with them and be seen with them which elevated your status.

  • @SCRIABINIST
    @SCRIABINIST 4 роки тому +2112

    Liszt: plays Revolutionary Etude
    Chopin: war flashbacks

    • @che2048
      @che2048 3 роки тому +38

      liszt is a bully

    • @hannahquintua
      @hannahquintua 3 роки тому +51

      @@che2048 I don't think he meant to initiate Chopin's flashbacks

    • @iangreer4585
      @iangreer4585 3 роки тому +115

      If you look at the backstory of Chopin writing this etude, it makes total sense.

    • @aliceko4695
      @aliceko4695 3 роки тому +8

      Why he played that piece not other etude.........

    • @aliceko4695
      @aliceko4695 3 роки тому +2

      @Raged Gamer yes

  • @DonVal86
    @DonVal86 4 роки тому +2801

    It’s crazy how footage like this can survive a couple of centuries.

  • @Kin_Ketzalcoatl333
    @Kin_Ketzalcoatl333 Рік тому +137

    *Thanks Liszt, Rachmaninoff and Chopin for filling our lives with magnificence and unspeakable beauty!*

    • @levin9997
      @levin9997 Рік тому +9

      and extreme painful etudes

    • @achilloryenrfr_2710
      @achilloryenrfr_2710 Рік тому

      With all due respect to Rachmaninoff, you really can't compare him to the 2 others...

    • @janjanaragones990
      @janjanaragones990 Місяць тому

      @@achilloryenrfr_2710actually, you can

  • @TheGrouchDnD
    @TheGrouchDnD 5 років тому +1462

    Damn, you imagine having to play after Liszt? I'd jump out the window

    • @fathursyahna5751
      @fathursyahna5751 5 років тому +59

      If i were mozart . That would be easy! :)

    • @local9724
      @local9724 5 років тому +100

      @@fathursyahna5751 eh...about that....

    • @apug296
      @apug296 5 років тому +159

      Not really if you're Chopin lol

    • @justsomerandomasshole3699
      @justsomerandomasshole3699 4 роки тому +36

      @@fathursyahna5751 Liszt is better

    • @jamesh.2890
      @jamesh.2890 4 роки тому +11

      Fathur Syahna no not at all lmfao

  • @NIVRAGG
    @NIVRAGG 5 років тому +1420

    Sees the piano getting destroyed
    me:Cries in 61 keys keyboard without touch sensitivity.

  • @RayMak
    @RayMak Рік тому +7

    The breaking piano part made me cry

  • @karennoble1168
    @karennoble1168 5 років тому +101

    A beautiful, sensitive, Polish actor who portrays Chopin and his soul and Polish one so well. This is one of the best clips from the movie. I have watched the full movie on YT many times.

    • @abubakrshoaliev2775
      @abubakrshoaliev2775 5 років тому +3

      Can you tell me the name of this movie please?

    • @karennoble1168
      @karennoble1168 5 років тому +12

      @@abubakrshoaliev2775 it is "Chopin Desire for Love" on CD, DVD? A Translated title?? Most probably the same Full! Polish movie, as on YT in English with Spanish subtitles
      Under
      "Chopin, un amor imposible". 2002
      There is also a British movie on Chopin, 1991?, CD? Have not seen it, just clips on YT. With Hugh Grant, Judy Davis. Hope it helps.

    • @abubakrshoaliev2775
      @abubakrshoaliev2775 5 років тому +3

      @@karennoble1168 thank you very much!

    • @karennoble1168
      @karennoble1168 5 років тому +2

      @@abubakrshoaliev2775 I forgot, the British movie which I did not see, just clips is called " Impromptu".
      May you enjoy both!

    • @karennoble1168
      @karennoble1168 5 років тому +4

      @@abubakrshoaliev2775 hello Abubakr again.
      if you like Chopin like I do, there are 2 great pianists on YT playing the beautiful Impromptu (Fantasie) after which one movie was named.
      Dmitry Shishkin and the lovely, elegant Anastasia Huppmann (russian-austrian).

  • @darrinsiberia
    @darrinsiberia 5 років тому +427

    Nowadays... "oh my god he is playing by CANDLELIGHT... how ROMANTIC!"
    Back then... "hey dude... can you bring some light over here? Thanks..."

    • @sp9392
      @sp9392 5 років тому +10

      Lol...this is probably one of the best comments.

    • @pumpkingamebox
      @pumpkingamebox 5 років тому +3

      Candles don’t produce much light at all. So you genuinely have to have it near to read sheets. Although why he does it here, not sure.

  • @ludwigvanbeethoven282
    @ludwigvanbeethoven282 6 років тому +2827

    Chopin Looks Like Anakin Skywalker In Episode 3 Of Star Wars

    • @Milordvega
      @Milordvega 6 років тому +72

      Ludwig Van Beethoven And Chopin like Anakin was also tempted by a brunette!
      But Herr Ludwig, what is your opinion of his music? Not quite as majestic as yours. Though that heroic Polonaise may be something you might like.

    • @Milordvega
      @Milordvega 6 років тому +68

      But this one doesn't hate sand, he loves Sand.

    • @orangejuiceman
      @orangejuiceman 6 років тому +23

      Bet you can't tell if he sounds like Anakin.

    • @wilmerherrera1502
      @wilmerherrera1502 6 років тому +5

      Jajajajajaj

    • @ArloVT
      @ArloVT 6 років тому +40

      It's over Chopin I have the high ground

  • @franzliszt5292
    @franzliszt5292 6 років тому +355

    My good pal, Chopin. Such respect I have for him! I shall write a biography on him!

    • @ffoco5453
      @ffoco5453 5 років тому +20

      Better not lend it to Carolyn.

    • @hannahquintua
      @hannahquintua 3 роки тому +3

      Update: Lads and lassies, a rumour had spread that Chopin was a nasty anti-semite

    • @snorefest1621
      @snorefest1621 3 роки тому +7

      @@hannahquintua probaly i heard this before

    • @macrobitgames2266
      @macrobitgames2266 3 роки тому +9

      @@hannahquintua BROOO it's the second time I read this. NO. Chopin wasn't an anti-semite. He had a trouble with 2 jews and wrote a letter talking bad things about them. Check your fonts man.

    • @hannahquintua
      @hannahquintua 3 роки тому +2

      @@macrobitgames2266 i said "rumour" but thanks very much for clarifying!

  • @MawoDuffer
    @MawoDuffer 5 років тому +357

    Chopin plays so well that the piano lid opens in the middle of him playing.

    • @mules8662
      @mules8662 5 років тому +8

      Mawo Duffer omg i never noticed

    • @bait5257
      @bait5257 2 роки тому +1

      Lmao

    • @giovannib27
      @giovannib27 Рік тому +5

      I think there was a time jump between csharp minor nocturne and the polonaise

  • @yon8081
    @yon8081 4 роки тому +286

    So glad they still have footage of this historic event!

  • @thesoultransformer966
    @thesoultransformer966 5 років тому +332

    Some scenes in the movie show Chopin leaving and 'saying good by' to his homeland - Poland (war, Russian soldier destroying the piano, carriage, escape, etc). During his trip-escape to France through Stuttgart he wrote "Stuttgard's Diary" in which he discribes his state of mind: thoughts and feelings, about his homeland and about the fall of the November's Uprising against Russian occupier). In the movie you can see also the weeping willow trees which are very characteristic to Poland and represent mourning. Chopin was born in 1810 in Zelazowa Wola, near of Warsaw, and left Poland when was 20 years old. Never seen his homeland again. Died in 1849 in Paris at the age of 39 years old (probably for tuberculosis). This is the reason why in his music is so much longing (homesickness), sadness and nostalgia. It is good to know the context (bigger picture) of his feelings and by what he was driven while creating his materpices. Since 1772 up to 1918 Poland was wipped off of the Europe's map and then split for nearly 150 years between Prusia, Russia, Habsburg's Empire and Austro-Hungerian Empire. Polish people where not allowed to speak their own language even at home what could yield in sending to Siberia. Chopin's Polish name is Szopen. I hope this information will help you better understand and feel Szopen/Chopin's music.

    • @rosacanina5353
      @rosacanina5353 5 років тому +7

      Bardzo dobra informacja dla cudzoziemcow. Ale z tym niemowieniem po polsku w domach trochę się Pan zagalopował😊

    • @rosacanina5353
      @rosacanina5353 5 років тому +6

      Przecież były wydawane książki w jęz polskim, wystawiano opery. Halka nie śpiewala po rosyjsku!

    • @swetoniuszkorda5737
      @swetoniuszkorda5737 5 років тому +3

      Thanks. But these are not "weeping" willow trees. Are "ordinary land" willow trees. Pictoresque though.

    • @excelsior999
      @excelsior999 3 роки тому +2

      Thank you.

    • @suzanailhabarretoviana1863
      @suzanailhabarretoviana1863 3 роки тому +2

      Thank you very much for your information! 🎹

  • @zsozso411
    @zsozso411 4 роки тому +78

    We’re so blessed to have had these two geniuses

  • @nickelliot3679
    @nickelliot3679 5 років тому +65

    A lovely friend of ours will turn 99 in December and being both Polish and a former classical pianist, adores Chopin. Although Alzheimer's is beginning to take her mind, when we visit she always remembers to request Chopin. So my son, who plays in a manner similar to Chopin and Debussy, obliged by learning several of Chopin's works. He even went as far as "completing" Chopin's posthumous Waltz in A minor. It never fails to bring a smile to her sweetly weathered face and a peaceful spirit to her home. I am convinced all great music is played from the heart, and is felt as well as heard.

  • @wooba7817
    @wooba7817 5 років тому +2146

    My heart literally felt like it was being ripped apart when the piano got destroyed... anyone feel the same?

    • @succulentbatteries5682
      @succulentbatteries5682 5 років тому +47

      fucking same

    • @Anonkontello
      @Anonkontello 5 років тому +27

      Same my dude.

    • @zetacon4
      @zetacon4 5 років тому +40

      Even to include such action in a movie is a travesty so gross, it would cause the film to be rated "R". It is a horrible thing to do.

    • @accidxntal1786
      @accidxntal1786 5 років тому +8

      zetacon4 i’ve never seen the movie, why did they destroy the pianos?

    • @zetacon4
      @zetacon4 5 років тому +6

      @@accidxntal1786 I do not know. I was wondering that too. Maybe if I watched the movie again, I will be reminded why.

  • @williamdeng1870
    @williamdeng1870 2 роки тому +32

    Liszt and Chopin, two great musicians whose names will always be remembered.

  • @fredericchopin8140
    @fredericchopin8140 6 років тому +4664

    Its me

    • @piotrsz2020
      @piotrsz2020 6 років тому +78

      Ha Ha. Cannot stop laughing😂😂😂 What a luck, Fryderyk, you cannot read all these comments here😁

    • @davutyalcin-
      @davutyalcin- 6 років тому +211

      When is your new album coming out buddy?

    • @ludwigvanbeethoven449
      @ludwigvanbeethoven449 6 років тому +236

      Frèdèric Chopin It’s nice to see you, old friend... It’s me, Ludwig V. Beethoven!

    • @ludwigvanbeethoven9511
      @ludwigvanbeethoven9511 6 років тому +286

      You imposter I'm Beethoven!

    • @meeaamii
      @meeaamii 6 років тому +52

      Umm where's Paganini??

  • @virvisquevir3320
    @virvisquevir3320 5 років тому +172

    Chopin, Liszt, pronounced: "shopping list". When I go to the supermarket, I always bring my Chopin Liszt. A musical extravaganza.

    • @alikilic9701
      @alikilic9701 5 років тому +3

      Hahah

    • @emjay2045
      @emjay2045 5 років тому +2

      😂🤣😅

    • @iliyajavadian
      @iliyajavadian 4 роки тому +5

      so many of these comments... it's actually pronounced as 'shoupan'

    • @ludwig4029
      @ludwig4029 4 роки тому

      Iliya3D or "show-pan"

    • @excelsior999
      @excelsior999 3 роки тому

      I actually have some grocery "Chopin Liszts'" which I bought in the Carnegie Hall gift shop.

  • @satrickptar6265
    @satrickptar6265 5 років тому +364

    Liszt and Paganini, the 2 devil rockstars. If I'm living in their era, that would be my emo phase.

    • @christinechon2464
      @christinechon2464 5 років тому +9

      LOLOL I WAS THINKING ABOUT THAT, both wonderful showmen who people would kill to play like

    • @user-rj3ot2nd2o
      @user-rj3ot2nd2o 5 років тому +1

      For me it would be a goth phase. :)

    • @PepeLuguillo
      @PepeLuguillo 4 роки тому +2

      They were literally Keith Emerson and Jimi Hendrix. Liszt for Emerson and Paganini for Hendrix. Yeah.

    • @alexs1504
      @alexs1504 4 роки тому

      Liszt is so much more than that

    • @okyeahbutwhythoe1804
      @okyeahbutwhythoe1804 3 роки тому +4

      fun fact: Liszt would purposefully tune the piano wrongly and play aggressively so the strings would snap and he would improvise around the broken strings

  • @dihydrogenmonoxide5994
    @dihydrogenmonoxide5994 7 років тому +907

    Chopin was probably a lot more quiet and timid than he is in these scenes but I like it nonetheless.

    • @zeeutuber1315
      @zeeutuber1315 7 років тому +51

      He does show a bit of that at the start, and also notice that his A minor waltz you see at the end wasn't published until after his death.

    • @Tyutyunnikova05
      @Tyutyunnikova05 7 років тому

      Dihydrogen Monoxide щ

    • @Populous3Tutorials
      @Populous3Tutorials 6 років тому +14

      pretty sure he was timid and shy too

    • @daph0307
      @daph0307 6 років тому +21

      @@Populous3Tutorials he had his moments of extrovert.

    • @terjes.9469
      @terjes.9469 6 років тому +17

      Chopin could be really temperamental - how could one write dramatic pieces as, say, his Prélude op. 28 no. 22 and not be? Several of his Parisian experienced this side of Chopin when receiving education in piano-playing from him. As I remember it, occasionally, when in difficult mood, he would raise his voice, close to shouting, and slam his hand in the table, breaking his goose-feather pen - those were referred to as 'stormy lessons'. But he was also was jocular, and good at impersonating, and in family settings (with George sand and children), he liked to rehearse and perform puppet-theater.

  • @letybg946
    @letybg946 3 роки тому +4

    Nunca ha habido un Compositor ,de esta Calidad y tan Romántico , del Piano ..como Frederic Chopen . Tan Prolífica su Obra ..Sus Estudios como el Revolucionario ...so tan hermosos , y con cierto grado de Dificultad que se los dedicó al Gran Franz Liszt ...Preludios , Nocturnos , Mazurcas , Squerzos , Baladas , Conciertos a mi en lo particular me encanta el 2° .
    Y sus Valses .
    Murió tan joven , por la Tuberculosis ..que no me explico cómo pudo componer tanto , estando enfermo . Polonia ha dado al Mundo , Científicos como Madame Curie , Chopin , y el Santo.Juan Pablo II , Papa de la Iglesia Católica ..perdón por extenderme ...amo a esa Nación ..Gracias por subir ese pequeño corto de su Película .🎹🎼🎶🎵👏👏👏👏👏💖💞😘😘😘

  • @phie6648
    @phie6648 5 років тому +354

    7:58 ah yes, the a minor chopin waltz, one of the few waltzes not played nor released until after the death of chopin
    wait...

    • @whooshylushy743
      @whooshylushy743 5 років тому

      dolphin534 I saw my classmate playing it 1 million times already on the piano performing

    • @phie6648
      @phie6648 5 років тому +12

      just a name no, thats not what the story is at all. Chopin actually had a lot of works that he wrote down, never performed, and importnalty never published as he had very high standards for himself and viewed those works as sub-par. After his death most of these works were discovered as even tho chopin didnt not like them, he also couldnt bring himself to get rid of them and they were the published as op.posth. The a minor waltz was one of these pieces

    • @phie6648
      @phie6648 5 років тому

      just a name uh huh, ok bud

    • @agk0604
      @agk0604 5 років тому

      @just a name reis be bi çeviri fırlatsana siz ne tartışıyonuz ?

    • @nitemarket7756
      @nitemarket7756 5 років тому

      dolphin534 wait for real which one is this

  • @etiennedelaunois1737
    @etiennedelaunois1737 6 років тому +1074

    Hahaha Chopin sitting down and playing like that in front of everybody and mocking Liszt.
    Chopin who did 5 concerts in his life and hated to be the centre of attention.

    • @j58534
      @j58534 5 років тому +117

      Etienne Delaunois well 5 official concerts he played for friends while drunk a bunch but that’s just our romantic era prince for ya

    • @esejsnake1503
      @esejsnake1503 5 років тому +37

      What's worse: Liszt plays like an uncultured piano student of 2 years :-D
      He just smashes the keys in.
      WHAT was the intent behind this?

    • @digpauya96
      @digpauya96 5 років тому +32

      @@esejsnake1503 are you serious?? You are ... Arggg I won't say none

    • @kuuderepiano2988
      @kuuderepiano2988 5 років тому +49

      @@esejsnake1503 never mind all the flashy almost-perfect scales and octaves

    • @kuuderepiano2988
      @kuuderepiano2988 5 років тому +27

      @CleXz I slowed down the video to see the first notes
      Left hand is alright
      Right hand seems to change the notes a little
      And I don't think someone who fakes piano playing has.. rather flashy fingers
      I tried playing like that and nope.
      He's an experienced pianist

  • @wagnerpolveiro7176
    @wagnerpolveiro7176 7 років тому +8

    Muchísimas gracias, Francisco Aguilera, por compartir este maravilloso video. Las escenas son verdaderamente preciosas.

  • @asuncionarcosgarcia6385
    @asuncionarcosgarcia6385 Рік тому +7

    Yo adoro a Chopin,su sensibilidad con el piano me conmueve y me llega al alma desde siempre.
    Para mí, siempre será el mejor.
    Muchas gracias por compartir con nosotros ésta pieza de la película,me gustaría poder verla entera.
    Si alguien me puede informar del título,me haría un gran favor,y si la pudiera encontrar, sería un gran regalo.
    Adoro a Chopin desde que tenía siete años, ahora tengo 61.
    Mil gracias.🎼🎶❤💕👏👏👏

  • @MrLewis-lk8us
    @MrLewis-lk8us 7 років тому +1189

    Liszt was always trying to out do the piano and out do music. His whole effort was to transcend both. Chopin was in love with music, in love with the piano. He was the piano. Even Liszt, being the better pianist, had to admit that Chopin was the better musician and composer.

    • @webkinznoodles
      @webkinznoodles 6 років тому +4

      !!! yes !!!

    • @MiorAkif
      @MiorAkif 6 років тому +3

      Indeed

    • @fivezeroniner
      @fivezeroniner 6 років тому +104

      And then l
      Liszt meet Paganini.. both trying to compose "unplayable songs".

    • @chargemanken144
      @chargemanken144 6 років тому +33

      Liszt's Consolation is still one of the GOATS of sadness. It's not like I dont like Nocturne it's just that Consolation has more depth.

    • @interstellar618
      @interstellar618 5 років тому +37

      The Hungarian Rhapsody is a work straight from the muse herself. They had very different styles but to call one better the other? I think they are beyond the threshold of mere competition.

  • @serenesiewhm9408
    @serenesiewhm9408 7 років тому +2957

    I hate seeing the part where the guards came and destroyed the piano with the rifle

    • @itsjustnopinionok
      @itsjustnopinionok 7 років тому +117

      Serene Siew HM when chopin left poland he kind of left for what would be a better start. poland was under alot of pressure at the time. so a famous young composer who could put poland on the map like beethoven and mozart did vienna, sort of speaking was knowest by a number of wealthy and political leaders. you can imagine they were not all to happy. and i also belive poland was in a conflict with russia. so its not surprising people being angry chopin ran off in their minds.

    • @paralysisbyanalysis2287
      @paralysisbyanalysis2287 7 років тому +112

      Yah, that hurt my soul

    • @james.housego
      @james.housego 7 років тому +90

      my heart died with every strike

    • @thenbenagcz3931
      @thenbenagcz3931 7 років тому +63

      They were Russians soliders and He was forced to leave his beloved Poland

    • @michaelmiller1215
      @michaelmiller1215 7 років тому +5

      Serene Siew HM So do I

  • @hungryfareasternslav1823
    @hungryfareasternslav1823 5 років тому +251

    7:28 How did Chopin know Hungarian Rhapsody no.2? Liszt published after Chopin died... Interesting...

    • @jfgn_1479
      @jfgn_1479 3 роки тому +27

      Facts

    • @RodgerFan-k2b
      @RodgerFan-k2b 3 роки тому +15

      magic

    • @supermariobrandon7642
      @supermariobrandon7642 3 роки тому +42

      Perhaps Chopin was working on it but Liszt took the credit after Chopin died?!???

    • @hannahquintua
      @hannahquintua 3 роки тому +18

      @@supermariobrandon7642 Quite sad to think that this is possible. But then again, Liszt had 19 Rhapsodies

    • @thebobbs6999
      @thebobbs6999 3 роки тому +1

      Where did you think Liszt got the idea from?

  • @iliatsiklauri3868
    @iliatsiklauri3868 6 років тому +381

    God thank you for Chopin.

    • @Andrea-xs4ny
      @Andrea-xs4ny 6 років тому +34

      I imagine God saying, "Sorry, but I needed him back sooner than I thought."

    • @roseblossom2023
      @roseblossom2023 5 років тому +1

      @Lisztian "lisztian", is that the fandom name now?

    • @roseblossom2023
      @roseblossom2023 5 років тому

      @Lisztian why, they surely can. youve just started one- lisztians for liszt fans. the only thing we need to do now is brainstorm fandom names for other classical composers

    • @Swzx
      @Swzx 2 роки тому +1

      ოპა სად ვიპოვე ქართველი

    • @iliatsiklauri3868
      @iliatsiklauri3868 2 роки тому

      @@Swzx გაუმარჯოს სულიერ დას/ძმას :)

  • @leonmaliniak
    @leonmaliniak 6 років тому +45

    Upon further review I have to repeat and re-confirm even more so that these two performances are amoungst the best interpretations I have ever heard by any pianists of these two Chopin works. The REVOLUTIONARY played by the LISZT actor and the Polonaise played by the Chopin actor have some of the most interesting dynamics, accents and phrasing I have ever heard in performance of these pieces.
    I wonder who decided on these interpretations....absolutely great

    • @pooliansshots6731
      @pooliansshots6731 5 років тому +2

      I doubt they really played the piano but they make it look very real.

    • @luanlovelyman
      @luanlovelyman 4 роки тому

      i think the nocturn too, love the rubato on the nocturne,

    • @adapienkowska2605
      @adapienkowska2605 2 роки тому +2

      @@pooliansshots6731 yes, the piano was played bye one person - Janusz Olejniczak.

  • @garigariwai164
    @garigariwai164 2 роки тому +21

    Haber imaginado y transmitido la emoción a través del tiempo y el espacio por la sensibilidad de Liszt y Chopin,dejan una huella indeleble en el alma de quien la escuche por todos los tiempos.

  • @krakerkrunch
    @krakerkrunch 5 років тому +14

    I have all my life , since a child, been in love with Chopin and with hes music....will allways be

  • @riitan412
    @riitan412 4 роки тому +15

    I love Chopin and his music,and always keep to learn his music and history

  • @trurocker03
    @trurocker03 5 років тому +7

    One of my best memories is when I went to a judging and played nocturne op9 no2 and the waltz in a minor. I was awarded with the highest ranking and although I remember the event I wish I had a video recording of it. Only my grandpa came because he took me there. I’m very proud that he was able to see me perform those two pieces.

  • @miriamsosa1612
    @miriamsosa1612 2 роки тому +17

    Chopin interpretaba el piano como si acariciaba las teclas. Es como se aprecia el valor de un instrumento musical y su armonía musical. Valiosísimo. Gracias.

  • @lavendelblue4368
    @lavendelblue4368 7 років тому +432

    I can't understand why so many complain that actor playing Chopin is not exactly like him. Excuse me, what??? First of all, the film was made in Poland with polish actors. Do you think, that there are hundreds actors there, who look like Chopin? Piotr Adamczyk, who played this role is perfect , because he has delicate, elegant, subtle and a liitle bit neurotic face, exactly like Chopin. He doesn't have to look exactly like him, it's a matter of impression that he make and Adamczyk made it really good. I believed him , believed in his story. It's not Brad Pitt. :)))) And very good.....

    • @goognamgoognw6637
      @goognamgoognw6637 5 років тому +8

      haha, and Liszt was not polish he was hungarian. Beside the actor did not need to be polish to portray Chopin. As I am sure you know, Frédéric was a polish citizen but biologically half French from his French father who came from the French region of Lorraine to Poland to teach French in a boarding school. But, to be perfectly honest, i think the actors feel historically accurate, i am especially pleased with the portray of Liszt's character and demeanor it's quite close to what i imagined. Also would you be annoyed to know that Chopin wrote his handwritten letters to his father in French and not in Polish (he would use polish for his other relatives) ? Chopin was a French-Pole. The son of an immigrant French father.

    • @mateuszloniewski
      @mateuszloniewski 5 років тому +23

      goognam goognws Chopin, while he might have been biologically half French his soul was fully Polish. He wrote Polonaises and always said of himself as a Pole.

    • @goognamgoognw6637
      @goognamgoognw6637 5 років тому +2

      @@mateuszloniewski might have been, ?! You are funny there, he WAS biologicaly half-french. I know the french region his grandparents and his father lived in. And he always wrote his correspondance to his father in French. His father almost certainly always talked to Frédéric in French so that he acquired the language. He wanted his soul to be Polish, but there is a difference between what one wants and what one is. Most likely he wasn't interested in his father's family because of their modest origins but would rather spend time with high society regardless of nationality.

    • @mateuszloniewski
      @mateuszloniewski 5 років тому +3

      goognam goognws biology doesn’t change one’s soul.

    • @nightybreeze
      @nightybreeze 5 років тому +18

      @@goognamgoognw6637 Excuse me, he also was born in Żelazowa Wola and spent his childhood, teenage years and twenties there. He finished a polish highschool and university. He spoke polish, he wrote letters in polish and he composed his pieces in a polish spirit, using polish national dances. Don't come to me with the audacity to accuse Chopin of not being a polish composer, I beg of you.

  • @calamitosforger9465
    @calamitosforger9465 4 роки тому +10

    I love how he says, with quite some fear, "But after Liszt?!"

  • @michaelmiller1215
    @michaelmiller1215 7 років тому +657

    I cannot even comprehend Chopin and Liszt being in the same room--the two greatest pianists that ever lived! But I always felt that Chopin sought to bring out the 'soul' of the piano, whereas Liszt wanted to compose the most technically 'unplayable ' pieces, which sacrificed the melodic line.

    • @wolfpsx6210
      @wolfpsx6210 7 років тому +112

      I presume you're not a pianist, because you're talking out of your a**. Liszt is pianistically very comfortable, often "easier" to play than Chopin. Liszt's octaves and sequences of diminished chords aren't that hard, compared to Chopin's more intricate passages. Their styles of composing are very different though, so it's useless to compare in any aspect. I wouldn't say either of them "sacrificed the melodic line", they just embellish and texture differently. I think composers like Schumann or Brahms are usually way closer to "unplayable" than Liszt. They didn't really perform their works on the piano like Liszt did, and you can really tell the difference when you've played a dozen works from each one.

    • @FrancisMaxino
      @FrancisMaxino 7 років тому +88

      You obviously have not listened to enough Liszt...there are sections of his second piano concerto and many of his later pieces that have the most beautiful melodic content ever written for piano.

    • @czeynerpianistproducercomp7155
      @czeynerpianistproducercomp7155 7 років тому +11

      I remind you that Carl Czerny was a teacher of Liszt and Thalberg, was a teacher of those who were masters of Rubinstein, Rachmaninov, Moszkowski, Barenboim and many more! From my point of view Czerny was more virtuous than Liszt and Chopin a clear example of this is the Op.365 School of Virtuoso, Op.400 School of Prelude and Fugue, Op.692 24 Grand Etudes, Op. 756 25 Great etudes

    • @tarikeld11
      @tarikeld11 7 років тому +15

      Michael Miller Greatest composer ever lived? You mean Beethoven

    • @bslaozora
      @bslaozora 7 років тому +13

      I humbly disagree. In my opinion, Liszt is actually more direct and passionate towards the feeling, or the soul, while Chopin's works are more melodic, but more indirect.
      In term of difficulty......Actually, I would say Chopin's works are on average slightly harder than Liszt's...

  • @masallah.g.7197
    @masallah.g.7197 6 років тому +35

    Hermosa película, triste la vida de mi compositor favorito. Bellas locaciones. No sabía que la condesa
    Rothschild , patrocinó grandes músicos de la época. Bravo!!! Fascinante película

  • @tidalpool1
    @tidalpool1 5 років тому +5

    for 50 years Chopin has moved me in ways I can not describe. he has taken me to worlds I can not perceive, This clip exemplifies why.

  • @panteranegra4548
    @panteranegra4548 3 роки тому +13

    Maravilhoso Chopin! Sua genialidade e delicadeza de sentimentos expressavam no dedilhar do piano. E mesmo no grito de protesto que ele expressou na POLONAISE N°6 "HEROICA", tinha uma expressam romântica. E Liszt, trazia a paixão eterna em suas danças Húngaras e Liberstraume. Enfim são dois compositores e intérpretes bem diferentes em suas interpretações.

  • @inazuma3gou
    @inazuma3gou 7 років тому +215

    In my imagination, Chopin only plays in complete darkness in a room that is lit, perhaps, only by a single candle. He would not take off his gloves when he plays and there would be no more than 20 people in attendance.

    • @lefinlay
      @lefinlay 6 років тому +39

      Even top pianists would struggle to play their best wearing gloves. They restrict movement and dampen dexterity

    • @Andrea-xs4ny
      @Andrea-xs4ny 6 років тому +28

      Andrew Marcus - I assume you're not a pianist because wearing gloves while playing (well) is darned near impossible. Playing while blindfolded is quite doable, but while wearing gloves, no. In college, however, the piano practice rooms were sometimes cold, so I wore fingerless gloves. Even those were cumbersome.

    • @cinnamonsteakhaus9013
      @cinnamonsteakhaus9013 5 років тому +15

      @@Andrea-xs4ny the original comment got some details right though. Chopin sometimes played in the dark, and he preferred to play in a salon or to a group of his close friends (usually less than 20 or even less than 10) because he thought it was far more intimate. For the gloves part? Ehh, I'm not sure about that.

    • @Andrea-xs4ny
      @Andrea-xs4ny 5 років тому +2

      @@cinnamonsteakhaus9013 Hi, there. I agree with you 100% and didn't contradict any of what you said. It was only the wearing of the gloves while playing piano that is not do-able.

    • @goldennebula5013
      @goldennebula5013 5 років тому

      A Man Has No Name probably slip notes too

  • @aprr20
    @aprr20 Рік тому +3

    Litz connected with a type of emotion and Chopin created music that was his mental and emotional expression in a score...one of the greatest in history.

  • @socorrronavarrete5250
    @socorrronavarrete5250 4 роки тому +97

    Chopin siempre será el maestro de maestros del piano...

    • @DefinitelyNotFelis.
      @DefinitelyNotFelis. 2 роки тому +6

      Y eso no es del todo posible cuando hay un compositor como Franz Liszt. La técnica pianística de Liszt por sí sola estaba muy por delante de la de Chopin, por no hablar de las habilidades de orquestación.

    • @levyhurtado5609
      @levyhurtado5609 2 роки тому +10

      Como ejecutante Liszt, no hay duda. Pero como compositor dame a Chopin.

    • @ЮрийФилиппов-ь6ь
      @ЮрийФилиппов-ь6ь 2 роки тому +1

      @@DefinitelyNotFelis. CNN он не только мастер игры, но и гроссмейстер сочинения фортепьянной музыки!

    • @pabloarreysalas8295
      @pabloarreysalas8295 2 роки тому

      No. Chopin es el jefe de jefes

    • @cristiandone5749
      @cristiandone5749 Рік тому

      @@levyhurtado5609 para darle mas realismo a la pelicula deberian haberla grabado en un piano de la epoca... los instrumentos del Siglo 19 no sonaban ni por asomo como este

  • @moniquelemarechal6163
    @moniquelemarechal6163 5 років тому +6

    Chopin et Litzt, 2 magnifiques compositeurs, mais c'est Chopin qui me va droit au cœur !!

  • @Dimivim
    @Dimivim 5 років тому +2

    The way he acts while playing and after seeing the womans eyes revealing his true nature of softness really reminds of me and my beloved...

  • @ايزيسطايل
    @ايزيسطايل Рік тому +7

    شكرا لمن أعطى صوتا جميلا للحياة ❤

  • @AtuyChannel30
    @AtuyChannel30 4 роки тому +11

    0:52 that notes. Makes minds blowing . Chopin so crazy

  • @oscarluja1002
    @oscarluja1002 5 років тому +1

    Most beautiful and dramatic short theme, The Revolutionary Etude. Thank you so so much.

  • @marciadantas3608
    @marciadantas3608 6 років тому +13

    Amo as composições de frederic Chopin são maravilhosas.

  • @LeonMare49
    @LeonMare49 5 років тому +38

    They are both immortal as their music lives 'forever' - as far as this life concerns... I got the shivers up my neck when Chopin started playing at 4:18

  • @erzsebetkovacs899
    @erzsebetkovacs899 7 місяців тому +1

    Nagyon felemelö megmagyarázhatatlan. lérzés fog el EZ alatt a film jelenet alatt ❤😊😊❤

    • @powderedwiglouis1238
      @powderedwiglouis1238 7 місяців тому

      My hungarian friend i fully get you two composers that are unique

  • @minema7953
    @minema7953 3 роки тому +30

    Liszt breaks my limbs, Chopin breaks my heart.

  • @helenzumaran4609
    @helenzumaran4609 4 роки тому +4

    Hermoso, cuanta fuerza e intensidad, desborda una sensacion de inquietud ... tenacidad

  • @mariamagdalenatieghi5621
    @mariamagdalenatieghi5621 5 місяців тому

    Gracias que emoción. Gracias Te admiro. Lo que me enviaste.

  • @davisatdavis1
    @davisatdavis1 5 років тому +13

    Even though this is not actually Liszt and Chopin, it's still really cool to think these are really my two favorite composers alive today.

  • @karinalima2
    @karinalima2 5 років тому +14

    Maravilhoso demais, incrível, sublime, lindo !! 🇧🇷

  • @marianadelima1598
    @marianadelima1598 Рік тому +1

    Gracias por las escenas del Film ✨✨

  • @marialiliacamarenagarcia2685
    @marialiliacamarenagarcia2685 2 роки тому +5

    Fabuloso maravilloso me encanta escuchar la música de Liszt y Chopin

  • @cristinag5798
    @cristinag5798 3 роки тому +11

    Dios mio gracias por darnos estos dos pianistas talentosos!! Con su música nos llevan del éxtasis salvaje, al cielo de la nostalgia absoluta ...

  • @theresaheyer537
    @theresaheyer537 Рік тому +1

    beautifully sounding personalities............distinctly different thank you! filmmaker!!!Aguilera.!!!

  • @yourdo11y
    @yourdo11y 5 років тому +9

    8:30 love that right hand melody

  • @bait5257
    @bait5257 2 роки тому +8

    3:32 even chopin doesn't want to play after liszt. Damn

  • @vakker5218
    @vakker5218 5 років тому +2

    I can't -- *wheeze* Piotr Adamczyk as Chopin is the best thing i saw today, thank you so much youtube recommendations--

  • @thibomeurkens2296
    @thibomeurkens2296 3 роки тому +5

    Seeing that piano being demolished it was soul crushing 😭

  • @GrammyTapDancing
    @GrammyTapDancing 3 роки тому +4

    Such hard times back then 😪 makes us appreciate what we have today

  • @claudiacarley4050
    @claudiacarley4050 Рік тому +2

    My Mom use to play Chopin... she's French and so fortunate to enjoy classical Music❣️

    • @oppdaloppdal5036
      @oppdaloppdal5036 Рік тому

      Chopin był Polakiem, muzyka szopena przesycona jest elementami muzyki ludowej polskiej. W sercu i duszy był Słowianin.

  • @paramexicoconamor.2337
    @paramexicoconamor.2337 2 роки тому +5

    BRAVO! Dos geniales artistas.

  • @magdalenadabrowska2394
    @magdalenadabrowska2394 2 роки тому +14

    Sama bym się zakochała w Chopinie po takim występie, podobnie jak George Sand. Wspaniałą muzyka wspanialy artysta

  • @michaelmamp9096
    @michaelmamp9096 Рік тому

    Liszt & Chopin, thank you for making my ears feel better!!!!

  • @saketrawat1004
    @saketrawat1004 4 роки тому +34

    4:17 imagine playing him still dre

    • @erhanlanjai171
      @erhanlanjai171 3 роки тому +4

      uncultured swines find this funny huh

    • @magnusemeritus
      @magnusemeritus 3 роки тому

      It's a joke! We are all here because we love and respect Chopin and Liszt!

    • @pitou6084
      @pitou6084 3 роки тому

      what was written on the paper?

    • @oswaldhiren0610
      @oswaldhiren0610 Рік тому

      this is so funny😂😂😂

  • @pablopenedo9126
    @pablopenedo9126 Рік тому +3

    Que belleza poder estar en el momento volver al pasado y ver y escuchar tanta maravilla👏👏👏👏🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹

  • @craigopperman5072
    @craigopperman5072 2 роки тому

    So many expert opinions in here is so wonderful! It's a miracle those who are not are graced with such worldly knowledgeable historians!

  • @lisztomaniac19
    @lisztomaniac19 5 років тому +4

    I love how Liszt sight-read the piece in seconds

    • @ozymandiaspbs
      @ozymandiaspbs 4 роки тому +1

      John Roland - That is what I do. I can play any music put in front of me, whether on piano, organ, or woodwinds. I am not so good playing by ear, though.

  • @beabea123
    @beabea123 6 років тому +9

    Piotr Adamczyk u r very good actor, don’t care what people says here about ur role..., congratulations!
    I am very emotional about Chopin’ s life and his music. You did very good job with Stanka🍷👌🍷👌🍷

  • @generakuj9443
    @generakuj9443 4 роки тому +1

    I am so happy we had these two men, so much beauty to listen and play!

  • @pianist-moko
    @pianist-moko 5 років тому +9

    I think that Chopin had played the piano more delicately✨

  • @evaaaaaaa2778
    @evaaaaaaa2778 3 роки тому +3

    I was happy when Chopin played this song 😭💕

  • @susanagomez1336
    @susanagomez1336 Рік тому

    Que belleza!!!!👏👏👏👏👏.
    saludos desde Bs As Argentina 😙

  • @ethanl.1699
    @ethanl.1699 7 років тому +84

    Revolutionary Etude
    Nocturne in C# minor
    Heroic Polonaise
    Hungarian Rhasphody no 5
    idk
    Ok, so I came back after a year and made some revisions.
    “Hungarian Rhasphody no 5” is obviously no. 2
    And the thing I didn’t know was Chopin’s Waltz in A minor posthumous

    • @themsous
      @themsous 6 років тому +5

      The idk is walz in A minor

    • @CiXoLoLPvP
      @CiXoLoLPvP 6 років тому +16

      Ethan Lam I believe that was an improvisation on Hungarian rhapasody no 2. Also Idk is Waltz in A minor which was posth.

    • @transforminggeek5249
      @transforminggeek5249 6 років тому +1

      All of those were not even close to right

    • @biol0gical718
      @biol0gical718 5 років тому

      Waltz In A minor

    • @ethanl.1699
      @ethanl.1699 5 років тому +3

      Transforming Geek boi, I got 3/5 first attempt lol

  • @colinmurphy2214
    @colinmurphy2214 7 років тому +7

    The tone of that pleyel is literally perfect

    • @Someonece
      @Someonece 7 років тому +2

      M's Compositions A Pleyel from the 1830s wouldn’t have sounded like anything close to that.

    • @colinmurphy2214
      @colinmurphy2214 6 років тому

      TacTundra I’m well aware. It’s not period appropriate perfect, but it’s perfect to my ears now.

  • @leonmaliniak
    @leonmaliniak 2 роки тому

    Whoever is playing these Chopin piano Buster's is really great. Some of the best interpretations I have heard.

  • @MagdalenaGutierrez-j7m
    @MagdalenaGutierrez-j7m Рік тому +4

    If they only knew how worshipped they are now and forever ❤

  • @diamonde2547
    @diamonde2547 7 років тому +4

    I love this movie so much !

  • @Buntal1309
    @Buntal1309 5 років тому +2

    Im in tears..i could feel the pain in that piece

  • @davutyalcin-
    @davutyalcin- 6 років тому +9

    Chopin.. always no.1 maestro

  • @georgehiggins1320
    @georgehiggins1320 5 років тому +4

    2:22
    "Someone's been bashing on the piano" Thank you dr. K

  • @mariamagdalenatieghi5621
    @mariamagdalenatieghi5621 5 місяців тому

    Que belleza, escucho e imagino a ambos a mi Adorado Padre en su Pleyel y al Pianista. Gracias.

  • @mariavilla2736
    @mariavilla2736 3 роки тому +4

    Exelente 😊👍🙂❤️🙏🙏🙏🙂❤️🙏🙂❤️❤️❤️🙏🙏🙂❤️🙏🙏❤️🙂👍😊💕😍

  • @doctorfate6414
    @doctorfate6414 5 років тому +9

    0:39 The most accurate depiction of the Etude i have heard yet. Most every other piece I've heard is waaaaay unappealing.

  • @elianeluty2065
    @elianeluty2065 2 роки тому +1

    Magnifique, à ne pas rater, merci beaucoup

  • @elwafikai4972
    @elwafikai4972 7 років тому +359

    Both composer are the best pianist ever created by god

    • @Spitfayeur007
      @Spitfayeur007 7 років тому +30

      elwafi kai then you've never heard of Ludwig von Beethoven

    • @Someonece
      @Someonece 7 років тому +19

      Also Scriabin and Rachmaninoff

    • @grandbluepianistofthesky9469
      @grandbluepianistofthesky9469 7 років тому +14

      elwafi kai Franz Liszt doesn't even come close to the level of Chopin.

    • @rrkdudas6848
      @rrkdudas6848 7 років тому +1

      elwafi kai youre all stupid, none of you even heard about Alkan, he was better than Liszt, chopin, beethoven or anyone else, Liszt himself said that he would never dare to compete against Alkan

    • @ibuprofen303
      @ibuprofen303 7 років тому +7

      We have this guy down my local pub. For a pint of guinness, he'll play "Knees up Mother Brown" on their piano. He's quite good. Nearly as good as these two. I've not requested any Liszt or Chopin off him yet, but I'm sure he could manage it if it didn't matter that the piano is missing some notes that the dog ate.

  • @thenetware1
    @thenetware1 6 років тому +20

    Grande gênio. Sempre existe uma forte história por trás das grandes mentes.

  • @mandyguo4274
    @mandyguo4274 Рік тому +1

    Finally, I can play all the pieces in this video! Thank you, Chopin, for composing such beautiful (mostly difficult!) pieces!😂

    • @senluke
      @senluke Рік тому

      How is the last one called?

    • @qurikymat54
      @qurikymat54 Рік тому

      @@senluke Chopin - Waltz in A minor, B. 150, Op. Posth.

    • @senluke
      @senluke Рік тому +1

      @@qurikymat54 Thank you!

    • @qurikymat54
      @qurikymat54 Рік тому

      @@senluke You're welcome!

  • @pineapplewhatever5906
    @pineapplewhatever5906 5 років тому +12

    From what I can tell, "Liszt" got a lot of the right hand (the first chord was wrong) but the left hand is faked.
    "Chopin" actually played both hands.