Beethoven Sonata No.8 '' Pathétique '' _____________________________________ I. Grave -- Allegro di molto e con brio: 0:05 II. Adagio cantabile: 8:11 III. Rondo: Allegro: 13:15 '' Great Performance Traum, nicely done! ''
The name of this piece perfectly describes my piano skills. Edit it's been 3 years: idk if anybody cares but I'm actually learning this now 😭😭😭 Man I never would have guessed I could reach this level. Keep practicing guys if I can do it so can you! You've got this 🫡
@@chispioo However, its current application is not as pertinent to its proposed original Greek form as it is to my intended use of it, stemming from French. Therefore, by referencing the indicated specification as to how the word was intended to be utilized for this sonata, we can truly conclude that my above points have value. To acknowledge your proposal, yes, the roots of this term can be traced back to Greek; however, in actuality, the intended use was its definition in French. The development of the term 'Pathétique' can be interpreted in different ways, but despite this fact, I did not intend to portray it in its original form, and its development via French was correctly used in order to mean 'impassioned' in the scenario at hand.
@@therealrealludwigvanbeethoven Well, in French which is my language, "Pathétique" is mostly used with the second meaning of the Larousse dictionary : "Bad enough to cause contempt and dismay." So the comment of @Tartar101 was obviously a joke for this meaning.
My favorite it's the "hunt" so beautiful and each mouvement have an exeptional theme and she's very difficult (thé 2nd mouvement is very jumpy)i love hear it on fortepiano
What until you listen to his inspiration, J.S. Bach. Yes, _THAT_ Bach. While Beethoven rewrote the definition of genius, J.S Bach inspired the Romantic period of music. ... oh and what we have is what we _recovered_ because his children overshadowed him.
@@Quidoute no, Beethoven had cited J.S. Bach as the inspiration for quite a bit of his work and constantly sang his praises (one of which is his last name should be _ocean_ because of how much inspiring music the man did). When the two biggest names of the Romantic Period cite J.S. Bach as the man to inspire them, then who am I to argue with that notion?
As a piano player I have respect for guitar players... guitar seems so hard, especially classical guitar. 😅 On piano, you just push a button and the note plays... buttons further to the left make lower notes and buttons further to the right make higher notes. Meanwhile on guitar you have to push the right spots on the right strings with one hand and then pluck the right strings at the right times with the other hand 😵💫
11:32 this movement means so much to me. I have been diagnosed with 3 different mental illnesses and listening to it helps me handle the constant suffering while still allowing me to look at my pain and to hum along with it. God bless you Ludwig Von Beethoven! RIP
@@hatman064 The same as usual. It`s been tough all of my life. It`s just my lot in life. But I believe there is an upside. When I pass away from here I will finally be happy when I will at last meet my soulmate and my children Juno Manesseh and Magnus Wolfgang! I can`t wait! Thanks for asking my friend!
@@Grupsy 3rd movement: *Start from the beginning and get familiar with the main motif.* As always, practice with hands separately. The Alberti bass with the scales on the first page can be learned fairly easily if you do it the way told above. The triplets are super annoying, but if you play it slowly, you can play it quickly (sacrilegious but partly true nonetheless). I am still trying to play them equally as of today for some of the harder trips. The quick scale that goes down that ends the first part will take a TON of your practice time, but it is important to get it perfect. The fugue thingy after the repeated motif should be practiced w/ hands separately too. For the scales on the 3-4th page, S T A C C A T O them properly and practice with both hands separately. The arpeggios after them (and throughout the piece) are a pain in the butt for me. The coda is the hardest part IMO, but if you can finish the rest of the piece, the coda should be less of a challenge, but a challenge nonetheless especially the part with the RH Alberti bass (I don't know how to describe it). I practice for about 1h30m's a day, and 45 mins are spent on the 3rd movement alone. Follow the fingering. Be patient, that is what brought me to finish the piece. (After all, it took at least a month's worth of practice). If you are feeling bored with the piece in general, play the hard parts and ignore the motif, as it gets repetitive. I didn't exactly use a metronome until I was familiar with the piece. I am by no means a piano teacher, and I don't know your personal level, so take my words with a grain of salt. It's a fun piece, and my family loves hearing it, even though I spend so much time on it. I hope you enjoy it too. If I were you, I'd practice the 2nd movement first. It was easier for me, and provided the pathway to learn more difficult pieces. Remember to use the pedal generously. RN, trying the first movement. The broken octaves/tremolos are killers, and doing them requires practice, like a marathon (they require a ton of endurance). It's very symphonic and *PASSIONATE*, so I really like it. When you learn pieces, you have to REALLY like them and be borderline obsessed with them, or else you might run out of patience. (pls drop a like so I feel better)
Oh my gosh, I thought I thought you were gonna drop the movements individually, but boy was I wrong (Actually I still am wrong, I did not know he posted this earlier this year, Still) Traum is incredible and we appreciate and love your playing and you, especially your dedication. Traum is simply incredible!
After playing this piece for 20 yrs, finally pianists are putting up more performances onto UA-cam. I always thought not many people would appreciate this Sonata. I like this speed and momentum, the toughest part I would say its the running down notes and jumping back up fast for the 1st movement. Well played!
this interpretation is fucking amazing. this is my new Pathetique. i always floated between kempff and gould. this is right in the middle in the most beautiful way. nothing feels rushed, or too slow. all the emotions and outbursts are there and acknowledged. Nothing feels left out, or dragged, or rushed. That is phenomenally impressive.
Love this sonata so much. Started learning this, but arthritic fingers aren't good when you have to play big chords. Thanks so much for this performance. Just beautiful.
@@margaretstrochnetter2850 I really feel your pain Mrs. Strocknetter, I am sixteen years old and have been playing for 10 years but am in extremely bad health...my left ear has already gone completely Deaf and my Right ear is on it's way to doing the same thing within the next few years and I'm trying to make a Career out of Composing and Playing already written Pieces. So, I sympathize with you. When you want to play a piece but can't because of an ailment it is truly Heart Striking.
@@randompianist5425 Jesus. Wish I could give you a huge hug. Or one of my ears. I'm a lousy pianist and can't compose to save my life, but I don't know how I'd cope if I couldn't just listen. Sincerely wish you all strength and a medical breakthrough. Hang in there. ♥
@Margaret Strochnetter I get what you mean! I am 16 and I have JRA. Luckily it is under control with the medication I’m on, but when I play piano it is difficult for me to reach chords and a lot of times I have to arpeggiate them because of my small hands combined with the arthritis in my right wrist, which prevents me from stretching it as far as my left one. Even though sometimes it hurts, I keep going because it is what I love. Don’t be afraid to take breaks in between, it helps, to make sure your fingers and wrists don’t have tension, and leave out a note (I leave out repeated notes sometimes) in chords that are difficult to reach! I wish you the best!
@@goodluck1449 oh okay ! thanks for the correction, i somehow just discovered your original answer and liked it, as i wanted to re-listen to this masterpiece :)
Those pauses in the first part!! 🤩🤩The entire work is so well done! I have about 18 spots I wanted to highlight saying I loved the expressions, or those particular parts. All I know is I’m so happy and feel like I just attended a performance in a proper setting. Thank you so much for this
I remember sitting in my GCSE music class about to study the first movement and my teacher played this piece and it blew me away. One of the reason I love classical music so much now
Currently doing Music GCSE, saw this as one of our set works and thought “why not…I’m gonna try learn this” I already know I’m in for one long ride, wish me luck 👍
This cover should be considered the standard of playing this piece. Have heard other renditions and yours is far and away the best! Great job and thank you for showing how you did it!
There are many great Beethoven Sonatas, but this one holds a special place in my heart as it was the first full sonata I learned to play. Fantastic playing as always, Traum!
I learned how to play the piano Sincé I was kid, now I'm 67 and can't play this máster peace complete, only second movement. You need to práctica a lot of hours every day to play like this pianist.
Even though this is obviously not nearly as long as other piano pieces, it's still amazing to me how people can just do performances of this length and still sound amazing. Awesome job on the interpretation as always!
Just fyi I'm pretty sure he just cut together 3 different performances into one video, that's why the screen goes black in between each movement. That being said I'm sure he could obviously play this in one sitting, and it is impressive
This isa college level piece, my piano teacher literally had this one piece to practice and to count for like 50% of her grade for the whole semester~ so definitely hard af :)
Back at 2 Million views! Thank you so much Traum for this excellent performance. This video was what lead me to eventually learn this piece 2 years later.
The first movement? The epitome of perfection! The second movement was lovely. I think this one is really up for a little bit of creative interpretation, and I personally would have played some spots more piano (but who am I to challenge Traum? lol). 10:40-11:32 section was the best in my opinion! The third movement was also amazing. I liked your choice of speed and the articulation was lovely. Amazing performance! :D
This is the first time I ever listened to the first movement of Pathetique Sonata. Your interpretation is unique. My favorite is the third movement, actually. Congratulations TRAUM .............AND THANK YOU FOR THIS BEAUTIFUL PERFORMANCE.
Tengo 14 años y es todo un honor que esta obra maestra me haya permitido ganar un concurso nacional, definitivamente es la pieza que más difruto tocando y oyendo.
I am 14 years old and it is an honour that this masterpiece has allowed me to win a national competition, it is definitely the piece I enjoy playing and listening to the most.
Que cool! Yo tengo 12 y estoy escuchando las sonatas de Beethoven para mi próxima clase de piano. Cuanto te tomo para aprender lo todo? Lo tienes memorizado?
This sonata is AMAZING. It was the first sonata that i have learned every mov. Its simply wonderful the change of the first movement to the second and then the third. But my favorite one is Waldstein
He was smaller then a manlet, shorter then someone who is 5``3 tall. And is said to have been terrible in every other activity that he ever tried, he even said it on his suicide letter, something like ´´music is the only thing i am good at``.
imagine living next to Beethoven when he was cooking this up making mistakes and revising them, then one night you come home to him finally playing the whole jam with all its ups and downs.
Came here to hear this masterpiece after I heard from NCT that it was used as a sample for Golden Age (the adagio cantabile part). Beethoven was a genius and you covered this flawlessly woahhh
Hey I'm learning this piece right now and I listen to your interpretations a lot. I will definitely take examples from your version. Thanks for uploading so much Traum.
Me, who has played this song for 20+ years now: Hey, this guy is pretty good! Nice and clean Me, halfway through listening: There’s…there’s a REPEAT in there?!?! I literally never noticed it, and now I am absolutely flabbergasted and shook that I’ve just blown right past that every time. WTF 😂😂😂😂
OH my.. this piece... I remember, when I was 11, I played the first movement and fell in love with Beethoven's music. Since than, I fell into the hole of romantism and I struggle to get out of it hehe
Mi Sonata favorita de Beethoven, sin duda dolorosa, muy expresiva. Muy buena interpretación, muy virtuosa. Está obra me cautiva por su complejidad rítmica, melódica, y armónica, pero sobretodo emocional. Bethoveen la escribió para narrar su complicada situación, se estaba quedando sordo, y esto lo hacía sentir miserable, patético. Una obra llena de multitud de emociones. Sin duda mi favorita.
Beethoven Sonata No.8 '' Pathétique ''
_____________________________________
I. Grave -- Allegro di molto e con brio: 0:05
II. Adagio cantabile: 8:11
III. Rondo: Allegro: 13:15
'' Great Performance Traum, nicely done! ''
Thanks a lot for sharing this!
Tysm
Tysm!!! 💕
Thank you
Oha Türk
The name of this piece perfectly describes my piano skills.
Edit it's been 3 years: idk if anybody cares but I'm actually learning this now 😭😭😭
Man I never would have guessed I could reach this level. Keep practicing guys if I can do it so can you! You've got this 🫡
What? Your skills are emotional and passionate? If so, congratulations!
@@therealrealludwigvanbeethoven
This was mostly a joke, but thank you :)
@@chispioo However, its current application is not as pertinent to its proposed original Greek form as it is to my intended use of it, stemming from French. Therefore, by referencing the indicated specification as to how the word was intended to be utilized for this sonata, we can truly conclude that my above points have value. To acknowledge your proposal, yes, the roots of this term can be traced back to Greek; however, in actuality, the intended use was its definition in French. The development of the term 'Pathétique' can be interpreted in different ways, but despite this fact, I did not intend to portray it in its original form, and its development via French was correctly used in order to mean 'impassioned' in the scenario at hand.
Exactly the same for me sometimes lol
@@therealrealludwigvanbeethoven Well, in French which is my language, "Pathétique" is mostly used with the second meaning of the Larousse dictionary : "Bad enough to cause contempt and dismay." So the comment of @Tartar101 was obviously a joke for this meaning.
I thought this piece was impossible to play, but luckily I started simply piano 6 months ago and boy was I right, it is still impossible to play.
Pathetique
fuck simply piano
U had me half way lol
@@thecanadian8206 is it that bad?
@@thecanadian8206 calm down bro but i agree
Beethoven when he plays it: Pathetique
Me when I play it: Pathetic.
Lmao
Best comment.
Lol
Haha
It's "passionate" or "emotional." Not literally pathetic.
It was on a Keyboard Conversations program.
I'm gonna carefully assume that this is my favourite beethoven sonata
If you haven't listened to the Appassionata, specifically the 3rd movement, then you have not heard classical piano.
Beethoven sonata 30 movement 1 is beautiful too
And so is sonata 15 (pastoral) movement 1
Moonlight is my favourite, but Pathetique is good as well.
My favorite it's the "hunt" so beautiful and each mouvement have an exeptional theme and she's very difficult (thé 2nd mouvement is very jumpy)i love hear it on fortepiano
'hmm.. let’s find something sightreadable..'
*ah, beethoven pathetique, perfect!*
Its not that hard to sight read this sonata :)
@@Lolmenchek yes it is
@@Lolmenchek it’s a Hard sonata
@@fuzzykoala6168 it's not a hard sonata but it's not sight readable to a concert level unless Ur liszt
@@Lolmenchek not hard to sightread but hard to interpret
Man, the power, the raw emotion. Beethoven truly is the grandfather of metal!
Ah?
What until you listen to his inspiration, J.S. Bach.
Yes, _THAT_ Bach.
While Beethoven rewrote the definition of genius, J.S Bach inspired the Romantic period of music.
... oh and what we have is what we _recovered_ because his children overshadowed him.
@@TheTrueAdept bro are you a hater of beethoven, both of them are geniuses
but Beethoven really changed music lets be real
@@Quidoute no, Beethoven had cited J.S. Bach as the inspiration for quite a bit of his work and constantly sang his praises (one of which is his last name should be _ocean_ because of how much inspiring music the man did).
When the two biggest names of the Romantic Period cite J.S. Bach as the man to inspire them, then who am I to argue with that notion?
Beethoven was a metalguy 😅
as a guitar player I feel huge respect for piano player it is so amazing
Do u have instagram?
I feel the same. But im not a guitar player (i swear im not egotistic)
As a piano player I have respect for guitar players... guitar seems so hard, especially classical guitar. 😅 On piano, you just push a button and the note plays... buttons further to the left make lower notes and buttons further to the right make higher notes. Meanwhile on guitar you have to push the right spots on the right strings with one hand and then pluck the right strings at the right times with the other hand 😵💫
@@unchaynd7266same lol
And also I'm the same person as hui
I approve! I'm currently writing my 33rd Piano Sonata.
🤣
Didn't you already write this comment, Beethoven?
And then that other Beethoven roasted you because you said 32 instead of 33 lol!
That was hilarious
@@vedantdave579 And then I finally roasted him, once and for all.
I feel like it's gonna be any day now when we get a notification for "crazy pianist plays impossible sonata Hammerklavier 106 with bruised femur!"
lmao he doesn't even play it with it with his fingers, he uses his fucking thigh
He will play it in Vinheterio style and show who is boss lol
😂
@ENESCU GAYPIE because why not...
@ENESCU GAY why
11:32 this movement means so much to me. I have been diagnosed with 3 different mental illnesses and listening to it helps me handle the constant suffering while still allowing me to look at my pain and to hum along with it. God bless you Ludwig Von Beethoven! RIP
You should check “fourside” from the earthbound soundtrack!
@@HowAboutNuh-uh Thanx for the suggestion!
Hope you get better:)
how are you now ?
@@hatman064 The same as usual. It`s been tough all of my life. It`s just my lot in life. But I believe there is an upside. When I pass away from here I will finally be happy when I will at last meet my soulmate and my children Juno Manesseh and Magnus Wolfgang! I can`t wait! Thanks for asking my friend!
I feel identified with this song, not cause of the feelings it transmits, but cuz of the name
I feel you :')
LMAO
I love how crisp and clear your piano is paired with your emphasis in the first movement is utter perfection.
This is crazy. My teacher just gave me this piece a week ago. What a coincidence!
So did mine! :D
Nice!!
I gave myself the last piece over a month ago and am now practically finished!
@@tommeng6522 cool! How is it?
@@Grupsy 3rd movement: *Start from the beginning and get familiar with the main motif.* As always, practice with hands separately. The Alberti bass with the scales on the first page can be learned fairly easily if you do it the way told above. The triplets are super annoying, but if you play it slowly, you can play it quickly (sacrilegious but partly true nonetheless). I am still trying to play them equally as of today for some of the harder trips. The quick scale that goes down that ends the first part will take a TON of your practice time, but it is important to get it perfect. The fugue thingy after the repeated motif should be practiced w/ hands separately too. For the scales on the 3-4th page, S T A C C A T O them properly and practice with both hands separately. The arpeggios after them (and throughout the piece) are a pain in the butt for me. The coda is the hardest part IMO, but if you can finish the rest of the piece, the coda should be less of a challenge, but a challenge nonetheless especially the part with the RH Alberti bass (I don't know how to describe it). I practice for about 1h30m's a day, and 45 mins are spent on the 3rd movement alone. Follow the fingering. Be patient, that is what brought me to finish the piece. (After all, it took at least a month's worth of practice). If you are feeling bored with the piece in general, play the hard parts and ignore the motif, as it gets repetitive. I didn't exactly use a metronome until I was familiar with the piece.
I am by no means a piano teacher, and I don't know your personal level, so take my words with a grain of salt.
It's a fun piece, and my family loves hearing it, even though I spend so much time on it. I hope you enjoy it too.
If I were you, I'd practice the 2nd movement first. It was easier for me, and provided the pathway to learn more difficult pieces. Remember to use the pedal generously.
RN, trying the first movement. The broken octaves/tremolos are killers, and doing them requires practice, like a marathon (they require a ton of endurance). It's very symphonic and *PASSIONATE*, so I really like it.
When you learn pieces, you have to REALLY like them and be borderline obsessed with them, or else you might run out of patience.
(pls drop a like so I feel better)
Oh my gosh, I thought I thought you were gonna drop the movements individually, but boy was I wrong (Actually I still am wrong, I did not know he posted this earlier this year, Still) Traum is incredible and we appreciate and love your playing and you, especially your dedication. Traum is simply incredible!
Actually he did it first per movement. You can scroll at his video, i think 3 month ago he uploaded 3 video of this sonata per movement
Thanks!!
Fully expecting you to be a professional pianist when you do a reveal.
Ngl he literally has to be at this point.
He has to be ling ling
😂😂😂😂
@@fuzzykoala6168 lang lang?)
@@fuzzykoala6168 Twoset Fandom Is Everywhere xD
beethoven made some real bangers.
After playing this piece for 20 yrs, finally pianists are putting up more performances onto UA-cam. I always thought not many people would appreciate this Sonata. I like this speed and momentum, the toughest part I would say its the running down notes and jumping back up fast for the 1st movement. Well played!
1st movement :-
introduction 0:00 - 1:43
exposition (1st) 1:44 - 2:11
2nd subject 2:12 - 3:13
repeat 3:14 - 4:42
opening again 4:43- 5:24
development 5:25 - 6:05
recapitulation 6:06 - 7:20
ending 8:01 - 8:07
Ty, I guess
POV your doing GCSE music
@@oliverm1255 is it that obvious 😭
THANK YOU, U LITERALLY SAVED ME AAAAHH
@@gwen3735 I've just about finished the first movement haha
The adagio cantabile is one of the most Heavenly melodies i've ever listen, thx for upload this piece. RIP Beethoven 🥀🌹
bruh hes not dead check the comments above lol
His melody voicing is wierd, kinda almost too harsh but his feel of the flow is on point as always 😂
???????????
@@4ss4ss1n5
this interpretation is fucking amazing. this is my new Pathetique. i always floated between kempff and gould. this is right in the middle in the most beautiful way. nothing feels rushed, or too slow. all the emotions and outbursts are there and acknowledged. Nothing feels left out, or dragged, or rushed. That is phenomenally impressive.
Love this sonata so much.
Started learning this, but arthritic fingers aren't good when you have to play big chords.
Thanks so much for this performance. Just beautiful.
My arthritic fingers forced me to give the sonata away also.
An exquisite piece of music, thank you for giving me the joy of listening.
@@margaretstrochnetter2850 I really feel your pain Mrs. Strocknetter, I am sixteen years old and have been playing for 10 years but am in extremely bad health...my left ear has already gone completely Deaf and my Right ear is on it's way to doing the same thing within the next few years and I'm trying to make a Career out of Composing and Playing already written Pieces. So, I sympathize with you. When you want to play a piece but can't because of an ailment it is truly Heart Striking.
@@randompianist5425 i feel so bad for you bro
@@randompianist5425 Jesus. Wish I could give you a huge hug. Or one of my ears. I'm a lousy pianist and can't compose to save my life, but I don't know how I'd cope if I couldn't just listen. Sincerely wish you all strength and a medical breakthrough. Hang in there. ♥
@Margaret Strochnetter I get what you mean! I am 16 and I have JRA. Luckily it is under control with the medication I’m on, but when I play piano it is difficult for me to reach chords and a lot of times I have to arpeggiate them because of my small hands combined with the arthritis in my right wrist, which prevents me from stretching it as far as my left one. Even though sometimes it hurts, I keep going because it is what I love. Don’t be afraid to take breaks in between, it helps, to make sure your fingers and wrists don’t have tension, and leave out a note (I leave out repeated notes sometimes) in chords that are difficult to reach! I wish you the best!
This is definitely beethoven’s daily casual stretch for the fingers in the morning😂
Hey guys we are before Liszt and Chopin.. Also I didn’t watch it yet but amazing interpretation Traum! You’re going places
This piece perfectly encapsulates the melodrama I feel at being consistently single through my early 20's.
Don't worry, you get older and it passes. Lol
I just turned 20 and got the sheet music for this piece xD
Still less drama than being in a relationship
@@martinepeters9891 Less drama, more emptiness.
This is the most amazing piece I could imagine. I'm so glad that at least 2.5 million people were able to hear it.
You are musician?
@@bernardetecarneiro9220 oh yeah, are you? Check out videos
Adagio cantabile hits different after watching Takt op.Destiny
Try listening "over the rainbow"
2:11 - 2:39 this part is so beautiful!
Yep, that's the second subject for you. Usually it's more decorated than the first subject. :>
Correction: that is the bridge, not the second subject
@@goodluck1449 oh okay ! thanks for the correction, i somehow just discovered your original answer and liked it, as i wanted to re-listen to this masterpiece :)
This part reminds me vaguely about Bella Ciao.
Those pauses in the first part!! 🤩🤩The entire work is so well done! I have about 18 spots I wanted to highlight saying I loved the expressions, or those particular parts. All I know is I’m so happy and feel like I just attended a performance in a proper setting. Thank you so much for this
Do u have instagram?
I remember sitting in my GCSE music class about to study the first movement and my teacher played this piece and it blew me away. One of the reason I love classical music so much now
Finally I can listen all movement's in a single video on Spotify, thank you ☺️
😍
Currently doing Music GCSE, saw this as one of our set works and thought “why not…I’m gonna try learn this”
I already know I’m in for one long ride, wish me luck 👍
how's that going after a year?
How’d it go
How's it been going?
My favorite sonata of Beethoven and I really waited for Traums interpretation 😉
Thank you so much Traum, you are amazing!!! 😘😘😘
🙏
This cover should be considered the standard of playing this piece. Have heard other renditions and yours is far and away the best! Great job and thank you for showing how you did it!
Listen this piece from Fazil Say. A Turkish pianist and you’ll understand how it should be played.
There are many great Beethoven Sonatas, but this one holds a special place in my heart as it was the first full sonata I learned to play. Fantastic playing as always, Traum!
Do u have instagram
This one and the Moonlight Sonata has got to be my favorite from my favorite composer.
phenomenal performance, Traum!
Listen to Piano Concerto 5.
I play the piano for almost 10 years and i still cant play this masterpiece as good as it needs to be played
I played piano for 9 years and im still working on the first movement of this piece, wish me luck qwq
I learned how to play the piano Sincé I was kid, now I'm 67 and can't play this máster peace complete, only second movement. You need to práctica a lot of hours every day to play like this pianist.
8:10 so this is the reinterpretation part for nct ‘golden age’ title
I've been working on this piece for a few months now and I absolutely love it! One of my favorite works by Beethoven for solo piano
this song is somehow exactly how i feel. im dealing with a lot of problems right now and this song describes my life incredibly well.....
This is what you upload after playing the whole mephisto waltz with wearing a scream mask
What a legend.
~7:04... hints of Succession, or just me?
e: ye, just done a quick search... lots of people also think so too.
Even though this is obviously not nearly as long as other piano pieces, it's still amazing to me how people can just do performances of this length and still sound amazing. Awesome job on the interpretation as always!
Just fyi I'm pretty sure he just cut together 3 different performances into one video, that's why the screen goes black in between each movement. That being said I'm sure he could obviously play this in one sitting, and it is impressive
@@indianawesomeness that's a possibility but still impressive none the less
@@Trooman20 do u have instagram?
Practiced this piece for a year but still learning the first crosshand part of first movement shows how pathétique my piano skill was LOL
This isa college level piece, my piano teacher literally had this one piece to practice and to count for like 50% of her grade for the whole semester~ so definitely hard af :)
Beautiful rendition as always, I absolutely love how you used Beethoven’s dynamics in such an delightful manner!
oh rather
The second movement is just hauntingly beautiful
Listen to Billy Joel’s song “This Night” it’s based off of that and Joel even gives credit. They sound very similar
Back at 2 Million views! Thank you so much Traum for this excellent performance. This video was what lead me to eventually learn this piece 2 years later.
The first movement? The epitome of perfection! The second movement was lovely. I think this one is really up for a little bit of creative interpretation, and I personally would have played some spots more piano (but who am I to challenge Traum? lol). 10:40-11:32 section was the best in my opinion! The third movement was also amazing. I liked your choice of speed and the articulation was lovely. Amazing performance! :D
I commend how well you played this: exactly how I intended
This is the first time I ever listened to the first movement of Pathetique Sonata.
Your interpretation is unique.
My favorite is the third movement, actually.
Congratulations TRAUM
.............AND THANK YOU FOR THIS BEAUTIFUL PERFORMANCE.
Development of first mvt is one of the most genuine things ever written.
Чудесная музыка! Прекрасное исполнение! Браво!!!!!!
Tengo 14 años y es todo un honor que esta obra maestra me haya permitido ganar un concurso nacional, definitivamente es la pieza que más difruto tocando y oyendo.
I am 14 years old and it is an honour that this masterpiece has allowed me to win a national competition, it is definitely the piece I enjoy playing and listening to the most.
translation
Es una pieza muy hermosa, en el final del tercer movimiento sientes a Beethoven diciendo Pathetique 😂
Yo tmb tengo14
Que cool! Yo tengo 12 y estoy escuchando las sonatas de Beethoven para mi próxima clase de piano. Cuanto te tomo para aprender lo todo? Lo tienes memorizado?
와 이분은 진짜 잘 치신다...... 대체로 곡을 속도감 있게 치시네요 그런데도 음이 정확해서 존경스럽습니다♥
Thank you for this superb rendition of a classic.
It would be great if he does: beethoven complete sonatas ajajjs
Give him 2 days
It would be great if he does chopin complete piano sonatas
Your tremolos are so clean
The second movement is such a moving piece to learn as a beginner, love it.
Schönes Stück! Bravo Traum!
This piece is crazy ! I love all the movements and it’s precily that piece who makes me love Beethoven so much (and believe Beethoven was an E.T ^^)
Learning this piece while Traum is at 99.9k subs and refreshing to see if it goes to 100k
I’m here because apparently this is where they got inspo for NCT’s Golden Age 8:11
Best rendition yet.
Bruh. Go listen to minsoo sohn.
This sonata is AMAZING. It was the first sonata that i have learned every mov. Its simply wonderful the change of the first movement to the second and then the third. But my favorite one is Waldstein
this is the best interpretation of Pathetique sonata I have ever heard. Beautiful playing by Traum
Beethoven was a freak of nature!
Why?😂😂😂😂😂😂
THIS IS THE BEST UA-cam CHANNEL I HAVE EVER SEEN
imagine living next to this guy
He was smaller then a manlet, shorter then someone who is 5``3 tall. And is said to have been terrible in every other activity that he ever tried, he even said it on his suicide letter, something like ´´music is the only thing i am good at``.
It would be only wonderfull
imagine living next to Beethoven when he was cooking this up making mistakes and revising them, then one night you come home to him finally playing the whole jam with all its ups and downs.
💀💀💀
I like how you are basically a god to your community
와 비창 2악장.. 제가 들어본 비창 2악장중에 제일 좋습니다 진짜..... the pathetique 2nd is best rendition i've heard
와... 감사합니다 🙏
Невероятный канал, настоящий бриллиант!
Спасибо за эстетику, вы дарите вдохновение!
0:15, bro tried vibratto on piano💀
It's traum 🤣 😭
tell me u never played piano without telling me
Came here to hear this masterpiece after I heard from NCT that it was used as a sample for Golden Age (the adagio cantabile part). Beethoven was a genius and you covered this flawlessly woahhh
Wtf, why does your style where you pronounce the melody so sharp fit the second movement so much?
Beautiful.
The 🐙 is everywhere
@@KaasIsLekker Since you find me everywhere, same goes for you xP
@@Zula_The_Squid 😂
Oh, hey Kait
@@Murcielag0scuro Hi Arch! :D
This was the piece that inspired me to learn piano. Every time I hear it I just think "Holy shit this is amazing," then listen to it again.
One of my favourite Beethoven sonatas. I like the first and third movements of this sonata.
Why you don't like slow movment it is fantastic
@@ramanamirabi2865 because it is in major and I like minor more.
Same, this is like the moonlights sonatas; 1 and 3 are very likable but 2nd doesn't exist.
@@pianoworld233I also like minors more
Hey I'm learning this piece right now and I listen to your interpretations a lot. I will definitely take examples from your version. Thanks for uploading so much Traum.
Jeno Jando has a really awesome version as well
Just recently I am done learning the second movement by heart, I absolutely love it
me2
The first chord is the most beautiful, understated, intense chord I've heard.
13:15 Clearly, Beethoven was a Remilia's fan. Based.
honestly my favorite interpretation of this piece, by anyone.
I play this ahah, do u have instagram?
Imagine listening to the 2nd mov. And suddenly an add pops out. BTW you played that part fantastically.
And then you vowed never to buy that product.
Hate when that happens
literally happened to me as i read your comment
Breath taking performance
Me, who has played this song for 20+ years now: Hey, this guy is pretty good! Nice and clean
Me, halfway through listening: There’s…there’s a REPEAT in there?!?!
I literally never noticed it, and now I am absolutely flabbergasted and shook that I’ve just blown right past that every time. WTF 😂😂😂😂
Takt Op. Destiny got me discovering such great music !
Gracias mil. Qué preciosa sonata e interpretación!🙏🌹🇲🇽
I'm learning this right now! It's going great so far 🎉
maravillosa pieza ❤ un genio increible
I think is beautiful to my very core.
as a person whos played this its safe to say this piece has many parts that were a pain in the ass
Theme 2 in eb and then the huge eb chord thingy moving in contrary motion, that was the worst part for me, my hands always tighten up lmao
OH my.. this piece... I remember, when I was 11, I played the first movement and fell in love with Beethoven's music. Since than, I fell into the hole of romantism and I struggle to get out of it hehe
My favourite Beethoven sonata. Very well played. Thank you for this awesome rendition
Absolutely brilliant! Very difficult piece, & he aced it!
One of my favorites to play when I was young :)
For real ? I thought you really didnt like beethov
@@charoox I thought he did like Beethoven?
Oww
Blimey! That 1st movement woke me up!
Such a beautiful piece and now I see why it took you some time to upload a video i mean it is 18 minutes long impressive 👍
You absolutely nailed the first few bars in my opinion. It sounds as sad and desperate as it can get I think.
when he lifted his hands at 7:22 i thought he was getting ready to fight someone lmao
So beautiful performance 👍
Thanks!
Mi Sonata favorita de Beethoven, sin duda dolorosa, muy expresiva. Muy buena interpretación, muy virtuosa. Está obra me cautiva por su complejidad rítmica, melódica, y armónica, pero sobretodo emocional. Bethoveen la escribió para narrar su complicada situación, se estaba quedando sordo, y esto lo hacía sentir miserable, patético. Una obra llena de multitud de emociones. Sin duda mi favorita.
Tienes instagram amigo para aprender esta?
@@filliiiii7 como?
@@josex2192 tienes insta?