Unbeschreiblich schön dieses Largo. Ein Superlativ, schwebende Melodik, Gefühl pur. Das war unsere Kultur, wohin ist sie entschwunden ? Göttlicher Paisiello.
I heard this composer on a cable tv classical musical channel while actually reading the newspaper. The melody of the piece (rondo) of #4 stopped me in my tracks. I had to research the composer who I hadn't heard of before. Some of the passages in the Allegro soar and the rondo is breathtakingly beautiful. Its changed my behavior. I now have the classical music channel playing in the background all the time, in the hope of another nugget like this!
This is Paisiello. The best composer of all time, the one who inspired Mozart & Rossini, and the man who was Napoleon's favorite composer. He was famous in his time, unfortunately he is not as popular anymore, but he deserves recognition
Das Largo strahlt eine Ruhe aus, die in die Ewigkeit zu fließen erscheint. Das ist wahre Kunst die sich gefühlt mit der Metaphysik vereint. Musik für den unendlichen Raum in dem wir leben. Göttlicher Paisiello. Das ist Klassik, wie ich sei empfinde, unabhängig von Zeit und Raum, ewig gültige Schönheit.
The more I listen to this piece of music the deeper I get into it. It's a beautifullly balanced masterpiece which stays among esthetical and social self-control, deep knowledge of musical language and of great experience of human condition.
UN très grand compositeur … Mais trop peu connu. "Il fait toujours beau chez Paisiello"; son nom ne résonne-t-il pas d'ailleurs comme un joli paysage de Toscane, avec son ciel bleu, ses villages de pierre blanche, sa douceur de vivre… On recommandera particulièrement (chacun ses goûts cependant) les numéros 8, et surtout, SURTOUT le N°4, empreint d'une sublime nostalgie, avec ses accents plus appuyés par moment, et ses mélodies qui durent heureusement assez longtemps pour que l'on puisse s'extasier dessus. A déguster avec un petit verre de rouge légèrement frais, pourquoi pas avec un délicieux fromage et un morceau de pain frais. Un bonheur total.
There can be no doubt now that Paisiello was a great composer and this concerto is beautiful. I only knew him from the aria collection and a couple of arias which are only now attributed to him. Some Beethovinian greatness here.
Paisello his 4th piano concerto is amazing! If this is wrote by Mozart we would hear it millions times! Other good is Jiri(Georg) Anton Benda his harpsichord concerto in b minor! If JS Bach have wrote it we would have millions of recordings of that!!
Primera obra que escucho de este autor por mi desconocido hasta hoy...Percibo a un clasico italiano muy parecido al gran barroco italiano...maestro Antonio Vivaldi!!...ambos autores con una musica llena de alegria y ligereza, el primero con una armonia vertical y repeticion de frases, el segundo con un contrapunto muy accesible para entenderlo...Muchas gracias por participarnos de este magnifico concierto...Dios los bendiga!
Very nice concerto! It is very rare performed now, and especial beyond Italy territory! It is pity. Unfortunately, Paisiello it is not enough known by his piano works, but only operas!
The fact is Classical composers beyond Mozart and Haydn are rarely performed (and let's face it, Beethoven wasn't a Classical composer), but there were plenty of talented ones, especially Italian and Czech: G. Paisiello, M. Clementi, J.L. Dussek, F.X. Dusek, J. Myslivecek, L. Kozeluch...
You did mean, Beethoven - is Romantic composer?) I am agree, very nice composers in this list - F. M. Kalkbrenner, Kozeluch, F. Lessel, M. Szymanowska, T. D. Tellefsen. Very rare.
And more famous composer - J. N. Hummel is also undeservedly rare performing composer upon live concertos. I never been listen his sonatas and piano concertos in live performing.
Paisiello's operas are indeed his most famous works, but are still unknown to most of the classical music listeners and performers. I've been playing and studying music for 8 years, and sadly very few of my teachers and professors have heard of his existence. It is true that many composers of the so called classical music are totally underrated. John Field, an irish composer and pianist is unknown to many pianists, despite his great importance for the development of the Nocturne and his influence on Chopin. Few people know that Czerny has written Sonatas, Nocturnes, Paraphrases, and not just sets of Études. Anton Rubinstein, Tchaikovsky's beloved teacher and a world class pianist and composer of his time, is totally forgotten. Every violinist knows J.S. Bach's Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin, but very few have heard or practiced Biber's Passacaglia. Even Johann Christian Bach's music is rarely performed. One very serious problem is that there are plenty of professors and teachers who discourage their pupils of practicing works by composers like these.
@@chpap98 With few exceptions (example: Vivaldi), Italian composers became famous for opera only. For some reason the instrumental pieces were forgotten very fast. Europe and also Italy wanted opera from Italians and not anything else. But the composers themselves maybe wanted to compose in different areas...
Le lingue in cui sono scritti i commenti lusinghieri per questo bellissimo concerto ci dicono tutto sulla nostra ignoranza, superficialità, volgarità. E questo è spunto per constatare che siamo finiti come popolo e come nazione. Speriamo di essere conquistati presto da un popolo nuovo, fresco, energico che raccolga la nostra eredità, ci debelli e costruisca una nuova civiltà.
It is interesting that Paisiello evidently chose the minor mode for all three movements. I wonder if this was the result of composing the movements at different times, then "marrying" them to create a new concerto. Also interesting is the fact that there is no shift to the major mode at the conclusion of the finale. Perhaps this pervasive focus on the minor wasn't unusual by the date of this concerto, but we don't find it in the minor-key concerti of Mozart or Beethoven.
Style is i think very much like Mozart, also Beethoven...hmm.. For example Tempest sonata.. I'm no expert but maybe both got inspirations from this guy...?
Qué belleza! Pero a la vez cuanta desesperación, cuánta agonía. Habría algo en la vida del compositor qué causó esa huella? Un hecho inesperado, la partida de un amor no correspondido?
@@lorenzocassani8169 se tu ignori la filologia musicale e le parole dello stesso mozart riguardo la Scuola Napoletana del '700, io non posso farci nulla. Tra parentesi la frase riguardo il plagio e tribunale, l'ho ripresa da un musicologo che ha evidenziato come il salisburghese non "elogiasse" i suoi colleghi prendendo brani da altri compositori ma copiasse de facto. Se i diritti d'autore fossero già esistiti a partire dal 1756, mozart avrebbe composto pochissimo. Preferisco piu' la verità che l'ascolto passivo fine a sè stesso
@@giovannipaisiello289 sono bene a conoscenza dell’impatto che hanno avuto i viaggi in Italia del giovane Mozart , così come l’incontro con i compositori della scuola napoletana in particolare . Ma credo per quanto si debba riscoprire questa inestimabile patrimonio musicale quasi dimenticato , credo anche che nessuno , né Paisiello, né Cimarosa o Jommelli (tra gli altri) siano arrivati alle vette artistiche di Mozart. Credo poi che considerare plagio l’assimilare nel proprio linguaggio musicale le influenze di altri compositori e l’estetica di una tradizione musicale più in generale sia sbagliatissimo . Che sarebbe mai stato Beethoven senza Haydn o Schubert senza lo stesso Mozart ? Per me utilizzare lo stile e le forme già esplorate da illustri compositori per creare , con la propria individualità , un opera d’arte tutta nuova sia alla base del processo artistico .
I have no words. This is one of the Best piano concerto ever. I can’t get enough of it. I’m listening that beautiful composition every night.
Paisiello piano concerto no 4!!! Georg Anton Benda Harpsichord concerto b Minor!!!
I AGREE
Paisiello is definitely THE best.
I share your opinion. This piece is so balance. I love it as mich as you do.
Unbeschreiblich schön dieses Largo. Ein Superlativ, schwebende Melodik, Gefühl pur. Das war unsere Kultur, wohin ist sie entschwunden ? Göttlicher Paisiello.
I heard this composer on a cable tv classical musical channel while actually reading the newspaper. The melody of the piece (rondo) of #4 stopped me in my tracks. I had to research the composer who I hadn't heard of before. Some of the passages in the Allegro soar and the rondo is breathtakingly beautiful. Its changed my behavior. I now have the classical music channel playing in the background all the time, in the hope of another nugget like this!
This is Paisiello. The best composer of all time, the one who inspired Mozart & Rossini, and the man who was Napoleon's favorite composer. He was famous in his time, unfortunately he is not as popular anymore, but he deserves recognition
Das Largo strahlt eine Ruhe aus, die in die Ewigkeit zu fließen erscheint. Das ist wahre Kunst die sich gefühlt mit der Metaphysik vereint. Musik für den unendlichen Raum in dem wir leben. Göttlicher Paisiello. Das ist Klassik, wie ich sei empfinde, unabhängig von Zeit und Raum, ewig gültige Schönheit.
The more I listen to this piece of music the deeper I get into it. It's a beautifullly balanced masterpiece which stays among esthetical and social self-control, deep knowledge of musical language and of great experience of human condition.
Wunderschönm Vollkommene Musik, gleichwertig mit den Schöpfungen der berühmtsten Klassiker. Herrliche Klavierparts. Göttlicher Paisiello.
Riscopriamo Paisiello 😍
raffinato ed intenso!💝👍
Verrassend nog nooit gehoord, alleen operas. Bravo Paisello
UN très grand compositeur … Mais trop peu connu. "Il fait toujours beau chez Paisiello"; son nom ne résonne-t-il pas d'ailleurs comme un joli paysage de Toscane, avec son ciel bleu, ses villages de pierre blanche, sa douceur de vivre… On recommandera particulièrement (chacun ses goûts cependant) les numéros 8, et surtout, SURTOUT le N°4, empreint d'une sublime nostalgie, avec ses accents plus appuyés par moment, et ses mélodies qui durent heureusement assez longtemps pour que l'on puisse s'extasier dessus. A déguster avec un petit verre de rouge légèrement frais, pourquoi pas avec un délicieux fromage et un morceau de pain frais. Un bonheur total.
I don't know what you say, but I think it is something positive!
la vie avec un grand V
Merveilleux largo 17:34
There can be no doubt now that Paisiello was a great composer and this concerto is beautiful. I only knew him from the aria collection and a couple of arias which are only now attributed to him. Some Beethovinian greatness here.
I listen to this at least 2 or 3 times a day. Never get tired. Paisiello was a fuckin genius. Neapolitan genius.
BEST Composer of all time
Ein sehr ausdrucksstarkes Largo,, das ist wahre Kunst.
Why is this so beautiful?
Is this Giovanni Paisiello's concert !!?? Wow this sounds like Mendelssohn or Brahms concert 👏 Paisiello is so underatted composer! 🇮🇹
Paisello his 4th piano concerto is amazing! If this is wrote by Mozart we would hear it millions times! Other good is Jiri(Georg) Anton Benda his harpsichord concerto in b minor! If JS Bach have wrote it we would have millions of recordings of that!!
@@RaineriHakkarainen I didn't know Benda. Thanks for the suggestion!! 👍
Concerto bellissimo !!
A cadenza in the middle of the 1st mvt. I LOVE it.
7:37
very innovative surpirising and complex piece of work, even greater than romantic era works.
Очень замечательная музыка можно слушать бесконечно спасибо
Thanks for this! A wonderful performance of a too little known wonderful work.
GREAT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Primera obra que escucho de este autor por mi desconocido hasta hoy...Percibo a un clasico italiano muy parecido al gran barroco italiano...maestro Antonio Vivaldi!!...ambos autores con una musica llena de alegria y ligereza, el primero con una armonia vertical y repeticion de frases, el segundo con un contrapunto muy accesible para entenderlo...Muchas gracias por participarnos de este magnifico concierto...Dios los bendiga!
It has nothing to do with Vivaldi. This is Mozart ante litteram.
je connaissais les trilles ; ici l'effet est très agréable en répétant 50 fois la même note! ( et sans l appuyer ou cadencer) au 3ieme mouvement.
et se concerto pour piano de Giovanni Paisiello n 4 et exeptionne!lement grand diose radio
classique la prix en introduction d'une publicité!
lle
Very nice concerto! It is very rare performed now, and especial beyond Italy territory! It is pity. Unfortunately, Paisiello it is not enough known by his piano works, but only operas!
The fact is Classical composers beyond Mozart and Haydn are rarely performed (and let's face it, Beethoven wasn't a Classical composer), but there were plenty of talented ones, especially Italian and Czech: G. Paisiello, M. Clementi, J.L. Dussek, F.X. Dusek, J. Myslivecek, L. Kozeluch...
You did mean, Beethoven - is Romantic composer?) I am agree, very nice composers in this list - F. M. Kalkbrenner, Kozeluch, F. Lessel, M. Szymanowska, T. D. Tellefsen. Very rare.
And more famous composer - J. N. Hummel is also undeservedly rare performing composer upon live concertos. I never been listen his sonatas and piano concertos in live performing.
Paisiello's operas are indeed his most famous works, but are still unknown to most of the classical music listeners and performers. I've been playing and studying music for 8 years, and sadly very few of my teachers and professors have heard of his existence.
It is true that many composers of the so called classical music are totally underrated.
John Field, an irish composer and pianist is unknown to many pianists, despite his great importance for the development of the Nocturne and his influence on Chopin.
Few people know that Czerny has written Sonatas, Nocturnes, Paraphrases, and not just sets of Études.
Anton Rubinstein, Tchaikovsky's beloved teacher and a world class pianist and composer of his time, is totally forgotten.
Every violinist knows J.S. Bach's Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin, but very few have heard or practiced Biber's Passacaglia.
Even Johann Christian Bach's music is rarely performed.
One very serious problem is that there are plenty of professors and teachers who discourage their pupils of practicing works by composers like these.
@@chpap98 With few exceptions (example: Vivaldi), Italian composers became famous for opera only. For some reason the instrumental pieces were forgotten very fast. Europe and also Italy wanted opera from Italians and not anything else. But the composers themselves maybe wanted to compose in different areas...
This is a great concert, which receives too little attention. Ahead of its time.
a gem of a piano concerto...thanks for airing this, y
Merveilleux largo
Marvellous !
Grazie.
Thanks for putting it up mirinae
Le lingue in cui sono scritti i commenti lusinghieri per questo bellissimo concerto ci dicono tutto sulla nostra ignoranza, superficialità, volgarità. E questo è spunto per constatare che siamo finiti come popolo e come nazione. Speriamo di essere conquistati presto da un popolo nuovo, fresco, energico che raccolga la nostra eredità, ci debelli e costruisca una nuova civiltà.
Puoi scegliere tra Africa, Cina o Russia
Per piacere, fai un favore a tutti: elimina questo commento e vergognati!
Beautiful
love it, beautiful...a discovery
I love u do me a kid
cool painting.
Thank you, mirinae0904 for the wonderful upload
Theme from 17:43 in Rondo.
It is interesting that Paisiello evidently chose the minor mode for all three movements. I wonder if this was the result of composing the movements at different times, then "marrying" them to create a new concerto.
Also interesting is the fact that there is no shift to the major mode at the conclusion of the finale.
Perhaps this pervasive focus on the minor wasn't unusual by the date of this concerto, but we don't find it in the minor-key concerti of Mozart or Beethoven.
Yes, Mozart wrote a piano concert in D moll and another in C moll; Beethoven a concert (3°) in C moll
Il compositore più amato da Napoleone Bonaparte
Davvero? Sei certissimo?
@@giovannipaisiello289 Certissimo.
@@Raphael-fg9lc perchè mai?
Il 2° movimento mi sembra un tipico "andante" dei concerti per piano di Mozart, solo che il nostro Tarantino è anteriore al Salisburghese!
Credo a Bologna Il giovane Wolfgang con il padre e altri, ebbe modo di assistere a concerti di Paisiello... fra loro si saranno intesi
How old is the painting? Was the pair of blue eyes with mascara added afterwards. Great music.
Can anyone give me sheet music for this please?
Altro che Mozart,Haydn,Schubert e Compagnia cantante.
Un´altro maestro italiano trascurato
Любимая мелодия Наполеона.
Are you commenting from Russia?
bien beau rapide enjoué
Картина Тёрнера?
c 'est vrais qui les beau se concerto pour piano excellent Jean Francois Mancer tu peu le trouver a la fnac a Paris
Incorrect french!
Gorgeous music; I would say Paisiello's on a par with Mozart's compositions !
Style is i think very much like Mozart, also Beethoven...hmm.. For example Tempest sonata.. I'm no expert but maybe both got inspirations from this guy...?
what year was this writen?
Google Tube now inserts ads into this performance. Pathetic!
Exacto. Alguien lo dijo
Paisiello es anterior a Mozart....
A real find. I love Mozart and consider him God but this PAISIELLO is special too and pretty much unknown. MUCH BETTER than a hack like Haydn.
Is it just my impression or the second movement of Paisiello's piano concerto sounds a bit Beethovenian?
Beethoven sounds like him. It is fully classical though.
c'est inouÏ que l;on puisse interrompre ces moments de pur bonheur par des connards qui y déposent leur pub
Can hold it's fort with Mozart.
Qué belleza! Pero a la vez cuanta desesperación, cuánta agonía. Habría algo en la vida del compositor qué causó esa huella? Un hecho inesperado, la partida de un amor no correspondido?
I do the same above all. The largo
Paisiello ,una scoperta , ascoltandolo credo che Mozart ne abbia preso ispirazione.
Mozart meriterebbe di stare in tribunale per plagio per anni ed anni... Devono enormemente agli italiani
@@giovannipaisiello289plagio di cosa ? Non facciamoci prendere da nazionalismi e apprezziamo l’arte per quello che è .
@@lorenzocassani8169 se tu ignori la filologia musicale e le parole dello stesso mozart riguardo la Scuola Napoletana del '700, io non posso farci nulla. Tra parentesi la frase riguardo il plagio e tribunale, l'ho ripresa da un musicologo che ha evidenziato come il salisburghese non "elogiasse" i suoi colleghi prendendo brani da altri compositori ma copiasse de facto. Se i diritti d'autore fossero già esistiti a partire dal 1756, mozart avrebbe composto pochissimo. Preferisco piu' la verità che l'ascolto passivo fine a sè stesso
@@giovannipaisiello289 sono bene a conoscenza dell’impatto che hanno avuto i viaggi in Italia del giovane Mozart , così come l’incontro con i compositori della scuola napoletana in particolare . Ma credo per quanto si debba riscoprire questa inestimabile patrimonio musicale quasi dimenticato , credo anche che nessuno , né Paisiello, né Cimarosa o Jommelli (tra gli altri) siano arrivati alle vette artistiche di Mozart. Credo poi che considerare plagio l’assimilare nel proprio linguaggio musicale le influenze di altri compositori e l’estetica di una tradizione musicale più in generale sia sbagliatissimo . Che sarebbe mai stato Beethoven senza Haydn o Schubert senza lo stesso Mozart ? Per me utilizzare lo stile e le forme già esplorate da illustri compositori per creare , con la propria individualità , un opera d’arte tutta nuova sia alla base del processo artistico .
@@giovannipaisiello289 stava parlando del presunto caso di plagio da parte di Mozart dal secondo movimento della sinfonia di anfossi?
Sottostimato, per mode culturali succubi del main stream esterofilo.
Paisiello vale mozart hyaiden e beethoven insieme
Thanks for putting it up mirinae
Merveilleux largo 17:34