How to Sound Like Franz Liszt

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  • Опубліковано 26 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,5 тис.

  • @NahreSol
    @NahreSol  5 років тому +276

    Hello all! Thank you so much for the supportive comments! The sheet music for the Happy Birthday arrangement, as well as all of the examples in the video is now available to (Bonus Materials Patrons) on Patreon, and on my website (bit.ly/31NWvAC) if interested! ❤

    • @marc-io
      @marc-io 5 років тому +1

      When How to Sound Like Scarlatti. When,
      Nahre Sol??? :D

    • @AndreiAnghelLiszt
      @AndreiAnghelLiszt 5 років тому +1

      @@marc-io Probably on his birthday

    • @vilhelmnorberg9265
      @vilhelmnorberg9265 5 років тому

      Hi Nahre Sol,
      Are there sheets of all your previous videos of "How to sound like..." available for Patreon supporters? I don't have Patreon yet but might consider it. Love your UA-cam channel!

    • @pelemos2466
      @pelemos2466 5 років тому +1

      how to sound like rachmaninoff , please do it

    • @TheMICMusicInspirationChannel
      @TheMICMusicInspirationChannel 5 років тому +1

      Did the "Happy Birthday" composer(s) come calling for royalties yet?

  • @Gabriel-jx4or
    @Gabriel-jx4or 5 років тому +936

    When arranging a song "in the style" of a composer, a lot of people just take a song the composer already wrote and add the theme they want to it and change the harmony a bit, but you actually make it seem as if you had asked Franz Liszt himself to make a completely new original piece based off of that melody, and I really love that.
    You totally nailed it! As a mega Liszt fan, I can confirm, it sounds just like him.

    • @Santosificationable
      @Santosificationable 5 років тому +33

      My thoughts exactly! While entertaining sometimes, such attempts come off to me as "corny" lol. I'm more interested seeing improvisations (or arrangements) that sound like the composer's style in earnest and not just ripping off popular tunes from that composer.

    • @samthepianoman
      @samthepianoman 5 років тому +3

      What’s your favorite Liszt piece?

    • @Haliflux1111
      @Haliflux1111 4 роки тому +1

      @@samthepianoman As a Liszt 'Expert" I figured I would throw my opinion into the mix.
      ua-cam.com/video/fsXZsiJaKXM/v-deo.html

    • @ManuSankaran2410
      @ManuSankaran2410 4 роки тому +16

      Thanks for the support!

  • @daeva_beats
    @daeva_beats 5 років тому +103

    "third hand illusion" that got me mind blown 8:55

    • @kaisarsihaloho975
      @kaisarsihaloho975 4 роки тому +10

      Yeah, i see her hands keep moving and moving, but I hear a note its like there is another hand playing the piano too

    • @TheDeathOmen
      @TheDeathOmen 4 роки тому +20

      And funny enough Liszt used to say that the third hand illusion was little more than a party trick, but he eventually made use of it in pieces such as Un Sospiro and Mazeppa

    • @p-y8210
      @p-y8210 4 роки тому +8

      Thalberg's third hand effect

    • @ValzainLumivix
      @ValzainLumivix 3 роки тому +1

      Thanks Elias Parish Alvars.

  • @ILyel
    @ILyel 5 років тому +393

    People often are mistaking Liszt as a virtuoso that was only playing the piano as a way to show off. Hopefully, this way of seeing him will change, as he was not only the best pianist of his age [and possibly our age], but also one of the best composers that has ever existed. His music has always been full of emotions [and not just full of techniques] and intense passion. I started playing the piano after hearing his Transcendental Etudes. Never in my whole life have I felt the way I did sitting through Daniil Trifonov's playing of these Études. It is now a dream for me to be able to play his pieces, especially some of his Etudes, Bénediction de Dieu dans la solitude, Vallée d'Obermann, and so much more !
    If anyone wants to discover, please, check out these pieces: his Transcendental Etudes [especially played by Daniil Trifonov], Mephisto Waltz no.1, Un sospiro, Bénediction de Dieu dans la solitude, En rêve, Romance S.169, Vallée d'Obermann, Après une lecture du Dante: Fantasia quasi sonata, his Consolations, and of course his sonata in B minor. They are all great pieces showing how Liszt was not just a show-off, but a passionate pianist with extreme virtuosity and feelings. Also, he was not only a romantic pianist, as he wrote some of the firsts impressionist pieces that inspired Debussy, Ravel and many more of the big composers.
    Sorry that my comment ended up being this long, I just really like Liszt and felt like jumping of joy when I saw this video in my feed hehe

    • @soyoltoi
      @soyoltoi 5 років тому +21

      Liszt is probably the pinnacle of Romantic music.

    • @ILyel
      @ILyel 5 років тому +15

      @@soyoltoi In some ways, I like to think that all of the well-known composers of the Romantic era were part of the pinnacle, including post-romantism, if it makes sense to you. They are all so different that it is difficult to compare, but I'd have to agree to say that him and Chopin were maybe the "most romantics" of that era !

    • @soyoltoi
      @soyoltoi 5 років тому +8

      @@ILyel I say that because not only was he a great Romantic composer like Chopin but he also took the Romantic project to its limit and then a little bit beyond, especially with his later works-a precursor to what is to come, similar to Satie-whereas Chopin stayed relatively firmly in the Romantic period.

    • @monkfishmondfinsternis3162
      @monkfishmondfinsternis3162 5 років тому +3

      Liszt came from the „trend“ of the „salon music“ in his time, which sometimes saw the virtuosos almost as piano artists, like circus artists. These musical salon events really were social events, where the masters of the piano showed off. But Liszt definitely transcended this trend, in his artfull playing, as in his compositins. In my research on popular music of his epoche, I found several piano books on how to play virtuous, but not necessarily musical. 😋 The virtuous way to play standard figures really reminded me of that.

    • @Quotenwagnerianer
      @Quotenwagnerianer 5 років тому +22

      I totally agree. If there is one composer that is truly underrated than it is him. His influence on other composers was huge, the progress he made in piano technique, and especially the stark late phase that is like someone serving icy cold mountain water after turning away from champagne.
      People scoff at his over the top virtuosity and call his music hollow. That is because they don't listen.
      There is a reason why he stopped giving public concerts as a pianist. He was tired of being seen as a party trick.

  • @SoundFieldPBS
    @SoundFieldPBS 5 років тому +111

    Happy belated birthday Liszt!

  • @YMESYDT
    @YMESYDT 5 років тому +437

    So glad I Lisztened to this today

  • @wobblyorbee279
    @wobblyorbee279 2 роки тому +5

    probably nahre when she was young:
    dad: hey it's your mom's birthday! im going to bring the cake then surprise her by playing happy birthday on the piano
    nahre: started to do theme and variations with different composer in the variations

  • @buffalo2478
    @buffalo2478 5 років тому +974

    Waiting for the "How to Sound Like Nahre Sol" Vid

    • @NahreSol
      @NahreSol  5 років тому +109

      😀😂

    • @SoundsFromSound
      @SoundsFromSound 5 років тому +26

      @@NahreSol That would be META :)

    • @JMnyJohns
      @JMnyJohns 5 років тому +8

      You'd have to bring back Horowitz from beyond the grave...

    • @helderdyela4822
      @helderdyela4822 5 років тому +2

      Kkkkkkkk lol

    • @williampuckett5440
      @williampuckett5440 5 років тому +1

      @@NahreSol Does that mean you will make the video?

  • @TheFlamingPiano
    @TheFlamingPiano 5 років тому +23

    Of all the composers, I've listened to Liszt the most. I guess his style just resonates with me (even if I struggle to play most of his music). Would be fun to make insane arrangements in his style eventually, that idea often pops into my head quite often. Leaps are a nightmare though, and double thirds chromatics are impossible for me. ...Please do Cziffra at 1M subs hehehe!

  • @RickBeato
    @RickBeato 5 років тому +170

    So great! You are brilliant Nahre✨✨✨✨

  • @HalcyonMusic
    @HalcyonMusic 5 років тому +72

    Great video and analysis as always Nahre Sol!
    I highly recommend anyone's who interested in Liszt to listen to his Sonata in B minor. It'll blow your mind.

    • @ignatiuswu3969
      @ignatiuswu3969 4 роки тому

      Halcyon hi 🤣

    • @qqma4791
      @qqma4791 3 роки тому

      Hi halcyon! I played your arrangement of laputa castle in the sky!

    • @frankiewinters1255
      @frankiewinters1255 2 роки тому

      YES! Yundi Li's version is my favourite of all concert pianists, and if you want you're mind blown even more I would recommend Mephisto Waltz No.1 played by Andre Laplante, yet there are 100's more which are just as incredible. Liszt is literally the most underrated genius of any trade, ever!

  • @farisalnahhas363
    @farisalnahhas363 5 років тому +255

    Im 3 minutes in and her handwork is mindblowing

    • @NahreSol
      @NahreSol  5 років тому +22

      🙏🙏🙏

    • @SHAJ115
      @SHAJ115 5 років тому

      I was gonna say the same thing lol

    • @sebastianmanterfield3132
      @sebastianmanterfield3132 5 років тому

      Ok.

    • @13I.U3
      @13I.U3 5 років тому +3

      im surprised nobody has made a "thats what she said" joke after a month that this comment was posted

    • @farisalnahhas363
      @farisalnahhas363 5 років тому +2

      ThatOneBlueGuy maybe u cant think of memes when ur brain is busy being amazed of her hands’ artwork...

  • @Herfinnur
    @Herfinnur 5 років тому +21

    I don't know if you realize this, but the way your "how to sound like" -videos break down the preffered building blocks of these composers gives us mortal music lovers and musicians an incredible insight that we wouldn't get, or maybe even understand without your graphics and way of telling it so simply. Only thing that comes close for me are Leonard Bernstein's lecture series. Please never, ever stop doing these videos! ♥️

  • @josephalvarez5315
    @josephalvarez5315 5 років тому +199

    I consider liszt to be incredibly underrated. Obviously he is a well known composer, but his influence on music to come is terribly understated. His years of pilgrimage and symphonic poems are amazing

    • @NahreSol
      @NahreSol  5 років тому +23

      Yes!!

    • @MikeyOnKeys
      @MikeyOnKeys 5 років тому +16

      His later works are very good, especially his consolations, (dedicated to Chopin). His very early works were very virtuosic, but not as good as his later works as it is with many composers. In his early life he thought the piano was just a percussive instrument, and so he felt there was nothing wrong with loud passages and frolicking around the keys with no point, instead of building a melody and writing something that people would want to listen to. Most of his music is virtuous, but there is more melody in his later works I feel. I might be wrong though lol.

    • @Otokage007
      @Otokage007 5 років тому +7

      A visionary indeed. I was mindblown when I heard "Les jeux d'eaux à la villa d'Este". It is basicly Debussy's whole career resumed in one piece lol

    • @josephalvarez5315
      @josephalvarez5315 5 років тому +2

      Oto Kage noooooooo. Maybe early debussy. But middle and late debussy sounds very very very different. If anything it sounds more like Ravel

    • @asean_bwoy
      @asean_bwoy 5 років тому

      Joseph Alvarez Music that’s big facts

  • @micoveliki8729
    @micoveliki8729 2 роки тому +11

    Nahre you are one of the few rare souls that actually UNDERSTANDS and has the ESSENCE of the composer in turm that just says how briliant of a musician you are yourself. God bless you

  • @tjatadaus6544
    @tjatadaus6544 5 років тому +378

    How to sound like me: press some random white and black keys

    • @NahreSol
      @NahreSol  5 років тому +26

      😂

    • @oneperson9708
      @oneperson9708 5 років тому +65

      Jazz artists be like "that's a G#7dim3aug4 chord"

    • @doubleentendre9589
      @doubleentendre9589 5 років тому +15

      @@oneperson9708 you just somehow overcomplicated the diminished chord by just throwing random extensions and alterations. now that's a big brain move, well done.

    • @AndrossUT
      @AndrossUT 5 років тому +6

      My favorite is only using black keys.

    • @tjatadaus6544
      @tjatadaus6544 5 років тому +2

      @@AndrossUT op 10 no 5?

  • @chroni3659
    @chroni3659 5 років тому +57

    I’m actually sobbing over this piece. Your playing is so beautiful it’s ludicrous to me. At first I was baffled simply by your speed, then I realized for as fast as you were playing, your velocities were on point for every note. And then it hit me. What truly made your playing breathtaking wasn’t just the performance itself: your composition is flawless. Each note is perfect: you took into account the harmonic relations to the other notes, rhythm, and even velocity for every note of the overwhelming amount in your arrangement.
    Thank you, Nahre, for this experience.

  • @only4wotbhwqcb569
    @only4wotbhwqcb569 5 років тому +318

    Very nice
    Like always

  • @samsuel15
    @samsuel15 5 років тому +87

    Nahre Sol is such a beautiful human being!

  • @rileyabarker
    @rileyabarker 5 років тому +62

    The piano inspiring Liszt:
    Piano: How much virtuosity do you want?
    Liszt: Yes

  • @JamesSBaker-de6sd
    @JamesSBaker-de6sd 5 років тому +162

    Quite virtuosic. You used the word that I most associate with Liszt : sparkling. (His buddy Chopin would sparkle at him of course.) Really, your little demo piece isn't so far from the Welte recordings of Liszt material on "Legendary Masters of the Piano". Your video production is very pro also. Thanks for your efforts on our behalf.

    • @NahreSol
      @NahreSol  5 років тому +9

      Thank you!!! 🙏🙏🙏

  • @TomCL-vb6xc
    @TomCL-vb6xc 5 років тому +38

    I’d love to see one of these done for Scriabin. I feel like most people who listen to enough classical music eventually grow to adore him and his music ( particularly his understanding of harmony and style of composition ) is very unique - a lot like his general persona.

    • @barbarasmith6005
      @barbarasmith6005 4 роки тому

      Maybe a video on "how to sound like Scriabin" is coming soon!

    • @Isa-tn7ex
      @Isa-tn7ex 3 роки тому

      Nice :D you predicted the future

  • @bayarbuyan84
    @bayarbuyan84 5 років тому +32

    Could this be enough research for a PhD degree in music? What effort! Absolutely amazing!

  • @franzkarl3452
    @franzkarl3452 3 роки тому +11

    As a rock guitarist who never spent serious time on listening to classical music but sometimes plays a little bit of chopin, bach and schuhmann on piano for fun this blew my mind.
    You are soo talented and I thank you so much for breaking down something what i never would be able to understand if i haven't YOU.
    And Liszt! Wooow! This is jaw dropping. Pure genius. (sidenote: shame on me, i m from Austria, but as mentioned before i ve never listened seriously to classical music and their composers.)
    Until this point Chopin was my favourite but know i have to listen to some liszt.
    Big,big thanx to you
    ....and sorry for my bad english

  • @tommacfadyen4561
    @tommacfadyen4561 5 років тому +27

    Omg you’re playing is absolutely gorgeous!

    • @NahreSol
      @NahreSol  5 років тому +4

      Thank you!!! 🙏🎵🙏

  • @mamokitty19
    @mamokitty19 3 роки тому +2

    In complete awe at the 8:50 mark, like you channeled Liszt himself.

  • @ucala8599
    @ucala8599 5 років тому +13

    Wow! This genuinely sounded exactly like Liszt! Incredible job!

    • @NahreSol
      @NahreSol  5 років тому +1

      Thank you!!! 🙏🙏🙏

  • @steveforwarduk
    @steveforwarduk 3 роки тому +1

    I remember showing this to my old music school piano teacher a few years ago, and his jaw dropped to the floor. Sometimes you need to take a step back from your own playing and perception of playing to really appreciate just how technically and musically accomplished people are. I tell my piano students to go watch Nahre. Sadly my music school teacher passed away last year, but I was happy to reconnect with him after all these years. He was a master musician too, a real inpsiration, but he gave you the nod of approval Nahre!, Stay safe, and thank you for the amazing videos you put out. I can fully appreciate the time and effort you put in to making these. Just brilliant.

  • @Syzygizing
    @Syzygizing 5 років тому +3

    That lyrical and romantic section at 5:20 gave me chills, Liszt blows my mind with his musical genius and your ability to decipher it may be even more mind blowing

    • @anthonyc6017
      @anthonyc6017 Рік тому

      what piece is this from?? did she write this or was this liszt

    • @이상호-p3c
      @이상호-p3c Рік тому

      @@anthonyc6017 she wrote it

  • @jacksonguthrie141
    @jacksonguthrie141 4 роки тому +6

    WOW! I am self taught and I’m currently attempting to learn Hungarian Rhapsody No 2. It’s not the best, but I think I’m getting the hang of at least the part I’ve learned. I absolutely love when you do arpeggios on both hands while giving an illusion of a third hand. It’s absolutely flawless.

  • @MajorAndMinor
    @MajorAndMinor 5 років тому +414

    "Liszt"
    me: *stress intensifies*

    • @NahreSol
      @NahreSol  5 років тому +26

      Same here 😂

    • @orsemcore
      @orsemcore 5 років тому

      okay... no one asked?

    • @peace-qe4ig
      @peace-qe4ig 4 роки тому +13

      @@orsemcore no one ask you to reply either

    • @gaiusflaminius4861
      @gaiusflaminius4861 4 роки тому

      Rather, "blood boils, nostrils inflate".

  • @DumblyDorr
    @DumblyDorr 5 років тому +2

    Can we petition you to play a full concert of the kinds of pieces you really feel connected to? Whenever I watch you explain the styles of various players and demonstrate their work with such insight, fluidity and expression, it's really entrancing and I kinda want more. I could listen to you play for hours!

  • @AaronCupps
    @AaronCupps 5 років тому +590

    So many piano puns I can’t Liszt them all...

    • @andrewh25
      @andrewh25 5 років тому +1

      Thanks

    • @stefan1024
      @stefan1024 5 років тому +48

      Guess I couldn't Händel them anyway...

    • @johndecicco
      @johndecicco 5 років тому +37

      @@stefan1024 Bach off.

    • @tornoutlaw
      @tornoutlaw 5 років тому +35

      @@stefan1024 Any more puns and I'll be Haydn under my bed.

    • @philipchenbusy
      @philipchenbusy 5 років тому +6

      wow ur Chopin-e

  • @DereBear
    @DereBear 5 років тому +4

    I never understood what made his pieces stand out to me but it’s the staggering! My favorite of his, Hungarian rhapsody no. 2 (the Tom and Jerry one) that ascending and descending line is the melody quickly sliding to its next not a half step up or down and it gives this clumsy feeling and it’s so unique

  • @jamesowen8623
    @jamesowen8623 4 роки тому +9

    3:03 - 3:09 Woah that sounds so good
    also 5:06 - 5:19 and 5:57 - 6:03
    the final result is also just so amazing!

  • @flop645
    @flop645 5 років тому +209

    "I bought the whole piano and I'm gonna use the whole damn piano!"

  • @Fiona1020_
    @Fiona1020_ 5 років тому +19

    Out of all the really famous composers, Franz Liszt has the closest Birthday to me, mine is October 20th, his is October 22nd, thank you for making this video! Was really fun to watch

    • @NahreSol
      @NahreSol  5 років тому +6

      Happy belated birthday!!!

  • @aligh18
    @aligh18 5 років тому +1

    Something special about your videos is that they deliver technical knowledge and insight about music theory in a pleasant, lovely, fun, and educational way. It gives the common person with little background in music theory a chance to appreciate the nuances, similarities, differences, and styles/techniques of varying classical composers and pieces. It gives us a chance to share something special, an appreciation, with the stunning world of classical music. You're bridging a gap between the layman people and the classical music artisans, and I really appreciate this. I always share your videos with my friends and family. Thank you!

  • @eduardobaitello
    @eduardobaitello 5 років тому +11

    "Third-Hand Illusion". Awesome!

  • @_redfoxx3387
    @_redfoxx3387 5 років тому

    as someone who was kind of “just” plays piano, without much passion because i dont feel like im that good at it (lol), it’s difficult for me to be interested in piano, but i couldnt resist clicking on this because it was by you AND had “lizst” in the title, and to my pleasant surprise, i became enraptured and felt like listening to real Liszt. thank you for making such an interesting and informative video!

  • @oneperson9708
    @oneperson9708 5 років тому +183

    Last time i was this early beethoven still had his hearing

    • @NahreSol
      @NahreSol  5 років тому +12

      😂

    • @MoonAlongMyHead
      @MoonAlongMyHead 5 років тому +31

      You mean to say he was still able to Liztsen?

    • @BeatleJWOL
      @BeatleJWOL 5 років тому +1

      @@MoonAlongMyHead oof
      but I lol'd

    • @manuelbes
      @manuelbes 5 років тому +1

      @@MoonAlongMyHead*liszten

  • @azb-ir3hd
    @azb-ir3hd Рік тому

    I just discovered this and it captures Liszt perfectly. I learned his Dante Sonata as a teenager and it incorporates nearly every stylistic device exhibited here. He's my favorite composer and a much deeper artist than many musicians give him credit for. Thank you for such an enjoyable video!

  • @WojtekPoroslo
    @WojtekPoroslo 5 років тому +60

    Nahre, you have an amazing talent for distilling essence of any music and visualising it clearly and beautifly at the same time. I'm just a beginner, but I don't feel that way watching your videos, because you make them effortless to enjoy. Thank you for that

  • @koreboredom4302
    @koreboredom4302 5 років тому +16

    I would kill to have such a clean touch like that.

    • @bretone9673
      @bretone9673 5 років тому +8

      Really? I would practise. :)

    • @chezchezchezchez
      @chezchezchezchez 3 роки тому

      @@bretone9673 I know. I hate when people say that.
      So EMPTY.
      If you WANTED it, you'd GET IT.

    • @liebesleid
      @liebesleid 3 роки тому

      @@chezchezchezchez I've been trying for 14 years and still nowhere near T-T

  • @ThatBoomerDude56
    @ThatBoomerDude56 5 років тому +6

    "in recent months" you've been learning about (and doing excellent presentations on) more different composers and music styles that I can count. It's amazing. Thank you!

  • @szilike_10
    @szilike_10 4 роки тому +4

    I still get goosebumps on how good this is.

  • @daviddinh5150
    @daviddinh5150 5 років тому +6

    Thanks for making this video! A lot of pianists tend to misunderstand Liszt’s technique and pianistic style but your video educated me on what Liszt is actually capable of. Good job 🙌🏻

    • @NahreSol
      @NahreSol  5 років тому +2

      Thank you!!! 🙏🙏🙏

  • @fugueholic
    @fugueholic 5 років тому

    I have watched many "How to Sound like..." series, but this one, I guess, is the most plausible for me. Not the superficial level, Sol almost completely digests his composing and piano virtuosic features. When I had no idea about this, and If anyone let me listen to this and says this one is Liszt's, maybe I would believe that word. Thanks, Nahre. You're always beyond my expectation. I am looking forward to your next videos.

  • @driliagor
    @driliagor 3 роки тому +4

    If Listz could somehow listen bto that, he would be giving you a standing ovation!! Brilliant!

  • @MichaelSlovin
    @MichaelSlovin 5 років тому

    It never ceases to amaze me just how many musicians and composers passively accept the caricature of Liszt as a shallow showman. Where is their skepticism, their curiosity? He was supremely original and inventive, with depth to spare.

  • @davidliang5488
    @davidliang5488 5 років тому +36

    When Franz Lizst writes his pieces, at the beginning, he makes its pretty easy and then makes it hard.

  • @pointlesstoll
    @pointlesstoll 5 років тому +1

    That was so great, Nahre. It's hard to overstate how accessibly you describe and convey the art of creating music to someone (me) who might-on a good day-know what a chord is, but would struggle beyond that. Loved your arrangement.

  • @gijsschubert7901
    @gijsschubert7901 5 років тому +3

    Now I understand what the Dutch pianist Wibi Soerjadi did some 20 years ago when he played improvisations on common songs in his concerts. Very well played Nahre!

  • @gabrielgan369
    @gabrielgan369 5 років тому +1

    I started playing piano 11 years ago because of Liszt
    Thanks for making a video about his style and composition : )
    Now I can understand him better

  • @aidanjahnke8297
    @aidanjahnke8297 5 років тому +12

    Awesome video! I love all of your “in the style of” videos

  • @szilike_10
    @szilike_10 5 років тому +1

    I've desperately been waiting for the video including Liszt's style. I'm glad to say that this video highly topped all my expectations, I am still thrown away at how good it is. I can't appreciate enough your work. Maybe it's just me but it is so rewarding to hear the great masters' music coming alive today, with all their uniqueness. Not to mention your brilliant playing and wonderful technique. I am truly grateful.

  • @joeraciti
    @joeraciti 5 років тому +142

    How To Sound Like Nahre Sol (Spoiler: Don't Try, You Can't)

  • @BarnieSnyman
    @BarnieSnyman 5 років тому +1

    This is a pure goldmine for a self-studying composition student! And your playing is fantastic!!! Rarely do I subscribe so quickly as I did to your channel!

  • @ZenandtheArtofPiano
    @ZenandtheArtofPiano 5 років тому +6

    Your most engaging happy b-day yet...loved it!!

    • @NahreSol
      @NahreSol  5 років тому +4

      Thank you!!! 🙏🙏🙏

  • @colehusted4618
    @colehusted4618 3 роки тому +2

    8:45 to the end is my favorite part. Really sounds like Liszts lyrical pieces

  • @LoganAlbright73
    @LoganAlbright73 5 років тому +4

    Great video. Liszt is my favorite composer and something of a personal hero of mine. It always annoys me to see him dismissed as a flashy virtuoso. Apart from showing complete mastery of his instrument, his compositions are amazingly evocative and emotional. His harmonies, especially late in life, are astonishingly adventurous, and Wagner even cribbed the famous Tristan chord from him. His solo piano arrangements of orchestral works are breathtaking in their texture and detail, managing to cram an entire orchestra into two hands. He invented the piano recital and the tone poem. He was also a kind and generous man more humble than his skills would suggest, and he spent a huge amount of time and effort championing the works of other composers, even ones we would consider minor figures today.

  • @n5cbi
    @n5cbi 5 років тому

    It always takes me longer than the posted time to watch these videos because I keep inadvertently pausing them when my jaw drops hitting the computer keyboard and bringing them to an unintended halt. Nahre Sol, I had enough piano lessons in my youth to be able to better appreciate some of what you accomplish in these gems. However, what I learned then and remember now is insufficient for that appreciation to do justice to everything you put into them both for their preparation and then their execution. You NEVER disappoint.

  • @Felix_Li_En
    @Felix_Li_En 3 роки тому +4

    Thank you for sharing! This is the most wonderful "Franz Liszt" style composition I've heard recently! 💗

  • @alvins1979
    @alvins1979 5 років тому

    No one else can explain AND show what you just did. Well done. Virtuoso!

  • @ananthd4797
    @ananthd4797 5 років тому +5

    While virtuosic playing is often associated with "just being flashy", I've always had a liking for these kinds of techniques. I feel that they provide more of an "atmosphere", and feel more like an orchestra. Some of the first pieces I listened to which inspired me to take up classical piano were by Liszt -- Hungarian Rhapsody no 2 (of course lol), Gnomenreigen, Transcendental Etude 10, ... There's something quite special about his compositions which captures the imagination.
    Listening to Cziffra playing Liszt, as well as improvising in the style made me really "get it", and I've never looked back.

  • @richardz42
    @richardz42 5 років тому

    The quality of your work is absolutely amazing. You are a living hope for anyone who thinks UA-cam can be the place of the democratisation of our historical culture but also the one where the apparition of a new culture that creators as you are represent can be possible. My most sincere congratulations!

  • @bitaltwo
    @bitaltwo 5 років тому +11

    6:52 happy birthday in the style of franz liszt

  • @clauzane
    @clauzane 5 років тому

    I've seen a lot of pianist on UA-cam and you Nahre Sol are by far the best! You are humble and very talented,motivating me to keep practicing.

  • @kevinnguyen552
    @kevinnguyen552 5 років тому +60

    Nice I’m going to go shopping and take my Chopin Liszt

  • @kmyase1
    @kmyase1 2 роки тому +1

    Love seeing your fingers flying through the keyboard like a Bumblebee😊😊😊. Time for me to practice.

  • @mechwarrior5727
    @mechwarrior5727 5 років тому +170

    how to scare a pianist 101:
    Step one: Mention Franz Liszt
    Step two: Profit

    • @norwegiancrazygamer9706
      @norwegiancrazygamer9706 4 роки тому +1

      what if the pianist says "Oh, I love Franz Liszt!" who should be scared then?

    • @mechwarrior5727
      @mechwarrior5727 4 роки тому +9

      @@norwegiancrazygamer9706 you

    • @zswu31416
      @zswu31416 4 роки тому +1

      I personally love to play Liszt music even though I often fail

    • @solarean
      @solarean 3 роки тому +1

      @@norwegiancrazygamer9706 then mention alkan

    • @norwegiancrazygamer9706
      @norwegiancrazygamer9706 3 роки тому +1

      @@solarean Yeah now I'm just gonna wait to see your comment get 20k likesand I only have the one like I got lmao

  • @gibtsnocheinenfreien
    @gibtsnocheinenfreien 5 років тому

    You have such a beautiful understanding of the things!
    To play all these hard pieces is one thing, but you are fully internalising the essence. It's simply amazing.

  • @atheism5284
    @atheism5284 5 років тому +3

    Still my favourite composer of all time. I recommend Walker's biography for understanding Liszt as a man and a musician.

  • @matbit33
    @matbit33 2 роки тому +2

    you make it all look so easy

  • @mohabbenjamin5233
    @mohabbenjamin5233 5 років тому +8

    Oh, dearest Nahre...
    These short 9 minutes and 55 seconds bear endless hours, days, and years of dedication and prolific hard work within. I came across your indescribable page a few months ago by pure luck, and how grateful I am for such priceless fortune.
    The way you explain these extremely complicated theoretical and harmonic nuances, aside from showing your own voice/identity through it all, it's a perfect reminder that music is limitless and timeless, much like your talent.
    And if I may add one last thing, your gorgeous smile is a thing of Divinity altogether. I find it impossible not to smile in response. In fact, I'm literally smiling so big as I'm writing this, precious Nahre.
    Thank you for the gift that is you. Karma will always reward you in dividends, I know that for a fact. : )
    Mohab

  • @liebesleid
    @liebesleid 3 роки тому +1

    I LOVE the third hand thing. It feels like if you just added the 3rd voice in post production

  • @michaelsotomayor5001
    @michaelsotomayor5001 5 років тому +5

    -valse impromptu
    -liebestraum no. 3
    -romance in e minor
    -etude ricordanza
    -sonetto 104
    thought I would leave a few pieces that are "easier" to listen.. Liszt can be hard to appreciate

  • @jonathanDstrand
    @jonathanDstrand 5 років тому +1

    !!!! I’ve personally been going on a Liszt journey of my own this past year, and he’s become my favorite composer - currently reading through the Alan Walker biography. happy to see you’re addressing common misconceptions about him, and excited to see your future videos on le petit Litz!

  • @abbykruppa4373
    @abbykruppa4373 5 років тому +4

    So I could listen to this all day! I don’t know if you write this all out note by note but even if not the hours of work that went into this video are so evident! Currently learning the lovely “Love Dream” :)

  • @invokingtheabstract
    @invokingtheabstract 4 роки тому +2

    You are simply a treasure to the world! Please keep blessing us with your take on music and musical thangs! Peace!

  • @mufelo
    @mufelo 5 років тому +48

    Oh boy, thought Christmas is in like 2 months.

    • @NahreSol
      @NahreSol  5 років тому +6

      😂🙏🙏🙏

    • @colincassidy1194
      @colincassidy1194 5 років тому

      @@NahreSol your music/teaching is definitely a gift!

  • @RasiRon
    @RasiRon 2 роки тому +1

    This is astounding. Highly educational. Beautifully rendered. And very sophisticated.

  • @christianvennemann9008
    @christianvennemann9008 5 років тому +6

    I've been looking forward to this!

  • @ErkaaJ
    @ErkaaJ 4 роки тому

    I really like that you challenged the notion that Liszt is just a showman. He is quite literally the first modern pianist, his middle years is a precursor to impressionism, and in his late years his work is highly modern and postmodern (c.f. Prokofiev, Bartok, Shostakovich, Poulenc). In terms of both harmony and structure, he is highly underrated and way too often compared to generic romanticists. I still cannot comprehend how Sonata in B minor was created in the 1850's and not later.

  • @markharris8254
    @markharris8254 5 років тому +18

    My musical goal:
    "How To Sound Like Nahre Sol"

  • @joshuacoppersmith
    @joshuacoppersmith 5 років тому +1

    This makes me realize how much of my sense of what piano "is" is Liszt. I seldom enjoy virtuoso pieces much, but these elements of movement seem authentic to me. Thanks for sharing your skill to let me hear Liszt more clearly.

  • @sagarnepal4395
    @sagarnepal4395 5 років тому +52

    When she hit the e flat and the higher e flat i legit thought she was about to play La Campanella
    At 3:12

  • @zigarettenbruch6999
    @zigarettenbruch6999 5 років тому +1

    That rendition of "Happy Birthday" was extremely beautiful! I never thought the birthday song would make me feel emotional.

  • @jefersonpereira7546
    @jefersonpereira7546 3 роки тому +4

    Estou impressionado com esse canal! Isso é um dom que dá pra ver de longe.

  • @pontosinterligados
    @pontosinterligados 4 роки тому

    In love with your symbolic visuals connecting complex sound modes

  • @ΝικόλαοςΔημητρίου-γ6ν

    Nahre Sol: "...but for me physicality doesn't mean complexity"
    Nahre Sol at the end of this video:

  • @Mattieval
    @Mattieval 5 років тому

    "Physicality does not equal complexity" You just blew my mind a little and articulated something I've not been able to articulate quite so clearly.

  • @SceneComparisons
    @SceneComparisons 5 років тому +71

    I can hear Liszt influences on Koji Kondo, composer from the Mario games.

    • @pianogram7280
      @pianogram7280 3 роки тому +2

      koji kondo was not classicaly schooled

    • @MusicalEssence
      @MusicalEssence 3 роки тому +11

      @@pianogram7280 can still be inspired by the greats.

    • @andrewdevine5223
      @andrewdevine5223 3 роки тому +3

      Yes! The Legend of Zelda’s Great Fairy Fountain.

    • @RijoBeats
      @RijoBeats 3 роки тому

      💯 had the same thoughts. Music is so dope

  • @ansonwong5490
    @ansonwong5490 5 років тому

    Hear so much elements from his transcendental etudes like Mazeppa, Feux follets, the end is like B minor sonata 😍😍😍

  • @MarcelHuguenin
    @MarcelHuguenin 5 років тому +14

    Amazing as always! Your technique and technical skills are top notch. It is such a joy to watch your videos with the ‘augmented reality’ of the kinetic texts and your elegant and clear presentation. Thank you for creating these videos and I am really looking forward to the one(s) about your trip to Weimar, sounds very promising!

  • @vex_music_official
    @vex_music_official 2 роки тому +2

    Great video. Gave me LOTS of inspiration for a piece i will make!

  • @helcaraxe0411
    @helcaraxe0411 5 років тому +5

    If I’m not mistaken, it was his birthday recently, so really this is all very thematic

  • @h2shin
    @h2shin 5 років тому

    Your quality of production, narrative and of course music never fails to make me happy

  • @nobodyeverinhistory
    @nobodyeverinhistory 5 років тому +5

    6:51 This is what classical musicians play when they're having a not-so-happy birthday.

  • @jimenezjae
    @jimenezjae 3 роки тому +1

    You are very humble, but know that you are also a phenomenal virtuoso!!!👏👏👏