I played this at my grandmother's funeral. She loved to dance. While everyone was talking about her final rest, I thought she was waltzing towards her final dance floor.
chopin waltzes arent meant to accompany dancing, chopin hated the bourgeoisie so he didnt write waltzes for them to dance to. He wrote them for everyone to be able to enjoy them no matter their status
Me too. I don't understand why he was so harsh with this Composition. It's sad to think that he despised this music so much. Artists are really hard to follow sometimes. Crises of pride which assailed them to the point of not being satisfied with what music offered them, it s quite disappointing
@@Ale-qf1pm Nobody thinks that op69 no2 should be more melancholic? Of course this pianist's skill is unbelievable, but I still feel like there was too much energy when he played it. This piece is in B minor. Shouldn't it be more depressing and sorrowful?
@@jackz1620 it really depends on how you see the piece personally. I learned this piece about a year ago, and in doing so I saw the piece in a more energetic and upbeat way, unlike interpretations by Rubenstein's or other pianists. I imagine it as if it were the last waltz a couple ever danced to, like a sad goodbye, not necessarily a sorrowful, slow waltz. Personally I find the waltz op. 69 n°1 to be much sadder and melancholic, this waltz is like a sad tribute to something gone but not forgotten, but not in a very depressing way, almost as if it were respectful
Just listen to the bass at 2:51. You even knew it was gonna be huge from the deep breath he took before playing it. I’m sorry Ashkenazy, but these small details are why I like his interpretation more than yours!
You misunderstood I love Ashkenazy’s interpretation as much as the next guy! I’m just saying for this particular piece I love Kissin’s way more. Also, I’m intrigued about Ashkenazy being your teacher’s teacher! Tell me how lessons go and if he or she uses the same techniques Ashkenazy uses!
Asdfswer You can probably trace your piano learning lineage back to a famous musician due to how teaching works (1 person can teach many students throughout their life). Take JS Bach. He taught a lot, and some of his students would also teach. Let’s say a person will teach 10 people that will later also teach (this is probably an underestimate since Bach taught many people in his lifetime). So, let’s say Bach has a legacy of 10 teachers. These teachers then will teach more people, with some of the people they teach (let’s say 10 again) becoming teachers. So, within two generations, thousands have been taught which can trace their learning back to Bach and 100 teachers will continue on Bach’s teaching legacy to the next generation. If we use 10 as a basis again, it will be 1,000 teachers, than 10,000, etc. The exponential nature of teaching, combined with the fact that musicians will have multiple teachers in their life, makes Piano Master’s statement technically possible. They also could mean teaching as in having a master class with them, which makes their statement even more possible. I wouldn’t be surprised if one of my teachers could have traced their teaching legacy back to a prolific teacher, like Czerny. Take this example. Haydn taught Beethoven, Beethoven taught Czerny, and Czerny taught Liszt. It’s a fun thought experiment to think about the legacy of a teacher. Like human ancestry, there might even be 1 person (probably the first person who invented the first keyboard like instrument) who indirectly has taught every harpsichordist, organist, pianist, etc.
Beautiful. But forget this is a waltz for a moment and play Andante. It sounds so beautiful and lyrical. I feel the really fast pace makes it lose the beauty of the Melody. At least that’s how I feel. I can’t play fast anyway.
It's strange. The Tempo marking for this piece is a Moderato... with a quaver BPM of 152. That's Presto territory. We will never know how Chopin intended this piece to sound since he wanted it burned upon his death, and he never published it.
29/11/2021: just now, the leaves racing to the ground beneath my window, and gently falling snow supervising the fall; there's a Maria sleeping darkly in the next room, and a full day of work ahead: I can get used to this newness. Perhaps, come this August, I'd have recovered from the follies of the last time I put myself in hands of August?
Je trouve ça un peu condescendant de le nommer comme un « garçon » c’est un homme, un artiste qui mérite le plus grand des respects. Il est né avec un don, celui de la musique et non pas nécessairement celui de la discussion comme vous l’entendez, il a sûrement atteint un stade de maturité bien plus haut que n’importe quel pianiste foulant encore cette Terre. Savoir modérer ses propos serait bien aussi, il est la pour jouer un morceau, pas pour parler.
in quanto lo hai fatto? io seconda media (secondo anno di pianoforte) e l'ho imparato in tre mesi, o meglio tutto quasi perfetto tranne l'ultima parte dopo la ripetizione finale.
Martin Ivanov en artiste !?? Pourtant c'est bien Evgeny de notre bon Frédérik Chopin, je met un pousse vers le bas mais c'est pour Martin car cette mélodie es l'une de mes préféré de Chopinou 😍et Evgeny c'est un as au piano
Не просто будет танцевать вальс под такую интерпретацию. Кисин, конечно, виртуоз, но не слишком ли фундаментально подошёл он к исполнению этого вальса? Придать драматизма, если уж этого так хочется, можно и в более легковесном исполнении.
No es por decirte nada pero este es un pianista de talla mundial no manolo el del barrio de al lado que aprendió con un curso por internet... La nota dura lo que tiene que durar .... Su interpretación es perfecta. Además que es eso de la nota principal ? No sabía que el fa# se llamaba nota principal...
I played this at my grandmother's funeral. She loved to dance. While everyone was talking about her final rest, I thought she was waltzing towards her final dance floor.
chopin waltzes arent meant to accompany dancing, chopin hated the bourgeoisie so he didnt write waltzes for them to dance to. He wrote them for everyone to be able to enjoy them no matter their status
What a beautiful interpretation! I love his control of dynamics and use of rubato! I wish to play like Kissin one day.
そんな風に弾けたら最高です!🎉
Too much rubato imo, tempo is uneven
Piękno muzyki Fryderyka Chopina to fenomen graniczący z cudem ❤️
When Chopin wrote this he said "I hope they burn this when I died" I'm happy they didn't. What a beautiful waltz and performance.
Composed already in 1829. But indeed only 8 waltzes published during his lifetime.
Lol, and upon hearing this rendition, Chopin exclaimed, "I knew they should've burnt it."
Really? Why??
He was too ahead of his time haha
Me too. I don't understand why he was so harsh with this Composition. It's sad to think that he despised this music so much. Artists are really hard to follow sometimes. Crises of pride which assailed them to the point of not being satisfied with what music offered them, it s quite disappointing
I’m learning this song right now and I like to watch others play this on UA-cam EXCELLENT!
ITS A PIECE NOT A SONG AAAAH
@@ACapella5597 I wrote this one year ago I didn’t know XD
I am too
I’m actually finished no.1
@@ACapella5597 It is just a small mistake.
One of the greats of the modern virtuosic literature interpretations.
nigga with da herr got it good
Evgeny has such passion. He is one of my favorite pianists. ❤ so enjoyable to watch. He really feels each note.
That's marvelous in play piano.
All sounds is beautiful and Clear like jewel.
-THE LOVER- movie made this waltz unforgettable even after 28 years
I love the way this guy plays, pedalling is so refined as are the rubatos, and the choice of tempi
Kissin is a master with the piano, his interpretations are some of the best put there
Ye
@@Ale-qf1pm Nobody thinks that op69 no2 should be more melancholic? Of course this pianist's skill is unbelievable, but I still feel like there was too much energy when he played it. This piece is in B minor. Shouldn't it be more depressing and sorrowful?
@@jackz1620 it really depends on how you see the piece personally. I learned this piece about a year ago, and in doing so I saw the piece in a more energetic and upbeat way, unlike interpretations by Rubenstein's or other pianists. I imagine it as if it were the last waltz a couple ever danced to, like a sad goodbye, not necessarily a sorrowful, slow waltz. Personally I find the waltz op. 69 n°1 to be much sadder and melancholic, this waltz is like a sad tribute to something gone but not forgotten, but not in a very depressing way, almost as if it were respectful
@@Ale-qf1pm saw you in the heroic polonaise video of Rousseau hehe
I am learning this right now and I always listen to him play! Because he is good!
of course he is, he;s Russian
Same
Same
Favorite pianist and favorite composer 🎼
Бесподобное исполнение. Евгений Кисин преклоняю колено. Ты Гений!
one of my fave waltz. I enjoy to play it. 👍
Very beautiful music,he has such a good talant I think.
Just start learning this song today..
*talant*
Of course he has talent! He is FAMOUS.
Piano Master it’s a -joke- legit comment
What do you mean by talent he is kissin
This is the best interpretation of this valls... beautiful, thanks Kissin and Chopin😍
Valse*
@@nadeemlo ups, thanks😅
Ps: sorry, english is not my language
@@marianaochoa719 lol no worries
In english it's called "waltz" i think.
English isnt my first language too
@@nadeemloWalttttttttttttttttttttz
@@nadeemlo waltz
Chopin-Kissin combinación perfecta!
Have you listened to Yuja Wang?
@@MarkRSommersDalia Lazar played perfectly
..........ohhh una de las bonitas melodias de Chopin
What a beautiful music.
*AN WALTS DA CHAPAN*
Smikkelbeer hiw you do that word, teach me pls
un waltz de chopin : it's french ;)
en français : une valse de Chopin
Jacqueline Cuenca il dit pas plutot : la valse de chopin?
Hahahahahh
GENIUS!!!!Like Chopain holding His back!!!BRAVO
Excellent. Reminds me of the performance by Howard Shelley in the movie The Lover. Well done.
It reminded me of the same movie as well.
Thank you for nice music 🎶
Szeretem Chopin-t.Búcsú keringő.
He plays So beautifully
Belíssimo!!!!
Beautiful music !!!! Great interpretation !!!!
Браво!!! Очень музыкально!!!
Este valz lo conozco como Nº10. De todas maneras es mi favorito de Chopin. Saludos desde Chile
This is the only person i will ever jealous of ( except Mister Chopin himself for having written all those masterpieces)
So amazing
I wish this was there on streaming services
Just listen to the bass at 2:51. You even knew it was gonna be huge from the deep breath he took before playing it. I’m sorry Ashkenazy, but these small details are why I like his interpretation more than yours!
Hey hey hey, 😤 ashkenazy is my piano teacher’s teacher! RESPECT
You misunderstood I love Ashkenazy’s interpretation as much as the next guy! I’m just saying for this particular piece I love Kissin’s way more. Also, I’m intrigued about Ashkenazy being your teacher’s teacher! Tell me how lessons go and if he or she uses the same techniques Ashkenazy uses!
yes your teacher’s teacher is definitely ashkenazy, if they were, they would not be teaching you
Asdfswer You can probably trace your piano learning lineage back to a famous musician due to how teaching works (1 person can teach many students throughout their life). Take JS Bach. He taught a lot, and some of his students would also teach. Let’s say a person will teach 10 people that will later also teach (this is probably an underestimate since Bach taught many people in his lifetime).
So, let’s say Bach has a legacy of 10 teachers. These teachers then will teach more people, with some of the people they teach (let’s say 10 again) becoming teachers. So, within two generations, thousands have been taught which can trace their learning back to Bach and 100 teachers will continue on Bach’s teaching legacy to the next generation. If we use 10 as a basis again, it will be 1,000 teachers, than 10,000, etc.
The exponential nature of teaching, combined with the fact that musicians will have multiple teachers in their life, makes Piano Master’s statement technically possible. They also could mean teaching as in having a master class with them, which makes their statement even more possible.
I wouldn’t be surprised if one of my teachers could have traced their teaching legacy back to a prolific teacher, like Czerny. Take this example. Haydn taught Beethoven, Beethoven taught Czerny, and Czerny taught Liszt.
It’s a fun thought experiment to think about the legacy of a teacher. Like human ancestry, there might even be 1 person (probably the first person who invented the first keyboard like instrument) who indirectly has taught every harpsichordist, organist, pianist, etc.
Huge yet so subtle!
beautiful.
Beautiful use of rubato and cantabile. Kissin at his best.
Like I you saw him talking when playing piano
I want to play just like him
You must studying very very much
@@thepittbullterrier6368 thanks captain obvious
completely *AMAZING!!!!!* #Chopin
Lol
He definitely changed some notes compared to my music! But I like every change he made; it's like his own interpretation.
There are multiple versions of this Waltz
Good.Beautiful.Cool.Amasing.
Beautiful. But forget this is a waltz for a moment and play Andante. It sounds so beautiful and lyrical. I feel the really fast pace makes it lose the beauty of the Melody. At least that’s how I feel. I can’t play fast anyway.
It's strange. The Tempo marking for this piece is a Moderato... with a quaver BPM of 152. That's Presto territory.
We will never know how Chopin intended this piece to sound since he wanted it burned upon his death, and he never published it.
I totally agree with you. I love to play this at slower tempo. Kissin interpretation is stunning though.
@@Un1234l It is 152BPM as eighth note, not quarter note, so transfer to quarter note will be around 76 bpm, of course Moderato
@@kawaii_miffioneverstops
I'm definitely seeing a quarter note in the sheet music I'm looking at
Очищает душу
Эмоции, не привлекают.....эта школа Российская... Так учили...хорошо, что уехал Кисин!!!
When you learnt it was it four pages?
Is this Fontana or Oxford version?
28/07/2018// august, i’m in your hands. do you hear too?-all that dust settling? we’ll make rhythm out of the caterwaul.
No
29/11/2021: just now, the leaves racing to the ground beneath my window, and gently falling snow supervising the fall; there's a Maria sleeping darkly in the next room, and a full day of work ahead: I can get used to this newness. Perhaps, come this August, I'd have recovered from the follies of the last time I put myself in hands of August?
This music is like an angry girlfriend and you are trying to convince here 😆😆 wonderful composition love that one🥰
Magnifique
Музыка просто космическая❤️
You Russian haha
Good comment
Почему ха-ха ? Женя из России !
AMAZING!
Браво! Браво! Браво!🙏👏
Is it that fast and loud🤔
that isn't fast or especially loud for that piece, that's exactly how it's supposed to sound.
Elaine Em exactly
I play this piece at the moment and I really enjoy the sound :) btw he plays well :)
Insa Kohlbecker me too (:
@Insa Kolby have you mastered that pieces?
awesome!!!
Amazing! What piano model is that?
stainway
tamaz papiashvili lol u don’t understand lmao
D 274
Браво ! Евгений !
bellísimo
Professional . He can play Chopin very well
I like chopin ❤️❤️❤️wow very good!
Is this the old version?🤔🤔🤔
What amazing touch. His soft notes are just barely audible.
Да действительно удивительные прикосновения пальцев! Браво!❤
Plz let us download it
Very good
Too much emotions in Chopin songs kills
Je l'ai vu en personne.
Froid.
Distant.
Je lui ai parlé.
Un garçon qui doit encore grandir.
Fermé.
Mais talentueux.
Un grand pianiste
Jorge Monteiro Il est autiste.
_ lisoon _vraiment?
Grand pianiste dans tous les cas.
Cela explique son comportement
@@ravel2859 J’ai pas souvenir qu’il soit autiste
Je trouve ça un peu condescendant de le nommer comme un « garçon » c’est un homme, un artiste qui mérite le plus grand des respects. Il est né avec un don, celui de la musique et non pas nécessairement celui de la discussion comme vous l’entendez, il a sûrement atteint un stade de maturité bien plus haut que n’importe quel pianiste foulant encore cette Terre. Savoir modérer ses propos serait bien aussi, il est la pour jouer un morceau, pas pour parler.
I love it tho I’m playing it too!
Sto al primo anno del liceo musicale e la sto studiando, ho quasi finitoo
in quanto lo hai fatto? io seconda media (secondo anno di pianoforte) e l'ho imparato in tre mesi, o meglio tutto quasi perfetto tranne l'ultima parte dopo la ripetizione finale.
chopin ο πιο γλυκος και τρυφερος ο ποιητικοτερος!...
Martin Ivanov en artiste !?? Pourtant c'est bien Evgeny de notre bon Frédérik Chopin, je met un pousse vers le bas mais c'est pour Martin car cette mélodie es l'une de mes préféré de Chopinou 😍et Evgeny c'est un as au piano
너무 감미롭다❤️
헐 한국인!!!!
👏 👍
👌👌👌
❤❤❤
He is playing something else. Look carefully and you will see
But is he tho
the timing is just a little off, he's not actually playing something else
Dear kissin the brothers gibb called they want their suit back.
BRAVO
1:28-1:30 😁😂😊19:45
0:07
AMAZING!!\(*º ロ º *)/
Who tf is out her disliking art wtf
🎹🎵👍
100 лайков👏👏👏👏
👌
Ce n’est pas la 64 op 2 !!!‼️⚠️
And
3:10 🤨
?
@@milocavaliere8828 Evengy is glaring at us
@@maxp.5480 ah I see lol
LMAOOOOO “u got a problem bro” 🤨🤨🤨🤨🤨
cool
Не просто будет танцевать вальс под такую интерпретацию. Кисин, конечно, виртуоз, но не слишком ли фундаментально подошёл он к исполнению этого вальса? Придать драматизма, если уж этого так хочется, можно и в более легковесном исполнении.
...
Вальсы Шопена не для танцев, это размер три четверти...как и мазурки и полонезы..тоже не танцы !
a little bit lay-back....
Bravo
역시 키친놈,,,
Sounds like a drunk Chopin who can't walk a straight line... Rubinstein just nailed it.
Tell it true, Rubenstein and Askenazy are immortal
Shingyu Chow wrong way to express yourself and your taste... you will learn... 😉
lofigr channel may I know wts the right way ? Lol
This certainly sounds fresh and different from other interpretations. Often the first one we hear becomes the favourite and a sort of reference.
I have that impression with waltz 64 no. 3... He's totally smashed in there....
Cuando toca la nota principal la pausa debiera ser un poquito mayor!!!
???? Cada uno lo toca como lo siente
No es por decirte nada pero este es un pianista de talla mundial no manolo el del barrio de al lado que aprendió con un curso por internet... La nota dura lo que tiene que durar .... Su interpretación es perfecta. Además que es eso de la nota principal ? No sabía que el fa# se llamaba nota principal...
@@JavierRodriguez-nd5cytotalmente de acuerdo 👏🏼
Gd tnx hl1oyf
He is not playing what we are listening in this video. Wrong video.
Mt bom! Kissin é pica
🤔🤭
That is not moderato.trust me I have a 🚊nome right next to me.
I have to play this and i am 11
Melanie Yau mt and I’m 12
Hate ppl who just comment their age to brag, like lil bro ur not special
wow ur too good
@@anthony3266 why do u care anyways LMFAO
@@anthony3266 jealous? 🫶
Dalia Lazar.
moderato😡😑👌
Agustina Peralta lets hear you play it then, I know you are not as good😜
ddfengmit soy pianista mi vida ! asique por favor guardate tus comentarios en el culo 😚😘
ddfengmit "You've to be a pianist to have an opinion on someone's performance"
Not an argument
Too fast. Best is Dahlia Lazar’s version.
There's more passion in his version don't you think, Lazar's version is too linear for me