Vladimir Horowitz - Liszt - Au Bord d'une Source

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  • Опубліковано 2 гру 2010
  • Vladimir Horowitz plays Liszt's Au bord d'une source (Beside a Spring) at home :)

КОМЕНТАРІ • 82

  • @pianomaly9859
    @pianomaly9859 3 роки тому +41

    I heard him play this in 1976, and the audience let out a collective sigh when it was over. I am always amazed that he used in hands in a way that looks like a beginner doing everything a good teacher would immediately land on him/her for. Yet he had one of the most fabulous commands of an instrument in the history of Western classical music.

  • @AlexanderArsov
    @AlexanderArsov 7 років тому +107

    A fine performance indeed, but the face in the end (3:50) is the most memorable part of this video.

    • @HermanIngram
      @HermanIngram 6 років тому +2

      Alexander Arsov
      Damn right!
      Sadly, the world does not have people like him anymore.

    • @albertbauli
      @albertbauli 4 роки тому +3

      And the last arpeggio is pure magic, how he touches the last note... Well, the whole second part, specially the coda. First time I heard it, I cried like a baby.

    • @andreabarone5827
      @andreabarone5827 2 роки тому +1

      I always said the same thing. It brought tears to my eyes.

  • @RWinkley02124
    @RWinkley02124 Рік тому +25

    The look of bliss on his face at the end is priceless! What an amazing range of color, phrasing, and emotional depth.

  • @tidaratz
    @tidaratz 11 років тому +27

    Really love his smiling face at the end! knowing that he is happy playing this Liszt beautiful piece.

  • @thenewtitanic
    @thenewtitanic 2 роки тому +19

    Au bord d'une source, at the edge of a spring, was written during Liszt's travels in Switzerland with his lover, Marie d'Agoult. The ending is pretty melancholic and Horowitz's smile is also full of nostalgia. Pretty moving video.

  • @stefanufer608
    @stefanufer608 4 роки тому +8

    A smile that says it all - Happy 116th Birthday for tomorrow dear Maestro Horowitz

  • @DanielMartinez-nw1pn
    @DanielMartinez-nw1pn 3 роки тому +46

    And just like that, in such a casual yet solemn moment, the best rendition of this piece was recorded 😁

    • @Hjominbonrun
      @Hjominbonrun 3 роки тому +2

      ​@William Taittinger I agree with Daniel.
      Quality of performance should not be rated on the percentage of right notes divided by all the notes.
      You would not do well listening to Cortot.
      I have heard many recordings, including Richter, Arrau, Brendel, Bolet, Cziffra, Cortot and Horowitz when he was younger.
      Laplante recording is a performance I like too.
      Bolet I like too.
      Cziffra pace is a bit slow Then rushed and slow and rushed, I cannot make sense of it. But he had very few wrong notes.
      But this performance by VH is hypnotic... to me, and far more listenable, to me.

    • @Hjominbonrun
      @Hjominbonrun 3 роки тому

      @William Taittinger Artur Schnabel was know to throw fists of wrong notes.
      He is revered amongst concert pianists as a monumental interpreter of Beethoven.
      Same for Cortot, Alfred Brendel looks to Cortot for interpretations of Chopin.
      I hope you have not cut yourself off from some great music and beauty by focusing on architecture.

    • @Viflo
      @Viflo Рік тому

      Eeeeh... Laplante would like to have a chat

    • @Viflo
      @Viflo 10 місяців тому

      Actually Maestro Brendel destroys everyone here

  • @ulfwernernielsen6708
    @ulfwernernielsen6708 7 років тому +14

    This is a piece that Horowitz played wonderful his whole career.

  • @frankiewinters1255
    @frankiewinters1255 6 років тому +12

    This is my favourite section from the whole of Années de pèlerinage and even though you played it beautifully and with character, that smile at the end just made my week :)

  • @markherron1407
    @markherron1407 6 місяців тому +2

    Happy Birthday to Franz Liszt REST IN POWER Blessings and Hugs 💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜

  • @voolare
    @voolare 10 років тому +58

    He went into depression three times for several years during his life and saw his family being wiped out either by wars or by suicide and he could never deal with the fact that he never really came out of the closet. Nevertheless he reached happiness toward the end of his life I'd say..

    • @pianomaly9859
      @pianomaly9859 3 роки тому +2

      Both his father and Richter's disappeared into the maw of the Gulag, I believe I've heard and read.

    • @augarno
      @augarno 2 роки тому +4

      I was just thinking that same thought, the smile at the end. There's definitely some kind of peacefulness and joy there, but I know he must've had a tremendously tortured life. Depression is a killer, and who knows what sorts of family trauma he might've gone through that nobody even knows about.

  • @marcospeedo5412
    @marcospeedo5412 3 роки тому +3

    A class of his own, the Horowitz class.

  • @TheTinklingofBells
    @TheTinklingofBells Місяць тому

    He said something like Liszt is the best...he definitely had a reverence for Liszt, maybe that look at the end ...lovely playing❤

  • @xyzunodostres
    @xyzunodostres 4 роки тому +4

    Good funerial music because like life, the piece is challenging and brief, and concludes with an uncertain resolution.But the genius of the composer combined with the artistry of the performer transcends all that.

  • @Bengraziano
    @Bengraziano 3 місяці тому +1

    I can’t explain why but that face at 3:48 is the best part and made me tear up a little

  • @magbag70
    @magbag70 9 років тому +3

    true pleasure of senses .. music springs everywhere

  • @josselinbeaumont1100
    @josselinbeaumont1100 2 роки тому +3

    je ne sais pas pourquoi je laisse ce message, les mots n'ont plus de sens en écoutant cette perfection

    • @richiejohnson
      @richiejohnson Рік тому

      C'est la meme que jettant un fleur qui garde son douce odeur. ❤

  • @gerardbedecarter
    @gerardbedecarter 13 років тому +1

    Beautiful playing!

  • @richiejohnson
    @richiejohnson Рік тому

    Fabulous data entry! 🥰

  • @bt9124
    @bt9124 Рік тому +1

    Bittersweet, like his smile.

  • @shabs124
    @shabs124 12 років тому +2

    Goosebumps

  • @timotot123
    @timotot123 5 років тому +1

    Absolute beauty

  • @jekyllmd1
    @jekyllmd1 9 років тому +1

    Enorme complejidad, belleza máxima.

  • @FlyingBlackAndWhite
    @FlyingBlackAndWhite 11 років тому +4

    Magical...

  • @leot7
    @leot7 6 років тому +1

    He made me break out into a smile at the end there too.

  • @nogootubetube3540
    @nogootubetube3540 7 років тому +1

    Beautiful peace

  • @martinadler73
    @martinadler73 13 років тому +15

    I can hardly imagine how this piece could be played any better.

    • @grubbetuchus
      @grubbetuchus 6 років тому +10

      Played differently? Of course. Played better? There is no pinnacle of greatness in art, there's a plateau. Reach that plateau, you might be the only one on it or it might be shared, but it's reached and that means that your art is elegant.

    • @qzrnuiqntp
      @qzrnuiqntp 6 років тому +3

      I'm sure Horowitz played it better, with no wrong notes and better control. But no one else, -but Liszt himself?

    • @Soytu19
      @Soytu19 5 років тому

      /watch?v=GX7bgT78x8U
      This way makes much more sense.

    • @noshirm6285
      @noshirm6285 2 роки тому +2

      Martino - agreed! :-)

    • @ulfwernernielsen6708
      @ulfwernernielsen6708 Місяць тому

      @@qzrnuiqntpHorowitz was never a machine. Even in his 1947 studio recording. there are some wrong notes here and there.

  • @lucagulizia6949
    @lucagulizia6949 3 роки тому +1

    Lo adoro, emozionante....

  • @GaryColemanBawse
    @GaryColemanBawse 9 років тому +5

    I can never play this video without watching it too.

  • @leddidi
    @leddidi 8 років тому +1

    greatness

  • @ViolaRrecaj-ie5gc
    @ViolaRrecaj-ie5gc 4 роки тому +10

    I really love his technique especially for the fact that he uses all the height of the key ,I'm tryna learn how to do that to because I usually play only with just the half of the key ,does anyone has any advice or any recommend of a way to practice it?

    • @epicbottleflips5032
      @epicbottleflips5032 3 роки тому

      What do u mean height of the key?

    • @robertvasi
      @robertvasi 2 роки тому

      His piano key depth is 7 mm

    • @thebutlerdidit6357
      @thebutlerdidit6357 Рік тому

      Long fingers help, and the unorthodox straightened fingers technique unique to Horowitz

  • @petrouchka2011
    @petrouchka2011 Рік тому +1

    1:34😮❤ magnificent pedal control

  • @flylooper
    @flylooper 7 років тому

    Such man, he was.

  • @martinstotzer3466
    @martinstotzer3466 4 роки тому

    Ja, der Horowitz... Gut, dass man ihn in diesem Video auch spielen sieht.

  • @Sportfuck
    @Sportfuck 11 років тому +2

    sadly, right... Yet he was happy at that moment. can't deny that ...

  • @mariaauxiliadoradealmeidai9123
    @mariaauxiliadoradealmeidai9123 2 роки тому

    Que bonito o cruzar das mãos !!

  • @craigkeller
    @craigkeller 2 роки тому

    He defines Genius. My hero.

  • @bicicleteando0
    @bicicleteando0 13 років тому +1

    i love you

  • @anapaulalimarodgers2413
    @anapaulalimarodgers2413 2 роки тому

    💕

  • @ivancheung6659
    @ivancheung6659 11 років тому

    Very good!!!!!!!!!!:)

  • @kimweonill
    @kimweonill 5 років тому

    Oh, my god.

  • @Scarbogn
    @Scarbogn 13 років тому +2

    3:49 - 3:54 He did live a happy life.
    He was the best pianist and a wonderful man, couldn't be a better combination.

  • @dalzieuy
    @dalzieuy 11 років тому +1

    He make s it look so easy...my god....

  • @C.A.1020
    @C.A.1020 8 років тому +11

    The chord in 2:30 is like a magic

    • @lepredator189
      @lepredator189 6 років тому

      It's beautiiful

    • @robertocrudo1967
      @robertocrudo1967 5 років тому

      True, true... glad that others noticed the same details... another proof that the word "absolute" in phylosopy has many real examples in Music

    • @thenewtitanic
      @thenewtitanic 2 роки тому +2

      3:23 even more this one, from an impressionistic piece to a mystical event.

  • @lunchmind
    @lunchmind 12 років тому +2

    I understand that h did not live a happy life but I can't help but laugh when I read the liner notes to my mother's double LP set of Horowitz. they spoke of how Horowitz aspired to be a composer but when the Russian Revolution liquidated his family fortunes, he was forced to the paino. Written like that,you get the impression,he had to play sailor tunes in a tavern rahter than be "forced"onto one of the greatest concert carreers in the 20th centruy.

    • @grubbetuchus
      @grubbetuchus 6 років тому +1

      Not quite, your impression is a bit off. He determined, quickly, that he could concertize and get paid for his recitals, he knew that he was good enough to attract audiences. His decision to concertize - he was very, very young - was pecuniary, given the exigencies of the times in Russia. He loved music, so performing and playing was not as if he sold his soul. He did have to walk away from being a composer. This wasn't America or Western Europe, people were starving.

  • @england670
    @england670 3 роки тому

    I couldn't critique anyone who played the piano like that. It was very moving.

  • @dikkimi
    @dikkimi 5 років тому +1

    쩐다

  • @cherubim4452
    @cherubim4452 9 років тому +2

    Some people believe that famous pianists become worse with age. Elly Ney (watch?v=5z-NlloM7TE) and Horowitz are counterexamples.

  • @Hobott
    @Hobott 10 років тому

    It's staggering...

  • @ancientsolar
    @ancientsolar 12 років тому +1

    @TheRedArmy10 True, this great man should be an inspiration to us! ~ He lost so much.... all it seems to take for people to go into depression these days.. is a rise in food bills etc,

  • @michielvaneechoutte3685
    @michielvaneechoutte3685 6 місяців тому

    Effortless.. just heavenly spooky

  • @lepredator189
    @lepredator189 6 років тому

    His face at 3:50 made me cry and want to die.

  • @NectarineofQuality
    @NectarineofQuality 2 роки тому

    0:10

  • @thejesusfreak919
    @thejesusfreak919 12 років тому

    What about those ten or so years where he withdrew from the public from depression? That's about. 10% of his life sad...

  •  9 років тому

    Falar o que????????????????????????

  • @RossU2
    @RossU2 11 років тому

    It seems easy playing the piano looking to Horowitz...

  • @paganviodio
    @paganviodio 6 років тому +1

    lazar berman plays this much better than horowitz.