0:00:00 Piano Sonata 1 in E major 0:16:56 Piano Sonata 2 in C major 0:33:59 Piano Sonata 3 in E major 0:57:27 Piano Sonata 4 in A minor 1:21:52 Piano Sonata 5 in Ab major 1:34:58 Piano Sonata 6 in E minor 1:54:53 Piano Sonata 8 in Eb major 2:21:54 Piano Sonata in F# minor 2:44:17 Piano Sonata 9 in B major 3:07:37 Piano Sonata 10 in C major 3:26:06 Piano Sonata 11 in F minor 3:49:41 Piano Sonata 13 in A major 4:08:42 Piano Sonata 14 in A minor "Grande Sonate" 4:29:40 Piano Sonata 15 in C major "Relique" 5:08:46 Piano Sonata 16 in A minor 5:42:42 Piano Sonata 17 in D major "Gasteiner" 6:20:24 Piano Sonata 18 in G major "Fantasy" 6:58:32 Piano Sonata 19 in C minor 7:30:30 Piano Sonata 20 in A major 8:02:13 Piano Sonata 21 in Bb major 8:43:07 Allegretto for piano in C major
@@null8295 Kick the owners of the copyright in the balls. They don't care about music. We do. ( and on a side note thanks for posting this is very nice )
L’univers de L’intégrale de Badura-Skoda reste un passage obligé pour tout pianiste qui veut approcher Schubert dans l’esprit de son épique avec un des viennois les plus cultivé et pénétrant de cette œuvre considérable. On admirera autant la rigueur que les phrasés impossibles à reproduire sur un piano moderne forcément déformant hélas, pour ne rien dire du charme et du caractère dansant de cette musique sublime et si bien rendue ! Là on touche à quelque chose du Schubert véritable, si spontané, si vivant. A écouter absolument.
People respect all these pop/rock/hip hop stars nowadays; but to be honest, the classicist who can perform multiple 10+ hour compilations of piano sonatas is the real performance hero. Schubert composed an amazing range of piano sonatas and I am hooked. The highlight for me is 4:59:29 15 - IV. Rondo, Allegro - Mr Paul Badura-Skoda "completed" the unfinished piece and I love it!
Badura Skoda,one of the best historian and interpreter of Mozart,Beethoven (including the first period of Elector'sonatas, apart of the 32 sonatas) and Schubert on period instruments (including his intepretations on the last restored Beethoven's piano).He revised Schubert full sonatas from Deutsch catalogue and edited them, His pupil Hannae Nakajima recorded them.Also,Michel D'Alberto recorded them.I have both LP and CD editions.Before, Artur Schnabel (among others,Alfred Brendel,for example) recorded the four last complete sonatas
Maravillosa la oportunidad de disfrutar de todas las sonatas de mi compositor favorito, de su dulzura, de su apasionamiento. Entre todas ellas, mi favorita es la 959, especialmente su andante que sirve de fondo musical a la película turca "Cuento de invierno". Cómo refleja ese ambiente helado de la Capadocia y el desencuentro de dos seres obligados a compartir sus diferencias.
Sonoridade brilhante, com um chorus que produz uma leveza única, soa médio agudo. Uma equalização diferente no temperamento daí esse timbre especial "cravo piano". Obrigado por nos brindar com a música de Shubert feita em um instrumento tão especial por um instrumentista com tal clareza de pensamentos. BRAVO!!!
Music and poetry are made as love is made; an exchange of blood, a total embrace without any caution, without any protection. The big jump every time !!
A poetic description from the genius of Philippe Cirse. Brilliant, brother Philippe. The knowing is in you: The mystic knowing. The mystic flight. The going far over, far gone, far upward to the infinite eye, to see all the unfound and all the lost. Bon voyage.
I have his Beethoven, Mozart, and Haydn on period instruments. Did not know he did Schubert. Were these the Astree label? I saw him in Ann Arbor ages ago. Curiously, he had a memory slip -- he said it was the first time he ever had one -- and had to pull out the sheet music for one piece, which bothered me none at all. I believe he did three encores, perhaps to make up for it. It was a magical afternoon.
I do think these performances were available on CD for a time under the Astrée imprint. I could be misremembering. Anyone know if the Beethoven, Mozart and Haydn recordings are available on UA-cam?
fortepianos have pedals and knee pads that change the timbre of the sound produced in cymbals, janissaries, bass drums, bassoons, lutes, celeste, and other tricks.
@@felixbader6320 according to the CD's booklet, a range of fortepianos are used. Listed are: a Donath Schöfftos (c.1810); a Georg Hasska (c.1815); Conrad Grafs 432 (c.1824) and 1118 (c.1825); and a J.M. Schweighofer (c.1846).
non lo so, un utente ha detto: according to the CD's booklet, a range of fortepianos are used. Listed are: a Donath Schöfftos (c.1810); a Georg Hasska (c.1815); Conrad Grafs 432 (c.1824) and 1118 (c.1825); and a J.M. Schweighofer (c.1846).
I'll be flamed for this, I'm sure! I'm an admirer of Badura-Skoda for 40 years. But I think I'm more impressed by his scholarship and teaching than his actual playing. I was disheartened to hear several big, amateurish counting errors within 4 minutes of listening -- miscounting rests and mistaking half-notes for quarter-notes. Lovely to have this collection of Schubert, but I stopped listening when I realized how musically sloppy it was.
He was a flawed pianist. I heard him in recital in Vienna, and he dropped some awful clangers due to lack of preparation. He was treated like music Royalty in Austria and could do no wrong. He was a good teacher and a very nice person. His flaws were forgiven because he was universally loved. I’m glad he had the chance to give his fiftieth birthday concert. He deserved this. Decent human being!
0:00:00 Piano Sonata 1 in E major
0:16:56 Piano Sonata 2 in C major
0:33:59 Piano Sonata 3 in E major
0:57:27 Piano Sonata 4 in A minor
1:21:52 Piano Sonata 5 in Ab major
1:34:58 Piano Sonata 6 in E minor
1:54:53 Piano Sonata 8 in Eb major
2:21:54 Piano Sonata in F# minor
2:44:17 Piano Sonata 9 in B major
3:07:37 Piano Sonata 10 in C major
3:26:06 Piano Sonata 11 in F minor
3:49:41 Piano Sonata 13 in A major
4:08:42 Piano Sonata 14 in A minor "Grande Sonate"
4:29:40 Piano Sonata 15 in C major "Relique"
5:08:46 Piano Sonata 16 in A minor
5:42:42 Piano Sonata 17 in D major "Gasteiner"
6:20:24 Piano Sonata 18 in G major "Fantasy"
6:58:32 Piano Sonata 19 in C minor
7:30:30 Piano Sonata 20 in A major
8:02:13 Piano Sonata 21 in Bb major
8:43:07 Allegretto for piano in C major
@@FixYourDesignJet ask the owner of the copyright
@@null8295 Kick the owners of the copyright in the balls. They don't care about music. We do.
( and on a side note thanks for posting this is very nice )
L’univers de L’intégrale de Badura-Skoda reste un passage obligé pour tout pianiste qui veut approcher Schubert dans l’esprit de son épique avec un des viennois les plus cultivé et pénétrant de cette œuvre considérable. On admirera autant la rigueur que les phrasés impossibles à reproduire sur un piano moderne forcément déformant hélas, pour ne rien dire du charme et du caractère dansant de cette musique sublime et si bien rendue ! Là on touche à quelque chose du Schubert véritable, si spontané, si vivant. A écouter absolument.
Oui !!
The period instruments work so well for the last 3 Sonatas! Especially the 1st movement of the B-flat and the andantino of the A major
To hear this in an instrument of that epoch is a true privilege. Great upload, and great pianist
People respect all these pop/rock/hip hop stars nowadays; but to be honest, the classicist who can perform multiple 10+ hour compilations of piano sonatas is the real performance hero. Schubert composed an amazing range of piano sonatas and I am hooked. The highlight for me is 4:59:29 15 - IV. Rondo, Allegro - Mr Paul Badura-Skoda "completed" the unfinished piece and I love it!
My favorite composer ! These sonatas are beyond beautiful . Thank you , Null !
Thank you for this complete Shuberts sonatas video, I've searched for a long time to all his sonatas in a single video.
Thank you all for sharing this beautiful music with the public!
Great performance of Skoda on this wonderful Piano-Forte sound.
Badura Skoda,one of the best historian and interpreter of Mozart,Beethoven (including the first period of Elector'sonatas, apart of the 32 sonatas) and Schubert on period instruments (including his intepretations on the last restored Beethoven's piano).He revised Schubert full sonatas from Deutsch catalogue and edited them, His pupil Hannae Nakajima recorded them.Also,Michel D'Alberto recorded them.I have both LP and CD editions.Before, Artur Schnabel (among others,Alfred Brendel,for example) recorded the four last complete sonatas
Listen too Walter Klien and Ingrid Haebler.
One of the best upload ever, thank you!!
Fantastic image! Looks like you grabbed your iPhone, hopped into a time machine, and went back for a quick pic!
Thank you thank you thank you! A valuable resource and a wonderful performance.
Maravillosa la oportunidad de disfrutar de todas las sonatas de mi compositor favorito, de su dulzura, de su apasionamiento. Entre todas ellas, mi favorita es la 959, especialmente su andante que sirve de fondo musical a la película turca "Cuento de invierno". Cómo refleja ese ambiente helado de la Capadocia y el desencuentro de dos seres obligados a compartir sus diferencias.
Sonoridade brilhante, com um chorus que produz uma leveza única, soa médio agudo. Uma equalização diferente no temperamento daí esse timbre especial "cravo piano". Obrigado por nos brindar com a música de Shubert feita em um instrumento tão especial por um instrumentista com tal clareza de pensamentos. BRAVO!!!
Schubert era genial!!!
As a 7th generation student of Beethoven (and, therefore Salieri - who was also Schubert's teacher), I rate this recording 'excellent'.
That's Schubert!
Thanks a lot Null.
Lovely.Thank you.
Music and poetry are made as love is made; an exchange of blood, a total embrace without any caution, without any protection. The big jump every time !!
true beuatiful statement. greetings from a german in Brazil!
A poetic description from the genius of Philippe Cirse. Brilliant, brother Philippe. The knowing is in you: The mystic knowing. The mystic flight. The going far over, far gone, far upward to the infinite eye, to see all the unfound and all the lost. Bon voyage.
音樂還是我的最愛
Gracias !
I have his Beethoven, Mozart, and Haydn on period instruments. Did not know he did Schubert. Were these the Astree label?
I saw him in Ann Arbor ages ago. Curiously, he had a memory slip -- he said it was the first time he ever had one -- and had to pull out the sheet music for one piece, which bothered me none at all. I believe he did three encores, perhaps to make up for it. It was a magical afternoon.
I do think these performances were available on CD for a time under the Astrée imprint. I could be misremembering. Anyone know if the Beethoven, Mozart and Haydn recordings are available on UA-cam?
Thank You!!!
7:23:02
💖
5:51:43 😂😂😂😂😂
還會再練琴
5h51m44 LOOOL
After Surprise symphony, the Surprise sonata??? Perfect timing !!
fortepianos have pedals and knee pads that change the timbre of the sound produced in cymbals, janissaries, bass drums, bassoons, lutes, celeste, and other tricks.
Lol that note also brought me to look for the comments
There is another one in the end ahah
S U P E R F R A N Z ! ! !
Quite jarring to have wax figure Schubert in front of a cross-strung piano, a mechanism he never saw in his lifetime
❤️💕💕💕
7..? 12..?
check description please
piano sonata no.15:still dre
BRAVI BRAVI BRAVI BRAVI BRAVI !
which period instrument exactly??
Fortepiano?
@@null8295 haha but which? Broadwood, Pleyel, Erard, Streicher...?
@@felixbader6320 according to the CD's booklet, a range of fortepianos are used. Listed are: a Donath Schöfftos (c.1810); a Georg Hasska (c.1815); Conrad Grafs 432 (c.1824) and 1118 (c.1825); and a J.M. Schweighofer (c.1846).
With a Conrad Graff forte piano PB-S recorded some Mozart's sonatas.
@@Chorizo727 Would you or anyone happen to know if any or all of these pianos used the Prellmechanik action?
抱歉
忘了跟你提起
Lo strumento è quello di Schubert?
non lo so, un utente ha detto:
according to the CD's booklet, a range of fortepianos are used. Listed are: a Donath Schöfftos (c.1810); a Georg Hasska (c.1815); Conrad Grafs 432 (c.1824) and 1118 (c.1825); and a J.M. Schweighofer (c.1846).
Schubert moment
Stop appearing everywhere.
@@ms-dosguy6630 You can deny the fact that I have a diverse taste of music :P
還在國外留學
我已經走火入魔了
hi
I'll be flamed for this, I'm sure! I'm an admirer of Badura-Skoda for 40 years. But I think I'm more impressed by his scholarship and teaching than his actual playing. I was disheartened to hear several big, amateurish counting errors within 4 minutes of listening -- miscounting rests and mistaking half-notes for quarter-notes. Lovely to have this collection of Schubert, but I stopped listening when I realized how musically sloppy it was.
He was a flawed pianist. I heard him in recital in Vienna, and he dropped some awful clangers due to lack of preparation. He was treated like music Royalty in Austria and could do no wrong. He was a good teacher and a very nice person. His flaws were forgiven because he was universally loved. I’m glad he had the chance to give his fiftieth birthday concert. He deserved this. Decent human being!
Sorry I meant NINETIETH birthday concert!!
What 4 minutes do you mean?
老師
我不會老
He had only guitar 🎸
Not true.
@@Piflaser piano 🎹 at the last days and sold for grave
@@zvezdinki7998 He had many friends where he played.
@@Piflaser but not Beethoven
昨天我生病了
ANÚNCIOS de sertanejo? Vou vomitar!
Desculpe, eu não coloquei essas coisas, instalei um bloqueador de anúncios em vez de reclamar, já que estamos em 2022, boomer...
Shubert n'avait ni 40, ni 50 ans , 'chers' messieurs les corrompteurs d'histoire !
🤭
The piano is dead. Nice antique but it's still an antique. I'd rather hear it in a fine way on a Steinway.
Modern piano is fine
But period instruments make you feel you’re listening to the composer himself
there was another version played by Kempff on my channel with contemporary instruments. It was taken down for copyright violation.