Johann Sebastian Bach - Flute Sonata in e minor, BWV 1034
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- Опубліковано 5 лют 2025
- My web: hyunkun.aixeta...
Adagio ma non tanto - Allegro - Andante - Allegro
Musica Glorifica:
HyeonHo Jeon: Recorder
Seungmin Lee: Cembalo
Hyunkun Cho: Cello
Concert at the Kumho Art Hall Yonsei (Seoul, Korea).
Flute Sonata in E minor, BWV 1034 (Wikipedia): en.wikipedia.o...
Johann Sebastian Bach (Wikipedia): en.wikipedia.o...
May 29th, 2022
Siete proprio bravi. Tutto suonato con proprietà, leggerezza e senza dimenticare la purezza del suono e il carattere della sonata. Che detto incidentalmente è una delle più belle, ma anche una delle più complesse e da rendere in modo appropriato. Bravi davvero
Why has the music of Bach found such a renaissance in the east? It's beautiful ❤
Glorious music that I never tire of. One of the best memories of this life that I ve been fortunate to live. I hope to listen to it, or the attendees to my funeral will, the day I die.
I played this today (with a cellist) at a funeral and I was told of the great solace the piece provides. Sergio, don't wait 'til you die to listen to this (and other) glorious works. Love.
Beautifully played! A pleasure to listen to!
Beautifully played and I like the transcription for tenor recorder
Not a tenor, a voice flute (recorder in D) specifically for playing flute music.
@@jaysparc*playing baroque flute music at baroque pitch
@@onemanfran Don't know what happened to your other reply. Pitch is different than key. A voice flute is a recorder in D, it's pitch is usually A=415. A tenor at A=440 is the same pitch as a voice flute at A=392.
As you know, recorders are non transposing instruments, therefore you play a voice flute reading it in D. Not in C as with a soprano. If you think about it like this. Read it like it's bass clef and finger it like it's an alto, it works out to D. Adequately confused now?
Terrific , lovely tone and expressive phrasing. Like myself discovered can play this favourite Bach sonata on tenor recorder transposing down to Dminor!
Splendid! Great tempo choices. Bravo!
Nice 👍
Bravo! Terrific playing.
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Well done ❤
Que c'est joli!
Merci!
Wonderful performance!
Wow! beautifully performed!
beautiful performance - thank you for sharing!
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What instrument you are playing? Is it a voice flute in D? The tone and balance is superb with good dynamic range. Please tell what brand, as i consider to obtain such an instrument
How beautiful! Bravo to you all! BTW, are you playing a tenor in C or "voice flute" in D?
It's a voice flute in D. If you pause the video at the 1:06 mark, you'll see he plays the pedal note of the home key with all fingers depressed - except the right hand (bottom hand) pinky which is raised. This indicates that he's playing a fingered D on his instrument, but it sounds at E the pedal note of the tonic. This communicates that his instrument is pitched a major second above the fingered note, if the fingered note were to correspond to a recorder at concert pitch/tuning. Therefore the instrument's fingered C is actually a concert pitch sounding D, also known as a D flute, or in the recorder world, a voice flute. I hope this helps and also demonstrates that I did not respond to the question by making a random guess.
@@flintwestwood3596 Yes that is what I thought too. But the score calls for an altissimo G in the first movement, at 2m31s in the video. I would have thought this note would be out of the range of either a tenor recorder in C or a voice flute in D. On the other hand the player raises his right leg just before attacking the G. Is this to stop the bell of the recorder (which I have heard allows for higher notes beyond the ordinary range)?
@@aludaketelauri7795 Yes, raising the leg to stop/plug the bell is exactly used for some altissimo notes. I know that the tenor recorder in C can indeed hit an altissimo G as the channel known as "Team Recorder" has an episode where the host of that channel did indeed hit the altissimo G in question. Said host actually even mentioned in one of her videos that there are recorder fingering charts dating from the 16th century that go as high as the altissimo A (no doubt leg stopping would likely be necessary for some of these notes).
Beautiful playing! Who made your voice flute? Good job with the high notes!
Този път изпълнението е по - близо до "стила Бах".
👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻❤️❤️❤️❤️
is he playing in a tenore or alto recorder???
That is a voice flute, actually. It’s tuned in D to fit perfectly into traverso's repertoire
It's a voice flute in D. If you pause the video at the 1:06 mark, you'll see he plays the pedal note of the home key with all fingers depressed - except the right hand (bottom hand) pinky which is raised. This indicates that he's playing a fingered D on his instrument, but it sounds at E the pedal note of the tonic. This communicates that his instrument is pitched a major second above the fingered note, if the fingered note were to correspond to a recorder at concert pitch/tuning. Therefore the instrument's fingered C is actually a concert pitch sounding D, also known as a D flute, or in the recorder world, a voice flute. I hope this helps and also demonstrates that I did not respond to the question by making a random guess.
The piano construction looks ...So Chinese!
Harpsichords are often very ornate, with paintings, sometimes. They are also tuned at A: 415Hz.