To było Boże Narodzenie 2023. Prawie cały dzień w smutku spowodowanym między innymi depresją. Całą noc nie mogłem spać. I gdy już zaczęło świtać puściłem to wspaniałe dzieło...
I thank the Lord that I have neither perfect pitch nor musical knowledge. In my ignorance, it is bliss to listen to this rendition of the Trumpet Concerto.
It is honestly a crime this music hasn't had recognition. Hummel really was a genius, I'd easily put him on par with Mozart, although the two say slightly different things through their music. Every time I listen to Hummel it is truly a magical, no, mystical experience. Utterly enchanting music, like being put under a spell. I honestly would be surprised if Hummel was a wizard.
Couple of problems I see.. firstly he didn't write a symphony. Which always seems to boost the popularity of a composer, especially from his era. Secondly he had the musical mountain of Beethoven to contend with. Although the two were friends, Hummels musical development was much less dramatic. And he was deemed out of fashion by the 1830s. You had the likes of Berlioz and Liszt coming on the scene.
Hardenberger's tone is flawless, his dynamics are incredible, and he plays this so musically. Thank you for posting this with such nice audio and the score.
@patrin maddison That's true, he does play the dynamics differently than they were written in a few spots. I think that his interpretation of them is equally interesting to listen to though.
So nice! Public radio classical music stations need to feature this more! Love this; reminds me of what I heard when I was a kid hearing this on San Francisco classical radio.♥️
Must be a blast for a trumpeter to play. So long as they know what they are doing. Lol. Love the bluesy intro of second movemt. Richer than the Haydn...
This is the recording which introduced me to the piece and I still love it. There are a lot of discrepancies between the printed score and what he plays and I'm not talking about classical decorations. These are structural differences. Nevertheless it's great performance.
The original is in E major,. The E-flat version is a XX century modification for players to be able to play it on the Eb trumpet, which is widely used by trumpet players.
Well yours is both a blessing and a curse. Someone like me who may remember if a piece is in the proper Key or not, it wouldn't hurt my ears if it was transposed. Notes are just indicators, not absolute.
Johann Nepomuk Hummel:E-dúr Trombitaverseny 1.Allegro con spirito 00:05 2.Andante 09:38 3.Rondo:Allegro 14:23 Håkan Hardenberger-trombita Academy of St. Martin in the Fields Vezényel:Sir Neville Marriner
I immediately noticed that on the first hearing myself - all but a direct quote of the Haffner. I would certainly expect this of Mozart's favorite pupil who no doubt held his master in equal or higher esteem.
Hummel was a child prodigy. At the age of eight, he was offered music lessons by the classical composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, who was impressed with his ability. Hummel was taught and housed by Mozart for two years free of charge and made his first concert appearance at the age of nine at one of Mozart's concerts.
it should sound good if you could interpolate a tenuto F# (sounding E) the lowest note on the Bb trumpet at 7:31 measure 245 (playing in the original E major key of course). I think I heard David Guerrier doing that and it really adds drama to the minor chord in the strings btw I think all trills sound better if started from above
Hardenberger played this on a C trumpet in the key of E. You would need a fourth valve to reach a low E. There is a nice recording on a keyed trumpet by Markus Würsch of the first movement here on YT, where you can hear the period instrument for which this concert was originally composed for. There the low E reaches its full potential, because this keyed trumpet is twice as long compared to a modern valved trumpet of the same key, hereby enabling a full vibrant sound in the lower register.
Hummel was a child prodigy. At the age of eight, he was offered music lessons by the classical composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, who was impressed with his ability. Hummel was taught and housed by Mozart for two years free of charge and made his first concert appearance at the age of nine at one of Mozart's concerts.
This andante is soft and seems to be very easy to play, BUT, it needs very strong lips and powerfull blow. It is the hardest part of the concerto.Believe me.
It must have been in E originally, noone would compose a movement with seven flats more than 200 years ago. Haydn composed with six sharps in his Farewell symphony, but it is a rare exception.
Not true they were not written at all. They were very rare and they were notated in parallel majors (so a movement in Ab minor would be notated in Ab major key signature). Hummel himself wrote a piano quintet in Eb minor (op. 87) and notated it in Eb major. In the key of Eb minor itself there are more examples: Haydn's Piano Trio no. 41 is in Eb minor.
Hummel was - I believe - the only student that Mozart ever took in. Mozart housed Hummel for 2 years when Hummel was a child - I think somewhere around age 10 - and evidently taught him well. Hummel’s two grand masses in D are also master works.
There are Ten Bs: JS Bach of Germany, Bartok of Hungary, Beethoven of Germany, Berlioz of France, Biber of Bohemia, Boccherini of Italy, Brahms of Germany, Britten of Great Britain, Bruckner of Austria, and Byrd of England--, and Three Hs: Handel of Germany, FJ Haydn of Austria, and Hildegard of Bingen. Would you rate Hummel of Slovakia as the Fourth H?
First i would not put Bartok, and Bruckner in the ten Bs, their music has not enought quality to match the other ones, and then hell yhea, put Hummel as the fourth Hs.
COMO molesta la propaganda en medio de un concierto o cualquier otra pieza musical !!! Es necesario que pongas 2 comerciales seguidos ??? Entiendo la necesidad comercial pero podrian darle otro formato.
E major. Hardenberger plays it in the original key on a C trumpet. The Eb major version is usually used when the soloist uses the more common Bb trumpet because otherwise you have to cope with very awkward fingerings. The instrument that the concert was originally composed for was actually a totally different instrument, a keyed trumpet without valves which had twice the tube length a modern valve trumpet in the key of E has. In recent years several players have recorded this concert using a keyed trumpet after reconstructions were available after almost 200 years.
c'est très bien joué mais il manque le coeur .Maurice andré jouait avec ses tripes en ne pensant plus aux notes .C'est ça qui fait la différence.Néanmoins félicitations pour la technique qui est parfaite .Lucienne renaudais vary joue ce morceau à la trompette sib parfaitement sans effort apparent et un son fluide mais c'est un cas et avec beaucoup de poésie
Genuine question, why is it that that the transcription is a half step down from what my man hakan is playing, is he playing on a trumpet that is in a different key, I’m kinda confused
In the description, it reads the following: "One final note: the concerto exists in two different forms. The work was originally written in E flat major, though either Hummel or Weidinger (or possibly both) made a less frequently played version in E major." Also, the tuning during this time period was also different. Beethoven's tuning fork produced the note 455.4 Hz, while others during this period were tuned to 423.5 Hz. The A = 440 Hz was only standardized around the 1930s. I hope this was helpful!
To było Boże Narodzenie 2023. Prawie cały dzień w smutku spowodowanym między innymi depresją. Całą noc nie mogłem spać. I gdy już zaczęło świtać puściłem to wspaniałe dzieło...
Underrated composerr. His Piano concertos are incredible.
Hummel doesn't deserve to be as neglected as he has been - it's good to see new recordings of his work being produced lately.
I agree, I'm trying to bring both the fantasie for viola and the trumpet concerto onto a future programme
🇺🇦Дякую, це найкраще виконання концерту!
Отримав багато задоволення!
I thank the Lord that I have neither perfect pitch nor musical knowledge. In my ignorance, it is bliss to listen to this rendition of the Trumpet Concerto.
I love this so much. Hummel is way too underrated !
It is honestly a crime this music hasn't had recognition. Hummel really was a genius, I'd easily put him on par with Mozart, although the two say slightly different things through their music. Every time I listen to Hummel it is truly a magical, no, mystical experience. Utterly enchanting music, like being put under a spell. I honestly would be surprised if Hummel was a wizard.
He taught Mozart for a bit.
Couple of problems I see.. firstly he didn't write a symphony. Which always seems to boost the popularity of a composer, especially from his era. Secondly he had the musical mountain of Beethoven to contend with. Although the two were friends, Hummels musical development was much less dramatic. And he was deemed out of fashion by the 1830s. You had the likes of Berlioz and Liszt coming on the scene.
@@dillonheck801 the other way around surely?
@@dillonheck801 mozart taught him idiot
Trust me: If you're a trumpet player, you know this piece inside and out.
im only 5 months in the womb and i played this perfectly
Dominic LaSalle loser! I was conceived this morning and is already play that kind of stuff
Hahaha silly mortals, I can play this and my mother hasn't even been born
Bud Budderson well I can play this and my grandmother isn’t even born yet
Silly Mortals! I can play this before the composer was born!
Okay Asian musicians, be quiet
Hardenberger's tone is flawless, his dynamics are incredible, and he plays this so musically. Thank you for posting this with such nice audio and the score.
@patrin maddison That's true, he does play the dynamics differently than they were written in a few spots. I think that his interpretation of them is equally interesting to listen to though.
To all of you saying it’s the wrong key, yes it’s not the same as the music shown, but the uploader explains it in the description
But he shouldn't play the audio of the E version but show the score for the Eb version
So nice! Public radio classical music stations need to feature this more! Love this; reminds me of what I heard when I was a kid hearing this on San Francisco classical radio.♥️
Bello Concerto-ottima orchestra- ottimo solista !
Wonderful to listen along with the score, which only deepens one's amazement at the virtuosity on display. Thank you for uploading!
something about this played in E major makes It sound so fun
Absolutely superb, great virtuosity and phrasing!!❤
Nice piece. Glad they put up the score in order to follow the music.
A favorite, along with Hertel.
là on atteint des sommets magnifique ensemble, soliste et orchestre et avec un chef extra
+Robert pc libre Je suis d'accord, merci pour vos mots!
Bravo super concerto music brilliance
Absoluta magnifica piesa asta ...multumesc mult atat orchestrei , dirijorului cat si interpretului , mi-ati facut ziua frumoasa !
17:07, that's a challenge!
Omg
I said good god out loud when I heard that
Must be a blast for a trumpeter to play. So long as they know what they are doing. Lol. Love the bluesy intro of second movemt. Richer than the Haydn...
I bet this arrangement would sound great 👍 on the Pipe Organ. Definitely worth Arranging for the Pipe Organ.
This is the recording which introduced me to the piece and I still love it. There are a lot of discrepancies between the printed score and what he plays and I'm not talking about classical decorations. These are structural differences. Nevertheless it's great performance.
The original is in E major,. The E-flat version is a XX century modification for players to be able to play it on the Eb trumpet, which is widely used by trumpet players.
Beautiful
Deutschland und Österreich die besten in der Musik
That is a "funny" sounding "piano".
That's exactly what I came to say!
5:39 pianissimo, I say
Bruh what you talking about that’s exactly what a piano sounds like 😎
Organs can get close to mimicking orchestras, but as you say, odd for a piano
It's a funny-sounding "B-flat trumpet" too
Finals/Audition timestamps:
I. 2:08
II. 10:29
III. 14:50
thank you kind sir
Note: this Concerto is originally in E major, hence the recording being higher pitched
I also noticed that when I started playing over
might be a trumpet in C
Maravilhoso concerto hummel2018
Håkan Hardenberger was my one of my favourites until I heard Wynton Marsalis
I'm quite surprised that nobody picked up that the first theme is the first theme of Mozarts Haffner symphony, albeit mildly varied.
Man i was just about to say that!!!😂
Assolutamente si, e nel secondo tempo è evidente il richiamo ai pizzicati e ad alcuni passi del 2 tempo del concerto k467 n21 per pianoforte.
I realized that immediately.
This recording is a half pitch higher.
I thought u were deaf
olla-vogala
Yes,but I'm still alive!!
Original is in mi major.
Peter Smirnoff yep
Probably because those dang Europeans think that 443 hz (for a Concert A) is STILL not high enough!
Why is my high school making freshmen play this to get into wind ensemble ;-; this is pure pain to a 13/14 year old
This video is agony for people with perfect pitch
Not the intonation, it's just all up a semitone!
Hmm.. the recording is this piece’s orignal pitch(E Major)
people with perfect pitch should know the original piece is written in E Major. ;)
Well yours is both a blessing and a curse. Someone like me who may remember if a piece is in the proper Key or not, it wouldn't hurt my ears if it was transposed. Notes are just indicators, not absolute.
Can confirm lol
I thought wow this is a pretty easy concerto but at 9:00 no way am I ready for that.
Yeah, or 17:08...
FANTÁSTIC
very nice!
Me enamoré ...!!
I love this
Johann Nepomuk Hummel:E-dúr Trombitaverseny
1.Allegro con spirito 00:05
2.Andante 09:38
3.Rondo:Allegro 14:23
Håkan Hardenberger-trombita
Academy of St. Martin in the Fields
Vezényel:Sir Neville Marriner
2:07 for audition
Amazing
I tried to play the solo part on my Bb clarinet. The sound on the recording is 1/2 step higher than what is written. Good concerto, though.
Sounds like Mozart's Halfner, symphony no 35, in the beginning!
I immediately noticed that on the first hearing myself - all but a direct quote of the Haffner. I would certainly expect this of Mozart's favorite pupil who no doubt held his master in equal or higher esteem.
The second movement is basically 'Jenamy' Piano Concerto Andante for a trumpet.
Listen to Mozart Haffner Symphony first movement and compare it to the introduction by the orchestra from this concert. Notice anything?
That's exactly what I also thought immediately after not even having heard the first 30 seconds.
Hummel was a child prodigy. At the age of eight, he was offered music lessons by the classical composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, who was impressed with his ability. Hummel was taught and housed by Mozart for two years free of charge and made his first concert appearance at the age of nine at one of Mozart's concerts.
excerpts-
2:06
8:21
it should sound good if you could interpolate a tenuto F# (sounding E) the lowest note on the Bb trumpet at 7:31 measure 245 (playing in the original E major key of course). I think I heard David Guerrier doing that and it really adds drama to the minor chord in the strings
btw I think all trills sound better if started from above
Trills from above are not historically accurate for the time period. That was over by the end of Handels life for the most part.
Hardenberger played this on a C trumpet in the key of E. You would need a fourth valve to reach a low E. There is a nice recording on a keyed trumpet by Markus Würsch of the first movement here on YT, where you can hear the period instrument for which this concert was originally composed for. There the low E reaches its full potential, because this keyed trumpet is twice as long compared to a modern valved trumpet of the same key, hereby enabling a full vibrant sound in the lower register.
What about Andante?... I see in it some similarity with II movement of well-known Piano concerto K.467 by W.A.M.
Yes, it is obvoius that it is the model for the Andante.
Hummel was a child prodigy. At the age of eight, he was offered music lessons by the classical composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, who was impressed with his ability. Hummel was taught and housed by Mozart for two years free of charge and made his first concert appearance at the age of nine at one of Mozart's concerts.
This andante is soft and seems to be very easy to play, BUT, it needs very strong lips and powerfull blow. It is the hardest part of the concerto.Believe me.
The beginning sounds exactly like Mozart's Haffner symphony no. 35.
The Original version is in E natural, wich is in the track, but the part in the video is in Eb
Amazing Handerberger!
At the beginning (bars 7 to 13) there's a little echo from Mozart Haffner... but it's ok, Classical era.
WOOOOOOOOW
Good ears. piece was originally written in E maj.
Second movement directly from 21th Mozart's piano concerto
Sounds Mozart in the first lol I love it
Where can I buy that B trumpet? LOL spectacular performance though :)
Mov 2 remember me Mozart Piano Concerto 21
It must have been in E originally, noone would compose a movement with seven flats more than 200 years ago. Haydn composed with six sharps in his Farewell symphony, but it is a rare exception.
Not true they were not written at all. They were very rare and they were notated in parallel majors (so a movement in Ab minor would be notated in Ab major key signature). Hummel himself wrote a piano quintet in Eb minor (op. 87) and notated it in Eb major. In the key of Eb minor itself there are more examples: Haydn's Piano Trio no. 41 is in Eb minor.
@@Pawel_Malecki True, but this one is originally in E. Check IMSLP.
4:28 There are two versions. I've seen f# several times but a lot of people play a.
Not saying it really matters but what's the original version?
The a
This is in E...the music shown is the wrong key.
+PhillyOTPT2 I know, but I only had a score in Eb.
+PhillyOTPT2 It's pretty common to play it in Eb, makes it easier on the trumpet.
On the Bb trumpet maybe. The original concerto is still in E and not Eb which is why people like Hardenberger play it on an E trumpet in E.
Wow, almost everyone plays Hummel in Eb and then I saw a recording titled "Hummel trumpet concerto in E". I had no idea....
@@olla-vogala4090 You could have just lowered the audio a half step in After Effects
2:08
Second Section - 5:26
i like hummel Tp concerto
Anyone here because they were initially listening to the Squid Game music (Hayden Trumpet Concerto in E-Flat major)?
I still can’t believe this isn’t Mozart 🤷🏻♀️
Hummel was - I believe - the only student that Mozart ever took in. Mozart housed Hummel for 2 years when Hummel was a child - I think somewhere around age 10 - and evidently taught him well. Hummel’s two grand masses in D are also master works.
Hummel stole the 2nd mvt. from Mozart’s 21st piano concerto for his 2nd mvt.
But can we blame him? That movement is too good not to steal.
I noticed that right away
Could the first movement be use for college auditions? Or would most be looking for more
I guess you could! The first movement alone is a marathon of musical ideas
New link with audio in original Eb major: ua-cam.com/video/IZ4_Tqz3yMs/v-deo.html
There are Ten Bs: JS Bach of Germany, Bartok of Hungary, Beethoven of Germany, Berlioz of France, Biber of Bohemia, Boccherini of Italy, Brahms of Germany, Britten of Great Britain, Bruckner of Austria, and Byrd of England--, and Three Hs: Handel of Germany, FJ Haydn of Austria, and Hildegard of Bingen. Would you rate Hummel of Slovakia as the Fourth H?
First i would not put Bartok, and Bruckner in the ten Bs, their music has not enought quality to match the other ones, and then hell yhea, put Hummel as the fourth Hs.
At 4:27 - In measure 143, beat 4, he plays an A instead of the written F#.
The original does have the F#.
It's an artistic liberty, that works with the chord very well.
The original actually has the a. The f# version isn't original.
Je t'aime Agathe
Why spoil a decent piece of music by inserting an unnecessary advertisement? That totally spoiled the mood as far as I am concerned.
04:38 143, F# helyett A-t játszik
Just pull out your slide till your Bb trumpet is keyed in A... then just transpose up a step. Easy peasy :}
2:05
His music sounds more like classical era, more specifically Mozart era.
👌👌
Kinda ĺ
used this to punish my self
Yes
Because I said I could not do push-ups
And they agreed
So I said I have my own punishment
And this was it
Yep 👍
COMO molesta la propaganda en medio de un concierto o cualquier otra pieza musical !!! Es necesario que pongas 2 comerciales seguidos ??? Entiendo la necesidad comercial pero podrian darle otro formato.
Is the music being played in this video in E Major or Eb Major? Thanks to some wise king I am horribly confused
E major. Hardenberger plays it in the original key on a C trumpet. The Eb major version is usually used when the soloist uses the more common Bb trumpet because otherwise you have to cope with very awkward fingerings. The instrument that the concert was originally composed for was actually a totally different instrument, a keyed trumpet without valves which had twice the tube length a modern valve trumpet in the key of E has. In recent years several players have recorded this concert using a keyed trumpet after reconstructions were available after almost 200 years.
el principio parece la sinfonia 35 de Mozart....
It is in the wrong key
What’s up with line 242 on part 1 (7:32)doesn’t look like right note
What's the name of the soloist ?....he sounds great.
14:23
My Guava, those ornaments, they're. How can you not know how to play classical era grace notes?
+Seth Thinks Thoughts Sorry, I don't really understand what you mean...
lol the trumpet part is a semi-tone higher than the recording
c'est très bien joué mais il manque le coeur .Maurice andré jouait avec ses tripes en ne pensant plus aux notes .C'est ça qui fait la différence.Néanmoins félicitations pour la technique qui est parfaite .Lucienne renaudais vary joue ce morceau à la trompette sib parfaitement sans effort apparent et un son fluide mais c'est un cas et avec beaucoup de poésie
Ads in a video you have no artistic claim to? Shame
14:24 👌
a moll !
Soooooo why is there no cadenza in the first movement? He skipped right over it.
Victoria Casteel there’s no space in most versions for a cadenza. Most players just put one at the end.
2:07 - 4:00
3rd movement is hard for me.
0:05 Symphony no. 35
9:40 Concerto no. 21
Is there a version of this in B flat?
why is it bit higher...
Genuine question, why is it that that the transcription is a half step down from what my man hakan is playing, is he playing on a trumpet that is in a different key, I’m kinda confused
In the description, it reads the following:
"One final note: the concerto exists in two different forms. The work was originally written in E flat major, though either Hummel or Weidinger (or possibly both) made a less frequently played version in E major."
Also, the tuning during this time period was also different. Beethoven's tuning fork produced the note 455.4 Hz, while others during this period were tuned to 423.5 Hz. The A = 440 Hz was only standardized around the 1930s.
I hope this was helpful!