Hearing this harpsichord gives me a new appreciation why composers from this era wrote so many notes: with no real sustain on the notes they had to keep the music moving somehow.
During Mozart's life the piano was evolving and improving quickly. So it's true that he played on a similar instrument to the one in this video but also he had access to earlier pianos with a more mellow sound. In Mozart's house museum in Salzburg there is one of his pianos and it sounds like a half way between harpsichord and modern piano.
Thank you for pointing this out, i was searching if somebody had already said this. Later half of his piano concertos weren't composed for harpsichord anymore. I would say one can even hear from this video that nr 21 Andante clearly was composed with different instrument in mind.
Mozart was more a clavichordist and a harpsichordist than pianist. That have been researched. Yes, he played fortepiano, but he still played a lot the harpsichord and the clavichord. And the instrument he most played was the clavichord. By the way, Beethoven did also played harpsichord and clavichord. He played it even during 19th century.
0:01 Rondo Alla Turca 0:16 Eine Kleine Nachtmusik 0:29 Sonata n.16 in C Major, K.545 0:51 Piano Concerto n.21-Allegro Maestoso 0:59 Piano Concerto n.21-Andante 1:17 Sonata for two pianos in D, K.448 1:50 Rondo in D Major K.485 2:11 Twinkle Twinkle Little Star (12 variations on Ah vous dirai-je, Maman) 2:55 Piano Sonata n.10 in C Major,K.330
I love the automatic song title real time detection and displaying screen on the instrument. Must have been quite an advanced technology when the harpsichord was marketed for the first time.
By the way, this is actually an early pianoforte, not a harpsichord. The harpsichord plucks the strings whilst the pianoforte strikes the strings. During this period the piano was in development and all sorts of hammer variations and actions were being used.
Mozart's music is perfect on the harpsichord. You can feel the liveliness, the joy and the fun through the unique sound of the harpsichord. I truly enjoy this video. Many thanks for your effort in bringing Mozart into our life.😊
At last Mozart played as it was then. It's true that at the end of the 18th century the harpsichord was quickly evolving and the early piano-forte were available, but not the piano we know today and on which Mozart is always played. So thank you !
Me too! A lot of the music I love to play on the piano was actually written for the harpsichord. On a digital piano I play them on the ‘harpsichord’ lol
I was taught some of these pieces on a piano by a harpsichordist when I was a child. But when I tried them on a harpsichord I found I completely lacked the technique to get a regular rhythm. Well done!
There are people who call themselves classical music listeners who think that Mozart's music is boring, superficial, repetitive etc. These people don't deserve to have ears.
Maybe they are basing their opinion on his early pieces. He was a better composer in his thirties than he was in his teens, let alone when he was younger.
"Mozart is the highest, the culminating point which beauty has reached in the sphere of music. Nobody has made me cry and thrill with joy, sensing my proximity to something that we call the ideal, in the way that he has." (Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky)
@@CrazyGamer-1944 glad I'm not the kind of person who would click! Because of piano in the name, I was assuming it was a piano video and didn't look closely at the link spelling
They are used a huge amount. I am in my fifties and when I was a little boy harpsichords were a historical curiosity barely played and rarely made. Now most early keyboard music is played on a harpsichord. If you live in Europe it's very easy to hear live harpsichord music and if you do, I urge you to seek out a historically informed performance. You won't regret it.
No Brasil a grande maioria das pessoas não valoriza a música clássica. São canções lindas que acalma a mente e o espírito. É uma pena grandes músicos nao serem valorizados. Parabéns vinheteiro!!! Você ama o que faz e toca com o coração .
@@danielmarquesmacedo6864 Mozart was a prodigy and could basically write down pieces from his head, most others would have worked through slower though
@@danielmarquesmacedo6864 This is true. The "Mozart wrote entire symphonies in his head" story is a romanticized view of Mozart's abilities. And it also gives a very misleading idea of what composition is. Full compositions don't just randomly appear into people's minds. Instead, people start from a short musical idea that they start to develop. Compositions need a structure - a good composition has the right balance of repetition and contrast. And if you want your composition to have a structure, you don't really come up with the full piece in your mind and then just write it down. Even if the general flow between the ideas comes to you spontaneously, those ideas still need some "polishing" in order to sound coherent and purposeful and avoid a "rambling" feeling. Mozart was definitely exceptionally talented, but if you study his pieces, it's pretty obvious that they are well-thought out. They use motifs in a consistent way and have a clear logical structure behind them. If Mozart really had written everything spontaneously in his head, then his music would sound much more like improvisation - it would be much more "free-flowing". You can hear some more free-flowing pieces if you listen to his Fantasias, but most of Mozart's pieces have a very clear structure behind them. Mozart did like to play his ideas on the piano to develop them into full compositions, and he did also write sketches. Now, Mozart was most likely a master of these structures, so coming up with a piece with a logical structure probably didn't take much effort from him. But he definitely didn't compose full symphonies in his head and then just notate them. Good compositions aren't 100% spontaneous. They do have an element of spontaneity to them (because otherwise they will feel too rigid or formulaic), but a completely spontaneous composition will feel formless and like it doesn't know what it's trying to say. It's the difference between a spontaneous speech vs a well-thought out speech. Even if someone is really good at giving speeches, you would still expect them to do some preparation before the speech, and not just shoot from the hip and see where that takes them.
@@MaggaraMarine "This is true" *proceeds to cope hard and ramble about captain-obvious tier shit* Look, fren, it's okay to not have any imagination, but don't predispose your sad opinions with "This is true".
The harpsichord is a plucked keyboard instrument related to the harp and lute while the fortepiano, pianoforte, and modern piano derive from the clavichord a percussion keyboard instrument.
@@billmcmahon1420 In a harpsichord with two manuals, the bottom manual traditionally operates the darker back gate 8' choir and the top manual operates the brighter front gate 8' choir. This allows for the musician to alternate manuals for immediate dynamic contrast. Additionally, the bottom manual can have an additional 4' stop that employs a set strings tuned an octave higher for added weight and volume. In this fashion the lower manual is more powerful and the upper manual is used for softer passages. Finally, both manuals may be coupled together. When the top manual is physically shifted towards the backboard, the result is that the bottom manual will operate both manuals and their set stops simultaneously but the top manual will only operate itself. This allows for the greatest possible volume the instrument can produce - the 8' back gate, 4' choir, and the coupled 8' front gate of the top manual. wiki.youngcomposers.com/Harpsichord
@@TonyBittner-Collins amazing that they figured out how to build all of that on a harpsichord, but nobody ever thought to just make piano which sounds 100x better.
There is a certain note that sounds much like my doorbell so every time it’s played I’m contemplating weather or not someone is knocking the front door or not
Yes, he does. At the same time, every competent guitar player can play without constantly looking at the fingerboard, and the guitar fingerboard isn't linear like the piano keys are.
I'm surprised how many of these I recognize, I find myself constantly clicking on your videos. I most certainly do enjoy them, and especially the presentation You are a Rock Star. Thanks; great stuff.
It's simply amazing you can replicate the period look of that era. Centuries ago . It's surreal to watch u play with such mastery👍🏻 Always a pleasure to listen to your performance.
I just loved your 'you'd better be listening' looks from the keyboard... quite admonishingly amusing. Loved the index finger for the next piece... new to me! very original. You are a real master on this instrument. (we might have had the real French title of the twinkle twinkle piece, but no matter.)
"This was the sound that was heard at the time." A bit misleading. He also played and owned and composed for clavichord and fortepiano. Mozart lived through a very important phase of rapid keyboard development.
@@jeffm5991 Imagine in the 2040s and 2050s some kid's gonna look at the Millennials, Gen X, and early Gen Z and they're gonna go "wOah that guy was born in the 1900s! Can you believe it?". It is at that point that we become F#CKING OLD.
This repertoire sounds surprisingly good on harpsichord, with the exception of that bit from the middle movement of the Elvira Madigan concerto, which really needs piano and strings.
The piano was evolving through most of his life. So some of these songs were composed with instruments like this in mind while others were composed with a more mellow sound in mind.
So much of this reminds me of sitting with my kids watching the Baby Einstein tapes I bought in the early 2000's. They had a Baby Mozart tape that had this exact harpsichord music on a tape along with colorful things and early learning visuals. My kids always recognize Mozart from watching that tape a million times. A wonderful memory. Thank you!
The first forty-five seconds of this video could've been called "The names of songs you've heard a million times, but don't know the names of, that Mozart wrote." Honestly, even though the names are the first things that stick out in my mind, I'm glad I got to hear them on a harpsichord :)
What fun! Thanks for including ‘Ah vous dirai-je maman’. Few people know Wolfy helped make this old tune famous. The 12 variations are great fun to learn.
@@mauriwayar the title of the video is 'how Mozart sounds on the harpsichord' not 'Mozart sounds good on the harpsichord' and can you give me an example of how a harpsichord should sound?
@@FadiKdy The instrument is out of tune and the dude is playing music that wasn't composed for harpsichord. As a result average viewers who know nothing about the baroque period or the harpsichord might walk away just thinking that it's a shitty instrument that sounds bad. Here's just one example of many on UA-cam of a proper harpsichord player using an instrument that is in tune. ua-cam.com/video/KQiBIb_klT8/v-deo.html
@@EnlightenedCentrism I agree. Also, Mozart's time was not Baroque but Rococo or Classical period. Baroque is totally underrated and Mozart is overrated too, but what can you expect from mainstream?
So imagine ser capaz de escutar uma musica dessas na epoca...seria uma viagem no tempo incrivel. Lord cosplay de nobre frances do sec XVIII é o melhor.
Well theoretically it is Twelve Variations on "Ah vous dirai-je, Maman" not "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star", even though both are indeed based same folk song.
Hearing this harpsichord gives me a new appreciation why composers from this era wrote so many notes: with no real sustain on the notes they had to keep the music moving somehow.
and plus the varied temperaments just overcomplicated that process
That is a great point. No sustain.
Great points.
As well, with the lack of dynamics the ornamentation was the only way to add interest.
The piano became a thing during Mozart’s time, but I do believe he did study Bach’s pieces which did employ similar techniques.
Plot twist: Vinheteiro is tired of staring in the camera that's why he asked Marie Antoinette to stare instead.
Oh my gosh
*shocked pikachu
Yes
Plot twist 2: Vinheteiro IS Marie Antoinette
@@ayoncruz lmao 😂
During Mozart's life the piano was evolving and improving quickly. So it's true that he played on a similar instrument to the one in this video but also he had access to earlier pianos with a more mellow sound. In Mozart's house museum in Salzburg there is one of his pianos and it sounds like a half way between harpsichord and modern piano.
Isn't that the Hammerklavier
I wonder if people are allowed to play the piano in his house?
@@r-bascus it was a fortepiano
Thank you for pointing this out, i was searching if somebody had already said this. Later half of his piano concertos weren't composed for harpsichord anymore. I would say one can even hear from this video that nr 21 Andante clearly was composed with different instrument in mind.
Mozart was more a clavichordist and a harpsichordist than pianist. That have been researched. Yes, he played fortepiano, but he still played a lot the harpsichord and the clavichord. And the instrument he most played was the clavichord.
By the way, Beethoven did also played harpsichord and clavichord. He played it even during 19th century.
Thats an amazing video of Mozart playing. He has aged well, and is astoundingly well preserved.
Hahaaa... your comment had me howling .
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
I thought Bill Murray killed him.
He shares a mansion with Elvis.
@@spacecadet35 yes, of course... Elvis isn't dead, and neither is Mozart. LOL
i so love the sound of the harpsichord; it is so playful in tone.
wow what a nerd
Well if you like hearing skeletons making love on a tin roof
0:01 Rondo Alla Turca
0:16 Eine Kleine Nachtmusik
0:29 Sonata n.16 in C Major, K.545
0:51 Piano Concerto n.21-Allegro Maestoso
0:59 Piano Concerto n.21-Andante
1:17 Sonata for two pianos in D, K.448
1:50 Rondo in D Major K.485
2:11 Twinkle Twinkle Little Star (12 variations on Ah vous dirai-je, Maman)
2:55 Piano Sonata n.10 in C Major,K.330
Thank you 😊
@@Iris-eu9bl you're welcome😊
Thanks cans
Thank u so much
@@bbrown1558 you're welcome😀
I love the automatic song title real time detection and displaying screen on the instrument. Must have been quite an advanced technology when the harpsichord was marketed for the first time.
It would also require the optional censorship add-on if I was playing the instrument.
By the way, this is actually an early pianoforte, not a harpsichord. The harpsichord plucks the strings whilst the pianoforte strikes the strings. During this period the piano was in development and all sorts of hammer variations and actions were being used.
*What??*
@@robertwhatley2825 nah that's a harpsichord not a fortepiano
@@robertwhatley2825 Mate. How and why would you build a hammerpiano with two keyboards above each other. This clearly is a harpsichord.
Mozart's music is perfect on the harpsichord. You can feel the liveliness, the joy and the fun through the unique sound of the harpsichord. I truly enjoy this video. Many thanks for your effort in bringing Mozart into our life.😊
At last Mozart played as it was then. It's true that at the end of the 18th century the harpsichord was quickly evolving and the early piano-forte were available, but not the piano we know today and on which Mozart is always played. So thank you !
Almost gives an 8-bit sound to the music. Love it.
🤬
-_-
@@Themehsofproduction ???
Hahaha
🤣
I've always had a particular love for the sound of the harpsichord. This just reinforces that!
Same to me :-)
It sounds more beautiful than the piano to me
Me too! A lot of the music I love to play on the piano was actually written for the harpsichord. On a digital piano I play them on the ‘harpsichord’ lol
You listen to “historically informed performance” stuff and there’s lots of this played the way it was meant to be.
I still remember the Star Trek episode in which I first heard the harpsichord. It was mind blowingly beautiful!
So lovely!!
Nice to see you have excellent musical taste as well as taste in baking tasty treats, miss Emma.
Oi linda passa o otizap
Oi vamu fase secsu
Ciao Emma, these can be your backsound when you create vintage style cookies
Oh, hi!! Nice to see you here! :D
This man sounds great on whatever instrument he plays.
😂 Mozart was a genius.
Gotta be the wig
I was taught some of these pieces on a piano by a harpsichordist when I was a child. But when I tried them on a harpsichord I found I completely lacked the technique to get a regular rhythm. Well done!
Wow, the Harpsichord really brings a kind of "lively" sound, to already-lively composition!
There are people who call themselves classical music listeners who think that Mozart's music is boring, superficial, repetitive etc. These people don't deserve to have ears.
😂
It's all just a matter of taste.
Much depends on the pianist.
Maybe they are basing their opinion on his early pieces. He was a better composer in his thirties than he was in his teens, let alone when he was younger.
I Will tell my kids this was Mozart.
Same
ua-cam.com/video/pD2XZHnDKvo/v-deo.html
Rare mozart fotage playing harpsichord
Lord Amadeus vinhezarto
It was. You mean he was?
The sound is fantastic, full of light.
"Mozart is the highest, the culminating point which beauty has reached in the sphere of music. Nobody has made me cry and thrill with joy, sensing my proximity to something that we call the ideal, in the way that he has." (Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky)
Really Tchaikovsky said that? Because I love them both so much ❤️
I like Tchaikovsky's music way more though...
@@maxis2k I do not like to compare, for me they are both gods of music.
@@anonymousanonymous5695 yes, he did say that. He deeply loved Mozart.
@@maxis2k And Bach’s
Melts my heart! Who could listen to a piano again after hearing the ... magnificence of this beautiful instrument!
It would be weird if Vinheteiro was in the painting looking at us too.
@Hamouza piano Hamza This is not a good way to promote yourself,
But best of luck to you
and we have a winner!
@@melissasaint3283 its most likely an IP grabber link
@@CrazyGamer-1944 glad I'm not the kind of person who would click! Because of piano in the name, I was assuming it was a piano video and didn't look closely at the link spelling
@@melissasaint3283 Nice lol
I just love the harpsichord sound! I wish they were used more!💜
They are used a huge amount. I am in my fifties and when I was a little boy harpsichords were a historical curiosity barely played and rarely made. Now most early keyboard music is played on a harpsichord. If you live in Europe it's very easy to hear live harpsichord music and if you do, I urge you to seek out a historically informed performance. You won't regret it.
Wow, history was so much more colorful before the camera was invented.
IMHO you can not say one classical composer was better than another. All classical music sounds GREAT!!!
No Brasil a grande maioria das pessoas não valoriza a música clássica. São canções lindas que acalma a mente e o espírito. É uma pena grandes músicos nao serem valorizados. Parabéns vinheteiro!!! Você ama o que faz e toca com o coração .
Verdade
I absolutely love the sound of a harpsichord
Amazing this 18th century recording exists! It's very clear too and with sound
ua-cam.com/video/Okdv-CTVpPg/v-deo.html..
@Maria Tereza Souza Lacerda its awesome!
This wasn't recorded in the 18th century. Video recording hadn't been invented then.
@@jeffm5991 How was this done?
@@jeffm5991 r/woooosh
Maaan, imagine having all that music running around inside your head and it doesn't stop till you've got down on paper.
they didnt have the entire song in their heads, I think they wrote that down little by little using their musical abilities
@@danielmarquesmacedo6864 Mozart was a prodigy and could basically write down pieces from his head, most others would have worked through slower though
@@danielmarquesmacedo6864 This is true. The "Mozart wrote entire symphonies in his head" story is a romanticized view of Mozart's abilities. And it also gives a very misleading idea of what composition is. Full compositions don't just randomly appear into people's minds. Instead, people start from a short musical idea that they start to develop. Compositions need a structure - a good composition has the right balance of repetition and contrast. And if you want your composition to have a structure, you don't really come up with the full piece in your mind and then just write it down. Even if the general flow between the ideas comes to you spontaneously, those ideas still need some "polishing" in order to sound coherent and purposeful and avoid a "rambling" feeling.
Mozart was definitely exceptionally talented, but if you study his pieces, it's pretty obvious that they are well-thought out. They use motifs in a consistent way and have a clear logical structure behind them. If Mozart really had written everything spontaneously in his head, then his music would sound much more like improvisation - it would be much more "free-flowing". You can hear some more free-flowing pieces if you listen to his Fantasias, but most of Mozart's pieces have a very clear structure behind them. Mozart did like to play his ideas on the piano to develop them into full compositions, and he did also write sketches.
Now, Mozart was most likely a master of these structures, so coming up with a piece with a logical structure probably didn't take much effort from him. But he definitely didn't compose full symphonies in his head and then just notate them. Good compositions aren't 100% spontaneous. They do have an element of spontaneity to them (because otherwise they will feel too rigid or formulaic), but a completely spontaneous composition will feel formless and like it doesn't know what it's trying to say. It's the difference between a spontaneous speech vs a well-thought out speech. Even if someone is really good at giving speeches, you would still expect them to do some preparation before the speech, and not just shoot from the hip and see where that takes them.
@@MaggaraMarine "This is true" *proceeds to cope hard and ramble about captain-obvious tier shit* Look, fren, it's okay to not have any imagination, but don't predispose your sad opinions with "This is true".
@@xamanto Okay. Tell me why I'm wrong.
Дуже гарно, підняло настрій. ДЯКУЮ
I would have gladly listened to the Mozart compositions in their entirety. It sounds great. Thank you for sharing this and what a beautiful costume!
The harpsichord is a plucked keyboard instrument related to the harp and lute while the fortepiano, pianoforte, and modern piano derive from the clavichord a percussion keyboard instrument.
ua-cam.com/video/Okdv-CTVpPg/v-deo.html
What is the purpose of the upper keyboard?
@@billmcmahon1420
In a harpsichord with two manuals, the bottom manual traditionally operates the darker back gate 8' choir and the top manual operates the brighter front gate 8' choir. This allows for the musician to alternate manuals for immediate dynamic contrast. Additionally, the bottom manual can have an additional 4' stop that employs a set strings tuned an octave higher for added weight and volume. In this fashion the lower manual is more powerful and the upper manual is used for softer passages. Finally, both manuals may be coupled together. When the top manual is physically shifted towards the backboard, the result is that the bottom manual will operate both manuals and their set stops simultaneously but the top manual will only operate itself. This allows for the greatest possible volume the instrument can produce - the 8' back gate, 4' choir, and the coupled 8' front gate of the top manual.
wiki.youngcomposers.com/Harpsichord
I've seen a harpsochord with upper keyboard move itself when the player play in first keyboard. How is that work?
@@TonyBittner-Collins amazing that they figured out how to build all of that on a harpsichord, but nobody ever thought to just make piano which sounds 100x better.
Im beyond impressed at how many songs you seem to know from memory and can play. Bravo!
ua-cam.com/video/Okdv-CTVpPg/v-deo.html
There is a certain note that sounds much like my doorbell so every time it’s played I’m contemplating weather or not someone is knocking the front door or not
ua-cam.com/video/Okdv-CTVpPg/v-deo.html...
LOVE the harpsichord. So stuffy and upidy. The snobbiest of all. Awesome to hear these wonderful works played on this awesome instrument.
This sounds partly like a historically accurate dream and partly like a twentieth century circus.
Minha preferida é Litle Star, lembra muito aquelas caixas de música. Muito bom!!!
Twinkle twinkle little star?
I don speak your language
@@SnickersEatsCookies like me, he is Brazilian. and yes, he is referring to twinkle twinkle little star
Ok
Legal!
@@SnickersEatsCookies YEAP
You made a time travel machine, everything feels 18th century, especially the piano sound, it's so satisfying to hear.
Not piano, harpsichord or cembalo
ua-cam.com/video/Okdv-CTVpPg/v-deo.html...
If you are watching this while on the toilet, even the smell is 18th century.
@@Beethoven80 Tf?
@@Nothing_to_see_here_27. they referred to the poor hygiene of the 18th century.
the way he looks at us when playing is just insane he knows his stuff man!
Although there were quite a few bits where he did need to look at the keys. I notice Mozart definitely challenged him in places.
Yes, he does. At the same time, every competent guitar player can play without constantly looking at the fingerboard, and the guitar fingerboard isn't linear like the piano keys are.
I'm surprised how many of these I recognize,
I find myself constantly clicking on your videos. I most certainly do enjoy them, and especially the presentation
You are a Rock Star.
Thanks; great stuff.
Thanks Badalice!
I think the harpsichord brings these pieces to life… beautiful
His technique is terrible, he plays it like a piano. Not even close.
It's simply amazing you can replicate the period look of that era. Centuries ago . It's surreal to watch u play with such mastery👍🏻 Always a pleasure to listen to your performance.
ua-cam.com/video/Okdv-CTVpPg/v-deo.html...?
This is just amazing ;) I never thought the “real” music was like this at that old time. Thanks for bring us this!
Mozart didn't sound like this. Guy is entertaining, but clueless.
I really love Mozart. He is the reason why I love classical music even though I can't play piano.
Mozart is the God of Music...
He was a genius 🎶🎶
You don't have to play any instrument in order to love classical music!💕
A good friend once said “I play the radio.” You can play anything on it.
Wonderful hands.
Pure and simple... most enjoyable... there is something about Mozart.
I think it's because even if you are not a classics buff, you can't help knowing the music because it gets used everywhere !!!
I've always enjoyed piano classics, but to hear them on the harpsichord is so much more authentic. Bravo!
Last time I was this early, Mozart was still alive.
He just dropped a new album i believe
Last time I was this early uncle Phil was alive
WHeN MoZArt WaS AlIVe YOutUBe hASnt BeEn inVEnteD
Iknow how u all feel god its great not running around like a God's knows whar
I’ve had Mozart’s sonata n. 16 stuck in my head for so long without knowing the name to it. Thank you kind sir for this small gift of knowledge
No matter what the instrument is Mozart's music has unique flavour of tonality that one can easily grasp..
Mozart!! The childhood song inclusive!! What a beautiful gift!!
I just loved your 'you'd better be listening' looks from the keyboard... quite admonishingly amusing. Loved the index finger for the next piece... new to me! very original. You are a real master on this instrument. (we might have had the real French title of the twinkle twinkle piece, but no matter.)
So beautiful 😍 I wish I could play like that!!!! Thank you for bringing classical music to us your fans and followers. Thank you again
This sounds so much better! I’m not the biggest fan of Mozart, but I actually like hearing his music on the harpsichord!
Is it just me or is this much better than with today's instruments? Thank you for the demonstration
Fell in love with this sound on the old T V show The Adams family
"This was the sound that was heard at the time." A bit misleading. He also played and owned and composed for clavichord and fortepiano. Mozart lived through a very important phase of rapid keyboard development.
*The perfect cosplay doesn't exi-*
...вует говорили они
@@artemik1986 ?
@@rashmitiwari6048 ?
@@artemik1986 um,what did you say I don't know cuz I don't know that language
ua-cam.com/video/Okdv-CTVpPg/v-deo.html
What can I say that has not already been said? You, Sir, are a master of your craft!
*Mozart is my favorite composer* 😍
Mine too.
Beethoven for me but mozart is up there
So Beautiful Sound Actually Classical Music
Is it bad that I love this sound for his music more than any other version Ive heard?
Those tones are yes wonderfull.
Yes. You should be ashamed of enjoying music played on period instruments. You're a monster.
What a dumb question.
Fun Fact - He is actually rebirth of Mozart of this century
ua-cam.com/video/Okdv-CTVpPg/v-deo.html....
Vinheteiro was presumably born in the previous century, not this one.
@@jeffm5991 Imagine in the 2040s and 2050s some kid's gonna look at the Millennials, Gen X, and early Gen Z and they're gonna go "wOah that guy was born in the 1900s! Can you believe it?". It is at that point that we become F#CKING OLD.
@@nanamacapagal8342 I recently heard blink 182 on my local oldies station so I already feel old.
@@jeffm5991 Oh my god. I'm not prepared for Lady Gaga on the oldies.
Such a beautiful instrument
This repertoire sounds surprisingly good on harpsichord, with the exception of that bit from the middle movement of the Elvira Madigan concerto, which really needs piano and strings.
The piano was evolving through most of his life. So some of these songs were composed with instruments like this in mind while others were composed with a more mellow sound in mind.
@@tiryaclearsong421 I'm aware, thanks.
@@fiandrhi others might not, which I didn't.
wonderful to hear it on such an amazing instrument. I appreciate his music even more.
00:59 - Mario Underwater Level but it's sped up
Mozart meu maior ídolo na música.
ua-cam.com/video/Okdv-CTVpPg/v-deo.html...
Bacana.
Even the painting of Marie Antoinette stares at us.
Yes but look at what she was looking at when she went
@@reginaldgiddy2538The floor below the guillotine??
So much of this reminds me of sitting with my kids watching the Baby Einstein tapes I bought in the early 2000's. They had a Baby Mozart tape that had this exact harpsichord music on a tape along with colorful things and early learning visuals. My kids always recognize Mozart from watching that tape a million times. A wonderful memory. Thank you!
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You mean baby crack. My son loved it.
Love your talent, staging and humor.
Music is our magic 🪄
Bravo! The focus on Mozart's genius and the tempo of his works is on the mark.
Not even close! 😄
I love how the harpsiocrd says the title of the song
What?
@@Lord_VinheteiroExcelente video!!
@@Lord_Vinheteiro he means how you wrote the name of the piece on the harpsiocrd
On a serious note: The joke was that there's always a name on the side of the piano, I think.
Like a high functioning player harpsichord
first only people who like good music know how to value it !! tremendous video greetings from norway
Thanks!
Congrats, lord Vinheteiro replied to your comment
@@Lord_Vinheteiro OMG lord vinheteiro replied your comment!!!! OMG i admire you lord!
@@Lord_Vinheteiro vc é um mestre no piano sr vinheteiro . todos da minha familia gostam de vc abraços (lucas)
👍👍👍
Eu fico vendo seus vídeos e cheguei a conclusão que talentos como você é que renovam e nossa fé na humanidade! Obrigado!
Verdade!
Renova a esperança nos brasileiros 😃
*being raised on classical music and opera such melodies bring me great joy*
I’m glad this continued to change.
I know how to do Turkish March but he makes it look so easy
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divertido como esse piano lembra trilhas sonoras de vídeo games clássicos.
So good that there’s no need for ending or nothing.
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I love this. They really sound great on the harpsicord.
The first forty-five seconds of this video could've been called "The names of songs you've heard a million times, but don't know the names of, that Mozart wrote."
Honestly, even though the names are the first things that stick out in my mind, I'm glad I got to hear them on a harpsichord :)
More videos like this please!
Love piano
Bravísimo Vinheteiro. Muy bien. Como siempre, felicitaciones. 👍👍👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
What fun! Thanks for including ‘Ah vous dirai-je maman’. Few people know Wolfy helped make this old tune famous. The 12 variations are great fun to learn.
Harpsichord is great for some of his early 60s to 70s pieces.
We also need piano - forte for his concertos
The dislikes are from the people who liked the video so much that they flipped their phone to like it again
The harpsichord is terribly out of tune (this is not a piano) and not all of this music is suitable for this instrument 😟
@@mauriwayar the title of the video is 'how Mozart sounds on the harpsichord' not 'Mozart sounds good on the harpsichord' and can you give me an example of how a harpsichord should sound?
@@FadiKdy The instrument is out of tune and the dude is playing music that wasn't composed for harpsichord. As a result average viewers who know nothing about the baroque period or the harpsichord might walk away just thinking that it's a shitty instrument that sounds bad. Here's just one example of many on UA-cam of a proper harpsichord player using an instrument that is in tune. ua-cam.com/video/KQiBIb_klT8/v-deo.html
@@EnlightenedCentrism I agree. Also, Mozart's time was not Baroque but Rococo or Classical period. Baroque is totally underrated and Mozart is overrated too, but what can you expect from mainstream?
You should try some "inappropriate" for harpsichord music, such as jazz, ragtime, or meme music just to see what is sounds like.
Thats just pure trash
@@varolussalsanclar1163 Jazz isn't trash
@@samdobie6748 it's the devil's music.
@@samsallon You're hilarious.
@@samdobie6748 yeah i guess its tolerable when youre in an elevator or a hotel lobby lol
Adoro o concerto no21, adoraria ver um vídeo seu tocando esta peça completa.
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Excellent presentation! Thanks! I liked the pointing and the staring and the wig almost as much as the music.
LOVE the way you play.
Magnífico cuadro de Élisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun… magnífica música e interpretación!!👏🏻👏🏻
The tuning for the Harpsichord is really beautiful 🤩 So extraordinary!
So imagine ser capaz de escutar uma musica dessas na epoca...seria uma viagem no tempo incrivel. Lord cosplay de nobre frances do sec XVIII é o melhor.
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eu não gostaria kk
Always impressed by these musical education videos. Thank you!
Sounds great. I love the sound of the harpsichord.
you get it's hard stuff when lord looks at the piano
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Marcante o som do Cravo! 👏👏👏
Well theoretically it is Twelve Variations on "Ah vous dirai-je, Maman" not "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star", even though both are indeed based same folk song.
Speechless...You're really a great master.
It's very beautiful, wonderful music of the most music