(VIDEO) György Cziffra at the BBC (1962-1963 complete TV broadcasts)

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  • Опубліковано 19 кві 2018
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    ______________________________________________
    Georges Cziffra - BBC TV broadcasts 1962-1963
    BBC Studio, 5/16/62
    1 Improvisation (includes Chopin Etude Op.10/1)
    BBC Studio, 7/22/62
    2 Bach-Busoni: Prelude and Fuga in D major
    3 Scarlatti Sonatas K.101, K. 96
    4 Schumann: Toccata
    5 Liszt: Hungarian Rhapsody No.6
    BBC Studio, 5/16/62
    6 Liszt: Polonaise No.2
    BBC Studio, 1963
    7 Liszt: Grand Galop Chromatique
    8 Chopin: Polonaise No.6 "Heroique"
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 269

  • @ClassicalPianoRarities
    @ClassicalPianoRarities  4 роки тому +19

    Buy our latest commercial release of recordings never-before available on CD:
    tinyurl.com/wjsewyg
    Brailowsky: Liszt Concerto No 1 (live 1945, Mitropoulos)
    Arrau: Liszt Concerto No 2 (live 1935, Rosbaud - recently discovered)
    Cziffra: Liszt Totentanz (live 1962, Benzi, from superior source)
    Magaloff: Liszt Hungarian Fantasy (new to the discography - live 1965, Ansermet)

  • @GuidoTondo
    @GuidoTondo 4 роки тому +189

    00:21
    Improvisation (includes Chopin Etude Op.10/1)
    BBC Studio, 7/22/62
    07:04
    Bach-Busoni: Prelude and Fuga in D major
    19:00
    Scarlatti Sonatas K.101, K. 96
    27:24
    Schumann: Toccata
    32:10
    Liszt: Hungarian Rhapsody No.6
    BBC Studio, 5/16/62
    38:50
    Liszt: Polonaise No.2
    BBC Studio, 1963
    47:54
    Liszt: Grand Galop Chromatique
    51:59 Chopin: Polonaise No.6 "Heroique"

    • @zuhairbakdoud1360
      @zuhairbakdoud1360 2 роки тому +1

      This is not music… This is just saying “look at me, am I not a great player of technical exercises. He also steals some of the Chopin etude no. 1 opus 10.

    • @Mori_Sann
      @Mori_Sann 2 роки тому +2

      4:56 〜 is based on "17 Polish songs Nr.1" composed by Chopin

    • @magdalenatalik870
      @magdalenatalik870 2 роки тому +3

      @@Mori_Sann More like 5:10 and it's improvisation on song "Życzenie" (A Wish)

    • @123eldest
      @123eldest 2 роки тому

      @@zuhairbakdoud1360 you must be stupid if you think playing someone's music is stealing

    • @woojae2001
      @woojae2001 Рік тому +1

      @@zuhairbakdoud1360 lol you’re hilarious

  • @championawairaz46
    @championawairaz46 2 роки тому +19

    Today marks the 100th Birthday of the Legend itself. Happy Birthday Cziffra.

  • @MichaelKaykov
    @MichaelKaykov 4 роки тому +157

    Some of the most astonishing piano playing ever recorded. If it was not for me discovering Cziffra when I was 15, I would not be doing piano professionally now.

    • @alainspiteri502
      @alainspiteri502 4 роки тому +5

      same thing for me if j did' not discover Chopin with Samson Francois in 1957 à Alger with the first concerto j would have known piano later it's sure , j have all my life the two records by S F mostly with Monte Carle Ochestra ( L Fremaux ) . With Listz it's France Clidat j discover a lyrical Listz but later in 1970' . J have transcendental-Cziffra but j prefer a lyrical pianist more than a fabulous technic for me music is not technic but a melody or a story or a music with a soul it's a choice , Cziffra is not the first pianist for me j prefer Cortot Haskil Gieseking Rubinstein of course Cziffra is a pianist mostly with a fabulous technic it's not that music for me a paesonnal choice

    • @MichaelKaykov
      @MichaelKaykov 4 роки тому +3

      Samson Francois is a legend, I remember being truly FLOORED by his glorious Scarborough recording from the 40’s.
      I listen to many great artists of the past, such a variety of styles.
      My current favorite is Ignaz Friedman.

    • @alainspiteri502
      @alainspiteri502 4 роки тому +1

      @@MichaelKaykov I F of course

    • @alainspiteri502
      @alainspiteri502 4 роки тому +1

      @@MichaelKaykov after many years in piano-recordings j don't if Clara Haskil is a different pianist where her piano is a langage who speaks to you : it's necesary to listen her Schumann with " les Scènes de la Forêt " , the last Schubert-sonata * recording before her death" , all Adagios * concertis sonatas by Haskil are the best Haskil for me above the notes they are a complainte of a woman alone , she was not a Star of beauty pershaps it's here one explanation of her soul ? Alfred Cortot Yves Nat also in Schumann but less good it's seems in Schumann j"m very far From Cziffra-Listz she's in an other world , in last Schubert-sonata an Angel who have lived on our planet . .

    • @Hjominbonrun
      @Hjominbonrun 4 роки тому +10

      I was an enthusiastic pianist, then I discovered his chromatique Galop.
      After that, I focused on my day job.

  • @etiennedelaunois1737
    @etiennedelaunois1737 Рік тому +14

    Cziffra virtuosity was very "natural". Dont get me wrong, there are a very big amounts of hours of practice behind this but it wasn't just a showman virtuosity. He was following his instinct behind that virtuosity. Today, we have so many copycats, playing what he was playing but lacking of that spontaneity. My teacher when he was a boy, met him and had lessons with him a few times and he was extremely humble. He told him once that if a musician was trying to play as fast or like an other one, you will probably become a pale imitation of that person.
    Your ambition as a musician is to explore your own musicality and expression then the rest will follow.

    • @hz3701
      @hz3701 3 місяці тому

      Thanks for sharing this! ☺️

    • @Marinavalerevna
      @Marinavalerevna 28 днів тому

      Драгоценные воспоминания! Как это трогает душу. Благодарю Вас.

  • @piano345
    @piano345 5 років тому +141

    How many pianists would allow the TV cameras to film him warming up before a recital. This was a time when Cziffra first appeared in London and caused such a sensation that he had critics searching for their most superlative adjectives to describe his wizardry. His fiery temperament set the Royal Festival Hall and other venues alight with his flame throwing technique.

    • @TJ-md5zh
      @TJ-md5zh 5 років тому +7

      Thankyou Daddy :)

    • @simonmountford1511
      @simonmountford1511 2 роки тому +5

      Not Michelangeli, he agreed as long as he could not see the cameras and the light was not bright. Tricky job for the engineers.

    • @Varooooooom
      @Varooooooom Рік тому +4

      Unfortunate age of pianism we live in. Feels like everyone’s only comfortable putting out their most polished stuff.

    • @aceofspades8634
      @aceofspades8634 Рік тому +1

      @@VarooooooomIs that wrong? Isn’t it good that people care enough to want to do justice to the music before performing to the whole world?

    • @Varooooooom
      @Varooooooom Рік тому +3

      @@aceofspades8634 The problem with that, however, is that many people actually don’t really do justice to the music. Many pianists make recordings with arpeggios/scales that sound hyper-refined and crisp, and all of their technique is indeed very polished. However, when you compare their performance to the score, they are missing textural markings that convey the phrasing that the composer intended (Katsaris has a segment in an interview with Cathy Miller where he talks about how much he admired Cziffra; he wouldn’t just play an ascending scale, he would make the notes louder/play with the dynamics as he ascended the scale too). Staccatos, staccatissimos, crescendos, diminuendos, and even dynamics (among many other things) get ignored very often. So if we’re talking about “doing the music justice,” I’d way rather hear a sloppier performance that attempts to actually convey what’s written on the score than a hyper-technical performance that literally neglects half of the music.
      I’d be way more forgiving of the latter group btw if they had any of the improvisational qualities of someone like Cziffra or Katsaris, aka people who change the music they play in such a way where it is obvious that they’ve studied the score but clearly decided to inject their personality into the music. I can even admire this about Glenn Gould or Horowitz even though I’m not a fan of their interpretations usually. I recognize right away that they can’t be anyone but themselves, and I take all of their performances as quasi-arrangements, typically.

  • @Highinsight7
    @Highinsight7 Рік тому +13

    his second to none virtuosity is JUST as impressive as his deep musical abilities...

  • @chilrad
    @chilrad 5 років тому +84

    Truly one of the most extraordinary and gifted musicians that has ever lived, and whose legacy is, in itself, a reason to live on.

  • @steven21ys
    @steven21ys Рік тому +15

    "I am finished, thank you." Still cracks me up every single time.

  • @opticalmixing23
    @opticalmixing23 3 роки тому +17

    I love Cziffra

  • @satrialesporkstore7889
    @satrialesporkstore7889 3 роки тому +11

    Power + Accuracy + Delicacy + Charisma = Magic

  • @christophdoelz6758
    @christophdoelz6758 2 роки тому +26

    I quote Volodja Horowitz who exclaimed: "I want to be Cziffra!" What a most wonderful, wonderful musician. Clearly one of THE great pianists of the 20th.

    • @Highinsight7
      @Highinsight7 Рік тому +4

      Cziffra... simply put... is CERTAINLY one of the greatest of all time... Richer... and others come close... I even think Liszt would be amazed...

    • @maksimryslyaev4794
      @maksimryslyaev4794 Рік тому

      Он реально так сказал? Можете указать источник, доказывающий это.

  • @keybawd4023
    @keybawd4023 2 роки тому +12

    The bach-busoni is nothing short of miraculaous

  • @T65XJ
    @T65XJ 3 роки тому +22

    I hit the like button but there should really be a “Kneel down cause I’m not worthy” button

  • @josephbarbarie692
    @josephbarbarie692 2 роки тому +10

    "Time", in the metered, or marked, sense, does not exist for this man. He will fit the oddest groupings of rhythmic values into whatever box he chooses. For Cziffra, a piece is a single open-bar phrase, and he declaims it all in a breath.

  • @davisatdavis1
    @davisatdavis1 4 роки тому +23

    Seriously, that improvisation was insane. I feel like he already knew what he was going to play once he played those first few notes and that rolled chords

  • @luizfernandg
    @luizfernandg 2 роки тому +16

    These days we listen to so many pianists playing at all the major Piano Competitions around the wolrd, but I ask, do we ever here someone playing like this man? He has it in his blood!

    • @grigorpetrov8006
      @grigorpetrov8006 11 місяців тому +3

      This is why I maintain that no living pianist today of any stature has this grand romantic pianism in their blood. It is simply extinct

    • @griffin5734
      @griffin5734 2 місяці тому

      @@grigorpetrov8006 You don't need to tell everyone how uncultured you are. right ?

  • @jozsefhalajko6995
    @jozsefhalajko6995 Рік тому +5

    He also was a bar - pianist in Budapest, drinking a lot of shorts. Improvized for themes giving him on the spot. These are all plays parts of his later world fame . ( everything are connected, and influences other things)

  • @careylarson119
    @careylarson119 Рік тому +6

    36:25--absurd!!! Everybody does that run with two hands because of the difficulty, and he does it with one, faster than I would have imagined is possible. The man is unbelievable.

    • @charlesthomas5956
      @charlesthomas5956 Рік тому

      Rousseau did it too! Check him out! Im trying to practice playing it with one hand also lol

    • @careylarson119
      @careylarson119 Рік тому

      @@charlesthomas5956 Yep. I tried and failed. Just couldn't get fast enough. Definitely not as talented as I need to be 😢😂.

    • @charlesthomas5956
      @charlesthomas5956 Рік тому

      @@careylarson119 Don't worry, you'll get better only if you keep practicing :-D

    • @pianisthenics
      @pianisthenics 11 місяців тому +1

      @@charlesthomas5956Rousseau is miles away from Cziffra.

    • @charlesthomas5956
      @charlesthomas5956 11 місяців тому

      @@pianisthenics Ik that!

  • @paulburke3247
    @paulburke3247 6 років тому +43

    A genius of the highest order!

  • @hdholl9696
    @hdholl9696 4 роки тому +56

    Effortless brilliance. There is no-one like Cziffra.

    • @bachopinbee5991
      @bachopinbee5991 2 роки тому +3

      Did you say effortless? It's clear blood and oil at the piano!

    • @bloodgrss
      @bloodgrss 2 роки тому +1

      There are a few-but VERY few...

    • @elenakun9318
      @elenakun9318 6 місяців тому

      Да , именно так ! Легкий , сверкающий , непринуждённый блеск

  • @wittekjmusic
    @wittekjmusic 5 років тому +19

    Cziffra is a Genius Piano Virtuoso

  • @trevjr
    @trevjr 2 роки тому +7

    I was only going to stay for the Bach/Busoni but the Scarlatti was so mesmerizing then the Schumann, I cannot stop just staring at his hands.

  • @brydon10
    @brydon10 3 роки тому +11

    He's really having a great time playing, you can tell.

    • @Marinavalerevna
      @Marinavalerevna 28 днів тому

      Да, стоит посмотреть на его лицо. Вдохновение и наслаждение. Люблю его!

  • @r.i.p.volodya
    @r.i.p.volodya 8 місяців тому +1

    HAPPY 102nd BIRTHDAY, Cziffra! Nov. 5th, 2023.

  • @marktabla5434
    @marktabla5434 2 роки тому +5

    30 years ago, I could only read about recitals like this in the Penguin Guide to Classical Compact Discs or pay $30 to special-order a European label import CD from Tower Records that would take weeks to ship. Now I can watch / listen to such material on demand on UA-cam for free. How times have changed.

  • @ernokorenyovszky2718
    @ernokorenyovszky2718 11 місяців тому +5

    The only person in the world that would inprovise on the hardest of liszts pieces. Witnessing here the greatest piano player ever to be filmed..

    • @moccagriselda
      @moccagriselda 10 місяців тому +2

      The one thing that should have been recorded for all the world to hear, was the improvised concert he was asked to give to the visiting german high command on the eastern front in the winter of 1943. He didn't touch the keys for more than 2 years at that time and he was given only a couple of hours to exercise his fingers a bit. He opened it with a paraphrase on a Tschaikowsky melody, so that he could play in silence and to have the undivided attention of those around him... No recording exists, needless to say. Only memoirs.

    • @gibsonlavery6978
      @gibsonlavery6978 10 місяців тому +1

      Very few people knows the story of his life. They would cry...@@moccagriselda

  • @luizfernandg
    @luizfernandg 2 роки тому +7

    I just love when he says "Ive finished"...and just walks out after all that! Amazing!

  • @bifeldman
    @bifeldman 3 роки тому +5

    Heaven

  • @vova47
    @vova47 3 роки тому +17

    I can't get enough of this tremendous video. Cziffra must have pre-warmed up before this warm-up. Look how fearlessly he attacks octaves right from the start! Incredible power!

    • @flambr
      @flambr Рік тому +4

      sometimes I wonder if he ever cooled down

    • @Marinavalerevna
      @Marinavalerevna 28 днів тому

      ​@@flambr Какой красивый цыган!

  • @BKlett
    @BKlett 2 роки тому +6

    Ein echter Musiker auch, nicht nur Virtuose!!!

  • @keybawd4023
    @keybawd4023 2 роки тому +8

    There are a hundred ways of interpretting this tocata; Each one is valid, This is one of the most transcendental of all

  • @melbapatti
    @melbapatti 5 років тому +35

    What truly EFFORTLESS, gorgeous playing. And I’ve never heard the melody over the rumbling octaves in the Polonaise played so beautifully.

    • @lorettaslovak7735
      @lorettaslovak7735 3 роки тому +6

      He’s not playing the piano but rather a whole orchestra! Superhuman technique not of this world God bless him

  • @Marinavalerevna
    @Marinavalerevna 3 місяці тому

    Как ему идёт фрак! Красивая посадка за инструментом. Цыффра умел быть элегантным. Люблю его. И вальяжный галстук. Как в стихах "А ваш изящный бант развязан так красиво..." А теперь слушаем. ❤

  • @suzyflorida1193
    @suzyflorida1193 4 роки тому +130

    God said, "I want a human to play the piano like I can." Ladies and Gentlemen, here is that human!

    • @safrane95
      @safrane95 3 роки тому +2

      Gods "style" is design & order ~ the sublime gravitational physics of orbiting galaxies, the periodic table of elements, the perfection of DNA & atoms, miracle of biology, the mathematics & physics of light & tones & frequency of real music from popular to classic ~ not self indulgent discordant chaos like this. Think Satan rather than God may be the analogy that fits these purposeless rambling abstract clashing sounds ~ however each to their own Suzy ~ enjoy if you can !😩

    • @SeigneurReefShark
      @SeigneurReefShark 3 роки тому +3

      @@AlexAlcyone no

    • @jeffreybryan8377
      @jeffreybryan8377 3 роки тому +2

      Couldn't agree more 😁💓♥️💗

    • @maximecloutier-gravel8908
      @maximecloutier-gravel8908 3 роки тому +9

      @@safrane95 Except none of those things are god's making since he doesn't exist.

    • @ClassicalPianoRarities
      @ClassicalPianoRarities  3 роки тому +10

      This is a piano channel

  • @jeffsmith1798
    @jeffsmith1798 3 роки тому +22

    Hofmann and Cziffra are in a class all their own. They make the performance of these great masterpieces sound effortless.

    • @davidcotuit
      @davidcotuit 2 роки тому +1

      Virtuosity, in and of itself, is a wonderful thing. But we must always remind ourselves that great musicianship involves much more than virtuosity, essential though that may be.

    • @orsolyafrank573
      @orsolyafrank573 Рік тому +6

      @@davidcotuit And what is astonishing about Cziffra is precisely this - that he always goes way beyond the technique and brings the MUSIC to life. That is the true purpose of virtuoso, and that is why he is unsurpassable.

  • @Pearfection
    @Pearfection Рік тому +5

    Just discovered Cziffra today. Wow!!!

  • @lorenzley1324
    @lorenzley1324 Рік тому +6

    Without any discussion Cziffra was one of the finest musicians with an extraordinary piano technic that has impress the world around him.

  • @chutdigadut
    @chutdigadut 11 місяців тому +4

    My God, even his Bach is incredible! This man was God's gift to music. Insane talent

  • @backloop1527
    @backloop1527 5 років тому +10

    THE BEST !!!!!

    • @ClassicalPianoRarities
      @ClassicalPianoRarities  4 роки тому +2

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  • @leomiller2291
    @leomiller2291 4 роки тому +11

    Most astonishing Schumann toccata ever.

  • @tarakb7606
    @tarakb7606 4 роки тому +9

    Merci Monsieur Cziffra.

  • @andre.vaz.pereira
    @andre.vaz.pereira 4 роки тому +14

    At 5:09 he improvised on "6 Polish songs" nº 1 "Madchens Wunsch" by Chopin that was also transcribed by F. Liszt. He played Liszt's transcription in his last recital too.

    • @ClassicalPianoRarities
      @ClassicalPianoRarities  4 роки тому +1

      Check out the CDs available in our store, all first releases
      tinyurl.com/ugj5pye

  • @ajodahseenarine9209
    @ajodahseenarine9209 4 роки тому +11

    the scarlatti is just pure so pure scarlatti.!!!

  • @patricknyman727
    @patricknyman727 3 роки тому +9

    He’s like the 20th century Liszt! Born in Hungary too.

  • @jonrosemann3292
    @jonrosemann3292 3 роки тому +15

    Only a few people in history have had this type of technique on their own preferred instruments. The piano has been blessed with Cziffra, Rachmaninoff, Busoni, Godowsky, and only a few other kings of their era for this type of virtuosity showcased to the world. Everyone else can dream of this raw skill. Remember we wouldn't be here without Bach.

    • @franzliszt975
      @franzliszt975 2 роки тому +1

      Me ! Rachmaninoff is dumb ! I am the best !

    • @jonrosemann3292
      @jonrosemann3292 2 роки тому +4

      @@franzliszt975 I forgot to mention how Franz Liszt is all of theirs father.

    • @bachopinbee5991
      @bachopinbee5991 2 роки тому

      You forgot the most effortless of them all, Josef Hofman

    • @dangermouse1967
      @dangermouse1967 Рік тому +1

      @@jonrosemann3292 Supposedly Liszt had said that Charles Alkan had the best technique of anyone he had known.

  • @davidhencshel5969
    @davidhencshel5969 5 років тому +34

    His Chopin Etude beginning at 3:40 is simply blistering, while each note is clear as a bell. Superhuman right hand technique that appears effortless. Jeez.

    • @jungwirthmartin
      @jungwirthmartin 3 роки тому +3

      Bunch of mistakes and slips as well as too much pedal

    • @celsosantana7844
      @celsosantana7844 3 роки тому +2

      Capacidade musical excepcional. GÊNIO

    • @oliviobertolini88
      @oliviobertolini88 3 роки тому +4

      Not that clear but still awesome

    • @emmerentiagroenewald3694
      @emmerentiagroenewald3694 Рік тому +4

      Remember:this is WARMING UP!!
      Recital starts at 7.00........

    • @fiokomjutub972
      @fiokomjutub972 Рік тому +2

      @@jungwirthmartin I think you just do not even deserve to listen Cziffra at all. Better for you to listen Michelangeli and Yuja Wang They are for your taste I think.

  • @vova47
    @vova47 5 років тому +40

    Have seen this dozens of times but it never gets old.
    Cziffra was one of a kind. Thank you for sharing!

  • @kpokpojiji
    @kpokpojiji 3 роки тому +7

    "I am finished, thank you." Yes. Gyorgy, and the rest of us are just beginning....

  • @Vandraren1000
    @Vandraren1000 5 років тому +44

    Hard to tell how this recording came out in UA-cam. I my selfe work as music producer at SR, Swedish Radio Classical Chanel, and may, after 22 years in office have some good moments to share. But in 1962 there was no way to record a broadcast. This must be put on net by someone inside. And of cause, I want to thank that person. No profit involved, just the joy to bring some extraordinary moments in time, caught, to the rest of the world to experience. Thank you, however you are, I would probably do the same after have gone to retire. Skrovaczewskis last live Bruckner symphonies.. :-)

  • @annah.1927
    @annah.1927 2 роки тому +9

    Beautiful ! 🌹
    Thank you.
    / Köszönöm szépen./

  • @othonduenas1274
    @othonduenas1274 5 років тому +9

    Cziffra Eres un Grande!

  • @user-wj6bl8oe6t
    @user-wj6bl8oe6t 4 місяці тому

    "I'm finished, thank you" at the end of the improvisation is so refreshing!!!

  • @pianosenzanima1
    @pianosenzanima1 5 років тому +26

    More Cziffra please!!...and thank you!!

  • @bernabela5003
    @bernabela5003 3 роки тому +8

    Brilliant!

  • @thedrinkerful
    @thedrinkerful 3 місяці тому

    Cziffra was the pianist that really got me into classical piano music, every note he plays has a certain emotion and meaning behind it, his playing is the most colorful withouth loosing that flow/line of the piece hes playing. Love his studio recordings for those reasons and live ones for the reason he never plays a piece the same twice always something new. An amazing pianist and person

  • @perreperre2884
    @perreperre2884 Рік тому +1

    I answer him : thank you God for so much love .

  • @bachopinbee5991
    @bachopinbee5991 2 роки тому +4

    Those octaves in the Toccata are just next level crazy! What z way he had with octaves!

  • @davisatdavis1
    @davisatdavis1 3 роки тому +8

    10 year old: Look! I can play piano!
    Cziffra: Me too

  • @VICTOBERN
    @VICTOBERN 5 місяців тому

    Every time l watch this ' run through ' l have to take a deep breath and remember that it is actually happening! How fortunate we are to have such wonderful moments preserved on film.

  • @blackandwhiterag1117
    @blackandwhiterag1117 5 років тому +14

    What a tremendous thing you have done. We could never have imagined this back in 1962. Many, many thanks indeed ""

  • @ubiestinsula
    @ubiestinsula 5 років тому +15

    Thank you for this incredible document!

  • @marcoplayzsolo3904
    @marcoplayzsolo3904 2 роки тому +4

    Gifted and Amazing....One of my influences. You guys should hear his own arrangement "flight of the Bumblebee"

  • @josepalomogomez9865
    @josepalomogomez9865 3 роки тому +6

    Una maravilla. Gracias.

  • @jozsefhalajko6995
    @jozsefhalajko6995 Рік тому +5

    He was a Hungarian half gypsy man.
    The gypsy blod in him a big part why he had an extreme temperament, more intense musicality, passion etc.
    I am a professional Hungarian classical guitarist knowing the characters of gypsies. Cziffra born into an extremely poor family. That is part of the reason why he was practicing diligently when he was a child to escape of that circumtences.Gypsies are famous all over the world for their extremely passionat musical talents. Like the intensity passionet flamenco players in South Spain who's aren't also mostly gypsies. He lived in France. His son ( who's was a conductor) with his wife and son burned and died in theirs house.
    Cziffra music after this extreme tragedy become extremely deep. Spiritually more painfully deep to express the horrible suffering, that is also part of our
    life, as we have to face our loved ones pass away. After loosing his only son, and his wife and grandson, his LP record of Chopin f - minor Fantasy is a realistic account of his extreme deep spiritual suffering. So this particular recording of him, put him far the best performer of this piece. So dreamily deep, that is beyond words. Also he have a section in this piece where he is producing flasolett, harmonic tones, that's only string instrumentalists do. But he is doing that on piano. That is an impossible magic. Since than I still wondering how he could do that. I did not hear that from any other pianists.
    For me, he is the best of all others.
    ( also as gipsy, he may had the instinct to get out from the discriminative treatment of gypsies in his childhood...?)

  • @andibonnington
    @andibonnington 3 роки тому +6

    Improvisation was amazing though it sounded to me more Liszt alike than Chopin... "I have finished" Wonderful!!!

  • @seongtaek84
    @seongtaek84 3 роки тому +4

    Gold!!

  • @cristiandone5749
    @cristiandone5749 5 років тому +4

    Gracias por compartir amigo

  • @guadalupepadillatorres6157
    @guadalupepadillatorres6157 Рік тому +3

    Extraordinaro

  • @pianowithspencer88
    @pianowithspencer88 3 роки тому +7

    Thanks for this.
    Loved it.
    Great channel thank you!

  • @valerieheinderyckx4506
    @valerieheinderyckx4506 8 місяців тому +1

    Quelle merveille...Merci infiniment. ❤

  • @klasszikuszene7434
    @klasszikuszene7434 4 роки тому +17

    csodálatos, fantasztikus - köszönjük a feltöltést, hogy még most is csodálattal hallgathatjuk és láthatjuk

  • @Faina1612
    @Faina1612 6 років тому +16

    Brilliant Cziffra! Thank you for this upload!

  • @MichaelAlexander1967
    @MichaelAlexander1967 10 місяців тому

    I find it absolutely amazing to have access to early recordings that were recorded before color filming was prevalent, especially of this caliber of talent. After hearing Georges Cziffra's Chopin Op. 25 no. 1, I wanted to see live recordings, so I'm extremely grateful to have this footage.

  • @mona1976able
    @mona1976able 6 років тому +13

    Thanks a lot for sharing!

    • @ClassicalPianoRarities
      @ClassicalPianoRarities  6 років тому +2

      More to come! Welcome!

    • @laslasman564
      @laslasman564 3 роки тому +1

      Loved Bach Busoni in this... probably the piece of the recital...clarity musicianship and control...

  • @satrialesporkstore7889
    @satrialesporkstore7889 3 роки тому +15

    After hearing Liszt playing in heaven, God thought it was wonderful but also a shame that no other human could hear his playing ever again, so he gave us Cziffra. Thank you God!

  • @robertobaroffio2391
    @robertobaroffio2391 2 роки тому +2

    Grande virtuoso

  • @martinu6
    @martinu6 2 роки тому +1

    Astonishing..

  • @ernokorenyovszky2718
    @ernokorenyovszky2718 11 місяців тому

    Thanks god this was filmed.. if just heard nowadays peiple would say its not a human playing this.. than you for showing us the piece piano player ,playing the best peice of music and improvising on it..

  • @user-mf3td9iw6f
    @user-mf3td9iw6f 5 місяців тому

    Галоп - это что-то из области фантастики!!!

  • @Felix_Li_En
    @Felix_Li_En 2 роки тому +3

    I recently find out that the piano Cziffra played at the beginning warm-up has more than 88 keys!!!

  • @Rudel23
    @Rudel23 5 років тому +6

    Thanks for giving us the complete broadcast, pity that many pieces are not synchronized audio-video...

  • @alainspiteri502
    @alainspiteri502 4 роки тому +6

    Improvisation of op10-1 is spectacular , in fact it's that Cziffra not Frédérick Chopin

  • @soussankobari1509
    @soussankobari1509 2 роки тому +1

    J aime bien .il est adorable.

  • @nataliebagdonas5759
    @nataliebagdonas5759 5 місяців тому

    God’s gift to us! Thank you ❤

  • @barakjoe
    @barakjoe Рік тому +1

    WOW

  • @palmerplantagenet
    @palmerplantagenet 4 роки тому +7

    When Cziffra was advertised as coming to Los Angeles to perform a recital, it was also mentioned that Mr. Cziffra might include some improvising. I especially wished to hear him doing the latter, but apparently, at the last minute, he changed his mind. However, the recital 'proper' was certainly impressive. Would like to have heard him "live" many more times!

  • @Hjominbonrun
    @Hjominbonrun 3 роки тому +3

    those 10 finger fists of leaps at the end of the polonaise.
    well ya.
    Madness.

  • @canman5060
    @canman5060 8 місяців тому

    Insane piano technique. I have a lot to catch up with after my Czerny Op 740.

  • @zsubaille
    @zsubaille 6 місяців тому

    ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @jannis11
    @jannis11 3 роки тому +2

    nice

  • @SELMER1947
    @SELMER1947 4 роки тому +23

    Nobody will never play Liszt like that... NEVER !!

    • @simonmountford1511
      @simonmountford1511 2 роки тому +1

      Clearly you've not heard John Ogdon.

    • @SELMER1947
      @SELMER1947 2 роки тому +6

      @@simonmountford1511 Oh yes i've heard Ogdon, Richter, Horowitz, Volodos, etc and many others but in Liszt, there is Cziffra and the others and I'm not alone to think that...the only one who was close to him was Simon Barere

  • @vincentnasorean56
    @vincentnasorean56 6 років тому +5

    A classic, as Shakespeare's Works...

  • @iheyinwaemmanuel3496
    @iheyinwaemmanuel3496 2 роки тому +2

    I really enjoyed that Bach-busoni ......bach the alpha and omega of classical music😤

  • @agnesdarvas4044
    @agnesdarvas4044 2 роки тому +4

    Ez maga a csoda!!!!!!

  • @MrInterestingthings
    @MrInterestingthings Рік тому +1

    Czifra could be as imaginative and exciting as Horowitz ! His Schumann Toccata on film Legendary ! HIs Liszt 2nd Polonaise!

  • @adrianoauguadri9373
    @adrianoauguadri9373 5 років тому +7

    sì... vorrei vedere tante altre cose di cziffra

  • @fakeaccount5888
    @fakeaccount5888 Рік тому +1

    Imp😮ssible

  • @doloresrodriguez9402
    @doloresrodriguez9402 6 місяців тому

    😮😮😳wooooooo!!!

  • @rich8037
    @rich8037 5 років тому +3

    Stunning! Does anyone recognise the piano used in the Bach-Busoni etc., by the way? Rather distinctive frame... Not that it matters, just curious. Blüthner maybe?