I hate it when people say stuff like "OMG I PLAYED THIS WHEN I WAS 10 HAHAHA THAT MEANS IM BETTER THEN YOU!!!" Music has absolutely NOTHING to do with age, its on how well you play it, and how musical/emotional you play it.
I always see comments like this, but I never see the actual young people bragging that they're better than everyone else. I don't mean any offense to you, I'm sure it happens. But I generally think its good to encourage young people to be happy about their accomplishments, as long as they understand that skillful piano playing comes with time and emotional maturity.
When you start to play it, it seems easy, a throwaway piece - then it hits you like a ton of bricks, full in the face, then you have to keep a straight face....what a genius he was!
言程 Oh, all you do is follow the fingerings for that part. Seriously, if you use the right fingerings it's a cake walk. Maybe your book doesn't have the fingering that's right for you. So play around and find that fingering and you'll be good. And make sure you're practicing your scales daily, including your chromatic scales.
@Joker ok MIND BLOWN that might be it !! and to think here I was about to just sell my broken piano and buy a new one 😱 Thank you, I'll definitely try playing it right instead of wrong, sounds like it might solve the problem
Wow, Chopin's waltzes are so sad, joyful, powerful, and beautiful at the same time... I don't even know how to describe this. This is a pure piece of art!!!!
@@segmentsAndCurves I have yet to find a composer that does. I am just saying the age doesn't affect the ability of the composer. (Not in a bad way at least)
I am learning this. I am 52 years old. I love it very much, but was hesitant that knowing Chopin wished this piece not to be published. Can not believe he was only 19, when he wrote this. But for me, adult beginner who wants to play Chopin. It is amazing.
@@adonisadmirer2752 no its very logical, if you look at the math of this composition you will understand its very logical, that's the beauty of that composition
the 152 bpm while keeping dynamics in mind is taking forever. I feel a little comfortable around 100-110 bpm with this song, but once it get's past that I lose the ability to plan out what I am doing. It's such a quick pace! But I'm slowly inching it up, day by day.
@@kakurocksman I have this problem too but recently I have been enjoying Arthur Rubinstein's version a little more. The slow pace just gives it something I prefer. I still struggle to keep the dynamics right.
I can suggest that you buy the Henle Vertag version if you really want to play this. It is in 17 well known pieces for the piano including the A Minor Waltz so liked by all. The reason I plug Henle Vertag is someone has gone through the scores very carefully and properly fingered them. The fingering at times can seem a bit bizarre. Fur Elise definitely is. But it is worth sticking to the Henle Vertag version of fingering and having their copy of the score. The Urtext Score.
Whenever I hear this piece, I imagine myself at the beach house, alone, sitting by the window (with white curtains blown by the breeze), looking at the view outside. It's either I'm longing for someone that I can't have, or remembering the good old times that I can't obviously go back to.. now they're just beautiful memories. Oh Chopin... your music sometimes makes me sigh. :( Oh no not just sometimes... very often.
This was my freshman solo performance piece back in high school. I remember hearing it for the first time and thinking 'THIS is the one I want to play.'
I’m currently a freshman, and, although I don’t have to play it for a solo piece, I had that same feeling of ‘THIS is the one I want to play!’ Gorgeous song...
What I like about Chopin is his simplicity and elegance. He builds music around a short and direct idea and creates a whole beautiful universe around it. Excellent
The very first Chopin piece I ever learned. I was going through a hard time back then, and also I was rushing myself to learn it. I always played it so fast and practically smashing the keys. Now I realize it must be played softly, with love and tender sadness.
To me this walz sounds like a broken up couple dancing for the last time or what unrequited love fantasies would sound like. There's pain and anguish and tragedy but also sweetness and purity and above all love and persistence?....Persistence of something good or of something bad... Don't you just love how everyone gets different things from any art form I guess..I love Chopin..
Why does every Chopin's Waltz sound like so? Take for example Chopin Waltz Op.64 No.2 and other numerous pieces. Maybe because waltz is actually a dance form? I imagine a castle-like place with the floor that's made up of checkers-colored marble and the people are waltzing in the orangish sunlight. Chopin is honestly the best romantic-period composer.
I love a waltz because it can feel like a bit of cheeky flirtation and then like one dancer is pursuing another, round and round. There's passion, or maybe frustration, in the tempo changes, which can mimic the tones of bickering. If it's an argument, the right hand is certainly determined to win.
Have you seen the film The Lover (1992)? This is the final piece played in the movie and I guess spoilers but.. it’s played after they part and see each other for the last time..
Comments on this video be like: 1. Op 69, nice 2. I played this piece before 3. Well played, beautiful piece 4. Practical jokes about how Ashkenazy is so much better than u 5. Foreign languages I don’t understand
I always underestimate chopin being obsessed with beethoven and liszt. But i just cannot beleive every time i listen to chopin how fucking amazing he is.
i can't decide myself between who's the master of romantic music between Liszt and Chopin. Liszt feels so different and original to play, but at the same time Chopin's sheets feel like words in a poem
Why must there be 1 master, Chopin, Tchakovsky, Dvorzhak, Brahms, Shestakovch, Greig, Liszt are ALL Romance masters with their own styles and begginings
Every Classical Composer had their own style classical music is just fucking incredible. However it is known that Composers like Tchaikovsky and Mendelson often made music for money, This does take away from the music. Liszt, Wagner and Beethoven have some of the most complex compositions going. But theres always room for some glorious little chopin waltz's along the way.
Ezra Nixon ALL composers have made music for money and it does not take away, no self-respecting artist make s a bad job, hell often themone makes them work on it with more frevor.
Ezra Nixon Chopin in my own thoughts just has this special way of creeping into your heart. For me his compositions top most, he evokes your emotions much like Beethoven, but the stories he has told through them are much more elaborate than Beethoven in my opinion. I can feel the heartbreak or the softness of the waves. I don't know but I feel like I see a whole new universe when I listen to his first ballad.
I am happy that in the world are born such great geniuses like Chopin - which means the Earth humanity has a future... Cieszę się, że w świecie rodzą się takie wielkie geniuszy jak Chopin - co oznacza, że ludzkość Ziemi ma przyszłość..... I'm just happy when listening to this great music
This was the very first Chopin piece I learnt. I played it at my middle school examination. I still play it now, 12 years later. It's one of my all time favorite pieces and I am grateful to my teacher at the time for suggesting it to me.
I really want to learn how to play, though I've stopped playing/learning how to play piano. I play tuned and untuned percussion and a little Violin now.
I remember this waltz fondly but with trepidation, I was eleven years old and I was to play this waltz at a recital. my name was called I sat down and looked at my music and.....panicked. drew a total blank. my wonderful teacher took me away from the piano. she called me back later and I finally had gotten my composure back and performed to her delight and mine. I still play this piece now from memory.thankfully it never happened again but I remember this vividly.
When I first heard this piece, as a much younger person, I realized I did not want it to end. It was so beautiful I wanted to go on and on. Now at 70 I feel the same. Thank you for this, both the composer and the player.
As I think every composer is different, everyone had his world that could only express trough music. Probably Chopin's one was a sad world, because of he losing everybody he loved and his country
I remember you. I was a little girl when I stayed at your home in Mass. while I went to camp. You took me to church, as I recall? I love Chopin. Beautiful playing!!!!!!!!!!!!
A few years ago I watched a movie called "The Lover" about a very intense love story between a rich young Chinese heir in Indochina during the French colonization period and a young French girl stuck in there to go to a boarding school for girls following her mom's strong will. Very well directed. The reason I am posting this comment is that at the last scene of the movie which also has an intense ending you can hear this waltz which gives the sad ending a romantic angle for the love story. Beautiful! I recommend you to see it.
Ashkenazy's use of rubato seems as completely lacking in ego as I can imagine a human being can be with this piece. It would be so easy to want to dwell in any of the luscious moments throughout this. He pushes forward then pulls back in all the right places in just the right amounts.
How prolific he was. Without sacrificing quality, he produced so much in his short life. He will continue to live in his masterpieces and in people's heart that he so dearly touched.
When I heard this piece for the first time I found it not only to be beautiful but funny as well. These slight, unexpected twists in the reappearing melody surprised me and really made me laugh because of how simple and playful they are.
👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👍🏻💐очень люблю это произведение. Телефоны меняю со временем, но рингтон на них , всегда эта мелодия. Да, забыла дописать, что это исполнение понравилось!
My mom had her piano book opened to this waltz and I began to play the right hand melody at a slow pace; that was when i realized how beautiful this waltz is played at a slow tempo. I put the playback on this vid at .5 and to me, the piece evokes a gothic Victorian house vibe in the first part and then a beautiful music box in the second part.
Nostalgia y dulzura en la belleza de la composición del inolvidable Frédéric Francoise Chopin, una de esas estrelas que vivirá eternamente. Gracias, Frédéric por habernos dejado tu amor en cada nota que escribiste.
my violin teacher used to talk about the apparent simplicity of Mozart, whose compositions might look easy on paper, but anything but perfection would be immediately obvious and grating. Chopin writes with an elegance and clarity that has a similar effect - even though this piece is technically easy, playing it beautifully takes a lot more than reproducing the notes. Learning this piece atm and (as a beginner on the piano) am really enjoying the fact it feels within my reach - but I know it'll take a while before I'll get it to sound anything like the way it's supposed to...
By far the best interpretation of this piece ever made. I absolutely LOVE how he makes some parts sound like full orchestras. I swear he has like, 30 french horns in the background sometimes
How could you been so in loved It shows all the feeling at the same time ! Maybe the only one who have had a clear picture of love was chopin! So whenever some body ask you what is love you can say in brief : chopin 💖
It's a beautiful piece! I'm playing it right now and when I chose this piece... it seemed hard... but after 4-5 days it turned into an easy piece. I'm auditioning this video and I love it! ❤ Thanks for doing this video!!!! 😊
I imagine a wintry ballroom in 1900, someone sat at a grand piano while women in ballgown dresses just dance silently to the music. This piece is so beautiful.
Started with the beginning... then I get a comment like “you play fur elise the wrong way” stopped playing for just slapping my own forehead and laughed.
I hate it when people say stuff like "OMG I PLAYED THIS WHEN I WAS 10 HAHAHA THAT MEANS IM BETTER THEN YOU!!!"
Music has absolutely NOTHING to do with age, its on how well you play it, and how musical/emotional you play it.
I always see comments like this, but I never see the actual young people bragging that they're better than everyone else. I don't mean any offense to you, I'm sure it happens. But I generally think its good to encourage young people to be happy about their accomplishments, as long as they understand that skillful piano playing comes with time and emotional maturity.
Too much ego as much as no ego at all is the issue. Balance is the key. In music too. :)
OMG I PLAYED THIS WHEN I WAS 10 HAHAHA THAT MEANS IM BETTER THAN YOU!!!!
Ok and i did it when i was 12
I am Chopin himself
Its good to see so many young minds taking a liking to Chopin.
Good luck to you all for the future.
this is such a nice comment. I hope you're doing well, too.
kinda late but thank you for your comment
'tis nice to hear
magical comment !!
@@adityagandhi5040 never late
@@jacku6193 🙂
That sudden switch in major to minor is absolutely stunning, it changes the mood completely
Yeah ahaha , do u also play this valse?
@@filliiiii7 I do play this vals
When you start to play it, it seems easy, a throwaway piece - then it hits you like a ton of bricks, full in the face, then you have to keep a straight face....what a genius he was!
+tmbfca Where does it start to get hard for you?
+Harry “RonaldMcBadass” Lube Yeah, the whole piece seems "easy" (chopin standard)
言程
Oh, all you do is follow the fingerings for that part. Seriously, if you use the right fingerings it's a cake walk. Maybe your book doesn't have the fingering that's right for you. So play around and find that fingering and you'll be good.
And make sure you're practicing your scales daily, including your chromatic scales.
+tmbfca exactly so - playing music is much more than just hitting the correct notes
+Harry ”RonaldMcBadass” Lube
I missed the part where music was supposed to create emotion.
Ok now I'm CONVINCED my piano must be broken cuz it definitely does NOT sound like this when I play it
@Joker ok MIND BLOWN that might be it !! and to think here I was about to just sell my broken piano and buy a new one 😱
Thank you, I'll definitely try playing it right instead of wrong, sounds like it might solve the problem
Sara Wyatt hahaha
@@sarawyatt8484 lol
XD pure gold
King1666 Oh god i cannot believe people as dumb as you exist 🤦🏻♂️ It was a JOKE that Sara wrote.
Wow, Chopin's waltzes are so sad, joyful, powerful, and beautiful at the same time... I don't even know how to describe this. This is a pure piece of art!!!!
He needed a hug so bad :'v
Olivia Oh예린 I think maybe it’s because he was born when his country was suffering a series of bad things.
They're just like how the life is. He did perfect job in reflect his feelings, this is why his music touches our hearts, and lives.
He was Chopin.:)
Лучшее из лучших исполнение этого вальса Ф.Шопена. Bravissimo!
Despite having a short life, his music will live on forever.
Because of having a short life, his music will live on forever.
@@segmentsAndCurves
Wagner: I am I joke to you?
@@vincentphan1595 But is Wagner make you cry and think about your grandma?
@@segmentsAndCurves I have yet to find a composer that does. I am just saying the age doesn't affect the ability of the composer. (Not in a bad way at least)
@@vincentphan1595 Chopin health is very bad, plus Poland at that time make his music sound... sad.
That key switch from B minor to B major is absolutely amazing
literally
But the change back tho
If you think that is a cool modulation, go start listening to Franck and Bruckner!
@@simonvanprooijen nah
@@zephthezquirrellord ?
I am learning this. I am 52 years old. I love it very much, but was hesitant that knowing Chopin wished this piece not to be published. Can not believe he was only 19, when he wrote this. But for me, adult beginner who wants to play Chopin. It is amazing.
Chopin was a really genius! All his music is amazing, awesome and beautiful!
His right and left hands sound like two entirely different instruments. The balance is juuuust right. Poi-fect.
Pol-fect
That's why he gets the big bucks.
SWING
naw, both still sound like a piano to me
EMPIRE ENTERTAINMENT & EVENTS correct
I imagine paper cutouts of people twirling in the wind whilst dancing around falling autumn leaves. Just gorgeous.
Chopin waltzes weren’t intended to be waltzed to ironically.
Bran Flakes *The more you know*
some can be waltzed others not
Learn English with Alex [engVid] 👍 Exactly what I imagine when I close my eyes
I used to watch your videos to learn English, and now that I have out you listen to such music, I'm wondering how wonderful a person can get!
Chopin's is just so logical and perfect at the same time.
Illogical yet perfect, perhaps?
Beo Bong yes
I think so too!
@@adonisadmirer2752 no its very logical, if you look at the math of this composition you will understand its very logical, that's the beauty of that composition
+@@WilliamMinkovsky
Are you referring to the phrases or something else that I didn't notice?
Who else is listening because they're learning this waltz and are struggling to play it nicely
the 152 bpm while keeping dynamics in mind is taking forever. I feel a little comfortable around 100-110 bpm with this song, but once it get's past that I lose the ability to plan out what I am doing. It's such a quick pace! But I'm slowly inching it up, day by day.
@@kakurocksman I have this problem too but recently I have been enjoying Arthur Rubinstein's version a little more. The slow pace just gives it something I prefer. I still struggle to keep the dynamics right.
Not me. But it is a nice piece
I can suggest that you buy the Henle Vertag version if you really want to play this. It is in 17 well known pieces for the piano including the A Minor Waltz so liked by all. The reason I plug Henle Vertag is someone has gone through the scores very carefully and properly fingered them. The fingering at times can seem a bit bizarre. Fur Elise definitely is. But it is worth sticking to the Henle Vertag version of fingering and having their copy of the score. The Urtext Score.
Rhyson Li me hahaha
Whenever I hear this piece, I imagine myself at the beach house, alone, sitting by the window (with white curtains blown by the breeze), looking at the view outside. It's either I'm longing for someone that I can't have, or remembering the good old times that I can't obviously go back to.. now they're just beautiful memories.
Oh Chopin... your music sometimes makes me sigh. :(
Oh no not just sometimes... very often.
Very well expressed :)
Thank you for inspiring me!
what a lovely comment. i can totally relate to that feeling so thanks for putting it into words.
This was my freshman solo performance piece back in high school. I remember hearing it for the first time and thinking 'THIS is the one I want to play.'
ditto
I’m currently a freshman, and, although I don’t have to play it for a solo piece, I had that same feeling of ‘THIS is the one I want to play!’ Gorgeous song...
Jennifer Frederick I am 12 and I am playing it
@@Adam-r2x8j I am 12 and I am doing chopins other waltz op 64 no 2. Both waltzes are amazing!!!
@@Adam-r2x8j My son's learning this song and is set to play in a recital early Feb. It's a little too hard for him (8) but yeah this is so beautiful.
Omg the section after 2:18 is SO GOOD
my MAN CHOPIN CRUSHING IT OVER HERE
He is my star!😘
Maloney Baloney, I dont care ;) lol just kidding
What I like about Chopin is his simplicity and elegance. He builds music around a short and direct idea and creates a whole beautiful universe around it. Excellent
The very first Chopin piece I ever learned.
I was going through a hard time back then, and also I was rushing myself to learn it.
I always played it so fast and practically smashing the keys. Now I realize it must be played softly, with love and tender sadness.
"Yes, Kousei. This piece must be played tenderly, just like a sweet caress on the top of a baby's head."
Actually, a very similar thing happened to me - it wasn't the first, but it was my second after the revolutionary etude
lol
kaede??
Heeey me to ( actually i am learning)
@@tommysmyth1210 Lol, where u guys study. If you have a repertoire, probably you'll learn more than two pieces of Chopin.
To me this walz sounds like a broken up couple dancing for the last time or what unrequited love fantasies would sound like. There's pain and anguish and tragedy but also sweetness and purity and above all love and persistence?....Persistence of something good or of something bad... Don't you just love how everyone gets different things from any art form I guess..I love Chopin..
Why does every Chopin's Waltz sound like so? Take for example Chopin Waltz Op.64 No.2 and other numerous pieces. Maybe because waltz is actually a dance form?
I imagine a castle-like place with the floor that's made up of checkers-colored marble and the people are waltzing in the orangish sunlight. Chopin is honestly the best romantic-period composer.
@@lilysthapit2222 Υup...I like that ....
I love a waltz because it can feel like a bit of cheeky flirtation and then like one dancer is pursuing another, round and round. There's passion, or maybe frustration, in the tempo changes, which can mimic the tones of bickering. If it's an argument, the right hand is certainly determined to win.
@@kstreet and the rubato rhythm is what makes a waltz sound emotional.
Have you seen the film The Lover (1992)? This is the final piece played in the movie and I guess spoilers but.. it’s played after they part and see each other for the last time..
너무 좋아서 악보까지 구매한 곡입니다.. 마음이 일렁이면서 오묘한 감정이 드는 곡이에요 너무 좋습니다..
Comments on this video be like:
1. Op 69, nice
2. I played this piece before
3. Well played, beautiful piece
4. Practical jokes about how Ashkenazy is so much better than u
5. Foreign languages I don’t understand
@Tuping Shen it's an interesting community of pianists
isabel giacchino I know right!
69 is a very special number
Glub Kibble A reason I don’t want to say, it’s weird how our humor evolves
6. Comments describing other comments, like yours
It is difficult for me to comprehend how great a genius Chopin was...
when I hear this I imagine pain...
pain from practicing this for 8 hrs a day..
That's because you don't practice for 40 hours
This is simple, don't need 8 hours a day to learn it
Chopin is beauty.I never get tired of listening to this work....❤
I always underestimate chopin being obsessed with beethoven and liszt. But i just cannot beleive every time i listen to chopin how fucking amazing he is.
i can't decide myself between who's the master of romantic music between Liszt and Chopin. Liszt feels so different and original to play, but at the same time Chopin's sheets feel like words in a poem
Why must there be 1 master, Chopin, Tchakovsky, Dvorzhak, Brahms, Shestakovch, Greig, Liszt are ALL Romance masters with their own styles and begginings
Every Classical Composer had their own style classical music is just fucking incredible. However it is known that Composers like Tchaikovsky and Mendelson often made music for money, This does take away from the music. Liszt, Wagner and Beethoven have some of the most complex compositions going. But theres always room for some glorious little chopin waltz's along the way.
Ezra Nixon ALL composers have made music for money and it does not take away, no self-respecting artist make s a bad job, hell often themone makes them work on it with more frevor.
Ezra Nixon Chopin in my own thoughts just has this special way of creeping into your heart. For me his compositions top most, he evokes your emotions much like Beethoven, but the stories he has told through them are much more elaborate than Beethoven in my opinion. I can feel the heartbreak or the softness of the waves. I don't know but I feel like I see a whole new universe when I listen to his first ballad.
I am 15 and I have been playing the piano for my whole life..I just learnt this piece and it's by far my favourite till now..:)
now you’re 25 😀🥹
@@boraquisitewait its so weird to think that
So what new musics have you learned in the past twelve years?🤣
I finally found this song! I am so happpppy... been listening to it but never knew the name.
It's called piece. Well never mind.
Cassandra Le
Indeed. Glad you found it but it's a piece not a song
For the last time, it's a PIECE
Don't spoil her happiness snobs haha
I am happy that in the world are born such great geniuses like Chopin - which means the Earth humanity has a future... Cieszę się, że w świecie rodzą się takie wielkie geniuszy jak Chopin - co oznacza, że ludzkość Ziemi ma przyszłość..... I'm just happy when listening to this great music
Regards from Poland :)
I feel like this should be the background music of a movie scene that shows everyone out and about in a European city before WW2.
lol, they did that but with nocturne in c sharp minor in the film,"The Pianist"
@@tacoguy764 and several other pieces from Chopin, even if they are not the core of the movie they are played.
They did that in "L'amant" (1992)by Jean Jacques Annaud, Saigon, Vietnam, 1920.
@@tacoguy764 There are two nocturnes in c sharp minor. Both Op 27 no 1 and the 20th nocturne.
This was the very first Chopin piece I learnt. I played it at my middle school examination. I still play it now, 12 years later. It's one of my all time favorite pieces and I am grateful to my teacher at the time for suggesting it to me.
Is very difficult , do u have instagram?
Classical music can be fantastic and can makes you smile like this masterpiece! ;)
“A mighty pain to love it is,
And ‘tis a pain that pain to miss;
But of all pains, the greatest pain
It is to love, but love in vain.”
-Abraham Cowley
I got to play this for my piano recital, it's a beautiful piece 💕
I really want to learn how to play, though I've stopped playing/learning how to play piano. I play tuned and untuned percussion and a little Violin now.
I think you should try it out :) It isn't too hard!
Renata Visnjic Okay!
This valse is one of the easiest valses of Shopin.And one of the best :)But mastering it like Askenazy, that is the hard thing.
Renata Visnjic sameee
I remember this waltz fondly but with trepidation, I was eleven years old and I was to play this waltz at a recital. my name was called I sat down and looked at my music and.....panicked. drew a total blank. my wonderful teacher took me away from the piano. she called me back later and I finally had gotten my composure back and performed to her delight and mine. I still play this piece now from memory.thankfully it never happened again but I remember this vividly.
Elegant and beautiful...
When I first heard this piece, as a much younger person, I realized I did not want it to end. It was so beautiful I wanted to go on and on. Now at 70 I feel the same. Thank you for this, both the composer and the player.
This is what it makes chopin different from other composers.
His music takes us to another world 🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶
As I think every composer is different, everyone had his world that could only express trough music. Probably Chopin's one was a sad world, because of he losing everybody he loved and his country
A ma mère décédée ce 25/05/2016 qui jouait magnifiquement cette valse
Qu’elle repose en paix...
Qu'elle repose en paix :((
Now your mother play in Paradise with the angels and the saints
@@Nigleuse tu ne parlais pas français ? 😂
Paix a son ame
The acoustics in this recording are remarkable - and just perfect for the atmosphere of this piece. I can't believe this is supposedly 40 years old.
I remember you. I was a little girl when I stayed at your home in Mass. while I went to camp. You took me to church, as I recall? I love Chopin. Beautiful playing!!!!!!!!!!!!
MJ T ?
Some people make me very jealous of their entire existence.
admirative is the word for me
I didn’t even think I’d love Chopin that much, but I’m glad I gave him a try.
A few years ago I watched a movie called "The Lover" about a very intense love story between a rich young Chinese heir in Indochina during the French colonization period and a young French girl stuck in there to go to a boarding school for girls following her mom's strong will. Very well directed. The reason I am posting this comment is that at the last scene of the movie which also has an intense ending you can hear this waltz which gives the sad ending a romantic angle for the love story. Beautiful! I recommend you to see it.
Jose Cossio we came from the same film
@@alessiapolito4296 x2
agree, without this beautifull move I would neved discovered this masterpiece of Chopin
Playing this at a concert tomorrow , wish me luck
nobody wished you luck
@@aondutta325 HAHAHA no problem , my concert was amazing 🤗
@@m.e.m589 Haha that's great to hear.
@@aondutta325 THANK U 😍
@@aondutta325 wholesome
Chopin, romanticismo puro. Elegante y dulce.
Uy, un papulince 😰💪😎👌
Emilio Borquez Ya vete con tus cosas de grupos autistas de Facebook a otro lado.
@@esperanzalibertadarandabazaez Quien habló del reggaeton? deja ofender algo de lo que ni siquiera se habló seguro haz de ser metalera
que paso que paso pasen contexto
Best interpretation I've ever heard!
🎹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷💐💐💐💐😇
Ashkenazi è un gigante!
2019?absolutely love this piece
What a wonderful piece. I'm playing it right now and it's really hard, but it's so wonderful that when I start practicing,it gets easier and easier.
최신순 현상앓이 미쳤다..
Juste fermé les yeux et se laisser entraîner dans cette sublime valse , magnifique.
Salut avez vous insta
Ashkenazy's use of rubato seems as completely lacking in ego as I can imagine a human being can be with this piece. It would be so easy to want to dwell in any of the luscious moments throughout this. He pushes forward then pulls back in all the right places in just the right amounts.
Amo questo valzer...non ho altro da dire...lo trovo semplicemente stupendo!!
This is the one piece I’ve heard so far that I’d say the acoustics of the room play an immenseeee role in how gorgeous this piece is.
How prolific he was. Without sacrificing quality, he produced so much in his short life. He will continue to live in his masterpieces and in people's heart that he so dearly touched.
When I heard this piece for the first time I found it not only to be beautiful but funny as well. These slight, unexpected twists in the reappearing melody surprised me and really made me laugh because of how simple and playful they are.
👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👍🏻💐очень люблю это произведение. Телефоны меняю со временем, но рингтон на них , всегда эта мелодия.
Да, забыла дописать, что это исполнение понравилось!
THANKYOU!! I've been searching the TITLE of this piece for AGES!!!
Ashkenazy plays Chopin so inspiringly. I've never heard any other pianist adapt his work the same magnificent way.
I'm learning how to play this piece. My piano teacher gave it to me today. BEAUTIFUL
Same
Im in love with this. This is my favorite piece❤❤!!
Большое спасибо! Вспомнил первого учителя по музыке!)
😂 ностальгия
@@kraltelekom6974 ,а у меня вспомнилась последняя учительница, Светлана Петровна Горбатикова.
До этого никто мне не нравился, много их было.
What a Beauty of Sound in your hands, was cut off from the world, Me and your Spell of Sound 👏👏👏👏👏👏😇
🎹🎶🎵💗😇
Such a sexy Waltz
I actually think it to be more dramatic and kinda sad at moments.
oh you
Flamenco well said
No it’s beautiful and perfect!
to me, the Farewell Waltz is the sexy waltz. huahuahehehe.
My mom had her piano book opened to this waltz and I began to play the right hand melody at a slow pace; that was when i realized how beautiful this waltz is played at a slow tempo. I put the playback on this vid at .5 and to me, the piece evokes a gothic Victorian house vibe in the first part and then a beautiful music box in the second part.
Did u play this or never?
@@filliiiii7 Only the right hand melody! I'm not a piano player but I can read music. That's how I was able to play the melody :)
@@helena8465 ohh Okay , do u have instagram? I show this piece for u, i play this in my recital
Thank you so much for putting this together and posting it. I really like being able to follow the music as I listen.
it was my first Chopin's Walz, after 8 year , i still love it
I can’t believe that when this was posted, it was still 2009. It’s already 2020.
*2021
Nostalgia y dulzura en la belleza de la composición del inolvidable Frédéric Francoise Chopin, una de esas estrelas que vivirá eternamente. Gracias, Frédéric por habernos dejado tu amor en cada nota que escribiste.
This is beautiful. Chopin is the reason I've loved piano for a decade
my violin teacher used to talk about the apparent simplicity of Mozart, whose compositions might look easy on paper, but anything but perfection would be immediately obvious and grating. Chopin writes with an elegance and clarity that has a similar effect - even though this piece is technically easy, playing it beautifully takes a lot more than reproducing the notes. Learning this piece atm and (as a beginner on the piano) am really enjoying the fact it feels within my reach - but I know it'll take a while before I'll get it to sound anything like the way it's supposed to...
By far the best interpretation of this piece ever made. I absolutely LOVE how he makes some parts sound like full orchestras. I swear he has like, 30 french horns in the background sometimes
His music is a painting Munch can't express, a poem Shakespeare can't tell, a story none have lived, a tragedy even dead can feel.
ok pooeter
Por Dios! Esto me transporta a otra dimensión...
I shook my head when the song finishes.
This is too beautiful!
I'd like to tender my highest accolade the Chopin and the performer, Ashkenazy.
Ashkenazy never fails to give an astonishing performance of Chopin's music
How could you been so in loved
It shows all the feeling at the same time ! Maybe the only one who have had a clear picture of love was chopin! So whenever some body ask you what is love you can say in brief : chopin 💖
Tout en finesse ... j'adore !
This is one of my favourite waltz that Chopin made !!!!!!!
Ever since I first heard this piece, I've wanted to play it. However, I never had time to learn it so now, during quarantine, perhaps I do? :)
How is it going?
This was the very first Chopin I learnt to play. Oh memories!
It's just so smooth. This piece is so smooth, Ashkenazy plays it so beautifully.
Just heard this on the radio it stopped me in my tracks. so sad but beautiful and somehow hopeful .amazing amazing amazing.
This has to be one of my favorite pieces of music in the history of ever. love this!
Excelente !!!!! Música grandiosa e inolvidable de Federico Chopin,gran interprete Ashkenazy.
Maravilloso vals de Federico Chopin, muy buena interpretación, Gracias por compartir
hola
Cats love Chopin. Play to your cat and just watch the expressions on their face change with the music.
@Fiona De Franco you tried it to your cat? :-)
i've played this two years ago and it was one of the best thinggs ive ever heard. It screams with pain,sadness, and emotions!
This is actually one of my favorites by Chopin. There's just something...can't really describe that feeling...
I used to play this waltz... While I'm listening my heart cries. Just 20 years never come back
this song is the sound of my life
its a piece !!
Piece...
Mine too.
No greater pleasure than listening to this while smoking a good pipe and drinking a fine wine
One of my favorite Chopin, intense, romantic and nostalgic melody..Only him could compose Valses on piano..Incredible
It's a beautiful piece! I'm playing it right now and when I chose this piece... it seemed hard... but after 4-5 days it turned into an easy piece. I'm auditioning this video and I love it! ❤ Thanks for doing this video!!!! 😊
Happy Birthday Chopin!
This is the best version on utube. Just the right tempo, glissandro, etc. Will buy the CD.
I’m playing this for a competition and it’s next week
How'd it go?
@@robertimmanuel577 not great lmaooo
@@brielle7130 rip
I imagine a wintry ballroom in 1900, someone sat at a grand piano while women in ballgown dresses just dance silently to the music. This piece is so beautiful.
By far the best of all time! I Love this man!!
This is the best interpretation i've ever heard of this piece.
Started with the beginning... then I get a comment like “you play fur elise the wrong way” stopped playing for just slapping my own forehead and laughed.
it feels like you are dancing with you beloved one in the most fairytale like hall, hearts full of emotions, wishing it all to continue endlessly.