Hear Me Out - An Interview With Evgeny Kissin

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  • Опубліковано 30 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 86

  • @oneginee
    @oneginee 12 років тому +11

    His playing at the end of Liszt La Campanela is stupendous inhumanly virtuosic like only russian school can do. This is not possible, the way he played.

    • @vanesaindij
      @vanesaindij 4 роки тому

      He didn't learn in formal music school

    • @xlyal8908
      @xlyal8908 3 роки тому

      @@vanesaindij And what is Gnessin Music School suppose to be?

  • @slsherwoodwells
    @slsherwoodwells 13 років тому +3

    Danke schon-Max Kohn!!-for bringing this so vital side of Evgeny Kissin to us-Thankyou, Thankyou!!!!!!!!

  • @archerponty5289
    @archerponty5289 6 років тому +30

    He speaks English, French Russian and Yiddish amd still finds time to play the piano!

    • @andrewjmesser
      @andrewjmesser 4 роки тому +4

      Didn't you watch the interview? He speaks piano... 😉

  • @TheCaithleen
    @TheCaithleen 4 роки тому +4

    What a wonderful listener,the true makings of a good interview.....Bravo

  • @tashkent42
    @tashkent42 7 років тому +18

    Very good Yiddish spoken.Bravo Kissin!

  • @GONZOftw2k
    @GONZOftw2k 11 років тому +6

    Without ever having learned about Yiddish, as a german I can understand so insanely much of that

  • @kgiven100
    @kgiven100 14 років тому +3

    Great talk, Evgeny is so authentic here indeed))))))))))))))

  • @SimonTime
    @SimonTime 13 років тому +1

    Wonderful that Kissin does not deny his cultural heritage and openly talks about his jewishness. Of course being so musical learning languages would come easy to him.
    Remember Arthur Rubinstein? Also spoke fluently many languages.
    What a remarkable person Kissin is. Touched and blessed by the gods. Elizabeth

  • @oneginee
    @oneginee 12 років тому +6

    that interview sounded a lot like a great psychoanalyst session actually. lol.

  • @erpollock
    @erpollock 7 місяців тому

    I had no idea Evgeny Kissin spoke Yiddish! Well done. He heard his grandparents speaking Yiddish as a secret language and picked it up. Very interesting. And he learned to read Yiddish. Notice the look of admiration of the Forwards interviewer. No one of 52 knows Yiddish nowadays. He is 52 now. Fascinating. Kissin is obviously brilliant at more than music.

  • @mrearlygold
    @mrearlygold 7 років тому +3

    I've got to see this fellow in person and by the looks of his schedule a short trip across the atlantic to the land of NON gmo's seems to be appropriate. Good food, great music, my wife by my side, who could ask for more?

  • @garfreed
    @garfreed 14 років тому +7

    I wish I had a Yiddish-speaking psychoanalyst.

    • @vanesaindij
      @vanesaindij 4 роки тому +2

      It was the Freud's mamme tongue, too

  • @jasmine543210
    @jasmine543210 13 років тому +8

    It's fascinating listening to Yiddish, when you have a good grasp of German!

  • @klauskeller7617
    @klauskeller7617 3 роки тому +2

    The man has a beautiful voice. I would like to hear audio books read by Kissin in Yiddish. Maybe short stories or something with a lot of yiddish humor.

  • @slsherwoodwells
    @slsherwoodwells 13 років тому +1

    So sorry, Respectfully, Dr. Max Kohn-Danke!!

  • @danialbrown4417
    @danialbrown4417 7 років тому +5

    There he is!!! Idc what he says... I will always love kissin nerd

  • @oneginee
    @oneginee 12 років тому +3

    I think it's sweat. I think if you calculate the amount of energy required to physically move these keys the way he did, it is superhuman. Not surprising his body temperature must have shoot up.

    • @quaver1239
      @quaver1239 6 років тому

      And that was at the Proms during one of the hottest August months on record! No cooling system in British concert halls! Poor guy. The back of his jacket was wet through.

  • @Babsie4826
    @Babsie4826 8 років тому +4

    what language is he speaking? I think he is the best at what he does.

  • @beatlessteve1010
    @beatlessteve1010 2 роки тому

    I have the same nostalgia hearing my Buby and Zeida speaking yiddish

  • @armandinarodarte9728
    @armandinarodarte9728 4 роки тому

    He is genius in everything

  • @horatiodreamt
    @horatiodreamt 11 років тому

    He plays La Campanella quite well. BTW, please listen to the late Sergio Fiorentino's amazing interpretation posted on YT. It's stunning.

  • @cartolaia5233
    @cartolaia5233 11 років тому +4

    he also speaks french...

  • @worras2007
    @worras2007 11 років тому +2

    If you know German, Yiddish is almost the same - like simplified German written in Hebrew letters (to put it roughly).

    • @vanesaindij
      @vanesaindij 4 роки тому +1

      80% of German… and a mix of others… and a VERY different mind

    • @haroldgoodman130
      @haroldgoodman130 Рік тому +1

      Yiddish is not German. It is a separate language with separate grammar, many vocabulary differences and a Jewish soul/heart. And, also, it is older than current German.

  • @buddy11212
    @buddy11212 12 років тому +1

    @chpnlzt THANK YOU FOR THE CAPS I'D NOT READ IT OTHERWISE!!!

  • @CHEAPESTSoftware
    @CHEAPESTSoftware 11 років тому +4

    It Sounds Like Deutsch..
    I can recognize some same pronunciations

  • @worras2007
    @worras2007 11 років тому +3

    Its vocabulary is some 95 per cent German. With simplified German language grammar rules. And written in Jewish alphabet which is also 95 per cent similar to Hebrew (also simplified). And no wonder why Polish accent is here - Yddish was mostly used in the territory of Poland, West Ukraine, Lithuania. It is like "Esperanto" for the East European Jews..

  • @crowdmaker
    @crowdmaker 8 років тому

    Sounds like he got a little unstuck around the end. But very refined take on the piece. Not my favorite, but I rather liked it.

  • @TheCaithleen
    @TheCaithleen 4 роки тому

    Genius

  • @chrish12345
    @chrish12345 13 років тому +1

    @Lieder83 welsh, he had an Auntie in Cardiff and combed the sheep in the summers

  • @jay241942
    @jay241942 12 років тому

    If you play this backwards, it says the devil made me do it, among other things

  • @snaaptaker
    @snaaptaker 12 років тому +3

    Oy, gewalt!!! :-))

  • @elianastewart2854
    @elianastewart2854 2 роки тому

    I love you Kissing, but your hair, my God!

  • @oneginee
    @oneginee 12 років тому

    or gentile girl. Based on his answer to the last question I think he has a open mind about that.

  • @oneginee
    @oneginee 12 років тому

    If this is Yiddish then it sounds 95% german. That explains a lot about many things

  • @manolete340
    @manolete340 12 років тому

    why he makes that pause when he is speaking ? it seems to be because he can't find the words to say what he is thinking or it't because of his try to remember ?

    • @mosichat
      @mosichat 6 років тому +1

      He's a "pauser" even in his mother tongue.

  • @Forverts
    @Forverts  13 років тому +1

    Yiddish!!!!!!

  • @aptsys
    @aptsys 12 років тому +1

    He has an advantage though...

  • @skybart
    @skybart 12 років тому

    It's obviously just a dialect of German. And much easier to understand than, for instance, Swiss German. Only word I'd never heard before was "khatoshem" for "months," but maybe that wasn't the proper Yiddish word.

    • @andrewlenihan6548
      @andrewlenihan6548 3 роки тому

      “Khoydesh” is a month. ‘Khadoshim” is “months”

  • @garfreed
    @garfreed 14 років тому

    An alte geschichte. Isn't it always an old story?

  • @Mr1329932
    @Mr1329932 12 років тому

    how the hell did you get evgeny kissin in your house?

  • @microsoftice6498
    @microsoftice6498 6 років тому +3

    hat was von deutsch finde ich

  • @MisterAlbertoPiano
    @MisterAlbertoPiano 11 років тому +1

    And German!

  • @gowheregodgoes
    @gowheregodgoes 12 років тому +1

    LOL!!!

  • @golosistiny8639
    @golosistiny8639 9 років тому +4

    To skybart:Not "khatoshem", but "khadoshim"; it IS a proper Yiddish word of Hebrew origin (singular is "khoydesh").And what about all the other words of non-German origin used in this interview: "sholem-aleykhem - aleykhem-sholem" (how do you do), "avade" (of course), "lemoshl" (for example), "mishpokhe" (family), "bobe" (grandmother), "zeyde" (grandfather), "zikhroynom livrokhe" (blessed be their memory), "dorem" (south), "tsad" (side), "beshas" (during), "dache" (country house), "a sakh" (a lot), "dor" (generation), "tsi" (or), "afile" (even), "yarid" (fair), "oysyes" (letters), "oyfn" (manner), "alef-beys" (alphabet), "sof-kol-sof" (finally), "matone" (gift), "shayekh" (concerning), "take" (precisely)?Yiddish is not "just a dialect of German", but a separate language. 70% of its words are of German origin, 20% - of Hebrew origin and 10% - of Slavic origin. And it's written in the Hebrew alphabet.

    • @fredrikrugby
      @fredrikrugby 8 років тому

      dache seems to be fr Russian? In Russian it's дача dacha

    • @judyanddavid
      @judyanddavid 8 років тому

      Golos Istiny of the

  • @rosemarie2841
    @rosemarie2841 4 роки тому

    🙏🎶😊🇩🇪

  • @knallfroosch
    @knallfroosch 8 років тому +4

    God it is really confused because this is not German but it basically it is all German Dialects, Swiss, Dutch and Swedish combined. I am from Austria but I understand everything xD

    • @Sandra_dV
      @Sandra_dV 7 років тому +1

      I agree with you. I speak German and can understand nearly everything!

    • @judyanddavid
      @judyanddavid 7 років тому

      LDC Tech n

    • @vanjavanja3905
      @vanjavanja3905 7 років тому

      KNALLFROOSCH WELCHE SPRACHE SPRICHT ER???

    • @vanesaindij
      @vanesaindij 4 роки тому

      Yiddish isn't a Dialect, is a Language

  • @maestros17
    @maestros17 11 років тому

    german, but he speak with heavy russian accent

  • @awayfromallsuns
    @awayfromallsuns 12 років тому +1

    no comprendo

  • @fortepianowalter
    @fortepianowalter 13 років тому

    Excuse me but what language is this???

  • @Crosswindhater
    @Crosswindhater 11 років тому

    Das ist gut wenn man deutsch kann kann man auch das verstehn was die sagen.

  • @matches0
    @matches0 11 років тому

    I DON'T KNOW WHAT WE'RE YELLING ABOUT

  • @OCaseyNat-z7w
    @OCaseyNat-z7w 2 місяці тому

    Hernandez Brian Walker Melissa Gonzalez Eric

  • @alexandredavid3812
    @alexandredavid3812 3 роки тому

    I thought the thumbnail was Borat

  • @Dan474834
    @Dan474834 13 років тому

    Speaks rather loud doesn't he?

  • @piano0b
    @piano0b 13 років тому

    lol i speak german and understand most of it. what an irony

  • @sergeygodun2173
    @sergeygodun2173 4 роки тому

    Warum klingt diese Sprache genauso wie Deutsch????????

  • @unterdemweiden
    @unterdemweiden 11 років тому

    don't exaggerate... almost each German speaks German, English and a kind of German dialect like this Yiddish, some German also speak French... so that is nothing for people from the old continent...

  • @SevenUpHub
    @SevenUpHub 12 років тому +1

    This is german

  • @MrAndieMusik
    @MrAndieMusik 12 років тому

    There's far too much uninteresting talk about Yiddish language. I would have much preferred speaking about music, piano pieces and composers.

    • @vanesaindij
      @vanesaindij 4 роки тому

      But it is published by Forverts