Questa Musica mi fa impazzire ogni volta che l'ascolto ed è come la prima volta. Una Magia di sensazioni si impadronisce di me: un prato fiorito, un cielo stellato, un abbraccio di cuori rapiti. A. Dvorak, grazie. Tutti sono bravi. Meraviglioso infinito paradiso di suoni. Grazie ❤🌷
This has to be one of finest performances ever of this great work. I enjoyed it immensely - thank you so much. It has the same stature as the performances given by the great Thomas Igloi with the MYO from Birmingham back in the 1967-69 season.
Selon ma sensibilité, je considère que la lumière la plus éblouissante du génie, de l esprit d un compositeur, se situe dans les mouvements lents, expressifs. Celui ci est merveilleux, frissonnant, tellement beau. Et remarquablement rendu par l orchestre et le soliste. Merci.
'Just wondering, and hoping that someone has commented, that the final movement includes what I call The Mother - in - Law Music. What an extraordinary tribute from the composer to his lately - deceased, and much - loved, Mom - in - Law. *PLUS, this quote from Young-Jin Hur [Daniel Muller-Schott concurring],"And then we have the famous episode of Brahms remarking that if he had known that a cello concerto could come out so well as done by Dvorak, he would have written one himself!" It really is a true masterpiece, and, IMHO, this is a Great performance.
There are two Dvorak cello concertos. The first one in A major is an early work that he never published in his life time and didn’t orchestrate either. It was published after his death in the early 20th century, though Dvorak never intended it to be. So it’s sort of stupid to call the B minor one number 2, but technically it is right.
dvorak wrote the A major cello concerto and gave it to a cellist who was meant to debut it, but the cellist moved away and took the only copy of the concerto with him and dvorak lost it and it was never orchestrated
@@idktbh2318 It's the only completed cello concerto by Dvořák; nobody cares about the early abandoned one. There is absolutely no tradition of referring to it as Number 2. To do so is just confusing and pernickety.
I don’t get the excessive praise lavished on this performance. Surely he is an excellent cellist, but does this performance rank amongst the best ever? Not even close. His playing of the second subject for instance has many awkward moments, and throughout there are constant moments of instability in the intonation and rhythm. The vibrato too is often a bit slack, and not enhancing the phrase. He’s very talented, but not yet one of the greats.
@@camilmoujaber4813 I haven't been playing the cello for 27 years, have heard over 40 versions of it on CD, and many more live, and am not myself a professional musician and cellist then?
@@celloguy you're entitled to your opinion, but so are the people who have nothing but praise for this young cellist's interpretation. After decades of being a musician, you really should be aware of the subjectivity of artistic beauty by now. I'm also a cellist (albeit not as experienced as you are), and I think this is one of the best recordings of this concerto to date. If you judge the playing in a vacuum, then sure, you might be able to find a handful of better renditions, but that sort of quasi scientific approach to judging music is not the one most people use. Most of us see a young man playing one of the most daunting and sensitive pieces of music ever written for cello, and we see him doing it live, in front of a huge audience. His playing is pure, and he's being vulnerable. He's not writing an academic paper: he's making art.
@@euomu Of course we can agree to disagree. But when did I claim it was scientific? Neither am I looking at the performance in a vacuum, quite the contrary, I'm placing it in the context of the last 100 years of recorded history of cello playing. Everything I've mentioned is a matter of taste. My claim is that if people aren't bothered by poor intonation, rhythm, and phrasing, they don't have good taste. I think people are attracted to the good looking young man and are looking past the serious lapses in artistic ability/sensibility of this cellist: a tale as old as time!
You are spot on, he is many many steps from the expertise and masterpiece that the greats offer, but I must admit his passion showed in his performance and it was rock solid. Tempo issues, some shifting slip ups and so forth. Most people that comment don't really know what they are talking about when they call this one of the greatest performances in history, and that's okay. Even though this is a competition it was posted to be enjoyed, not necessarily to be critiqued and I think we can all agree it was a fantastic performance by the young cellist.
Questa Musica mi fa impazzire ogni volta che l'ascolto ed è come la prima volta. Una Magia di sensazioni si impadronisce di me: un prato fiorito, un cielo stellato, un abbraccio di cuori rapiti.
A. Dvorak, grazie.
Tutti sono bravi. Meraviglioso infinito paradiso di suoni. Grazie ❤🌷
My god, that fourth finger vibrato is to die for. Bravissimo!
Do you know what the Fourth Finger is in string playing?
The last one
@@artyjaycayairlinesthe pinkie finger
@@BellaNathaliaeven on clarinet and piano, the fourth is not the best friend😅
the principal flutist is incredible
Impacting: Composer, soloist, orchestra, naipes, sound and filming. Bravo!!!!
Dvořák Cello Concerto n. 2 in B minor is King of all of Cello Concerto in the world.
more beautiful than we imagine.
followed by Elgar ;)
@@idktbh2318 Then Haydn
@@kingchubbythe1541 yeah haydn in D right?
@@idktbh2318 c for me at least.
@@kingchubbythe1541 fair! i like the D major better
In my opinion this is the best concerto ever written and 11:26/29:23/30:50 are the best parts of the concerto.
That's a bold opinion
6:36 i love this part i replayed almost x100
EVERYBODY is truly amazing here. I love Dvorak piano concerto but this Cello Concerto is a true masterpiece.
His violin concerto is also amazing 🤩
It is a masterpiece. In technical aspect- orchestration- and musically too.
Wonderful performance. Everyone is first rate. The wind players are terrific. The 2nd oboist nails his very difficult part.
...too much for such a young man!
...and he accomplishes his task so wonderfully just like an older and very experiênced 😊one! BRAVO, YOUNG MAN!
This has to be one of finest performances ever of this great work. I enjoyed it immensely - thank you so much.
It has the same stature as the performances given by the great Thomas Igloi with the MYO from Birmingham back in the 1967-69 season.
Du Pre’s 1st movement is better than Bruno’s imo.
only different...
One of the best cello concertos along with Elgar's one
Thank you for uploading in stereo sound, unlike the earlier uploads. :)
I wish there was a recording of this on Apple Music. It would be one of my top versions of this concerto.
Wow one the best performance I've heard yet. Such great recording quality too! Thanks so much
Well played, Bruno, in this worlds finest cello consert
Quel magnifique pièce de musique. De loin le meilleur concerto pour violoncelle à mes yeux !
Marvellous - Bruno poured his heart and soul into the performance.
36:22
39:31
Violin Solos.
Très belle interprétation, d'une fluidité majestueuse !
le style est épique, l'affichage du violoncelle est unique en son genre. d'où viens-tu ?
Selon ma sensibilité, je considère que la lumière la plus éblouissante du génie, de l esprit d un compositeur, se situe dans les mouvements lents, expressifs.
Celui ci est merveilleux, frissonnant, tellement beau.
Et remarquablement rendu par l orchestre et le soliste.
Merci.
He is the best
4:20
Que emoción... una bellísima interpretacion.
Absolutely stunning.
This Concerto makes my soul warm. I've listened to music since I was a baby and there's nothing quite like this that speaks to me in the same way.
Thanks a lot for your unloading ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
magnifique violoncelliste
Gorgeous
Indeed,wonderful performance ❤❤❤❤❤
Absolutely glorious!
At 15:46 a good number to start off with is the one with no kids
¡Majestuoso!
Wonderful!
BRAVIIIIIIIIII🎉
BRAVOOOOOOO 🌹
SUBLIME❤️❤️❤️💋
'Just wondering, and hoping that someone has commented, that the final movement includes what I call The Mother - in - Law Music. What an extraordinary tribute from the composer to his lately - deceased, and much - loved, Mom - in - Law. *PLUS, this quote from Young-Jin Hur [Daniel Muller-Schott concurring],"And then we have the famous episode of Brahms remarking that if he had known that a cello concerto could come out so well as done by Dvorak, he would have written one himself!" It really is a true masterpiece, and, IMHO, this is a Great performance.
Only laureate 2017? He is a fantastic musician!
Perfect ...bravo!!
Ottimo Bravo
Merci, merveilleux clip
wish Dvořák had 10 cello concertos.
wonderful!!
29:34
The Triangle-
Never seen that featured before 😂
If the second movement doesn't play as the gates of heaven open, I'm not going.
Couldn't agree more!
Good luck with that. Heaven is not a real place.
Good luck with that. There are so much more heavenly music that the chance they happen to pick this one is minuscule.
@@amandaaunko6535 Perhaps, but this music is from heaven!
Hope he won 😭😭
Die natürlichste Interpretation dieses Werk bisher...
7:37/8:38 are repeated 85 times in the gig
this performance is beyond words.
Very coolvk I d rockvon dream big dreams do come true
Mon Dieu , quel récital ! le nombreux public a du se régaler !
Starts at 0:40
At 8:48 a new one will arrive on Monday so I can go over there with them
18:00
At 7:31 I was going
🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏❤️❤️❤️
4:00
12:30 14:54
What cello is he playing? a Tononi in this concert?
22:18
21:22
24:25
36:35
wait in so confused isn't there only one dovark cello concerto why dose it say no. 2
There are two Dvorak cello concertos. The first one in A major is an early work that he never published in his life time and didn’t orchestrate either. It was published after his death in the early 20th century, though Dvorak never intended it to be. So it’s sort of stupid to call the B minor one number 2, but technically it is right.
@@celloguy ok thank you so much that makes more sense
I am not sure
, πρώτη φορά το βλέπω
35:40
🙏🎀~* 🌸
He was the first person to be
Gonzalez Larry Martinez Charles Miller Mary
Dvorak Cello Concerto N.2??????
yeah the 1st is in A major
@@idktbh2318 It wasn't even orchestrated. This, Op.104, is THE Dvorak cello concerto. To call it "No.2" is just being pedantic.
@@joshgrumiaux6820 Okaay? It’s still number 2.
dvorak wrote the A major cello concerto and gave it to a cellist who was meant to debut it, but the cellist moved away and took the only copy of the concerto with him and dvorak lost it and it was never orchestrated
@@idktbh2318 It's the only completed cello concerto by Dvořák; nobody cares about the early abandoned one. There is absolutely no tradition of referring to it as Number 2. To do so is just confusing and pernickety.
Er spie=ieltnicht nur schön er ist schön
La culture européenne, franchement quoi de mieux?
add comment lol
結婚して
박진경이 더욱 매력적 이다
I don’t get the excessive praise lavished on this performance. Surely he is an excellent cellist, but does this performance rank amongst the best ever? Not even close. His playing of the second subject for instance has many awkward moments, and throughout there are constant moments of instability in the intonation and rhythm. The vibrato too is often a bit slack, and not enhancing the phrase. He’s very talented, but not yet one of the greats.
I don't think you know what you're talking about.
@@camilmoujaber4813 I haven't been playing the cello for 27 years, have heard over 40 versions of it on CD, and many more live, and am not myself a professional musician and cellist then?
@@celloguy you're entitled to your opinion, but so are the people who have nothing but praise for this young cellist's interpretation. After decades of being a musician, you really should be aware of the subjectivity of artistic beauty by now.
I'm also a cellist (albeit not as experienced as you are), and I think this is one of the best recordings of this concerto to date.
If you judge the playing in a vacuum, then sure, you might be able to find a handful of better renditions, but that sort of quasi scientific approach to judging music is not the one most people use. Most of us see a young man playing one of the most daunting and sensitive pieces of music ever written for cello, and we see him doing it live, in front of a huge audience. His playing is pure, and he's being vulnerable. He's not writing an academic paper: he's making art.
@@euomu Of course we can agree to disagree. But when did I claim it was scientific? Neither am I looking at the performance in a vacuum, quite the contrary, I'm placing it in the context of the last 100 years of recorded history of cello playing. Everything I've mentioned is a matter of taste. My claim is that if people aren't bothered by poor intonation, rhythm, and phrasing, they don't have good taste. I think people are attracted to the good looking young man and are looking past the serious lapses in artistic ability/sensibility of this cellist: a tale as old as time!
You are spot on, he is many many steps from the expertise and masterpiece that the greats offer, but I must admit his passion showed in his performance and it was rock solid. Tempo issues, some shifting slip ups and so forth. Most people that comment don't really know what they are talking about when they call this one of the greatest performances in history, and that's okay. Even though this is a competition it was posted to be enjoyed, not necessarily to be critiqued and I think we can all agree it was a fantastic performance by the young cellist.
Starts at 0:39
0:55
0:40
4:10
19:58
10:27
4:19
36:21
11:25