Karl Ritcher, he was certainly a true virtuoso. Here you can see him not only playing like a beast, but conducting an orchestra and turning his pages for his own. He was one of a kind. Will be forever missed, always in my heart Maestro.
Imagine at one of these concerts. Right when the solo ends and they all join back in, some dude in the audience is all wasted and stands up and shouts Fuck Yeah!
Too bad what you hear is not what's being played on video... you can clearly see him playing staccatissimo in several places whilst there's a legato going on in the audio (e.g. 1:47). Also he's skipping whole bars, and I'm guessing that's not because of any artistic decision...
@@ChrisStockslager eems like it, the netherlands bach society often has a harpsichordist or whoever is the main instrument in the piece being played conduct alongside their playing. other than that, though, usually I don't see it.
@@ChrisStockslager I think Bach , on harpsichord, played on memory because he was shortsighted. I have the same problem. I don't know if he actually played this concerto on harpsichord because, according to Carl Philip Emanuel Bach, when there was an orchestra , he usually played the violin to better conduct the players.
Honestly, this is pretty easy compared to the harpsichord concertos. It has some tricky passages, but I guess an ambitious intermediate level player could do this after 2-3 weeks of practice. He did great, but for a player as skilled and talented as he is (or was), this probably wasn't hard at all😄😁
I was blessed to see Karl Richter playing this concerto in San Francisco in 1972. He was brilliant and received a standing ovation for the performance. I'll never forget it! Thanks for posting this!
Historically-informed Bach can be incredibly boring. To the point where I think a lot of "historically informed" types are really just trying to justify their expensive conservatory diplomas by finding fault where there is none.
Beautiful rendition by Richter. NO RUBATO HERE. That's how Back wrote his music. He was not a romantic. I absolutely enjoyed this. Thank you grumpa1936.
There is no doubt in my mind that had Karl Richter lived to a ripe old age that he would have become one of the most famous musicians of his time. He had so much to give and accomplish that who knows what this man would have accomplished and given to the world of classical music. During his lifetime nobody really realized that there was a genius in their midst. His did things that nobody at that time dared to do but yet he did it and decades later he is recognized for his momentous accomplishment.I dearly wish I could have met this man even for 5 minutes!!!
Awe-inspiring performance by a great master and scholar of Bach. Growing up on the recordings of Glenn Gould, I find a renewed passion in listening to the same works as performed by Richter. What an absolute joy to hear Bach's grand masterpieces. And, of course, SDG.
He nailed the solo all the way through without a sweat. He is one of the best performers of Bach especially with BWV 538 Toccata Dorica in D minor. Best organ performance ever. Rest in Peace Karl
The weather sure is nice here today, and made even nicer by listening to this beautiful music and sharing said music and thoughts with strangers. No, new friends. Thank the Owl for the recommendation! What relaxing and uplifting music here.
This Always send shivers down my spine. Richter and Bach, what a perfect combination. Bach must have been in really elated Spirits when he composed that.
Questo genio ci ha lasciato troppo presto. Grande Karl, sei stato il più grande interprete del grande Maestro del quale tu hai avuto l'onore di occupare il posto appartenuto a Lui. Quello di Kantor della Thomasschule di Lipsia. Non credo che Johann Sebastian amasse più di tanto quel lavoro, ma per un musicista vissuto qualche secolo dopo è stato sicuramente un grande onore. Secondo me nessuno riuscirà mai ad eguagliarti. Soprattutto nella cadenza del quinto Brandeburghese. Sei sempre nel mio cuore Karl Richter, come il nostro Maestro Johann Sebastian, il più grande di tutti i tempi.
Indubbiamente Karl Richter, kantor, organista, maestro al cembalo, direttore d'orchestra e di coro, improvvisatore, è stato il più grande interprete di Bach, il punto di riferimento, 'colui che sapeva conciliare poeticamente la fedeltà al testo con la fedeltà agli affetti, all'anima e al cuore'. Solo una piccola osservazione: Richter divenne organista nella St.Thomaskirche, poi fuggì dalla DDR e fu cantor e molto altro a Monaco di Baviera.
There is no match to this unstructured Baroque section in music......Incredible that a human could both create such music and another human reproduce it flawlessly
Un moment musical baroque exceptionnel. Merci au Kapellmeister Karl Richter et à ses musiciens d'exception pour ce concerto brandebourgeois n°5 de Bach que rien ne surpasse. Danke für alles!
Unforgettable hour when I first saw Karl Richter & Co in a German TV broadcast, wayyy back in the 80s. Since then, hooked. Thanks to be able to see this again here.
Richter's performance is so strong and the orchestra achieves such a powerful, muscular sound compared to all the other Brandenburg recordings I've heard. I had this performance on cd for a long time and was so happy to see that they took a film of the performance also. What a special moment in human history.
@@ssbphotography I'm sure the aliens will be waiting with headphones, and we'll be waiting with empty cigar boxes . C'mon, face it, we're alone so we better get our act together
I like how they chose a harpsichord with a 16’. There is evidence to indicate that Bach ordered a special harpsichord to be used with this Brandenburg concerto from the builder in Mietke which probably included a 16’ stop
Who else is here from the ex-bird-app at the suggestion of Owl at the Library (AKA Sketches by Boze)? 😂 PS. I wrote another version of this comment before, but it seems to have disappeared. I don’t know why! This time I avoided naming the app and I left out the “at” symbol from the username I mentioned.
This performance is incredible, Richter is like a beast in the cadenza😱. The orchestra is very skilled, too. In my opinion it would be even better if they used an ancient flute.
Just lovely to hear my old friend from 30 years back when I first heard this piece! Could anyone explain what the 3:14 to 3:24 type of music is called - is there any specific music term or terminology? Thanks! 🙂
Una bestia! No lo puedo creer! Como hizo? Como hizo Bach para escribir tal magnificencia y siga en el tiempo, y alguien pudiera interpretarlo mucho tiempo después? Una máquina Richter! Y Bach un genio! Es increíble ❤
God created Bach to give the universe its final shape and Bach's music created Karl Richter to give Bach's masterpiece its final shape
3:05 - "Wow... that's a pretty intense solo, Johann!"
**grin** "Watch this shit"
1:46 Find someone who looks at you the way the first chair looks at Richter's hands
Karl Ritcher, he was certainly a true virtuoso. Here you can see him not only playing like a beast, but conducting an orchestra and turning his pages for his own. He was one of a kind. Will be forever missed, always in my heart Maestro.
Imagine at one of these concerts. Right when the solo ends and they all join back in, some dude in the audience is all wasted and stands up and shouts Fuck Yeah!
could not have said it better...
Not only a great direrctor, but also an excelent harpsicord player!
Too bad what you hear is not what's being played on video... you can clearly see him playing staccatissimo in several places whilst there's a legato going on in the audio (e.g. 1:47). Also he's skipping whole bars, and I'm guessing that's not because of any artistic decision...
REST IN JESUS MAESTRO..... THANK YOU FOR THE MUSIC
Guy: Are you conduct today, play the Hapsicord, or just turn the pages?
Karl Richter: Yes.
Didn’t Bach and Händel themselves do it this way in their respective days?
@@ChrisStockslager yes they did! so did a lot of composers like mozart, beethoven and chopin majority of the time when they played their own works!
@@espressonoob Exactly! Is it done very rarely these days?
@@ChrisStockslager eems like it, the netherlands bach society often has a harpsichordist or whoever is the main instrument in the piece being played conduct alongside their playing. other than that, though, usually I don't see it.
@@ChrisStockslager I think Bach , on harpsichord, played on memory because he was shortsighted. I have the same problem. I don't know if he actually played this concerto on harpsichord because, according to Carl Philip Emanuel Bach, when there was an orchestra , he usually played the violin to better conduct the players.
It's not the fact that this is extremely hard to play anyways, it's that he does it with such an ease! Genius!
Not only playing but conducting and turning his own pages.
By memory mind you. Wow.
Honestly, this is pretty easy compared to the harpsichord concertos. It has some tricky passages, but I guess an ambitious intermediate level player could do this after 2-3 weeks of practice. He did great, but for a player as skilled and talented as he is (or was), this probably wasn't hard at all😄😁
@@consti1873 Agreed. I found his Harpsichord Concerto in G minor more difficult than this to play.
Hours and hours of practice a day for years is only way to a technique like that along with natural felicity.
Karl Richter plays the harpsichord and organ as if he were making up the music as he goes along. The mark of a true musician! Gorgeous
Not human... Definitely the most epic solo I've ever heard
I was blessed to see Karl Richter playing this concerto in San Francisco in 1972. He was brilliant and received a standing ovation for the performance. I'll never forget it! Thanks for posting this!
Que envidia!
I was surprised that the orchestra began to play at 4:00 instead of erupting into cheers
no zey r zerman (Kraig Ferguson german accent)
Same
it was actually at 4:05
certainly must be one of the highest forms of music to ever have existed ever in human history
The highest.
And some people said Bach was too boring!!! Simply amazing, another fantastic performance by the great Karl Richter.
I used to think that myself. Took me some time to understand the intelligence of his pieces
anyone who thinks bach is boring doesn't understand the genius behind his music.
Historically-informed Bach can be incredibly boring. To the point where I think a lot of "historically informed" types are really just trying to justify their expensive conservatory diplomas by finding fault where there is none.
Who says Bach is boring?
@@lipby Chopin lovers do
70 years on from my first hearing of this magnificent masterpiece... it still boggled my mind how bach was even human
Beautiful rendition by Richter. NO RUBATO HERE. That's how Back wrote his music. He was not a romantic. I absolutely enjoyed this. Thank you grumpa1936.
The harpsichord solo started, and I was just, wow, wow, woow. :D
There is no doubt in my mind that had Karl Richter lived to a ripe old age that he would have become one of the most famous musicians of his time. He had so much to give and accomplish that who knows what this man would have accomplished and given to the world of classical music. During his lifetime nobody really realized that there was a genius in their midst. His did things that nobody at that time dared to do but yet he did it and decades later he is recognized for his momentous accomplishment.I dearly wish I could have met this man even for 5 minutes!!!
Me too.
But he was! The first still now for Bach and Haendel.
I love how Karl has those page flips memorized and looks at them for half a second, almost for pleasure.
Bach and Richter from another world.
Karl Richter = Karl der Große, wie hier eindrucksvoll dokumentiert wird, absolut souverän und virtuos!!!
Just imagine the pressure of not getting a wrong note o_o; amazing!
Karl Richter ist immer unter uns ! Es sind immer wieder die schönsten Momente im Leben Ihn spielen zu hören!
I feel the same, Richter is unforgettable, unique and always in our hearts. Too soon gone.
Absolutely marvelous. rip richter, you technical skills were the best of the 20th century.
Awe-inspiring performance by a great master and scholar of Bach. Growing up on the recordings of Glenn Gould, I find a renewed passion in listening to the same works as performed by Richter. What an absolute joy to hear Bach's grand masterpieces. And, of course, SDG.
Definitely
Yes, Solo Dei Gloria
L'avrò ascoltato miliardi di volte e non mi ha mai stufato!
Anche me :'3
this guy died so young, the world lost a Genius.
just like Glenn Gould.
@@stevenxia2944 gould sucks
And a Bravo for the harpsichord, it has the power of a concert grand here.
He nailed the solo all the way through without a sweat. He is one of the best performers of Bach especially with BWV 538 Toccata Dorica in D minor. Best organ performance ever. Rest in Peace Karl
When a great musician plays a masterpiece we can just listen and be happy that we can listen to it. Thank you for the upload of this wonderfull video.
This is my personal favorite performance!
Beautiful music, and beautiful conversation -- who could want more from the latest social network!
The weather sure is nice here today, and made even nicer by listening to this beautiful music and sharing said music and thoughts with strangers. No, new friends. Thank the Owl for the recommendation! What relaxing and uplifting music here.
This is the most impressive thing I have ever seen.
This Always send shivers down my spine. Richter and Bach, what a perfect combination. Bach must have been in really elated Spirits when he composed that.
Merveilleux Karl Richter ! c'est suite à l'écoute de ce morceau que j'ai eu envie de devenir musicienne à 13 ans !🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
i love seeing the man playing the flute smile while enjoying Richter's playing of the wonderful harpsichord
Best piece of music in the universe and all time. Nothing can top Brandenburg concerto 5. Nothing
it is a serious contender indeed
The cadenza is insanity for it's time, but I would put many pieces on the same level as this. A true tie!
i am agree
Questo genio ci ha lasciato troppo presto. Grande Karl, sei stato il più grande interprete del grande Maestro del quale tu hai avuto l'onore di occupare il posto appartenuto a Lui. Quello di Kantor della Thomasschule di Lipsia. Non credo che Johann Sebastian amasse più di tanto quel lavoro, ma per un musicista vissuto qualche secolo dopo è stato sicuramente un grande onore. Secondo me nessuno riuscirà mai ad eguagliarti. Soprattutto nella cadenza del quinto Brandeburghese. Sei sempre nel mio cuore Karl Richter, come il nostro Maestro Johann Sebastian, il più grande di tutti i tempi.
Indubbiamente Karl Richter, kantor, organista, maestro al cembalo, direttore d'orchestra e di coro, improvvisatore, è stato il più grande interprete di Bach, il punto di riferimento, 'colui che sapeva conciliare poeticamente la fedeltà al testo con la fedeltà agli affetti, all'anima e al cuore'. Solo una piccola osservazione: Richter divenne organista nella St.Thomaskirche, poi fuggì dalla DDR e fu cantor e molto altro a Monaco di Baviera.
After reading your beautiful Italian words, I think that I am going to dedicate more time to learn your poetic language.
There is no match to this unstructured Baroque section in music......Incredible that a human could both create such music and another human reproduce it flawlessly
This is fantastic. Just look at the hall they are playing in. Wow. This is just too great to describe.
The sound is almost organ-like. Love this recording and the masterful playing of… well, the master.
Karl Richter is a wonderful conductor.
If beauty could kill I would have died hundreds of time already by hearing this composition and performance. No words !!!!!
the best in his game
Un moment musical baroque exceptionnel. Merci au Kapellmeister Karl Richter et à ses musiciens d'exception pour ce concerto brandebourgeois n°5 de Bach que rien ne surpasse. Danke für alles!
More delectable than cake, and fewer cavities.
That solo is one the best things I've ever heard
Their faces after 4:05 THAT is leadership
He completely and utterly nails it.
You can see in their faces that they know that they are very lucky to be with him.
Yo yo, new social network!🎉
Oh yeah let’s do this!
@@chickenfish7166I’m ready! 😂
And my axe!
Wow. Many thanks for posting this. Never heard a better interpretation of this great solo. Richter makes it look so easy.
A gifted man
Richter, my favorite player when I was young
Absolute madness. What superb chaps. Bach for writing and Mr Richter for the rest. Stunning.
Karl Richter was a fucking beast.
Unforgettable hour when I first saw Karl Richter & Co in a German TV broadcast, wayyy back in the 80s. Since then, hooked.
Thanks to be able to see this again here.
Great artist. Great Maestro.
A wonderful man.
best solo ever written
Il love Karl Richetr in this concert... ""Simply"" wonderful!
My goodness that was incredible.
WONDERFUL! one of my favourites! i'm happy that someone still likes this ART!
Richter's performance is so strong and the orchestra achieves such a powerful, muscular sound compared to all the other Brandenburg recordings I've heard. I had this performance on cd for a long time and was so happy to see that they took a film of the performance also. What a special moment in human history.
rezilla1 it was karl richter's Brandenburg recording that they sent into space on the golden record of Voyager 2
Yes, the concert n.2, on Voyager 1 & 2 in 1977 I think.
@@ssbphotography I'm sure the aliens will be waiting with headphones, and we'll be waiting with empty cigar boxes . C'mon, face it, we're alone so we better get our act together
This isn't a harpsichord solo, this is magic and god
Now this is the proper way to play this bad ass piece!
1:26 solo starts.
Superbe interprétation.
one of my favorite interpretations of this solo
einfach brilliant! eine blitzsaubere Bach-Interpretation mit einer Instrumentierung, die dieser zeit auch tatsächlich entspricht!
Just stunning.
Amazing 🤩. Also amazing that the harpsichord player is also conducting, and turning his own music pages.
This is madness. And it's on UA-cam for everyone to see FOR FREE!
I like how they chose a harpsichord with a 16’. There is evidence to indicate that Bach ordered a special harpsichord to be used with this Brandenburg concerto from the builder in Mietke which probably included a 16’ stop
Here in case of twitter collapse.
Still waiting for my bluesky invite, so…. Let’s gooooooo
Huh?
Can someone explain
Who else is here from the ex-bird-app at the suggestion of Owl at the Library (AKA Sketches by Boze)? 😂
PS. I wrote another version of this comment before, but it seems to have disappeared. I don’t know why! This time I avoided naming the app and I left out the “at” symbol from the username I mentioned.
Hey! I am here for similar reasons. There was an epic comment community on the AV Club’s review of the season finale of community (Season 5?)
@@Wmblair I didn’t know about that! Sounds cool!
Thanks for this amazing video! Up the Bach, from Brazil.
That is truly an insane solo. Bach would be proud.
Gotta come back to this every once and a while.
Your concertos are the greatest, Bach.
Absolute genius.
No.
Each to his own.
Yes! Oui, ja da sì!!!
Favuloso, que energia y que elegancia. Bravo
This performance is incredible, Richter is like a beast in the cadenza😱. The orchestra is very skilled, too. In my opinion it would be even better if they used an ancient flute.
Filippo Zaccaria 0:26 very beautyfull
The baroque flute and baroque violin have much more color than their modern counterparts. But the baroque flute is not audible in a large space.
@@brumels1570 especially for the violin, the extra colour is worth nothing if someone plays it simply bad.
merciless & stratospheric
this is the best by far!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Just lovely to hear my old friend from 30 years back when I first heard this piece!
Could anyone explain what the 3:14 to 3:24 type of music is called - is there any specific music term or terminology? Thanks! 🙂
Amazing how you end up cheering him on like you're at a football match when he's just playing a few minutes of music at a harpsichord
that's beautiful!!
Una bestia! No lo puedo creer! Como hizo? Como hizo Bach para escribir tal magnificencia y siga en el tiempo, y alguien pudiera interpretarlo mucho tiempo después? Una máquina Richter! Y Bach un genio! Es increíble ❤
Fantastic!!
I have no words...
Allen: First there was the creation, somewhat later J.S. Bach, rocket forward and there was Karl Richter.
Excellent interpretation! Karl Richter is a great musician! 👌
amazing talent
FINALLY A PIECE THAT FEATURES THE HARPSICHORD... I've been looking for songs like this everywhere but couldn't find anything that I really wanted 0
Not a song, called a piece
You joking?
The 'harpsichord' in this video is a revival harpsichord, unlike the (much more beautiful in my opinion) harpsichords Bach knew in his time.
You must be deaf. Search for real harpsichords
Karl e o cravo formam um elemento só: alma e instrumento. Maravilhoso.
This is a modern day guitar solo but on a Harpsichord. Brilliant.
Sublime. Bach was a genius and this performance is stunning.
To me Bach will always be the ultimate Rock Star, this harpsichord solo riff jams... if there ever was a god, Bach was it.
To watch Richter's hands is to watch Bach's hands. Totally groovy time travel.
3:07 sounds like he is playing heavy metal with an electric guitar no joke close your eyes and listen. Thats sick Bach Rocked it out baby
Classic music is better than rock... comparation do not applie, thanks!
Walter Lee of course i just saying it crazy how crazy and down they got back then
XD haha ok man!
A lot of heavy metal was inspired by classical...
Jacob Woods This isn't the classical period actually, I don't think any ''heavy metal'' was inspired by say Haydn...
Un puriste ... magnifique!
magnifique!!!
merci pour ce chef-d'oeuvre