@@lukeschofield574 fair enough but any norma person would expect clapping at a very difficult part rather than a part where he is just spamming two notes
Non musicians don’t know what to listen for in difficulty of music. They usually cheer for stuff like scales and chromatics, but don’t know that is one of the easiest things
You don't get it.... The part is the o ly part of the Piece when crowd CAN applaud. It's the way for a pianist to show how he master the piece and the crowd to applaud him before the final great part. You can watch the Lang Lang performance 2012. You'll note that this happens too, because it's acceptable.
@@milanerdei2527 This is a list put together by rousseau, but as he mentions, Difficulty is very subjective, and the difficulty of pieces are different for each pianist because the strengths very from musician to musician. 10) Balakirev - Islamey This piece often gets thrown around as being 'the most difficult piano piece'. Though insanely virtuosic and really beautiful melodically, this romantic work is far from the most difficult piano piece ever composed. 9) Beethoven - Hammerklavier (Piano Sonata No. 29) As the name suggests, this mammoth of a Sonata (which is almost 1 hour long) contains Beethoven's typical intensity, but also his beautiful melodic writing that makes it a challenge both physically and musically. The Fugue in particular is nigh on impossible to perform at the tempo Beethoven wrote, and is rarely attempted at full tempo even by pianists today. Legend says Beethoven claimed no one would be able to play it in 100 years, though not even 20 years after completion, a certain young Franz Liszt performed the work in what would be one of his greatest concerts. 8) Ravel - Gaspard de la nuit Arguably Ravel's greatest piano work - this set of three works based on poems by Bertrand is a musical wonder. The contrasting imagery Ravel captures in the three works is absolutely magical. The first piece, Ondine, tells the dream-like story of a nymph singing to lure an outsider into her underwater kingdom. The second, Le Gibet, a story about a corpse hanging in a desert with bells ringing from a nearby city, creating an eerie atmosphere. The third and final, Scarbo, a nightmarish goblin/devil who haunts the poet in his sleep - this work is also often flaunted as the most difficult piano work, but it definitely takes the cake in Impressionism. 7) Godowsky - Passacaglia in B Minor It's no surprise Godowsky's name begins with 'God', famed for his Chopin Etude studies, this piece is easily one of the best examples of variation theme. This work not only contains a virtuosic passacaglia (bassline repeats throughout) of gargantuan proportions, but then takes the theme and crafts an incredible fugue around it. Like many pieces so far, playing this work not only requires a massive feat of physical endurance, but extreme musicality and control. 6) Liszt - Gallop in A Minor What would a Top 10 piano list be without Liszt? Not much needs to be said here other than this fun Gallop is next to impossible to perform at tempo. C major/A minor are usually the first keys a pianist learns when starting out on piano, though they often don't know that these are the hardest keys to master, and virtuosic playing on black keys is significantly easier. You also know a piece is extremely difficult when most recordings of it are MIDI reproductions - Mereaux, a contemporary of Liszt, also wrote a devilish short work in A minor, his Etude, Op. 63 No. 45 and MIDI is the form you will find it in most often. 5) Alkan - Concerto for Solo Piano Alkan - Liszt's greatest rival in Paris. A good friend of both him and Chopin, the path of history has made him the lesser known virtuoso pianist of that time period, though he was equally respected during his time. An extremely rare form of concerto (which are usually for a solo instrument with an orchestral accompaniment - this work is almost stretching the definition of the style to its limits), this monumental work is one of Alkan's greatest, and one of the most difficult solo piano works of the romantic repertoire. 4) Ligeti - Piano Concerto One of the names most associated with "Piano Concerto" is Rachmaninoff, with his 2nd and 3rd piano concertos being some of the staples of the form, but in terms of pure difficulty, avant garde composer Ligeti may take the cake. Due to being extremely complex musically, containing two time signatures at once (4/4 & 12/8) along with changing tempo and extreme syncopation, it is arguably the most difficult piano concerto written to date. 3) Xenakis - Mists Up until this point, time signatures have been an important part in the piano works listed. Not here. Xenakis was not only a musician, but an architect and used mathematical models extensively in his music. In this piece, there is no time signature, but all of the musical content has been excruciatingly mathematically calculated. Actually playing this piece faithfully to the score is likely not physically possible for a human to achieve. 2) Messiaen - Vingt Regards sur l'Enfant-Jésus Now we get into the big leagues. Messiaen's Vingt Regards, a set of 20 pieces that in full is 2 hours long. Not only a pianist, but an organist too, religion was a big theme for Messiaen - this work is described as a meditation on the infancy of Jesus. With harmonic similarities to French Impressionism, infused with with the musical complexity and exploration of the early 20th century, this is one of Messiaen's greatest works, and certainly one of the most difficult. 1) Sorabji - Symphonic Variations for Piano This piece is 9 hours long. 9. Hours. Long. Sorabji is known for his ridiculously difficult and ridiculously long works, and this one is at the top of his list. This piece is so difficult, a full recording does not even exist, and in terms of pure difficulty - it is pretty safe to say that this is the most difficult piano work ever written. As always - take these with a grain of salt, a 'Top 10' list is highly subjective and there are thousands of pieces that would be fit to be here. There is too much difficult music out there and especially on UA-cam, where audience retention is favored, it is impossible to capture a lot of what makes these works difficult.
I like how everyone cheered at the easiest part with the second chromatic up and the trill. That said you did a stellar job, especially considering you were in a cap and gown, it was windy and you were in front of your whole class.
And also, it is called a piece. At least know the difference before consulting me on matters detailing the complexity of certain sections of the piece.
Kyle Palsson this is not even close to being the hardest piece for piano. Listen to his rondo fantastique, his transcendental etudes no 4 and 5, his sonata in b minor, his Paganini etude no 6 and many more
It’s so sad that no one ever realizes how hard this song is, and it doesn’t really trigger any deep emotion, so it’s not the most fun to hear so no one even can say anything about it other than it was good
@@lukemockabee7407 calling a piece a “song” is like using the wrong gender pronoun it’s very offensive so please have respect for classical pieces and compositions and use their proper terms
The sound is too saturated in the open area.. U can't hear the juicy colors of classical music at all in places like this... Well at least he picked a show-off piece so that the technicality is still apparent
I love the reactions of non musicians or people without much insight on the difficulty of a piece like this. They go wild at the most absurdest things while literally the hardest parts are completely disregarded.
He actually plays it in a good pace unlike other people ive seen online but either way slow or fast im mind blown this is extremely difficult and can take really long to perfect thats awesome 🙌🏻
A lot of people don’t understand the shear amount of work that goes into mastering a piece like this, let alone the work it took to get to this skill level. Excellence performance!
That is incredibly impressive, given the weather conditions (wind), the graduation cloak and the enormous anxiety he must've felt since this was performed in a graduation ceremony.
isthatayden lmao look at yourself you are probably that one guy that criticizes people like this for one mistake when you probably cant even play a clementi sonatina 😂
Although it’s very disrespectful to clap or cheer during a performance, I think this situation it’s ok not to be so serious, he’s playing to impress and show his achievements, I mean look at his face as they cheer, does he seem unhappy about the confidence boost
@@edwinperea7545 Not to be that guy but I’m gonna be him anyway. I get what your saying but it really isn’t the climax it’s actually the opposite where the piece starts to calm down a bit the climax is the beginning of the coda
I live in Australia and besides that beautiful playing, that graduation looks exactly what I thought an American graduation looks like, like high school musical real ness
@@user-pf5nb9tu6n most likely they would roast the announcer for the egregious mispronunciation and the audience for a total lack of concert etiquette...
I swear if I saw someone play this in real life I’d lose my shit I mean one of my three main goals in life is to learn this piece. Sad how people don’t realize the actual difficulty of it.
I’m a sophmore in high school and one of my lifelong music goals is to be able to play this piece. Definitely won’t be able to do it by my graduation but I can’t wait until the day that I make it happen. Playing moonlight sonata. 2nd movement rn but one day I’ll do this. Congrats man your at the pinnacle!
I would love doing this. Your music set my soul on fire like the first time I heard this piece, when it hasn’t been quite so magical of late. I applaud you, my friend.
Amazing, Wonderful performance!!!! Playing this outside greatly compounds sound issues. The piano was beautifully tuned and miked!!!! Accoustics were ecellent as if it were in a top concert hall!!!! This 7 ft piano sounded as good as a Hamburg 9' Steinway!!!
1. He is to be commended for playing one of the most difficult pieces in the piano repertoire outdoors, on a windy day, with a barely stable piano, in a graduation gown. 2. LOL @ the audience clapping. Like most modern audiences, they aren’t familiar with classical protocol. Admittedly, that chromatic run section they are applauding is pretty cool. Although, again to be fair, this might be more period-appropriate, since Liszt’s audiences were known to be wild, scream, cheer, faint, and fight over his discarded gloves. 3. LOL @ her pronunciation. To be fair, she probably thought it was Spanish, in which case it WOULD be pronounced “campaneya” as the double-l has a “y” sound. Someone should’ve told her it was Italian. 4. The sound people did a really good job also of capturing the best sound profile and great volume in an outdoor space. Even with a full concert grand, piano/pianissimo sections can be washed out. Especially with wind. Overall, applause protocol breaches and pronunciation issues aside, this was great. This kid kept his cool in a situation that wouldn’t even be easy for a professional concert pianist and did an amazing job. Very few wrong notes given the environment and challenges, and great structure to the piece as well. Some great moments of real virtuosity. Kudos to him.
you said song after "piece". good try. but no, the ending isn't that difficult, at least compared to the structured and technical bits of the piece, like the middle. i assume you are a non-pianist/musician thats why you say this, but im here to help you with your knowledge. moreover, its actually called "coda" and not ending. this term is used for classical music always. 🙏
As a musician who play piano and saxaphone this is the most sacraligist thing ive ever seen FIRST OF ALL YOU DO NOT CHEER IN THE MIDDLE OF THE PERFORMANCE! LIZT CAMPANELLA IS THE HARDEST PIECE LIKE OMG AND PEOPLE ONLY CHEER WHEN THEY FIND SOMETHING IMPRESSIVE ARE YOU SERIOUS? THIS PIECE TAKES HOURS AND HOURS TO PERFECT OMFG I HAVE HAD SO MANY PRACTICES OF CRYING OMG
Most high schoolers do not play piano enough (or at all) to know how hard this is to play 😂 I’m still on grade 6-7 pieces but I understand how hard this piece is lol, I’m personally hoping that I’ll be able to play it in the next decade or so since any sooner would be a stretch 😅
I cringed so hard at the beginning when she tried to pronounce La Campanella.
Mateowo I cringed a lot harder even though I had your comment as a headstart😂
@@sashmithashankar1284 I cringed at my toe nails
la campeyah? oh la campanella
I cringed when I saw this boring comment
Same
I think we’ve all dreamt of doing this
I'll do it except with unravel arr. Animenz
@@4thDT I played that before it’s on my channel
I don't! It's impractical and stupid
That’s me. And I will live my dream.
y e s
Plays the most difficult part of the piece: audience: 😐
Plays two notes really fast:
Audience: 🥳🥳🥳🥳
HAHA YUP
FRR
I should've played fur elise to get the ladies
What u expect them to cheer over the really hard parts?
@@lukeschofield574 fair enough but any norma person would expect clapping at a very difficult part rather than a part where he is just spamming two notes
Ah yes, La Campaneya, my favorite piece.
I think its Kkkkampaneya, idk tho 😂
Tomas Josef you again? I just saw you ten mins ago in the Comment Section from Sheet Music Boss from his 3rd Moonlight Sonata Movement
Lol it's la campanella not campaneya
@@ktorres9244, they're spelling it how she pronounced it lol
She probally thought it was spanish or something
WHY DO THE PEOPLE CHEER IN THE MIDDLE OF IT
THE SACRILEGIOUSNESS
peasants
Its cus he was playing *15 notes a second*
@@davidi.w.c2368 lol, legit lol
And cheer at the easiest part. No different than America's got talent.
Americans.
"la campanaya"
bruh she really thought that was a spanish word
LOL ikr
Isn't it italian?
@@pabloduarte1722 yea it is
Same pfp lol
@@null9922 noice
Next we have Jimmy playing hot cross buns on the recorder.
🤣🤣
Your comment made my day💀😂
XDDDDDDDD
That's just sad lol
*everyone cheers hysterically*
My guy played one of the most difficult pieces in classical music and people cheered at the trill 💀
Not even close to one of the most difficult
@@epointerwinboie in the top 3
@@SamJB.c not at all bro
@@SamJB.c not even close ...
@@terafairy it is, the technique to play it fully makes it one of the hardest songs
people really cheered for a trill...
ik that disappointed me
Non musicians don’t know what to listen for in difficulty of music. They usually cheer for stuff like scales and chromatics, but don’t know that is one of the easiest things
@@babyyoda6567 OMG he's repeating notes so fast this is crazyyy WOOOOOOHOOOOOOO
_It's like the trémolo in violines..._
At least it wasn't as obnoxious as America's got talent!
Also don’t applaud until the pianist raises his hands wtf
Sam Pinsky no one even knows that
9 more months later, nobody really cares since it's in a fuckin graduation thing
James Yong 勇 2 weeks later..
icedwavvy MC 4 weeks later...
You don't get it.... The part is the o ly part of the Piece when crowd CAN applaud. It's the way for a pianist to show how he master the piece and the crowd to applaud him before the final great part. You can watch the Lang Lang performance 2012. You'll note that this happens too, because it's acceptable.
What's that? I mean no one really noticed how hard this piece is to play
thats because it sounds simple until the end LOL but is actually one of the hardest pieces composed for piano.
I also like how everyone cheered at literally the easiest part: E and Eb trill.
@@oceanshmienek5462 no... no it is not please oh god why does everyone think it is even close to the hardest piece
@@giraffodil436 what is the hardest? :D
@@milanerdei2527 This is a list put together by rousseau, but as he mentions, Difficulty is very subjective, and the difficulty of pieces are different for each pianist because the strengths very from musician to musician. 10) Balakirev - Islamey
This piece often gets thrown around as being 'the most difficult piano piece'. Though insanely virtuosic and really beautiful melodically, this romantic work is far from the most difficult piano piece ever composed.
9) Beethoven - Hammerklavier (Piano Sonata No. 29)
As the name suggests, this mammoth of a Sonata (which is almost 1 hour long) contains Beethoven's typical intensity, but also his beautiful melodic writing that makes it a challenge both physically and musically. The Fugue in particular is nigh on impossible to perform at the tempo Beethoven wrote, and is rarely attempted at full tempo even by pianists today. Legend says Beethoven claimed no one would be able to play it in 100 years, though not even 20 years after completion, a certain young Franz Liszt performed the work in what would be one of his greatest concerts.
8) Ravel - Gaspard de la nuit
Arguably Ravel's greatest piano work - this set of three works based on poems by Bertrand is a musical wonder. The contrasting imagery Ravel captures in the three works is absolutely magical. The first piece, Ondine, tells the dream-like story of a nymph singing to lure an outsider into her underwater kingdom. The second, Le Gibet, a story about a corpse hanging in a desert with bells ringing from a nearby city, creating an eerie atmosphere. The third and final, Scarbo, a nightmarish goblin/devil who haunts the poet in his sleep - this work is also often flaunted as the most difficult piano work, but it definitely takes the cake in Impressionism.
7) Godowsky - Passacaglia in B Minor
It's no surprise Godowsky's name begins with 'God', famed for his Chopin Etude studies, this piece is easily one of the best examples of variation theme. This work not only contains a virtuosic passacaglia (bassline repeats throughout) of gargantuan proportions, but then takes the theme and crafts an incredible fugue around it. Like many pieces so far, playing this work not only requires a massive feat of physical endurance, but extreme musicality and control.
6) Liszt - Gallop in A Minor
What would a Top 10 piano list be without Liszt? Not much needs to be said here other than this fun Gallop is next to impossible to perform at tempo. C major/A minor are usually the first keys a pianist learns when starting out on piano, though they often don't know that these are the hardest keys to master, and virtuosic playing on black keys is significantly easier. You also know a piece is extremely difficult when most recordings of it are MIDI reproductions - Mereaux, a contemporary of Liszt, also wrote a devilish short work in A minor, his Etude, Op. 63 No. 45 and MIDI is the form you will find it in most often.
5) Alkan - Concerto for Solo Piano
Alkan - Liszt's greatest rival in Paris. A good friend of both him and Chopin, the path of history has made him the lesser known virtuoso pianist of that time period, though he was equally respected during his time. An extremely rare form of concerto (which are usually for a solo instrument with an orchestral accompaniment - this work is almost stretching the definition of the style to its limits), this monumental work is one of Alkan's greatest, and one of the most difficult solo piano works of the romantic repertoire.
4) Ligeti - Piano Concerto
One of the names most associated with "Piano Concerto" is Rachmaninoff, with his 2nd and 3rd piano concertos being some of the staples of the form, but in terms of pure difficulty, avant garde composer Ligeti may take the cake. Due to being extremely complex musically, containing two time signatures at once (4/4 & 12/8) along with changing tempo and extreme syncopation, it is arguably the most difficult piano concerto written to date.
3) Xenakis - Mists
Up until this point, time signatures have been an important part in the piano works listed. Not here. Xenakis was not only a musician, but an architect and used mathematical models extensively in his music. In this piece, there is no time signature, but all of the musical content has been excruciatingly mathematically calculated. Actually playing this piece faithfully to the score is likely not physically possible for a human to achieve.
2) Messiaen - Vingt Regards sur l'Enfant-Jésus
Now we get into the big leagues. Messiaen's Vingt Regards, a set of 20 pieces that in full is 2 hours long. Not only a pianist, but an organist too, religion was a big theme for Messiaen - this work is described as a meditation on the infancy of Jesus. With harmonic similarities to French Impressionism, infused with with the musical complexity and exploration of the early 20th century, this is one of Messiaen's greatest works, and certainly one of the most difficult.
1) Sorabji - Symphonic Variations for Piano
This piece is 9 hours long. 9. Hours. Long. Sorabji is known for his ridiculously difficult and ridiculously long works, and this one is at the top of his list. This piece is so difficult, a full recording does not even exist, and in terms of pure difficulty - it is pretty safe to say that this is the most difficult piano work ever written.
As always - take these with a grain of salt, a 'Top 10' list is highly subjective and there are thousands of pieces that would be fit to be here. There is too much difficult music out there and especially on UA-cam, where audience retention is favored, it is impossible to capture a lot of what makes these works difficult.
I like how everyone cheered at the easiest part with the second chromatic up and the trill. That said you did a stellar job, especially considering you were in a cap and gown, it was windy and you were in front of your whole class.
That is not easy lol.
Shouka he said the easiest part. Not that it was easy, but that in comparison to the rest of the song it was easy.
Ethan Da Silva No, that was not easy nor was it the easiest part.
And also, it is called a piece. At least know the difference before consulting me on matters detailing the complexity of certain sections of the piece.
Shouka I normally say piece and idk why I said song. What would be an easier part of the piece? Genuinely curious.
imagine playing arguably the hardest piece ever written for piano outside in a graduation gown and in gale force wind... could never be me
and still playing it with like no mistakes like huh
Kyle Palsson this is not even close to being the hardest piece for piano. Listen to his rondo fantastique, his transcendental etudes no 4 and 5, his sonata in b minor, his Paganini etude no 6 and many more
This is not (even) arguably the hardest piece pfffttt lol it’s hard af but solo piano works have a lot more difficult pieces
Kyle Palsson this isn’t even close to one of the hardest compositions for piano
There is a composition that is literally 9 hours and has no recordings
of fully being played through
what a freakin badass lol
It’s so sad that no one ever realizes how hard this song is, and it doesn’t really trigger any deep emotion, so it’s not the most fun to hear so no one even can say anything about it other than it was good
*piece
its not a song. Its a piece
@@smithy1578 omg who cares, y’all know what he means
@@ferdinandmarcos8214 people like you are the reason nobody likes classical music.
@@lukemockabee7407 calling a piece a “song” is like using the wrong gender pronoun it’s very offensive so please have respect for classical pieces and compositions and use their proper terms
to think a graduation will have performances like this, its commendable
Hhhhm, indubitably.
Indeed
Agreed, never would've imagined lol
It wasn’t my graduation but I played Mozart’s Flute Concerto No 1 in G Major with my high school orchestra during the senior concert...
I agree with you 100%!!!
Clearly he has been practicing at least 40 hours a day
ah yes twoset :)
Haha I almost thought it was possible to watch a music video without a twoset referrence :)
Ah. A person of sophistication here.
agreed. bro really is a ling ling god
Nah, pretty sure he just reached day 2 on simply piano
How the hell can you play with such sleeves?!
@@NotCrazyDan you’re a wizard Harry
@@cjadventures8840 ye're a HAIRY lizard!
Nevermind cold hands
@@tdscwhelangraduation is in the summer.
3:23 it's always this part. ALWAYS. WHY
And that was the easiest part
Uncultruled people
I Can Do That You Don't Have To Practice Just Slap The Notes Tada Perfect They Don't Know Piano Is Easy Or Hard :(
It's just trills!?!!?? Not even that hard
@@outgoingblur BuT, iT's AMAZING. IT'S FAST IT MUST BE HARD
If he played in a room, it will be a better performance. You can hear better and notice the details in this piece
if it were in a room, it would be worse because you could hear the mistakes better
@@Zimzamzoom95 it's not about the mistake...
@@Zimzamzoom95 yeah but the sound would travel better why do you think orchestras play mostly inside
@@isabelladuarte8385 read my comment again, maybe you'll get it better
Maybe if he was inside, he could hear himself better and make fewer mistakes.
when she tried to pronounce la campanella
@AgestaDesu Fr
Never thought I would hear this piece played on a football pitch, what a nice way to bring some culture to people. Wonderful playing, it was magical
it’s..its a piece
The sound is too saturated in the open area.. U can't hear the juicy colors of classical music at all in places like this... Well at least he picked a show-off piece so that the technicality is still apparent
Piece
@@randomperson-en8kq I know the difference between a song and a piece, yet I still wrote song. I have corrected it.
Hopefully he went to a university where the students can pronounce La Campanella and not clap or cheer during piano recitals.
LMAOOO
Ikr lmao
it made him smile!
@@mikelemie768 its the only appropriate reaction, I mean what else can he do? Even though he is smiling im sure he is annoyed cause anyone would be
The audience here clearly know nothing about classic music😢😢😢
this needs more views, i was blown away listening to this. One of my favorite piece by Liszt.
Yeah I agree. It’s hard to find someone good at playing a piece like this. Well, other than Rousseau
Mh8642 bruh no it’s not
Mh8642 valentina lisitsa, lang lang, evgeny kissin
@@samcrackers I agree, evgeny and valentina really expresses more articulation than Rousseau through their performance
Fat Boi I agree but I liked kissin’s performance a lot better than Valentina’s
1:18 Even the mic knows , that place was not meant for such a masterpiece
*masterpiece
*master peace
*masstur peas
*mahsteur piss*
*mayonese
insane.
Haha why?
@@philip.stigaard Just look at the people who cheered and clapped in the middle of the performance... 15 notes a second trill
@BUZZaysTheBee _ ikr, thats the easiest part, just spam. Well bar the first 2 measures put not every can rach an octave with ease i learned
i was learn this pieces 6 years ago, but still cant play correctly
@@JSBach-pd4yg oh god bach
He did such a great job, every note is so clear and even. You shouldn’t cheer in the middle of a classical performance.
pretty sure the audience thought that the trill was the ending lol
@@Jason-xe6etno, they cheered before it was even done lol. You wait a few seconds before clapping if you think it done just I case it isn't.
if i play this to my parents they wouldnt be impressed
That's Just Disappointing I Would Be Impressed 😭
Same
Because of the Asian They Trying to Say "Good Warm Up Now Do It Backwarda"
If you play Flight Of Bumblebee with 15 notes per second they would be impressed
Heh, Asian parents, am I right?
This piece is much harder than it sounds. Most of the people in the audience probably didn't think this was even that difficult
Fr they think the fast trills are the hardest part
probably one of the most difficult pieces that wasn’t written to be intentionally difficult
i edited out the comment so youll never know how i got so many likes
any counties got talent in a nutshell
@@mastermazbot america got talent in a nutshell as well!
@@beigebets I don’t think anybody cares
@@thorgodxx3689 man has Xx in his name and liked his own comment, and did anyone ask if you care?
4:02 , don't mind me i just love that run he made
He didn't make it that arpeggio is in the original
@@davidi.w.c2368 ik
And 90% of the people in the crowd can't appreciate how absurdly difficult this piece is
Boring piece, boring graduation
@@silloweet what are your hobbies
The facts that he’s playing in a graduation gown, the wind’s blowing, and he’s playing LA CAMPANELLA is enough to earn my respect more than a little
I love the reactions of non musicians or people without much insight on the difficulty of a piece like this. They go wild at the most absurdest things while literally the hardest parts are completely disregarded.
He actually plays it in a good pace unlike other people ive seen online but either way slow or fast im mind blown this is extremely difficult and can take really long to perfect thats awesome 🙌🏻
It's actually... FAST.
A lot of people don’t understand the shear amount of work that goes into mastering a piece like this, let alone the work it took to get to this skill level. Excellence performance!
Oh he had to play outside in those conditions. the poor soul!
As a high school music teacher and classical pianist, I am proud to see this performance during high school graduation. Bravo, sir!
Audience should feel so lucky that they don’t have to pay for this beautiful piece.
That is incredibly impressive, given the weather conditions (wind), the graduation cloak and the enormous anxiety he must've felt since this was performed in a graduation ceremony.
5:46 : Tq Jj for sharing your wonderful performance 'TONIGHT' !
I didn't expect that you were here jj I was looking for this lol😹😹😹
Razin Saiful i want you to laugh at my comment. It’s a joke
Jj Gabriel AHAHAHAHAHAHHHA😂😂 it's your name
Razin Saiful well the main focus of my joke is the emcee said TONIGHT !
Jj Gabriel AHAHHAAHHA TONIGHT ARE YOU KIDDING ME 😂😂
I think we all collectively thought "OI! SHUT UP" when they started clapping
🤣👍!!!
When the woman tried to pronounce the piece, I was already waiting for the sacrilege.
Liszt la campanaya
Chris Benna they’re Americans they’re used to spanish, they don’t realise it’s an italian word
@@matthewhammans4365
No es Español, es Italiano.
@@matthewhammans4365 Ah yes, America’s.
@@mtaram809 es lo que dijo, es una palabra italiana
La campanella *!!!!!!!
I’m more surprised he was able to keep focus on the piece while people were cheering. Talented dude.
The power of piano! Ugh, the sound of it just resounds so well, the piece itself makes it much more enlightening.
he missed a couple notes but good performance with all the peer pressure
isthatayden lmao look at yourself you are probably that one guy that criticizes people like this for one mistake when you probably cant even play a clementi sonatina 😂
Swish King yo he can make pointers and stuff it’s not like he’s bad talkin em.
yeah true that was amazing and maybe the tempo at the beginning was a bit too high
Swish King lol
aydenn
WDYM
I put this in one of my playlists for motivation. This guy must've felt like a boss after that!
@James Yong 勇 much WoW
Although it’s very disrespectful to clap or cheer during a performance, I think this situation it’s ok not to be so serious, he’s playing to impress and show his achievements, I mean look at his face as they cheer, does he seem unhappy about the confidence boost
I know, the fucking comments on this are stupid just a bunch of pretentious people.
@@cyntile9862 That's the point tho obviously like most people they're used to normal performance etiquette where u can clap after a "climax".
@@cyntile9862 It really is the climax of the piece though
@@edwinperea7545 Not to be that guy but I’m gonna be him anyway. I get what your saying but it really isn’t the climax it’s actually the opposite where the piece starts to calm down a bit the climax is the beginning of the coda
Agree
I live in Australia and besides that beautiful playing, that graduation looks exactly what I thought an American graduation looks like, like high school musical real ness
the BALLS he has😭 i could never play in front of so many people let alone this piece and that well🥺😭
Congrats and such a great performance. Nothing more badass than commemorating by playing a piece hundreds of years old.
damn i wish i graduated like this so that i am a badass embedded in my school's memory forever
What a God!
I admire this guy, playing la Campanella in his graduation, considering the high chances of messing up those huge octave jumps, scales etc..
Now-a-days kids 12 years old are playing this for their 6th grade graduation in S. Korea. And amazingly well. Lot's of 'em. fact.
WHAT
We all wish we were half as good as this guy.
Greatest part is 99% of the people in the crowd have no idea how difficult this is.
Two Set Need to see this
Yeah so they can roast him and the announcer
@@user-pf5nb9tu6n most likely they would roast the announcer for the egregious mispronunciation and the audience for a total lack of concert etiquette...
plot twist: they know which is the easiest part to cheer the guy to keep him motivated and let him focus on the difficult ones
This is respectable, because instead of choosing a random anime song, he chose to play one of the hardest pieces that was ever made.
It's about showmanship y'all. Music is performed, for other people. This dude did a great job reacting to the crowd.
Every musician in a 100km radio at 3:28: really?
@@wuzz I think he means radius
3:23 CRIIIIIIIIIIIIIINNNNNNGEEEEEEEE CAMPAAAANAAAAAAAAYAAAAAAA BOOOY
Nooooo
I swear if I saw someone play this in real life I’d lose my shit I mean one of my three main goals in life is to learn this piece.
Sad how people don’t realize the actual difficulty of it.
OMG and this is HIGH SCHOOL?! What a brilliant piece played by a brilliant pianist!
Wow!! Is this a fresh high school graduate or a professional pianist!!! Incredible!
All the pianists when they start wooing, " nonono, i wanna hear it". 🤣
This is a talent
my bro playing one of the hardest piece and the audience applause at the trill
2:18 is my favorite part of the song, it’s so good
Great playing. Very treacherous piece La Campanella is.
I’m a sophmore in high school and one of my lifelong music goals is to be able to play this piece. Definitely won’t be able to do it by my graduation but I can’t wait until the day that I make it happen. Playing moonlight sonata. 2nd movement rn but one day I’ll do this. Congrats man your at the pinnacle!
Moonlight sonata has a second movement?
@@Clyde0000it has 3 mvt xd
@@raphaelguerin2691 I was joking
@@Clyde0000 fr he didnt get the joke
why the seocnd movment
that's actually amazing in the wind and with those sleeves in front of the whole school
There's always that one person coughing in the background- 3:06
Amazing, this is the most beautiful performance i ´ve heard of this piece!😢
What a badass. Great performance
I don’t know what to be impressed by because I find everything but the first 6 seconds to this piece hard 😭😭
I’m impressed by the zoom of that camera
I can only imagine the absurd amount of pressure I would feel if I were to do this. That performance was something else.
As liszt would say, congratulations on graduating my class.
3:23 My man was like “Trills for the Girls”.
Jajaja that claps in the middle makes this performace see as a rock concert.
This doesn’t go out of my head again, I keep saying la campaneya ever since...
I would love doing this. Your music set my soul on fire like the first time I heard this piece, when it hasn’t been quite so magical of late. I applaud you, my friend.
I literally got goosebumps at the coda. Crazy performance in front of that many people
only musicians can really grasp the amount of pain that this song causes on the fingers
Amazing, Wonderful performance!!!! Playing this outside greatly compounds sound issues. The piano was beautifully tuned and miked!!!! Accoustics were ecellent as if it were in a top concert hall!!!! This 7 ft piano sounded as good as a Hamburg 9' Steinway!!!
1:22 The microphone moves
As a musician (not pianist) myself I can confirm this is one of the hardest if not the hardest piano pieces in history.
Not really the hardest but still very hard
Not even top 100 💀
1. He is to be commended for playing one of the most difficult pieces in the piano repertoire outdoors, on a windy day, with a barely stable piano, in a graduation gown.
2. LOL @ the audience clapping. Like most modern audiences, they aren’t familiar with classical protocol. Admittedly, that chromatic run section they are applauding is pretty cool. Although, again to be fair, this might be more period-appropriate, since Liszt’s audiences were known to be wild, scream, cheer, faint, and fight over his discarded gloves.
3. LOL @ her pronunciation. To be fair, she probably thought it was Spanish, in which case it WOULD be pronounced “campaneya” as the double-l has a “y” sound. Someone should’ve told her it was Italian.
4. The sound people did a really good job also of capturing the best sound profile and great volume in an outdoor space. Even with a full concert grand, piano/pianissimo sections can be washed out. Especially with wind.
Overall, applause protocol breaches and pronunciation issues aside, this was great. This kid kept his cool in a situation that wouldn’t even be easy for a professional concert pianist and did an amazing job. Very few wrong notes given the environment and challenges, and great structure to the piece as well. Some great moments of real virtuosity. Kudos to him.
Beast
This Video needs more attention
seeing them cheer at the easiest part had me rolling. I haven't played this piece but i would say the ending of the song is probably the hardest part.
you said song after "piece". good try. but no, the ending isn't that difficult, at least compared to the structured and technical bits of the piece, like the middle. i assume you are a non-pianist/musician thats why you say this, but im here to help you with your knowledge. moreover, its actually called "coda" and not ending. this term is used for classical music always. 🙏
@@therealransu I play the piano and guitar but I’m not some nerd that goes on UA-cam correcting peoples understanding about technicalities
@@itsgunner5562 i agree with you. i hoped this helped 🙏
@@therealransuyou’re not better than anyone, don’t cut off your nose to spite your face 😉
Audience: holy was that a trill omg he’s insane 🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳👍👍👍🙌🙌
bro all of that "WOOOOOOOOOO CLAP* CLAP* CLAP*" while its not yet done just makes me wanna die
As a musician who play piano and saxaphone this is the most sacraligist thing ive ever seen FIRST OF ALL YOU DO NOT CHEER IN THE MIDDLE OF THE PERFORMANCE! LIZT CAMPANELLA IS THE HARDEST PIECE LIKE OMG AND PEOPLE ONLY CHEER WHEN THEY FIND SOMETHING IMPRESSIVE ARE YOU SERIOUS? THIS PIECE TAKES HOURS AND HOURS TO PERFECT OMFG I HAVE HAD SO MANY PRACTICES OF CRYING OMG
You're a moron.
@@javascriptkiddie2718 how?!!!
Most high schoolers do not play piano enough (or at all) to know how hard this is to play 😂 I’m still on grade 6-7 pieces but I understand how hard this piece is lol, I’m personally hoping that I’ll be able to play it in the next decade or so since any sooner would be a stretch 😅
@@orionyxe you will!! I'm so proud if you
Its not the hardest piece ever lmao, not even top 50 but still difficult. Liszt himself has composed harder pieces than this.
Really enjoyed this performance. Keep it up man.
Nobody gonna acknowledge that he played this by memory..?
Learning a piece from memory isn’t hard lmao
You'd know the piece off by heart long before you mastered it with a piece like this
@@alexkyritsis01 playing by memory under pressure is scary tho
@@abbeyekrut9528 yes
I love how they all stand up