What an expansive and fascinating piece! It’s almost like a little overture.
@Viennalute3 күн бұрын
I like it. Thank you!
@saccobello65164 күн бұрын
Excellent! 🧉👌🏻
@wolkowy14 күн бұрын
Either Harpi feels good with your room-temperature, or he is getting older (which improves his sound), or you performed this piece beautifully, or all the three components together. I tend to think it is all together. Either way, BRAVO and thanks for uploading.
@LearningToPlayAVirginals4 күн бұрын
I think it's a mixture of Mr Bellicanta's touch and the instrument itself. It produces such a sweet sound.
@theclavierist3 күн бұрын
Thank you Riva! The harpsichord is now 5 years old :-) I find that when my body is warm the sound is better, I don't remember but it might have been the case.
@Joachim-dj2em7 күн бұрын
Recomendada Muchas exelente muy Gracias Compositor Händel.Entre por tropical Temperatur Costa Rica Joachim Ehlers
@musicalintentions8 күн бұрын
I especially enjoyed your ornaments.
@icroft308510 күн бұрын
This sounds like music sent to heal. It soothes my soul.
@saccobello651611 күн бұрын
Very good 👍🏻!
@Viennalute11 күн бұрын
Thank you from Vienna.
@sonnysonny282714 күн бұрын
Wonderful performance, and your concentration is palpable! Very admirable indeed, thank you for sharing :-)
@theclavierist14 күн бұрын
Thank you! I did have to concentrate a lot to do it in one shot 😅 without hitting any wrong notes or too badly played ones, or messing up the trills, all easily done on the harpsichord! It was also beyond my bed time 😴 I did sleep well that night!
@wolkowy115 күн бұрын
Here is a composer I really like. Although (and in contrast to you and the contemporary trend) I tend to break the simultaneous performance of the two hands only in a meaningful place in the piece, I find this performance very beautiful with tastefull emotional mood. Bravo! Thanks for uploading.
@theclavierist15 күн бұрын
Thank you Riva! I am with you. I break the synchronicity between the two hands more than what I would like with the purpose of softening the sound. It works better like this on my harpsichord. Otherwise it can sound harsh with a continuous simultaneous attack. I find that if a harpsichord is voiced softly and in quill I naturally do less de-synchronization. Eventually I will quill my harpsichord with crow, just need to collect enough feathers and face the task!
@teobaldoteobalde400417 күн бұрын
bela sonoridade. Vc vende instrumentos? Queria um clavicórdio
@theclavierist17 күн бұрын
Não vendo, simplesmente tenho um piano, um clavicórdio e um cravo. Aonde moras? Seria mais facil conseguir um instrumento nos Estados Unidos ou na Europa. Dependendo do país existem diferentes paginas para consultar.
@Viennalute17 күн бұрын
Thank you for playing "my music", Bravo!
@theclavierist17 күн бұрын
You are welcome Mr Fischer :-)
@saccobello651617 күн бұрын
Very good! 🧉
@theclavierist17 күн бұрын
Cheers!
@DonRushtheClassics18 күн бұрын
This is excellent! I'm curious how it would sound in a cathedral or a large hall.
@theclavierist17 күн бұрын
Only trying to know! I think that the harpsichord is a 'living room' instrument though. Small halls or small churches would work well for it. Even the most sonorous harpsichord would suffer in a too big space, could do the job depending on the specific space, but would suffer.
@LearningToPlayAVirginals20 күн бұрын
Wonderful as always.
@julesmarwell802321 күн бұрын
Thank you.
@rosarioforino707524 күн бұрын
Barry Lyndon's music
@Viennalute24 күн бұрын
Excellent, Thank you.
@musicalintentions24 күн бұрын
What a wonderful piece!
@saccobello651625 күн бұрын
Heavenly good!
@thehalf-bakedorganist25 күн бұрын
That was a really nice performance. I especially like how the theme takes a melancholy turn toward the end. Very nicely done.
@theclavierist24 күн бұрын
Thanks! It does have an interesting turn before going back to repeating the first theme.
@DonRushtheClassics25 күн бұрын
This is likely the first time I've heard a piece played at a truly Larghetto tempo!
@theclavierist24 күн бұрын
Thank you! Your comment means a lot to me :-)
@williamhuband791325 күн бұрын
Love the gentle pace of your playing this piece. It is however, only possible on such a gently sonorous instrument ! Thank you for bringing this, (to me, unknown )piece so beautifully to life !
@theclavierist24 күн бұрын
Thank you for the kind words. I had to work a bit on how to render it on my harpsichord specifically, I am glad you liked the result!
@PCTersites25 күн бұрын
Simplemente bello. Gracias.
@theclavierist25 күн бұрын
Gracias por escuchar 🙂
@binary13227 күн бұрын
Very precisely timed! I appreciate the care and accuracy!
@theclavierist27 күн бұрын
Thank you 🙂
@musicalintentionsАй бұрын
Of make a lovely prelude to a suite.
@theclavieristАй бұрын
The Allemande is coming soon :-)
@danawinsor1380Ай бұрын
In Jane Austen's "Northanger Abbey," it takes the main character eight hours to travel 80 miles to return home. In those days you could travel on the post coaches, which would take you from town to town to pick up and deliver mail.
@theclavieristАй бұрын
Another episode in John Marsh's diaries relates how a person went to visit him in Salisbury and simply walked 20 miles from Shaftesbury. It was another perception of the world.
@danawinsor1380Ай бұрын
@@theclavierist Very interesting! I hope to read "John Marsh's Diaries."
@theclavieristАй бұрын
@@danawinsor1380 the tittle is 'Thr John Marsh Journals' there is a scanned version online here archive.org/details/johnmarshjournal0000mars
@johngarbi3011Ай бұрын
Beautiful, thank you
@theclavieristАй бұрын
Thank you for listening!
@saccobello6516Ай бұрын
Very good!
@ViennaluteАй бұрын
I ike it, not only your play, but also due to the composer's name.
@theclavieristАй бұрын
🙂
@danawinsor1380Ай бұрын
Che bella musica!
@theclavieristАй бұрын
Grazie!
@musicalintentionsАй бұрын
What a nice piece!
@StonmannАй бұрын
The clavichord is (imo) the most difficult keyboard instrument. I've played piano, fortepiano, organ, harpsichord, and virginal, but NONE are nearly as challenging and nuanced as the clavichord. Amazing job!
@theclavieristАй бұрын
Thanks 🙂
@gabrielaguilera496026 күн бұрын
How so? Expand on the nuances
@Stonmann26 күн бұрын
@@gabrielaguilera4960 Well it's complicated, but you have to have a very delicate touch. Too hard and makes a brash sound, too soft and it doesn't sound at all. That's just one thing tho
@DavidJordan-o9o9 күн бұрын
@@Stonmann Thankyou I enjoyed that, it looks very difficult to play, you can sense the effort made to learn the technique and style. Bravo Thankyou
@cuttwice3905Ай бұрын
χαῖρε
@rebeccapugh2297Ай бұрын
Lovely performance, as always.
@theclavieristАй бұрын
Thank you 🙂
@JérémyPresleАй бұрын
Very nice! Couldn't find any other interpretation on KZbin. Wim recorded the sixth sonata however. Maybe I'll play it's 'tocatta'.
@theclavieristАй бұрын
Thanks! There are others on youtube, not videos but as part of recorded albums.. fast and furious 🚀
@ViennaluteАй бұрын
Tank you rom Vienna.
@saccobello6516Ай бұрын
Excellent 👌🏻
@clavichordАй бұрын
A taste of Paradise by Paradisi! 👍
@LearningToPlayAVirginalsАй бұрын
Lovely performance, as always.
@theclavieristАй бұрын
Thank you!
@saccobello6516Ай бұрын
Very good! 👍🏻
@ViennaluteАй бұрын
Thank you from Vienna.
@JérémyPresleАй бұрын
English people of that time had a weird way to spell dances' names! Doesn't feel like a sarabande to me anyway, with this walking bass in the first part. Is the title a later addition by an editor perhaps? Well played anyway!
@theclavieristАй бұрын
I am actually still confused by that first part of the piece 😂 the second part is much more like a common Sarabande. I am sure I have seen other English Sarabands with that notation though. I wonder if it should be played more inegale, like a dotted note pattern. I need to experiment more. Or Sarabandes were conceived differently in England at the time. Or someone made a 'collage' between two pieces. I need to investigate. I think that a lot of people didn't really care about spelling back in the day, they just wrote it like it felt like. It could be a typo, or at some point a typo started the whole SarabRand thing.. quite a few of them around.. just like some 'Almonds' 😂
@翁慈玲Ай бұрын
💯
@saccobello6516Ай бұрын
Well done!
@teobaldoteobalde4004Ай бұрын
a ternura das apojaturas casam tao bem com a metalidade do acordeamento 😢
@RollinglennАй бұрын
Your tempo shows a grace and fluidity, not a mechanical race to the finish. This is a lovely dance.
@theclavieristАй бұрын
Thanks Glenn :-)
@thehalf-bakedorganistАй бұрын
Yes! Very nice. WBMP is something I've also been getting more and more into.
@theclavieristАй бұрын
Those metronome numbers of the 19th century are a great objective reference to work our way back to this earlier music. We might get it wrong, but we won't get it THAT wrong.. which is irrelevant anyway. What hooks me into this way of playing is the fact that the music assumes that rhetorical quality of speech with all notes becoming like syllables to be pronounced clearly.
@DonRushtheClassicsАй бұрын
For decades, Hollywood and television have used sped-up classical music as a shortcut to represent historical settings. Horse-drawn carriages and fast harpsichord music have become clichéd indicators of the past. This music is often treated as an anachronistic joke, only used in "period" pieces. They would never consider it for their big productions. I think this will change once this tempo is embraced.
@theclavieristАй бұрын
Once I played a short recital to a mixed audience, some people were familiar with 'harpsichord music', some were not. Some, at the end, came to tell me that for the first time they really liked the harpsichord! I played well enough but far from my best. I believe that my tempo choice allowed the music to speak for itself, even with the odd wrong note! That day I played, amongst other pieces, an Allegro by Galuppi, unknown to most, even the connoisseurs, which at my tempo would have been classified by modern standards an Allegretto at the most, but more towards Andante. That piece generated an enthusiasm that even to me was surprising! Obviously because of not knowing the piece, there was nothing to compare it with. I do think we are only the beginning of a big musical revolution :-)