Thanks for reminding me how much I love this piece.
@TimondeNood3 ай бұрын
❤️ my pleasuere Stephen, I got to know it on your channel and afterwards via Rubinstein's amazing late recording. If you're ever interested in making an animation again on this piece, I'm sure Jane Coop will let you lend her recording ;)
@smalin3 ай бұрын
@@TimondeNood I went back and watched my old video of it, and decided it deserved a remake, so I’m working on that. I was going to use my own recording, but if you think Jane Coop would let me use hers, could you put me in touch with her?
@TimondeNood3 ай бұрын
I'll put you in cc and send her email right now.
@prototropo5 ай бұрын
On top of the blistering smart analysis, this is the most gorgeous recording of this capprichio on YT.
@TimondeNood5 ай бұрын
Thank you, the recording is from Jane Coop: kzbin.info/www/bejne/e6bGdqttnb6Jabcsi=BOhxVOut4Wl-jrRk
@naphtanaptha5 ай бұрын
brilliant analysis! I also fell in love with this piece on first listen. the climax is so beautiful and full of humour. very insightful to understand the harmonic workings and especially brahms' use of less common chords (mostly +6 chords) as pivot harmonies!
@TimondeNood5 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for the kind words, also congratulations on your acceptance to the conservatory!
@naphtanaptha5 ай бұрын
@@TimondeNood thanks!
@lolbruh11705 ай бұрын
Love when the counterpoint enthusiast is awful and completely ignorant at counterpoint
@Poeme3405 ай бұрын
When I “woke up” to these piano works some 30 yrs. ago, I couldn’t get enough of them. As a percussionist, I was thrilled to hear such rhythmic complexity beneath the gorgeous harmonies. I feel like I can hear Brahns’ unique, “3D” intelligence in this music. IMHO. Great vid-thx!👌
@TimondeNood5 ай бұрын
That's so cool! I can relate, such a gem... Thank you for the kind words
@prototropo5 ай бұрын
3-D intelligence is a perfect descriptor for Brahms!
@chadvindin99335 ай бұрын
2:29 the Disney theme bit
@prototropo5 ай бұрын
You nailed it!
@prototropo5 ай бұрын
I've listened to this fabulous recording about ten times today, and my most recurrent, and exuberant, sensations, are the wonderful allusions to Central/Eastern European, especially Slavic, dance forms, with all their intoxicating syncopations and bivalent modal sensibilities. (Dvorak's dances are swaying in the background.)
@Joseph-mv3rz5 ай бұрын
Learning this rn
@TimondeNood5 ай бұрын
Looks hard 😁
@danielritter62845 ай бұрын
Excellent analysis. Thank you!
@TimondeNood5 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@SuonoReale5 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this video 💯
@TimondeNood5 ай бұрын
My pleasure!
@gregrice13545 ай бұрын
Oh yeah! I would have written it exxactly the same way, if I was Brahms! 8-D
@nicos_piano5 ай бұрын
Amazing video man! Congrats! Just a little detail that probably you didn’t even notice. When you mention the enharmonic chord ( Italian Augmented 6th Chord in F Major = Dominant in F Sharp Major), you say E double sharp when it should be just E sharp!😌 Once again great job with making this video!
@TimondeNood5 ай бұрын
Oh yes, good that you spotted it, I even did it wrong on the score example afterwards! Also, thank you for the kind words!
@thinkermanmusic5 ай бұрын
@@TimondeNoodThat’s when I spotted the small mistake; when the score example was played I immediately thought ‘this doesn’t sound like a dominant seven chord, something’s wrong’. Still an amazing video of course, I’m subscribing!
@TimondeNood5 ай бұрын
Thank you, yes I didn't notice it even while editing... probably I had already too much on my mind and wasn't paying close attention anymore while rechecking the complete video! Thank you for the sub, more content and compositions soon!
@danielt.86869 күн бұрын
so nice !!!!
@TimondeNood9 күн бұрын
Thank you!!
@dansaber44275 ай бұрын
Check out Opus 122 number 10
@TimondeNood5 ай бұрын
Wonderful!
@pedrodavila92705 ай бұрын
Could you do more Brahms piano pieces? Op. 118 2 and 3, or op, 117 2? Love your videos!
@TimondeNood5 ай бұрын
Hi Pedro, Op.118 no 2 is really one of my big favourites. However, this guy already did quite a good analysis, go check it: kzbin.info/www/bejne/q2GtfWtropKlbtk Regarding the others op 118 no 3 and op 117 no 2, I think we have a similar taste cause these pieces are always in the back of my head :D. So some day probably they will be featured on this channel. For the moment being, I have 4 analysis videos and a lot of compositions to finish, so you won't see them upcoming months. Thank you for the kinds words!
@jamesrockybullin52505 ай бұрын
There’s no way the second phrase Mm. 3-4 is in a minor. It’s definitely in E.
@TimondeNood5 ай бұрын
Well I think definitely is not a good word to use for this composition here ;)
@dansaber44275 ай бұрын
❤
@lolbruh11705 ай бұрын
Brahms using random harmony. Brahms being incompetent yet again. Anyways, here's a wrong and useless analysis of his random noise.
@Eeeeeee-j7o5 ай бұрын
Have you listened enough Brahms music? Because you cant simply say something like that about a composer as great as Brahms just because you don't like him, this coming from a person who is not exactly a big fan of Brahms, but I cannot deny his genius.
@lolbruh11705 ай бұрын
@@Eeeeeee-j7o you cannot deny his genius because you don't think for yourself and just listen to the words of others and agree with them by default. Brahms is a genius in the eyes of the modern artist, in the eyes of a cultist, in the eyes of someone so ridiculously ignorant to music, that they refuse to accept the fact that music in fact can be poorly composed. Brahms's only contribution to music is making the standards for success ever lower. His pieces are completely incoherent garbage. He writes like an amateur, though maybe not like an amateur of the modern day, who are somehow worse than him. The only thing upholding brahms's genius is a century of dogma. Any competent musician can see past his showmanship and vanity. His pieces have no form, his pieces are filled with contrapunctal errors, his pieces are not music. Just random, occasionally musical noise.
@Eeeeeee-j7o5 ай бұрын
@lolbruh1170 First of all, its so ridiculous to insult anyone when discussing about a composer in a KZbin video. And then, no, I think that because, unlike you, I have spent time listening and analyzing his music. His first symphony isn't called "Beethoven's 10th" by nothing. Go and listen his 2nd piano concerto, his clarinet sonatas, his intermezzos (for example op76 no4, or op117 no 2). Its undeniable that he was a master of orchestration, and was able to compose music of huge complexity.
@lolbruh11705 ай бұрын
@@Eeeeeee-j7o I know his first symphony isn't called "Beethoven's 10th" for nothing. Because it's also completely incompetently composed, just like Beethoven's symphonies. Maybe go listen to some mozart quartet or scriabin's 5th symphony. I know full well of Brahms's "music"(noise). He cannot compose for the life of him. Honestly, the "beethoven's 10th" probably isn't very accurate considering that brahms somehow is so many leaps and bounds worse than that guy. Anyways, instead of receiving your opinion of whether or not brahms is a good composer from someone equally incompetent like Schönberg, use your own ears, be repulsed, and form your own negative opinion of him. The "complexity" in his "music" is literally just adding excessice voices in his counterpoint and excessively thickening every chord to make it as incoherent as possible. His form is completely incoherent, he has only once or twice even composed a semi coherent phrase, letalone a piece of music. He is complete trash.