thats a real Beethoven. a true one. Beethoven would have been delighted to hear this.Extraordinary performance. the piano is singing and has at the same time strenght. but never is stiff as in so many interpretations. Young pianists should listen to this and try to get the technique necessary for it.
@carlhopkinson3 жыл бұрын
To my mind, the greatest of all piano concertos.
@gabrieltancredinicotra4 жыл бұрын
Merci ! Played with such energy! The applause after the first movement was needed indeed.
@eytonshalomsandiego22 күн бұрын
nothing to say but Thank You and BRAVO!!!
@WarinPartita65 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing thismagnificent video of a great artist.
@MrInterestingthings6 жыл бұрын
There is a post on youtube where this great musician's tone and piano sound cutesy in this monumental work . I keep finding recordings then go back and everything is different .Hofmann is unlike anyone else an even bigger personality than Horowitz a truly great mind and a depth to his interps unlike that of any other ! So glad I found this upload it sounds like Hofmann .
@MrInterestingthings4 жыл бұрын
I really don't believe anyone alive now or since Hofmann Can play like this. Those light chordal runs sound unlike anyone as if each note is being played by a different instrument . It's more than piano intuition, he had ears, mind, genius and a musicalgift of communication . His teacher Anton supposedly was even more Titanic! Gilels was Titanic enough,! None of us will ever hear finger work like this or wristwork . Everything makes my head shake hear and this was after his prime. Mitropolous is divine!
@DynastieArtistique4 ай бұрын
@@MrInterestingthingsHofmann is a once in a universe phenomenon, like Bach
@_PROCLUS7 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for the most wonderful upload
@Twentythousandlps5 жыл бұрын
Hofmann was a composer and surely wrote his own cadenzas.
@markhenselt95655 жыл бұрын
Reinecke, I believe
@theopaopa19 ай бұрын
excellent. a real musician. chapeau ! thank you very much !💯
@stephenlord93 жыл бұрын
No, the cadenza is not Beethoven's very familiar one. Bit what is the the purpose of a cadenza? Bravo Hoffmann. He fulfills the needs and desires of a cadenza and it is personal, which is the whole point.
@Leibo077 жыл бұрын
Hurray. Two of my favorites. Or actually three. And thx for sharing.
@antoinezygfryd12 жыл бұрын
ah!ce thème du second mouvement qui semble jaillir de nulle part.... quel scintillement de cette merveilleuse sonorité.... merci pour ce trésor!
@christiankircher3696 жыл бұрын
yes indeed this a world treasure. one never will hear something again. Josef Hofmann was a real Master.
@sosoyo180 Жыл бұрын
28:45 his cadenza
@timjowett73006 жыл бұрын
Tim Jowett. Played brilliantly , both chilling and chilled like.
@_PROCLUS7 жыл бұрын
The music 0:28 .... 16:52 .... 21:26
@goodmanmusica5 жыл бұрын
here is the rest of the concert: kzbin.info/www/bejne/b5bagqJno5qnZrM
@John-se5vc Жыл бұрын
In my student days, I saw a 16mm film of Hofmann playing this entire concerto. What a gorgeous cadenza! I don't know who wrote it.
@elizabethnekesa732111 жыл бұрын
Wow...
@democolor425 жыл бұрын
Cadenza is not Beethoven's but what a genius, brilliant musician from the fairy tales. It is so sad that in later years he started heavy drinking.
@RModillo2 жыл бұрын
Apparently, that started before Rachmaninoff died, although perhaps not with consistency. I wonder what kind of shape he was in for this broadcast?
Best Beethoven piano performances: Hoffman, Horowitz, Ely Ney, Claudio Arrau , Wilhelm Backhaus, Gieseking , Emil Giljels, S. Richter....
@tunatuna672311 ай бұрын
Alfred Brendel!
@RaineriHakkarainen2 ай бұрын
Wilhelm Kempff More colorful beautiful piano sound for Beethoven no 4 than Hofmann! Vladimir Ashkenazy had More colorful beautiful piano sound for Beethoven no 5 than Hofmann! Grigory Sokolov his Beethoven concerto no 5 Rhythmic vitalness is unbeatable!!
@dmitrikostov48037 күн бұрын
Это произведение исполняли три, или четыре пианиста одновременно?
@Barbapippo12 жыл бұрын
devo avere le allucinazioni acustiche.... Hoffmann fa precedere l'accordo iniziale da un arpeggio "preparatorio"!?
@TheStefanNestor7 жыл бұрын
Hofmann era solito farlo...
@p.a.cthegoldenageofmusic3279 Жыл бұрын
È solo ignoranza...prima si preludiava e questa cosa aiutava la qualità del suono e la rilassatezza e naturalezza dell'esecuzione
@Barbapippo Жыл бұрын
@@p.a.cthegoldenageofmusic3279 Da ignoranti è rovinare la sorpresa del magico inizio di questo concerto con un'insulsa settima diminuita, e chi se ne frega se così usava ai tempi "d'oro"; ma, si sa, i passatisti trovano sempre una giustificazione per qualunque malvezzo, purché d'annata... Beethoven, che non esitò a bloccare la pubblicazione dell'Hammerklavier pur di aggiungere due note all'inizio del terzo movimento, avrebbe preso il grande Hoffmann a pedate nel sedere, altro che storie.
@p.a.cthegoldenageofmusic3279 Жыл бұрын
@@Barbapippo continua la sua ignoranza... Beethoven era forse il più grande improvvisatore di tutti i tempi...fini al 1945 circa si è sempre improvvisati anche in concerto e preludiato...gli ignoranti abbiano almeno l umiltà di informarsi:ascolti l ultimo concerto di Backhaus... siamo nel 1968...e Backhaus Beethoven lo conosceva molto bene!Mi dispiace per lei
@Barbapippo Жыл бұрын
@@p.a.cthegoldenageofmusic3279 Continua la sua supponente imbecillità; stai a vedere, adesso, che suonare a sproposito UN accordo di settima diminuita prima di cominciare è "improvvisare": ma mi faccia il piacere, come direbbe Totò; e con questa la saluto, propini le sue ridicole lezioncine di prassi esecutiva dei bei tempi andati a qualcun altro.
@mehmetiksel30813 жыл бұрын
A remarkable curiosity with interspersed pianistic gems but not as musically convincing to us as the greats of the next generation. His virtuoso style is more suited to Chopin in which he can, like his contemporary, Cortot, teach a lot to the upcoming Asian wunderkinder. (who by the way, impress us with an increasing musicality despite their lack of pedagogic pedigree.)
@jackatherton01117 ай бұрын
Try as I have for fifty years, I don’t hear the primal surge of Beethoven in Hofmann’s (admittedly late) radio transcriptions. His Chopin is more problematic. The E minor concerto fragment from London would be enough to place Hofmann on Parnassus. The full concerto with Barbirolli in New York is less focused, and so it goes with Hofmann. His friend Rachmaninov said Josef’s late performances reflected his level of alcohol. But thanks so much for sharing.
@malbamope6 жыл бұрын
I wonder if the Backhaus/Bohm interpretation is based on this one....though Backhaus was no Hoffmann!
@doGreatartistsgrowontrees3 жыл бұрын
Backhaus was one of the most extraordinary pianists of all time. Listen to his Chopin Etudes. But yes, Hoffmann is Hoffmann and there was no one like him. And there is no one like him either. Hell, there won’t be another one like him.
@RaineriHakkarainen Жыл бұрын
Come on! More beautiful colorful piano sound than Hofmann and Backhaus=Wilhelm Kempff Emil Gilels Artur Rubinstein Radu Lupu Vladimir Ashkenazy! More Powerful Louder than Hofmann and Backhaus=Mikhail Pletnev Supernova Explosion Power!( Prokofiev piano concerto no 1 by Pletnev!) The Second Loudest pianist was Lazar Berman! More Genius than Backhaus and Hofmann=Sviatoslav Richter Solomon Cutner Grigory Sokolov Maurizio Pollini Alexei Lubimov Stanislav Igolinsky!
@kakoou33625 ай бұрын
@@RaineriHakkarainenI dont think I agree with anything You said here
@tobiasmostel24 күн бұрын
Neither was Bohm...
@susanamatthias85696 жыл бұрын
Μμ. Μμμμμ μ μμ. Μμ μμ μ
@hyramesshiramess103510 жыл бұрын
Oh DEAR! What a cadenza! It sounded like a PARODY -- Something worthy of DUDLEY MOORE, although some of it was played in a sublimely lyrical fashion. A strange rather theatrical interpretation, full of individual character, but I prefer a more reverent, "innig," less flamboyant interpretation. I'm thinking particularly of Guiomar Novaes --- also Glenn Gould, whose recording from the early 1960's is sublime.
@patrickcrosby38248 жыл бұрын
Not as good as Lang Lang, you don't think? :)
@_PROCLUS7 жыл бұрын
Good one ...
@TheErnesto76082 жыл бұрын
@@patrickcrosby3824 "Lang Lang"... what is this? A new candy? I was mesmerized by the cadenza. New music introduced into this concerto that we heard a hundred times. Yes, profane like all of Hofmann, but... wonderful display of fire works! No wonder the audience clapped so much after it.
@thewizardii16386 жыл бұрын
very gd. but the cadenza?. wheres beethovens cadenza..
@chrisczajasager11 жыл бұрын
tradition, an introductory contact with t the piano before the 'main course' from his master, Anton Rubinstein! here JH in his declining years( alcoholism) not really a service to his memory, this release!!!
@christiankircher3696 жыл бұрын
you are very wrong , try to play like this when drunk you will see its impossible to reach this level of Mastering. when recording this Hofmann was not drunk. Everything is totally clear and done with Maitrise. he is like an architect who creates a monument like a cathedral here.
@pianoredux75162 жыл бұрын
Mr. Sager and Mr. Kircher are both right. While this is not peak Hofmann, there are still gold nuggets in it demonstrating his uniqueness.
@p.a.cthegoldenageofmusic3279 Жыл бұрын
Mister Kircher Is right.One of the very Little White mosquitos remained nowadays...