Sorry for the reloading: the previous video was blocked. For this new video I used a different audio track (and so it will be for the next two sonatas from Op. 2).
@mamacita1508 Жыл бұрын
Aarrrg I really like that version, would you mind telling us the name of the pianist? I forgot :C
@ThomasLigre Жыл бұрын
@@mamacita1508 Howard Shelley :) (The Complete Piano Sonatas, Hyperion)
@mamacita1508 Жыл бұрын
@@ThomasLigre thank you!
@marcraider5 ай бұрын
Beethoven took a lot of inspiration from Clementi, you can see it reflected in this and many other Clementi's works.
@МарианнаЮматова2 ай бұрын
А Гайдн вдохновлялся Карлом Филлипом Эмануэлем Бахом, Гендель же Люлли и Перселлом
Ouch that's too bad. Some part you can't even hear the note clearly. This tempo is playable but a lot of the 16th notes and 32th note are missing details because of this tempo. The ideal tempo should sit between 120-140bpm for 4th note for the first movement and 100-130bpm for the last one.
@Hanakodrawing Жыл бұрын
I think it’s No 1 not 2
@matu-7203 Жыл бұрын
el joven Clementi no tenia mucho para ofrecer en la musicalidad de sus obras realmente... materiales y elementos inconexos, escalas y acompañamientos insulsos. no es de mi agrado
@TheSunlight7411 ай бұрын
Clementi is like if AI was asked to write Mozart/early Beethoven
@stephanjwilliams10 ай бұрын
That is a terrible characterization of Clementi's work as a whole. This sonata (which is not bad by any means) is on the lower end of Clementi's works in terms of quality. I have played many of Clementi's and all of Mozart's sonatas and I can say with complete confidence that Clementi's sonatas, at their best, are *at least* on par with those of Mozart, if not greater. Personal taste will determine which composer one prefers, when comparing the best piano sonatas of each. Of course, their styles are very different, but each composer has his own style, and the London and Viennese Pianoforte schools were quite different.
@alanweinberg27549 ай бұрын
As well as which it is an early composition and shows enormous strides in the composer's early development .
@matthewvarney62145 ай бұрын
I suppose it would need to be very early Beethoven given that this piece was originally published when Beethoven was 9 years old 😉