OMG, such depth, such authentic beauty and connexion with the music... Honestly, Stanislav Bunin is so incredibly underrated and so unfairly overlooked, it's truly heartbreaking...
Bravo Bravo 👏 Great Pianist 👍 잘들었습니다 덕분입니다 감사합니다 고맙습니다 이 순간만큼은 세상사 모든 풍파에서 자유롭습니다
@みーちゃんのお世話日記6 жыл бұрын
すごすぎて感動❤️😭
@mostbestjia6273 жыл бұрын
I hope one day I can go to his concert and listen in person 👂
@classicalalways9 жыл бұрын
Stunning performance - filled with all of the beauty and drama that makes for an outstanding Chopin 3rd Sonata. What a pity that it seems that no pianist since has played it at this level, even the dozens and dozens at the Chopin Competition since as well. Perhaps it is the fact that there is real intensity hear and not just an attempt to play with perfect polish at all times. If you think about it, if Yundi Li is the most well-known and considered finest Chopin Competition winner since Bunin - and if you really think about it, not a famous AND great Chopin player since 1975 with Zimerman. Similar things can be said for other competitions - though oddly the best prize winner to come out of the Tchaikovsky since 1978 was a 2nd place winner Lugansky. Yet, back to Bunin, what happened? Few pianists have ever played the Chopin 3rd Sonata so well (with very heavy competition) - yet why only in Japan did anyone pay attention to him?
@TheDynamitedoll17 жыл бұрын
classicalalways that's what I am wondering how did we miss this genius pianist?? I can't believe I've never heard of him. I have seen some of the latest and greatest pianist and nothing compares to Bunin IMO.
@ganjamozart14356 жыл бұрын
Some pianists simply step away from the limelight. His Polonaise Fantaisie is absolutely marvellous as well.
@Thijs-Kuiken5 жыл бұрын
what bs are you talking about... 1978 Tchaikovsky competition? Pletnev won... in 1990 Berezovsky.. not that long ago Trifonov.. Matsuev... they are mainstays of the piano world.. and not for nothing. About this chap here... inspired playing.. perhaps yes... but it's a misconception to think of inspired playing with lots of mistakes as having an edge over playing that is technically more brilliant and assured because mistakes supposedly show "character". that's just bs. It's what it it.. inspired playing full of mistakes.. and it becomes a waiting game... when will he screw up some more? It's fine.. not that good. About Lugansky.. ALL his recordings have the same high level playing....without any of the discernable qualities that some of the aforementioned first prize winners do have.
@MagnoliA-752 ай бұрын
Играл лучше, и это был Гениальный пианист Алексей Султанов! Послушайте. Вечная ему Память! Очень рано покинул этот мир, к сожалению...Да, и кстати, раз уж тут вспомнили Мацуева..., то и победителем конкурса Чайковского по-настоящему должен был быть совсем не он, а Алексей Султанов. Это был самый скандальный конкурс Чайковского. Сохранились записи, как Алексей играл тогда, Мацуев даже близко не стоял...
@donkgated80742 ай бұрын
@@Thijs-Kuiken Pletnev is also often riddled with mistakes, but he is always absolutely inspired and artistic. Just like Horowitz. I'd pay money to hear artistic inspiriations - I don't care about a few slipped notes here and there. I'd sooner hear Pletnev, Volodos or Bunin in concert than Lugansky. If you are different, that's fine. Just don't call other people's preference bs. I could also say your performance can be fully satisfied by an AI.
@naceslak79628 жыл бұрын
This is truly unbelievable performance! Breathtaking rubato, beautiful and powerful sound and he still menages to keep form very clear..
@matthieucailliau Жыл бұрын
De toute évidence un immense pianiste. Toutes les Sonates de Chopin sont difficilement accessibles !
@morinoroba4 жыл бұрын
He really had something special that moves me, when he was young. I hear strong yearning and passion.
Breathtaking. Bunin is one of the greatest - the greatest? - Chopin player there has been. A remarkable pianist and another remarkable performance. Thanks for sharing.
His Bach recordings are equally worth acquiring to his Chopin. I find myself wishing he had recorded more.
@harryelardo40562 ай бұрын
He is really really marvelous pianist.
@르릉z6 жыл бұрын
I love this play. His performance is powerful and dramatic.(my personal think) Thanks for sharing this video
@caseyjeremy16023 жыл бұрын
sorry to be off topic but does anyone know a method to log back into an Instagram account? I somehow lost my account password. I would appreciate any tips you can offer me.
@manueljustice12783 жыл бұрын
@Casey Jeremy Instablaster =)
@caseyjeremy16023 жыл бұрын
@Manuel Justice thanks so much for your reply. I found the site thru google and Im waiting for the hacking stuff atm. Looks like it's gonna take a while so I will reply here later with my results.
@caseyjeremy16023 жыл бұрын
@Manuel Justice it did the trick and I actually got access to my account again. I am so happy! Thank you so much you really help me out !
@manueljustice12783 жыл бұрын
@Casey Jeremy Happy to help xD
@danielche23497 жыл бұрын
Enchanting lyrical sections... I don't know how he does it but it's just so different from others, in a good way of course.
@andygato24524 жыл бұрын
Beautiful❗👍
@quaver12393 жыл бұрын
I don’t KNOW if this is as great as I think it is, but I found it bloomin’ marvellous. Have never before enjoyed this sonata as much as in this rendering. Mr Bunin is (was?) a great musician. Thank you for the upload.
@Tristan-zt8tw2 жыл бұрын
Amazing!
@moo883jp2 ай бұрын
まだお若い頃ですねえ😁みずみずしい演奏に惚れてしまう この数年後に来日した際にお会いしました
@j.spenserthompson54582 жыл бұрын
He's the best.
@vladibaby795 жыл бұрын
truly outstanding!!!
@leonorkilayko37402 жыл бұрын
Such clarity
@b1i2l3368 ай бұрын
The grreatest pianist who ever lived. Sadly, he no longer concertizes.
@serhiysalov15857 күн бұрын
Rubinstein said: I am not the greatest, there isn't such thing in art as The Greatest, just a "different one". After reading your comment I finally understood that he was wrong. The greatest pianist is Stanislav Bunin.
@taoyezhang8686 жыл бұрын
Handsome Pianist !
@leonorkilayko37402 жыл бұрын
Pure magic
@remomazzetti87574 жыл бұрын
It's interesting to compare his performance of this Sonata to those of his father and grandfather. My own preference is for his grandfather's recording: he has the most beautiful tone of the three, and his is the only one who does the exposition repeat of the first movement. But Bunin is certainly impressive.
@matsao1313Ай бұрын
Please check out Igor Zhukov, who studied with Neuhaus. kzbin.info/www/bejne/gn7IopSuqJqIras I find Bunin a bit harsh at times and I don't really connect with his style of playing, it's a bit too excessive and calculated. I prefer that the music simply flows out of the pianist's soul, not his brain or fingers. Technique isn't enough.
@Terasawa153 жыл бұрын
Namumyohorengekyo What a miraculous happy unison of the sprit of music, pianist highest skills, his physical body flow, which is truly rare and special young age only possible. No doubt his Chopin is beyond any comparison because those unique unison of his music making of power beauty and emotion. He was the special cultural phenomenon of the dramatic change of the post Soviet era. He was truly genuine inheritor of Russian Piano Romanticism of Soviet elites however with the collapse of Soviet Union such breeding institutions also collapsed. His migration to Japan and exposure to commercialism and sensationalism might destroyed his best condition as Piano soloist.
@carmen61692 жыл бұрын
Los genios de su época. 🇮🇷♥️
3 жыл бұрын
Splendid ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
@angelob.10895 жыл бұрын
How does someone like this simply vanish from the world stage? I guess performing wasn't the life for him. (He plays Chopin exquisitely though... what a shame.)
@똥쌀짜식5 жыл бұрын
he has diabetic and he is sick (since 30~40 ish age) . Thats part of reasons why he doesn't appear in public anymore. also he married a japanese girl and has a son. he enjoys living in Japan. but he finds performing in public hard enough as he get anxious/stressed too much etc. I was a big fan of Bunin since in 1989 (he played in Korea) but really its a shame he doesn't even make any more decent recordings. His Chopin competition live performance (DG) is the best so far I can tell.
@terrygowork5 жыл бұрын
Another pianist I love a lot.
@newcenturypianists31953 жыл бұрын
@Eugenie Song, where do you get that information? Such a pity that someone with Bunin's skills is no longer active.
@momoohta20746 жыл бұрын
ショパンは彼がだんとつだー❣️
@dawidwalega47262 жыл бұрын
Stanislav Bunin is one of the greatest Pianists. HIs IV movement was dangerously fast. Inspired I recorded Finale on my channel.
@nataliea.s.61735 жыл бұрын
He plays the first sixteenth notes like the lightning flash.
Maravilhoso, sonata preferida, a primeira vez que ouvi foi com a grande pianista brasileira Guiomar Novaes, estou ouvindo sempre tambem com outros pianistas, e maravilhosa e eleva o espirito humano.
This performance shows why he won the chopin comp. one year before.
@rickartdefoix12985 жыл бұрын
Fabulous pianist. Apalling sound, neatness in playing and a wide range of colours. All together with an uncommon sensitivity. The result is an stunning mix of delicacy and majestic piano rendition you won't find in anywhere else. The best interpretation I've heard of this Sonata, that of Glenn Gould included. A shocking discovery. Why on earth did this artist cast aside or "vanish" from the world? Seems there's a bit of a mistery 'round him... 🙄😳😳🙏Still the question mark arises : is he mannered? for his critics say he is... 🙄😳🎵🎶
@brkahn3 жыл бұрын
What do you mean by mannered?
@НАТА-ь5э7 ай бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤
@fastben20106 жыл бұрын
powerfull
@kttk71513 жыл бұрын
ブーニン、ショパンコンクールの審査員にも呼ばれないのかな。
@fastben20105 жыл бұрын
first price of Chopin competition and Marguerite Long Jacques Thibaut
@hansdekorver73657 жыл бұрын
In the last movement he is sometimes dangerously fast.
What is Bunin doing now? I hardly hear about him. I know he married a Japanese woman and lived in Japan for a while. But he hardly did concerts outside Japan m if I understand correctly. Really too bad that he disappeared into obscurity.
@atomic791007 жыл бұрын
as i have read he is teaching in Japan now
@organicnatto6 жыл бұрын
Yes, and he has been performing in Japan as well.
@rickartdefoix12985 жыл бұрын
@Mookie Spindlehurst To teach and perform in Japan does not mean to vanish : he went away or dissappear from our Western world, but not from that other. He may have become a Zen man, fed up with our Civilization.. Who knows? One can still getting his recordings through the Japanese Amazon market.. You still finding them in Amazon, so, we're lucky!! 😂😂🙏
@rickartdefoix12985 жыл бұрын
@Mookie Spindlehurst You right. But we have to understand that if you marry a Japanese and you're in love with, you may happen to love her world too... and then you may decide to settle down there, then start working there and, all of a sudden, you are making a life there.. your friends are there, your house, your work... in some months you have a new life and your home is out of the blue (to say so), there. If you earn well enough, would you then, miss Russia or your stressing Western world? Perhaps not. For me, this what has surely happened. In any case, I prefer to think it was so, just a love story with a happy ending. 😳😘After all, he has recorded quite enough repertory, and probably keeps going on with that production. For what have seen, it in't a problem at all, for pianists to live here or there. About his live performances, the idea I've gotten is that he keeps on with, now and then showing up, somewhere, 'round there. And again, some pianists don't like studio recordings as others don't like stage appearances. Think it's possible he thinks he earns well enough with his classes and then his royalties, many did the same... Tatiana Shebanova, Sokolov, Gould, Lupu... even Weissenberg kept volontarily retired during ten years and said he didn't repent at all about it. Think what are named master classes of this piano wonders or celebrities, are very well paid, so where's the need of producing themselves on stage again, and then having to re enter into the chains of contracts and stressing tours a bit everywhere? He surely has found some gratifying harmony with the world and with himself the way he does it nowadays. What if he is a man who loves being home with his dearest after his classes and recordings? Can't tell, but it's what I tend to think. He can always reappear in our Western world for a single concert per year or three in a year and then stop again. These brilliant artists have also gotten a freedom degree that we can't even imagine... If he reappears in Europe or the States now, he will be payed triple than they paid him before. Just because his apparent "vanishing" has created a demand non existent before, who knows. But it doesn't seem to me he is someone in permanent search of fame and money. Many of these artists are not that kind. And tend to think too, that what his wife may think, surely matters a lot to him, he wouldn't have settled down there if not, would he had? Is he the Celibidache or Gulda or Vasary kind? Why not? there are many who decide to live under the Orient stars: aren't those cultures fascinating? I know they are. 🙄✨🌟🌟🤔😔🙏
15:04 hilarious his face after he played the wrong chord 19:26 those three notes always sounds wrong to me but that's correct in the book
@ああ-u7p4i28 күн бұрын
Where are you finding these Bunin videos?
@markgoretsky7666 жыл бұрын
After listening to Stanislav Bunin's Chopin one feels all of the other pianists are either redundant or just caricatures.
@rickartdefoix12985 жыл бұрын
Is he mannered, as his critics have said? 🙄😳
@rickartdefoix12984 жыл бұрын
@@elisabetta5044 Have just asked mentioning what his critics say. Don't think that 's my opinion... 🤔🙄😳
@remomazzetti87574 жыл бұрын
Nonsense. There are many extraordinary interpreters of Chopin including his father and grandfather, not to mention Cortot, Rubenstein, Novaes, Horszowski and many others.
@bachadmirer9 жыл бұрын
I think if he had debuted these days he would have been more successful in his career.
@AlexPashkov9 жыл бұрын
+bachadmirer I think totally the opposite...Have a look a the present-days-winners... :)
@AlexPashkov9 жыл бұрын
edwindepianist of course, he is...I just meant that with all that long-yundi-wangs he wouldn't have any success nowadays. ...
@AlexPashkov9 жыл бұрын
+edwindepianist completely agree with Edwin. ..I personally remember his faschinschwank aus Wien. ...if you are a pianist wouldn't you mind to have a little look at my Chopin 3d sonata...?
@音楽日記5 жыл бұрын
左の6連符がどうしても弾けん
@paolofranceschi68742 жыл бұрын
why the surname in bunin, if the father was neuhaus?
@alexeyignatyev20884 жыл бұрын
Очень жаль,что пианист носу не кажет в Россию,по крайней мере ,я слежу за афишей 25 лет.
@unkunk57842 жыл бұрын
Ему и там неплохо
@alexeyignatyev2088 Жыл бұрын
@@alitalake4932 я думаю он не концертирует уже, а только преподаёт в Японии
@alexeyignatyev2088 Жыл бұрын
@@alitalake4932 спасибо за информацию, видимо, в России его обидели чем- то, сын Нейгауза, , и вот Япония стала второй Родиной
@alexeyignatyev2088 Жыл бұрын
@@alitalake4932 у нас Мацуев есть, его хватает
@liabarnabishvili2823 ай бұрын
@@alexeyignatyev2088😂
@Luis-Miguel-Gallego2 ай бұрын
How come his surname is 'Bunin', if he is Stanislav Neuhaus' son? 😐 Anyone knows? 🤔
@morinorobaАй бұрын
He is a son of Stanislav Neuhaus, but he grew up with a stepfather. His surname comes from his mother's, 'Bunina'. He wrote that in his autobiography。
@helenavondrakenstein49697 жыл бұрын
15;24 wayyyyyyyy too fast
@ちゃんチン-c8c2 жыл бұрын
コクは無いがキレが有る
@arribachrach29669 жыл бұрын
rather crude. tremendous faciity AB
@hansdekorver73657 жыл бұрын
Bunin is the son of Stanislav Neuhaus and who is the mother ??
@nataliea.s.61735 жыл бұрын
Lyudmila Bunina, a pianist, pupil of Heinrich Neuhaus.
@lagunagreg40195 жыл бұрын
Quite aggressive in the beginning of the first movement, precipitous throughout, and not necessarily a lovely tone. A brilliant player of course, and some lovely moments, but a little too Schumannesque (badly) for my tastes. I can see why his performing career did not take off internationally beyond the requisite 2 years of prize-winning contracts.
@rickartdefoix12985 жыл бұрын
Yes. Besides, Bunin has been critised as being mannered. A very serious flaw in interpreting Chopin. Up to you to judge if this is so. 🙄😳🎵🎶
@grigorpetrov80062 жыл бұрын
Way too much "rubato". This is NOT rubato. He is playing faster, slower, then faster again. Good technique but this is not true Chopin. In places, it almost sounded like Rachmaninoff. Also, his cadence's are rather because he makes massive ritards into them making it seem like the end of the movement. In the scherzo, he has great finger work but in the trio section, again he has far too much rhythmic freedom.
@davidfooterman65157 жыл бұрын
Too edgy. Too upsy downsy. Too much bashing. Too many Russian pyrotechnic dotted notes where the score simply didn't say so. Great technique for its own sake. Not in the service of the music. Momentary lapses of concentration causing wrong notes. I think pianists with this level of promise who have gone astray should go on sabbaticals, shut themselves away and listen to Dinu Lipatti, the pianist's pianist, to learn how flawless technique can pass almost completely unnoticed in the service of the music. Nadia Boulanger would have straightened this fellow out real quick, and Heinrich Neuhaus would have been right there saying, "with a little guidance, my grandson could be quite a fine pianist indeed" Yes, really, he has some beautiful sotto voce, and just when you're starting to enjoy him, he starts bashing again. "This performance shows why he won the Chopin competition the year before"? I have no idea where our host got that notion from. He must have turned in some way better performances than this unless the 1985 line-up was a weak one. But there again, I'm just an armchair critic who couldn't even get close to this effort, but nonetheless has a pair of ears that don't want to be conned.
@danielche23496 жыл бұрын
David Footerman interesting, where did you get that quote from neuhaus?
@lagunagreg40195 жыл бұрын
Well I'm a pianist who can play this piece well enough to present it to the public more than few times, to a couple of good reviews, and I agree with you. I can well see why his career stalled and then fizzled.
@rickartdefoix12985 жыл бұрын
His critics have insisted in saying he is mannered. What do you think? 🙄😳
@andremileu70833 жыл бұрын
Dont agree
@davidfooterman65153 жыл бұрын
@@danielche2349 It's not a quote. It was just me speculating on what Neuhaus might have said!