The 12 Easiest Bars In Rachmaninoff Are A Pianist's Nightmare

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tonebase Piano

tonebase Piano

Күн бұрын

0:00 Rachmaninoff wrote lots of notes
2:29 The passage in context
3:58 Sokolov plays it (without messing up)
4:58 Two types of memory slips: #1 Vertigo
5:57 Competition winner & Gavrilov's vertigo
6:47 Two types of memory slips: #2 Lost in the Woods
7:25 Require first aid: Melnikov, Bunin, Chopin laureate
8:00 Missteps: Howard, Zimerman, Kissin
8:57 Wrong inversion: Kocsis, Ohlsson
10:59 Rachmaninoff forgets his own notes
11:45 Four tricky things about the passage
14:17 The "purely musical way" of memorizing it
16:38 The experience of being hypnotized
Ben Laude and Garrick Ohlsson explore a notorious passage in Rachmaninoff's Second Piano Concerto.
Study Rachmaninoff's piano works on tonebase: app.tonebase.co/piano/home?tb...
Watch Grigory Sokolov play Rach 2: • Grigory Sokolov - Rach...
Watch Nobuyuki Tsujii play Rach 2: • Nobuyuki Tsujii - Rach...
Watch Yeol Eum Son play Rach 2: • Yeol Eum Son 손열음, Rach...
Produced and edited by Ben Laude.
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Пікірлер: 317
@mickizurcher8450
@mickizurcher8450 7 ай бұрын
This is by far your best video, side-splitting. I can’t believe the hairsplitting editing you did …kudos, but do me a favor throw away that horrid green stained T-shirt that color comes with a jail sentence. it is against the law to wear that color in public Ew. Now, if you would only spend as much time at the keyboard, as you do, doodling with your videos …aw, good luck at your concert break a leg!
@tonebasePiano
@tonebasePiano 7 ай бұрын
Thank you. The stains are meant to symbolize the wrong notes that "stain" the passage in question.
@dale731
@dale731 7 ай бұрын
Supposedly Beethoven said that to make a mistake is unimportant but to play without passion is unforgivable.
@bluedoggo483
@bluedoggo483 7 ай бұрын
oh my god i laughed so hard agahaha
@AnibalPacaco
@AnibalPacaco 6 ай бұрын
Amazing detail. Such keen sense of hearing. Congrats!
@lavietzion4388
@lavietzion4388 2 күн бұрын
We all can learn a lesson on revenge from tonebase pinning this comment
@jemimalamb78
@jemimalamb78 7 ай бұрын
It doesn't matter if you make mistakes, it does matter if you don't keep going on with the performance. ❤
@cameronpeterson1175
@cameronpeterson1175 7 ай бұрын
I am really impressed with how people stitch together their mistakes with something very believable. They just keep going and make it up.
@pokerandphilosophy8328
@pokerandphilosophy8328 5 ай бұрын
The number of notes in only one of Rachmaninoff's piano concertos is larger than the number of atoms in the visible universe.
@juliegastler3872
@juliegastler3872 6 ай бұрын
Professional pianists hit wrong notes. It's okay to hit wrong notes. What matters is how you respond to that. Thank you for talking openly about that. I feel a sense of relief.
@epicgamer7697
@epicgamer7697 7 ай бұрын
This video reminded of what my piano teacher taught me years ago which was "don't bumble around trying to fix mistakes, act all natural and move on".
@sambarker6141
@sambarker6141 7 ай бұрын
This is why I'm a jazz musician, there are no wrong notes as long as you play with confidence lol
@hawkvandelay
@hawkvandelay 7 ай бұрын
in jazz you're always right until someone tells you you're wrong
@luiginumbers6268
@luiginumbers6268 7 ай бұрын
@@hawkvandelayjust say Nuh uh and then you’re right again
@Kazarijyanainoyonamidawa
@Kazarijyanainoyonamidawa 7 ай бұрын
repetition legitemizes.
@sekazzi
@sekazzi 7 ай бұрын
Wrong notes or more spice? Who knows
@trumpetlessons8488
@trumpetlessons8488 7 ай бұрын
No wrong notes in jazz... Just opportunities
@e.p.s.9037
@e.p.s.9037 7 ай бұрын
As someone with anxiety issues, this video made it sky rocket! My deepest admiration to those who pull through playing live
@user-nj9ru4ef2w
@user-nj9ru4ef2w 7 ай бұрын
now you just need to book a performance of rach 2 at carnegie hall
@awakenwithoutcoffee
@awakenwithoutcoffee 6 ай бұрын
@@user-nj9ru4ef2w well those that can do have the skill. In my journey I noticed my anxiety comes from a lack of skill/too little exposure to success. For every failure you need about 3 wins.
@remedyszn
@remedyszn 7 ай бұрын
babe wake up new tonebase video dropped
@kkngd391
@kkngd391 7 ай бұрын
Ok
@dalsegno1251
@dalsegno1251 7 ай бұрын
Ugh 🙄 so lame
@zihaoooi787
@zihaoooi787 7 ай бұрын
Holy hell
@mitchellwilliam95
@mitchellwilliam95 7 ай бұрын
They always sleeping, eh?
@Kaimo1
@Kaimo1 7 ай бұрын
I have played this concerto several times and never messed up this passage - but I am impressed by your ability to play the trill so fast with the 3th and 5th fingers haha
@eddydelrio1303
@eddydelrio1303 7 ай бұрын
I LOVE your channel. For an aging physician who formerly studied piano at the DMA level at a distinguished US conservatory, who has so little opportunity to even maintain my playing ability and repertoire, let alone advance either, your posts are such a lifeline to me both musically and pianistically. Thank you, thank you, thank you, and may success follow you wherever you go! Your ANALYSIS was excellent and is the key to correct performance in my opinion.
@murdo_mck
@murdo_mck 7 ай бұрын
Maybe you will be inspired by another retired physician kzbin.info/www/bejne/iZTSl5qdnqdmoq8
@PianoBuffs
@PianoBuffs 5 ай бұрын
Man... I had a memory lapse in this precise place while performing this live... I never realized it was such a common phenomenon :D
@ClassicalRaritiesChannel
@ClassicalRaritiesChannel 16 күн бұрын
I had a chance to watch Mikhail Pletnev rehearse this concerto last year in Jūrmala. He would repeat this passage again and again and again during the breaks, and I remember thinking "wow this is so weird, why would he be so obsessed with these few notes". Makes so much more sense now 😂
@Chopin-Etudes-Cosplay
@Chopin-Etudes-Cosplay 7 ай бұрын
16:38 Love the connection with hypnosis, since this concerto was dedicated to Rachmaninoff’s psychiatrist who hypnotized him
@iampracticingpiano
@iampracticingpiano 7 ай бұрын
This video was a lot of fun--more of this kind of content, please. Experienced pianists thoroughly enjoy comparative analysis of the "greats" and learn much from it.
@michaelowens5394
@michaelowens5394 7 ай бұрын
Mega-kudos to Ohlsson for discussing his mistakes in public. My admiration for that man is still soaring.
@imag1n342
@imag1n342 7 ай бұрын
Very informative and interesting video! Good luck on Rach. 2, we believe in you 🥰
@margarethansen7480
@margarethansen7480 7 ай бұрын
I loved this vídeo, as tonebase channel, very nice aspects treated with humour and excellent analysis👏👏👏I hope your rendition can be fine!❤
@Filekeepers
@Filekeepers 7 ай бұрын
the editing is sublime
@ernestbarretta4297
@ernestbarretta4297 7 ай бұрын
Dude, spot on as usual 👏 I also think that when the passage returns in Gb the fact it's not an exact transposition can confuse an already-overtaxed memory at this point in the piece...good luck with it!!
@oscarsnr
@oscarsnr 7 ай бұрын
Great subject. Yes, I have heard pianists screw this section. It’s so easy to switch train tracks between the 2 occurrences. I got it right when I played the concerto a couple of weeks ago, but I fluffed the 5th chord of the opening, which was a bit of a surprise. I went into a short holding pattern and nobody noticed! My head was still in the previous piece where I was faking harp on keyboard.
@classicallpvault8251
@classicallpvault8251 7 ай бұрын
Most people are completely oblivious to mistakes because the level of complexity in a piece like this is outside the scope of their comprehension. I am an amateur pianist and when I play Brahms' Hungarian Dance no.1 on a public piano I occasionally hit the wrong octaved bass or make mistakes in chords in all those large leaps over the keyboard which sound dissonant even to an untrained ear but people genuinely think I am a concert pianist. Because I play the piece in roughly the right tempo and with roughly the right phrasing and dynamics while playing through any mistakes. The bar is really that low and I am not at all surprised that even pros benefit from it.
@NoName-zn1sb
@NoName-zn1sb 7 ай бұрын
train tracks
@melchestermodelrailway
@melchestermodelrailway 7 ай бұрын
The last movement of Schumann's piano concerto would also be a suitable case for treatment, lots of memory lapses have occurred there, including Adelina de Lara, who fled from the stage in tears in a performance with Landon Ronald, when she messed up the repeat of the third subject. It probably didn't help that the day before in rehearsal the conductor told her that the last three times he had conducted the Schumann concerto, the pianist's memory has failed during the performance. Also the film "Madam Sousatzka" (where Shirley Maclaine plays an eccentric piano teacher) features a scene where her pupil has a memory lapse in the third movement.
@mickizurcher8450
@mickizurcher8450 7 ай бұрын
what a thoughtless conductor
@kerenneeman5879
@kerenneeman5879 7 ай бұрын
Also, it is a very contemplative moment in which it is easy to get lost in the beauty of the sound. Keeping a warm heart and a cold mind is not so easy sometimes. Loved the video, BTW.
@ruthie682
@ruthie682 7 ай бұрын
Great content. Who knew those illusive few measure caused so much chaos.
@ltbrooklynny
@ltbrooklynny 7 ай бұрын
Your hairsplitting is entertaining! Thank you! I love all the erroneous versions that don't sound wrong at all!
@lawrencetaylor4101
@lawrencetaylor4101 7 ай бұрын
I can relate. I'm trying to get through Czerny Opus 599, No 2. I hesitated between describing the feeling of failure and getting the passage wrong as either vertigo, constipation or diaper rash. I usually just belch and carry on. The only one that noticed a mistake is my teacher, and the neighbour's dog.
@Siansonea
@Siansonea 7 ай бұрын
I love how I don't even play piano but I'm always fascinated by discussions like these.
@LuisMorales-xn9fh
@LuisMorales-xn9fh 7 ай бұрын
i really really enjoyed listening to Ushida Tomoharu's playing of the concerto 2 during the 10th Annual hamamatsu tournament he played very nicely
@joshyman221
@joshyman221 7 ай бұрын
Ironically, I’ve never had issues here but now I might because I’ll overthink it….
@yuvalavital2357
@yuvalavital2357 7 ай бұрын
Same
@VocalEdgeTV
@VocalEdgeTV 7 ай бұрын
Yes!it’s never crossed my mind. But now…
@VocalEdgeTV
@VocalEdgeTV 7 ай бұрын
What a niche and fantastic video.
@txbooklvr
@txbooklvr 5 ай бұрын
I played Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto no 2 a couple weeks ago on cello during our community orchestra concert! The cello part is very difficult as well, but I love listening to the piano part in this piece, and it was my first concert I’ve ever played on cello! Definitely will never forget playing this piece, it is so magical and difficult!
@csxlab
@csxlab 4 ай бұрын
The cello warms my skin and bumps my heart on this piece .... this concerto for me is not just the piano ... is a dialogue between the strings .... the piano ... the cello .. the bass its pure love :)
@vaaal88
@vaaal88 7 ай бұрын
amazing video! Super entertaining and informative. Thanks!
@kentst8956
@kentst8956 7 ай бұрын
Like so many of your videos... interesting, entertaining and refreshingly unexpected.
@basslogicvibes641
@basslogicvibes641 7 ай бұрын
Love it, more Rach content please
@classicallpvault8251
@classicallpvault8251 7 ай бұрын
Playing note-perfect is overrated. The greatest recording artist of all time, Alfred Cortot, made mistakes in every recording but they're musically brilliant. Spontaneity = more important than note-perfection. Same for his contemporary, Mark Hambourg. And virtually every pianist from their generation. Striving for note-perfection has robbed the world of many brilliant performances: almost no one dares to take on the Henselt piano concerto, which is purely because almost no one is capable of playing it without making mistakes, hence only super virtuosos like Michael Ponti, Raymond Lewenthal and Marc-André Hamelin have or had it in their repertoire. It was part and parcel of the standard repertoire until the dawn of recording technology ensured that any performer would be unmasked making mistakes or simplifying passages. A wonderful piece of music was lost to obscurity in the process and all we have are a few recordings. If pianists all had the mindset of Cortot they'd just play such a work, knowing that a few wrong notes here and there are irrelevant in the grand scheme of things. The standard repertoire would be a lot bigger and the music world would greatly benefit from this. I don't want to hear 25 recordings of the Rach 3 for example. I'd much rather hear 25 recordings from a dozen piano concertos from not only Rachmaninoff but also Henselt, Scharwenka, Litolff and the Rubinstein brothers to choose from and only occasionally hear several renditions of the same piece. Even if some of them have mistakes in them. It's interesting to see that people care at all. I have heard several of these performances and it never even occurred to me to go and look for imperfect rendition of specific parts of the score because I just don't care. What matters is the grand scheme of things, not details. Doesn't make this video any less interesting though because we can still take valuable information from analysing something trivial.
@chong2389
@chong2389 7 ай бұрын
I agree. The record companies who splice together perfect Frankenstein performances make audiences expect it in live performances. But other than the rare 'live' recordings, recordings are all most people have. 😢
@sambarker6141
@sambarker6141 7 ай бұрын
If it sounds good, it's right
@zavilov
@zavilov 7 ай бұрын
Throwing notes under the piano by no means destroy the performance if you make the music convincing and meaningful.
@RaineStudio
@RaineStudio 7 ай бұрын
Spontaneity is not _always_ better than playing what they guy wrote, dear. It depends on the taste and ability of the performer. And a mistake is just a mistake, even if it is an improvement.
@jakehr3
@jakehr3 7 ай бұрын
​@@RaineStudioI think the main point they were trying to make was that if your only concern is with perfection then you run into issues of performers not even trying pieces because they are afraid of failure. That it is better to be spontaneous and roll with the "mistakes" then to just refuse to play a piece because somebody might come along and say you missed the Xth note in the Yth measure of the Zth movement We are human, we make mistakes. Beethoven didn't write the moonlight sonata with the expectation that every performer would play the exact same way every time. Every composer has always understood that there will be variability in performance (either intentional or otherwise). So think of the mistakes as adding to the long narrative of the music to its listeners, rather than as something that needs to be pointed to and shamed over.
@eddiemdhdhwk
@eddiemdhdhwk 7 ай бұрын
Fantastic video. Very interesting. Thank you
@SergioValenzuela
@SergioValenzuela 7 ай бұрын
Coming from a jazz improvisational perspective, my favorite sounding "error" is Garrick Ohlsson´s :).
@reamartin6458
@reamartin6458 7 ай бұрын
If my memory serves me well, Cortot also botched the passage and played instead of the E-flat a Chopin Prelude by mistake…alas
@tonebasePiano
@tonebasePiano 7 ай бұрын
underrated comment
@sonjatoutenhoofd8696
@sonjatoutenhoofd8696 7 ай бұрын
Amazingly fun video! Yet another approach to "solve" memorization issues is to use tools such as grouping, in and out, alignment, and more using the Taubman Approach that I'm studying. It's more about the movement of the body (and some neuroscience) than music theory. I'd like to try this section. I'm impressed how the college student did!
@singaporesymphony
@singaporesymphony 7 ай бұрын
We'll see you in January for this, Mr Ohlsson! 😉
@devunamoranto4094
@devunamoranto4094 7 ай бұрын
The way I recognized my school’s hall in your first example 😅. The first pianist is my classmate and I was able to be at this performance, she’s an amazing pianist!
@oosallytomatooo1321
@oosallytomatooo1321 7 ай бұрын
The first bars of his 3rd piano concerto's first movement are utterly easy as well ! Hiding the upcoming nightmare...
@veganpianist22
@veganpianist22 7 ай бұрын
This is just superb!
@quaver1239
@quaver1239 7 ай бұрын
Interesting and fun. Thank you!
@philipofsparta1355
@philipofsparta1355 7 ай бұрын
What a little gem!!!
@NN-rn1oz
@NN-rn1oz 7 ай бұрын
Confession: I sometimes just REWRITE those irregularities into more regular and memorizable versions. For example in his Sonata no.2, 1st mvt when the 2nd theme comes back in Gb maj near the end of the piece, it is not a literal transposition of its previous instance in Db maj, for no apparent musical benefit. So I just say screw this, I'm playing it as a literal transposition. The composer is not the one who's gonna look like a fool on stage, I am! So I'd rather look like a fool this way than by completely fumbling the passage!
@audenisarat8179
@audenisarat8179 7 ай бұрын
hope this blows up!!! i loved it and it really deserves more attention
@robkeeleycomposer
@robkeeleycomposer 7 ай бұрын
Fascinating. I wonder if the opening of Rach 3, also a baby-simple passage, ever creates similar problems.
@tonebasePiano
@tonebasePiano 7 ай бұрын
I think it's a little different. I don't hear pianists botch that theme, probably because it's not sequencing - it more or less stays put. And the chromatic moments are very distinct and harder to forget.
@freakytea2815
@freakytea2815 7 ай бұрын
I would doubt it, because it's a pretty distinctive (and famous) melody that's easy to sing back. It's also the opening, and people definitely practice openings.
@pineapple7024
@pineapple7024 7 ай бұрын
The opening of Rach 3 is NOT easy
@georgenorris2657
@georgenorris2657 7 ай бұрын
@@pineapple7024 It´s easier than the opening to the second and third movements!
@DamaruInochi
@DamaruInochi Ай бұрын
So awesome!😎 This channel is awesome!😎 Rach is awesome! (However I wish there were more vids on the 4th concerto, my favorite of his concertos.)😎 Ben is awesome!😎 Ohlsson Is awesome!😎 And all the people on here are awesome! 😎 Thank you!
@danielschoch9604
@danielschoch9604 7 ай бұрын
I have never seen a music video so humorous and still educating. Victor Borge meets Leonard Bernstein!
@brandonmacey964
@brandonmacey964 7 ай бұрын
That's a great point right there at the end "it's a beautiful metaphor, it doesn't matter if its true." It just works
@AmeeliaK
@AmeeliaK 6 ай бұрын
My only strategy for passages like that is playing it always with the exact same fingering and getting it into the finger memory until I don't have to think about it anymore.
@asyaandreeva2193
@asyaandreeva2193 7 ай бұрын
The inserts of movie are so fun! Thank you
@danielgloverpiano7693
@danielgloverpiano7693 7 ай бұрын
I’d love to see an analysis of the eight repetitions of the main theme of the slow movement from Mozart C minor Concerto, K 491. Each time has a different rhythmic/melodic variation and drove me to insanity. Mozart played with the score and improvised in any case. Brendel does his own thing each time, and I think that’s totally in the spirit of the style. Make it up as you go along. To play exactly as the score says each time is enough to put you in an asylum. The same goes for the various repetitions of the Promenade in Pictures at an Exhibition. I had to write out the differences in words to be able to retain it. Anyone else relate to that? This video uses exactly the correct way to solve this issue- analytic approach is the only dependable way to approach it. My ears aren’t good enough to depend on for this. I have to know each note and how it fits in the chord. Visual memory also helps me.
@BorjaVarona_at_YT
@BorjaVarona_at_YT 7 ай бұрын
Great video and logical explanations. Regarding memorizing fingering, Georg Solti commented on this problem on his autobiography. I read it years ago, but I think he relates that when he was in exile in Switzerland during World War II, before becoming a conductor he aspired to a career as concert pianist. And during a performance he made some mistakes which he put down to muscular memory rather than actually memorizing the score and the harmonic development.
@tonebasePiano
@tonebasePiano 7 ай бұрын
Absolutely. Muscle memory without musical understanding is playing with fire.
@nancywoo1762
@nancywoo1762 7 ай бұрын
This is just the type of thing that we pianists obsess over. 😊. Gotta go practice now.
@rogerward8047
@rogerward8047 7 ай бұрын
I love the hypnotic interpretation discussed. My understanding is that Rachmaninoff composed this piece after receiving treatment from Dr. Dull, who used hypnosis. Tonebase is a fantastic resource.😄
@rebarnes2215
@rebarnes2215 7 ай бұрын
I'll never forget a recital I heard in the 1970's performed on a new 3-manual German-built pipe organ in Ft. Wayne, Indiana. The guest organist was performing the entire recital from memory. During one piece, he suddenly stopped due to a complete memory block. He tried to backtrack a little but couldn't get past that point. The church's resident organist took him out of the balcony and talked him out of just ending the recital by encouraging him to finish the recital using the sheet music. He knew that if the recitalist didn't do this, he might never be able to bring himself to play another recital. Thankfully, the recital continued, including that particular piece.
@rebarnes2215
@rebarnes2215 7 ай бұрын
Organists don't typically perform recitals from memory unless they are virtuosos or participating in a competition or exam for which it is required. This is because a pipe organ is unlike all other instruments. Each pipe organ is a unique instrument because of differences in the number of keyboards (anywhere from 1 to 6 keyboards, plus - usually - the pedalboard). The organ may have anywhere from 61 pipes to thousands of pipes, which may be situated directly in close proximity to the organ console or scattered throughout the entire church or concert hall at great distances from the organ console, so much so that there's a delay between the time the organist presses a key until that pipe or set of pipes is heard. To control those pipes, the organ console may have anywhere from a few control mechanisms to hundreds of them. Since no two pipe organs are identical, the recitalist must learn where everything is located plus what pipes are most suitable for each piece of music to be performed everytime they perform in a different location, usually within the span of a few days if they're on a tour. There's also the reverberation of the room that must be comsidered. So, in short, the pipe organ can be an extremely complex instrument, and therefore most organists simply don't perform recitals from memory. And to make an already complex situation even more complex, the organist plays with both feet as well as both hands.
@chrissahar2014
@chrissahar2014 7 ай бұрын
Actually the vertigo feeling happened to me while playing the first movement of one of Bach's Tiro Sonatas for organ.
@benharmonics
@benharmonics 7 ай бұрын
4:08 Sokolov 5:20 5:58 Gavrilov 7:01 7:12 7:25 7:37 Melnikov 7:47 Bunin 8:00 Howard 8:10 Zimerman 8:19 Kissin 9:03 Kocsis 9:17 Ohlsson 11:23 Rachmaninoff
@davidhertzberg
@davidhertzberg 7 ай бұрын
Things like this happen as one gets older (I speak here from personal experience). Its one reason why many pianists of a certain age will use sheet music in public performance.
@georgenorris2657
@georgenorris2657 7 ай бұрын
I´m 68 now and my finger memory has deteriorated a LOT!
@DressedForDrowning
@DressedForDrowning 7 ай бұрын
When it comes down to triples, it might help to accentuate always the first note of the triplet, so you know always exactly where you are - and the listener also does.
@bobdagranny7431
@bobdagranny7431 7 ай бұрын
Great video
@daa589
@daa589 7 ай бұрын
I'm laughing, not at the pianists but at Rach for making this deceivingly simple passage
@cadriver2570
@cadriver2570 3 ай бұрын
Had this same experience with the 4 d minor bars on the first page of "the snow is dancing" from Debussy's Children's Corner.
@noisydoll168
@noisydoll168 7 ай бұрын
So when/where’s the concert? I love this piece!
@EleniOperaNoir
@EleniOperaNoir 7 ай бұрын
You guys need more views.
@aritina8379
@aritina8379 7 ай бұрын
I never forgot it or had a problem remembering it because every time I play it or practice it, I would sing it in my head using solfege (fixed do) like I do with all melodies: do si do, si la si, la sol la etc. I was not taught music using the ABCDEFG system and I think that only benefited me. I think every pianist at one point should try memorizing the melodic line by singing it in their head every time they practice it. Pretty soon you won’t be able to play that melody without singing every note in your head. Works like a charm! ❤
@tonebasePiano
@tonebasePiano 7 ай бұрын
I agree completely. When you've solfeged your way through a piece, it's hard to forget.
@paulvannessspianoworld1724
@paulvannessspianoworld1724 7 ай бұрын
Such a great video for us pianists! First, it is teassuring to see the best level pianists screw up! Makes us schlubs feel better. Second, I loved watching the different fingerings on thos nadty, exposed trills! Your 3-5 is very impressive, 2-4 works better for me, buy even the 135-2-35 works! Thank God. Lastly, Garrick Ohlsen is such a real charmer! Totally loveable! ps I played #1 and 3, but never 2. Too tricky! Even Rubindtein fakes the last movement! 🤣
@julianbrelsford
@julianbrelsford 7 ай бұрын
I'm a violinist and I've definitely made the same kinds of mistakes described here without playing any Rachmaninoff
@foljamb
@foljamb 3 күн бұрын
very entertaining and very valuable: what tonebase is pointing to at the end is the usefulness of a knowledge of functional harmony in the secure memorization of tonal music--and functional harmony is the easiest part of music theory for a pianist to master: we can see it on the keys, we get to hear it in chords modulating, and we get to make it part of the train of thought as we play and tend to finger technique
@wassup_-ku5ty
@wassup_-ku5ty 7 ай бұрын
Did he really just say that all the notes in his concert is more than all the grains of sand on every beach combined
@DylanOndine
@DylanOndine 7 ай бұрын
It doesn’t matter if it’s true was really nice to hear ❤❤❤
@Turunflo
@Turunflo 7 ай бұрын
Very similar issue we can get playing the transition on Chopin's Barcarolle... Very hard to keep that "balancing" touch...
@barstumkaya2581
@barstumkaya2581 7 ай бұрын
I really wish maestro Elizondo would record Rach 2 😢
@nadeemlo
@nadeemlo 7 ай бұрын
What an interesting and funny phenomenon!
@IanKnight40
@IanKnight40 7 ай бұрын
Really interesting video.... Just as a side note, I've heard that some pianist miss out a note or two in the 1st movement chords because they are so hard to play without resorting to splitting or rolling the chords. I find it impossible to play the 2nd and 8th bar chords without breaking them. Thanks for a really absorbing episode. Cheers Ian. Leicester UK.
@mickizurcher8450
@mickizurcher8450 7 ай бұрын
Rolling a chord is a minor transgression
@tonebasePiano
@tonebasePiano 7 ай бұрын
Rachmaninoff breaks up the chords even though he didn't have to. But there's a trick to the 2nd and 8th chords. Play the C-Db half step in the right hand with the the thumb playing both notes. It's surprisingly comfortable and reliable, and more manageable for most hands.
@IanKnight40
@IanKnight40 7 ай бұрын
@@tonebasePiano Thanks, I will be giving that tip a try. Cheers Ian.
@tomsmith620
@tomsmith620 7 ай бұрын
Watched this for a long time and quit. He’d never get to the actual mistake. Maddening.
@avaraportti1873
@avaraportti1873 7 ай бұрын
The real lesson is this: theory isn't just for nerds, it makes you a better performer
@adrianyaguar7666
@adrianyaguar7666 7 ай бұрын
Richter execution of this passage is unreal ❤
@Pedsonc01
@Pedsonc01 7 ай бұрын
I've played the Rach 2 in concert at least eight-times. I can't remember ever playing every-single-note correctly. Vladimir Horowitz, appearing at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles in 1975, missed one entire bar in the third movement. He laughed as he corrected himself and drove-on to the finish of the movement. The crowd gave Horowitz his usual standing ovation. On our way to the car, my wife asked me, "did you catch Horowitz's mistake in the first movement?"
@mangomerkel2005
@mangomerkel2005 Ай бұрын
As a fellow Rach 2 player, the hardest but easiest section for me are clearly the two piano buildups to the climaxes in the development of the 2nd Movement. Very hard to remember.
@georgepantzikis7988
@georgepantzikis7988 7 ай бұрын
I think the reason this passage is fumbled so often is because, since pianists have heard the piece so many times and the melody is fairly simple, it's really easy to slip into playing by ear instead of playing from memory. They probably didn't spend much time practicing it, so they don't have strong muscle memory to fall back to. No muscle memory + playing half by ear, half from memory = high probability of making a mistake.
@rotsteineva
@rotsteineva 4 ай бұрын
I deffinetly need that t-shirt!
@VanVlearMusic
@VanVlearMusic 7 ай бұрын
YO I messed up on this same part during a concerto competition!
@ronwalker4849
@ronwalker4849 7 ай бұрын
WITH A GOOD PIANIST, EVEN THE MISTAKES SOUND GOOD.
@fushifushi9441
@fushifushi9441 7 ай бұрын
Hahaha as a pianist I can confirm! The easiest parts in a difficult piece are often overlooked, thus not memorized quite as well!
@georgenorris2657
@georgenorris2657 7 ай бұрын
That reminds me of a finalist at the Leeds piano competition some time in the 90´s who was playing Rach Paganini variations very beautifully. When he got to the very famous variation (18th I think) he had a really serious memory slip. He´d probably hopped over it during his practising a few times thinking "Oh I know that one."
@lospazio
@lospazio 7 ай бұрын
And what about the accentuation? It seems to me that, at the beginning of the passage, everybody accentuates the the third note of the first triplet instead the first note of the second one.
@korados5146
@korados5146 7 ай бұрын
I don't know if anyone already said this but this gets even worse knowing that there was a printing error in the Pavel Lamm score. The first arpeggio had an e-flat followed by a d-sharp in the score, which is the same tone. Maybe this was what Rachmaninoff himself might have tripped over.
@asdfg952816
@asdfg952816 7 ай бұрын
3:25 lmao nice flexing those 35 trills
@mitchnew3037
@mitchnew3037 5 ай бұрын
The do it with your nose caught me dying 😂😂
@user-nj9ru4ef2w
@user-nj9ru4ef2w 7 ай бұрын
it's so interesting how professional pianists think; they seem to memorize "groups", or I guess the musical term would be phrases and think about the harmony and music theory behind it... so when they make a mistake, its on the whole phrase where as for amateurs, we just fumble and "misclick" because we are memorizing individual notes, not seeing it as a cohesive block and thinking about why those particular notes are chosen
@JSB2500
@JSB2500 7 ай бұрын
Yes indeed!! As I think you've now realized, the amateur way just doesn't work at all. It suddenly breaks, leaving you falling from 40000 ft. I only became able to perform entire works from memory after getting to know some great concert pianists, and understanding how they work.
@user-nj9ru4ef2w
@user-nj9ru4ef2w 7 ай бұрын
@@JSB2500 Well, I was able to get to RCME grade 10 in Canada so it works to some level... but I could never understand how people can just improvise on the spot or sight-read so well or re-create the sheet music for anime music and such just by listening to it.
@JSB2500
@JSB2500 7 ай бұрын
@@user-nj9ru4ef2w I understand. By "works" I meant "works safely" in the sense that one's career would not be wrecked if it went wrong. With an exam you can retake it if it goes wrong from a memory block or whatever (I'm not suggesting you did do that). The brain works best by recreating, not by literal recall, so the concert pianist in a sense becomes the composer and improvises a piece that just happens to be identical to the one that Bach or Rachmaninoff etc composed. If they can't get it exactly right, they can come very close. None of the pianists threw in a G#! (AFAIK). That's what I do, anyway. I've used this method to memorize (internalize) many Bach organ Prelude and Fugues (see my channel). I'm currently memorizing Rach 2, which is why I'm here. This discovery changed my life - greatly for the better! All the best.
@Karsten_Kramer
@Karsten_Kramer 7 ай бұрын
On one day somebody played a wrong note, ... and so jazz was born. 😁
@aphraxiaojun1145
@aphraxiaojun1145 7 ай бұрын
If the total amount of notes in all of Rachmaninoff's concertos was more then the amount of grains of sand, then using rachmaninoff's recording of the concertos, which takes around 8820 seconds, then there are 1 quadrillion notes played per second haha
@alekd4415
@alekd4415 7 ай бұрын
yea no that’s definitely bs
@obedmaldonado6303
@obedmaldonado6303 7 күн бұрын
I feel like I just practiced this passage for hours just by watching this video.
@popolala2160
@popolala2160 7 ай бұрын
It isnt a "fumble" if the pianist manages to recover and make it sounds emotionally and harmonically fitting. rachmaninoff himself was known for improvising and changing the score a lot in his playing just. listen to recordings of him on youtube. in general a section which is less dense in notes used to mean the preformer himself was expected to improvise and expand on (mostly baroque music). i think it is beautiful that not every performance of this passage is note perfect, it makes it much more human this way, human error leads to musical variety in the context this simpler musical line.
@wuwupiano
@wuwupiano 7 ай бұрын
Omg Ben need a tutorial video on how to trill with 3 and 4.
@wuwupiano
@wuwupiano 7 ай бұрын
Great video btw!
@tonebasePiano
@tonebasePiano 7 ай бұрын
I was born with a decent 3-4 RH trill and a lousy 2-3. I think I'm using 3-5 a lot in this video, which I find very comfortable for some reason.
@anrvandelay1897
@anrvandelay1897 7 ай бұрын
PLEASE, make Seymour Bernstein's reaction to Waltz Opus 64 2 Katsaris arrangement.
@tobyr21
@tobyr21 7 ай бұрын
Number five: these concertos require incredible concentration to play. Here’s the one passage that says you can relax and catch your breath for a moment and drop your concentration.-Toby
@stevenlarkin1706
@stevenlarkin1706 7 ай бұрын
I have listened to this concerto since I was a teenager and I though the triplets were all in the same key and were just one repeated three times! This means I don’t have perfect pitch for sure. Anyway Rachmaninov playing his own concerto sounded beautiful to me mistakes and all.
@jblen
@jblen 7 ай бұрын
It is interesting. I cant say for sure this is what happened to everyone, but if it was me I'd be using the comparatively simple section as a brain-breather moment where you just go on autopilot and think about whats next more than whats going on, and then that leads to more mistakes deapite being objectively easier.
@MiguelCatalaoMusic
@MiguelCatalaoMusic 7 ай бұрын
I wonder if muscle memory has somethijg to do with it too. By the time one masters this kind of piece every strong and fast passage has been trained do exertion and is completely written in the pianist brain's synapses, to the core of his arm, pukse and finger nerves. But a mellow, soft passage in the modsft of such a complex piece might not have had the same attention as the rest.
@MiguelCatalaoMusic
@MiguelCatalaoMusic 7 ай бұрын
Ps. : quite a clever save from the "younger" undosclosed pianost. Nerves of steel, I've heard the concerto a lot of times, live and recordings and i thik i wouldnt notice it.
@xjAlbert
@xjAlbert 7 ай бұрын
I never knew this passage is tricky! I'll have to play some of this excellent video at Rach's grave and see if anything happens. How did Gunkle Lenny fare with this hypnotic moment? I can play some over his grave at my next visit.
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