Daniel Barenboim: Debussy - Des pas sur la neige (Préludes - Book I)
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- čas přidán 20. 05. 2016
- Des pas sur la neige is a musical composition by French composer Claude Debussy. It is the sixth piece in the composer's first book of Préludes, written between late 1909 and early 1910. The title is in French and translates to "Footprints in the Snow" The piece is 36 measures long and takes approximately three and a half to four and a half minutes to play. It is in the key of D minor.
Daniel Barenboim - piano
Watch the full documentary about Claude Debussy with Daniel Barenboim (Entre Quatre-z-Yeux): • Debussy - Entre Quatre... - Hudba
Ohhhh soooo beautiful!!!!!!👏👏👏👏👏🙏👏💖👏🎶👏🌟☘️✨☀️✨🌟🌟🌸💗😇😇😇💖🌷🥰🌷💖💖😇🌟😇🌸✨✨💫💫🌿
Debussy disait : « Il n’y a pas de théorie : il suffit d’entendre. Le plaisir est la règle. »
Magnifique. Des mots d’une grand’e esprit.
I love Barenbom and what a great sensitive Conductor of Orchestras BRAVO
This was one of my Grade 8 pieces. Passed with flying colours… but over 40 years later doubt that I could replicate those controlled emotions..
Eu estou encantada e maravilhada essas lindas músicas,obrigada por tudo
My favourite Debussy.
When after my second year of classical piano learning (as an adult learner) I asked my teacher to let me learn one of Debussy's preludes, he ought to have chosen this one, the easiest to learn, but he did not because he did not think I had the subtlety to play all these "pp" notes.
Playing piano is much more difficult than playing forte. But the only way to master it is ... to try it. It's the journey that matters.
If I could play chess in my mansion and have Daniel Barenboim just drop by for some sly wintertime piano fun, then boy oh boy I wouldn’t mind it at all. Especially if there was hot chocolate and bourbon for snacks 😂
And did you notice it was spring at the beginning of the film? Maybe a pointer that Debussy’s beautiful music can make you time travel kinda 👁️
This incomparable performance covers everything in this world , human suffering , grief and joy .
From Tokyo of the dizzying megalopolis ablaze with neon .
Lovely...😊
Wonderful interpretation
Isao Tomita's version is extraordinary
nice
lololol i just heard this and listened to abt 30 songs to try and find it
same bruh💀
Brilliant. Claude's caught the whites on white wash, on white canvas, with white keys? I think a minor, some sharps d or g for the footprints.Snow's slightly sinister subcutainity.117 years old. modern. Prefer geiseking. BTW check out "night pieces" by Peter Sculthorpe for an equally magical evocation
Hey there thanks for helping me discover Peter Sculthorpe. After a lot of searching I managed to find the sheets for Night Pieces. Very interesting to play and listen too. Once again thanks for the tip.
@@halzander8573 you're very welcome
Love the chess playing at the end.
la neige faite pour dresser l'oreille dans la nuit ...
Great playing!I just uploaded this piece too:)
OK only had my guitar. D minor it is.
@Sim Turner what does atonality even mean as of now?
Beautiful playing, but I’m not sure the comfortable scene
with the chess players captures the cold and slightly desperate feel of the
music.
I would say it represents the meditative side of the piece surrounded by a cold and timeless scene
Existential angst....... even while playing chess which allows you plenty of meditative time.....like it or not....
There is a comedy film by "Lenny & Squiggy" from the old Laverne & Shirley show. There were actually apt musicians, and often added comic music performances to what was a situation-comedy show. Their 80's film "This is Spinal Tap (1984)" was about to metal-head musicians who were being documented on a tour. At one point, the short one (who played the singer) sits at the piano with full metal-hair mane, and plays a haunting, elaborate piano piece, explaining that he is creating a "Mach" piece (Half Mozart half Bach). He finally discloses that part of the dark sound is the it's in D-minor, "the saddest of all keys. Makes people weep instantly.) I actually agree with you that the setting of the video does not match (per se) the tone of the piece. Cold pieces are more in A-flat (blue) and A (indigo/blue-violet.) I am a person who see's a color for each shape--sorry, a color-shape for each note. Beginning with middle C as red, and continuing up the spectrum: D = orange, E=yellow, F=green, etc. I personally also see (and feel) D minor to be more about stark, even bleak feelings (to add to your own description as "cold and slightly desperate," in feel). // Both of the people who responded to your post of two years past were wrong! And WE were right!!! // If you are out there, David, I would be honored if you took a peek my channel here on uToob. I am beginning to reveal all of my "Revelations" about the colorings of the notes; A very detailed description that I think no musician has ever quite observed before. // Your's truly: _The Acoustic Rabbit Hole_
Je comprends maintenant pourqois SAKAMOTO aimait Debussy.❤
Morton Feldman.
Échec et mat. (Difficile d'imaginer film plus crétin pour illustrer une telle interprétation.)
Sal jalou
Je ne vois pas l'intérêt de cette mise en scène...le piano et le pianiste suffisent amplement.
In the context of a film about Debussy which lasts an hour ...
The chess board is sideways.
The chess players detract so much from this. The hubris of trying to "interpret the music" for us is not only insulting, it is shameful. The whole video diminishes Daniel's playing.
There are opinions and different opinions have different value respectively to different styles and genres.
The french music of the early 20th century often crosses his border and merges with different form of arts. In this period the dialogue between all the arts was an actual argument and every artist was involved into it. Especially in Paris.
It's supposed that Debussy wrote the prelude inspired from some painting of impressionists (maybe the "La neige à Louveciennes" by Alfred Sisley), does this "musical interpretation" by Debussy insults the painter(s)? Someone could have thought it for sure.
In my opinion we are not talking about absolute music at all so artistic contaminations are accepted.
I've heard that this peace, along with other's of Debussy's, were played while in a museum and he didn't intend for it to be distracting so that other's could focus on the art. (like background music) But, sadly, people were paying attention to him play, rather than paying attention to the display.
Further it is showing the guy ahead in the chess game, how biased. :)
Tru
@@foundershinenation8380 Even worse, earlier on in the game he appeared to have already captured her knight, but in the end it seems to have reappeared on the board and she made a move with it!
Does this suggest that he gave her a second chance in the interest of bedding her? Or does it really mean that she is "cheating" on him, and he recognizes it but won't tell, hence the mournfulness of the music? :-)
mise en scène ridicule, musique sublime