Debussy plays Debussy | Clair de Lune (1913)

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  • čas přidán 20. 11. 2017
  • Claude-Achille Debussy - Clair de Lune (Mondglanz, Mondschein, Moonlight), Suite Bergamasque, Debussy, piano. The Suite bergamasque was first composed in 1890-1905.
    "Claude Debussy Plays His Finest Works"
    Claude Debussy, Piano Roll, 1913.
    NOTE: This is NOT an ACOUSTIC RECORDING. This is a recording obtained by PIANO ROLL, see further details below. But acoustic recordings were made by Debussy with Mary Garden and you can hear here: • Claude Debussy plays D... (tempo 01:17:25)
    From 1903 to 1913, Claude Debussy recorded several of his own pieces on piano rolls. Debussy was delighted with the reproduction quality, saying in a letter to Edwin Welte: “It is impossible to attain a greater perfection of reproduction than that of the Welte apparatus. I am happy to assure you in these lines of my astonishment and admiration of what I heard. I am, Dear Sir, Yours Faithfully, Claude Debussy.” More than one century old, these recordings allow us to listen to the great composer playing his own works. Debussy made his last recordings when he was 52 years old and suffering from cancer, in 1913. He died less than five years later, on March 25, 1918.
    Rolls for the reproducing piano were generally made from the recorded performances of famous musicians. Typically, a pianist would sit at a specially designed recording piano, and the pitch and duration of any notes played would be either marked or perforated on a blank roll, together with the duration of the sustaining and soft pedal. Reproducing pianos can also re-create the dynamics of a pianist's performance by means of specially encoded control perforations placed towards the edges of a music roll, but this coding was never recorded automatically. Different companies had different ways of notating dynamics, some technically advanced (though not necessarily more effective), some secret, and some dependent entirely on a recording producer's handwritten notes, but in all cases these dynamic hieroglyphics had to be skillfully converted into the specialized perforated codes needed by the different types of instrument.
    The playing of many pianists and composers is preserved on reproducing piano roll. Gustav Mahler, Camille Saint-Saëns, Edvard Grieg, Teresa Carreño, Claude Debussy, Manuel de Falla, Scott Joplin, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Sergei Prokofiev, Alexander Scriabin, Jelly Roll Morton and George Gershwin are amongst the composers and pianists who have had their performances recorded in this way.
    Claude Debussy's famous Clair de lune is the third piece of the Suite bergamasque for piano, a work whose title was chosen as much for its composer's love of the word-sounds as for its Renaissance implications (though the work can rightly be described as something of a tribute to the French harpsichordists of olden days).
    The D flat major of Clair de lune is perfectly chosen, the gleaming melody in parallel thirds (con sordina, Debussy requests) expertly balanced by the beautifully dissonant tempo rubato that follows it. During the un poco mosso middle section of Clair de lune, the music swells far past the pianissimo of the opening, and in its climax one might say that the young composer has crafted more of sunlight than of moonlight; the incessant arpeggios may well be overdone, but one can cherish them all the same. Little wisps of these arpeggios find their way over into the reprise of the opening music, and the rolling tones of the middle section are given a few measures to plead their case once more before the final chromatic cadence, a moment of absolute tranquility, is made.
    Clair de Lune is a French poem written by Paul Verlaine in the year 1869. It is the inspiration for the third and most famous movement of Debussy's 1890 Suite bergamasque of the same name. 'Clair de lune' ('Moonlight') is from Verlaine's early collection Fêtes galantes (Gallant Parties, 1869).
    Clair de lune
    Votre âme est un paysage choisi
    Que vont charmant masques et bergamasques
    Jouant du luth et dansant et quasi
    Tristes sous leurs déguisements fantasques.
    Tout en chantant sur le mode mineur
    L'amour vainqueur et la vie opportune,
    Ils n'ont pas l'air de croire à leur bonheur
    Et leur chanson se mêle au clair de lune,
    Au calme clair de lune triste et beau,
    Qui fait rêver les oiseaux dans les arbres
    Et sangloter d'extase les jets d'eau,
    Les grands jets d'eau sveltes parmi les marbres.
    Paul Verlaine
    Moonlight
    Your soul is a select landscape fair
    Where charming masqueraders and bergamaskers go
    Playing the lute and dancing and almost
    Sad beneath their fantastic disguises.
    All sing in a minor key
    Of victorious love and the opportune life,
    They do not seem to believe in their happiness
    And their song mingles with the moonlight,
    With the still moonlight, sad and beautiful,
    Which gives the birds to dream in the trees
    And makes the fountain sprays sob in ecstasy,
    The tall, slender fountain sprays among the marble statues.
    Paul Verlaine
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Komentáře • 4,7K

  • @Thamer4life
    @Thamer4life Před 5 lety +20436

    Congratulations Debussy, you played yourself

  • @jocknessmonsterjockedwards1914
    @jocknessmonsterjockedwards1914 Před 4 lety +16636

    If it didn’t say Debussy played it everyone would be hating on the speed

    • @zdvxgf
      @zdvxgf Před 4 lety +811

      Yee right, pretty sure if it's not him they'll hate the rendition.

    • @Anonimnyytovarishch
      @Anonimnyytovarishch Před 4 lety +88

      True

    • @tactus72
      @tactus72 Před 4 lety +2318

      As choral singer who used to perform composers works conducted by them, then others, I've come to the conclusion that composers are not always the best interpreter of their own works. In some cases yes, but often not. Think about it. If they spent most of the time by themselves composing, and not performing in front and audience, and add the fact that they've obsessed on the piece for hours and hours/days/weeks/months, they probably get bored with the original tempos, and try to add a fresh interpretation to it after playing a zillion times.

    • @enriques05xd
      @enriques05xd Před 4 lety +127

      @@tactus72 true

    • @dragunyt2727
      @dragunyt2727 Před 4 lety +128

      @@tactus72 Based.

  • @kashphlinktu
    @kashphlinktu Před rokem +253

    *ONLY* Debussy himself could play it like this, because if anyone else did it, they would be surrounded with people telling them no, no, you played it *wrong*. But nobody can tell Debussy that he played his own piece wrong. So he plays it however he damn well pleases. Something to be learned about trust here, I think.

    • @terrycmartin
      @terrycmartin Před rokem +7

      Gosh, it's always validating for me to come back to this video and hear how the man himself apparently played it. This is the tempo I go for too but I'm always a bit self conscious that seemingly more authoritative people might criticize me for it. To be fair though, I'm sure I play everything too fast LOL. This one just happens to be correct.

    • @mauricesalentiny5495
      @mauricesalentiny5495 Před rokem +1

      Well... this shows-for me- that even sometimes the composers do not entirely see all the dimensions that their work is able to have. Michelangelo, Abbado... other times, other circumstances may alter the deep meaning of a musical work.

    • @riggedgame1189
      @riggedgame1189 Před rokem +5

      I started listening to early recordings of pianists and was shocked how wildly different they sounded compared to almost everyone today. Some of it is due to recording limitations (they would have to play loud for the recording to actually pick it up) but to me it felt like musicians took a lot more liberties with the pieces than they do now. I can still hear the differences in current interpretations but it’s always really interesting to see what musicians have previously done with pieces.
      I’m not sure whether the internet has been good in this regard- obviously it makes this music way more accessible and it’s great to be able to hear basically anything I want on a whim, but part of me also kind of wishes that people would take more risks when interpreting a piece. I’ve been playing piano for a long time but I didn’t really start exploring different interpretations of pieces I liked until recently. I was really surprised when I heard Rachmaninoff play Chopin’s 3rd ballade, and the tempo almost sounds like it’s flexing wildly or something, especially in the coda.
      That evolved into a really off topic ramble but tldr I kinda wish we’d hear more varying interpretations of classical music.

    • @jakoblino
      @jakoblino Před rokem +10

      Debussy didn't play it. This was played by Suzanne Godenne. The title in the video is wrong, Debussy never recorded Clair de lune.

    • @kashphlinktu
      @kashphlinktu Před rokem +2

      @@jakoblino Ah! Good to know. Well I appreciate her wonderful performance.

  • @ameliajang
    @ameliajang Před 3 lety +1575

    Debussy’s version: rapidly yet gently falling in love with a fluttering heart
    Modern version: reminiscing a relationship that ended with bittersweet memories

    • @20alphabet
      @20alphabet Před 2 lety +34

      That's about right.

    • @musicalmoongirl5055
      @musicalmoongirl5055 Před 2 lety +20

      That's a neat interpretation

    • @boldstandard
      @boldstandard Před 2 lety +40

      Claire de Lune refers to a poem by Paul Verlaine; my copy of the score has an excerpt translated as, "...they go to charming masques and bergamasques Playing the lute and dancing and somewhat sad beneath their fantastic costumes." Debussy's version captures this mood quite a lot better than most modern versions I've heard, imo.

    • @bluesque9687
      @bluesque9687 Před 2 lety +4

      I agree instantly with your comment!
      I am thinking about how this is making me feel... and you have made it so easy for me!!! :)
      very well interpreted!!

    • @Kettvnen
      @Kettvnen Před 2 lety +6

      the modern version too slow

  • @illlanoize23
    @illlanoize23 Před 4 lety +4426

    Crazy this guy has the same name as Debussy

  • @SlackBallSack
    @SlackBallSack Před 4 lety +2049

    I'm glad Debussy is still around to share this with us

  • @taradonelson9242
    @taradonelson9242 Před rokem +238

    I've been playing this piece for near 15 years with more than one teacher -- It never crossed my mind to look up Debussy himself playing it! This is a game changer. He emphasizes things I didn't expect. I plan to listen to this many more times and create a sound closer to his than the modern interpretations. It's shocking that the modern ones all sound alike and no one plays it the way he did! It's much more... chaotic... than I expected

    • @goldennebula5013
      @goldennebula5013 Před 9 měsíci +20

      You must keep in mind that he was recorded using piano rolls, of which were limited. Meaning he likely couldn’t elongate phrases as much as he’d like, else the roll would end preemptively

    • @jrm8024
      @jrm8024 Před 8 měsíci

      Chaotic...emotion

    • @kpkbkpkb7768
      @kpkbkpkb7768 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Agree!! Mom played this my entire childhood, now daughter plays it (skipped a generation in me). It's interesting to hear how he plays it...much more chaotic. "Moonlight" maybe for Debussy has many changing luminations and intensities.

    • @TheFlawless321
      @TheFlawless321 Před 7 měsíci +11

      Maybe that’s just how he was feeling that day

    • @taradonelson9242
      @taradonelson9242 Před 7 měsíci

      @@TheFlawless321 🤣

  • @gentlelikefire8392
    @gentlelikefire8392 Před rokem +138

    Him playing is how I always interpreted Clair de Lune; it's nostalgic, not melancholy. It's reminiscing beauty, the past, appreciate the present and the movement of the night. It's moving. Amazing we have this recording.

    • @deannareyna3859
      @deannareyna3859 Před rokem +3

      Love your interpretation 👏🏾 thanks 🙏🏽

    • @barbaraarnzen5181
      @barbaraarnzen5181 Před 9 měsíci +2

      I agree. I have a friend who used to play it much like Debussy did at the end of our evenings. Just beautiful. 💛

  • @TheXPERT891
    @TheXPERT891 Před 6 lety +5974

    his wife must've been telling him dinner was ready mid-way through the piece

    • @sensei-sama903
      @sensei-sama903 Před 6 lety +257

      JayTee she killed her self with a gun..

    • @photo161
      @photo161 Před 6 lety +155

      I don't hear any rushing at all anywhere, because all Debusst's accelerandos and tempi changes in generall make perfect if somewhat personal sense musically and expressively... Suggestion: Listen and Learn!!!

    • @semi-mojo
      @semi-mojo Před 6 lety +49

      Sensei -Sama he had more than one wife

    • @djentlemanguitar909
      @djentlemanguitar909 Před 6 lety +5

      Hahaha good one

    • @djentlemanguitar909
      @djentlemanguitar909 Před 6 lety +5

      Even funnier

  • @kenmayfield3739
    @kenmayfield3739 Před 4 lety +606

    This has to be one of the most beautiful pieces of music ever composed.

    • @56chevydog
      @56chevydog Před 3 lety +20

      I totally believe that this was channeled from the angelic realms. Perfection.

    • @arlenegwynn2310
      @arlenegwynn2310 Před 3 lety +11

      Agree to that....one other is Liszts Liebestraum. Both incredibly beautiful!

    • @jessiestout703
      @jessiestout703 Před 3 lety +5

      I totally agree. Absolutely beautiful

    • @pensadordomediterraneo2073
      @pensadordomediterraneo2073 Před 3 lety +8

      To me, this is the best one. The feeling it shows is exactly the same feeling I feel inside me since I was born.

    • @Maya220100
      @Maya220100 Před 3 lety +1

      @@56chevydog Beautiful comment.

  • @e_8074
    @e_8074 Před 3 lety +739

    This was the first performance of Clair de Lune to really move me. Debussy knew exactly when to push and when to pull back, how to pace and where to hesitate. This piece just became exponentially more interesting to me. Thank you, Claude.

    • @rrickarr
      @rrickarr Před 3 lety +31

      So true. This is an absolute revelation to me. So tired of these people who put rubato all over the place and try to put "feeling" into it.

    • @BlackHayateTheThird
      @BlackHayateTheThird Před 2 lety +10

      Almost like he wrote it! (heavy sarcasm)

    • @amityboi4398
      @amityboi4398 Před 2 lety +3

      @@BlackHayateTheThird oMg hE Did MaKE tHe pIece (heavy sarcasm)

    • @friedemannvonekesparre
      @friedemannvonekesparre Před 2 lety +5

      If you say that, Victor Borges version is also worth a listen! Very unknown but as debussy’s, very different from the modern interpretations we are used to..

    • @friedemannvonekesparre
      @friedemannvonekesparre Před 2 lety

      Sorry for my bad english, i am from denmark

  • @generalfishcake
    @generalfishcake Před 2 lety +248

    The speed and flow of the original is breathtaking... After listening to so many renditions, I don't think there's any more passionate than this one.

    • @lahm.verlassener
      @lahm.verlassener Před 2 lety +8

      Indeed!

    • @ftera4
      @ftera4 Před rokem +5

      Absolutely

    • @williamtaittinger4529
      @williamtaittinger4529 Před rokem

      I call BOOLLSHEET. first, it's a troll. Is not Debussy playing, but an amateur. You got played. And second, it is a very weak amateur player. Is this still the best version? Better than Lang's or Kissin's. These normies iq's are truly entertaining, LOL.

    • @thegreencat9947
      @thegreencat9947 Před rokem +4

      I concur.

    • @percyrevelation8233
      @percyrevelation8233 Před 3 dny

      I would agree if only Pressler's interpretation never existed. His performance was just as emotional and mellifluous, truly fast and slow tempo can be played for this piece

  • @flamingfive3893
    @flamingfive3893 Před 4 lety +8561

    the actual reason it’s so fast is because it’s recorded on a roll that has limited time for recording, so playing it fast is the only way to get through the whole thing

    • @ADN1996
      @ADN1996 Před 4 lety +170

      was it a wax roll?

    • @brahmomento3189
      @brahmomento3189 Před 4 lety +98

      @@ADN1996 Most likely yes

    • @aca2506
      @aca2506 Před 4 lety +378

      Change playback to 0.75 and its perfect

    • @josephdoesmore8922
      @josephdoesmore8922 Před 4 lety +70

      Yall fucken dumb its not called a roll its called a cylinder that was produced by edison labortories and are ment to b played on phonographs early types of cylinders that were produced from 1880s-1900 were wax then after from 1901-1929 they were made out of celluloid (a early type of plastic) then there was victor and berliner which made discs that were usually made outta shellac but some early berliners were made outta wax too

    • @josephdoesmore8922
      @josephdoesmore8922 Před 4 lety +6

      Phonographs*

  • @marianneoelund2940
    @marianneoelund2940 Před 4 lety +2121

    Debussy made this recording of Clair de Lune, and 13 other pieces, onto a set of 6 rolls using a Welte-Mignon reproducing piano, also known simply as a "Mignon."
    The Mignon was unique in that it recorded the nuances of a player's performance, including dynamics and pedaling, thus the result can be far more expressive than the more typical player-piano roll reproductions. Debussy was delighted with the quality of the result, and wrote in a letter to Edwin Welte, "It is impossible to attain a greater perfection of reproduction than that of the Welte apparatus. I am happy to assure you in these lines of my astonishment and admiration of what I heard."

    • @reallyhappenings5597
      @reallyhappenings5597 Před 4 lety +48

      nice primary source thank you

    • @paulwillis2104
      @paulwillis2104 Před 4 lety +48

      Thank you, Marianne for this important information. It's certainly valuable to our understanding that it's most likely the correct speed.

    • @emanuelavozza1821
      @emanuelavozza1821 Před 4 lety +9

      This is really interesting, thank you!

    • @richarddowney1972
      @richarddowney1972 Před 4 lety +34

      I had no idea that there was a reproducing piano that included dynamics and pedaling capabilities..

    • @bobolinkr
      @bobolinkr Před 4 lety +14

      @@richarddowney1972 all the other male pianos want it too

  • @dylanhall6355
    @dylanhall6355 Před 3 lety +535

    Gotta say, at first I didn’t like this version. But as it went on I realized how natural and almost improvisational it sounds with him playing it. I’ve never heard someone play it like that before. It truly is a treat to hear a great piece played by the person who wrote it.

    • @jimmerskrimmerfriddet3246
      @jimmerskrimmerfriddet3246 Před rokem +25

      We’re lucky to be able to hear this

    • @davidouldtaleb2129
      @davidouldtaleb2129 Před rokem +1

      @@jimmerskrimmerfriddet3246 really

    • @tinapeiker2006
      @tinapeiker2006 Před rokem +1

      For me the only one who's able to play it too is Daniel Barenboim.

    • @Kumgll
      @Kumgll Před rokem +1

      Yes, you've got it. The feeling of improvisation. Reflections from the water even more so.

    • @BV2
      @BV2 Před rokem +1

      the others play slow and boring

  • @Rabbert
    @Rabbert Před 8 měsíci +139

    Since this was recorded more than a decade after it was written by Debussy, do you think it might be different from how he originally played it? Much like a lot of artists play their biggest hits very differently live in concert, for example how Freddie Mercury performs his biggest hits live is so different from the original record to keep it fresh for him. I imagine he would have played this piece thousands of times and heard hundreds of interpretations therefore might've wanted to put a different interpretation out there.

    • @nicknewman7848
      @nicknewman7848 Před 7 měsíci +12

      That's plausible. You might adjust tempo, phrasing or change the feel in certain places. It has a loose feel here of someone familiar with their own composition obviously but it doesn't feel played with the same reverence or conscious poise as other top pianists would play what is now a classic. It's less melancholy and nostalgic and simply a short pretty piece about the moonlight.

    • @DanaKot336
      @DanaKot336 Před 7 měsíci

      It is true that there are often different interpretations of the composer.
      I personally know modern composers that when you look at the sheets it's written a little differently.
      THOUGH - I remember someone said that in the epoch of impressionism and the early 20's the recording was different and that is the reason behind the radical liberty of the rythm

    • @liltick102
      @liltick102 Před 7 měsíci

      Just as last year, I might have replied smartly; now I will say “boner balls”

    • @meemaurice
      @meemaurice Před 6 měsíci +4

      Great point!
      Some authors think of an "ideal version" for a recording; a version to which others will refer. Other authors will just play however they feel. There isn't a simple answer, in my opinion.

    • @DADunkin200947
      @DADunkin200947 Před 6 měsíci +1

      I would say yes, because he'd critique the original and tweak that to make the perfect piece of what he had imagined in his mind. I like this.

  • @molybdenumrose
    @molybdenumrose Před 5 lety +2704

    I like the speed. It feels like the music is pouring out of him.

    • @kc2094
      @kc2094 Před 5 lety +97

      I agree. I meant he reason for such speed is due to the piano rolling running out, but it still gives it this "infinite" feeling

    • @Nogetomalting
      @Nogetomalting Před 5 lety +45

      That´s the way I like to hear it. He knows best. A lot of the other pianist means apparently, that they can play it better than the composer and play it like it is a lullaby with pauses the wrong places.

    • @theokepler9484
      @theokepler9484 Před 5 lety +3

      agreed

    • @sampsings
      @sampsings Před 5 lety +7

      best comment on this video

    • @MARTIN201199
      @MARTIN201199 Před 5 lety +11

      Molybdenum Rose The way this guy plays is so natural that i have the feeling that he composed it.

  • @eenayeah
    @eenayeah Před 6 lety +5144

    If it really is him, then it is interesting how fast he plays it..

    • @franzheidet4178
      @franzheidet4178 Před 6 lety +11

      nv

    • @idkp.9507
      @idkp.9507 Před 6 lety +3

      eenayeah Uhum

    • @vincentandrews301
      @vincentandrews301 Před 6 lety +864

      Which then means it's supposed to be the right way to play it
      Edit: wow this is the most likes I've ever gotten on a CZcams comment and I don't even agree with it anymore

    • @clare2385
      @clare2385 Před 6 lety +588

      It is! Seems hectic almost, knowing slower versions. Strangely though, it seems more impressionistic as well.

    • @clare2385
      @clare2385 Před 6 lety +202

      PRETTYCATLOL I absolutely agree. That is why I expressed it sounds hectic KNOWING SLOWER VERSIONS.
      So is that really how Debussy intended it to be played? There was something in the comments about damaged piano rolls (or whatever this is called).

  • @tiffsaver
    @tiffsaver Před rokem +53

    When I was still a young rock musician, I hated classical music... until I heard this song coming over the radio. I was so immediately stunned by its sheer beauty, that I stopped some stranger to tell me the name of it. I've been a Debussy fan ever since.

    • @ellavaderknows
      @ellavaderknows Před 7 měsíci

      Same with me. This one "got me" and haunted me. I can't say that I'm a fan of classical music, but I'm a fan of this.

    • @2cupojoe136
      @2cupojoe136 Před 2 měsíci

      Come on! There can't be more sheer beauty than rock music!

  • @magikrap7560
    @magikrap7560 Před 3 lety +258

    I can't be the only one who likes the slow interpretation AND the faster interpretation? This interpretation (that of Debussy himself smh) is evocative and full of feeling. It has faster moments, but also slightly slower moments. To me it has a more playful feeling, a bit happier. The slower interpretations (evidently the more commonly preferred ones nowadays) have a melancholy charm, maybe with a sadder more sombre feeling. Who gives a shit?

    • @f52_yeevy
      @f52_yeevy Před 3 lety +6

      One of the best comments under this video. I completely agree

    • @JordansTake35
      @JordansTake35 Před 2 lety +9

      Exactly, it's much like Bach prelude on the cello, Yo Yo ma of the 90s played it very slow and it has a romantic quality to it. Meanwhile Rostropovich played it quickly and it feels like a beautiful run through the woods. I love both for different situations

    • @perkelix
      @perkelix Před 2 lety +5

      Good musicians known how to play with the tempo and metrics.

    • @lopazio
      @lopazio Před 2 lety +7

      When a work of superior human art like this comes into existence and is then played by different people, it will sound and feel good in any tempo, style, interpretation. It only proves the geniality of it. Moreover I would like to say that if this is the interpretation of the composer, it must have the original feeling he was trying to convey. What I feel is that he was trying to materialize the energy one feels when the full moon is shinning bright, illuminating the dark and scary night thus putting darkness aside and bringing a new day (after a day) where one can be awaken, energized and full of love. That is why his interpretation feels more energetic and fast (my two cents). Nevertheless Debussy is pure genius!

    • @athos401
      @athos401 Před 2 lety +2

      actually I both like the fast and the slow version, the only thing I don't like is when pianist start slooooow and that get fast as hell. That really drives me mad

  • @simeonowen8230
    @simeonowen8230 Před 5 lety +1649

    Trying to comprehend the 106 years of time between then and now. Imagine all the moments this song has experienced. Withstood the test of time and reached us today through means that nobody back then could have imagined.

  • @thomasdalton9504
    @thomasdalton9504 Před 5 lety +812

    For those wondering why it's fast in comparison to modern recordings, Debussy actually gave the instructions "très expressif" (very expressive) at the start of the piece, I.e play it how you want - what speed, what rhythm, what dynamics, what tone... This is merely Debussy's representation of Clair de Lune, and not sounding like a stuck up, but it's one of the most interesting yet beautiful I've ever heard.

    • @user-xx8xy8hl5r
      @user-xx8xy8hl5r Před 5 lety +44

      well, near everyone else is saying he was running out of paper to record with. though it's VERY beautiful and does give those instructions

    • @electrostatic1
      @electrostatic1 Před 5 lety +16

      ""adante très expressif" at the beginning, actually.

    • @topic260
      @topic260 Před 4 lety +2

      @@user-xx8xy8hl5r that is also true

    • @ayhamshaheed7740
      @ayhamshaheed7740 Před 4 lety +13

      Yeah the common interpretation is the most popular but it doesn’t mean it’s the correct or the only one. If anyone else played this way, they would receive endless hate, but as it’s debussy it’s ok.

    • @opwave79
      @opwave79 Před 4 lety +12

      Andante is “walking speed”, which isn’t necessarily slow. There’s a lot of eighth and sixteenth notes in this piece, which give it a unique vivacity. It’s not a song to fall asleep to, though I’ve heard some renditions with such a slow tempo that it’s excruciatingly boring to sit through.

  • @johnf153
    @johnf153 Před 3 lety +523

    An amazingly clear recording using 100-year old technology.

    • @TheRealPaulCaplin
      @TheRealPaulCaplin Před 3 lety +94

      It’s not a recording. It’s a piano roll. So the recording technology is modern. That’s why it’s clear.

    • @gnamp
      @gnamp Před 3 lety +42

      @@TheRealPaulCaplin A piano roll is a type of recording.

    • @TheRealPaulCaplin
      @TheRealPaulCaplin Před 3 lety +77

      @@gnamp Yes, if you’re going to be pedantic about it. What I meant, obviously, is that it’s not an audio recording. It’s more like a MIDI sequence in modern music. It’s actually closer to sheet music than it is to an audio recording. Anyway, it means that it can be played back on a modern piano and recorded using modern recording technology. Which is what happened here.

    • @gnamp
      @gnamp Před 3 lety +11

      @@TheRealPaulCaplin Pedantic? This is an accurate record of how Debussy played. Measure twice and cut once, Old Fruit.

    • @TheRealPaulCaplin
      @TheRealPaulCaplin Před 3 lety +18

      @@gnamp Of course it's accurate. When did I say it wasn't? I was replying to the comment that said it was "amazingly clear", and explaining why. Old fruit.

  • @TheCarnivalguy
    @TheCarnivalguy Před 11 měsíci +8

    It’s magical. I can envision Debussy at the piano, lost in concentration as he plays his own piece.

  • @aleksap5459
    @aleksap5459 Před 3 lety +1104

    I like this tempo. The fast parts make me think of twinkling stars or the gentle trickling sounds of a garden fountain.

    • @JRobbySh
      @JRobbySh Před 3 lety +9

      Perfect comment.

    • @caitgems1
      @caitgems1 Před 3 lety +7

      That's the gayest damn thing I've ever heard a straight man say!

    • @ApostoladoPetrino
      @ApostoladoPetrino Před 3 lety +2

      I think aleksa is a girl

    • @aleksap5459
      @aleksap5459 Před 3 lety +20

      @@caitgems1 yes... I’m a girl. Don’t assume someone’s sex/gender haha!
      Aleksa is a nickname short for Aleksandra for context :)

    • @caitgems1
      @caitgems1 Před 3 lety +2

      @@aleksap5459 I'm sorry but I don't know how to adjust for errors, perhaps I could ask Siri

  • @ferociousgumby
    @ferociousgumby Před 6 lety +4730

    He speeds up because he was running out of paper. Used to happen with cylinder recordings a lot

    • @dancegod1691
      @dancegod1691 Před 5 lety +654

      Ohhh I see all these comments fart sniffing about how it's better fast but this makes more sense

    • @fernandaseixas9602
      @fernandaseixas9602 Před 5 lety +50

      tell me more...

    • @katherinesage
      @katherinesage Před 5 lety +5

      correct

    • @saintjabroni
      @saintjabroni Před 5 lety +19

      ferociousgumby Running out of paper. lol

    • @thetruedarksoul168
      @thetruedarksoul168 Před 5 lety +29

      Chauvin write out 5 pages of words, read them about 5 times, and then repeat them exactly. Thats how it is with music, its a language, not only an art.

  • @MidanMagistrate
    @MidanMagistrate Před 3 lety +59

    It's a strange change but I kinda really like it, doesn't feel as depressing to me. Feels magnificent

  • @genevieverainey1307
    @genevieverainey1307 Před 2 lety +4

    Beautiful , magical , otherworldly

  • @jaylamerlockwood
    @jaylamerlockwood Před 6 lety +2185

    Does anyone else see the star in his eye?!

    • @hamzabustami710
      @hamzabustami710 Před 6 lety +152

      Jacqueline Lockwood great now I can’t unsee it

    • @jaylamerlockwood
      @jaylamerlockwood Před 6 lety +19

      ah well, stars are part of the night sky, light of the moon & all that! Btw, who are the Beginner Bros?

    • @PhukIT1865
      @PhukIT1865 Před 6 lety +2

      yeah so what?

    • @hamzabustami710
      @hamzabustami710 Před 6 lety +10

      Jacqueline Lockwood it was just a joke good observation it’s just that now I’ll always see it as there’s a star in his eye 😂

    • @AlexMR
      @AlexMR Před 6 lety +9

      Ironically when I hear this song I just think of stars

  • @historicalsignificance4183
    @historicalsignificance4183 Před 6 lety +1073

    His view of playing this piece is so unique and different from other interpretations, it's not played in the way you expect. I like it

    • @davidandpamfreeman5647
      @davidandpamfreeman5647 Před 6 lety +10

      I fully agree it is beautiful.

    • @jamiesinjin8655
      @jamiesinjin8655 Před 6 lety +27

      Historical Significance In the same way that countless pianists play The Entertainer up-tempo when Joplin explicitly put on the sheet music, 'NOT FAST'.

    • @whatevergoesforme5129
      @whatevergoesforme5129 Před 6 lety +13

      I don't, I am sorry to say and I love this piece. How sure are we that the original composer actually played it this way. It is too fast for me and there is no emotion at all. I have heard several interpretations from moderate tempo to the slowest possible tempo for this piece. This rendition did not evoke the atmosphere of moonlit skies or moonlit scenes for me.

    • @brendanswords4659
      @brendanswords4659 Před 6 lety +3

      WHATEVER GOES FOR ME it is him

    • @espurr6628
      @espurr6628 Před 6 lety +4

      WHATEVER GOES FOR ME he wrote a piano roll so thats saved and played via i think machine, it really is him

  • @Giescul
    @Giescul Před 3 lety +14

    The entire feeling of the piece changes when played this fast. It's amazing how it almost sounds like a different song with a whole different feeling. The slow version is ethereal and dreamy, the fast version is full of energy and feels like a rushing river. A beautiful piece no matter how you play it.

  • @thomassieg666
    @thomassieg666 Před 3 lety +25

    To everyone complaining about the tempo: Someone who would not know Clair de Lune and would listen to this recording would just be amazed by the piece. We are just used to hear it very slow.

    • @theoe354
      @theoe354 Před 3 lety +1

      You're probably right. Unfortunately, I have definitely heard it a few times before. Lol

    • @petertaylor3600
      @petertaylor3600 Před 3 lety

      Maybe, just perhaps...we've all been hearing it played at a slower tempo than Debussy wanted it to be played. There have been recordings of it that, to my ear were too slow. It is still something that stops me in my tracks when I hear it. I'm gobsmacked to be able to hear the originator of it and it matters not a jot if I love the movement of it and the mental picture it brings me.

  • @zacharyvaldes883
    @zacharyvaldes883 Před 4 lety +2701

    this guy's good, he should compose

    • @BRNRDNCK
      @BRNRDNCK Před 3 lety +19

      He’s a famous composer. You didn’t know?

    • @zacharyvaldes883
      @zacharyvaldes883 Před 3 lety +149

      @@BRNRDNCK no, it's a joke. like if i saw a video of lebron james playing basketball in the street, i would say "this guy's good, he should play professional basketball"

    • @BRNRDNCK
      @BRNRDNCK Před 3 lety +41

      Zachary Valdes I know lol just messin with ya

    • @zacharyvaldes883
      @zacharyvaldes883 Před 3 lety +88

      @@BRNRDNCK oh lol. guess i took your joke about my joke too seriously.

    • @t-sax-king
      @t-sax-king Před 3 lety +79

      WOW this is a mess

  • @eddyyamato8854
    @eddyyamato8854 Před 4 lety +1333

    How does he play without moving

  • @biancasp2023
    @biancasp2023 Před 24 dny +1

    Beauty and Sorrow in one! Can’t help but to cry every single time it plays! 👑❤️‍🔥🔥

  • @nargesgheissari7899
    @nargesgheissari7899 Před 3 lety +3

    Giving this gem a 👍🏻 seems shamefully inadequate and insulting. We are so lucky to hear this man perform his beautiful creation a century later on CZcams. Magical.

    • @TheUltimateLegend7
      @TheUltimateLegend7 Před 17 dny

      !! This is not a recording by Debussy. Debussy never recorded Clair de Lune!

  • @kwamealievergreen4257
    @kwamealievergreen4257 Před 3 lety +2373

    if you ever want insight on the elitism within the music community, all you have to do is look at all the comments of people saying that DEBUSSY is playing his own composition wrong and too quickly.

    • @stepaushi
      @stepaushi Před 3 lety +47

      right

    • @NotoriousFunk
      @NotoriousFunk Před 3 lety +43

      I could not say it better

    • @SpaghettiKillah
      @SpaghettiKillah Před 3 lety +126

      Yep 100% true
      I went to a piano concerto at the Milan Conservatorio....90% of the audience were old rich snobs in real fur...who passed out after the first ten minutes, but then passed judgements on the performer in the interval LOL

    • @stephenf5136
      @stephenf5136 Před 3 lety +92

      First, just because he wrote it does not mean that his interpretation is 'right', it's interesting sure but there's no reason to assume it is be better than any other musician's interpretation of it; Second, there is nothing 'elitist' about not liking the tempo - why would that be 'elitist'? That strikes me as an ad hominum;

    • @stepaushi
      @stepaushi Před 3 lety +39

      @@stephenf5136 Right, it's certainly not elitist. Probably k p is misusing the word and means something like "arrogant". Not sure.

  • @carlsmith4568
    @carlsmith4568 Před 5 lety +2066

    I can understand why people enjoy this song with a slower tempo, but remember that Debussy is an impressionist. I think the idea behind this piece, especially in the mid section, is to fill a room with music, not slowly played single notes. The sound that comes out of the piano when it's played at this speed is completely different and creates a different mood. I think Debussy was going for this.

    • @qqnxj712
      @qqnxj712 Před 5 lety +68

      Carl Smith of course he was “going for this.” he wrote it himself for Christ’s sake

    • @ferxismferx8060
      @ferxismferx8060 Před 5 lety +27

      Cus academics cant play without the paper and its too fuckin fast to use them... The academics always see only blocks cus they didnt learn from their ear, they only read, do not listen to music. This is music no fuckin rethoric

    • @bigburd875
      @bigburd875 Před 5 lety +152

      I'm thinking it's because he had to speed it up so it would fit in one recording

    • @justinlee2300
      @justinlee2300 Před 5 lety +44

      You cant rly call Debussy an impressionist. Even he himself stated that he disliked the label of “impressionist”. He didnt like being called that

    • @michaelwhite5151
      @michaelwhite5151 Před 5 lety +30

      Debussy was vehemently opposed to the suggestion that his music was "impressionistic." He always maintained that his music was an "expression."

  • @marytresham9164
    @marytresham9164 Před 2 lety +3

    So gentle and very special

  • @adralia23
    @adralia23 Před 3 lety +8

    When Debussy plays it, it is joyful, vibrant, exciting, very much in love, I can almost hear his joyful eyes gazing on the woman he loves. Think of Paris, at night, under the moon light, and the gorgeus lady he describes beautifully with the melancholic notes. But when others play it, it is melancholy, despair, beautiful but tragic, unrequited love..

  • @samhutchinson4959
    @samhutchinson4959 Před 3 lety +833

    I see a lot of people dissing his interpretation, or saying that he played it fast because piano rolls (which is the method through which Debussy recorded this piece) had limited space, but that’s plainly untrue. Each piano roll he did in 1913 had ample enough space for multiple pieces so there’s no reason to believe that’s why he’s speeding up.
    This interpretation is really cool and it’s amazing how every different performer of this piece flows with it in a different way. There’s enjoyment to be found in every interpretation :)

    • @djembesoloshorts
      @djembesoloshorts Před 3 lety +35

      It’s faster that what we are used to but it’s also very fluent.

    • @Magnetron33
      @Magnetron33 Před 3 lety +41

      How about He just felt like it at that moment. Spontaneous interpretation of one's own work is simply an artistic joy.

    • @amadeusw666
      @amadeusw666 Před 3 lety +10

      Speed depends on who you listen to. This is perfectly lovely and gives the piece an ethereal feel. All interpretations have something to offer... which is part of the genius of Debussy

    • @astr0nox
      @astr0nox Před 3 lety +4

      He never recorded this song on piano rolls

    • @FactHubREAL
      @FactHubREAL Před 3 lety

      Maybe he had to record multiple pieces or something on a limited number of rolls?

  • @dragonpictures3559
    @dragonpictures3559 Před 4 lety +2372

    Debussy: "Music is the space between the notes."
    Also Debussy:

  • @leoblum0631
    @leoblum0631 Před rokem +11

    From the horse's mouth! Extremely interesting to hear his own interpretation of the piece, more dramatic and fluid than one usually hears it. Not just some serene marble-like moonlight, but also passion and turmoil under it: there are some Van Gogh fists against the merciless sky here! The more I listen to this, the more I'm also seized by the raw emotion of the piece. No modern pianist, to my knowledge, brings out that same despair: this is flesh, lunatic 'horror' and reality. To me, this is a prayer from a man who has nothing to hide, and nothing to lose. He sees the Seine in moonlight, where so many people have drowned themselves. He feels la cathédrale engloutie within him. He is at one with his soul. And no teacher has ever, never, taught him how to interpret and feel this nocturne: Mon coeur mis à nu...

    • @leoblum0631
      @leoblum0631 Před 7 měsíci

      Valid remark. It could be a trick. The excellent quality of the sound, for one, is suspicious. Never thought that it could be a make-believe, but it's actually quite possible. That said, who on earth would come up with an interpretation like this? No serious pianist even of that time would have dared to relate so "freely" to the written text!

  • @suemonk8745
    @suemonk8745 Před 3 lety +17

    This is sublime - I love hearing it at the speed he, the composer himself, plays it. Gorgeous!

  • @fabricioguido8202
    @fabricioguido8202 Před 6 lety +3645

    Honestly this is the best performance I've heard of this piece. Well, who can beat the composer anyway?

    • @fraa7548
      @fraa7548 Před 6 lety +465

      Fabricio Guido I think that the composer is not even the best performer of is music, because sometimes another musician can see something different in the score, for example the tempo. (Sorry for my english, i'm 16 and from italy)

    • @I_M_SEONG
      @I_M_SEONG Před 6 lety +37

      Cho seong jin made it

    • @whydoievenbothertoputthish2199
      @whydoievenbothertoputthish2199 Před 6 lety +6

      Did they have recording equipments back in those days??? Prolly not prolly just some dude who plays this like years after

    • @johnnycochicken
      @johnnycochicken Před 6 lety +116

      whydoievenbothertoputthishere Debussy recorded his playing onto a piano roll, which was then played back much later to get what we hear here. there was audio recording equipment in his time but it wasn't very good so if he had recorded to that directly the sound would be low quality. the style is his but what you hear was played by a piano on its own from the piano roll he recorded to

    • @DJfractalflight
      @DJfractalflight Před 6 lety +14

      johnnycochicken does piano roll capture the degree of impact and other subtle features of playing? This didnt sound like it to me.

  • @handpancakeman
    @handpancakeman Před 4 lety +163

    I was confused as to how the audio quality was so good for such an old recording until I realized thanks to the comments and then a little internet scouring that this is a piano roll recording. So glad that this technology was around back then so we could hear this amazing piece of art played by its creator! Kinda adds a little touch to an already ethereal song.

    • @coast2coast00
      @coast2coast00 Před 3 lety +7

      Yes, the first digital music is over 100 years old. It still sounds exactly the same as it did then, as a MP3 will in 80 years.

    • @Magnetron33
      @Magnetron33 Před 3 lety +1

      The clarity and nuances are remakable

    • @barkbarkwoof1
      @barkbarkwoof1 Před 3 lety

      If you've ever listened to old recordings of Caruso, the accompanying piano sounds so horrendous it makes me appreciate this technology used at the same time. To bad it couldn't have been done for voice.

    • @halasimov1362
      @halasimov1362 Před 3 lety

      MP3 in 80 years on what media? Most digital media won't last a couple decades. Those "Lifetime" dvds are interesting though

  • @spactick
    @spactick Před 3 lety +4

    Debussy heard music in his head that no one had heard since the beginning of time. His influence is still felt today. All musicians
    today ow a debt of gratitude to this genius

  • @cherylblancaster2373
    @cherylblancaster2373 Před 3 lety +166

    I like his rendition because it shows how he intended it to be heard.

    • @waterbe3564
      @waterbe3564 Před 2 lety +5

      I don't think it is. This was recorded on a piano roll and it has a limited time to record so he had to play fast.

    • @dogorog6918
      @dogorog6918 Před 2 lety +39

      @@waterbe3564 each piano roll he did had enough space, he just wanted it to be this way buddy

    • @epicgamer7697
      @epicgamer7697 Před rokem +8

      @@waterbe3564 not your precious claire de lune

    • @mineblastersfiebig853
      @mineblastersfiebig853 Před rokem +5

      @@waterbe3564 that is simply false what you said, the piano rolls had space for multiple songs, he played it this way because that is how he wanted it to be played

    • @williamtaittinger4529
      @williamtaittinger4529 Před rokem

      1. its not Debussy, but a troll
      2. the playing is PURE SHIT.
      3. how about your opinion NOW? lol

  • @lzdmglg202612
    @lzdmglg202612 Před 3 lety +110

    I never expected to hear Debussy play anything. If I had something "clever" to write here, it has been completely erased by this wonderful performance.

    • @IvoMiller
      @IvoMiller Před 2 lety

      Same with me and I’ve been playing since 5 years old Cadek Conseratory Chattanooga Tennessee. Harold Cadek voice Doris Doe. Leading mezzo Soprano in New York City. Metropolitan Opera

  • @CarlosVargas-cn7rx
    @CarlosVargas-cn7rx Před 4 lety +1417

    Debussy: Plays Clair de Lune at the double of the usual speed:
    Piano Virtuosos: That's not the way you should play it.
    Beethoven: Plays the 3rd movement of the Moonlight Sonata at half of the usual speed:
    Piano Virtuosos: That's not the way you should play it.

    • @Qrayon
      @Qrayon Před 3 lety +25

      Did Beethoven really play the 3rd movement of Moonlight Sonata at half the usual speed?

    • @chrisc7265
      @chrisc7265 Před 3 lety +42

      @@Qrayon no, it's Presto Agitato --- I do think a lot of performers use this piece to show off their skillz, so they might be pushing the tempo a bit, but certainly not doubling it (I haven't heard any anecdotes about how Beethoven played it)

    • @Qrayon
      @Qrayon Před 3 lety +51

      ​My piano teacher used to tell me that "presto" means "the sky's the limit" as to how fast it should be played. However, I think the 3rd movement of Moonlight Sonata sounds better if it's played at less than maximum speed.

    • @Akiraa197
      @Akiraa197 Před 3 lety +3

      The most accurate rendition of the 3rd mvmt in my opinion is in a movie about Beethoven
      This is the scene
      czcams.com/video/wI7Ookr4-gU/video.html

    • @GabrielRibeiro-nm5uv
      @GabrielRibeiro-nm5uv Před 3 lety +22

      @@Qrayon There is a stupid movement that says everymusic from the classical to the romantic era is played now at double the speed it should be played

  • @ichangedmyself4362
    @ichangedmyself4362 Před 2 lety +6

    The original, very much has undertones of syncopated jazz & is all around more a happy tune, a celebration of the night. There is clearly an explosive yearning in the melody and keystrokes. Amazing. Beautiful. One of my ever favorites.

  • @apollosgadfly
    @apollosgadfly Před 3 lety +17

    3:30 Loving the closeup they do on Debussy’s photo, like he’s looking at all the piano snobs and saying “Your move”.

  • @fgbowen
    @fgbowen Před 6 lety +129

    There is something special about hearing a composer with their own work - SO much can be learned about melody, harmony, and the "painting" of notes that invoke a musical landscape. Lots of fearlessness in this performance - and too many other performers attempt to do unnecessary things in their own performing... too much worrying going on in most cases, and not enough artwork being accomplished.

    • @yoryteperman429
      @yoryteperman429 Před 4 lety +1

      Most other versions render it too sleepy and letargic, as if it were not about moonlight but about death (- no wonder it is beloved to be performed by geriatrics while Debussy was only 28 years old when he wrote this rather romantically virile piece); This particular rendition is believably about moonlight; it expresses melancholy WITHOUT excessive old-age nostalgia, it is very impressionistic without being overly sentimental or "precious" about itself; not self-serious which is why I personally love this version; it is also not a "schoolboy" straightforward or simplistic, nor particularly easy to play at this speed - i.e. a proper companion to Chopin and Liszt as it should be.. Cheers! .

    • @TheUltimateLegend7
      @TheUltimateLegend7 Před 17 dny

      !! This is not a recording by Debussy. Debussy never recorded Clair de Lune!

  • @emmanuelwestra6524
    @emmanuelwestra6524 Před 4 lety +35

    This is one of the most elegant pieces in modern civilization.

  • @lahm.verlassener
    @lahm.verlassener Před 2 lety +7

    This heavenly musical work by the great Claude Debussy so wonderfully soothes the soul of the listener...

  • @jamesfrank5438
    @jamesfrank5438 Před 3 lety +5

    You all can’t just appreciate the music and chill - I’ve played This song since 1972. A masterpiece !

  • @forrestnorman5760
    @forrestnorman5760 Před 5 lety +30

    The change in tempo gives it an air of gentle excitement, which makes sense when you think that one of the most romantic things one can do in the moonlight is walk with the one you love. The upbeat tempo matches the heart.

  • @kanecanedy623
    @kanecanedy623 Před 5 lety +27

    Debussy is really something. He’s the type of person who can fill your head with dreams.

  • @CK-kd5pn
    @CK-kd5pn Před 3 lety +91

    It's saddening to see people dissing the tempo or dismissing it as a byproduct of limited technology (piano rolls, even though the piano rolls he used had more than enough time). You may dislike the tempo, but it doesn't mean his interpretation is wrong. Debussy was someone who wanted his pieces to sound like they were improvised, so it's plainly obvious that he'll have different interpretations (note the use of rubato and rhythmic changes). I'm also disheartened by those who dismiss his playing as lacking emotion or feeling simply based on the fact that the tempo is faster than they're used to. His performance is most definitely full of emotion and expression. This situation reminds me of people criticizing Heifetz for his fast tempos and lack of emotion, even though well-respected figures/violinists who personally heard Heifetz speak volumes of the emotion contained Heifetz's playing. Debussy is expressing such raw emotion into this performance and nobody appreciates it for what it is. Truly a shame.

    • @theoe354
      @theoe354 Před 3 lety +3

      I'm glad you're someone who can accept others have opinions about the music without dismissing them as something silly like "snobby" or "elitist".
      I agree that you shouldn't be so quick to dismiss a different interpretation just because of one feature of the music. It all takes immense skill and any version where they're able to play at this level should be taken with the seriousness it deserves. However, whether it's just because of what I'm used to or something else, I still do prefer the more "traditional" way of playing at a slower tempo.

    • @CK-kd5pn
      @CK-kd5pn Před 3 lety

      @@theoe354 I can completely understand why people prefer the slower, modern interpretation because it's the most popularized way of playing it. When I first listened to this, I was also put off by the tempo. The way Debussy plays here though, is actually a lot closer to his desired tempo if we use a metronome. He marks the score as Andante Très Expressif which from some research means a "walking-pace" that implies "easy-going" and "expressively" which really helped me put into perspective what sort of sound Debussy was going for. Clair de Lune was also previously named Promenade Sentimentale which I believe has to do with some dancing, but promenade also means "walk" which is a little neat because it sort of reflects his marking. It made much more logical sense to me that Clair de Lune is played at this tempo after I realized that this is a story of dancing, like the original poem. They're dancing, but with that sense of melancholy and sadness hidden underneath. I personally think today's slower tempo doesn't best represent Debussy's intent, though it doesn't mean that a slower tempo is bad.

    • @astr0nox
      @astr0nox Před 3 lety

      The point is: he had never recorded Clair de Lune on whatever technology available then

    • @Raherin
      @Raherin Před 2 lety +1

      Learning to listen to 'fast' interpretations takes a bit of getting used to. The people saying they don't hear emotion just aren't used to faster music. I am in love with this version and I feel there is bounds and tons of emotion. The low hanging fruit of musical opinions: it's too fast therefor i can't feel the emotion

    • @carabeingblue4016
      @carabeingblue4016 Před 2 lety +1

      I've heard that a piece of music only truly played once. Isn't it nice to think that instead of repeating himself, he played as authentically and true to heart as possible for posterity? Just lovely.

  • @steveclapping
    @steveclapping Před 3 lety +11

    Achille-Claude Debussy interprété par lui-même, une surprise pour moi. J'apprécie cette belle oeuvre romantique qui m'inspire une agréable nostalgie et me touche dès les premières notes.

  • @eatrocks331
    @eatrocks331 Před 4 lety +947

    Can we also acknowledge that perhaps Debussy intended the piece to be played quickly? I mean after all he wasn’t a baroque or classical player, he was an impressionist, his music was meant to invoke feeling, often of nature and more often of water. And in the way he plays the piece in this recording I can hear that, so maybe instead of saying it’s cause he was running out of time, which I can admit that also might be the case, can we also think that we have our interpretations of his piece incorrect, and Debussy as the composer intended it to be this way. Thank you for coming to my Ted Talk.

    • @kestrel3509
      @kestrel3509 Před 4 lety +17

      Dude its written in description, it was recorded on piano roles which were really short and you had to play piece really fast

    • @drkekenstein5750
      @drkekenstein5750 Před 4 lety +14

      @@kestrel3509 Having to play pieces fast because of piano rolls does not mean pieces are not meant to be played fast. Are you an NPC?

    • @originalstarwalker21
      @originalstarwalker21 Před 4 lety +7

      its because the time is limited.
      you see, the recording can only take so much time.

    • @bluemob733
      @bluemob733 Před 4 lety +12

      Well it’s because he had limited time. Also, he wasn’t a fan of being called an impressionist.

    • @patinho5589
      @patinho5589 Před 4 lety +3

      I acknowledge that you didn’t call it a song. !

  • @LanNguyen-iu3oe
    @LanNguyen-iu3oe Před 4 lety +34

    he's such a genius. this piece is so beautiful.

  • @lziv7583
    @lziv7583 Před 3 lety +2

    This song always gave me the image of a person in their last days pondering through all the beautiful moments in their life as the curtain slowly closes. And it makes me cry every time.

  • @JO-kp6lk
    @JO-kp6lk Před 3 lety +6

    Beauty, suspended in timelessness.
    How priveledged we are to hear it
    from the mind and fingertips of its
    creator.

  • @brianogden9023
    @brianogden9023 Před 4 lety +112

    I never knew there was a recording of him playing this. It feels like each note flies from his soul. The music is dynamic, brilliant full of passion and played as it was intended to be played. My wish is to have this played when I die, for me it is a little piece of heaven. 🎼🎼🎼🎼🎼

    • @StrangePerson69
      @StrangePerson69 Před 3 lety

      It’s a piano roll, not a recording. However, I agree with everything else.

    • @logannslm1593
      @logannslm1593 Před 3 lety +2

      ​@@StrangePerson69 Can you explain to me how it works? I'm not sure I get it...The piano rolls is a machine which "reads" sheet music, right? So we're not hearing Debussy playing at all, just listening to a machine reproducing the notes he wrote on the sheet, right? It's not a recording, is it?

    • @nemrody7828
      @nemrody7828 Před 2 lety +2

      @@logannslm1593 the video description has a complete explanation, but, to be short, Debussy played it on a special piano which records what notes are being played. This is then used to create rolls of perforated paper, which are inserted in a special piano which can read them.
      This video is a modern recording of an old piano playing one of these rolls. Debussy apparently loved how close to the original these rolls got, so he recorded some of his works.

  • @jwbarnhartmusic
    @jwbarnhartmusic Před 3 lety +31

    There is something haunting about hearing this. It’s absolutely beautiful.

  • @BillyCobbOfficial
    @BillyCobbOfficial Před rokem +19

    This recording is remarkable for 1913

    • @julianw1010
      @julianw1010 Před rokem

      Okay thanks verified CZcamsr

    • @b4d69
      @b4d69 Před rokem

      guffaw

    • @williamtaittinger4529
      @williamtaittinger4529 Před rokem

      oh really? but its not debussy playing it is an amateur. And op is trolling people. This was recorded in 1988 by a student.

    • @williamtaittinger4529
      @williamtaittinger4529 Před rokem

      @BigPig this was recorded in Odessa, Ukraine, in 05.05.1988 by a student named Andriy Pavlovski who later became an engineer and left piano. Not hard to guess why, the kid could not get Clair de Lune right. The dude pulled this prank and later outted himself as a troll on Reddit. What you are seeing is a copycat work on trolling. Search for it on reddit and you might still find the discussion over all this BULLSHIT you low iq normies are so quick to embrace, no matter how bad the actual playing is.

  • @BethGreenTV
    @BethGreenTV Před 3 lety +9

    This interpretation is so alive, lyrical and expressive. Thank you SO much for sharing this. It gives us a fresh insight into the composer and his music.

    • @TheUltimateLegend7
      @TheUltimateLegend7 Před 17 dny

      !! This is not a recording by Debussy. Debussy never recorded Clair de Lune!

    • @BethGreenTV
      @BethGreenTV Před 15 dny

      @@TheUltimateLegend7 Fascinating. Thanks for letting us know.

  • @tracybromage-spencer1882
    @tracybromage-spencer1882 Před 3 lety +713

    Why do 329 people dislike this when a man is playing his own music? lol.

    • @jeff-hd9og
      @jeff-hd9og Před 3 lety +7

      who knows

    • @joyvan0827
      @joyvan0827 Před 3 lety +3

      😂😂😂😂

    • @baptm727
      @baptm727 Před 3 lety +4

      Neurosis

    • @morbidmanatee5550
      @morbidmanatee5550 Před 3 lety +21

      @@roserosewater it's his own song!

    • @Qrayon
      @Qrayon Před 3 lety +22

      Probably because it failed to please them. (You can't please everybody, even if you're Debussy.)

  • @mamatogirls
    @mamatogirls Před 3 lety +48

    It has been interpreted so many ways and I was surprised to hear the composers intended tempo. This is always glorious to hear, no matter who plays it, but especially surprised to hear Debussy play it himself. Thank you for this gift.

  • @CaBdosdos
    @CaBdosdos Před 2 lety +2

    How much time has passed since 1913...relationships formed and lost...loved ones come and gone ...families started and ended. This song brings out the best of all those memories.

  • @ronniedixon1128
    @ronniedixon1128 Před 3 lety +4

    Lifelong love my mum payed this beautiful composition throughout our childhood. We had few possessions but we’d had a piano.

  • @davelydon5766
    @davelydon5766 Před 4 lety +10

    when he picks up the tempo the first time I can see moonlight dancing on the tips of leaves and water - just beautiful.

  • @ankurage
    @ankurage Před 4 lety +83

    Only Debussy can turn a piano into a harp

  • @alanbobe-velez9716
    @alanbobe-velez9716 Před 3 měsíci

    It's a treat to hear Debussy play one of his compositions. I fell in love with his music because of this piece.

  • @KLm912
    @KLm912 Před 3 lety +2

    INCREDIBLE, never did I think there was recorded tapes on Debussy playing. Unbelievable

  • @virtuozlaboucledor9083
    @virtuozlaboucledor9083 Před 5 lety +145

    Speed up because (Out of paper) ??? Really ?
    Debussy recorded 14 pieces onto six rolls in Paris on or before November 1, 1913. According to Debussy enthusiast Steve Bryson's Web site, the composer was delighted with the reproduction quality, saying in a letter to Edwin Welte: "It is impossible to attain a greater perfection of reproduction than that of the Welte apparatus. I am happy to assure you in these lines of my astonishment and admiration of what I heard. I am, Dear Sir, Yours Faithfully, Claude Debussy."

    • @echorrhea
      @echorrhea Před 4 lety +7

      Jonathan Marion Debussy’s remarks speak to the fidelity of reproduction of sound via the Welte-Mignon process. This has nothing to do necessarily with its ability to allow a performer to properly convey their preferred tempi, however. It is quite likely that Debussy did have to tailor his tempi according to the amount of paper he had at his disposal. While this may sound unlikely to us, it is important to keep in mind that the materials needed for recordings of any kind in the early 20th century-be they acoustic or via the Welte-Mignon process-were not exactly cheap. Therefore, performers had to work within the limitations of early sound reproduction.

    • @owenwhite4466
      @owenwhite4466 Před 4 lety +2

      It’s just not played this fast lmao. Look at the sheet music and the tempo of the piece.

    • @Mnnvint
      @Mnnvint Před 4 lety +1

      @@echorrhea If he had to speed up his pieces in order to make them fit, he would not have been happy about it.
      You can find many Welte-Mignon pieces on youtube that are considerably longer.

    • @echorrhea
      @echorrhea Před 4 lety +9

      Owen White It was played this fast. If you listen to earlier recordings, it was played rather faster than it is today. (If anything, most pianists drag the thing morbidly nowadays.) Marius-François Gaillard, a pioneering champion of Debussy who was the first to publicly perform cycles of the complete piano works, actually plays this about 10 seconds 𝗳𝗮𝘀𝘁𝗲𝗿. Musicians simply had a different idea of “slowness” a century ago than they do now.⁣

      Also, the score doesn’t indicate any metronome markings. So what Debussy actually meant by “Andante” (which likely has nothing to do with the “Adagio” or even “Grave” typical of present-day pianists) is left to the performer to guess.

    • @echorrhea
      @echorrhea Před 4 lety

      Mnnvint They are longer because the pieces themselves were longer and, thus, required more paper, but that didn’t mean the materials allocated for these sessions allowed performers excessive license to slow down either. Mahler’s piano rolls, for example, exhibit tempi considerably faster for the works in question than are standard today. Also, your expectations of what would make performers “happy” to hear are founded upon present expectations of sound fidelity. Over a century ago, sound reproduction was still in its infancy. The Welte-Mignon process, flaws and all, would have sounded like a miracle compared to the then wretched state of acoustic recordings. So of course Debussy would have been happy. Had he managed to live at least until the advent of electric recording, however, he likely would have changed his tune. The remarkable advances in recording that would be made only a decade after his death alone would’ve stretched his imagination.

  • @t-sax-king
    @t-sax-king Před 3 lety +1752

    Pianist: "Who tf is this guy? He's playing it wron- oh wait a second, oh no" *identity crisis initiates*

    • @CBlargh
      @CBlargh Před 3 lety +16

      lol! I know, I hate the way he plays it. Tant pis pour moi.

    • @petertaylor3600
      @petertaylor3600 Před 3 lety +1

      AAAAARRGHHH!

    • @raweggwhite
      @raweggwhite Před 3 lety +1

      Same's with rachmanninoff

    • @petertaylor3600
      @petertaylor3600 Před 3 lety +13

      Isn't it wonderful? After all, he had the thought in his head and the feel of the music in his mind and he interpreted what he felt in his composition. M. Debussy, I don't care what you did you are a hero and your interpretation is just right for me.

    • @CBlargh
      @CBlargh Před 3 lety +6

      ​@@j4ck442 Nope! It's not a he, it's a she. The musician's name is Suzanne Godenne. The uploader has incorrectly identified the musician as Debussy.

  • @happybergner9832
    @happybergner9832 Před 11 měsíci +3

    We are so blessed, when we can hear how the artist himself interprets the piece of music we love so well

  • @StuartwasDrinkell
    @StuartwasDrinkell Před 2 lety +4

    Im amazed by how differently i interpret this GIANT'S piece... i will endeavour to capture this interpretation from now on. It almost sounds rushed but i love it - its frenetic! Like he cant get it out quick enough! You'll never be forgotten Claude! I played this to my children when they were babies. They will never unremember!

  • @nemo227
    @nemo227 Před 3 lety +13

    I LOVE to hear composers performing their own works. It's pretty rare in many cases and impossible in other cases. But here . . . it's just our good fortune.

  • @xs10tl1
    @xs10tl1 Před 5 lety +96

    instantly the best version I've ever heard.

    • @patinho5589
      @patinho5589 Před 4 lety +1

      I guess that’s better than having a lag for you to decide so...!

    • @_ydhdh9340
      @_ydhdh9340 Před 4 lety +1

      I agree

  • @Artfan123
    @Artfan123 Před rokem +2

    This rendition is like a dance between two lovers on a cold autumn day, two lovers that don’t where anything is heading. They suspect that their time is limited and the joy and fast tempo of the music has a underlying slow sadness to it

  • @billbright1755
    @billbright1755 Před 2 lety +4

    A piece of music can be interpreted in a thousand ways.
    It is all in ear of the listener.

  • @OdaKa
    @OdaKa Před 5 lety +13

    Wow this is so totally different, the lilt and swing of it... it blows me away

  • @daviddorsey1910
    @daviddorsey1910 Před 3 lety +140

    Found it very interesting to read all the comments on Debussy’s performance, his interpretation of his own work! The socially accepted performances always made me feel like it was something meant for listening to while you fell asleep, ethereal, dreamy and falling softly slowly like a sleepy drizzle. Maybe since I only heard this at night, floating from my father’s bedroom radio, it was a natural expectation. But now listening to Debussy’s performance at 3am in the morning, sleepy and wanting to fall back asleep, I appreciate the refreshingly energized interpretation as something to be enjoyed in the morning with a cup of piping tea spiced with a zest of orange, toast and honey, stimulating the soul with vigor and freedom to make the day my own!
    CHEERS!

    • @josepholeary3286
      @josepholeary3286 Před 3 lety +3

      He makes you feel the power and brilliance of moonlight, which is not always dim and vague.

    • @sylviaroberts8103
      @sylviaroberts8103 Před 3 lety +1

      David Dorsey : Beautifully said. You’re a poet.

    • @petertaylor3600
      @petertaylor3600 Před 3 lety

      David Dorsey: I'm betting that's exactly what the Great Man would have wanted you to do. It's an interpretation of the sounds of moonlight in a clear sky at midnight, if there are such things. So, he succeeds in his aim when he put his thoughts to music.
      What do you all bet me we'll now have a discussion on the sound of moonlight at midnight. The wheres and wherefores....!

  • @vbaglivio
    @vbaglivio Před rokem +3

    Truely, a most beautiful masterpiece.

  • @ChristianMohammedCohen
    @ChristianMohammedCohen Před 3 lety +5

    Un des airs les plus beaux!
    chargé d'émotions ,
    De nostalgie...
    Quelle inspiration
    Claude était véritablement
    En dialogue avec Dieu...

  • @diegeigergarnele7975
    @diegeigergarnele7975 Před 4 lety +690

    To all the people saying Debussy had a shortage of time into this: you're wrong.
    It's pure speculation made up by people who can't accept that Debussy had a different view on a work than Lang Lang.
    I see these arguments under every video of old recordings. Even in Rachmaninov recording of his 3rd concerto people, who apparently cannot understand freedom, wrote big paragraphs of comments of complete bullshit on Rachmaninov taking fast tempos because he was nervous.
    Nervous.
    In a studio recording.
    Choosing the wrong tempo for the whole concerto.
    *IN A STUDIO RECORDING*
    If you want the reasons why in this case it's bullshit I'll give them, but I can assure you already that the same company in the same years was doing much longer piano rolls.
    There's plenty of very old recording out there and you will find as a constant that when Saint Seans or Ysaye (or anybody, just quoting some you easily can find) wanted to be expressive they almost never made use of extreme slow tempo. Much more often rubato was employed but never in the exaggerated way is used nowadays.
    If you can find the recording of Havanaise made by Seant Sains with an old french violinist (sorry I can't retell the name rn) you will listen to a very fast and staccato rendition of a piece that everybody nowadays plays softly and gently... because they've been told it's french music and it has to be softly seductive.
    Same happens with Stravinskij's firebird which nowadays is always overly dramatic and Stravinskij himself apparently "rushes" through the ending.
    In conclusion just listen to this, and if you can only feel that it's too fast I'm sorry but I think you are a little bit too closed minded the poetry of the light rubato and tempo changes Debussy employed here.
    Music is freedom, we already have too many assholes sitting as judges in international competitions telling us where to use rubato and when to vibrate and when to play loud and when not. We don't need people on the internet reminding everybody that the time signature on paper is different.
    If anything these ancient recordings are a testament to the freedom of music, which should never be just playing the notes as written.
    Don't hear the recording, listen to the music.

    • @taylorlingwall2441
      @taylorlingwall2441 Před 4 lety +38

      "Don't hear the recording, listen to the music" I like that

    • @trog.lodyte
      @trog.lodyte Před 3 lety +7

      Sad that we wait till folks die so we can argue over "what they meant". Vita brevis, ars longa.

    • @oceanelf2512
      @oceanelf2512 Před 3 lety +23

      Your comment deserves a thousand likes.

    • @Tofu524
      @Tofu524 Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you

    • @smolchungus9213
      @smolchungus9213 Před 3 lety +4

      I play guitar but I read through the entire comment even though I can't understand most of the things you say nor the points you make😂

  • @tanushreeb
    @tanushreeb Před 3 lety +177

    This is the only version that has ever made me feel things.

    • @petertaylor3600
      @petertaylor3600 Před 3 lety +1

      Adrastea: That's because it's the composer, the creator of it, wants it played and seen. I agree totally.

    • @kasajizo8963
      @kasajizo8963 Před rokem +2

      There's no way you're serious.

    • @williamtaittinger4529
      @williamtaittinger4529 Před rokem +1

      lol its an amateur troll you effin NORMIE.

    • @tanushreeb
      @tanushreeb Před rokem

      @@williamtaittinger4529 Why so angry? Let us normies have our ignorant fun.

    • @williamtaittinger4529
      @williamtaittinger4529 Před rokem +1

      @@tanushreeb yeah you are right. My patience with normies is very limited but you are right, lol

  • @stenplayz4468
    @stenplayz4468 Před 2 lety +3

    My favorite piano piece of all time

  • @higherview136
    @higherview136 Před 5 měsíci +2

    I named by beloved cat, Claire and this will always be her song. She waits for me at the gate and I’m almost ready to make that trip to her -to a place where there is no illness, greed or selfishness.

  • @bm8584
    @bm8584 Před 4 lety +10

    Sublime version. We are lucky to hear this from him

  • @Crewelperleology
    @Crewelperleology Před 4 lety +14

    There seems to be a knowing intention in this performance, at this resting tempo. It is more crisp and precise. As though Debussy were kneading the keys in comfortable, careful and deliberate expression. I can breathe ever more deeply.

  • @Eyelashtv
    @Eyelashtv Před rokem +3

    to this day, this remains to be the most beautiful song I have ever heard

    • @DieFlabbergast
      @DieFlabbergast Před 9 měsíci

      Er ... it's not a damned "song," you unutterable m***n. If you heard any lyrics, or any human voice singing anything, see a doctor, pronto!

  • @michaelgibson4705
    @michaelgibson4705 Před rokem +2

    What a gift this man had to write music that still moves people 120 years later

  • @photo161
    @photo161 Před 6 lety +229

    In spite of numerous eccentricities, strange rubato, odd tempo changes, etc., in the end, in the hands of its composer, Claude Debussy, the piece emerged as beautiful, interesting and also somehow deeply moving, ...all more so than I had ever experienced before.

    • @cookaboorra
      @cookaboorra Před 5 lety +8

      I listened it many times, and I can say I'm with you. What he experienced we can nothing but imagine. But his execution is solid, harmonious, flying, as a moon lover would do to bring life to its aiméé.
      Far from being a lullaby, it's exciting and warm he put WARMTH into the quicly escaping moon reflections....

    • @Darjoli8
      @Darjoli8 Před 5 lety +1

      Well said.

    • @photo161
      @photo161 Před 5 lety +1

      @@cookaboorra - Thankyou for that lovely appreciation of this special performance...very well put, indeed.

    • @TheGoogilly
      @TheGoogilly Před 4 lety

      Finally, someone saying something truly meaningful.. This moment, carried out by Debussey, has become so dear to my life experience.
      I am so happy to read your comment.

    • @emanuelavozza1821
      @emanuelavozza1821 Před 4 lety +1

      "In spite"?! I would rather say "because of". There is nothing odd, nothing strange, of course it is eccentric, but only from our modern view point.

  • @julietcunningham852
    @julietcunningham852 Před 4 lety +5

    His rhythmic freedom is amazing. I wish I'd heard this back in high school when I was playing this.

  • @ViktorRadoslavov
    @ViktorRadoslavov Před 3 lety +13

    I wish Leo would play him in a movie

  • @fhowe4431
    @fhowe4431 Před 3 lety +2

    What a treat, to hear this lovely piece played by the composer himself.