Artur Schnabel plays Beethoven Piano Sonata No.32, Op.111

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  • čas přidán 10. 09. 2024
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Komentáře • 82

  • @paradiddleday
    @paradiddleday Před 12 lety +27

    For me, this has to be the definitive reading of this sonata. I don't find quite the same level of spirituality in other versions. Listen to it sometime while reviewing the philosophical description of this sonata in Mann's novel Dr. Faustus.

    • @raymondtogtman1047
      @raymondtogtman1047 Před 4 lety +8

      That's right. Schnabel's playing of the second half of movement two has a spiritual dimension that I have not heard in anyone else's playing.

    • @jgrab1
      @jgrab1 Před 3 lety +3

      @@raymondtogtman1047 Not even his own. He did another recording in 1942 that is not as good as this one, though of course the sound is better.

    • @laurencegoldman4639
      @laurencegoldman4639 Před 3 lety

      I’m lazy. How bout posting the quote? Please. (Or at least page reference for the Mann)

    • @paradiddleday
      @paradiddleday Před 3 lety +2

      Laurence Goldman Goodness! After 10 years! How did you know I wasn’t dead? 😏 Anyway, it’s a whole chapter- VIII, starting on p 49 of the Modern Library edition.

    • @laurencegoldman4639
      @laurencegoldman4639 Před 3 lety +1

      @@paradiddleday Thanks. Glad to find you apparently still breathing (Me too). God bless ePdf.pub . Just read the Chapter 8. Great reference. I think I’ll now have to check out the fugues (“bad” and “good”) as well. This was my first listen to Op. 32, so I’m fortunate to have stumbled upon this recording, your reference, and this station, in general. Thanks again.

  • @pbrower2a1
    @pbrower2a1 Před 6 lety +17

    It is just amazing... this, the most profound of Beethoven sonatas, could offer even more through the interpretation of Artur Schnable than through anyone else whom I have ever heard, including Brendel, Pollini, and Arrau.I listen to this Opus 111 and question whether anyone could go further with music.
    Everything after this work is simply a postscript -- even Chopin, Brahms, Puccini, and Mahler.

  • @kristijankarovski4811
    @kristijankarovski4811 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I am sure that Beethoven is smiling satisfied from Heaven for this incredible performance.

  • @2929felix
    @2929felix Před 6 lety +19

    I have listened to many interpretations of this sonata and find this interpretation has the most nuances and is very touching.Thanks

  • @user-fq2pn2cc8j
    @user-fq2pn2cc8j Před 3 lety +9

    0:00 I. Maestoso - Allegro con brio ed appassionato
    8:17 II. Arietta: Adagio molto semplice e cantabile
    魁偉 瑰麗 雄奇 壯美

  • @laurencegoldman4639
    @laurencegoldman4639 Před 3 lety +2

    At around 15:00 it almost goes into jazz improvisation-amazing. And the finish-what a surprise-the fluttering of a butterfly.

  • @horacion80
    @horacion80 Před 7 lety +16

    Quien critica esta interpretacion no entiende nada de Beethoven... Es la mejor interpretacion jamàs hecha dela ùltima sonata para piano de Beethoven.

  • @francescaemc2
    @francescaemc2 Před 9 lety +6

    I'm back... best pianist for Beethoven!! Thanks again!!!!

  • @MrKlemps
    @MrKlemps Před 5 lety +8

    In our troubled times I am not comforted by seeing (above) that 9 people gave this recording a thumbs-down. They must like Trayfenough's tortured rendering or the slow-motion performance by Hamelin. Most other performances rob Beethoven of his "uncomfortable-ness" or else attempt to impose their own "profundities" on the music. It's much more difficult work to approach Beethoven on his own terms, which is what Schnabel, and to a slightly lesser extent his great American student, Leonard Shure, and Rudolf Serkin did.

  • @Fritz_Maisenbacher
    @Fritz_Maisenbacher Před 10 lety +12

    Unmatched . Completely unmatched , and from far , as usual with Schnabel . The history of Beethoven's interpretative possibilities and perspectives ended with him . Time just stopped . Finito . Aus .

  • @lalamiocean5344
    @lalamiocean5344 Před 6 lety +4

    永远昂扬的贝多芬,虽然历尽苦难,但……不知道怎么说,喜欢这个演绎,庄重朴实,在艰辛沉重之后平淡中的思索和不坚实地希望。播放完之后觉得留下了很多东西,这就是音乐的样子吧,难以言喻,感觉一切都变得更清晰了

  • @gwedielwch
    @gwedielwch Před 11 lety +19

    This is a very powerful and confident version. Just a year later, in 1933 the Nazis took power in Germany. Schnabel, who was Jewish, left Berlin, where he was an eminent teacher in the State Academy, and emigrated, first to the UK, then to the USA. In 1942, his mother, at the age of 83, was deported from her home in Vienna to Theresianstadt. She died there two months later. After the end of the War, Schnabel returned to Europe. He never returned to Germany or Austria.

    • @paulcannon5065
      @paulcannon5065 Před 4 lety +3

      Don't blame him

    • @MultiSORDO
      @MultiSORDO Před 2 lety

      Bandidos, canallas nazis

    • @howardstrauss5337
      @howardstrauss5337 Před rokem

      Thanks for that. We Jews weren't being defined by your vile Holocaust boasting enough. In fuct I hardly meet people who think Jew/Holocaust like you do. Your shitty little survivor guilt is useless in the world. Take six million years of silence. Please.

    • @lilianamincu6285
      @lilianamincu6285 Před rokem +1

      Minunat interpret pentru Schubert

  • @platypusguy
    @platypusguy Před 5 lety +6

    Bravo, Maestro!!

  • @stuartbreckinridge2399
    @stuartbreckinridge2399 Před 12 lety +10

    The triple trills were perfectly even. A feat few can pull off!

  • @paulcannon5065
    @paulcannon5065 Před 4 lety +2

    Good Grief! Awesome and terrifying.Stunning and sublime. Incomparable 🙆

  • @MrGer2295
    @MrGer2295 Před 7 lety +7

    Beautiful! Thanks for sharing :)

  • @victorbernard284
    @victorbernard284 Před 7 lety +8

    réponse à tonycosworth: Backhaus aussi ne respecte pas à la lettre les indications de Beethoven... mais si l'esprit y est ? êtes vous sûr que quand Beethoven jouait ses propres oeuvres, il aurait respecté à la lettre ses propres indications? n'aurait y t il pas réinventé à chaque instant un jeu vivant pour sa propre musique?

  • @user-ry6pp3js2b
    @user-ry6pp3js2b Před 11 měsíci +1

    Schnabel, 멋진 사람

  • @syourke3
    @syourke3 Před 5 lety +2

    Schnabel had small hands. When he was rejected for military service in WW1, a fellow pianist quipped “Of course he was rejected. No fingers!”

  • @natkernell1438
    @natkernell1438 Před 3 lety +1

    This portrait as v. 1937 . . . he's been through hell - but what music - maybe the best reading of op. 111 despite rough edges - compressed files? Heartfelt, what rugged momentum!

  • @yaelpalombo4604
    @yaelpalombo4604 Před 2 lety +1

    Fantastica interpretazione

  • @francescaemc2
    @francescaemc2 Před 7 lety +2

    Grazie

  • @francescaemc2
    @francescaemc2 Před 10 lety +2

    thank you.

  • @JoelLeBras
    @JoelLeBras Před 6 lety +2

    22'00" Back of the theme OMG !

  • @Fritz_Maisenbacher
    @Fritz_Maisenbacher Před 6 měsíci

    19:56 hello ? .... hello ? ......... is here someone .... ? ...... ? ..... ...... hello ....... hee .... yes ? hello .... what .. ? hello .... ? ... ................ Beethoven and Schnabel, hand in hand, calling from the utter cosmos, or calling the cosmos itself, in an incredible way, full of hope and tenderness .........
    (in reality, the listener talking with himself, in his granitic solitude)
    and the answer ................. 20:58 coming in this hesitating doubting notes, quite desperate, like some hieroglyphs ....... Rosette's Stone ..............
    but 21:59 AND SUDDENLY, and not more possible ever, some hope .................. hope .......................
    I listen to this since 50 years.
    And everytime, everytime, I am shaking, tears, I shout in my room

  • @nickk8416
    @nickk8416 Před rokem +1

    Much of this interpretation is amazing but it's a little too fast for me. Some areas seem rushed to an extreme in the 1st movement. The Adagio was sublime.

  • @innocenzobarrera1505
    @innocenzobarrera1505 Před 10 lety +2

    la preferisco a tutte le altre esecuzioni.

    • @emaknoch8717
      @emaknoch8717 Před 8 lety +2

      +innocenzo barrera , de acuerdo , coincido con usted, es excepcional, lo escuche muchas veces de niña, pasaron los años, me dediqué a otras versiones, pero hoy reconozco que otra igual no hay, está tan identificado con el carácter del compositor, esas dulzuras, esos enojos, esos miedos, esa alegría, ese Beethoven único Grande "Hombre,y compositor" Más pasan los años y más lo comprendo !! Ema Knoch

    • @francescaemc2
      @francescaemc2 Před 3 lety

      Perché non andare ad ascoltarle!

  • @tonycosworth
    @tonycosworth Před 10 lety +1

    La dynamique écrasée dessert évidemment l'enregistrement dans les ff. Cela dit, il a oublié des sf et ff, et ce dès le début du Maestoso; On note de curieuses irrégularités de tempo dans la 3° variation (rubati ?) et à 23'35; sa vision de l'Arietta reste très intéressante, très belle, même; Mais globalement, ce n'est pas -et de loin-la version que j'ai le plus de plaisir à auditionner.

    • @florestankiki
      @florestankiki Před 8 lety +1

      Rubati : oui, bien sûr ! Pourquoi réserver cela à Chopin ? Schnabel est TOUJOURS ponctuel lorsque Beethoven est actuel ! Maintenant, rubato et ponctualité...C'est leur niveau à EUX !!! Nous, on écoute... et... Chuuuut...

    • @Fritz_Maisenbacher
      @Fritz_Maisenbacher Před 6 měsíci

      Eh bien, ne l'auditionnez pas. Et foutez-nous la paix.
      Vous êtes ici en territoire sacré.
      Allez-vous en.

  • @bhonzonbongco5810
    @bhonzonbongco5810 Před 7 lety +1

    happy Birthday

  • @francescaemc2
    @francescaemc2 Před 3 lety

    grazie

  • @francescaemc2
    @francescaemc2 Před 5 lety

    grazie!!!!

  • @user-mh3hc6mt5n
    @user-mh3hc6mt5n Před 6 lety

    生で聴いてみたかったなー

  • @ymat111
    @ymat111 Před 7 lety +2

    8:15

  • @dj-classical7266
    @dj-classical7266 Před 4 lety

    Schnabel的8CD贝多芬钢琴奏鸣曲有很多首处理不当,但仅凭这一首op 111,就足以确立其不朽的地位。

  • @friedrich1012
    @friedrich1012 Před 3 lety +2

    Es como si tocase el propio Beethoven.

  • @bevaconme
    @bevaconme Před 11 lety +1

    21 january and 21 march 1932.

  • @bratcheda1
    @bratcheda1 Před 12 lety +1

    Does anybody know when this sonata was recorded?

  • @ramanashiu4744
    @ramanashiu4744 Před 2 lety

    魁偉 瑰麗 雄奇 壯美

  • @thomgeo8073
    @thomgeo8073 Před rokem

    I love Artur ❤ but I prefer Arturo Benedetti ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤

  • @user-sv9yk2vy4d
    @user-sv9yk2vy4d Před 4 lety

    しかし、何でベートーヴェンは、最後に、地獄(第一楽章)と天国(第二楽章)を書いたんやろか?シュナーベルはテクニシャンではないが、ベートーヴェンのこの地獄と天国の対比を赤裸々に見せてくれる。しかしこの第二楽章の安らぎはどうや!誰にも追従できない、彼だけが到達できた高みだ。聴くたびに涙を禁じえない。トリルがうまくないとか些細なことを指摘するんは、音楽を知らん馬鹿や。ついでに言うと、わしは英HMVのいぬがカラーのSPで蓄音機で聴いとる。英HMVはチリチリいうが、シュナーベルはSPでないとだめや。東芝の紺色に灰色のレーベルの復刻版は音が恐ろしくボロやから、持っとったら即捨ててくれ。

  • @hophmi
    @hophmi Před 9 lety +1

    Daniil Trifonov's rendition, which he played at Carnegie Hall last week, is the most like this one that I've heard in awhile.

    • @MrKlemps
      @MrKlemps Před 5 lety +4

      DT's performance of this sonata, which I've heard on CZcams, is about as different from Schnabel's as it is possible to get.

    • @_PROCLUS
      @_PROCLUS Před 4 lety

      @@MrKlemps Adolf Drescher

  • @arturozeballos1
    @arturozeballos1 Před 8 lety +2

    prefiero las grabaciones de hoy, ya que hay interpretes aun mas interesantes.ARRAU-Kissin,Schiff,Ashkenazy o Trifonov...

  • @farmertice7064
    @farmertice7064 Před rokem

    I like this version, but not nearly as well as Glenn Gould's.

  • @AlbertoCobo
    @AlbertoCobo Před 3 lety

    Beethoven was deaf when he composed this sonata, hence he needed more intensity in the sound. This version of Schnabel, still being legendarily Beethoven's "reconstructor", in my modest opinion is lacking in resources, both in terms of sound power and technique (including in phrasing), leaving many unresolved passages and going through them with great effort -passing the rope around the neck-, dirty notes, failures in the balance of rhythmic values, trills and imperfect biting, it is true that he seeks the tremendous virtuosity that the sonata requires but cannot achieve it, because in the moments that it requires great manifestation of technical power, it barely manages - if at all - to outline them. At the same time Beethoven was nicknamed "the Spaniard" due to his great temperament that even broke the delicate fortepianos at that time.
    Here is my version:
    First movmnt.
    czcams.com/video/3XolgMhOYjU/video.html
    Second movmnt.
    czcams.com/video/dC9p6KY_rMs/video.html

    • @hostlangr
      @hostlangr Před 3 lety

      Vielleicht die Arrau-Interpretation?
      czcams.com/video/AhGAm3s4_-A/video.html

  • @francescaemc2
    @francescaemc2 Před 3 lety

    grazie

  • @francescaemc2
    @francescaemc2 Před 3 lety

    grazie