![Alex Dobshinsky](/img/default-banner.jpg)
- 7
- 984 614
Alex Dobshinsky
United States
Приєднався 7 січ 2007
Відео
Debussy - Page d'album
Переглядів 802 місяці тому
Pièce pour le Vêtement du blessé Played on Casio PX-S1000
Bach - Prelude No. 2 in c minor, BWV 934
Переглядів 2434 місяці тому
From 6 little preludes. Played on a Casio Privia PX-S1000
C.P.E. Bach - Solfeggietto in C minor (H 220, Wq. 117: 2)
Переглядів 959 тис.10 років тому
Recorded on Yamaha P155.
Burgmüller - L'Harmonie des Anges
Переглядів 24 тис.11 років тому
Étude Op. 100 No. 21 Played and recorded on Yamaha P-155.
Most people nowadays play this way too fast. You have yo give the notes and phrasing space to breathe.
Bro that e is flat
I came here to listen to the piano version as a guitarist that’s a beautiful performance :)! This will help me with playing it on guitar 🎸
Why that natural E (l.h) in this passage ? The E is always flat in theses measures..
Played in a recital 42 years ago...and I don't play much anymore but I still love this piece. Loved this pace too as I was way too "fast" with it seemingly and it made it more complex (for me at least at the time).
I wonder if this would be a good piece I could learn in front of my student so he can watch a pianist practice.. there’s not much exposure to this instrument where I’m from.. maybe it would be something he would get a lot out of.
O andamento correto é aquele que você consegue executar com limpeza e musicalidade. Essa peça é tão linda que até lenta é cativante se bem executada. ❤
I’ve gone from playing this one way too slow to playing it way too fast now. This is the tempo it should be played in!
Too fast to be appreciated. A slower tempo sounds better.
surprisingly easy to play
медленно, нужно быстрее
Welcome to Pump It Up Phoenix 2024
Skinny Pete (aka. Charles Baker) sent me here and I am just trusting the uploader of this video that the version is the original by CPE Bach!
Anyone catch the mistake at 0:55? The computer was only doing what it was told...!
0:54. That E mistake actually works quite well with the harmony
So beautifully played! Absolutely wonderful! Bravo! Big like 7 👏👏👏👏
Beaucoup d'élégance et de sensibilité ! Merci pour cette belle interprétation ❤💐👏🎶
The drama 🎭 of this piece is sooo delicious and sophisticated
Skinny Pete
Yes
It is obviously just "Allegro"...
At 0:56 it's an Eb, minor ;)
Anyone knows where the 0:08 part can be heard ? I have a strong familar feeling, kind of a "nostalgic" sentiment and i can't find why, but i'm pretty sure i've heard this exact part somewhere. I discovered this piece like a lot of people by watching Breaking Bad, but i had the same feeling when i saw Skinny Pete playing for the first time so that doesn't come from here
When I was growing up, teachers would play classical music in the class and I have the same nostalgic feeling. Did the same happen for you?
@@Daryl_Phillips_ No, i might have heard it in another song. The feeling i'm talking about is more familiar than nostalgic, can't really describe it
circle of fifths progression
La difficoltà di questo brano e il suono cristallino l omogeneità tra mano destra e sinistra le note in appoggio lo stacco fra il forte e il piano e sinceramente gli arpeggie e le scalette darei un po' più di crescendo e diminuendo comunque è un ottimo studio di tecnica lo letto oggi per scrupolo non è proprio così facile ,da studiare bene a metronomo buon lavoro
Im teaching it to one of my students and we are loving it The main problem is to keep control and not let it disappear into a jumble of the odd wrong notes Slowly practice is the answer but sometimes just let it fly........ Great composition
A question for the pianists, for which grade is this piece? Or age? (I mean you can play it whenever you want but, I want to have a reference) thanks!!!
the bach family never disappoints
I've never heard this piece before but just in the first few bars I instantly know it was a Russian composer. Lovely.
The progression at 00:08 is beautiful. I don't know what this pattern is called, but I've heard it in so many baroque pieces. Does it have a name?
Same with Mozart's Sonata no 16 it has the same pattern.
Man that part is a gift from god, wish I knew what it was
It's called the circle of 5ths progression. Precisely, downwards moving circle of 5ths progression.
@@ozrenpiano Thank you!
Magnifique. Quelle énergie, quelle souplesse! C'est brillant.
this should be removed. There is an error!
That one kid in middle school who played solfeggietto whenever there was a piano in sight as everyone stood there thoroughly impressed 🙄 as I crossed my arms and was like, “yeah but can you make Brahms’s chords sing?!!?!” 😭🤧
I’m in middle school and that kid is my best friend lmao
came here because frank tedesco lol
0:56 left hand must play g-es but not g-e
This sounds so much like Beethoven!!!
It doesn't work!
Is there a mistake on the last page, top line, second bar. Does the pianist play an E natural in the Left Hand rather than a flat?
Mistake at 0:15 Edit: also mistakes at 0:56 and 1:05 bruh practice more before uploading
Cry more
@@HepponismeLmao kid u butthurt
Cara, se hoje eu ouço muita musica barroca é porque eu assiti breaking bad ...
Amazing tempo!!!
I’ve listen to so many versions, but I always come back to this one. No one else I’ve heard plays it better.
thank u skinny
There's a mistake in 0:56 (E natural in the left hand), and also in the last arpeggio...
HOW THE HELL IS IT SLOW WHAT
If Skinny Pete can do it, we can
I'm gonna learn this bitch
had a heart attack when my piano teacher sent this to me
6 bars from the end the left hand should play an e flat in the left hand to agree with the c minor chord in rh. Oops!
Breaking Bad brought me here
A good way for beginners to learn about *C minor.* 😮(Prestissimo means as fast as you can without going too fast) Its *CRITICAL* that you use the fingerings provided 1-5, written above for R.H. and below for L.H. (1=thumb and 5=pinky) The influence of *JS BACH* on his son, *CPE BACH* is obvious ... but why does this easy keyboard-piece remind me of a *JS BACH* Cello or Viola da Gamba Sonata?🎻 Does anybody know what Solfeggio *really means* in Italian?🤔
A few thoughts: (i) If you want to know what different keys meant to composers in the second half of the 18th century into the early 19th, search Christian Schubart’s Ideen zu einer Aesthetic der Tonkunst (Characteristics of musical keys); it’s available in English, but tells you what c minor meant at the time. (There are others as well, including by Charpentier, and yet more still relating keys to colours for example by Scriabin). (ii) Prestissimo is as you say, but the key to playing works like this Solfeggio is the sensitive shaping of the musical phrases; CPE is I think one of the most difficult of composers to move from playing the notes to playing the music, and there are a number of performances of this well-known work on UA-cam that fall somewhere between mechanical and wooden. (iii) The fingering as you say is critical; CPE is unusual in that a number of his works include the composer’s own suggested fingerings which are modern-style and effective. Note ‘suggested’; whilst I generally speaking agree with your point, I do believe that a young small-handed pianist does not need always to adopt the same fingering as a larger hand - in other words, fingering can be negotiable, providing that it is good fingering. (iv) Not sure there is really much link with JS Bach in this Solfeggio; there are many similar passages in Mozart and Haydn where a small fragment does it’s paces through a variety of keys; that said, JS Bach (and Handel, Scarlatti, et al) do it as well, as in the first prelude of the 48. (v) In the context of this piece, the Italian word Solfeggio really means an exercise or study, though alternative Italian words exist for both of these words - essercizio, studio. In English, we have borrowed the French word Solfege rather than the Italian Solfeggio, and a quick search of Solfege will give you a better definition than my simple translation.
0:55, wrong!!! By the way, the trill at 0:47 was really neat