Week 1: Let's start Rach-ing!
Hello and welcome to the WEEK ONE Main Thread for this challenge!
Alright everyone - this is the thread where we'll all be posting our daily updates.
Make sure you've read the rules before replying (<- click)
Twice a week between March 13 - March 20 I hope to be reading your daily updates in this very thread right here!
Here is this week's assignment!
1. Pick a Piece of Rachmaninoff to study and let us know!
Check here for suggested repertoire pieces, including "Beginner" level Rachmaninoff
2. Optional: Watch the Kick off livestream where Dominic walks us through some of these suggested pieces, and listen to excerpts!
https://app.tonebase.co/piano/live/player/pno-rachmaninoff-birthday-kickoff-challenge
3. Optional for Everyone: Listen to Rachmaninoff playing some of his own music, share the video and let us know what you think!
Let me help you get started!
Rachmaninoff Plays his C-sharp minor prelude
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZcG-DnGdWRw
I listened to Rachmaninoff play his famous C-sharp minor prelude and a few things I noticed:
He didn't play the opening insanely loud! He saved the fireworks for the recap (last page).
The middle section still had such an amazing clarity.
The music never felt like it was "metronomic" he has an unbelievable way of allowing it to always flow.
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I won't be participating by playing in this challenge, but it is giving me an excuse to explore Rachmaninoff's music. I found his Elegie Op. 3 No. 1 - today, it is my favorite! The emotional range he expresses in his playing is extraordinary: tenderness, hope, love, reminiscence, anger (of a sort), resignation, all with an undercurrent of sadness/grief.
I can imagine a lovely pas de deux being danced to this piece.
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Thanks very much, Dominic, for compiling a list of the more approachable Rachmaninoff pieces. I anticipate going back to the list again to play some of the other pieces, but for now I have picked Melodie, Op 3 no 3, to play as my very first Rachmaninoff piece ever!
Listening to various recordings, Rachmaninoff's playing really stands out. It has everything, the slightly melancholic singing melody, the expressive dynamics throughout including the chord progressions, and an assertive and confidently styled rubato. I am in awe!
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I am going to learn Rachmaninoff’s piano transcription of his own vocal composition- Daisies, Op 38/3, based on a poem by Igor Severianin:
Just look! See how many daisies there are
Here and there…
They are in flower, so many of them, in abundance.
Their three-faceted petals are like wings,
Like white silk.
They are the summer’s might, the joy of plenty,
A radiant army!
Prepare, oh earth, a drink of dew drops,
To refresh the flowers’ stems…
Oh maidens fair! Oh little daisy starlets!
How I love you!
Here is Rachmaninoff playing his delicate composition. Beautiful imagery and maybe a hint of longing. He plays it faster than many other pianists I have heard but of course that suits him! I love his trills!
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This is a slightly more humorous post, but here is a very *interesting* recording of Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C# Minor: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ifKKlhYF53w
People with small hands take note!
Joshua
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I’ll be working on his Prelude Op.32 no 5 in G major. The first time I listened to it I picture an icy landscape, with some melting of snow.
I couldn’t find a video of him playing this piece, but I found him playing another prelude that also has long melodies with a glittering background.
His playing really blew me away with the virtuosity, balance of voices, and dynamic control. Even with all the many notes in the right hand in the higher “louder” register, the melody is still very present while still being delicate and naturally flowing, not forced. -
I was going to revive Rach Prelude no 3 op 23, on second thoughts I will post his prelude no 12 op 32 which I already have under my fingers, and will take this opportunity to learn something new, at least the 1st 3 pgs of his transcription of Kreisler Liebeslied. Such a lovely tune with a jazz swing.