Fanny Mendelssohn - Notturno in G minor video free download


251,769
Duration: 04:46
Uploaded: 2012/02/20

Fanny Mendelssohn - Hensel

Piano: Heather Schmidt

Comments

5 years ago

Jamerson Farias

bravo! Lindo, intenso, é tão fluido como um vento gélido que perpassa o corpo

5 years ago

小島信一

This rendition is fabulous good and a brilliant performance. From where are you watching this video ? Estas viendo que este video es del pais ?

6 years ago

paulo bassman

hermoso......

6 years ago

nazareno sciabordi

Grazie Fanny per quello che ci hai lasciato. Avresti meritato molto do piu' in questo mondo!!!!

6 years ago

Cloud Berry

I absolutely fell in love

6 years ago

Samuel M

Funny how all the women are trying to say how great this is. It's mediocre at best. She's no Mozart.

6 years ago

moggsy 71

thank you Mozart in the Jungle for bringing this lady to my attention.

6 years ago

Jody Delwo

such good music!

6 years ago

Michelle Martin

This is beautiful, wish female composers would be more celebrated in music appreciation lessons...

6 years ago

Jan Harasim

I'm obsessed with this music!

6 years ago

EVA FARIOU

Divine.....

6 years ago

Tranisha Thomas

I can not stop listening to this piece! It is so haunting and expressive, and it makes you want to hear it again. I would love to hear and study more on Fanny. She's very gifted.

6 years ago

evert anders

women are by FAR the most SUPERIOR of ALL.!.!.!.! QE

6 years ago

Guido Korbach

Danke für diese wunderbare Aufnahme Heather Schmidt und fürs Einstellen Demian. Die Musik ist so tiefgründig gespielt und eine der Besten die ich je gehört habe.

6 years ago

Giuseppe Di Marco

Wonderful! So Much Passion in this Work ! I think Heather Schmidt! Really Does Show Her Inner Most Feelings in to This Music! Hands Up!

6 years ago

Malu Pezzin

Adorável !!!

6 years ago

Saiful Rimkeit

Love at First Listen.

6 years ago

Brittney Turbyfill

it is so good go to my you tube

6 years ago

runupahill1

Clara Wieck had a father who knew how to exploit her talents, and who didn't have to concern himself with her feelings. His filial rage over Robert Schumann and the subsequent legal fights were all about his loss of a meal-ticket, Fanny was highly regarded in her own right. According to sources, at one point in their youth, Fanny was even favored over Felix. Their composition instructor, Carl Friedrich Zelter mentioned the siblings in a letter to Goethe, the poet, as adorable children and that Fanny, the "oldest daughter could give you something of Sebastian Bach. This child is really something special." In another letter to Goethe, he said of Fanny, "She plays like a man." Upon her death,the Berlin music critic Ludwig Rellstab wrote that she had shared "a partnership of talent" with her famous brother and "had achieved a level of musical knowledge which few other artists who have dedicated their lives to music could claim" Her own father simply told her: ""Music will perhaps become his [i.e. Felix's] profession, while for you it can and must be only an ornament, never the basis of your being and doing." And Felix said of her, "she has neither inclination nor vocation for authorship. She is too much all that a woman ought to be for this. She regulates her house, and neither thinks of the public nor of the musical world, nor even of music at all, until her first duties are fulfilled. Publishing would only disturb her in these, and I cannot say that I approve of it." .

6 years ago

Alan Hill

Clara Wieck had a father who knew how to exploit her talents, and who didn't have to concern himself with her feelings. His filial rage over Robert Schumann and the subsequent legal fights were all about his loss of a meal-ticket,  Fanny was highly regarded in her own right. According to sources, at one point in their youth, Fanny was even favored over Felix.  Their composition instructor, Carl Friedrich Zelter mentioned the siblings in a letter to Goethe, the poet, as adorable children and that Fanny, the "oldest daughter could give you something of Sebastian Bach. This child is really something special."  In another letter to Goethe, he said of Fanny,  "She plays like a man."  Her own father simply told her: ""Music will perhaps become his [i.e. Felix's] profession, while for you it can and must be only an ornament"  I don't believe we can compare Clara Wieck Schumann and Fanny Hensel Mendelssohn as artists, except as to how their music affects us. .  As human beings, they were both denied the full "development"  of their talents and feelings and potential. That is what should never ever be any longer denied.

Related Videos