Musical Pieces  



This piece of music by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) is from 1788. It is part of a sonata containing three movements: allegro, andante and rondo.



Youtube comments ...

michaminau: wow!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 

DaveMcG: BTW, you should get rid of the 'blurry' video effect, I'd prefer to be able to see your hands clearly as it might help me to learn pieces myself. The blurriness serves no purpose.

DaveMcG: perfect

amadeok: don't like how you play

piposlescolos: it's good but i even don't really believe in digital pianos. For me, i think it's easier to get a beautiful sound with those pianos. But, may be i'm wrong. Great playing! Wow. just perfect

bsd300d: TOOOOOOO slow. It seems to loses it's feeling with a slower tempo. Other than that it was nice.

heartofpiano: yeah, uhh...did I tell you that I started when I was 3 and a half? I was nine. I'm just using my sister's old ACCOUNT, because for some REASON her NEW account is balance2us, she is 18 now. And I am 9 now. oh ya, and I am composing music that isn't anything c ompared to what I play. and I told my sister to make a better name when I was 5 because I like piano. She was 14 if you didn't notice.

heartofpiano: dude, I have a picture of MYSISTER, you think I am alowed to use my  own account? I share with my SISTER. DUDE.

BLACKDOTSx: LOL ORLY? Your youtube has you listed as fourteen, and the girl in your picture looks a lot older than a nine year old. I envy those who were given the opportunity to be taught the piano at a young age, but what I hate is when people lie about their age to appear as a prodigy. It's pathetic and not at all charming. It's not that special or uncommon for someone to play an instrument decently at a young age..unless you're, like, four years old and composing pieces like Mozart did.

heartofpiano: I love to play this. I have been playing this Whole Grand Sonata since I was 8-9, and guess what? I am 9!

limortaccitua2: when i was child i played it...now..i lost the tech but not the love and all that marvellous feelings.... miss u

DeMusicManiac: needs to be the tiniest bit faster but still its fabulous nice one mate :)

SpiralaPL: Love it.

jeff35165: that was very musical. i like the way you played it. i am learning this song right now

NikOzk8: mmm kreo ke tu no tocas de verdad... =)

Macross100: alta reverb!

FleaPeaa: i love this beacuse i watch litttle amadues

guidohizon: @brattylord i think you're hearing the different pitches "overlapping" each other because his sustain thing is turned on.

mansonesque: On all tunings - any 'tempered' instrument is inherently out of tune, which is why it's more difficult to play a stringed instrument with piano - as you have to adjust the pitch-perfect tuning to that of a tempered instrument. Listen to the way people sing - the flats are flatter, and the sharps sharper, than the black keys on a piano. Only by a shade, but the difference is there. Another reason why autotune should be banned ;-)

BayAreaBiker2001: For mean-tone temperment, maybe. The Fisk organ at Stanford Memorial Church is one of only a few organs with such tuning. Keyboard instruments after the mid-18th century are tuned with equal temperment. B flat and A sharp are the same with equal temperment. Bach experimented with equal temperment at a time when many different tunings were in use. The Well-Tempered Clavier was the result.

AvidHobbyist: I agree. I was just telling BrattyLord off, though.

BayAreaBiker2001: That's one of the selling points. However, they sound generic. There is a difference between a Yamaha, Steinway, Kimball, Bosendorfer, and a Broadwood. Yamaha pianos are best for popular, Bosendorfer is best for classical.

AvidHobbyist: Digital pianos can't get out of tune, you idiot.

kev7978: oh i see... no wonder.

mansonesque: It might be that the person who posted plays an untempered instrument, i.e. violin, etc - because we're used to hearing the true pitches rather than the standardised ones, certain keys sound out of tune on the piano. Believe it or not, I can tell the difference between a B flat and an A sharp in a piece of music - kind of comes with the territory on cello.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Piano Sonata No. 16, K545, 3rd movement (Rondo).
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