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Friday 26 June 2026 03:28:59 GMT
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sekkkkherz
tuttt_pasekkk🇺🇲 :
peih ber sad gen
2026-06-26 03:32:08
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adii galauu bossqq
2026-06-26 03:32:20
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Astor Piazzolla – Libertango (arr. Nikolai Kuznetsov) Nikolai Kuznetsov – piano 🎹 The freest tango Piazzolla ever wrote came out of a commercial demand. Living in Italy, he got an awkward request from his own agent: write something short and direct, something that plays on the radio. Instead of refusing, he handed over a piece you can’t get out of your head. He recorded it in Milan in 1974 and left the tango orchestra behind: in its place, electric bass and drums, like a rock band. What was meant to be a radio hit became the most recorded tango on the planet. You’ve probably already heard this melody without knowing its name. It became a pop song in Grace Jones’s voice, slipped into film soundtracks and ended up in Yo-Yo Ma’s hands on the cello. But Libertango wasn’t born on the piano: it was born on the bandoneon, that bellows a player opens and closes as if it were breathing. Much of the tension in the piece comes from that back and forth, from an instrument that breathes in and out the whole time. Go back to the video paying attention to this, and the piano stops sounding like a piano: it starts to breathe. There’s one detail that changes everything: the arrangement you’re hearing is Kuznetsov’s own. He took a piece written for several instruments and squeezed it all into ten fingers. The two hands start living in separate worlds: one holds the entire structure on its own, the other stays free to sing the melody. And since a piano can’t stretch a note the way the bandoneon’s bellows does, he attacks the keys hard to imitate that breathing. He made the whole band disappear, and even so, nothing is missing. #piano #music #pianoapp #synthesia #tango
Astor Piazzolla – Libertango (arr. Nikolai Kuznetsov) Nikolai Kuznetsov – piano 🎹 The freest tango Piazzolla ever wrote came out of a commercial demand. Living in Italy, he got an awkward request from his own agent: write something short and direct, something that plays on the radio. Instead of refusing, he handed over a piece you can’t get out of your head. He recorded it in Milan in 1974 and left the tango orchestra behind: in its place, electric bass and drums, like a rock band. What was meant to be a radio hit became the most recorded tango on the planet. You’ve probably already heard this melody without knowing its name. It became a pop song in Grace Jones’s voice, slipped into film soundtracks and ended up in Yo-Yo Ma’s hands on the cello. But Libertango wasn’t born on the piano: it was born on the bandoneon, that bellows a player opens and closes as if it were breathing. Much of the tension in the piece comes from that back and forth, from an instrument that breathes in and out the whole time. Go back to the video paying attention to this, and the piano stops sounding like a piano: it starts to breathe. There’s one detail that changes everything: the arrangement you’re hearing is Kuznetsov’s own. He took a piece written for several instruments and squeezed it all into ten fingers. The two hands start living in separate worlds: one holds the entire structure on its own, the other stays free to sing the melody. And since a piano can’t stretch a note the way the bandoneon’s bellows does, he attacks the keys hard to imitate that breathing. He made the whole band disappear, and even so, nothing is missing. #piano #music #pianoapp #synthesia #tango

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