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Free Great Video Clips to download





Yes its old, I know I know...


Vladimir Horowitz plays Chopin his first ballade


In April 1986 Horowitz hold a concert in Moscow. This "Traumerei" is given as encore. Enjoy!


This is his recital in Moscow in 1986


Horowitz plays Liszt!


Vladimir Horowitz again, and an amazing performance of Chopin´s prelude "Raindrop" in D flat


Horowitz plays Chopin!


Vladimir Horowitz plays Liszt / Schubert Soirees de Vienne: Valse-Caprice No.6 in Vienna (1987).


This si Vladimir Horowitz playing Chopin's 2nd piano sonata at the white house


Moscow 1886


I really want to play this piece :) And this one is better than Brendel in my oponion (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4UQL9HTixic)


This is Vladimir Horowitz playing Chopin's "Heroique" A-flat major Polonaise, Op. 53 as only Vladimir Horowitz could! Correction! This is Horowitz in Musikverein, Vienna, Austria on May 31, 1987 which makes him 84 years old. Two years before his death on November 5th, 1989. Sorry for the wrong info and thanks for the correction :) God bless Horowitz. "there are three types of pianists. Jewish pianists. Homosexual pianists. and bad pianists." -Vladimir Horowitz I know this is a repost, but I will not deny my video collection of the great Horowitz, I don't care if this is the only video on youtube 60 million times. make it 60 million and one!


Polish TV Broadcast


Vladimir Horowitz plays Chopin Mazurka in b minor Opus. 33 No. 4 in Vienna (1987).


Outtakes from the Documentary "Vladimir Horowitz: The Last Romantic" by the Maysles brothers. Vladimir Horowitz plays: * Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Piano Sonata No. 11, K. 331 (Alla Turca: Allegretto "Turkish Rondo") * Sergei Rachmaninoff: Polka de W. R. * Bizet-Horowitz: Carmen Variations * Frederic Chopin: Etude Op. 10. No. 5 "Black Key Etude" * Moritz Moszkowski: Etude in F Major * Franz Liszt: Années de Pélerinage (Au Bord d'une Source)


Horowitz plays Chopin Waltz at the white house.


This 1928 & 1929 home movie was fillmed in Cincinnati, Ohio at the home of Dr. Karol Liszniewski, my late father's (pianist David Edward Smith's) music teacher. Horowitz made his debut in New York in 1928 and then came to Cincinnati for a concert with the symphony and this home movie was filmed at a party after the concert. In 1944, music critic J. Harold Harder, writing for the Toldeo Blade newspaper (April 17, 1944) after a concert by my father, (who was then 19 years old) said :"The best title to give him is the 'American Horowitz". See: http://www.drslawfirm.com/toledoblade1944.jpg See also 1951 review of David Smith's concert at the National Gallery of Art, Washington DC where critic Glen Dillard Dunn, of the Times-Herald said his playing "belongs in the same category with Solomon, Curzon, and even the venerable Arthur Rubenstein". http://www.drslawfirm.com/natlgallery51review.pdf My father played Horowtiz's variations of Bizet's theme from Carmen several times in concert to very great reviews. I have the sheet music (notes/fingering) he prepared. Horowitz's "Carmen variations" was never published. My father wrote and asked Horowitz for the music/fingering but Horowitz declined, albeit respectfully. So my father had an sound engineer at the college where he was teaching in Oregon slow down the music so he could listen to the notes. He then prepared sheet music and played the piece. If anyone would like a copy of this music I would be happy to provide a copy. He said (my father) it was very difficult to play. But I would love to see/hear it played again. Some of you have commented or e-mailed me as to my father's style of play. A bit of history. David Edward Smith, studied piano from the age of 12 (1936) until age 20 (1944) with Dr. Karol Liszniewski of the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music. What is no doubt lost to history is Dr. Liszniewski's exceptional background and lifestyle that so suited him to be a master teacher of the piano. Born in Poland, in his youth Liszniewski studied with Mikuli who had studied with Chopin. After receiving a law degree he went to Vienna to study with Leschetitsky, the great teacher of piano. There Liszniewski fell in love with another student (who was English)--Marguerite Melville--whom he married. Liszniewski was then involved in a duel--a matter of honor--and tendons in his right hand were severed, ending his concert career. Eventually he and his wife were both asked to join the faculty at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music. My father became a pupil at the age of 12. My father wrote in a letter: "All the Polish celebrities knew Dr. Liszniewski (who speaks Polish besides the Poles?). Arthur Rubinstein and Mieczyslaw Munz often stopped by when they were on tour. So did Rachmaninoff and Paderewski. I would be allowed to sit right next to them--only inches from the keyboard--to watch them practice by the hour--preparing for their solo recitals and concerto performances. They would give me lessons and sometimes, when I was practicing in my room upstairs, they would open the door at the bottom of the stairs and yell such things as 'Practice SLOWLY' or, for example, 'Who told you to do that crescendo in the left hand' (I had done something terrible, no doubt). 'That's good-don't ever change that!' (What a pleasant surprise). Sometimes they would come to my room to watch me practice--stopping me to show better fingering, a more beautiful interpretation, or how to solve some difficult problem 'at hand'. To an artist there is nothing quite so satisfying as the solving of an 'aesthetic problem'."


1982 ロイヤル・フェスィバル・ホール ダイアナ妃ご懐妊 チャールズ皇太子の招請 での演奏、 トロトメライ他 シューマン、 ショパン


Moscow 1986


Hi! I will start with uploading new videos from now on. This is our Horowitz playing scriabin 8/12...and...well...yeah have a look :p


Vladimir Horowitz playing "Vers la Flamme" (Toward the Flame) by Alexander Scriabin.


very funny :)


Dr. Len Horowitz spoke about vaccine toxicity, the pharmaceutical industry, and bioterrorism, and also touched on the healing properties of water. The "American medical cult—ure" has created an "Rx-Generation" where it's considered normal to take a pill for every ill, and then more medications to treat the side effects brought on the first prescriptions, he commented. Portions of his documentary In Lies We Trust, which examines the "military-medical-petrochemical-pharmaceutical profiteers," are available for free viewing on YouTube. Authorities recently conceded there was a connection between vaccines and autism in a case involving a young girl. Horowitz said that newborns are needlessly injected with the Hepatitis B vaccine and exposed to heavy metal toxicities and amino acid poisons. Vaccines make children more susceptible to auto-immune diseases and cancer, he argued. Following up on Dr. Masaru Emoto's groundbreaking work on water, Horowitz said that water is alive and has consciousness-- the image of an embryo and umbilical cord was seen in a water molecule, he noted. Polluted water loses its sacred geometrical structure, but water that still has its energy can be used to heal, he continued. In particular, he recommended the product Oxysilver as an immunity-building alternative to vaccines. Dr. Len Horowitz is an internationally known authority in behavioral science, public health education, and health practice management. He received his doctorate from Tufts University, was awarded a fellowship to do behavioral research at the University of Rochester, and later earned a Master of Public Health degree in behavioral science from Harvard University and a Masters degree in health education from Beacon College. One of healthcare's most captivating motivational speakers, Len has served on the faculties of Tufts University, Harvard University, and Leslie College's Institute for the Arts and Human Development, directed a multidisciplinary health center for over a decade, and currently serves as President of Tetrahedron, Inc., a nonprofit health educational corporation. March 11th, 2008 http://www.youtube.com/user/DrLeonardHorowitz http://www.drlenhorowitz.com/ http://www.coasttocoastam.com/shows/2008/03/11.html


Carl Czerny: Variations On A Theme By Rode "La Ricordanza" Op. 33


Vladimir Horowitz (1 October 1903 - 5 November 1989 ) plays Appassionata Sonata op.57 no.23-first movement by Ludwig van Beethoven (16 December 1770 - 26 March 1827).