Associated Content Features The Great Kat In “Bizarre Celebrity & Music Composer Comparisons”
Associated Content Features The Great Kat In “Bizarre Celebrity & Music Composer Comparisons”
ASSOCIATED CONTENT FEATURES THE GREAT KAT IN “BIZARRE CELEBRITY & MUSIC COMPOSER COMPARISONS.”
“Was MJ the Reincarnated Mozart? Bach, Slayer, Big (Great) Kat and Other Celebrity Comparisons”!
“The Great Kat Priestess of the Guitar Shred and Beethoven. Great Kat, claimed to actually be a contemporary Ludwig van Beethoven, can perform some insanely crazy feats, including performing many of Beethoven’s works at ridiculously mind-numbing speeds. Great Kat and Beethoven demonstrated incredible music accomplishments. (Great Kat actually holds a degree from Juilliard).”
By Sabrina Young, Associated Content
Associated Content features The Great Kat “Top 10 Fastest Shredders Of All Time”/Shred Guitar Virtuoso/Juilliard Grad Violin Virtuoso/The New Beethoven (greatkat.com) in their article today.
“Beethoven’s Guitar Shred” DVD features The Great Kat’s shred guitar & violin virtuosity on Classical Masterpieces(now available on iTunes http://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/the-great-kat/id368743108):
Beethoven’s “5th Symphony”
“The Flight Of The Bumble-Bee” (performed at 300 BPM!)
Paganini’s “Caprice #24″ (Kat Shreds on VIOLIN & GUITAR!)
Bach’s “Brandenburg Concerto #3″
Along with original theatrical speed metal Wagnerian style music videos
greatkat.com
Karen Thomas, Thomas PR 631-549-7578
The Great Kat Accolades:
”Top 10 Fastest Shredders Of All Time” (Guitar One Magazine)
“50 Fastest Guitarists Of All Time” (Guitar World Magazine)
“The 100 Wildest Guitar Heroes” (Classic Rock Magazine)
“12 Greatest Female Electric Guitarists” (Elle Magazine)
Juilliard graduate violin virtuoso/Concertmaster of the Juilliard Pre-College Orchestra
Winner of the Artists International Competition on Violin/Carnegie Recital Hall Debut on Solo Violin
The Great Kat Web Site: greatkat.com
“Beethoven’s Guitar Shred” DVD is distributed worldwide by MVD and is now available through major retail stores, iTunes and other online stores, and at greatkat.com, with a Suggested Retail Price of .95.
Composer : Ludwig van Beethoven ( 16 December 1770 – 26 March 1827 ) Piano transcription : Franz Liszt ( 22 October 1811 – 31 July 1886 ). Composition : Symphony no.5 in C minor op.67 Interpreter :Glenn Gould ( 25 September 1932 – 4 October 1982 )
Video Rating: 4 / 5
@karozlee oh yeah
Glenn Gould plays Beethoven Symphony no.5 – part 1
@karozlee Yeah especially when you are pianist))
@karozlee yes…but the guitar is the QUEEN =)
Piano is just not right for this work
@MisterPenguinMusic Wow. Coooooooooooooooool.
is this clen cloud or liszt
I can play it better than this guy. =P
I think the piano is the only instrument that can act as an entire symphony.
@Arsen2488 Sorry, I mean imslp.org, this is a site where you can get almost all classical pieces
@StefanInvAsian Can you say please what is islmp????
This recording was something of a joke, according to Gould. He did not care for Beethoven’s 5th.
@Arsen2488
The piano version is written by LIszt, you can find it on islmp I think
@Arsen2488
The piano version is written by LIszt, you can find it on islmp I think
Does anybody have video?????????
And who is author of piano version??? do you have sheet notes??
I am just fan of Glenn Gould!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The Best Piano Player of All TIME!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Is betther Gould of orchestra!!!!
GOD sent him down.
Check out my new symphony on my channel, if you like classical music this one will probably a very interesting piece, I believe.
@v3idt This is NOT Beethoven’s “piece”, this is Liszt’s transcription of Beethoven’s “piece”. Had Beethoven written for Piano directly he would certainly have written differently.
What can one say for music coming from high above…
Always wondered what this would sound like on piano! Thanks!
Gould really slams some of the chords very percussively. He once said in an interview that thickness of chords, like that found in Liszt transcriptions, didn’t sound good on the piano, and of course Gould really didn’t care much for middle period Beethoven anyway, so you wonder whether he may have been playing it tongue in cheek.
@JustynaPhilipp Wonderful video!!!
@karozlee yup
@broadfall Amen, I think there should be a rule that you have to play a song before you can express an opinion. My my, how many big mouths would have to shut up.