J.S. Bach Showdown 🎻 ft. Hilary Hahn, Rachel Podger, Heifetz & Milstein

Музыка

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Who’s style do you prefer when it comes to Bach?
0:00 - Intro
1:08 - Jascha Heifetz
2:28 - Nathan Milstein
3:54 - Rachel Podger
7:10 - Hilary Hahn
9:53 - Conclusion

Пікірлер: 305

  • @RayChenViolinist
    @RayChenViolinist8 ай бұрын

    Who’s your favorite Bach player? Btw make sure you join the Bach Practice Challenge on Tonic: tonicmusic.app/practice-together and win some FREE prizes!! Woohoo!

  • @TwoSetViolinEdits

    @TwoSetViolinEdits

    8 ай бұрын

    Hilary Hahn!

  • @kai1884

    @kai1884

    8 ай бұрын

    You

  • @celli_ec._.

    @celli_ec._.

    8 ай бұрын

    Ray Chen or Hilary Hahn

  • @jervilopez1844

    @jervilopez1844

    8 ай бұрын

    In baroque playing, they vibrate but very little.

  • @Bobeeha

    @Bobeeha

    8 ай бұрын

    sigiswald kuijken

  • @Ember_Prime
    @Ember_Prime8 ай бұрын

    Something about how Hilary Hahn plays Bach is just so powerful but delicate at the same time. She’s just all around an incredible violinist!

  • @gerriedegeitenmelker4278

    @gerriedegeitenmelker4278

    8 ай бұрын

    Where can we watch the whole performance though? Can’t find the video Ray uses on yt :(

  • @alexandreboyenval3140

    @alexandreboyenval3140

    8 ай бұрын

    Recording a perfect Chacconne at âge of 17… just incredible.

  • @prijicrw

    @prijicrw

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@gerriedegeitenmelker4278

  • @flatmars7072
    @flatmars70728 ай бұрын

    Flashback to "Who's Rachel Podger??"- Ray, good to see he's learned from his mistakes xD

  • @zainab58

    @zainab58

    8 ай бұрын

    I admire the way Ray incorporated the clip himself, rather than let some wiseass in the Comments point it out 🙂

  • @flatmars7072

    @flatmars7072

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@zainab58dang bro my bad didn't know I wasn't allowed to make a lighthearted joke, it's almost like people sometimes comment before finishing the video 😊

  • @georgefredrichandel

    @georgefredrichandel

    8 ай бұрын

    I remember 😂

  • @zainab58

    @zainab58

    8 ай бұрын

    @@flatmars7072 I can only say that you have somehow entirely misinterpreted my comment.

  • @LJTTYT

    @LJTTYT

    8 ай бұрын

    I remember the twoset video

  • @yush4673
    @yush46738 ай бұрын

    Hilary Hahns bow control is unmatched imo. No wasted movements, no wavering in the sound. Its like a gymnast doing a slow handstand pushup (this analogy works in my head), something so difficult to do without showing some sort of weakness but she just executes it in a controlled matter like she was born to do this.

  • @Y3llow_Submarin3

    @Y3llow_Submarin3

    8 ай бұрын

    Yes, watch her practise clip, so much to learn

  • @user-ur4nl6dq2x
    @user-ur4nl6dq2x8 ай бұрын

    I love how Ray and Twoset so openly fanboi over Hillary's playing. No ego, just "SHE IS WOW" and it's nice 😊

  • @benfox6292
    @benfox62928 ай бұрын

    it's weird that when you hear hilary playing it's like on a whole other level. hard to describe but it's so so good.

  • @susanbryant6516
    @susanbryant65168 ай бұрын

    I love HH’s performances of Bach pieces. I think that’s because I feel that she loves them (She has said she plays bach nearly everyday as part of her practice) and has thought a lot about what should come through, and how. I also respect what Rachel Podger is doing and enjoy listening to her version. And of course, Ray, when you perform this more thoughtful, less flashy music as an encore, it brings another aspect of your playing to us, the audience

  • @user-fi9ug1vb5j
    @user-fi9ug1vb5j8 ай бұрын

    I love how he's all compliments with Hilary, but when podger,hes just explaining baroque things, and with heifetz he's just amazed

  • @hlarjay7503
    @hlarjay75038 ай бұрын

    You finally put the perfect word to how I feel about Hilary's playing; existential. She pours so much power into the notes she wants to, to the point that when youre listening to it, it feels like nothing else matters. She puts her entire life and experience into a single chord and deafens you with it. Its awe inspiring. Love content Ray, keep it up!

  • @grace6300
    @grace63008 ай бұрын

    I was JUST listening to that exact Hilary Hahn recording and when Ray talked about the feeling she evokes, I was like EXACTLY OMG I FELT THAT EXACT THING

  • @yusha5728
    @yusha57287 ай бұрын

    I'm just an amateur listener of classical music but its precisely because of that "eternal note of sadness" which is why I love Hahn's Bach. There is an undercurrent of pain that is *chef's kiss*

  • @brozors
    @brozors8 ай бұрын

    My favorite Bach player is Henryk Szerying. The all time favorite Bach performance I’ve ever heard is the playing of the 2nd sonata by Philippe Hirschhorn at the Queen Elisabeth competition. Blows me away every time I hear it.

  • @arlin411

    @arlin411

    8 ай бұрын

    I’m with you on Szeryng.

  • @EvanKaplanPianist

    @EvanKaplanPianist

    8 ай бұрын

    Yeah Szeryng’s Bach is far better than Heifetz or Milstein for me

  • @ravithangiralaviolin1201
    @ravithangiralaviolin12018 ай бұрын

    Welcome Bach to another video!

  • @Phymacss

    @Phymacss

    8 ай бұрын

    Y E S

  • @mylesyiu6188
    @mylesyiu61888 ай бұрын

    That cough after Hilary’s encore 💀

  • @lad4694
    @lad46948 ай бұрын

    Man... Hilary Hahn is just phenomenal

  • @feb5th
    @feb5th8 ай бұрын

    Hilary's Bach always gives me goosebumps no matter how many times i hear it. She's so amazing

  • @joejoejoe532
    @joejoejoe5328 ай бұрын

    I like the part about informed decision in terms of interpreting Bach. I'm a flutist, but my primarily artistic profession is painting. For example, we learn to draw human anatomy not because every human figure we create has to be anatomically accurate. We learn accurate human anatomy so that we choose to go off the rails, exaggerate, or change, it's not because we are ignorant. It's because we know what rules we are breaking and why.

  • @gimletrose1985
    @gimletrose19857 ай бұрын

    Hilary's Bach is just another world! I also love Nemanja's Bach. They both makes me feel things ❤

  • @leechaerin2any1
    @leechaerin2any17 ай бұрын

    Hilary sounds like more than 1 violin, it’s so effortless. Her movements and control it’s streamlined beautifully. I can’t tell when she is or how she is moving the bow is what I mean. It’s captivating she makes me want to listen to classical music I randomly found her one day on Spotify listening to pride and prejudice soundtrack she was recommended so glad I did!

  • @monalisamackey783
    @monalisamackey7838 ай бұрын

    My favourite violinist of all time is David Oistrakh…hands down. His playing was full of emotion and warmth 🙂🙌🏻

  • @richardwhitehouse8762
    @richardwhitehouse87628 ай бұрын

    I always like Grumiaux in Bach. Old school for sure but French/Belgian rather than Russian. And recently I found Ruth Waterman, who I like a lot. And I do like your's too, Ray. There's a youtube clip you put up a few years ago of the Sarabande from the D minor Partita. I listened to it a lot at the time because it spoke to me (and still does). In the end that's the marvel of music. Some days it's Mihalia Jackson, other days it's John Coltrane alongside Richter playing Schubert, Angela Hewitt playing Bach or Heinz Holliger playing anything. Thank you for sharing.

  • @marcvilleneuve1889
    @marcvilleneuve18897 ай бұрын

    Grumiaux played Bach very well in the Concert Hall...James Ehnes is a great Bach interpret...live or on recordings. Ehnes understanding of the polyphonic effect wished by the composer is unmatched. His bow chord technic is absolutely amazing.

  • @trippingorc
    @trippingorc8 ай бұрын

    I get to see Ray in January and Hillary in June

  • @KT-yr2yo

    @KT-yr2yo

    8 ай бұрын

    Du bist nicht zufällig in Mannheim im Januar? Da darf auch ich Ray erleben😊.

  • @jessicawong3081
    @jessicawong30818 ай бұрын

    When Ray said "The next one we are going to check out is Rachel Podger", I was like, good job Ray, you have learned from your mistakes.

  • @koopalovetoast2409
    @koopalovetoast24098 ай бұрын

    Hadelich is right in the middle of old school and baroque style playing. Love his bach. But I am also quite the fanboy.

  • @rockflame7876
    @rockflame78768 ай бұрын

    Maybe Ray can do the Episode 2, I believe many people would also like to hear you explain the performances of different violinists such as Midori Goto❤

  • @josephzepeda7608
    @josephzepeda76088 ай бұрын

    Cool video. I heard HH play an all Bach concert this spring and it was completely amazing, and I was surprised at how Romantic some decisions were, as compared to her early Bach recordings. Also, I want to hear more Milstein and hear Ray break it down. That opening was fabulous.

  • @MattinSapmi
    @MattinSapmi8 ай бұрын

    Hilary Hahn is just incredible. I adore her Bach ❤️

  • @wiltonpt1
    @wiltonpt18 ай бұрын

    You got it! HH brings out the soulfulness of JSB like unheard before.

  • @HappyG1lmor488
    @HappyG1lmor4888 ай бұрын

    I love videos like these, Ray sharing an expert opinion on a piece or violinists interpretations of them. I can watch these all day.

  • @trevorpinnocky
    @trevorpinnocky8 ай бұрын

    I listened to Milstein’s recording of these pieces for years. I used his style as a model since it falls between romantic and baroque technique. He also has more restrained use of vibrato.

  • @anneharrison1849
    @anneharrison18498 ай бұрын

    I joined the app this morning and thus decided I’d better practice some Bach. The problem is, I had wrist surgery 18 months ago, I’m a recorder player, I’ve played various things, but the one thing I really haven’t got back is the little finger and half holing the ring finger on an alto. The main Bach repertory for recorder is Partita BW1013 transposed to C minor, exactly where I need to finish my rehab, I put in about 20 minutes earlier, and boy does my whole forearm hurt now! I might need to switch to practicing cello suites on my great bass, no half holing required as it’s all key work, but hopefully still contributes to strengthening.

  • @Highlander515
    @Highlander5158 ай бұрын

    The piece that the artists performed is Adagio from Sonata No. 1 for Solo Violin by J.S. Bach, in case someone wants to search for the full videos.

  • @sansangaga8560
    @sansangaga85608 ай бұрын

    I’m just in love with Heifetz version of this piece. Exactly those first notes, hanging in the air, it strikes me. All the drama, the suffering hit instantly. We are hung until the end in between spaces. I also like your interpretation, which is much rounder than Heifetz’. But for me only Heifetz’ interpretation delivers that level of drama and thinking of the existence from this piece. Thank you for sharing your professional comments on some interpretations of Bach.

  • @spacejackson1612
    @spacejackson16128 ай бұрын

    It will be interesting to do a part two with Bach chaconne!! There’re so much intense thing in there😆

  • @user-hl4kk8wd3k
    @user-hl4kk8wd3k8 ай бұрын

    This is my favorite video you have ever posted! Excellent examples and so informative as to historical practices guiding musical interpretation today. I really like Hilary Hahn's versions the best.

  • @BaggerVance
    @BaggerVance8 ай бұрын

    Totally agree with you: Learn all style; choose your personal! I love old school performances and Hillary Hann over all ❤️

  • @map-reduce
    @map-reduce8 ай бұрын

    This is a really interesting video, but I have to admit, I'm a little disappointed we didn't get YOUR interpretation :)

  • @yimuxiao8941
    @yimuxiao89417 ай бұрын

    Isabelle Faust’s Bach albums are the best ever recorded. The performance is not just historically informed but imaginative, absolutely enjoyable and just imbued with great aesthetics. The level of details and control in her bowing is absolutely insane

  • @recurvearcher6542
    @recurvearcher65427 ай бұрын

    Hi Ray , thank you. We are witnessing perhaps what Bach intended, regardless of development in instrument technology and musicians own interpretation , he wrote in such a way incouraging and embracing this. In his life he witnessed technology changes not only in music but everday mechanical devices. Therefore we are fortunate to now enjoy his work on many different levels. Great posts

  • @isabelsnow3697
    @isabelsnow36978 ай бұрын

    Also +1 vote for more of this type of content pretty please

  • @WKC-sc9jt
    @WKC-sc9jt8 ай бұрын

    This is a very interesting, knowledgeable and also educational short clip featuring and comparing between a few different playing approaches on Bach's solo violin sonata ( BWV1001, in g minor ). Mr Ray Chen imitates the ways and the tones those legendary violinists used to play vividly and wonderfully. Just keep up the good work. It has been so nice.

  • @dougdumbrill7234
    @dougdumbrill72348 ай бұрын

    As a listener I enjoyed them all and enjoyed learning about what the differences mean and how they come about. I have to say however that, more than anyone, Hilary Hahn makes me understand all the awe around Bach’s solo music. When I listen to her, I get it!😳

  • @frankgustafson1905
    @frankgustafson19058 ай бұрын

    Love the video Ray. They are all amazing violinist. Your explanations on their styles was very informative. Thanks for sharing.

  • @maksimsinitskiy3676
    @maksimsinitskiy36768 ай бұрын

    Ray, thank you for your videos! It’s inspiring! I’ll go practice Bach right now.

  • @radjedi2010
    @radjedi20108 ай бұрын

    This was awesome content, great job Ray! Really enjoyed the entire video. It helps deepen my appreciation of music, Bach and top notch artists. I loved the descriptions of technique and comparisons between artists and between old school/new school styles.

  • @sophielee570
    @sophielee57020 күн бұрын

    thank you Ray, love the showdown series, they inform me a lot!!

  • @sharongerlofs8517
    @sharongerlofs85178 ай бұрын

    They are all so amazing! It is great to be able to hear different violinist have their own interpretations of Bach,. Yet, each i interpretation displays the beauty of Bach’s pieces for violin.

  • @antonvf9619
    @antonvf96198 ай бұрын

    this is the best of your videos so far (the "serious" ones I mean) I've learned a ton and I wish you will make more videos like this that help us listen and play differently. wonderful video! amazing! ❤❤❤❤

  • @MrEL28
    @MrEL283 ай бұрын

    My all time favorite is Henryk Szeryng's 1968 recording on Deutsche Grammophon.

  • @sabrinai
    @sabrinai8 ай бұрын

    Can't wait for this vid!

  • @paucajtro
    @paucajtro8 ай бұрын

    In Bolivia we have a very special Baroque Festival, so I grew up hearing the New School technique, so I definitely feel more "at home" with Rachel Podger interpretation, it's like I hear it and immediately think Bach and Baroque. I find it very interesting how things like a Festival can influence so much our appreciation of music just by the exposure we have from very young age to this.

  • @shahx1010

    @shahx1010

    8 ай бұрын

    exposure instead of exposition?

  • @paucajtro

    @paucajtro

    8 ай бұрын

    @@shahx1010 you're right, exposure. thanks!!!

  • @Highlander515
    @Highlander5158 ай бұрын

    They all sounded great to my ears 🙂

  • @thevector384
    @thevector3848 ай бұрын

    I absolutely love your reaction videos,keep going ✌️💜

  • @1389Chopin
    @1389Chopin7 ай бұрын

    Great vid - as a pianist ive grown to appreciate the variation of technique in violin playing and its impact to sound

  • @PositivelyNice
    @PositivelyNice8 ай бұрын

    Really love your commentary. Educational.

  • @SNathalie9
    @SNathalie98 ай бұрын

    Спасибо! Как раз сейчас разбираю😊❤

  • @medbeth9857
    @medbeth98578 ай бұрын

    Milstein has been my go-to whenever I listen to Bach. Ever since I heard his Chaconne (and the entirety of partita n02), something within me just clicked. It might be outdated or not the most "historically accurate" way of playing but his dramatic, embellished and deeply sentimental interpretation is what makes Partita n02 complete, in my opinion.

  • @hansmahr8627

    @hansmahr8627

    6 ай бұрын

    In the end, who cares for historical accuracy. It's all about how a performance affects you and that's not dependent on a particular approach to accuracy. Personally, I can't stand the snobbery and arrogance of some of the people who advocate for historically informed performances as if it was somehow immoral to play Bach with vibrato. Never mind the fact that even in Baroque times, people likely used way more vibrato than so-called historically informed performers nowadays. The evidence for performance styles in those days is way less conclusive than some people claim. In fact there are some books by violin teachers back then who advocate for a constant slight vibrato because the violin is supposed to emulate the human singing voice which has a natural vibrato. Ultimately, it's a matter of taste. I like some of the more moderate historically informed performances and I appreciate hearing the sound of the old instruments and playing techniques. But to me at least, hearing violinists play music without any vibrato at all is a bit ridiculous. Why get rid of an excellent expressive tool? And it gets even more ridiculous when you listen to Roger Norrington's recordings of Mahler (!) without vibrato because Norrington believes that vibrato was invented in 1920 which is just insane.

  • @Dilsli
    @Dilsli6 ай бұрын

    Wonderful video! Please, make more videos like this, discussing different ways of playing pieces and composers.🎉

  • @MrDaduh59
    @MrDaduh595 ай бұрын

    Love your comparison vids. Please do a lot more!!

  • @karenrobert7200
    @karenrobert72007 ай бұрын

    This was such a helpful video! There is so much to learn about how to approach playing Bach. I hope to apply these different techniques during my practice! Thanks so much, Ray! I have to check out Tonic…..

  • @AMMandrea123
    @AMMandrea1234 ай бұрын

    In 1976 I was studying at the Hochschule für Musik und darstellende Kunst in Vienna, we were treated to an amazing Bach concert on Baroque instruments in the courtyard of a monastery. At twilight, a flock of birds spun off into the Night Sky and i told my teacher that I felt as if I had gone back in time and heard a baroque concert. He turned and told me I couldn’t hear what they heard because I didn’t have their ears. it took me a minute to understand what he was saying, but then I had to agree. My mind had heard so many so much more music than a patron of Bach, the music could not possibly have sounded the same.

  • @adamdonovan5633
    @adamdonovan56337 ай бұрын

    Great content! Love the head-to-head comparison, AND your careful answer to the question of 'personal interp'. Yes AND No. Milstein phrasing: NICE. Podger: too much Rachel. HAHN: the most "satisfying' of these 4: lyrical, not maudlin, balanced choices, introspective. Thanks for this kind of material. More comparisons with other Bach players.

  • @MS-nj1fq
    @MS-nj1fq8 ай бұрын

    Give us more Bach listening (especially HH!)!

  • @Ream44
    @Ream448 ай бұрын

    Absolutely loved your video today. On your poll, I wasn't completely sure of your designations. Of course, I don't have a very strong knowledge of violin technique. I come at this from more of a music history point of view. Thanks for introducing me to Rachel Podger, and I wanted to say that I was beyond impressed by Hilary Hahn's performance.

  • @disthymia6929
    @disthymia69298 ай бұрын

    Hillary Hahn has been so impressive lately (the past 2~3 years) I liked her sound in the 90s/when she was pretty young, but admittedly didn't like her as much past that. However, recently, she has combined the technical prowess she has been known for with the emotional sound she had when she was younger and has ascended to another level.

  • @briankuhl9314
    @briankuhl93148 ай бұрын

    Loved hearing Ray talk about Hillary in historical context. Really helps me understand both of 'em better.

  • @neilford99
    @neilford995 ай бұрын

    I had some lessons from a baroque violin teacher. The lessons were a real eye-opener in so many respects especially bowing and integral to that, phrasing. Highly recommend seeking out a teacher who specialises in baroque repertoire.

  • @BigParadox
    @BigParadox8 ай бұрын

    Thanks for a very interesting video!

  • @nubbyrose87
    @nubbyrose878 ай бұрын

    The non-decorated notes set the stage for decorated notes that have greater impact. I like the romantic/old school.

  • @uliwidmaier5192
    @uliwidmaier51928 ай бұрын

    I so would love to hear your take on Milstein. I recommend you devote an entire video to his Bach. He's such an unusual figure. Raised in the grand Romantic tradition, he nevertheless cultivated a Bach that sometimes (the more so the older he gets) anticipates the modern Baroque approach. A few selections - the Double to the B Minor Sarabande, for instance - are radically un-romantic, vibrato-free, pure, structural, linear, downright modest, the antithesis of Heifetz (as you note in this video but do not elaborate). And he does all this from pure instinct, and quite evidently without any attempt whatsoever to play in a historically informed way. I would especially love to hear your thoughts on his bow technique (smoother than anyone's ever, yet produced with a near-inflexible right hand) and - most of all - his strange intonation, which you also briefly comment on here. His intonation is clearly under his total control, but he makes striking and unusual decisions about it which are supported by deep musical intent. What do you make of it all?

  • @sasssssa6565
    @sasssssa65658 ай бұрын

    What I learned in baroque class is to use vibrato !! Telemann and others said longer notes should have vibrato. But it's mostly on the end of the notes, with a certain speed and not too wide and not on every note!

  • @dr.a.w

    @dr.a.w

    6 ай бұрын

    I have a copy of the treatise on keyboard playing by C. P. E. Bach and he laments the inability of keyboard instruments to do vibrato like singers and string players. Of course, we all know who his teacher was. Since I read that, I have felt like the quantitative elimination of all traces of vibrato in baroque and earlier performance is misguided...

  • @myrtillegrandesoreilles8275
    @myrtillegrandesoreilles82758 ай бұрын

    3:58 You took the words right out of my mouth! 😂 Nice. I love these kind of videos, thank you Ray!

  • @AndySaenz
    @AndySaenz8 ай бұрын

    He’s a professional violinist so I wish he would also play through this piece and then classify his own style versus how everyone else did it.

  • @valtergilenardi2639
    @valtergilenardi26397 ай бұрын

    La Musica Terapeutica di Bach mi ha aiutato a sconfiggere la mia Depressione. Saluti da Lecce South Italy ❤

  • @txsphere
    @txsphere8 ай бұрын

    Excellent video.

  • @MrInterestingthings
    @MrInterestingthings8 ай бұрын

    This was wonderful! I wish when I was younger someone would have pointed out how to listen to phraseology and contrasts. How things mean something. I would have paid more attention to making music and less to moving my fingers.Hahn is a fellow creator that's why his critique is different.Podger is courage ous playing contemporary composers etc.

  • @claudiocanonica4842
    @claudiocanonica48428 ай бұрын

    I like so much to listen to your ideas. Could you analyze baroque violinist? That would be great. Thank you for all!

  • @IzzyHoP_
    @IzzyHoP_8 ай бұрын

    more vids like this please

  • @Eyiba07
    @Eyiba078 ай бұрын

    Hilary Hahn is definitely my favourite. Her sound is so rich & full. Milstein comes second for me.

  • @alexeiheintz7350
    @alexeiheintz73504 ай бұрын

    No talk about Bach is possible without refering to Szering. He created a golden standard.

  • @jarodvmusic
    @jarodvmusic8 ай бұрын

    Great content. Hey it would be great if you did a longer review of playing that $340 violin on your last video. I was really surprised with the sound quality for the price.

  • @Iaido_Tests
    @Iaido_Tests8 ай бұрын

    Fun fact: Joseph Joachim and Andreas Moser brought out an edition of the Bach solo violin pieces. Ich think it was 1909 after Joachim's dead. And there Joachim tried to write down in a baroque playing style with modern notation methods. It's really interesting and worth having a look at it.

  • @ModusVivendiMedia
    @ModusVivendiMedia8 ай бұрын

    Rachel Podger recently won "Album of the Year" from BBC Classical Music magazine for her solo Bach recording. Aside from the inventively-arranged Toccata and Fugue in D Minor that opens the album, I found it startlingly boring. Hilary Hahn's video here must be an encore from the same concert as her shockingly-good Prokofiev VC #1 with hr-Sinfonieorchester, which I like better than the album version with ORF. (Is she the only violinist who actually plays the sul ponticello passages in the Prokofiev 2nd movement sul ponticello? It's so spooky sounding. The range of tone qualities she gets is amazing.) I, too, prefer Milstein's approach to Heifetz's.

  • @dees3179

    @dees3179

    8 ай бұрын

    I’m a historically informed performance junkie, so I’ll confess a natural bias here towards baroque at the outset. But I’ll offer the opinion that baroque equipment sounds better in person to a greater degree than classical equipment.

  • @dees3179

    @dees3179

    8 ай бұрын

    Not sure why KZread won’t let me edit my own post, …. I’m keep trying to add: I think classical equipment comes across more easily in recordings. The excitement of baroque equipment needs really careful sound engineering to come across, but you can be lazier with the classical. So the earlier set up instruments are at a disadvantage.

  • @genehuangviolin
    @genehuangviolin5 ай бұрын

    Love this series. Please do a Bach Chaconne showdown!

  • @gailrodgers4434
    @gailrodgers44348 ай бұрын

    I play piano, not violin, but come across the same issues regarding interpretation (pedal, no pedal, etc.) Your observations were very helpful. I think, like you, I'm somewhere in the middle. Maybe sometime you could address today's Baroque music playing, which seems like everyone has a train to catch, The tempi are so fast these days, I can hardly hear the music.

  • @kevinlowen2648
    @kevinlowen26485 ай бұрын

    I do not really have knowledge about classical music and I am also not musically trained but for some reason I always get goosbumps when Hilary Hahn is playing.

  • @laurabaikokshinova3070
    @laurabaikokshinova30708 ай бұрын

    Definitely listening to Bach on piano

  • @duggiefresh8170
    @duggiefresh81705 ай бұрын

    Szeryng's Bach is second to none!

  • @user-hq1kq1me6f
    @user-hq1kq1me6f8 ай бұрын

    Thanks Ray, I really love your videos and this one as well! I didn’t know much about violin or classical music in general but your videos really help me to develop my preferences and understand the classical music world 😊

  • @markchen5710
    @markchen57105 ай бұрын

    i really love james ehnes' recording of this

  • @comangeorge7622
    @comangeorge76228 ай бұрын

    You should definetly listen to George Enescu’s recording of Bach!! It’s worth listening to!

  • @TheCreate78
    @TheCreate788 ай бұрын

    Hello Ray! You should definitely check out the recordings of Shunske Sato!

  • @M_SC

    @M_SC

    8 ай бұрын

    I want to like them but I don’t

  • @cangetme
    @cangetme6 ай бұрын

    First, thank you Ray for giving us a rare modern & chilled insight into classical violin music playing. May I humbly request if you can do a video on playing in tune - especially during double stops versus linear melodic lines. My old school teachers were always shouting "everything's out of tune!!" but never offer advice on where to "start fixing the problem". Till i was exposed to the physics of sound that I realised the first two B flats in the opening of the first Bach sonata required two different pitches in order to be "in tune" (due to Pythagorean and Just tuning violinst have to understand and learn). A similar issue occurs with the F natural in the 2nd sonata opening. While we can further raise the F# as a leading note in the Bruch opening solo - as a horizontal melodic line, we must compromise our intervals when playing vertical harmony in double stops or when playing in ensembles. Great if you can share your perspectives on this rarely talked about issue with violin intonation. Thank you! :)

  • @CrossingWolfi
    @CrossingWolfi8 ай бұрын

    In this specific instance, Rachel Podgers playing made the most musical sense to me, finally I understand those oddly heavy chords in the Chaconne. But Hillary’s resonant sound is just to die for, how does she achieve it?!

  • @hildegerdhaugen7864
    @hildegerdhaugen78648 ай бұрын

    Heifetz brought it all up to a level nobody could follow thereafter.

  • @wcgillis01
    @wcgillis0110 күн бұрын

    Would love for you do one on the rondo capriccioso

  • @stefan3641
    @stefan36418 ай бұрын

    I would love to see you reacting to the arrangements of Roman Kim, there is a Bach "air" arrangement as well. But his other arrangements are amazing as well.

  • @joemahlerng
    @joemahlerng8 ай бұрын

    Milstein (EMI mono version) and Grumiaux

  • @bryanpark8098
    @bryanpark80988 ай бұрын

    I'm definitely on the historically informed/performance practice side. I love Rachel Podger and Sigiswald Kuijken.

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