- Видео 11
- Просмотров 178 942
Leila Schayegh
Швейцария
Добавлен 17 янв 2013
Leila Schayegh belongs to the most visible violinists in the current baroque music scene. Her vivacious interpretation has placed her at the center of old music. She performs all over Europe as a soloist or in chamber music groups and is regularly invited by modern orchestras for concerts and masterclasses. Since 2010 she is professor of baroque violin at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis, as successor of Chiara Banchini. She passes to a new generation of musician her experience as well as approach of music: an expressive interpretation based on thorough knowledge of the historical and musical context of the period where the works were composed.
Pachelbel Kanon - La Centifolia/ Leila Schayegh
The one and only Kanon by Pachelbel, performed by La Centifolia:
Leila Schayegh, Eva Saladin, Sonoko Asabuki, violins
Jonathan Pesek, viola da gamba
Daniele Caminiti, archiliute
Johannes Keller, harpsichord
June 2022, Landgasthof Riehen, recording session of the CD Ciaccona!
Glossa, GCD 924207, release January 2023
Video by Elam Rotem, recording by Markus Heiland @Tritonus Musikproduktion
Leila Schayegh, Eva Saladin, Sonoko Asabuki, violins
Jonathan Pesek, viola da gamba
Daniele Caminiti, archiliute
Johannes Keller, harpsichord
June 2022, Landgasthof Riehen, recording session of the CD Ciaccona!
Glossa, GCD 924207, release January 2023
Video by Elam Rotem, recording by Markus Heiland @Tritonus Musikproduktion
Просмотров: 8 878
Видео
baroque violin lesson 4: vibrato
Просмотров 4 тыс.3 года назад
Learn about the difference between a modern and a historic vibrato, when and how to use it. Leopold Mozart, Violinschule, (Salzburg 1756) Thanks to Art Specks and Nithin PA on Pexels.com
baroque violin lesson 3: position change
Просмотров 3,2 тыс.3 года назад
Learn how to shift without being afraid of dropping your instrument, and how to use your thumb and your fingers independently for more stability. Sources: Leopld Mozart, Violinschule, (Salzburg 1756)
baroque violin lesson 2: how to make a beautiful sound
Просмотров 5 тыс.3 года назад
learn the difference between producing a sound on a modern and a baroque violin, and how you have to change your bow technique to achieve your goal. Source: Neuhauspralinen, kaffeeroesterei.de
baroque violin lesson 1: posture
Просмотров 7 тыс.3 года назад
Learn about the so-called 'chin-off' technique and get some tips on how to stabilize your violin without holding it permanently. See how to hold your violin against your chest in 17th-century repertoire and how the posture evolves during the 19th century. Mentioned sources: Francesco Geminiani, The Art of playing on the Violin (London, 1751) Jean-Baptiste Labadens, Méthode de Violon, (Paris 179...
Kopfkino
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.3 года назад
Inspired by the collection of concertos for violin by Jean-Marie Leclair published in the XVIIIth century, this project evolves in parallel between the violinist Leila Schayegh and the dancer Carlos Kerr. Approached in the form of docu-fiction and through the notion of "kopfkino", meaning "cinema in the head" in German, this project seeks to follow each of them throughout a day in their lives b...
Schayegh Schultsz Brahms Violin Sonatas EPK
Просмотров 4,2 тыс.6 лет назад
Schayegh Schultsz Brahms Violin Sonatas EPK
Leila Schayegh - Sonata detta la Farina à 2
Просмотров 5 тыс.7 лет назад
From 2017 CD Carlo Farina - Sonate e Canzoni (Pan Classics)
Leila Schayegh - Fantasia Steffan Nau (Etienne Nau).mp3
Просмотров 2,5 тыс.7 лет назад
From 2017 CD Carlo Farina - Sonate e Canzoni (Pan Classics)
Carlo Farina / Sonate e Canzoni - Leila Schayegh
Просмотров 13 тыс.7 лет назад
Video Trailer - CD release February 2017 by Pan Classics. Produced by Elam Rotem: Carlo Farina (ca.1600-1639) Sonate e Canzoni Leila Schayegh, violin Jörg Halubek, harpsichord Daniele Caminiti, archilute Jonathan Pesek, violoncello & viola da Gamba February 2017 PAN CLASSICS
EPK Schayegh Halubek JS Bach Sonatas
Просмотров 27 тыс.9 лет назад
Johann Sebastian Bach, Largo from Sonata in c-minor BWV 1017 Leila Schayegh, Violin Jörg Halubek, harpsichord video by Elam Rotem
Great job! 🎉
Bellisimo Galardón 😊❤
Beautiful. Thankyou. Hope you do Corelli one day too..... :) (my all time favourite!)
💯👍🔥❤️💯👍🔥❤️
Danke für die Videos. Sie waren sehr interessant!!! Ich hoffe Sie machen mehr davon in der Zukunft. Grüsse aus Griechenland. ))))
Lovely colourful performance! Thank you so much!
Non mi lsekfjwrr 2 hire mmdie kreoi
❤❤❤
This so beautiful. I have downloaded your album to listen to it all 🧡🧡🧡
thank you so much , nowadays there is a few baroque violin lessons we beginners find to learn ,so your videos are really helpful and enjoyable to learn , thank you so much
Wie wunder,wunderschön. Welche ein Klang und Tiefe des Gefühls. Was für phantastische Verzierungen!!!!!!
00:39
Sublime
Do Bach violin harpsichord sonata in e major mov 3, please please please... 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
We don't have it on Video, but it's on the CD of course😉
I have just listened to this piece to see what sort of a treat I am in for on 12/11/23 at the Melbourne Recital centre, having today bought a ticket to Poet of the Violins at which Leila will be playing along with the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra. I am so looking forward to hearing a whole programme of such beautiful music. Happy happy.
Thank you Norma, I'm looking forward too!
Why is she wearing a swimming hat?
If you don't like my haircut, just focus on the topic
@@leilaschayegh6956 🤣🤣🤣 oops
😉@@frillydaffodilly
Nothing beats Bach
Players of Hardanger Fiddle, please note!
Outstanding instruction. Thank you.
Une belle tradition mise à jour. Super clean, super beau.
Great advices. I have been playing Baroque instruments for the last 3 years but feel very uncomfortable with out the shoulder rest. So I put one and slightly moved my chin over the tail piece. I feel much better and can be more expressive and relaxed on my left hand. Is this good or should I try again to do in the way you show here?
Sublime!!
Hauntingly beautiful!
Great tonality but was it necessary to improvise on Bach.
Definitely not. Bach wrote what he wanted played. The rest is ego.
Are these LeClair pieces on the Farina CD,?
leclair
Good luck with that
❤️💕💕
♥
Very good interpretation 👍👍
Straordinaria Leila: energia, vitalità, intelligenza! Bravissima.
Stupenda !!!! Ti adoro
Rossella, che gentile! Sarebbe bello di incrociarsi un giorno
Thanks Leila....love what you've done here. Thankyou. I am converting My modern violin into my new "Baroque" violin as much as i can!! Know very little about playing in this style but always loved the music. You are currently my official baroque teacher!!😅🤣 Andrew (Sydney Australia)
Wonderfull! To my ear, missing link between 'passagisti' and i.e. Mateis.
Muito bom! Parabéns
Excelente vídeo didático, parabéns pelo trabalho!!!
Excellent advice also for those who play the modern violin. Now I understand that vibrato does not always have to be marked to perform a song. Even a little is enough
what a wonderful combination! video music dance violin! what solo violin piece is at the beginning?
It's the second movement of the Leclair violin concerto op VII no 2
Liebe Frau Schayegh, wissen Sie möglicherweise, wie man diese Art Verzierung nennt, die der Solist hier bei 2:19 auf dem g verwendet? ruclips.net/video/0FP9N2SbWn4/видео.html Ist im Grunde fast ein Tremolo, nur dass der Ton immer wieder ganz kurz von oben angespielt wird. Höre diesen schönen Effekt immer wieder mal in barocken Stücken und frage mich schon lange, ob das eine Bezeichnung hat. Herzliche Grüße!
Das ist, was man bei SängerInnen als "ribattuta di gola" bezeichnet: eine schnelle, rhythmische Bewegung des Kehlkopfs. Die Verzierung wird in den Traktaten des frühen 17. Jahrhunderts beschrieben und ist in der Zeit bei Streichinstrumenten eine stärkere Form des rhythmischen Vibratos sowie gleichgestellt und austauschbar mit dem Bogenvibrato. Deshalb sind auch die Begriffe "trillo" und "tremolo" sehr nahe beieinander. Francesco Rognoni bezeichnet mit "trillo" eine regelmässige Bebung auf derselben Note, mit "tremolo" eine unregelmässige, schneller werdende Bewegung ebenfalls auf derselben Note. Aus der stärkeren, schlagenderen Variante, nach der Sie spezifisch fragen, hat sich später der Triller entwickelt, die Zwischenformen wurden aber noch lange gebraucht und zB noch von Tartini als gebräuchlich beschrieben. Rein technisch gesprochen wird dabei der trillernde Finger halbwegs auf den darunter liegenden gelegt und in rhythmischen Bewegungen nach unten gedrückt, so dass jeweils nur ein kleiner Teil der Fingerkuppe die Saite kurz und knapp berührt. Somit ergibt sich ein Triller fast ohne Tonhöhenunterschied. Eine willkommene Möglichkeit, in Kombination von linker und rechter Hand die ganze Palette von Bogenvibrato bis zum ausgewachsenen Triller auszunutzen. Ich hoffe, das beantwortet Ihre Frage! Mit herzlichen Grüssen, LS
...sehr schön: sehr schlicht, sehr innig und sehr berührend! Danke (...höre ich ich da Vögel draußen nach dem letzten Ton?)
Lieber Herr Kestel, vielen Dank für den schönen Kommentar! Ja, es war Juni und die Vögel in voller Fahrt.
very informative and practical! thank you!
Thank you!
Thank you for your great tutorials! Looking forward to the next update! As you know vibrato in the 17 and 18th century were ‘preferences’ . E.g. some players were known for adding a lot of vibrato, like being the soprano diva in the opera. So like a voice really. Even Wolfgang Mozart loved the vibrato…. But Mozart sr. didn’t!! So I don’t take Leopolds vibrato instructions too seriously! I try to add ‘natural’ vibrato where needed, in combination with non vibrato. Meaning often: the faster the piece, the faster and intense the vibrato. If a note at the end of a phrase resolves or not also influences the kind of vibrato…
I’ve been pointed to this recording a couple of days ago by a friend and it opened up a new space for me - while being a big friend of romantic symphonies, the chamber music of this era has never really spoken to me. But I was instantly and profoundly caught by this recording. When I heard it for the first time, I thought this was three dimensional music. In my own words I thought of never having heard such glissandi into the right pitch of the note that opened up space just as did the delaying of notes, as good comping in jazz does. And now I hear you talk about Portamento and rubato. This makes perfectly sense. I find this approach a most profound and thrilling innovation that makes the music breathing . It’s for the first time I discover the revolutionary harmonic progressions Brahms composed, which I knew well in his symphonic work, but which I didn’t hear in the chamber music as the latter appeared so linearly played. The interplay of violin and piano here is stellar, the way you’re passing the notes from violin to piano and back again is made even 3-dimensionally perceivable by the careful recording technique, which lets the tones of the violin float in space from left to centre and the piano from the center to the right side. It’s great to hear a deep violin tone far left and the the portamento slide into the center of space where it goes from the deeper piano tones the scale up to the right side. And the there is this delicate aspirating soft violin sound…. Thank you for such an elating masterpiece.
Wow, Jost Ammon, you made my day. Thank you very much for this comment. I am very happy our view speaks in the intended way to you. All very best, Leila
I had the best imaginable teacher who taught me to listen carefully and think about what I hear - American jazz pianist and composer Lyle Mays. Sadly he passed away two years ago. Hearing your very offering would have made also HIS day! It would have been honey to the bear, as he used to say :)
A fascinating history of the early Baroque Violin player's and the stance employed by the player's solely dependant upon the time and the piece being played. It does explain the posture of many of the figures in older paintings I've seen over the years. Thank you.
Thank you for your nice comment !
Fantastisch, Leila!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Merci Amandine!!!
Amazing!! Thank you from Japan ;)
So helpful!! Amazing, thank you! 🙏