Well you can hear the A string resonating once more... before that the adjustment did not work and A was not resonating anymore, Sheku very kindly asked...
That was my favorite part. There are times when I watch him and others perform and ignore the music because their facial expressions show the sheer joy of what they are doing and sometimes I need that more than their music.
It did make a difference. It's difficult enough to move the cello around and I wonder how often such adjustments are required. I hope someone could come up with a more stable construction. Think about a singer who has to tweak his voice through his mouth with an instrument.
I suspect that all instruments could use a checkup and adjustment: stringed, reed, brass, drums. Everything changes over time and use. I'm hoping to find a good string bass luthier here on the California central coast but I'm retired and not in a big hurry. I figure that the more repair/adjustment videos I watch should help me understand whatever the luthier tells me when we finally meet.
@@edwinbond5995 It's nice to receive a reply with out malice. I had no intention of down rating established methods of instrument building, and as a senior citizen; would not like immature shortcuts. Please consider the equally tempered scale for keyboards. Steinway, Bluthner, Yamaha and all reputed builders today use this system; without which there would be too many keys to search for. Same with fretted instruments. There are some reputed cello makers who have the sound post somewhat locked and have capable players as customers as well as a long waiting list. I wanted to learn how this is done! I am not against servicemen who know their job, but concerned about the musician s difficulties and reputation. I prefer solid wood instruments as against laminated ones which you can take to the beach. I'm talking about preserving heritage!
Experienced luthiers are like experienced doctors, they are rough because they've been there a thousand times and are confident in what they're doing/know they won't hurt you
They have been doing this their whole life. I would trust them with the life of my violin. They know every adjustment, every nook and cranny that can fix it and make it sound better. I trust My Luther. He has also worked on Paganini’s violin so that makes me trust him even more
It’s great that these old instruments are still being played and cherished . They are an important link to the past and should never be locked away some museum where nobody can hear them 🎻
Far too many go into the isolated collections of wealthy collectors who use them as silent investments rather than instruments whose real value is in being played.
My biggest question thats always been circling my mind is how are these people getting instruments that are hundreds of years old?? Like seriously what hidden treasure vault they be getting them from?🤯
these instruments should belong to very very talented people, an instrument is supposed to be played, the more you play a cello the better the sound will be. Sheku Kanneh-Mason is one of the youngest most talented cellist so now the instrument is in the right hands ;)
@@unlimitedsky8506 No you're absolutely right, but it's like wow there's only like a few of these relics from the 3 major historical instrument makers left in the world, and it's always boggled my mind lol
These old valuable treasure instruments like the Strads, Guarneri Del Gesus, Amati, Gudaninin, and the like -- are usually owned by private foundations like the Nippon Foundation in Japan, various museums/library's like the Library of Congress, and often wealthy individuals who have certain instruments in their own private collection. These bodies decide to lend them in perpetuity to top performers.
When you are a top talent instruments are loaned to you by their owners. Did you see Alma Deutcher and her sister Helen, two little girls, who were actually allowed to play Mozart's personal violins? Wow!
I fell out of love with my instruments because my parents encouraged me a little too much. When I found my singing myself, my love for it carried on into my college degree and was the foundation of my professional career. It's the student, more than the parent, who must love making music, and for many - on their own terms. But yes - Sheku can play the cello like an extension of himself, and it's always a pleasure to hear it, here or otherwise.
I know, it should be engraved or on a tiny scroll inside or something. I'm sure there's paper work for stuff like that. Just like show dogs and their lineage. Ha! yes..I just compared this cello to a show dog. wtf.
I like the way that Leonhard twice tuned it by just twisting the key, didn’t even have to check against the other strings, and the player accepted that it was perfectly tuned. Man, that is perfect pitch to the max!!
Sheku is blessed with perfect pitch. You need it to get "a might be moody cello" to be in her/his aurally most scintillating form.😊 Wow! A master luthier too!!!!👏👏👏👏
Bowing that close to the bridge is always going to create a tough, slightly scratchier sound, even on a really good cello, with a very advanced player.
Bailey Beers , If you or I played it, it would sound like the noise a heavy wooden cupboard makes when being pushed across a wooden floor......aaaaaaarrrggghhh..lol.
Indeed, there is so much knowledge, feel and skill required to make this instrument sound so good. When I'm watching sheku play it sometimes looks like he is resting his head against the neck to feel the vibrations the instrument is making, as if he is feeling the resonance and gauging the sound by it.
@@Matt-by3yd I didn't think it was deep at all, but I can see how a person of limited mental capacity, such as yourself, might think so. It's okay. I typed this slow so you could keep up.
Nice! It"s hilarious how small a 17th Century full size cello looks in Sheku's hands, he is a tall lad. Humans have evolved :) It almost looks like he is holding a 3/4 or 7/8 instrument!
@Mycel it's like watching a master chef work. I can follow a recipe to the letter, measure everything out, time it to the second, and it may not turn out anything like it does in the cookbook. Yet, a master chef doesn't open the book, doesn't measure anything or look at a clock, and their food is absolutely amazing. The experts work on their own level.
A lot of the really fine craftmanship is lost through out the ages. It's hard to get really, really good wood today. Wood that have been drying for 50-100 years before the instrument maker even gets his hands on it.
When a cello is played for years, the sound of the cello will get better. It’s kinda like breaking in a horse, but it takes ages. Plus old cellos are so gorgeous.
Hey Florian can you fix my violin? Pretty please! Just kidding. It's a Lewis and about 45 years old. (My student violin, but the sound has improved with age!) I wouldn't doubt he would improve it.
@@jamesdowell8758 It's done that way with violins. It allows for fine adjustment of the angle of the post setting tool to avoid touching the treble f hole with the tool. Don't know about cellos; there's more room to see inside there. Setting or resetting the sound post is an art; luthiers work in different ways.
As is explained in the description above, a wealthy donor has lent the instrument to him. This is a typical arrangement for virtuosos to get hold of priceless instruments like this. The instruments would start to deteriorate if no-one played them, so instrument collectors want virtuosos to play them so they keep their value.
Listen my friend - the mere fact that you watched this makes you a very VERY cultured person. Don't put yourself down. Just listen to his performance of the Elgar Concerto of last years PROMS. and enjoy the music, because Beautiful Music uplifts the spirit, transcending all boundaries ---- creating a Better World. BTW this guy is coming to Australia in November and the promoter I am sure will invite me (we are friends) Alas, I am well past my UBD, octogenarian PLUS! Also check out the whole family! Amazing! Greetings from Australia. (hsoenario@gmail.com)
Florian Leonhard is the most luthier name I’ve ever seen in my life
And he LOOKS like his name also. What an intense luthier he must be.
You know you've done well when your taking your instrument to this chap.
You know you've done well when you have this particular instrument.
you’re *
How Sheku’s face lit up when the sound was to his satisfaction.
Well you can hear the A string resonating once more... before that the adjustment did not work and A was not resonating anymore, Sheku very kindly asked...
That was my favorite part. There are times when I watch him and others perform and ignore the music because their facial expressions show the sheer joy of what they are doing and sometimes I need that more than their music.
I didn't realize how much difference small shifts of the soundpost could make...
It did make a difference.
It's difficult enough to move the cello around and I wonder how often such adjustments are required.
I hope someone could come up with a more stable construction.
Think about a singer who has to tweak his voice through his mouth with an instrument.
glenn lopez well, it's been holding up for 400 years so I think it's fairly stable...:)
I suspect that all instruments could use a checkup and adjustment: stringed, reed, brass, drums. Everything changes over time and use. I'm hoping to find a good string bass luthier here on the California central coast but I'm retired and not in a big hurry. I figure that the more repair/adjustment videos I watch should help me understand whatever the luthier tells me when we finally meet.
@@edwinbond5995
It's nice to receive a reply with out malice.
I had no intention of down rating established methods of instrument building, and as a senior citizen; would not like immature shortcuts.
Please consider the equally tempered scale for keyboards.
Steinway, Bluthner, Yamaha and all reputed builders today use this system; without which there would be too many keys to search for. Same with fretted instruments.
There are some reputed cello makers who have the sound post somewhat locked and have capable players as customers as well as a long waiting list. I wanted to learn how this is done!
I am not against servicemen who know their job, but concerned about the musician s difficulties and reputation.
I prefer solid wood instruments as against laminated ones which you can take to the beach.
I'm talking about preserving heritage!
ikr
Wow, Sheku even makes tuning / trying out the cello sound like a performance; what a blessed soul!
Haha. I was thinking the exact same thing.
This is the first time I get a real sense of how powerful this Amati cello is. This first bowing blew me away on how dynamic it was.
@Violin Accordion Gofrilla's - really great! Got a Forster myself, and it suits me.
watching him work on that old instrument made me very nervous, but he did improve the sound.
Experienced luthiers are like experienced doctors, they are rough because they've been there a thousand times and are confident in what they're doing/know they won't hurt you
Anne Arsenault
Especially when he hit it with the tool!!
They have been doing this their whole life. I would trust them with the life of my violin. They know every adjustment, every nook and cranny that can fix it and make it sound better. I trust My Luther. He has also worked on Paganini’s violin so that makes me trust him even more
I hope it will go another 400 years.
x1101126 it will unless one of its owners drop it, or it travels in a plane.
It’s great that these old instruments are still being played and cherished . They are an important link to the past and should never be locked away some museum where nobody can hear them 🎻
BRAVO!
Far too many go into the isolated collections of wealthy collectors who use them as silent investments rather than instruments whose real value is in being played.
That smile when the sound is perfect ❤
My biggest question thats always been circling my mind is how are these people getting instruments that are hundreds of years old?? Like seriously what hidden treasure vault they be getting them from?🤯
these instruments should belong to very very talented people, an instrument is supposed to be played, the more you play a cello the better the sound will be. Sheku Kanneh-Mason is one of the youngest most talented cellist so now the instrument is in the right hands ;)
@@unlimitedsky8506 No you're absolutely right, but it's like wow there's only like a few of these relics from the 3 major historical instrument makers left in the world, and it's always boggled my mind lol
These old valuable treasure instruments like the Strads, Guarneri Del Gesus, Amati, Gudaninin, and the like -- are usually owned by private foundations like the Nippon Foundation in Japan, various museums/library's like the Library of Congress, and often wealthy individuals who have certain instruments in their own private collection. These bodies decide to lend them in perpetuity to top performers.
When you are a top talent instruments are loaned to you by their owners. Did you see Alma Deutcher and her sister Helen, two little girls, who were actually allowed to play Mozart's personal violins? Wow!
My strad violin is 244 years old built 1776
You do have a real talent for playing that instrument it’s a shame that not all parents can encourage their children like yours can
I fell out of love with my instruments because my parents encouraged me a little too much. When I found my singing myself, my love for it carried on into my college degree and was the foundation of my professional career. It's the student, more than the parent, who must love making music, and for many - on their own terms. But yes - Sheku can play the cello like an extension of himself, and it's always a pleasure to hear it, here or otherwise.
This is a brilliant interplay between a master luthier and a musician intimate with his instrument.
It would be amazing to have the history of every player of that instrument over those 400 years
I know, it should be engraved or on a tiny scroll inside or something. I'm sure there's paper work for stuff like that. Just like show dogs and their lineage. Ha! yes..I just compared this cello to a show dog. wtf.
Very nice resonance in the tone! It vibrates with a lot of life! The overtones ring through very nicely!
Amazing cello. The Amati family trained Antonio Stradivari to make instruments! Sounds incredible.
And there you see the reason I give my violin only to selected luthiers! Great showing of skills!
Fascinating! I used to play bass, but had no idea of the importance of the precise placing of the bridge.
Peter Brodie the luthier was adjusting the sound post
Daniel Fleming, yes, but that's in coordination with the bridge: one depends on the other.
Peter Brodie yes it is why some call the bridge the soul of the instrument
Daniel Fleming and that's what I'd never realised. Thanks for drawing it to my attention🙂
Thanks for posting this!
I want an Amati 😍😱❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️ so beautiful!!!! Lucky him 😂👌🏻🎶🎶🎶
Shamsa Al Maktoum ikr
I like the way that Leonhard twice tuned it by just twisting the key, didn’t even have to check against the other strings, and the player accepted that it was perfectly tuned. Man, that is perfect pitch to the max!!
My little iPhone speakers have never vibrated like this
Lol
This luthier is also able to fix my $10 headphones.
The last adjustment made the A string warmer. Daniel shafran played an old amati.
Two masters at work.
What a difference getting the sound post in just the right place. Makes me wonder how the original instrument makers came up with this stuff.
Thanks for share it with us. This is amasing.
Listening 400 years cello through youtube. Ooh my...
I think I had a mini seizure whenever he played any note at all this sounds too beautiful
Plot twist, the notes werent off, the cello repairer just wanted a private concert hahaha
Sheku is blessed with perfect pitch. You need it to get "a might be moody cello" to be in her/his aurally most scintillating form.😊 Wow! A master luthier too!!!!👏👏👏👏
i like they way he tuned it slightly after getting it back
Why is this dude grabbing my interest like this...WTH LOL He's cool as a cucumber and so Humble
Beautiful.
For some reason I'm feeling completely relaxed right now
He reminds me of a doctor listening for a heartbeat.
This is an incredible Cello and one could not find a finer musician to play it. Sheku is my hero.
Incredible team!
Bowing near the bridge for power but nasal on any cello it's like playing a harder reed on a sax
Bowing that close to the bridge is always going to create a tough, slightly scratchier sound, even on a really good cello, with a very advanced player.
Omg it basically plays itself lol
Bailey Beers , If you or I played it, it would sound like the noise a heavy wooden cupboard makes when being pushed across a wooden floor......aaaaaaarrrggghhh..lol.
Othman Hassan Majid nice cellos are nice
Indeed, there is so much knowledge, feel and skill required to make this instrument sound so good. When I'm watching sheku play it sometimes looks like he is resting his head against the neck to feel the vibrations the instrument is making, as if he is feeling the resonance and gauging the sound by it.
So smooth
Amazing!
Both men are gifted.
They weren't given anything, they're talented.
Brilliant!
Made Sheku smile when it was adjusted to his liking
I like how he wears that apron, not to protect his clothes from his work, as in many other occupations, but to protect his work from his clothes.
Oooooo so deep
@@Matt-by3yd I didn't think it was deep at all, but I can see how a person of limited mental capacity, such as yourself, might think so. It's okay. I typed this slow so you could keep up.
When Gordon Ramsey switches professions
YOU CALL THAT AN INSTRUMENT? YOU CAN STILL HEAR THE WOOD GROWING ON THAT THING
There's a lot of noise in the audio signal.
Superb!
3:44 high level of surgery
I'm glad to see dilios got his eye back after the battle of thermopylae
This luthier has an amazing *ear*.
Pure bliss!
Nice! It"s hilarious how small a 17th Century full size cello looks in Sheku's hands, he is a tall lad. Humans have evolved :) It almost looks like he is holding a 3/4 or 7/8 instrument!
My jaw literally dropped a few times. What a lovely sound!
How do they get these old instruments?????? 400 years old!!!! That’s amazing!!!
So why, with such a great instrument, have these adjustments only just been made?
Mr. Leonhard's amazing!!!
This guy looks exactly like a mix between Jaime Lannister and Patrick Stewart.
How about John Denver and Harrison Ford?
The smile said wow lol
Does anybody know what song he was playing at 4:35 ?? if he even was playing a song... but if he was let me know because it was beautiful
Concludety Do you know the name?
No crap Sherlock
I think he might have just been playing random notes to test the strings, but because he’s so talented it sounded beautiful
3:30 the look he gives when you play off tune lol
Sheku se transforma quando toca
Super intéressant !
Seems incredibly cavalier to do it on his lap. I've set many a soundpost in violins and it's easy to ding the f holes.
I'm sure he knows what he's doing.
@@WinrichNaujoks That's right; he does.
Mycel he’s a “legendary” luthier, I’m sure he’s better at this than you are
@Mycel it's like watching a master chef work. I can follow a recipe to the letter, measure everything out, time it to the second, and it may not turn out anything like it does in the cookbook. Yet, a master chef doesn't open the book, doesn't measure anything or look at a clock, and their food is absolutely amazing. The experts work on their own level.
what was that at 1:40...
???
Remarkable
Gratidão, o poder de um instrumento!
E de um luthier muito mais...
oh to have a cello that is as loud as this one... mine has a large crack along the seam at the bottom so almost all of the tome disappears
What did you say caused the scratchy sound when he was playing? Something to do with the bridge on the cello?
Karen Ingram adjusting the sound post inside the cello.
Why i cannot close my mouth while watching the video..?
How can I manage my cello it needs to be fixed
If its so old why is it better than the new ones.... aren't we getting better at making instruments?
A lot of the really fine craftmanship is lost through out the ages. It's hard to get really, really good wood today. Wood that have been drying for 50-100 years before the instrument maker even gets his hands on it.
When a cello is played for years, the sound of the cello will get better. It’s kinda like breaking in a horse, but it takes ages. Plus old cellos are so gorgeous.
Honestly, experts disagree. Some that thats you really cant hear the difference...
If only MD's could do this.
Did they make finger boards that long 400 years ago??
The most triky job ! See you at mondomussica Heavy Lion!
who else is watching this after youtube recommended it and you know nothing about cello's
Not me. I literally searched "black cellist" and this video was in the top 20 or so results.
Not regarding the instrument I found the Luthier's black shirt/sweater really smart, is that sport related ?
Мастер молодец, подтянул струну и точно попал в строй! И не надо ничего настраивать!)
Did he just hit the cello with his tool?!?
Wider vibrations? What on earth does that mean?
You just answered your own question
lol at 1:40 he obviously wacks the back of the Cello with whatever he is holding
W.O.W.
Where is this at what state or country?
Yes, Sheku (the cellist) is British. Florian, the luthier (viol builder / repairer) is German but now works out of his shop in New York, USA.
Was this filmed inside of the shower?
How much do you think that cello costs?
I read in some newspaper that it is invaluable. Strange, because I suppose the current owner bought it?
akia goldsmyth its priceless!!
akia goldsmyth lmao it’s in the millions- between 1 and 10
Probably at least £1000 my guess
Bruh, theres no way this is less than $1,000,000
Hey Florian can you fix my violin? Pretty please!
Just kidding. It's a Lewis and about 45 years old. (My student violin, but the sound has improved with age!)
I wouldn't doubt he would improve it.
When your name is Luthier Florian Leonhard, you're automatically gonna be a legend
I mean actually from 17th centuries didn’t have endpins.
Oh god I can't imagine how the person who had to drill a hole in an Amati cello felt (for the endpin)
Legendary luthier that knocks the neck and the F hole in adjusting the instrument?
I wonder how much of the instrument is original and unaltered. Maybe just the back and ribs?
forget the cello. does he really need an apron for tuning a cello?
It's so he won't scratch it.
@@darkiee69 oh. didnt realize that. good to know though.
It’s also probably because he doesn’t just do these little adjustments all day long- he must make and repair instruments too
Maybe he waits tables in his spare time!👍🏿
Mycel I feel as if you don’t know what you’re talking about.
1:39 Legendary Luthier bashes the FUCK out of the cello with metal tool.
#CelloBae and the Luthier!
My banjo goes to Eleven!
1:40 I cringed when he mistakenly rapped his tool on the priceless cello
@@jamesdowell8758 It's done that way with violins. It allows for fine adjustment of the angle of the post setting tool to avoid touching the treble f hole with the tool. Don't know about cellos; there's more room to see inside there. Setting or resetting the sound post is an art; luthiers work in different ways.
Markus WX Right on
Scary Pumpkin I do think violins are a lot less clumsy feeling to set on your lap though
C'mon play something worth listening to....it's 400 years old ! you lucky duckeeeeee
How does he afford a cello that’s like 600,000 dollars
As is explained in the description above, a wealthy donor has lent the instrument to him. This is a typical arrangement for virtuosos to get hold of priceless instruments like this. The instruments would start to deteriorate if no-one played them, so instrument collectors want virtuosos to play them so they keep their value.
It sounds so tinny and metallic. I'm sorry, but it doesn't sound like an old antique instrument at all.
Lol. It was probably recorded with a smartphone and you also listened to it on crappy smartphone speakers. What did you expect?
Are you sure this is a 400 year old cello? The end pin never existed until the 1800s
The end pin can be added to any cello.
Realizing how uncultured and unskilled I am lol
Listen my friend - the mere fact that you watched this makes you a very VERY cultured person. Don't put yourself down. Just listen to his performance of the Elgar Concerto of last years PROMS. and enjoy the music, because Beautiful Music uplifts the spirit, transcending all boundaries ---- creating a Better World. BTW this guy is coming to Australia in November and the promoter I am sure will invite me (we are friends) Alas, I am well past my UBD, octogenarian PLUS! Also check out the whole family! Amazing! Greetings from Australia. (hsoenario@gmail.com)
Doesn't say a lot does he?