Korngold: Violin Concerto | Stefan Jackiw | Orquesta Sinfónica de RTVE

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 78

  • @jeffreykalb9752
    @jeffreykalb9752 5 лет назад +62

    I've heard people praise other performances over this, but when I listen to them they leave me flat. Having heard this, I could never hear the others the same way. The clarity, the emotional exactness... You can just get lost in this performance.

    • @Berlinchesmusic
      @Berlinchesmusic 5 лет назад +6

      Exactly

    • @beckchen9669
      @beckchen9669 3 года назад +4

      I think the magic word is exactness. Stefan has a very non-BS style that is very charismatic at the same time.

  • @jennyi0929
    @jennyi0929 5 лет назад +111

    This is the best Korngold EVER

    • @andreweverton162
      @andreweverton162 5 лет назад +3

      How is there not an album of this

    • @maiarho
      @maiarho 4 года назад +5

      no, Heifetz is best.

    • @Berlinchesmusic
      @Berlinchesmusic 4 года назад +10

      @@maiarho This Korngold is the best in the new way of violin playing, and Heifetz's one is the best of the classic XXth century way

    • @generalsnicky3219
      @generalsnicky3219 4 года назад +3

      I very much liked Kavakos' version when I heard him play live. His recording is excellent as well, you should check it out too!

    • @jamesboone3678
      @jamesboone3678 4 года назад +2

      @@maiarho cannot agree with that. Yes jascha was amazing. But I can't get over his arrogant ways.

  • @elgar104
    @elgar104 4 года назад +46

    The intonation is so perfect...and in music as chromatic as this...this is so important. Wonderful performance fantastic concerto from the most under-rated composer of the 20th or any other century..... Korngold simply rocks.

    • @Berlinchesmusic
      @Berlinchesmusic 4 года назад +1

      There are a lot of violin concertos completely underrated. Korngold, Walton, Castelnuovo Tedesco, Rozsa, Bruch 2nd... Etc

    • @elgar104
      @elgar104 4 года назад +2

      @@Berlinchesmusic I said underrated composer. Not concerto.

    • @elgar104
      @elgar104 4 года назад +1

      @@Berlinchesmusic and in what universe do you think the Walton underrated?

    • @pai194
      @pai194 4 года назад

      @@Berlinchesmusic Do u listen to heifetz? He had recorded all these.

    • @stillstanding6031
      @stillstanding6031 3 года назад

      Oh, dear! I thought your comment was very clear. I agree. Stefan slams each note spot-on. A real joy.

  • @tirtaamerta3911
    @tirtaamerta3911 4 года назад +18

    I wish Stefan Jackiw would like to make a recording of this piece with the same tempo, interpretation & orchestra. I will definitely buy it!

  • @JM-jy7qy
    @JM-jy7qy 5 лет назад +30

    Stefan is absolutely fantastic!

  • @ayamiaoyama60
    @ayamiaoyama60 2 года назад +4

    I have listened his live performance of this violin concerto this Saturday in Princeton. My blood was boiled with joy from head to toe. I didn't wanted to end. It was truly a treat for my life.

  • @b1i2l336
    @b1i2l336 5 лет назад +21

    Absolutely superb performance of my favorite violin concerto by my favorite living violinist and the superb orchestra and conductor; it doesn't get any better than this!

  • @matthewmosca5002
    @matthewmosca5002 5 лет назад +28

    Wow! absolutely perfect- so musical, not showy but what technique too. Also love the sound of this orchestra- they are superb. thank you for posting!

  • @한예은-s1f
    @한예은-s1f 5 лет назад +17

    thanks you so much,,my wish is seeing this perform again!!

  • @angelakentador7944
    @angelakentador7944 5 лет назад +40

    THANK YOU THANK YOU I was so sad when they took this down the first time you're a blessing!

    • @hamzahalasadulloh7779
      @hamzahalasadulloh7779 5 лет назад +7

      Angela Kentador I thought I was the only one. I was devastated!

    • @jeffreykalb9752
      @jeffreykalb9752 5 лет назад +2

      I was utterly depressed. That so many people felt this way tells just how good this performance is.

    • @mvictoriab8407
      @mvictoriab8407 5 лет назад +1

      We have to share this to the people to give this video the views it had and it deserves

    • @astromantix
      @astromantix 3 года назад

      same! i need this as a lullaby sometimes

  • @nataliabenedetti3639
    @nataliabenedetti3639 2 года назад +1

    Fantastico! Musicale, tecnica spaventosa! Ma l orchestra anche è superba! The two combo are the secret of Music! Braviiiiiii tuttiiiiiii👏👏👏👏👏👏👏

  • @LavaMLG
    @LavaMLG 4 года назад +12

    16:27 seriously one of the most gorgeous moments in music history

  • @galinakrivulin6767
    @galinakrivulin6767 3 года назад +1

    Korngold! A very passionate performance. Infatuated! I have listened to this concerto many times and admire it more and more. Korngold forever! Thank you.

  • @nicholasc6686
    @nicholasc6686 4 года назад +9

    the best performance of this work to this date.

  • @danybuchini
    @danybuchini 5 лет назад +18

    is the best performance ever of the concerto

  • @wendyshell8679
    @wendyshell8679 3 года назад +2

    My first Korngold! Looks like I picked the best!❤️ Man, Stefan, you rock!👏👏👏

  • @nikkowhite2104
    @nikkowhite2104 5 лет назад +20

    You are a hero.

  • @alecrobinson7124
    @alecrobinson7124 3 года назад +6

    Some people search the Korngold concerto and then they see Ray Chen and Hilary Hahn at the top of the rankings, and they make their decision. Some look past that, and then see Stefan Jackiw, and then they end up here. Some read the comments, and elected to come here instead. It doesn't matter, we all find our own way. Welcome to this select group of individuals.

  • @seogio07
    @seogio07 3 года назад +1

    He knows what the music is & what the beauty is...

  • @Dwchidwchi
    @Dwchidwchi 4 месяца назад

    stunning, wonderful violin playing

  • @semrabahcivan8627
    @semrabahcivan8627 Год назад

    Amazing performance thank you

  • @carlfranzensvocalstudio9826
    @carlfranzensvocalstudio9826 Год назад

    The most gorgeous music!

  • @bigbandsrock1
    @bigbandsrock1 4 года назад +3

    Unspeakably magnificent!

  • @123jozef
    @123jozef 5 лет назад +2

    Great to know that you get to hump your violin 24/7. I would break mine before the month was over. I've been playing guitar, bass, drums and everything else under the sun for over 40 years straight. No way, no how. Violins are so delicate I know mine would magically snap into two pieces, maybe more, and my bow would get buried into something..... or someone. I can practice 10- 16 hours a day, but there's no way that I could just live it

  • @jamesboone3678
    @jamesboone3678 4 года назад +13

    It's so unfortunate when a musican this great doesn't become what they deserve in life. Unfortunately all great musicians don't become famous.

    • @albertbauli
      @albertbauli 3 года назад

      It used to be that way... Now a days, the only thing that matters is marketing, no matter the content.

    • @wric01
      @wric01 3 года назад +1

      Furthermore being a Asian male musician, skills alone wont open opportunity doors.

    • @albertbauli
      @albertbauli 3 года назад

      @@wric01 Unfortunately that's 100% true. For me, best concert violinist alive, now, is Mayu Kishima. Have you ever heard of her?

    • @flexaeterna
      @flexaeterna 2 года назад

      @@wric01 Lang Lang is doing just fine

  • @jackburgess8579
    @jackburgess8579 3 года назад +1

    I arrived here from Hilary Hahn's performance. Definitely an upgrade!

  • @vilalotti6781
    @vilalotti6781 5 лет назад +5

    Fantastic!!!!

  • @jieunkim7100
    @jieunkim7100 2 года назад +1

    There used to be a full video before I really miss it

  • @Berlinchesmusic
    @Berlinchesmusic 5 лет назад +8

    Es perfecto

  • @PeterLunowPL
    @PeterLunowPL 2 года назад +1

    this young man moves me to tears ,takes me to another world with his incredible tone and elegant expression , God what a talent ! listen also to his Bruch Scottish Fantasy here on youtube

  • @deperpetrador
    @deperpetrador Год назад +1

    I cannot assess the technical quality, but I perceive the sound of this orchestra or this recording as extremely warm and cozy (I don't know how to describe it exactly)

  • @guarneri20
    @guarneri20 2 года назад

    Best Korngold I have ever heard

  • @astromantix
    @astromantix 3 года назад +2

    this and vilde frang. so different but so perfect

  • @Berlinchesmusic
    @Berlinchesmusic 5 лет назад +3

    Increíble

  • @ummglick
    @ummglick 5 лет назад +4

    wonderful

  • @123jozef
    @123jozef 5 лет назад +4

    Just read about him in Strings Mag.... wouldn't have known otherwise. I like the "outside" playing style. Don't hear this too often. Paginini had his bag of tricks, but that was mostly taking things to another dimension. Stefan is playing scales and melodies and just touching on the notes outside of the scale structure without sounding to "Jazzy" or just plain 'off...' .. "No" playing "outside" does not mean .... out doors.

    • @Ocelot2000
      @Ocelot2000 4 года назад +5

      He's not choosing any notes BTW. The notes are what Korngold wrote on the page. He's not allowed to diverge from one note or rhythm that the composer wrote. It's not like pop or jazz or any free form music where the soloist can riff. He has to play the exact notes written for this concerto. The only difference you will her from him playing this and other violinists is the tempo he or she will be comfortable to take each movement, but they will all play the exact notes, rhythms, scales, melodies to a T. WHat's even more incredible with these world class soloists and them not riffing, is that they memorize the music and play every note the composer wrote with no music in front of them. As an oboist in an orchestra in my past and as a composer now, that still amazes me. I can't even imagine doing that with one concerto let alone so many that are out there. Mendelssohn, Tchaikovsky, Beethoven, Walton, Barber, Brahms, and of course this Korngold concerto to name a few.
      Also as a side note, in case you didn't know, if you are a fan of movies from the 30s and 40s, Korngold wrote many of the incredible scores to so many movies in that Golden era like Captain Blood, Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex, The Sea Hawk, Prince and the Pauper etc etc and later on he took a melody from three different films, which became the basis of each of these three movements in this concerto. I think the last movement was one of the melodies form his Prince and the Pauper score.

  • @my2006natu
    @my2006natu 3 года назад

    美しい!!! オーケストラも素晴らしい!!!

  • @literart5170
    @literart5170 Год назад

    Лучшее исполнение : тонкость, контроль и нет насилия в звуке, фразы грамотные

  • @jeffreykalb9752
    @jeffreykalb9752 3 года назад

    The woman violinist to the left at 16:37... She seems somewhat in awe.

  • @roychan588
    @roychan588 2 года назад

    1:36 is my favourite moment!

  • @stillstanding6031
    @stillstanding6031 3 года назад

    Korngold would be jubilant!

  • @flexaeterna
    @flexaeterna 2 года назад

    He has the most interesting technique.. his fingers are very spidery

    • @pcpt
      @pcpt 10 месяцев назад

      and yet so strong at the same time. i've never seen such a confident fourth finger, and someone so confident in using it

  • @tyrunwilloughbyjr.8220
    @tyrunwilloughbyjr.8220 2 года назад +2

    8:10

  • @123jozef
    @123jozef 5 лет назад +2

    Are these considered "chamber" musicians? Can they make a living at this or is this something they do aside from a "day job?" Sorry, I'm a guitarist and since I'm not touring, it's a weekend gig for extra money. Lessons is another alternate, but I still have to have a regular steady job. I've always wondered how much one of the second violinists would make in a gig. I'm sure if they were on a world tour it would be salaried, but if it's once a month or something like that.... it is a serious question. Guess I could Goog it....

    • @handelviola
      @handelviola 5 лет назад +8

      haha i don't think you can play at this level or expression and accurately as a side job. this is his only job.

    • @alfredduckett
      @alfredduckett 5 лет назад +2

      he was referring to the orchestra musicians. One should simple use their ears to answer that simple question.

    • @123jozef
      @123jozef 5 лет назад +3

      @@alfredduckett ~ That kind of answer was un-warranted. First of all, if you are attempting to condescend on anyone, maybe you should double-check your phrase and spelling capabilities. I was not referring to just the orchestra musicians. I've been doing a bit of research to find out a "ballpark" figure of what these musicians might make in a year. At the same time, I was not being specific enough. It would depend on where they are playing, how often they are playing, what audiences they are playing for, which is redundant. There are far too many factors to determine exactly what one musician might make if it were just based on his or her proficiency vs. basing it on time spent in actual performance. What I have found so far is that a majority of these musicians tend to make anywhere from 65K to 100K (USD) per year, but there are also a handful that may far surpass that number. Again, it isn't always based on how often they play, sometimes it's based solely on "who" they are in the circle of competitors. You can also go broke trying to do this for a living. Maxim believes that you must "speak" to your audience. Paginini was just plain rebellious and obnoxious, yet extremely proficient. This guy here seems to be in his own world. He's a great musician, but he's not even attempting to "connect' with his audience or his fellow musicians. The whole subject is quite "subjective" and even somewhat ambiguous. I think that there would be a similarity in the financial prospects for all professional musicians in that they just have to get out there and take their chances. There is also going to be the "who you know" factor, just as there is with actors and 'up-and-coming' performers. There really are no guarantees in any industry as to what one might make when it concerns money. It's not always about how great you are, or how hard you work. I would bet money that a lot of the musicians in orchestras hold down more than one job, but the 'other' job would have to be something that does not require a 'set' schedule. It might be part-time employment or constantly playing with other musicians... unless you are salaried or under a contractual obligation of some sort. I dont' think the question is going to be answered here, and I probably shouldn't even have asked. I would imagine some, maybe even quite a few of these musicians teach music or hold seminars on the side. That way they can work around their performance schedules. Who knows?

    • @Ocelot2000
      @Ocelot2000 4 года назад +1

      Playing in any professional orchestra would be their main job, and they would audition to be in that particular orchestra. Some for all their professional lives, some will move on if they feel they don't fit for whatever reason. The pay is not great but they can supplement their payments by taking on teaching their instrument to students and they might also do side jobs like being hired to go in studio for various pop/world or film scores for example if they have a way in. However the soloists, like this kid will make way more money playing different concertos with many orchestras around the world.

    • @christianspillemose4074
      @christianspillemose4074 4 года назад

      @Ron It's actually spelled "Bro" LOL

  • @yellsesow
    @yellsesow 3 года назад +1

    약간 연주할때 해리스타일스닮은거,,,,같은데 ㅋ ㅋ

  • @davidjacobson9907
    @davidjacobson9907 День назад

    the faces...can he stop?

  • @Tuxster3
    @Tuxster3 Год назад

    I rather listen to classical music, instead of watching it being played. This way I don't have to look at and see the sometimes ugly faces performers make while they play.
    I have nothing against a performer being into what they are doing as far as playing the music. I just CAN'T stomach the ugly facial expressions.
    I'm probably the only person who feels this way. Actually, Horowitz kind of felt the same way. He really didn't get into unnecessary facial expressions or bodily movements, while at the piano.