Tamás Velenczei on Sarah´s Horn Hangouts
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- Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
- Tamás, Trumpet and Table Tennis
Berlin Philharmonic principal trumpet Tamás Velenczei joins Sarah Willis live from Berlin on the Horn Hangouts. With a special appearance from the Pacific Music Festival Trumpet Alumni from all over the world, this is definitely a Hangout not to be missed!
More Horn Hangout magic here: sarah-willis.co...
Berlin, March 2017
One of the greatest trumpet players, who performs with one of the greatest orchestras in the world!
🎺 Tamás Velenczei is also the greatest orchestra player for me.
I want you to come to Japan 🇯🇵 for the recital🙏
More trumpet players! 🎺🤓
greetings from Frankfurt to you both!
Oh so lovely again! Thank you Sarah and Tamás!
Thanks very much Sarah!!Bravissima!
Doc Severinsen!
Hi Sarah, one slight oddity with the new website and your hangout with Tamás: I believe the stereo was reversed--your voice was coming from the left and Tamás's from the right, but the audio and video quality were excellent. BTW, I passed on your greeting to Barbara in the Met Opera Der Rosenkavalier pit, April 13
Yo that's crazy one of the trumpet players from pmf, Brad hogarth, was my band director in high school!
Velenczei Tamás is the correct way to address him, thanks Sarah for getting it right.
Like East Asian (Chinese, Japanese, Koreans), Hungarians put family names in front.
My guess is it's probably a relic of the Huns occupation period.
It's more because of the language and its logic.
A paste from Quora:
"When Hungarian family names appeared around the 14th century, they served to differentiate between people with the same given name. For example 'The Smith' ('Kovács') made it possible to tell one person called (let's say) Ügyek from the other Ügyeks. In the Hungarian language these adjectives precede the noun (as opposed to most other languages), so in Hungarian it is natural to say Kovács Ügyek (Ügyek the Blacksmith) not Ügyek Kovács. This was helped by the fact that in Hungarian articles ('the') did not appear until the late 15th century."
see you in summer Tamás!!!
👏
What's this song ? In intro ?
Ya... whats the intro?
"Le Basque" of the french baroque composer Marin Marais
Why do European musicians tune to 666 Hz? Well, it's subconscious, but why is concert E at 666 Hz? If not 440 Hz or 432 Hz, Why not 448 Hz? Why consistently tune to 444.5 Hz ET?
E-666 = A-444: the string players will tune to perfect fifths, not ET fifths