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Isaac Stern - Kreisler's Schon Rosmarin
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- Опубликовано: 18 янв 2007
- A brilliant performance by Isaac Stern from the academy award winning documentary 'From Mao To Mozart' during his first visit to China in 1979 .
Piano accompaniment by American pianist , Mr. David Golub .
its realy brilliant performance!!!! i have no words!!!
Really a brilliant piece and performance
His performance is the best one!
no me cansaria nunca de escuchar a isaac stern playing this or other musical pieces un lujo impagable thanks a million blanca madrid spain
its realy brilliant performance!!!!
Thanks for posting. Never seen Stern at such an old age before.
Mr. Stern had his very own style that's for sure!!! As a Muscian, I admire all who dare to play string instruments. Isaac Stern and Itzhak Perlman had/has a way of making the listener "feel" and "view" the piece in a very real way. I always hear people compare Mr. Stern, Mr. Perlman to people like Kreisler and Heifetz and I say it's pointless. They are all one of a kind who interpreted the Music and expressed it as they felt. Who is to say one is better than the other? Just my thoughts. :)
A tip: you can watch movies on InstaFlixxer. Me and my gf have been using it for watching lots of of movies recently.
@Alan Cairo yea, I've been using instaflixxer for years myself :D
@Alan Cairo Yup, been watching on instaflixxer for since november myself :)
"In every violinists ear there is Heifetz" - I. Stern
This performance is recorded in 1979 during Mr. Stern's first visit of China ( from the Documentary of Mao and Mozart) He was 59 years old at that time. in 1999, Mr. Stern revisited China after 20 years and found some of his old friends he met during his first visit and recorded the same piece again. which can also be found at youtube
amazing performance, bravo.
Hey guys , do you realise something special about Isaac Stern when he plays the violin ? He never looks at his violin whenever he plays , his eyes will always be at the audience , unlike other violinist .
@yinlin89
When I play violin I always keep my eyes trained on the other members in my group or take a glance at the music to remind myself of the next section.
You shouldn't be needing to rely on visually seeing your violin after a while.
@yinlin89 he doesn't tilt his head but he will look at his hands with his eyes in that position.
He is charming ^^
Pretty smile~
Thanks Yinlin for sharing your video. I have this performance on vhs, however, it is annoying to search the tape for the segments that Stern is playing in.
he's such a cutie pie!
i have a question. I know perlman, hilary, gil shaham etc they are very good players. but i simply can't get enough of old recording with noises. new recordings are noise free and every humans love it but i am simply in love with old recording sounds with noises. Am i going insane?
nope
he is not that old yet in this video , he was only 59 when he perform in this video . I will post another video showing him play the same song when he was already 79 .
dude i can hella out play this bag of bones
so do I... I don't mean Stern is bad, but Kreisler could reveal something I dunno how to describe which other violinists can't show
hey guys you know that hes like Itzhak Perlman seriously
you're welcome
this is from MAO TO MOZART .
The piano part is a little bit different, isn't it??
But he IS enjoying himself!!
Stern is only 59 here..
I feel like I'm in a quaint 19th Century Europe haha
yaya what ev
actually i don't i just like the song and strangely you guessed right lol i do play the trumpet
nice sense of humour... ;)
It is short form of Robert
Well, Stern was a great violinist, but you only need to go listen to Kreisler playing this himself to realize that Stern simply does not have the feelings and interpretation this piece requires.
Not true haha.
19th and early 20th- century violinists never did.
Heifetz, Oistrakh, Pearlman didn't believe in what you consider master violinship.
Nope, dead as the proverbial door nail.
this guy misses some of the double dotted quarter notes and plays the sixteenth too early
Nice, but sounds like pure caffee music