Giuseppe Guarneri del Gesù: the ‘Baltic’ of c. 1731

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  • Опубликовано: 30 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 49

  • @michaelfaulkner6607
    @michaelfaulkner6607 16 дней назад

    Even through the medium of an iPhone or iPad you can hear the richness, depth and power it possesses. Such beauty and perfection. Thank you for sharing this. 🙏🏻

  • @user-sw6ej8ci7o
    @user-sw6ej8ci7o Год назад +27

    I had the good-AND BAD-fortune to play on the Baltic for two weeks back in the early 1970s. I kid you not that I seriously thought of running away with the instrument.* It was so perfect and pure that it made my violin sound like it was an opera singer with a cold. When I say that it was BAD FORTUNE to play on it was because it waa devastating to have to return to my violin, and I was never satisfied with another instrument in my entire career. In short, I just suffered and "got by." When you tell this sort of thing to a modern maker, they don't want to believe it. When you tell it to a lot of younger players, they can't even imagine what you are talking about. When you talk to very fine violinists who have owned great instruments for a long time, they will say things like, "I've had my ___________for thirty years and I"m still finding new things I can do with it."
    When the violin-making community eventually figures this out, it will be a great day for the poor violinists who have to put up with only passably useful tools.
    It certainly IS true, however, that all Stradivari and Guarneri violins are not of this calibre. And a few modern makers are getting close. I'm wishful but not hopeful.
    * BTW, in an episode of "Northern Exposure" a young violinist runs away with a Guarneri violin. It had nothing to do with my personal experience; purely coincidental.

    • @atletasedentario2945
      @atletasedentario2945 Год назад +4

      Thanks for the story, hearing it from a professional sure shows the difference and that this is not a legend. About the violins that are approaching... where are they from? Who are the luthiers?

    • @srinitaaigaura
      @srinitaaigaura Год назад +1

      The reason is you need to maintain and play the best music on a violin for over a hundred years before it opens up and resonates more and more at those pitches. The woods used were extremely old in them too. The secret no one says is right in plain sight - time.

    • @kishascape
      @kishascape Год назад

      Is already been done, I mean anyone with half a brain could see that statement is ignorant. We've far exceeded 1600s Luther technology and there have been many superior violins for 150 years now. It's even been confirmed in blind tests that the Stradivarius is just a placebo and there's no actual difference other than the status symbol.

    • @angryjalapeno
      @angryjalapeno 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@kishascape it's a Guarneri not a Stradivarius.

    • @tomsmart1970
      @tomsmart1970 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@srinitaaigaura I think the age thing is mostly folklore, and that a violin "opens up" (whatever that means) more in the first 10 years than it does in the next 300. I've played violins completed in the last few months or years that sound and feel more "open" than others that are extremely old. Every violin has its own personality. The "secret" of Guarneri is that he made some very good and innovative instruments, not that he made them a long time ago. No doubt they were great instruments back when they were new. There are contemporary makers who are doing exceptionally good work at a far more affordable price. I suspect that bench copies are often passing as the real thing on concert stages.

  • @clivemossmoon3611
    @clivemossmoon3611 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks for talking over the music. Great decision. 👍

  • @simon-oy6um
    @simon-oy6um Год назад +4

    It sounds like a bouquet of fresh mixed flowers

  • @10coolfacts
    @10coolfacts 6 месяцев назад

    Beautiful instrument, beautiful players, and beautiful presentation. Someday I hope to play an instrument of this caliber. Even once or twice in my life, and I could die a happy man.

  • @seanhallahan14
    @seanhallahan14 Год назад +1

    Beautiful done! Thank you so much!

  • @stephanebelizaire3627
    @stephanebelizaire3627 Год назад +1

    Very Instructive, Bravo !

  • @simon-oy6um
    @simon-oy6um Год назад

    Sound so sweet full of colour😊😊

  • @joelssantos3033
    @joelssantos3033 Год назад +2

    Magnífico som fantástico ❤❤❤

  • @simon-oy6um
    @simon-oy6um 10 месяцев назад

    Iv'e said before ìts not just the instrument its the player that can make it sing and love it 😊

  • @simon-oy6um
    @simon-oy6um 7 месяцев назад

    Sweet and mellow 😊

  • @tullochgorum6323
    @tullochgorum6323 Год назад +2

    It sold for $9.44 million, which was a bit short of the $10 million estimate.

  • @patriciajrs46
    @patriciajrs46 Год назад +3

    Also, Amati'a sons were prominemt in that time frame.
    I've never heard of Bergonsi. Are there many of his violins still existing today?

    • @user-sw6ej8ci7o
      @user-sw6ej8ci7o Год назад

      There was a Bergonzi family, which included The master, Carlo; then his sons and grandsons Michel Angelo, and Nicolo, (plus a couple of others). Carlo is sort of the Vermeer of violin makers, having made only very few instruments, but they are masterpieces. I believe, without unpacking my books, that there are only about 25 around-this compared to 600-700 Stradivari. Within the last few years there was an exhibit in Cremona and a book published with very good photos.

    • @serafin1719
      @serafin1719 Год назад +1

      And there are two cellos of smaller frame. I played one of them and due to its smaller size it didn’t have the biggest sound, but beautiful!

  • @fernandomarcondescorrea8495
    @fernandomarcondescorrea8495 Год назад

    🎻🎼🎵🎶🔝

  • @zzp1
    @zzp1 5 месяцев назад +1

    @user-sw6ej8ci7o I had the instrument in my hands, it was for sale around 2005 for about 5 million USD. It had an incredible sound and I fully understand your awe. I have still the full specs of this instruments, made around the end of Guareneri's golden era. And no, it is not original in all parts.

  • @chrisebbesen5798
    @chrisebbesen5798 Год назад +1

    Thank you, who bought the Baltic?

  • @osiasgomes6904
    @osiasgomes6904 Год назад

    Foi o primeiro a fábrica o violino

  • @liamnevilleviolist1809
    @liamnevilleviolist1809 Год назад +1

    1:31.... is that a massive crack on the bass side??

  • @kaavest
    @kaavest Год назад +1

    what is the name on the first piece she play?Thnx

    • @alisekeita3921
      @alisekeita3921 Год назад +2

      Tchaikovsky violin concerto if im not mistaken

    • @user-pw3tr1xg2x
      @user-pw3tr1xg2x 11 месяцев назад

      From the first movement of the Tchaikovsky Concerto.

  • @patriciajrs46
    @patriciajrs46 Год назад +7

    Why does everybody ( violin player) have to play that piece? Yes, it shows off note clarity and tone quality of the instrument and profeciency of the soloist, but there are many others that could do the same thing.

    • @stephanebelizaire3627
      @stephanebelizaire3627 Год назад +4

      Yes indeed, any Handel or Bach sonata would be very good.

    • @kliop00023
      @kliop00023 Год назад +1

      it attract more guesses lol

    • @kishascape
      @kishascape Год назад +4

      ​@@stephanebelizaire3627they can't Handel it

  • @athan4752
    @athan4752 Год назад

    I’ll take two.

  • @НаталияФедоровна-ц6в

    Какой. Звук.. Мастер. Знал. Какой-то. Секрет... 😮...

  • @liamnevilleviolist1809
    @liamnevilleviolist1809 Год назад

    Another quite-high bow hold.... are we slowly creeping back into the Baroque hold?

  • @osiasgomes6904
    @osiasgomes6904 Год назад +1

    Ninguém fala do Andrea amati foi o pioneiro no violino

  • @Cat-ls1jr
    @Cat-ls1jr Год назад

    What piece is Stella playing?

    • @powerflower6727
      @powerflower6727 Год назад

      „The Lark Ascending“ by Ralph Vaughan Williams

    • @MrItalianviolin
      @MrItalianviolin 7 месяцев назад


      I think it is a Butterfly Concerto.
      Actually Sounds very similar..

  • @Skinny_Karlos
    @Skinny_Karlos 4 месяца назад

    Were I independently wealthy, it'd be mine !!

  • @josefIL
    @josefIL Год назад +2

    Marketing... Pumping up the price

  • @mariaschwartz447
    @mariaschwartz447 Год назад

    How did the original jewish owner loose ownership? He escaped persecution and carried it with him.