Improve your violin SOUND and EXPRESSION - BestPractice 01

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  • Опубликовано: 29 май 2019
  • Welcome to my new violin masterclass video series BestPractice, where I share ways of practicing smarter and building the artist's technique. I am looking forward to sharing my ideas on the craft of violin playing! Today I will share one of the most simple but important exercises to improve your sound and range of expression on the violin. Practice this everyday with scales or any piece of repertoire!
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    01:30 Exercise begins
    04:00 and 5:30 repertoire demonstrations
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Комментарии • 51

  • @ramirodelbosque7280
    @ramirodelbosque7280 3 года назад +14

    You are so inspirational! I used to play with my local Philharmonic as a teenager while attending my local fine arts school and after 2 years of music studies in college I changed majors to nursing (I'm now a Family Nurse Practioner). Even though I continued taking private lessons for a few years after my major change I've never felt like I could ever perform as I used to (it's been about 14 years since my last formal lesson). Well not anymore! Your videos are so...scientific?...logical? They have rocked my fundamentals on violin playing for the better! Thank you so much!

  • @luisalfonsodiaz156
    @luisalfonsodiaz156 4 года назад +11

    Thank you very much for the tip. That bring more security by violin playing.

  • @jameslay240
    @jameslay240 4 года назад +28

    I'll try it but I'm gonna be mad if it doesn't sound better right away,just so you know

  • @jameslay240
    @jameslay240 4 года назад +10

    Nice thick sound,like the sound I hear in my head but can't do yet

  • @AndreiViolinist
    @AndreiViolinist 4 года назад +6

    Wonderful video Daniel and really nice, inspiring and helpful tips! All the best!

  • @darlenerivest148
    @darlenerivest148 4 года назад +2

    Great video, Daniel! An excellent video to help maintain a consistent tone on a full bow. Thank you!!

  • @lucasmhevia
    @lucasmhevia 3 года назад +2

    I didn`t even finish to see the video and i already have upgrated my right arm with this video. Amazing.

  • @MrEvajoly
    @MrEvajoly 3 года назад +2

    excellents exercices for all violin sound production i used it often for me and keep my arm in deep sound

  • @henrypagan6657
    @henrypagan6657 4 года назад +3

    Wow violin sounds amazing

  • @sawtinthtoo5130
    @sawtinthtoo5130 Год назад +1

    Thanks Sir for sharing violin course!

  • @sarabande6670
    @sarabande6670 5 месяцев назад

    You are so generous for sharing your knowledge! it has been making a difference in my life. I love playing violin and I have been improving thanks to you!

  • @HappyScalesforDuo
    @HappyScalesforDuo 4 года назад +4

    A very informative lesson. Thank you.

  • @JulianaVieiraViolin
    @JulianaVieiraViolin 5 лет назад +3

    Very nice! Thank you.

  • @carolineandtigger
    @carolineandtigger 4 года назад +4

    Bravo!!!

  • @AlamoCityCello
    @AlamoCityCello Год назад +1

    Good tip. Thanks man!

  • @sjensens
    @sjensens 4 года назад +1

    Thank you

  • @elaineng7522
    @elaineng7522 4 года назад +13

    Thank you so much for sharing Mr Kurganov! This is very insightful and extremely helpful. And way too underrated. Please keep posting technique classes!! Speaking of expressions - May I ask if you’d like to talk about continuous vibrato or thumb positions?

    • @DanielKurganov
      @DanielKurganov  3 года назад +2

      Thank you Elaine. My next vibrato video will discuss continuous vibrato!

  • @dmitrishostakovich83
    @dmitrishostakovich83 3 года назад +1

    Yes

  • @onyenkwereblessing
    @onyenkwereblessing Год назад

    Thank sir I am new here in this class

  • @esthermarcus5135
    @esthermarcus5135 Год назад

    Love your hearty lessons!!
    Dear Daniel
    How can you play fortissimo at the tip without having extra tension in the bow hand ? I get pain from it...

  • @terlanfeyzullayev6663
    @terlanfeyzullayev6663 4 года назад +1

    👏👏

  • @spaganini653
    @spaganini653 4 года назад +1

    Excellent video! This is what I am working on right now.
    PD: what shoulder rest do you use in this video?

    • @DanielKurganov
      @DanielKurganov  4 года назад +1

      Sebastián Paganini I am glad you’re found it useful! The shoulder rest is Bonmusica

  • @clivemossmoon3611
    @clivemossmoon3611 5 лет назад +32

    Great stuff. Interesting that I was doing this exercise for years without knowing what to call it. I’ve always been fascinated by Szeryng’s immaculate bow arm and was experimenting just based on what I could see in his technique. If you look closely you can actually see his bow “pushing” into the notes where the pressure is released in between the notes, incredibly even in 32nd notes. A kind of portato but more subtle, not accented but smoothly articulated where, as you point out, the bow speed remains the same. This passage from the Tchaikovsky for example: ruclips.net/video/_10LEWQe7EQ/видео.html Thanks again.

    • @DanielKurganov
      @DanielKurganov  5 лет назад +10

      yes exactly -- szeryng was the master of this. so, in fact, it's both useful as an exercise to develop the beauty and control of your sound, and as an actual implementable technique for expression. you can see old school guys like Abram Shtern doing this (in the tradition of Kreisler)

  • @roman14032
    @roman14032 4 года назад +3

    00:27 " before i DO-DO"

  • @atlanticking2315
    @atlanticking2315 4 года назад +6

    Daniel, can we have more tutorial on the right hand please?

    • @DanielKurganov
      @DanielKurganov  4 года назад +6

      Definitely. Coming up after the vibrato series finishes. Glad you like the videos!

    • @atlanticking2315
      @atlanticking2315 4 года назад

      @@DanielKurganov lookin forward!

  • @jonathanreichner4483
    @jonathanreichner4483 4 года назад +4

    I have been told that pronation of the index finger is created by slight rotation of the wrist inward as opposed to pressing the finger downward. The difference seems subtle and likely ends up in the same place. Can you comment on this technicality?

    • @DanielKurganov
      @DanielKurganov  4 года назад +7

      Thanks for your question, Jonathan. There are actually 3 distinct things at play here. The actual pronation comes exclusively from the (1) forearm, in a rotation akin to twisting a doorknob. Then the (2) wrist is involved, as you say, however it's not really rotating (that's coming from the forearm). It is pushing downwards mostly to assist (3) the index finger, which provides more nuanced manipulation of the bow -- this can include actual pressure coming from the finger itself, or the finger "conveying" the rotations of the forearm or impulses of the wrist. It gets quite complicated on a high level, and is difficult to explain verbally. To have a flexible sound, the interplay of all of the 'levers' is required, but this is mostly learned dynamically, as in some situations in order to get the sound you want, it's not possible to use the forearm and things must happen in the hand (for example). There are many possible situations, and if you analyze the playing of great violinists you can start trying mapping certain kinds of sound to different ways of applying weight into the stick. It also depends on ones existing technique. Some great players don't play with very flexible fingers and learn to manipulate the sound with bigger muscles.

    • @jonathanreichner4483
      @jonathanreichner4483 4 года назад

      @@DanielKurganov Thank you for your rapid and thorough reply. I am an adult learner and took up the instrument 10 years ago as a form of mid-life crisis. As I progress, the difficulty, nuance and complexity of playing the violin is revealed in layers, none of which is obvious by watching someone play. That is especially true of the bow arm. Right now what encourages me the most are the moments when I find myself making simple but open and tonal musical sounds that is characteristic of bowed instruments. Your video was quite helpful in that regard. So...when does it get easy?

    • @DanielKurganov
      @DanielKurganov  4 года назад +1

      Music can fill any void...I am convinced... easy? Well...sometimes things feel easy, sometimes impossible. Just have to keep evolving. Check out my newest video-I outline this incredible exercise that stays with me till today.

    • @jonathanreichner4483
      @jonathanreichner4483 4 года назад

      I was attempting the Ysaye exercise earlier this evening after seeing your recent video. Sort of like leap frog for shifting. Thanks for posting it.

  • @USclassical
    @USclassical 4 года назад +1

    I heard this called louré. That first open G, together with other open strings and some other notes crackled and sounded very unpleasant. Is this what you suggest to hear while practicing?

    • @DanielKurganov
      @DanielKurganov  4 года назад +6

      It’s not quite loure. Loure typically means slowing or stopping the bow, like dots under a slur. I quite like my first open G! Putting the gut string to good use:) the process of practicing shouldn’t hold ‘sounding good’ as the primary goal, as one might do during a performance. It’s about testing and experimenting with boundaries. The ability to push the instrument a bit too far is important to develop. My feeling is that the ultimate goal is land in the volatile area right before failure and live there in terms of sound and musical conception. When training that, it means sometime (often) the sound will fail in some direction.

  • @chipcurry
    @chipcurry 2 года назад +2

    I am enjoying your videos immensely. I am a bluegrass Fiddler. My only problem was that that you didn’t say anything about what pronation was. I was able to look it up and find out.

    • @DanielKurganov
      @DanielKurganov  Год назад

      Pronation and Supination are functions of the forearm, like the motion to rotate a doorknob. I've actually revised my theories on this topic, so this video is a bit out of date. It's not really pronation, but rather leveraging via the wrist and index/thumb that make the magic happen.

  • @congero113
    @congero113 3 года назад +1

    Interesting. How do you put the pressure without tensing the hand?

    • @DanielKurganov
      @DanielKurganov  3 года назад +3

      Practice leaning into the stick with your weight, not with a “grabbing” feeling. Also try to isolate the index finger and thumb (essentially) as the source of the pronation.

  • @t7.swapnil
    @t7.swapnil Год назад

    Are these master classes suitable for a 3 month beginner?
    Or it's more for intermediate+ levels?

  • @CapellaStringQuartet
    @CapellaStringQuartet 3 года назад

    Thank you for your videos! I find practicing pulsing helpful for bow control but as a violinist with an ongoing rotator cuff injury I find it agony to do any kind of pronation. Is it not better to use the natural forces of the bow to create the sound rather than pronating which can cause undue tension and eventually lead to injury?

    • @DanielKurganov
      @DanielKurganov  3 года назад +3

      Glad you like it! Certainly, using the natural weight of the stick is always optimal when it is possible. However, it’s not possible to get a full sound past the lower half without applying weight into the stick either with the index finger/thumb action, wrist pronation, or forearm pronation. People often confuse pronation one sort of movement, but it’s actually rather dynamic and can be done in those three ways separately or in combination. “The Waves” teaches these impulses to feel very natural and not tense. There never be any injury or tension due to pronating even with an hour of practicing very powerful music, as long as the technique is proper.

    • @CapellaStringQuartet
      @CapellaStringQuartet 3 года назад

      Awesome thanks for your reply! I will practice pronating and pulsing from the wrist and forearm and keeping the upper arm quiet and relaxed.

    • @CapellaStringQuartet
      @CapellaStringQuartet 3 года назад +1

      Although I do still feel it’s possible to make a full sound in the lower half with the correct bow speed, weight in the back of the hand towards the pinky and no need for pronation?

    • @DanielKurganov
      @DanielKurganov  3 года назад +1

      That’s right, we are not pronating past the balance point of the bow. However, there are moments when you still want to put with into the string. At that point, it’s a matter of “sitting in the string” or “sitting on the frog” rather than rotational energy.

  • @christinecasano3907
    @christinecasano3907 2 года назад

    First of all I wanted to thank you for these tips
    Second I am doing this exercise and I noticed that I am STRUGGLING A LOT to make a good sound at the frog going down
    Is there a way to fix this? Because I am getting very frustrated 🙃

    • @DanielKurganov
      @DanielKurganov  Год назад

      Lighten the hold of the bow, and imagine all of the activity coming from the upper arm (from the shoulder joint), and feel the hand/fingers like a ragdoll, almost inactive.

  • @audiomoodespanol2995
    @audiomoodespanol2995 8 месяцев назад

    ..