I am 102 years old and have the pleasure of having been present at this unforgettable concert with my now deceased wife. This video caught me off guard, it took my tears, but it left me diamonds.
I can imagine how much you were pleased to find this video of the concert you and your wife were in several decades ago. Hundred and two year old man makes me surprise. You have my respect.
The late Sir Yehudi Menuhin will never be forgotten. His music lives and breathes naturally. This Brahms performance had uncommon musical insight. He has a indelible place in our hearts. For me, it has special meaning. I met him and we talked briefly on two separate occasions; once when I was 14 or 15 years old and 33. Warm and encouraging.
I prefer his 1962 recording of the Beethoven but that is probably because I merely prefer the Beethoven. Menuhin ranks with Casals and Rubinstein and Heifetz as the greatest of the 20th century, or for that matter, all time. I had the great pleasure of meeting him in 1959 as a student living in San Jose, Ca. One of my most treasured experiences as a music lover.
Menuhin never fail with Brahms Since his great recording with Furtwangler in 1949 till his Masur 1996 . He recorded it too with Kempf too in the sixties all of them are Philosophy
So it’s true. Fritz Kreisler is officially the king of cadenzas! From Beethoven to Brahms, give him a theme and he will write music that is perhaps even more sublime than the original!!! Oh what a sublime piece and a sublime performance. Some “violinists” here are criticizing his mushy bow control and lack of clarity on some of the speedier sections. Well, let me tell you something, as an actual violinist myself, this is a mesmerizing performance. He’s an old man for goodness sake, so what if he doesn’t play every note clearly!!! He plays a solid 90% of them clearly! He’s still Menuhin and he still has that rich, lush sound that Menuhin and all the greats always possessed. Furthermore, if you want to talk about control, look at the time he takes to add little bits of vibrato to all of the sections that involve eighth and sixteenth notes or really any section of some speed or intensity. This is a very precise and really, very intense and heartfelt performance by an incredible talented soul. That finish after the cadenza ended and the orchestra came back. So serene, so intimate… Oh, just heavenly!!! Thank you Yehudi!!!
you know what else, he's playing without a shoulder-rest that most modern players can't live without, plus he barely uses his chin-rest but yet manages to perfectly balance that Strad or Guaneri, to nail those double stops at his age is remarkable, yes I agree, an incredible talented soul and a mesmerizing performance! Lisa Batiashvili is impeccable in her magic with these classical pieces as well
@@Santhosh-jn2xw You said it better than I did😉 And speaking of Lisa, I’m seeing her for the very first time in 2024!!! My local Philharmonic Society (Orange County) has brought her and Esa Pekka Salonen to put together an all-Sibelius concert including his 1st Synphony and Finlandia as well as his Violin Concerto featuring Lisa. I’m very excited!!!
@@Tennisisreallyfun Wow, I wish Lisa would come to Dallas and perform with the DSO, she has this ability to make her instrument soar above the notes, hard to describe but as a violinist you prob know what I'm talking about, I may have to fly out to your neck of the woods just to see her, I see she's performing in March, what's a good seat for the best accoustics in that hall?
@@Santhosh-jn2xw You know, the box circle seats are fine and I have tried them before, but they’re so overpriced for what they offer. I have season tickets for the orchestra terraces. They’re on the first level, but slightly up from the stage so at face level with the artists themselves!!! Not only that, but the orchestra terraces have those “terraced” seats so nobody is going to impact your view which, as I mentioned, is at face level, but far enough away so as not to be overwhelming as it would be on the ground. I typically take rows V, W, or X, and I like the Orchestra Terrace Right. Trust me, they are premium seats, and even better sound and view than the box circle which is the next level up and the “best” seats in the house, but not in my opinion as someone who has had season tickets for nearly a decade now. You will love them👌 EDIT: If you are in Orchestra Terrace Right, try not to go too far beyond the first seats of the terrace (seats 2, 4, etc…). You don’t want to go so far where you are facing sideways to the stage.
@@Santhosh-jn2xwI thought I would respond to you again since we talked about Lisa in this thread. I attended that concert back in March and I thought I’d share my thoughts. You were not wrong when you said that she has an ability to make the music soar, so to speak. Her sound is impeccable, no doubt. Full of warmth and texture. But what impressed me the most was actually her intonation. I don’t go to concerts looking for wrong notes as that would ruin the experience, but there’s always a little part in the back of my mind taking an unconscious tally and there was literally one single harmonic in the entirety of that Sibelius Concerto that was slightly off. And she had such perfect bow control as well with every note given exactly the right amount of sound and perhaps some of the smoothest transitions I have seen to date. All very clean, but not clinical, in fact the performance was redolent with soul and passion. In this season alone I have seen violinists such as Midori, Joshua Bell, and even Itzhack Perlman! Although no one beats Perlman, Lisa was actually a very close second. Just marvelous!!!! And she gave us this hymn or something like that by Sibelius as an encore. Not quite sure what the piece was and I’ve been trying to find it, but my goodness, it was heavenly🤩
Wonderful indeed, a great warmth from the beginning. Difficult, tantamount to impossible to crown THE Master in the realm of the super dooper mega violinists.
18:48 Menuhin's wonderful cadenza....! Truly a unique player, a style that only he has and the world hasn't seen since in another player....the passion is all there in every single note.
@@pavelinslovenia Yes, it's his. Unique! Wonderful ! Edit: I've been corrected- it's not his, but Fritz Kreisler's. So technically I find Kreisler's unique and wonderful.
I don't get it, was he unable to play it correctly because of his age? Or did he intentionally play it like that? It's the first time I listen to this violin concerto and his recordings at that age
That´s actually not his Cadenza, but Fritz Kreisler´s. You can find it played by other violinists in many other rercordings like the ones of C. Ferras, Berl Senofsky and Kreisler´s own recording.
@@davidbento7441 I didn't know that, thanks for the info! I looked through sheet music online, probably about only 2 or 3 cadenzas, but couldn't seem to match up any of them to what I heard here. So I thought it was original.
If only music could rule the world fans, just like a prayer for peace, let's save lives and forget war hostilities once for all... recalling such EPIC performances 🎉❤🎉
Beautiful gentle and lyrical. Shows that Menuhin , who could be very tecnically deficient, could produce wonderful interpretations if he was feeling inspired.
9 times out of 10 I'd rather listen to Menuhin being technically deficient, but musically sublime, than a lot of modern players who hit all the right notes, yet have nothing to say, musically speaking.
He is old, he is playing like he is half there. Lots of out of tune notes, wandering tempo and technic is bare knuckles. Menuhin will always be remembered most as that kid that played his first time in Carnegie Hall playing the Beethoven Concerto like an old pro.
1742 Guarneri 'del Gesu' actually. Menuhin's favoured instrument for the latter part of his career. Remarkable power and colours Menuhin is drawing from it in this heroic performance.
His performance in Sydney was canceled and I was so disappointed I didn't bother with a refund, and he died shortly after that so that's one name on my bucket list that will never be crossed off.
I met Yehudi Menuhin at Walter Hall in 1989 at a Masterclass. He is a wonderful performer. I wonder how many people there are who play violin at the same level of experience as Mr Menuhin but for political reasons are never invited to audition at any post secondary school or enter a concert hall. Many people can only learn music at people's homes. Thanks for the video!
According my point of view,Menuhin is one of most highest violinists of XX century,like jascha Heifetz,fritz krysler,ivan galamian,David Oistrakh,Aaron Rosand ,Ruggiero Ricci etc,etc,He was a master of violin my friend.
Having got both Recordings of this Great work the 1949 with Willhelm Furtwangler and the 1957(P1958)with Rudolph Kempe and the Berlin Philharmonic ASD-264 First Pressing
I think it is appalling that youtube neither writes the name of the conductor nor the orchestra, nor where it is. Most people want to know these things. Climb out of the depths to which you have sunk. Other than that, beautiful brilliant playing.
@@peeyansh i thought it might be Berliner Philharmoniker. I recorded this on VHS in the 90s, so I might be wrong. I believe it is only for TV and was never released as tape recording
HalleluYAH that He enables us to enjoy such beautiful music. My dear mother, of precious memory, saturated my being with it from the time I was in her womb growing, playing the old 78's, the FM radio and going to the Grant Park band shell, so that I was already in love with classical music before I was born. I praise Yahuah (KJV: "the LORD") for providing such artists as Yehudi Menuhin to calm our beings in this chaotic, dissonant world, in the Name of our Master Yahusha ("Lord Jesus"), amein & amein!
Potom poprobovala Pharmacy, viju vsyo lechat. Disbakterioz? Ne problema? Cirrhoz? Ne problema. Smotrim vsem daje doma dali. Inchn er? Opera Crap, Music Crap, food crap. Healthcare excellent. Heto nkarum enq stavim portreti v muzeye, es el dser tesq@ in so and so year. Gesture ein uzum, aha, Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Sarqel em saxin, kapel. Nayeq hiatseq. Ed el Astvats. Anorexia ein bujum. Erexes mnats 3 tarekan. Hima el nor ban chem karum sovorem at all. Bandid vonts vor linen. Nayenq asuma pravilno sdelali, saxin tvetsinq, tesnenq incha linum dser verj@. I nichevo xoroshevo. Pol en avlum. Asuma kextot er. Muzei zakrili, biblioteki zakrili, Gallerei zakrili... Mi hat sirunutyun chtoxetsin. Asuma snachalo Kitaytsi, Heto Japanese, heto Germans, heto English, tents uraxatsnum en mek mek, chagazazen. Nayem tenam checka ekel. Harevans el vo dvortse jivyot, razgovarivat ne umeyet, no rabotayet. Asuma Ponyali, da da. Yes Mem. Srants ches hakachari. Yes el arden asuma em Cherez sebya idu, lish bi vsyo po vashemu bilo. Esi troretsi, esi hanetsi i togda li. Everything relies on psychology, tsuyts vetsi, I agree. Esi kez Votq, esi Dserq, es Achq, es el Akanj. Kextotn el kextotin.
My Hungarian music teacher would say that this video might be too expensive! Yehudhi Menuhin does not use a music stand or music or chair as all these items are too expensive!
It's a disgrace that Yehudi Menuhin didn't write any decent music. If only he'd spent less time chewing tofu and more in being creative. There are thousands of violinists.
Всегда казалось, что Брамс скорее взрывной, невероятно эмоциальный и страстный автор, нежели это получилось у Менухина...сколько его слушаю, не покидает ощущение, что он занял место более достойного и его раскручивала мировая мафия и его исполнение было среднего уровня...здесь у него больше моцартовской лирики, рассудочности и некоторой схематичности даже в штрихах - видать, берёг себя в таком почтенном возрасте. Ойстрах и Коган были куда убедительнее и ярче - оттого и сгорели раньше срока...после них слушать Менухина нет смысла.
Gewandhaus Orchestra - Kurt Masur
concert recorded in 1982
Thank you for the informations!
I am 102 years old and have the pleasure of having been present at this unforgettable concert with my now deceased wife. This video caught me off guard, it took my tears, but it left me diamonds.
❤
I can imagine how much you were pleased to find this video of the concert you and your wife were in several decades ago. Hundred and two year old man makes me surprise. You have my respect.
🌺❤️🌺❤️
@@jaejoonwee1720😮😢😢😢
Ignacio I hope this missive finds you still with us,however
I have absolute belief you will relive this memory with your dear wife again.
The late Sir Yehudi Menuhin will never be forgotten. His music lives and breathes naturally. This Brahms performance had uncommon musical insight.
He has a indelible place in our hearts. For me, it has special meaning.
I met him and we talked briefly on two separate occasions; once when I was 14 or 15 years old and 33. Warm and encouraging.
Oh, what a wonderful experience!! What a fortune, that you could meet him!
I prefer his 1962 recording of the Beethoven but that is probably because I merely prefer the Beethoven. Menuhin ranks with Casals and Rubinstein and Heifetz as the greatest of the 20th century, or for that matter, all time. I had the great pleasure of meeting him in 1959 as a student living in San Jose, Ca. One of my most treasured experiences as a music lover.
I would really like to know what Brahms thought or had to say about this concerto
ชอบMenuhin หน้าตาเป็นคน อัจฉริยะ
Menuhin never fail with Brahms Since his great recording with Furtwangler in 1949 till his Masur 1996 . He recorded it too with Kempf too in the sixties all of them are Philosophy
😇
The conductor in his second recording was Rudolf Kempe and it was recorded 1958 .
Indeed
Menuhin never FAILS...
So it’s true. Fritz Kreisler is officially the king of cadenzas! From Beethoven to Brahms, give him a theme and he will write music that is perhaps even more sublime than the original!!! Oh what a sublime piece and a sublime performance. Some “violinists” here are criticizing his mushy bow control and lack of clarity on some of the speedier sections. Well, let me tell you something, as an actual violinist myself, this is a mesmerizing performance. He’s an old man for goodness sake, so what if he doesn’t play every note clearly!!! He plays a solid 90% of them clearly! He’s still Menuhin and he still has that rich, lush sound that Menuhin and all the greats always possessed. Furthermore, if you want to talk about control, look at the time he takes to add little bits of vibrato to all of the sections that involve eighth and sixteenth notes or really any section of some speed or intensity. This is a very precise and really, very intense and heartfelt performance by an incredible talented soul. That finish after the cadenza ended and the orchestra came back. So serene, so intimate… Oh, just heavenly!!! Thank you Yehudi!!!
you know what else, he's playing without a shoulder-rest that most modern players can't live without, plus he barely uses his chin-rest but yet manages to perfectly balance that Strad or Guaneri, to nail those double stops at his age is remarkable, yes I agree, an incredible talented soul and a mesmerizing performance! Lisa Batiashvili is impeccable in her magic with these classical pieces as well
@@Santhosh-jn2xw You said it better than I did😉 And speaking of Lisa, I’m seeing her for the very first time in 2024!!! My local Philharmonic Society (Orange County) has brought her and Esa Pekka Salonen to put together an all-Sibelius concert including his 1st Synphony and Finlandia as well as his Violin Concerto featuring Lisa. I’m very excited!!!
@@Tennisisreallyfun Wow, I wish Lisa would come to Dallas and perform with the DSO, she has this ability to make her instrument soar above the notes, hard to describe but as a violinist you prob know what I'm talking about, I may have to fly out to your neck of the woods just to see her, I see she's performing in March, what's a good seat for the best accoustics in that hall?
@@Santhosh-jn2xw You know, the box circle seats are fine and I have tried them before, but they’re so overpriced for what they offer. I have season tickets for the orchestra terraces. They’re on the first level, but slightly up from the stage so at face level with the artists themselves!!! Not only that, but the orchestra terraces have those “terraced” seats so nobody is going to impact your view which, as I mentioned, is at face level, but far enough away so as not to be overwhelming as it would be on the ground. I typically take rows V, W, or X, and I like the Orchestra Terrace Right. Trust me, they are premium seats, and even better sound and view than the box circle which is the next level up and the “best” seats in the house, but not in my opinion as someone who has had season tickets for nearly a decade now. You will love them👌
EDIT: If you are in Orchestra Terrace Right, try not to go too far beyond the first seats of the terrace (seats 2, 4, etc…). You don’t want to go so far where you are facing sideways to the stage.
@@Santhosh-jn2xwI thought I would respond to you again since we talked about Lisa in this thread. I attended that concert back in March and I thought I’d share my thoughts. You were not wrong when you said that she has an ability to make the music soar, so to speak. Her sound is impeccable, no doubt. Full of warmth and texture. But what impressed me the most was actually her intonation. I don’t go to concerts looking for wrong notes as that would ruin the experience, but there’s always a little part in the back of my mind taking an unconscious tally and there was literally one single harmonic in the entirety of that Sibelius Concerto that was slightly off. And she had such perfect bow control as well with every note given exactly the right amount of sound and perhaps some of the smoothest transitions I have seen to date. All very clean, but not clinical, in fact the performance was redolent with soul and passion. In this season alone I have seen violinists such as Midori, Joshua Bell, and even Itzhack Perlman! Although no one beats Perlman, Lisa was actually a very close second. Just marvelous!!!! And she gave us this hymn or something like that by Sibelius as an encore. Not quite sure what the piece was and I’ve been trying to find it, but my goodness, it was heavenly🤩
OMG, how FABULOUS!!! THANK'S FOR SHARING!!!! MENUHIN FOREVER!!!
Ti amo Brahms e ogni volta che ti ascolto mi vengono i "brividi". Questa esecuzione è divina. Grazie ❤❤❤
In questa Musica c'è la "Vita"
Wonderful indeed, a great warmth from the beginning. Difficult, tantamount to impossible to crown THE Master in the realm of the super dooper mega violinists.
His Cadenza was just on point! Perfect!
Menuhin spielt nicht, er singt. Einmalig!❤❤❤
Bravo , Yehudi , Bravo , Maestro !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
So great!!! Please, please also put the second and the third movements.
Proud to be a Son of yehudha.
That conductor kinda looks like if Brahms and Musorgskij had a baby-
Bonita melodía , me encanta escuchar esta música en las mañanas... saludos desde Chile.
Gewandhaus Orchester Leipzig 1982
18:48 Menuhin's wonderful cadenza....! Truly a unique player, a style that only he has and the world hasn't seen since in another player....the passion is all there in every single note.
Oh my... he wrote that?? (!) So beautiful
@@pavelinslovenia Yes, it's his. Unique! Wonderful !
Edit: I've been corrected- it's not his, but Fritz Kreisler's.
So technically I find Kreisler's unique and wonderful.
I don't get it, was he unable to play it correctly because of his age? Or did he intentionally play it like that?
It's the first time I listen to this violin concerto and his recordings at that age
That´s actually not his Cadenza, but Fritz Kreisler´s.
You can find it played by other violinists in many other rercordings like the ones of C. Ferras, Berl Senofsky and Kreisler´s own recording.
@@davidbento7441 I didn't know that, thanks for the info! I looked through sheet music online, probably about only 2 or 3 cadenzas, but couldn't seem to match up any of them to what I heard here. So I thought it was original.
The conductor is Marx
Miss you Yehudi
If only music could rule the world fans, just like a prayer for peace, let's save lives and forget war hostilities once for all... recalling such EPIC performances 🎉❤🎉
❤
A great reading! So musical. The cadenza is not by Joachim but by Kreisler. Menuhin plays it so brilliantly.
Thanks so much for sharing
do you have second movement?
this was the first version I've heard in 1995 and has been searching for so long
2.Satz : ruclips.net/video/0Pv576Eea-k/видео.html
3.Satz : ruclips.net/video/iOse6qZlrwM/видео.html
@@jomasch9106 thanks for the help
@@jomasch9106 thank you very much sir.
Yehudi Menuhin est notre belle référence dans l’interprétation du violon au 20ème siècle. Il rayonne au 21ème siècle… Et il va rayonner longtemps !
Minuto 22 a 23 puro arte; del 23 en adelante hasta el seg,45, lo sublime, la poesía total...
Beautiful gentle and lyrical. Shows that Menuhin , who could be very tecnically deficient, could produce wonderful interpretations if he was feeling inspired.
9 times out of 10 I'd rather listen to Menuhin being technically deficient, but musically sublime, than a lot of modern players who hit all the right notes, yet have nothing to say, musically speaking.
Men@@TB-us7el
Ling Ling would be proud of his 40hrs practice daily 🖤🎻
Who is ling ling?
@@bricotico6498 check two set violin
Oh no not Ling Ling again
Interesting. Didn't excpect to see my fellow Ling Ling wannabes here
The conductor looks like Brahms!
And Menuhin looks like a Jewish Clint Eastwood
Barak Porat Menuhin is actually jewish
@@ludmilazimmerman7624 Clint Eastwood isn't
Лирико - фантастишь!!!! Брависсимо!!! Не знал, что концерт Брамса можно так лирично играть, обычно все только и делают, что "рвут и мечут".
Augustin hadelich...
I saw mr menuhin perform the Bach chacconne in the cloisters in 1967.
The only! Bravo, forever!
no shoulder rest, so nice looking and free arm
Que viva muchos años
mas con ese talento
maravilloso !!!!
He is old, he is playing like he is half there. Lots of out of tune notes, wandering tempo and technic is bare knuckles. Menuhin will always be remembered most as that kid that played his first time in Carnegie Hall playing the Beethoven Concerto like an old pro.
Brilliant cadenza
This violin is a Stradivari
1742 Guarneri 'del Gesu' actually. Menuhin's favoured instrument for the latter part of his career. Remarkable power and colours Menuhin is drawing from it in this heroic performance.
This is lord Wilton del Gesu.
, I think.
His Soil Strad already sold to Perlman at that time.
Magestuosa interpretación del Excepcional Violinista .
Bravo
His performance in Sydney was canceled and I was so disappointed I didn't bother with a refund, and he died shortly after that so that's one name on my bucket list that will never be crossed off.
You have genuinely provided value to me, which I think others could also benefit from.
Fa invisible power. Some villages use fa fresh and free to enjoy their cassettes.
I took my father to meet Mr Menuhin, and my father said in wonder "I shook the great man's hand
"
Usually violinists get worse with age. Menuhin reached his peak and stayed there until his death
😂
It's 2021, we're now back to folks with long beard style again...
So we all have to use antiperspitant not to sweat. On top of everything we don't sweat.
Boy he was a good fiddler 😂😊😊😇🥰
This is the only brahms violin concerto version i like, no other player convices me with this piece. Mr. Menuhin was a god given talent!
Christian Ferras convinces me more.
Amazing 😍😍😍
Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, 1982, Kurt Masur (as noted in another comment)
I met Yehudi Menuhin at Walter Hall in 1989 at a Masterclass. He is a wonderful performer. I wonder how many people there are who play violin at the same level of experience as Mr Menuhin but for political reasons are never invited to audition at any post secondary school or enter a concert hall. Many people can only learn music at people's homes. Thanks for the video!
İnanılmaz
🫂🙏🧿🌹✌️
Is this Menuhin’s original cadenza???
i believe it is the kreisler one
Aroxchutyan vra eva xnayum? YOu know what I mean?
Impecable .!!!!! e inolvidable ...❤️🌹
My mother used Blago cooking oil.
Holycarp this is the best version the heard yet
His Cadenza was just on point! Perfect!
indeed
Menohin was one the best,And Will ever be ❤
Quel plaisir d entendre yudi menuhin merci à vous
According my point of view,Menuhin is one of most highest violinists of XX century,like jascha Heifetz,fritz krysler,ivan galamian,David Oistrakh,Aaron Rosand ,Ruggiero Ricci etc,etc,He was a master of violin my friend.
Having got both Recordings of this Great work the 1949 with Willhelm Furtwangler and the 1957(P1958)with Rudolph Kempe and the Berlin Philharmonic ASD-264 First Pressing
I think it is appalling that youtube neither writes the name of the conductor nor the orchestra, nor where it is. Most people want to know these things. Climb out of the depths to which you have sunk.
Other than that, beautiful brilliant playing.
kurt masur and the leipzig gewandhausorchester i think
@@peeyansh i thought it might be Berliner Philharmoniker. I recorded this on VHS in the 90s, so I might be wrong. I believe it is only for TV and was never released as tape recording
Y.Menuhin es uno de los grandes violinistas
- gracias por tener la
gran oportunidad de
escuchar esta gran
obra de Brahms. Es un gran placer !!!!!
HalleluYAH that He enables us to enjoy such beautiful music. My dear mother, of precious memory, saturated my being with it from the time I was in her womb growing, playing the old 78's, the FM radio and going to the Grant Park band shell, so that I was already in love with classical music before I was born. I praise Yahuah (KJV: "the LORD") for providing such artists as Yehudi Menuhin to calm our beings in this chaotic, dissonant world, in the Name of our Master Yahusha ("Lord Jesus"), amein & amein!
Potom poprobovala Pharmacy, viju vsyo lechat. Disbakterioz? Ne problema? Cirrhoz? Ne problema. Smotrim vsem daje doma dali. Inchn er? Opera Crap, Music Crap, food crap. Healthcare excellent. Heto nkarum enq stavim portreti v muzeye, es el dser tesq@ in so and so year. Gesture ein uzum, aha, Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Sarqel em saxin, kapel. Nayeq hiatseq. Ed el Astvats. Anorexia ein bujum. Erexes mnats 3 tarekan. Hima el nor ban chem karum sovorem at all. Bandid vonts vor linen. Nayenq asuma pravilno sdelali, saxin tvetsinq, tesnenq incha linum dser verj@. I nichevo xoroshevo. Pol en avlum. Asuma kextot er. Muzei zakrili, biblioteki zakrili, Gallerei zakrili... Mi hat sirunutyun chtoxetsin. Asuma snachalo Kitaytsi, Heto Japanese, heto Germans, heto English, tents uraxatsnum en mek mek, chagazazen. Nayem tenam checka ekel. Harevans el vo dvortse jivyot, razgovarivat ne umeyet, no rabotayet. Asuma Ponyali, da da. Yes Mem. Srants ches hakachari. Yes el arden asuma em Cherez sebya idu, lish bi vsyo po vashemu bilo. Esi troretsi, esi hanetsi i togda li. Everything relies on psychology, tsuyts vetsi, I agree. Esi kez Votq, esi Dserq, es Achq, es el Akanj. Kextotn el kextotin.
上手いね 素晴らしい
18:48
I met menuhin many years ago twice we had a very nice visit together what an an amazing artist genius and what a great man God bless his memories
El hecho de que siga
tocando a esa edad,
merece el aplauso mas grande, pues trae
la musica en el alma.
Bravo !!!!!
My Hungarian music teacher would say that this video might be too expensive! Yehudhi Menuhin does not use a music stand or music or chair as all these items are too expensive!
It’s a disgrace that superstars nowadays like taylor swift don’t even know how to read music notations.
It's a disgrace that Yehudi Menuhin didn't write any decent music. If only he'd spent less time chewing tofu and more in being creative. There are thousands of violinists.
I am sure he could have written some three-chord pop songs to please the tiktok audience of this generation if his standards were that low.
The way you talk about other people is disgraceful
Fritz Kreisler Cadenza ..
Спасибо за редкое видео! Великолепная интерпретация великого музыканта.
Sublime!!!
Bravo
No shoulder rest for the mastah
Qué orquesta mas triste, todo hombres 🤔🤔😅😅😂😂🤣🤣
I think he was the best performer of the 20th cen.
I really respect his musicality.
MATUR SUKSMA
BRAVO !
Für mich der größte 🎻 aller Zeiten. Seine Autobiographie ist phantastisch!
Many thanks for sharing Wonderful music achievements
Strange, the orchestra is entirely composed of one of the two genders
Who in the world cares.
Even if her performed this in his sleep, he would do it well.
Comfort of his performance is off the charts
Crédito a la orquesta y al enorme Maestro Masur.
Thankyou
Yehudi Menuhin in Poland
数少ないクライスラーカデンツァ!
Thank You.
Gran director de orquesta sinfónica.
Exellent
0:55
Hy hehuda
Blessed 🌹🌸🌻
its great!!!!
Un régal !
Всегда казалось, что Брамс скорее взрывной, невероятно эмоциальный и страстный автор, нежели это получилось у Менухина...сколько его слушаю, не покидает ощущение, что он занял место более достойного и его раскручивала мировая мафия и его исполнение было среднего уровня...здесь у него больше моцартовской лирики, рассудочности и некоторой схематичности даже в штрихах - видать, берёг себя в таком почтенном возрасте. Ойстрах и Коган были куда убедительнее и ярче - оттого и сгорели раньше срока...после них слушать Менухина нет смысла.
帅哥!!!我心中的男神Male god
Awesome 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
The lead up to 13:10 is insane