Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Join the YouTube Symphony Orchestra


Join the world's first collaborative online orchestra.

From the YouTube Symphony Orchestra page: http://www.youtube.com/symphony
We invite musicians from around the world to audition for the YouTube Symphony Orchestra. Your video entries will be combined into the first ever collaborative virtual performance, and the world will select the best of you to perform at New York City's Carnegie Hall in April 2009.

1. Prepare - Select your instrument to access the sheet music and rehearse with the conductor
2. Submit - Upload your performances and submit them to join the YouTube Symphony Orchestra
3. Entries - Browse videos to get ideas and check out the competition

Here's the catch: "The best and the bravest of you will be invited at the Carnegie Hall"

Watch the video below:




They also have violin masterclass videos for the YSO audition:

Here's the violin part:



What are you waiting for? Join now! Go to the YSO website, hit the Get Started button, pick an instrument, and download your piece.

Submission of videos is up until January 28, 2009.

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Merry Christmas Junkies!

Merry Christmas to all Violin Junkies! To all my readers and visitors! Thank You and Happy Holidays!

I wish you a Merry Christmas!

Vanilla Mood - We Wish You A Merry Christmas


Saturday, November 29, 2008

Miri Ben Ari - Female hip-hop violinist

Another chick violinist. She is Miri Ben Ari, a hip-hop violinist.

Watch some of Miri Ben Ari videos here:


"People tell me when I play, they don't even think it's the violin- it transcends to be another voice," she says. "That's my voice. I feel like a rapper when I go onstage. I express myself similarly, my voice is the violin."

-Miri Ben-Ari

Miri Ben-Ari On Apollo video


I think she's cool and hot at the same time!

Friday, October 31, 2008

Cello Rock Groups: APOCALYPTICA and Cello trio Melo-M

They are not violinist but I want to share some Cello Rock!

Here's APOCALYPTICA! A cello rock group.


PATH music video


The Cello trio MELO-M with the Liepaja Symphony Orchestra (Latvia)


Final Countdown with some headbanging!


What do you guys think of them?

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Violinist: Janine Jansen

Janine Jansen: The Dutch Violinist





Janine Jansen is one of the most promising violinists. She's Dutch and oh let me correct the heading, she's not just a violinist. She can also play the viola with equal brilliance.

Her recordings:
Tchaikovsky: Violin Concertos
Bach: Inventions & Partitia
Mendelssohn & Bruch: Violin Concertos
Vivaldi: The Four Seasons
Janine Jansen Album

Her Bach: Inventions and Partita album is a great album. You can listen to her recording even if you're studying. She provided me a daily dose of Bach and I always listen to it before I sleep. :D

I first saw her on YouTube when I searched for some Bach violin music at the site. I watched the first video and I found myself searching for more videos of her, typing Janine Jansen on the search bar. I have embedded some of her videos here from YouTube for you to watch. Enjoy!
I hope you'll like this beautiful and great violinist.

She uses Antonio Stradivari, Cremona, 1727 violin.


I heart Janine Jansen! :D

Jansen: The Bach Album
Dutch violinist Janine Jansen brings a fresh chamber approach to Bach's two and thee-part inventions. The centrepiece of this recording is her thrilling D minor partita for solo violin. (source: DeccaMusicGroup)






Mozart Violin Concerto 5 in A Major
The Mozart Violin Concerto videos: (courtesy of DrMontague)




















Biography from her website: janinejansen.com
Janine studied with Coosje Wijzenbeek, Philipp Hirshhorn and Boris Belkin. She was a previous BBC New Generation Artist and in September 2003 she received the Dutch Music Prize from the Ministry of Culture – the highest distinction an artist can receive in The Netherlands.

She received numerous awards including the Edison Classic Public Award three times, an Echo award for her Vivaldi recording in 2006 and her Mendelssohn/Bruch album in 2007 as well as the NDR Musikpreis for outstanding artistic achievement in 2007.

The outstanding instrument being used by Janine Jansen is the violin by Antonio Stradivari, Cremona, 1727, ‘Barrere’ – on extended loan from the Elise Mathilde Fund through intermediation of The Stradivari Society® of Chicago.


You should also see her picture gallery on her site to see more of her pictures. She's very beautiful! Really beautiful! Here's some of her pics. (from janinejansen.com)


Saturday, October 11, 2008

The Daily Contributor: Your Daily Contributor for News, Technology, Sports, and Entertainment



I just want to promote my new blog. It's called The Daily Contributor.

My new blog was officailly launched on September 27.

The blog covers topics such as:
  • Technology - The latest technologies, gadgets, and things on the web
  • Sports - Updates on hoops, the boxing ring and other Sports
  • Entertainment - The Latest Buzz on Music, T.V., Movies and Hollywood
  • Fun - Funny and weird things, pictures, news on the web

The Daily Contributor is currently a 4 Man blog but if you are interested to be a contributor, just post a comment here and I'll get back to you.

You can subscribe to our feeds via a reader or by e-mail.

Thanks!

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

My Violin Group: Class picture at the MPO Office

These pictures was taken at the Manila Philharmonic Orchestra (MPO) Office. We are conducting our lessons there every Saturday.

Group Picture 1: (From left to right) Ron, JJ, Ate Jessica (The Teacher), Me


Group Picture 2: (From left to right) Ron, JJ, Me, Ate Jessica (Sensei)


ME and Our Teacer (Jessica Trinidad) - She owns a Violin made by a famous Filipino Luthier, Amador Tamayo.


We are 5 in our class but unfortunately the other 2 is absent. This is the last lesson for our group class. After learning some pieces, the 3 of us have decided to re-enroll to further our learning. =) Class starts September 27.

It's fun learning the violin!

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Video: Suzuki Violin School: Volume 1

I 've managed to collect videos on YouTube and posted it in here for easy reference. This collection is a good reference for those using the Suzuki Method and the Suzuki Violin School book, Violin Part, Volume 1 by Suzuki Method International.


Most of the videos here were played by a female violin player from South Korea. I am a subscriber of her videos on Youtube. The pieces were played using an electric violin.


The other 2 videos (Lightly Row and Andantino) were posted on Youtube by violinspieler from Germany.


Enjoy Watching!




1.
Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star Variations, Shinichi Suzuki




2. Lightly Row,
Folk Song




3. Song of the Wind,
Folk Song




4. Go Tell Aunt Rhody,
Folk Song




5. O Come, Little Children,
Folk Song




6. May Song,
Folk Song




7. Long, Long Ago,
T.H. Bayly




8. Allegro,
Shinichi Suzuki




9. Perpetual Motion,
Shinichi Suzuki


10. Allegretto, Shinichi Suzuki


11. Andantino, Shinichi Suzuki


12. Etude, Shinichi Suzuki


13. Minuet 1, J.S. Bach


14. Minuet 2, J.S. Bach




15. Minuet 3,
J.S. Bach




16. The Happy Farmer,
R. Schumann


17. Gavotte, F.J. Gossec


The CD that comes with the book is of course the best reference for the Volume 1 pieces but a visual reference is also a great help.

You are encouraged to bookmark this page. :D


Special thanks to sori1004jy and violinspieler.

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

A Suzuki Recital with Mr. Shinichi Suzuki

A rare video of Mr. Suzuki's students in a recital. 

These kids are great! Maybe all of them are now accomplished violinists in Japan.

They are playing "Bach A Minor Concerto 3rd Movement" of  Suzuki Book 7. 

OMG!


I wish I had a great teacher like him when I was I child! hehe

Violinist: Hilary Hahn

She's on my list. One of the best violinist of this generation. At 28 years of age she had already traveled so many countries, touring for concerts and album promotions. She is Hilary Hahn.


photo credit: Kasskara courtesy of Deutsche Grammophon

Hilary Hahn is an American violinist born November 27, 1979 in Lexington, Virginia.

Hahn began playing the violin one month before her fourth birthday in the Suzuki Program of Baltimore's Peabody Conservatory. She participated in a Suzuki class for about a year. Between 1984 and 1989 Hahn studied in Baltimore under the direction of Klara Berkovich. In 1990, at the age of ten, Hahn was admitted to the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia where she became a student of Jascha Brodsky. Hahn studied with Brodsky for seven years and learned the études of Kreutzer, Ševčík, Gaviniès, Rode, as well as the Paganini Caprices. She also learned about twenty-eight violin concertos, recital programs, and several other short pieces.

"At the age of 28, Grammy Award-winning violinist Hilary Hahn is one of the most compelling artists on the international concert circuit. Renowned for her intellectual and emotional maturity, she was named "America's Best" young classical musician by Time Magazine in 2001, and appears on a regular basis with the world's great orchestras in Europe, Asia, and North America." - HilaryHahn.com


Her Instrument

Hilary Hahn plays an 1864 Vuillaume violin that was formerly owned by the Russian violinist Samuel Lande who was a friend of Klara Berkovich, Hahn’s first teacher. Hahn uses Dominant strings and bows by French bow makers Paul Jombar and Emil Miquel.


Some of my favorite Hilary Hahn videos on YouTube

Hilary Hahn - Sibelius Violin Concerto (Allegro Moderato) - she is still very young on this video. She recorded Schoenberg & Sibelius Violin Concertos with Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra this year.

Hilary Hahn plays Der Erlkoenig


Hilary Hahn Plays Paganiniana


Visit Hilary Hahn website to know more about her. hilaryhahn.com
She's got an online journal and she writes some articles there. That's what she said in an interview before.

Enjoy!

references:
hilaryhahn.com
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hilary_Hahn

Friday, August 29, 2008

Hip-Hop Violin: Nuttin but Stringz


Meet Damien and Tourie Escobar. They call themselves as Nuttin' But Stringz. They are brothers and both studied at the Juliard School of Music and Bloomingdale School of Music. They play an intense blend of classical music, jazz, R&B and hip-hop. They can rap too!

These guys are amazing! They've put the violin into a different genre. Do not imitate their bow hand though. haha!

They were discovered on America's Got Talent June 2008.


Then later created an album, music videos and I saw them on Step Up 1.

THUNDER




They're ain't nuttin' for me!

Check out their website: http://www.nuttinbutstringz.com

Itzhak Perlman and Pinchas Zukerman

They belong to my list of The best of the best violinists ever existed.
Perlman and Zukerman Duo is just great!

Watch the two of them as they play the Handel-Halvorsen: Passacaglia.
Perlman is playing the violin while Pinky is playing the viola on this one.
The video is quite old though but you should watch it. Enjoy!


Thursday, August 28, 2008

violinjunkie on friendfeed


I have created a room for you violin junkies!
Just go to this link http://friendfeed.com/rooms/violinjunkie and click JOIN.

See you all there and share your violin love. :D

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Paganini Avatar

I got this avatar making site from a multiply post and I tried to create one for our long lost friend Niccolo Paganini. After a few minutes of work, here it is. I've included a Paganini picture for reference.

















Haha! Are they look-alike? :D

Do you want your own Avatar? Click here!
It does'nt look like manga though.

Violinist/Composer: Niccolò Paganini

Niccolò Paganini (born Genoa, October 27, 1782, died Nice, May 27, 1840) was an Italian violinist, violist, guitarist, and composer. He was one of the most celebrated violin virtuosi of his time, and left his mark as one of the pillars of modern violin technique. His 24 caprices is among his best known compositions, and serves as inspiration for other prominent artists from Johannes Brahms to Sergei Rachmaninoff.

Paganini's signature violin, Il Cannone fabricated in 1742 by Giuseppe Antonio Guarnieri del Gesù, was his favourite. He named it "The Cannon" because of the powerful and explosive resonance he was able to produce from it. Its strings are nearly on the same plane, as opposed to most violins, the strings of which are distinctly arched to prevent accidentally bowing extra strings. The stringing of Il Cannone may have allowed Paganini to play on three or even four strings at once. Il Cannone is now in the hands of the City of Genoa, where it is exhibited in the town hall. It is taken out and played by its curator once monthly, and periodically loaned out to virtuosi of today.

I enjoy watching violinists on Youtube playing Paganini's Caprices. Here is Jascha Heifetz , one of my favorite violinist (I will feature him soon here) playing the Paganini Caprice #24. Enjoy!

Saturday, August 23, 2008

Dr. Shinichi Suzuki and "The Suzuki Method"

The Suzuki method (スズキ・メソード), also called Talent Education, mother-tongue method, or Suzuki movement) is an educational philosophy which strives to create "high ability" and beautiful character in its students through a nurturing environment. Its primary vehicle for achieving this is music education on a specific instrument. The 'nurture' involved in the movement is modeled on a concept of early childhood education that focused on factors thought then to be present in native language acquisition, such as immersion, encouragement, small steps, and an unforced timetable for learning material based on each person's developmental readiness to imitate examples, internalize principles, and contribute novel ideas.

The term "Suzuki method" is also sometimes used to refer solely to the Suzuki repertoire of sheet music books and/or audio recordings which have been published as part of its music education method.

Shinichi Suzuki

"I want to make good citizens. If a child hears fine music from the day of his birth and learns to play it himself, he develops sensitivity, discipline and endurance. He gets a beautiful heart."
-Shinichi Suzuki

Shinichi Suzuki, the man who developed the Suzuki Method, died on January 26, 1998, at his home in Matsumoto, Japan. Though he lived to be 99 years old, Dr. Suzuki always seemed young. He was full of energy, and was cheerful and loving to everyone he met.

Shinichi Suzuki was born on October 17, 1898, in Nagoya, Japan. He was one of twelve children and his father owned a violin factory. Shinichi and his brothers and sisters played near the factory and saw instruments being made, but the children never realized what beautiful sounds could come from a violin. When he was seventeen, Shinichi heard a recording of Schubert’s Ave Maria, played by a famous violinist named Mischa Elman. He was amazed that a violin could make such a beautiful tone because he had thought it was just a toy!

After this, Shinichi brought a violin home from the factory and taught himself to play. He would listen to a recording and try to imitate what he heard. A few years later he took violin lessons from a teacher in Tokyo. Then, when he was 22 years old, he went to Germany and studied with a famous teacher named Karl Klingler. Shinichi also met his wife Waltraud in Germany. They married and moved back to Japan, where he began to teach violin and play string quartet concerts with his brothers.

Shinichi had always loved children and became very interested in teaching them. He thought that children could learn music just as they learned to speak—starting when they were very young and hearing music all around them. He believed that all children have the talent to learn if they are taught well by loving parents and teachers. These were very unusual ideas at that time. If children did play an instrument, they started learning when they were ten or eleven. Also, most people thought that musical talent was a special thing that only a few people had.

Dr. Suzuki’s young students learned to play very well and everyone was amazed when they performed. No one had ever seen so many young children playing music so beautifully. At first people thought all the students were musical geniuses. They did not understand Suzuki’s idea that all children can learn if they are taught in the right way.

For many years Dr. Suzuki continued to work on his teaching method. He chose music that would help children learn to play. He even wrote some pieces himself (like the Twinkle Variations, Allegro, Perpetual Motion, and Etude). Teachers from many countries came to Japan to learn about his method of teaching, and Dr. Suzuki and his students traveled to play in other countries. Over the years, more and more teachers and parents became interested in Suzuki’s ideas and began to teach children with his method. Now there are thousands of children around the world who have learned to play instruments through the Suzuki Method.

Through his teaching, Dr. Suzuki showed teachers and parents everywhere what children could do. He also believed that hearing and playing great music helped children become good people with beautiful, peaceful hearts. Dr. Suzuki hoped that these children would help bring peace and understanding to the world.


References:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suzuki_method

http://suzukiassociation.org/about/suzuki/


Violinist Around The World

Are you now inspired up by those Itzhak Perlman videos? Or do you now want to break that David Garret world record as the fastest violinist someday?

If you are still trying to find who your favorite violinist is going to be, here's a link for some of the famous violinist around the globe. The lists includes those legendary violinist or those people that you will not be able to see in person because they are long gone.

Go to these links:
http://www.theviolinsite.com/violinists/index.html
http://www2.osk.3web.ne.jp/~wistaria/violinists.htm

The second link includes personal website/s of the violinist.

The Red Violin


The Red Violin is a beautiful award-winning film of great drama and emotion, with a stunning soundtrack from major contemporary composer John Corigliano that features a brilliant performance from violinist Joshua Bell. The film was released by Lion's Gate Films on June 11, 1999 in New York and Los Angeles, and opened in wide release in the following weeks.

A tale filled with passion, pageantry, tragedy, romance, adventure and intrigue, The Red Violin centers around a contemporary auction in which a priceless violin with an infamous past is placed on the block. As the bidding mounts, the story flashes back to signature chapters in the violin's history and the inevitable impact it had on all those who possessed it. From its creation in 17th-century Italy, to the court of imperial Vienna in the 1790s, to Victorian England in the late 1800s, to the People's Republic of China in the mid-1960s, the dramatic story spans continents and sweeps centuries. At the center of the story is a dark secret that is only revealed at the film's suspenseful and sensational finale.

Directed by François Girard and with an original screenplay by Girard and Don McKellar (the creative team behind the award-winning film Thirty-Two Short Films About Glenn Gould), The Red Violin boasts a stellar international cast including Samuel L. Jackson, Greta Scacchi, Colm Feore, Don McKellar, Jason Flemyng and Sylvia Chang.

In addition to the film's score, the soundtrack features the premiere recording of Corigliano's "The Red Violin -- Chaconne for Violin and Orchestra", a concert work the composer created with themes from the film. Corigliano is best known as the composer of the opera The Ghosts of Versailles as well as the Symphony No.1 "Of Rage and Remembrance". He received an Academy Award® nomination in 1980 for his first film score, for Ken Russell's Altered States.

For more details about this movie:
Visit: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Red_Violin
Reference:
http://www.sonyclassical.com/music/63010/

Friday, August 22, 2008

Itzhak Perlman: Evolution Videos Of A Virtuoso Violinist

Itzhak Perlman (born August 31, 1945) is an Israeli-American violinist, conductor, and pedagogue. He is one of the most distinguished violinists of the late 20th century and one of my favorites!

Itzhak Perlman 13 years old Mendelssohn Violin Concerto


Wieniaswky Concerto no2 - Young Itzhak Perlman


Itzhak Perlman (Schindler's List)

David Garrett - Czardas

Another David Garrett video (with orchestra):He is playing Czardas (The Gypsy Dance) composed by Victorio Monti.
Great Playing! One of my favorite piece.



David Garrett Sets World Record For “Flight of the Bumblebee” on Violin

David Garrett Sets World Record For “Flight of the Bumblebee” on Violin

Probably best (infamously) known for being the violinist to fall down the stairs and break his $1 million Guadagnini Violin (often mistakingly reported as a Stradivarius), David Garrett plays some familiar tunes and then goes on to break the world record for playing the popular piece, “The Flight of the Bumblebee.” The piece normally takes approximately 80 seconds to perform at tempo, David performs it in just 66 seconds! As a warm-up he also performs bits of Madonna’s Four Minute, Mika’s Grace Kelly, and Estelle’s American Boy.



David Garrett is the fastest violinist as of this day.

Violin Playing: How to get started?

Ok, so you want to start as a beginner? Let me list all of the stuffs you need to acquire before you or your children becomes a violin student.

1. You must have a teacher
It is the very first requirement. I suggest you contact a music school or a local orchestra to find one. Try to search the web for available teachers near you. I found my current teacher on the web. She's a member of an orchestra but still studying her Bachelor's degree.

2. Violin (of course!)
You need to have a violin. There's a lot of music stores out there where you can find student violins. Seek for a "violin outfit". A violin outfit is a complete package mostly for beginners. The outfit includes the violin, case, violin bow, and a rosin. It is enough to get you started.
I suggest you go with your teacher when you buy your outfit. Teachers knows best what's the right size for you and they can test the sound of the violin if it's good or unacceptable. Find a violin according to your budget.

3. Time
Be dedicated. Once you start to study the violin you should be dedicated to practice and practice and practice some more.

So that's about it, off you go! Good luck!

Welcome to violinjunkie.blogspot.com!

At last! I have a blog site for my violin addiction. It is obvious on the blog name that I became a violin junkie. haha! I only started to play the violin a few weeks ago when my friends and I decided to enroll in a group violin lessons at MPO (Manila Philharmonic Orchestra).

I am very happy to be a violin beginner. It is my life long dream to play the violin. Violin playing is very addicting, I got hit by OCVD (Obssessive Compulsive Violin Disorder) and I can't get enough of it. LOL!

This site will be full of violin stuff, blogs about different violin virtuosos, review of recordings, conciertos, favorite violin stuffs, and many others related to the violin and music in general.

You can visit my site every now and then for updates and new posts. Thank You!

Randy
Violin Junkie