The lady on Chloe’s right is the principal of her music school. The man on her left is her violin teacher, Mr Yin Ke. Host to Mr Yin Ke: What’s the significance/status of the Menuhin competition in the world of classical music? Yin Ke: It’s the competition of the highest standard for adolescents, sometimes referred to as the “Olympics” of the classical music scene. Host: You’ve been teaching and accompanying Ke Yi (Chloe) on her musical journey from the tender age of 5 to 12. From a beginner to the world champion she is now, what kind of training has she been through? Yin Ke: The school, teachers, her parents and Chloe herself have put in tremendous efforts for this. We had to have great chemistry and a common understanding to nurture a champion like her. The intense hard work also brought about immense joy and great results. Host: Ke Yi, do you remember how it felt when you clinched the top award last year? Chloe: I was really excited. I didn’t expect to get it because it was very difficult to win. Host: Were you nervous then? Chloe: I was quite relaxed but sometimes I get overly excited. (How cute!) Host: What happens when you’re over excited? Chloe: My stomach hurts. Host: Is this a common problem for young children? Yin Ke: Yeah, this is quite a normal reaction for kids when they get nervous. Host: I heard Ke Yi worked really hard in preparation for the competition, putting in more than 5 hours of training a day. Did you do that everyday? Chloe: Yes, everyday. Host: Did you find it tough? Chloe: No, I didn’t think so because I think it’s worth putting in all that hard work. Host: Do you remember your first impression of the violin at age 5? Chloe: Yes I do because I saw it just as a toy. I didn’t think too much about it..I just put the bow on the strings and played around with it. It was so fun. Host: Principal, Is this the mindset children ought to have from the start? Principal: Of course it’s always fun at the start but if you want to be trained seriously, it can be arduous. CHLOE PERFORMS. Host: Principal, we often hear that music is based on innate talent. Can this be developed through nurture? Principal: Yes it’s possible. You do need talent because music is somewhat different. However, If you have talent but don’t work hard, the talent is wasted. Some children have talent but it’s not as obvious. That can be discovered and developed through our training methods. Host: In Singapore, parents have this dilemma. They hope for their child to discover their talents but there is just too much schoolwork. Principal: At our school, we find that the problem often is that kids do not have enough time to train. So with this constriction, the programme has to be really streamlined and focused. We looked at international programmes and found a way to combine what’s good about their pedagogy with what is uniquely Singaporean. Many of these international programmes are professional programs where they can learn many aspects but we do not have as much time. So we are particularly selective with what we teach based on the student’s needs. This is how we have done it over the years.
The lady on Chloe’s right is the principal of her music school. The man on her left is her violin teacher, Mr Yin Ke. Host to Mr Yin Ke: What’s the significance/status of the Menuhin competition in the world of classical music? Yin Ke: It’s the competition of the highest standard for adolescents, sometimes referred to as the “Olympics” of the classical music scene. Host: You’ve been teaching and accompanying Ke Yi (Chloe) on her musical journey from the tender age of 5 to 12. From a beginner to the world champion she is now, what kind of training has she been through? Yin Ke: The school, teachers, her parents and Chloe herself have put in tremendous efforts for this. We had to have great chemistry and a common understanding to nurture a champion like her. The intense hard work also brought about immense joy and great results. Host: Ke Yi, do you remember how it felt when you clinched the top award last year? Chloe: I was really excited. I didn’t expect to get it because it was very difficult to win. Host: Were you nervous then? Chloe: I was quite relaxed but sometimes I get overly excited. (How cute!) Host: What happens when you’re over excited? Chloe: My stomach hurts. Host: Is this a common problem for young children? Yin Ke: Yeah, this is quite a normal reaction for kids when they get nervous. Host: I heard Ke Yi worked really hard in preparation for the competition, putting in more than 5 hours of training a day. Did you do that everyday? Chloe: Yes, everyday. Host: Did you find it tough? Chloe: No, I didn’t think so because I think it’s worth putting in all that hard work. Host: Do you remember your first impression of the violin at age 5? Chloe: Yes I do because I saw it just as a toy. I didn’t think too much about it..I just put the bow on the strings and played around with it. It was so fun. Host: Principal, Is this the mindset children ought to have from the start? Principal: Of course it’s always fun at the start but if you want to be trained seriously, it can be arduous. CHLOE PERFORMS. Host: Principal, we often hear that music is based on innate talent. Can this be developed through nurture? Principal: Yes it’s possible. You do need talent because music is somewhat different. However, If you have talent but don’t work hard, the talent is wasted. Some children have talent but it’s not as obvious. That can be discovered and developed through our training methods. Host: In Singapore, parents have this dilemma. They hope for their child to discover their talents but there is just too much schoolwork. Principal: At our school, we find that the problem often is that kids do not have enough time to train. So with this constriction, the programme has to be really streamlined and focused. We looked at international programmes and found a way to combine what’s good about their pedagogy with what is uniquely Singaporean. Many of these international programmes are professional programs where they can learn many aspects but we do not have as much time. So we are particularly selective with what we teach based on the student’s needs. This is how we have done it over the years.
The lady on Chloe’s right is the principal of her music school. The man on her left is her violin teacher, Mr Yin Ke. Host to Mr Yin Ke: What’s the significance/status of the Menuhin competition in the world of classical music? Yin Ke: It’s the competition of the highest standard for adolescents, sometimes referred to as the “Olympics” of the classical music scene. Host: You’ve been teaching and accompanying Ke Yi (Chloe) on her musical journey from the tender age of 5 to 12. From a beginner to the world champion she is now, what kind of training has she been through? Yin Ke: The school, teachers, her parents and Chloe herself have put in tremendous efforts for this. We had to have great chemistry and a common understanding to nurture a champion like her. The intense hard work also brought about immense joy and great results. Host: Ke Yi, do you remember how it felt when you clinched the top award last year? Chloe: I was really excited. I didn’t expect to get it because it was very difficult to win. Host: Were you nervous then? Chloe: I was quite relaxed but sometimes I get overly excited. (How cute!) Host: What happens when you’re over excited? Chloe: My stomach hurts. Host: Is this a common problem for young children? Yin Ke: Yeah, this is quite a normal reaction for kids when they get nervous. Host: I heard Ke Yi worked really hard in preparation for the competition, putting in more than 5 hours of training a day. Did you do that everyday? Chloe: Yes, everyday. Host: Did you find it tough? Chloe: No, I didn’t think so because I think it’s worth putting in all that hard work. Host: Do you remember your first impression of the violin at age 5? Chloe: Yes I do because I saw it just as a toy. I didn’t think too much about it..I just put the bow on the strings and played around with it. It was so fun. Host: Principal, Is this the mindset children ought to have from the start? Principal: Of course it’s always fun at the start but if you want to be trained seriously, it can be arduous. CHLOE PERFORMS. Host: Principal, we often hear that music is based on innate talent. Can this be developed through nurture? Principal: Yes it’s possible. You do need talent because music is somewhat different. However, If you have talent but don’t work hard, the talent is wasted. Some children have talent but it’s not as obvious. That can be discovered and developed through our training methods. Host: In Singapore, parents have this dilemma. They hope for their child to discover their talents but there is just too much schoolwork. Principal: At our school, we find that the problem often is that kids do not have enough time to train. So with this constriction, the programme has to be really streamlined and focused. We looked at international programmes and found a way to combine what’s good about their pedagogy with what is uniquely Singaporean. Many of these international programmes are professional programs where they can learn many aspects but we do not have as much time. So we are particularly selective with what we teach based on the student’s needs. This is how we have done it over the years.
“I wouldn’t be nervous but sometimes I would get too excited.” “What would happen when you are excited?” “Stomache.” Hahah Chloe soo cute and talented :')
@@sofiesummerbradley Chloe's parents have played a huge role in her personal and, in the case of her mother Eng Lee, who is a pianist, her musical, development. There are photos of the two of them with Chloe in this very interesting article, together with an explanation of the roles they have respectively played. (It requires machine-translation.) www.shwyw.cn/article-7174-1.html Chloe's mother is the accompanist in the beautiful performance of "Albumblatt" that is on Chloe's channel!
The lady on her right is the principal of Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts- School of Young Talents (Chloe's school) and the gentleman on her left is Mr Yin Ke, her violin teacher.
@@Beesurvivor You're welcome. I'm going to translate this video in a couple of hours since she has so many non-mandarin speaking fans who will like to find out more..
3:17 "I heard you practice 5 hours every hour"
Ling Ling:finally, a worthy opponent
Do you mean opponent?
以为就我听到了呢。。。神tm每小时练习五小时
才五個小時,音樂附小大把孩子每天6小時以上......
@@Angelicawoo 人家是每小时五个小时,也就是每天120个小时
24x4=120
She Practices more than ling ling
To become lingling, you need to practice 5 hours an hour.
Ling Ling said he practices 40 hours, he never practiced 5 hours
@@llacrymossa are you stupid or are you just bad at maths?
高手都是用一個小時練三百分鐘
@@HeNTaI-oe7xw haha it's a Twoset violin joke. The fictional character Ling ling practices 40 hours a day.
the host literally asked her in the video: “是不是每小时都练五小时?”🤣🤣
Chloe fans without Mandarin still watch the video from beginning to end out of loyalty..
well i skipped through a little bit . hehe
@@mattmartian1658 That's like practicing only 39 hours a day. 😞
@@grantbmilburn lol.
The lady on Chloe’s right is the principal of her music school. The man on her left is her violin teacher, Mr Yin Ke.
Host to Mr Yin Ke: What’s the significance/status of the Menuhin competition in the world of classical music?
Yin Ke: It’s the competition of the highest standard for adolescents, sometimes referred to as the “Olympics” of the classical music scene.
Host: You’ve been teaching and accompanying Ke Yi (Chloe) on her musical journey from the tender age of 5 to 12. From a beginner to the world champion she is now, what kind of training has she been through?
Yin Ke: The school, teachers, her parents and Chloe herself have put in tremendous efforts for this. We had to have great chemistry and a common understanding to nurture a champion like her. The intense hard work also brought about immense joy and great results.
Host: Ke Yi, do you remember how it felt when you clinched the top award last year?
Chloe: I was really excited. I didn’t expect to get it because it was very difficult to win.
Host: Were you nervous then?
Chloe: I was quite relaxed but sometimes I get overly excited. (How cute!)
Host: What happens when you’re over excited?
Chloe: My stomach hurts.
Host: Is this a common problem for young children?
Yin Ke: Yeah, this is quite a normal reaction for kids when they get nervous.
Host: I heard Ke Yi worked really hard in preparation for the competition, putting in more than 5 hours of training a day. Did you do that everyday?
Chloe: Yes, everyday.
Host: Did you find it tough?
Chloe: No, I didn’t think so because I think it’s worth putting in all that hard work.
Host: Do you remember your first impression of the violin at age 5?
Chloe: Yes I do because I saw it just as a toy. I didn’t think too much about it..I just put the bow on the strings and played around with it. It was so fun.
Host: Principal, Is this the mindset children ought to have from the start?
Principal: Of course it’s always fun at the start but if you want to be trained seriously, it can be arduous.
CHLOE PERFORMS.
Host: Principal, we often hear that music is based on innate talent. Can this be developed through nurture?
Principal: Yes it’s possible. You do need talent because music is somewhat different. However, If you have talent but don’t work hard, the talent is wasted. Some children have talent but it’s not as obvious. That can be discovered and developed through our training methods.
Host: In Singapore, parents have this dilemma. They hope for their child to discover their talents but there is just too much schoolwork.
Principal: At our school, we find that the problem often is that kids do not have enough time to train. So with this constriction, the programme has to be really streamlined and focused. We looked at international programmes and found a way to combine what’s good about their pedagogy with what is uniquely Singaporean. Many of these international programmes are professional programs where they can learn many aspects but we do not have as much time. So we are particularly selective with what we teach based on the student’s needs. This is how we have done it over the years.
@@n661 thank you soooo much!
The lady on Chloe’s right is the principal of her music school. The man on her left is her violin teacher, Mr Yin Ke.
Host to Mr Yin Ke: What’s the significance/status of the Menuhin competition in the world of classical music?
Yin Ke: It’s the competition of the highest standard for adolescents, sometimes referred to as the “Olympics” of the classical music scene.
Host: You’ve been teaching and accompanying Ke Yi (Chloe) on her musical journey from the tender age of 5 to 12. From a beginner to the world champion she is now, what kind of training has she been through?
Yin Ke: The school, teachers, her parents and Chloe herself have put in tremendous efforts for this. We had to have great chemistry and a common understanding to nurture a champion like her. The intense hard work also brought about immense joy and great results.
Host: Ke Yi, do you remember how it felt when you clinched the top award last year?
Chloe: I was really excited. I didn’t expect to get it because it was very difficult to win.
Host: Were you nervous then?
Chloe: I was quite relaxed but sometimes I get overly excited. (How cute!)
Host: What happens when you’re over excited?
Chloe: My stomach hurts.
Host: Is this a common problem for young children?
Yin Ke: Yeah, this is quite a normal reaction for kids when they get nervous.
Host: I heard Ke Yi worked really hard in preparation for the competition, putting in more than 5 hours of training a day. Did you do that everyday?
Chloe: Yes, everyday.
Host: Did you find it tough?
Chloe: No, I didn’t think so because I think it’s worth putting in all that hard work.
Host: Do you remember your first impression of the violin at age 5?
Chloe: Yes I do because I saw it just as a toy. I didn’t think too much about it..I just put the bow on the strings and played around with it. It was so fun.
Host: Principal, Is this the mindset children ought to have from the start?
Principal: Of course it’s always fun at the start but if you want to be trained seriously, it can be arduous.
CHLOE PERFORMS.
Host: Principal, we often hear that music is based on innate talent. Can this be developed through nurture?
Principal: Yes it’s possible. You do need talent because music is somewhat different. However, If you have talent but don’t work hard, the talent is wasted. Some children have talent but it’s not as obvious. That can be discovered and developed through our training methods.
Host: In Singapore, parents have this dilemma. They hope for their child to discover their talents but there is just too much schoolwork.
Principal: At our school, we find that the problem often is that kids do not have enough time to train. So with this constriction, the programme has to be really streamlined and focused. We looked at international programmes and found a way to combine what’s good about their pedagogy with what is uniquely Singaporean. Many of these international programmes are professional programs where they can learn many aspects but we do not have as much time. So we are particularly selective with what we teach based on the student’s needs. This is how we have done it over the years.
Thank you so much!
May god bless you
@@jenthefwen A kikuo fan!, Salute 🤝
Thank you so much
I don't know how to speak mandarin but I am still watching
lol, me too....
Same
Me too
The lady on Chloe’s right is the principal of her music school. The man on her left is her violin teacher, Mr Yin Ke.
Host to Mr Yin Ke: What’s the significance/status of the Menuhin competition in the world of classical music?
Yin Ke: It’s the competition of the highest standard for adolescents, sometimes referred to as the “Olympics” of the classical music scene.
Host: You’ve been teaching and accompanying Ke Yi (Chloe) on her musical journey from the tender age of 5 to 12. From a beginner to the world champion she is now, what kind of training has she been through?
Yin Ke: The school, teachers, her parents and Chloe herself have put in tremendous efforts for this. We had to have great chemistry and a common understanding to nurture a champion like her. The intense hard work also brought about immense joy and great results.
Host: Ke Yi, do you remember how it felt when you clinched the top award last year?
Chloe: I was really excited. I didn’t expect to get it because it was very difficult to win.
Host: Were you nervous then?
Chloe: I was quite relaxed but sometimes I get overly excited. (How cute!)
Host: What happens when you’re over excited?
Chloe: My stomach hurts.
Host: Is this a common problem for young children?
Yin Ke: Yeah, this is quite a normal reaction for kids when they get nervous.
Host: I heard Ke Yi worked really hard in preparation for the competition, putting in more than 5 hours of training a day. Did you do that everyday?
Chloe: Yes, everyday.
Host: Did you find it tough?
Chloe: No, I didn’t think so because I think it’s worth putting in all that hard work.
Host: Do you remember your first impression of the violin at age 5?
Chloe: Yes I do because I saw it just as a toy. I didn’t think too much about it..I just put the bow on the strings and played around with it. It was so fun.
Host: Principal, Is this the mindset children ought to have from the start?
Principal: Of course it’s always fun at the start but if you want to be trained seriously, it can be arduous.
CHLOE PERFORMS.
Host: Principal, we often hear that music is based on innate talent. Can this be developed through nurture?
Principal: Yes it’s possible. You do need talent because music is somewhat different. However, If you have talent but don’t work hard, the talent is wasted. Some children have talent but it’s not as obvious. That can be discovered and developed through our training methods.
Host: In Singapore, parents have this dilemma. They hope for their child to discover their talents but there is just too much schoolwork.
Principal: At our school, we find that the problem often is that kids do not have enough time to train. So with this constriction, the programme has to be really streamlined and focused. We looked at international programmes and found a way to combine what’s good about their pedagogy with what is uniquely Singaporean. Many of these international programmes are professional programs where they can learn many aspects but we do not have as much time. So we are particularly selective with what we teach based on the student’s needs. This is how we have done it over the years.
Chloe 好可爱呀😊
“I wouldn’t be nervous but sometimes I would get too excited.”
“What would happen when you are excited?”
“Stomache.”
Hahah Chloe soo cute and talented :')
Lol
Im so jealous. I want to be able to understand her language too. :(
第一次听她说中文诶
天份+興趣+口袋深+名師
我是从 Twosetviolin 而来的
Same
Same here
双琴侠,出!!
看到 Chloe 就立马点了进来呵呵呵
她好可爱噢
難得聽到珂宜說中文www
珂宜教授的中文口音也好可愛山口山~
從two set violin來的嗎😂😂😂
@@spinalcordinjury8947 對啊www
珂宜教授真滴4太厲害了!自覺這幾年音樂白學了。
所以只好 -Chloe40hours- *改玩虛擬歌手www*
她非常棒👍,今天已經可以當很好的指導老師了,我昨天才看的短片
Chole's Chinese accent is sooooo cute
太棒的演奏了,清晰的發音,高標準的音準,完全超出了她的年齡!
這個孩子除了天賦,更有異與常人的努力
I don't understand a single thing but just wanna see the cute little Chloe ♡
I dont understand Chinese, Im just curious on how Chloe speak Chinese😂😂
Singapore learns Chinese as well
same😂😂😂
Because we do learn Chinese as a second language. We call it Mother's tongue
@@SingaporeLyfe yup, Im Korean and its my mother tongue
And I will speak Chinese to you 你好我是华人
每天只练5个小时,7年就这么厉害了。。。真的是天才!艺术太看天赋了!
一天五小时并不少啊…如果是刻意练习就更累了
@@vivitu4350 这在专业音乐院校,是很普通的练习时长了,基本上所有人都练那么久,光中国九大音乐学院就有几百这么大的小提琴学生,也没有见谁能参加梅纽因比赛,音乐真的是太看天赋了,5个小时7年就到这个水平这个小姑娘天赋真的好
@@juandeng6149 我們家的20-30分一天,還不是每天練,cloe 7 年,我家的70年也趕不上
梅纽因比赛重要性其实不如帕格尼尼比赛
Omg the host asked whether she practises 5 hours in an hour -.-
"听说你每小时练习5小时,辛不辛苦"。主持人,我听了都替你感到辛苦。
笑死了
主持人似乎不明白 她在跟神說話 還在那邊嗲聲嗲氣逗小孩zzz
人家一天都練40個小時的
Chloe講中文真的超可愛
im a simple person. i see chloe i click.
edit: i should probably start watching channel 8 again lmao
someone please translate this.thank you.
eh cute eh her little “你好”
Did not understand anything and no subtitles either. Can someone tell if those are Chloe’s parents?
@pigjedi thank you so much! :)
@@sofiesummerbradley
Chloe's parents have played a huge role in her personal and, in the case of her mother Eng Lee, who is a pianist, her musical, development.
There are photos of the two of them with Chloe in this very interesting article, together with an explanation of the roles they have respectively played. (It requires machine-translation.)
www.shwyw.cn/article-7174-1.html
Chloe's mother is the accompanist in the beautiful performance of "Albumblatt" that is on Chloe's channel!
SUPER TALENT. superb !!!!!!! WOW so beautiful music
She jumped into that cold - no warm-up. And yeah, that makes it even more difficult.
Chloe 和 Christian 好可爱啊!
It sounded like a heifetz recording when she started playing
太興奮XDDDDD
我的話大概緊張到死吧...
What a candid and adorable child!
她很可爱
現在已是亭亭玉立,十八姑娘一朵花👍
Lingling 40 hour!
哈哈哈“太过幸福”
看到有其他地区的中文台感觉很亲切,作为一个一直在大陆长大的中国人:)
她是新加坡人吧🤔不是中國人
克洛伊的音樂非常好聽✨🥰
.即便登顶世界第一梯队 也免不了在长辈面前表演的命运😂
I speak English. Is the guy her violin teacher? And the lady in blue her mother?
Yes, the guy is her teacher and no, that’s not her mother. she’s her school principal .
And in 2021 Chloe Chua is roasting TwoSetViolin and still being humble to them when she's 1000x better than them
lingling 40 hours. Host: I've heard that you practice for 5 hours every hour. LOL
Such a shame that this video is uploaded with such a poor quality audio.
小小年纪,如此的有才华
我的给我儿子看下。非常好的榜样。
为啥小提琴弹得这么好,英文中文还讲得这么好啊,真的太棒了
人家是新加坡人啊😂
因為她是新加坡人, 當然會一點中文,還有她去了Curtis學琴,英文自然也會好
lingling!!!
太強!!!
Those adults beside her are her parents ? Just asking.....
The lady on her right is the principal of Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts- School of Young Talents (Chloe's school) and the gentleman on her left is Mr Yin Ke, her violin teacher.
@@n661 Thanks
@@Beesurvivor You're welcome. I'm going to translate this video in a couple of hours since she has so many non-mandarin speaking fans who will like to find out more..
superb
Very good
主要是家长培养出来的,跟学校关系不太大吧。
努力能讓你避免坐地板,但是只有極高的天賦配套才能夠到天花板。沒
Utrolig krontrol❤️❤️🏁🇩🇰
Chloe saying chinese is so cuteee
👍👏👏👍👏
It cute
No se que dicen pero si si a huevo.
XD
😲😲😲
Alguém traduz por favor
那就告知葉
In Spanish please ! ! ! ! !
主持人空有臉蛋,問題深度好差,也不懂音樂
瞎扯,不要赶鸭子上架。
她是真的很厲害 可以去搜她的比賽影片
少吃柠檬,多练琴