@@marshallartz395 She is such an incredibly talented prodigy that classical violin music just runs through her veins. The doctors clearly saw this upon her birth as her first cry was to Paganini's Caprice No. 24. :-)
This girl is geniuses. This was played in korean tv program. She was tested her talent. It came out she enjoys. She also has such a heart. She had concert for sick people. I truly wish her best.
Most of the pieces for the people who want it : 0:57 Twinkle Twinkle Little Star (Mozart) - Suzuki 1 1:19 Happy Birthday :) 1:36 sorry can’t find it :( 2:53 Theme from the Witches Dance (Paganini) - Suzuki 2 3:30 Humoresque (Dvorak)- Suzuki 3 4:15 Concertino in B minor, 1st movement (Rieding) 4:23 Concerto No.2, 3rd movement (Seitz) - Suzuki 4 5:09 Concerto in A Minor, 1st movement (Vivaldi) - Suzuki 4 6:04 Double Concerto in D minor, 2nd violin, 1st movement (Bach) - Suzuki 4 6:56 Concerto in G minor, 3rd movement (Vivaldi) - Suzuki 5 7:22 Allegro (Fiocco) - Suzuki 6 7:42 Gigue from Sonata in D Minor (Verancini) - Suzuki 5 8:04 Concerto in A Minor, 1st movement (Bach) - Suzuki 7 9:40 Sonata No.4 in D major, 2nd movement (Handel) - Suzuki 6 You’re welcome
@@rupertacuesta well most musicians start learning music at a young age. I can't believe you DESIRE to learn a instrument at 5,6,7 (yeah yeah, 6 year olds are smarter, but they still do what their parents decided for them.) She just started earlier and that doesn't mean anything elss
No Body My mom plays over the rainbow on her violin, ( it’s 30 years old ) and loves the wizard of oz. I’m 9, and she’s letting me learn the violin! I just wrote this because of you’re profile.
Haha - when I was three the best thing I could do was climb everything, and shove cake in my family members face on their birthdays :) Istarted a tradition :)
I work with kids, and let me just say that most five year olds I work with don’t have the fine motor skills for scissors, this girl could move each of her fingers independently to play a violin when she was three. That’s wild.
Right?? I've worked with two year olds that still had high chairs. And when they mentioned that she was playing from memory, that's impressive, but I was twice as impressed when it showed her reading music at like, 3 because most kids don't learn their alphabet until then or even commonly later
It's a wonder then as to how her parents even knew she could even be able to play something such as the violin at such an early age. Who's parents actually think like this and what exactly prompts them?
@@kuzumi920 Because Maddy mentioned how most 5 year old in her class don't have fine motor skill for scissors ..So Heidrun spoke of different teaching system in Hungary .They start teaching kids very early so they gain lot experience and skills :)
Me too! 45 years old and playing Vivaldi concerto in A minor (first movement), is what I learned last year, and this year learning the second violin part of the double Bach in d minor (first movement).
You guys really make me laugh. Right before you stop the video of her playing a passage, I was making the same comments and expletives. It is so cool to listen to you and think about your musical journey and mine. I started playing violin when I was 12 and now I am 70. I am working on the last movement of the Mendelssohn violin concerto and will give my first recital in about 45 years. Thanks for posting, I am telling all my violin students about you :)
Her face went from “oaheuehueheueheee this is fun” to “game face on, I now realize I have the super powers to destroy adult musicians’ self-esteem...must get better....must inflict maximum damage.....must inflict ultimate KO....”
There's something off with seeing tiny children playing instruments perfectly. At least this girl is having fun with it. Most prodigies look robotic and joyless as if they're forced to play. Not her, I really appreciate that.
Is her parent the one playing the piano in some of them? Maybe they made playing instruments a game, and so she actually enjoys it and it's not psychological torture like with many kids who are forced into playing an instrument so their parents can brag to their friends about it...
@@iamchanman4041 I don’t think she would look that happy if her parents were like that. Look how she’s smiling while playing. Plus, even if her parents were like that, it still takes so much skill to make that much progress in a short amount of time.
@@iamchanman4041 - We don’t know a thing about that. She truly seems to like playing, but I don’t know how much she has to practice and how she likes that, if she is made to practice, which I do not agree with, if it happens to children.
@@iamchanman4041 Dude, I wouldn't make assumptions. If anything, listen to literally everyone else who can tell from the way she's smiling that she is enjoying herself.
@@iamchanman4041 my colleague told me his parents brutally beat him at three years old if he played a wrong note and was forced to play for at least three hours STRAIGHT a day. And he had to smile the entire time or else his parents were giving him up for adoption. His parents were arrested when the police found out and he grew up with his much nicer uncle after his parents were arrested though.
Idk whether to admire the girl more or the teacher for being able to help her progress that much so young while still keeping her interest, they're both incredible
It’s what the Suzuki Method was designed to do for anyone at any age. Incremental technique based on listening and rote memory. It’s also called the “Mother Tongue” method because it’s designed for the mother to study first for about 6 mos & to teach and share with the child. It mimics the way we learn language from (usually, in Patriarchal societies) the mother. Shinizi Suzuki’s family manufactured violins, so he knew how to make affordable instruments to size. He was trying to develop something to give children hope and self esteem after he saw how traumatized Japanese children were after the US invented overkill, for one thing, and annihilated so many civilians with the Atomic Bomb (speaking of darkness). It’s such an effective method it spread around the world & was adapted to other stringed instruments and piano.
Suzuki doesn’t teach sight reading at the beginning. They use a simplified written form in the beginning ( letters for the notes, and highlight each one with a different color corresponding eith the string on which it is to be played.) and transition to actual sheet music later. So she probably isn’t reading most of that on a typical staff. Hugely impressive skill tho in such a little one!!
She has left me breathless!!! What a delightfully charming child! And, your reactions echoed mine but were appropriately timed to help in understanding how extraordinary her talent is. I played “with” a violin many years ago but seeing this angel play and your amazement, I know I never really played it! 🤣 Thank you for this joyful video and for your channel❣️🐅
It's a little known fact but these prodigies are just fragments of Ling Ling, only through joining all these prodigies together does Ling Ling finally become whole again.
Everyone be praising the Prodigy but I'm gonna give the teacher a standing ovation. The kid pick and learn new things impressively fast, but it takes a lot for the teacher too
Her teacher probably utilizes A LOT of ear training, esp when she first started. It's a lot easier to mimic a rhythm you've heard than to read it dry and try to figure it out mathematically. Most young children can't figure it out. I started at 3 and my teacher didn't even try, a lot of what she taught was by rote. The only thing I looked at when I first started were the numbers for the fingering. Note values and pitches came later as my understanding of music got more advanced.
I guess this is how everyone should learn. The classic way of teaching is underestimating the power of Human mind... (After Understanding the music it is a lot easier)
@@Ahmed-mz7xo I mean it depends on the person. People who are super analytical would benefit more from applying music theory to their playing, but people who are more creative might learn better with lots of ear training. The sign of a good teacher is one who can recognize what each student needs, since everyone learns differently. With most super young kids, the ear training is very effective because their cognitive skills are still super low just due to age. But it really depends. In the vid, that little one was already reading advanced sheet music at 4, so you never know.
It is apparent that she's going through the suzuki method, given that a couple clips are at suzuki institutes, going through the suzuki books, and performing with piano accompaniment. You can review the teaching technique concepts summarized on wikipedia for those unfamiliar and it covers what you've said. But beyond the basics described, Part of suzuki concept is the repertoire is the same, and there are weekly performances by everyone in the class, so you not only learn the songs from recordings but every week you sit and hear other students play the pieces. So by the time you get to the new piece you already heard it 100+ times from other students, even if you weren't studying it yet you already know how the piece goes. Just like how 3yo can sing babyshark and complex pop songs that has rhythm shifts because they've heard it 100times. Kids even can parrot back the entirety of bohemian rhapsody with no concept of music theory.
@@raytseng1979 I was about to say the exact thing :D Yeah, I've been trained through the Suzuki Method, so I really know that she was also trained by the same method. Even the pieces (some I think cause I never went past Book 2) that she played came from Suzuki Books. :)
To me as a weightlifter, this is the equivalent of seeing 14 year old chinese girls squatting a metric shit ton more than i can and then crying in the corner EDIT: heres an example if you're curious th-cam.com/video/KyW967OvQC8/w-d-xo.html
It's truly amazing to see children find their natural talents at such a young age. Some people go their entire lives without experiencing that. I hope she understands (eventually) how incredible that is ❤️
I eman kids like that have brains that develop way faster than other kids so that’s why people can explain advanced stuff like that to them and they get it. It’s why you see 10 year olds doing college kind of stuff
same. i literally cant do anything anymore. all i can think about is them, im begging for it to be a joke. i lost sleep over it. i literally cannot stop crying man
Her channel is *YoEun Seol* you can find latest update there. She's nine now. In interview she said: When I was 3(Korean age) there was friend one year older than me who played violin and I saw violin it looks really weird/unique in young kid's eyes. So I went to violin class with her since then I didn't lost interest in violin and keep playing since then. What do you think while playing violin? Violin gives me support when I feel lonely. I feel happy while playing violin and whe I can't do some technique I would keep practice until I could do when I finally able to do that I feel very proud of myself. also Yoeun in other TV show about young musicians : How do you memorize all these notes? My fingers just go on their own before I actually think.
Hey what's Korean years? I thought years were the same everywhere? Like they start and end at different times but it doesn't make a difference in age does it? Wow I'm dumb-
@@gaanadelrey In Korea, on the day baby born they are 1 years old. international age is 0years old cuz they just born. and one more thing is that in Korea you don't get old on your birthday. All people automatically get old in 1st of January. So let's say you born 31th of December 2000. In 31th Dec 2000, you are 1years old. In 1st Jan 2001, You are 2years old but actually 2days old in international age. So generally you are 1 year older than your international age in korea. In this video. they wrote international age in english and Korean age in korean.
@@lotion75ml more precisely in original video twoset reacted it said she was 2year 8months old(int' age) when she had her first lesson. still mind blowing🤯
I love that she’s smiling and genuinely enjoying herself. I can’t wait to see how she plays when she gets older. So talented. Bravo to her parents, her instructor and her.
Don't know why algorithm gave me this, but thanks. These two guys were so respectful and serious about the little girl's talent. They never once made fun of her or laughed at her. Great video.
You don’t necessarily have to “explain” anything to young kids when teaching. You do something and they’ll copy you. Kids are actually great at imitating whatever they see and hear. The biggest challenge is keeping their attention and making learning fun. She definitely has amazing skills, and kudos to parents and teachers for guiding her well. 😊
No Kudos to the parents. The only way a three-year-old gets that good at anything is if they practice 5 hours a day, every day. No exceptions,;no say in the matter. No friends. No playtime. She goes to lessons, does hours of practice, then school, more practics, sleep, repeat.
Kari Ziebarth we don’t know that. I’ve seen her other videos, I think she’s 6? now, and it seems that she really enjoys what she’s doing. Her eyes twinkle when she plays. I don’t want to judge on how her parents brought her up, but if she’s happy playing the violin, I’d say it’s still better than others who leave their kids in front of the tv the whole day.
@@Cesiaj I am still not even remotely convinced that she hasn't had this life forced upon her. I will however agree with you that it's better to have parents that care too much than ones who don't care enough.
Ngl everytime I watch this video I'm actually more curious about the kid's teacher rather than the kid itself. The kid's obviously very talented, but can you imagine trying to teach a 2 year old kid play the violin? Her teacher must also be very talented.
@@kittenmimi5326 nope. most kids that age don't even have a proper functioning memory, let alone a consciousness. Not entirely sure why you thought that was a joke?
My brother started violin age 5. A year later it was my turn. He was furious when he heard me play so easily. I had spent a year hearing all his practice, so once I could put my fingers on the strings the pieces play themselves from memory. He took up the trumpet after that. Sacrilegious.
lol, im kinda annoyed that my brother is so good already but i think that now you say it, listening in the backround to me playing could of helped him lol, never-the-less it is really annoying
Lmao happened to my sister with piano, she spent 2 years practicing, I ended up on her level within 3 weeks, if only I started earlier I could've been so good by now
Hearing his practice would do nothing for knowing where any of the notes are, the technique or the muscle memory it takes to learn an instrument. So im calling BS on this.
@@BnMProductions11 You are bang out of order. It takes only seconds to learn where to put your fingers to make the notes, but repeatedly hearing tunes means replicating them is easy, particularly with perfect pitch.
I really want to see an interview with her parents and or teacher, because it's not that she was born a musical genius, it's about how the teacher explains complexities to a 3 year old.
I think it's a combination of both. Yes, the environment matters. But it can only take you so far if you don't have any natural aptitude. Everyone who's taught a significant amount of students knows this.
@@reepicheepsfriend Humans don't have advantages over others intellectually when born, small details that happen around them that we haven't yet figured out from age 0 to age 6 affect what kind of person they turn out to be, It's the most crucial part of a human's life.
@@reepicheepsfriend yes, but my opinion is that sometimes parents should force their kids to do some educational things. Especially when they are that young. I can explain (but sorry my English, I'm from Russia). When you're 3-6 years old, you're still exploring the world. You have no idea what is funny and what is boring, because there are no examples of people's attitudes towards different kinds of occupation. If your parents say that you have to learn how to read, you won't mind, because they are the only people in your inner circle and you see that they encourage you in your education! At the very beginning kids can resist, but if their parents gently and calmly force them to keep practicing, they will become great in the future. I don't think this girl watches TV or playing with toys, I bet her parents made her love the violin.
I love how you guys express your appreciation for this young girl's skill, I'm so use to hearing about football, basketball and baseball players talk like that. This is really special from the commentary to the outstanding music.
Seeing her smile and enjoy herself is such a relief because I'd hate to think she was one of the many kids who are forced to give up being 'just a kid' for the sake of their overbearing achievement-obsessed parents, and it looks like she genuinely enjoys this, so as a child psychologist that was my favourite part of this video (and the reactions from the guys, acknowledging her talent)
I read an article about this chess Grand Master who wanted his daughters to learn chess but understood that if he forced them to learn that they would never become great because they would eventually resent him. So he started by putting chess pieces in their cribs and play area to get them interested and used to chess paraphernalia. Then he would play near them and eventually they asked questions about what he was doing and eventually asked to learn how to play. I think both his daughters ended up champions and all because he made it a fun game, not a chore.
@@ayameisastarow that’s really nice- cause my parents wanted me to play piano but I didn’t really wanted to learn anything back then, but my parents said it was either I play piano or I’ll learn tennis. But I’ve never liked tennis so I just went with piano. But now my parents just force me to practice piano every day it’s getting a lot more annoying and it’s also talking away my time. And now they want me to play another instrument and it’s ok not too hard but still! I still have school and homework and other stuff that I have to take care of. It’s really sad. :(
@@ayameisastar He's playing phycological chess and planning for his kids' next few moves. Little did his daughters know that he had a checkmate in four before they were even born...
@@Akari_Yue Playing an instrument is more than entertaining, it's developmental. It shows up in unexpected ways. Like the children with the chess pieces in their crib, the human mind develops in different stages. Not unlike learning an extra language at an early age, music opens doors that might otherwise remain closed. A fundamental early experience with music can positively effect the understanding and aptitude with mathematics. You don't have to completely understand or appreciate that your parents want you to practice, and keep paying for your lessons. Try to appreciate that you have that opportunity, and that millions of children around the world do not. Even if you decide to stop at some point in your life when you make your own decisions, keep your last violin. I promise there will come a point when you miss it, and you'll pick it up again.
What you have here is an extraordinary endowment of prodigious giftedness for the instrument. It's like she was born with an instinctive intuitive understanding of the essence of violin. It's amazing.
The fact that she's playing like that and probably can't even read her own language properly, look at the whiteboard at 5:50, she's learning 한글 (Hangeul - Korean alphabet)!! This is impressive 👏
@@floppyfox9614 Actually, Korean alphabets are easier to remember. There are ways to help memorise them in a day like how the letter 'g' in Korean looks like a gun and the first letter of 'gun' is 'g'. There are also two lesser alphabets in Korean alphabets. Don't get me wrong, the language itself is still difficult to learn just like all other languages.
When it amazes you so much you stop having your esteem destroyed but more in awe and hope she grows into who she wants to be and be able to do what you love. It's great seeing classical music and the violin still manages to engage such young practitioner !
I got to know this little prodigy on Korea TV show few years ago which introduced many prodigies all different fields. Her name is Yoeun Sul. She loves to play violin all the times as you see her smile all through the videos. Not only that she has such a beautiful heart that kept growing her hair long enough to cut off to donate to other young children patients who suffer for cancer. She loves to help other children. Her parents rise her well.
Thanks for the info. Yes the main thing to me watching this was seeing how much she was enjoying it as prodigy or not that is the important thing for such a young child
I absolutely adore when kids are actually having fun with their instruments. I honestly kind of envy it since I started piano when I was 5-6. I’d have an hour long classes every day (and an hour is rlly long to a little kid, especially when you don’t like what your doing,) and every hour spent playing piano was my mom screaming at me for not knowing the notes, playing or hitting the wrong keys. So I grew up able to play the piano but I hated it so much. It was probably the only skill I wish I didn’t have.
The same with my situation, it's hard to like piano again because my mom force me to play when I was small. Not to mention the teacher tend to hit my hand if I play wrongly. At the end, I do hope you try to like playing the piano again or perhasp other instrument that can make you happy.
I get how you feel! I started at ~6 and definitely didn’t enjoy the piano as much bc my mom would always hover over me and yell at me to restart every time I made a mistake or played “too slow” when learning a piece. She would also distract me by turning the TV/radio on loud so I could “hear myself”. I got to a high level but still can’t bring myself to play around people tbh. I’m glad these kids seem to find joy in practicing/improving and I hope you found a hobby/instrument you enjoy too!
Heh heh you'll get past it! The same thing happened to me. I would literally scream every time I had to practice, and I hated piano and I wanted to quit. But now, it's better. A few years ago I realized I sounded okay, and my parents stopped watching over me while I practiced, and so I just kind of started liking it more. Now I think I'm completely over the "i hate piano" stage, and I can actually be proud of myself and enjoy it (when I have pieces that sound good, of course. A.k.a. anything except for Czerny lol). So don't worry! Keep it up, don't quit, and you will get past it.
This must be what Mozart was like... She hears the notes in her head perfectly, so even if they are not perfectly in tune, she is still playing the music (phrasing) as if they were correct - she is interpreting pure music, and it's all going on inside her head. Astounding. Bit like a composer would do, actually 🙂
I once watched her video (yes, she is poooopular) when she composed a short piece, and present that piece with story. About happy bear or something like that.
Oh my goodness she’s amazing! I’d be concerned about her doing this so young but look how much fun she is having and how proud she is. I always think it’s just so amazing. How did her parents and she know that this was the perfect thing for her? That’s divine intervention.
I know right? Usually with these videos I have to pick up my confidence from the ground because of how this kids are talented, but this time it's couple of meters lower because I also know I am nowhere as good of a teacher :D
Her little smile whenever she plays is so cute! Like that kind of pure joy is just so contagious and I hope she keeps feeling that kind of happiness whenever she plays
Whenever I see young children doing this great at learning the instrument, I can't help but feel how amazing must be their teachers or parents too. Because a child can learn the instrument at a very young age (she obviously has a native talent for that), but that can go to no fruition if she doesn't have a good adult doing amazing supervision.
@@artemisia4718 Yeah I've seen some of her other videos and the best thing about them is the delighted smile she has on her face. It's impressive to hear a prodigy play but it's lovely to see a young child enjoying music so much.
I believe their teacher also learning/studying young kids-children behaviour or parenting things beside being musician. Because teaching young kids is REALLY HARD for me 😭
I went to school with a harp playing prodigy, you'd swear she was made of water the way she flowed along the strings. Doesn't have a happy ending though, turned out her family forced her to practice like half the day and she wasn't allowed to hang out with friends or pursue others hobbies and interests. This led to her committing suicide at age 16. Because of this I always feel bad for child prodigies. I know they could've picked up the instrument themselves and they could be under no pressure from parents, but that story is always the first thing that springs to mind
I am very impressed. As a music teacher, I have taught kids below 3 years and its very hard to even get them to focus. Its like, Teacher: Its time for your Violin lesson Student: Spongebob
th-cam.com/video/sv9csMGnIJE/w-d-xo.html Not the greatest performance I've heard, but she's 10, I guess! And it's enjoyable to watch because she still has the same smile she did in those clips from when she was 3 and 4.
Foonf Keng Mok Ha, disappointing. At one, i did professional powerlifting (200 kg squat) and entered in a military branch and got a wife and 3 kids (not trying to flex)
I get the feeling she was a violin in a past life. It's part of her. Like, there has to be a ton of practice involved, but she has an understanding of beats, timing, power to put into it, all of it. There is something that is natural about it. Her little giggle shows she really enjoys this and is having fun. I wonder if she is playing with composing her own stuff by now.
the untranslated parts give me shock too, so I’m sharing 1:00 ONE month after 1:45 finished Suzuki 1 4:15 finished Suzuki 3, right before getting into book 4 6:50 took off the fingering tapes 6:57 first song with vibrato
Only musicians know the pain and how truly unbelievable she is. The skill. Not talent but pure joy and commitment and understanding she has of the violin. SHE IS THE NEW AND IMPROVED LING LING
english translation for anyone who's wondering what the korean subs say 0:42 first lesson 0:55 (it's been) a month since learning. first official playing 1:35 the day she finished suzuki book 1 4:15 finished (suzuki) book 3, right before learning book 4. 4:23 finally a 1/10 violin! 5:09 also learning third position~ 6:50 took off the fingering tapes~ 6:56 first piece after learning vibrato 7:21 (the banner says)2016 little star summer music camp 9:40 practicing the piece she's recently learning~
Imagine a tiny orchestra. Kid conducter, 4 y olds playing strings, persucssion, woodwinds etc. It'd be so adorable Edit- BONUS the audience are their pets and stuffed animals are the body guards😂 Edit- not be that person but yay thx for the likes😁
Are there mini winds tho? I can’t imagine a kid handling a tuba. And usually with winds, the smaller an instrument, the higher the pitch. There must be a reason why all flutes are the same length even if bent around to make it appear shorter
@@amalkatrazz i know tonnes of wee kids who play big brass instruments... in the world of brass banding we all know someone who is tiny and plays a big instrument like euphoniums and stuff... maybe not tubas although I know 10 year olds or so who have done so 😂
I was told I was "too young" to learn vibrato even though I constantly asked my teacher about it. In the end she said "just shake your hand".... Then I got a new teacher who taught me properly. Now I am a violin teacher and I make it my missions to teach kids whatever they want to learn. I NEVER tell them they can't do something. And I teach them the goddamn vibrato the right way. Don't be that teacher. Be someone who can inspire the new world of violinists to be their best... And maybe even better than yourself
@Lulu Jones I only learned how to do vibrato recently but I can try to explain how to do it. First, put one or more fingers on a string. Try to move your arm/elbow a bit to the right side (if you are a right handed person of course; if not, then do the opposite) and loosen up. Try to make your arm be less underneath the violin, but to the side. After you do that, make sure your finger/fingers are on a string. Use the tip of your fingers so you can easily move them. Make sure you are comfortable. Then try to move your finger/set of fingers up and down and around. Remember to not use too much of you fingers and to keep your arm a bit away from your violin. Also, don't forget to practice. It is very unlikely that you will be able to do vibrato on the first try, but you can do it after you practice it enough.
One good thing about choosing med school instead of instrument: there is no 8 years old child prodigy doctors (yet)
Actually....lol jk (tho probably they exist)
HUGE SAME
lumberjack time
And if you become a young violin virtuoso you can’t take up Ophthalmology as a hobby in your spare time.
yeah.. they still got the limit of 15 or 13 I guess.. and still on med school
When she was born the doctors said, "It's a violin!"
ema629: Very funny! 🎻🤣
@@marshallartz395 She is such an incredibly talented prodigy that classical violin music just runs through her veins. The doctors clearly saw this upon her birth as her first cry was to Paganini's Caprice No. 24. :-)
AHAHAHAHA
WHEN SHE WAS BORN, THE DOCTOR EXCLAIMED : " SHE'S HOLDING A STRADIVARIUS ! !!!!!"
@@ema629 LMAO
we just gonna ignore the fact that she can read music while she probably can’t even read basic sentences- i-
She can do calculus already. Check other video
@@madewahyu9665 wtf, i can't even function when seeing calculus shts
Made Wahyu where?
i am 9 and i know how to read the bouree music notation
you should consider taking music notation classes then it will become a piece of cake to read that.
This girl is geniuses. This was played in korean tv program. She was tested her talent. It came out she enjoys. She also has such a heart. She had concert for sick people. I truly wish her best.
"I didn't even have a CONSCIOUSNESS when I was three!" LOLOL
Yeah... LITERALLY lol
I was 4
Really?
Same tho
Relatable
Alternative title: *Girl getting 10 years of musical training while remaining 3 years old*
3 year old girl: plays a piece I’m playing better than me when I’ve been playing for 4.5 years
Me: *cries in a corner*
@@shane17777 Watch this and cry more th-cam.com/video/YKcf3prTQyo/w-d-xo.html. Her at 8 years old.
Lol
This is what jobs want. 10 years of experience when you only had 3 years of experience.
And she has perfect pitch
Asians whatever you do, make sure your parents NEVER find this video
YAHAHAHAHAHA! Too late!🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️
@@lamdao1242 Moment of silence for a fallen soldier
Black parents too it might be just mine....
I- Ok
sir yes sir
Chloe Chua, born in Singapore, at age 11 she wins the Menuhin Competition, one of the biggest music competitions for string players.
This is not Chloe Chua, if that's what you're saying. I just checked and she was born in 2007 whereas this little poppet was born in 2012.
@@BenjWarrant So what IS her name?
@@reddragonready Yo Eun, apparently.
This girl at 3 years old: is amazing at violin,
Me at 3: drawing on walls
My cousin at 3: eating dirt
Facts
me at 3: yay i go preschool
my cousin at 3: how do talk
Hahaha!
lol pretty much
Me at 3
Cutting the tip of my brothers finger off and smashing my chin open on the counter. I was a violent child. Why not?
Non-Violin players: Oh, that’s pretty cool. Good for her.
Violin players: oOHHHHHH
She makes it look so easy for us non-violin players
No u wrong
Violin player: Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh (RIP my confident)
😭😭😭I was looking for this comment
And here I am tying to make Suzuki corporate with meh and then there’s her. Bye confidence
@Sarah Garcia I don’t know, maybe? But those were the reactions me(a piano player) and my sister( a violin player) had.
In the next episode: a newborn prodigy playing violin in the hospital: 2 hours progress
Hospital
@justrhino where is my autocorrect when I need it
Where is the lie tho ? 🤣😭
2 hours progress ohMY xD
Next next episode: a prodigy playing violin in the womb: 3 minutes progress:
Most of the pieces for the people who want it :
0:57 Twinkle Twinkle Little Star (Mozart) - Suzuki 1
1:19 Happy Birthday :)
1:36 sorry can’t find it :(
2:53 Theme from the Witches Dance (Paganini) - Suzuki 2
3:30 Humoresque (Dvorak)- Suzuki 3
4:15 Concertino in B minor, 1st movement (Rieding)
4:23 Concerto No.2, 3rd movement (Seitz) - Suzuki 4
5:09 Concerto in A Minor, 1st movement (Vivaldi) - Suzuki 4
6:04 Double Concerto in D minor, 2nd violin, 1st movement (Bach) - Suzuki 4
6:56 Concerto in G minor, 3rd movement (Vivaldi) - Suzuki 5
7:22 Allegro (Fiocco) - Suzuki 6
7:42 Gigue from Sonata in D Minor (Verancini) - Suzuki 5
8:04 Concerto in A Minor, 1st movement (Bach) - Suzuki 7
9:40 Sonata No.4 in D major, 2nd movement (Handel) - Suzuki 6
You’re welcome
The one you couldn't find is called Gavotte! It's also in the Suzuki one book, one of my favorite pieces
@@aitri4987Im still working on Gavotte and im 12 😭
(and Concerto in B minor 😥)
@@Sarii-312 I WAS TOO DONT WORRY! 😭
@@aitri4987 THANK YOU FOR THE MORAL SUPPORT ❤
@@Sarii-312 NP!!!! You'll progress quick, dw. I'm 14 now and I'm working on Summer (IT'S SUPPOSED TO BE AGT LEVEL EASY, WHY IS IT NOT EASY 😭😭😭)
What I like about this is that she looks like she's genuinely enjoying it.
Her smile really brighten up my day.
And of course, also kinda make my self esteem lower than before.
@@jenny-qr7op How do I know?
@@xzy7196 it's generalising, but young talented musicians get burnt out at a young age and as a result and end up hating their craft.
@@xzy7196 I mean look at the kid, it's sad to say but she prolly wasn't the one that decided she learn the violin. Though correct me if I'm wrong
@@rupertacuesta well most musicians start learning music at a young age. I can't believe you DESIRE to learn a instrument at 5,6,7 (yeah yeah, 6 year olds are smarter, but they still do what their parents decided for them.)
She just started earlier and that doesn't mean anything elss
" she can count. she can hear"
That was pretty much my greatest achievement at three.
Mine was "she can get the Cheerios to her mouth without starting at the back of her head!"
my greatest achievement at three years old was, and i quote, "holy shit, she can talk???"
@@sleeeepyy_ ahahahaa XD
Hahaha I died
We have the same surname lol
It’s so rare to see such a young “prodigy” seem to genuinely enjoy their skill this much
Super true
A good sign that her parents are still letting her be a kid.
No Body
My mom plays over the rainbow on her violin, ( it’s 30 years old ) and loves the wizard of oz. I’m 9, and she’s letting me learn the violin! I just wrote this because of you’re profile.
@@animaljammusic5905 Awwe good luck and have fun that’s so exciting! I love the wizard of oz so much and I’m glad you guys love it too!
@@absolutelynotanyone it’s nice knowing there’s other fans out there 🥰
I’m an early childhood professional, and I can honestly say she’s developmentally advanced in at least a few areas. This blew me away.
"I didn't even have a consciousness when I was three"
me: Same bro
her: kill my parents.
Haha - when I was three the best thing I could do was climb everything, and shove cake in my family members face on their birthdays :) Istarted a tradition :)
Get a very strict well-off asian parent 😌
@@kasan2272 I do, well parent. Singular. Haven’t seen my mom in years-
@@tingtinnggg4667 how I wish we were well-off 😌 I might've bought a piano and continue music. Lucky for you, you had the chance
I work with kids, and let me just say that most five year olds I work with don’t have the fine motor skills for scissors, this girl could move each of her fingers independently to play a violin when she was three. That’s wild.
Wait really- when my sister was literally like 2 or 3 she sat in the middle of the living room cutting up an entire stack of paper with scissors-
Right?? I've worked with two year olds that still had high chairs. And when they mentioned that she was playing from memory, that's impressive, but I was twice as impressed when it showed her reading music at like, 3 because most kids don't learn their alphabet until then or even commonly later
It's a wonder then as to how her parents even knew she could even be able to play something such as the violin at such an early age. Who's parents actually think like this and what exactly prompts them?
@@ChiefHerzensCoach How is Hungary related to this comment?
@@kuzumi920 Because Maddy mentioned how most 5 year old in her class don't have fine motor skill for scissors ..So Heidrun spoke of different teaching system in Hungary .They start teaching kids very early so they gain lot experience and skills :)
When I realized the 3 year olds playing the same piece as me:
Confidence has left the chat
And the song is happy birthday
Hahahahaha chill dude, that's normal
Lol same
I can barely play jingle bells 😤✋🏻
Me too! 45 years old and playing Vivaldi concerto in A minor (first movement), is what I learned last year, and this year learning the second violin part of the double Bach in d minor (first movement).
You guys really make me laugh. Right before you stop the video of her playing a passage, I was making the same comments and expletives. It is so cool to listen to you and think about your musical journey and mine. I started playing violin when I was 12 and now I am 70. I am working on the last movement of the Mendelssohn violin concerto and will give my first recital in about 45 years. Thanks for posting, I am telling all my violin students about you :)
"This is 2016, how old would she be now?"
"She'd be eight"
" Is she playing paganini now?"
th-cam.com/video/YKcf3prTQyo/w-d-xo.html Yes. Yes she is.
😦...
Twoset needs to do a part 2.
And she played with Henry.. damn. They need to see that.
Great link! Wow!
yessss hopefully they see this!
Up you go. This should be the next video!
She is really too amazing
Do you mean TWO amazing
You again....
I SAW U IN LIKE 5 VIDEOS TODAYYY WHAT THE HELL MATE
Agreed.
HOW TF ARE YOU IN ALL COMMENT SECTIONS
Her face went from “oaheuehueheueheee this is fun” to “game face on, I now realize I have the super powers to destroy adult musicians’ self-esteem...must get better....must inflict maximum damage.....must inflict ultimate KO....”
"Game over. You lose!"
😂 😂 😂 😂
Yeaah. Epic willpower here
@@ManiacMemes bruh why you advertising your meme channel on twoset, big sacrilegious
i will however watch your video
Glad this is still up. One of my favorite videos
There's something off with seeing tiny children playing instruments perfectly. At least this girl is having fun with it. Most prodigies look robotic and joyless as if they're forced to play. Not her, I really appreciate that.
@deadend That's just bizarre.
true enough
Is her parent the one playing the piano in some of them? Maybe they made playing instruments a game, and so she actually enjoys it and it's not psychological torture like with many kids who are forced into playing an instrument so their parents can brag to their friends about it...
@@TheGoldenDunsparce yeah....but I'm not sure about making a two year old go viral
@@lailataluminousnight8064 Yeah, if I had one, I'd never post photos or videos of my child online...
She’s not like «this is so easy», she’s like «I’m loving this, this is so much fun»! How adorable! 😊👏👍
Not to be that guy, but she is probably being disciplined when she hits a wrong note, definitely crazy parents
@@iamchanman4041 I don’t think she would look that happy if her parents were like that. Look how she’s smiling while playing. Plus, even if her parents were like that, it still takes so much skill to make that much progress in a short amount of time.
@@iamchanman4041 - We don’t know a thing about that. She truly seems to like playing, but I don’t know how much she has to practice and how she likes that, if she is made to practice, which I do not agree with, if it happens to children.
@@iamchanman4041 Dude, I wouldn't make assumptions. If anything, listen to literally everyone else who can tell from the way she's smiling that she is enjoying herself.
@@iamchanman4041 my colleague told me his parents brutally beat him at three years old if he played a wrong note and was forced to play for at least three hours STRAIGHT a day. And he had to smile the entire time or else his parents were giving him up for adoption. His parents were arrested when the police found out and he grew up with his much nicer uncle after his parents were arrested though.
She is destroying my non-existent self-esteem.
I don't even play violin but i feel terrible lol
@@no_peace same..lmao
@@no_peace same, I want to learn though.
I felt that
Ha.....same...
Thank goodness for not deleting one of my favorite videos twoset violin. But i still wish for u to come back and make videos to make us laugh
Idk whether to admire the girl more or the teacher for being able to help her progress that much so young while still keeping her interest, they're both incredible
@picolo pagalingling I feel like the teacher deserves a lot of respect bc of them the kid is amazing at violin
Well, maybe the teacher could be the parents.
Probably, just an assumption.
@piccolo pagalingling
A thought of a name is Piccolo Naganini.
It’s what the Suzuki Method was designed to do for anyone at any age. Incremental technique based on listening and rote memory. It’s also called the “Mother Tongue” method because it’s designed for the mother to study first for about 6 mos & to teach and share with the child. It mimics the way we learn language from (usually, in Patriarchal societies) the mother. Shinizi Suzuki’s family manufactured violins, so he knew how to make affordable instruments to size. He was trying to develop something to give children hope and self esteem after he saw how traumatized Japanese children were after the US invented overkill, for one thing, and annihilated so many civilians with the Atomic Bomb (speaking of darkness). It’s such an effective method it spread around the world & was adapted to other stringed instruments and piano.
The teacher didn’t do anything, because geniuses are born not created
This girl learned to read extremely complicated sheet music before she learned how to READ WORDS.
Suzuki doesn’t teach sight reading at the beginning. They use a simplified written form in the beginning ( letters for the notes, and highlight each one with a different color corresponding eith the string on which it is to be played.) and transition to actual sheet music later. So she probably isn’t reading most of that on a typical staff.
Hugely impressive skill tho in such a little one!!
And you know what, I even still make some mistakes when reading simple sheet 😅
My kid could read the newspaper at 2.
I’m 99% sure she learned by ear. I’m a Suzuki teacher. Beginning students learn exclusively by ear-especially at such a young age.
When I was her age I ate mud and thought it was fun... Yup, that's what I did... I ate mud.
The family says that whenever I was denied a cookie at 3 I would go bang my head on concrete.
That explains a lot really.
lmao same
Lmao
Relatable
Same bro same
You were trying to lose consciousness because you couldn't take the stress of being cookieless lol
She has left me breathless!!! What a delightfully charming child! And, your reactions echoed mine but were appropriately timed to help in understanding how extraordinary her talent is. I played “with” a violin many years ago but seeing this angel play and your amazement, I know I never really played it! 🤣
Thank you for this joyful video and for your channel❣️🐅
Imagine someone saying
"You play the violin like a three-year old!"
"Well actually..."
Oh, now that's mean, LOL
I WISH!!!😄
Take it as a compliment then
That's compliment now lmao.
Although I'll probably get down to negative self esteem after remembering a 3-year old is far better -_-
Damn I’d take the compliment after listening to her although if tried to play it would sound like a cat fight haha
If you can get impressed slowly, you can get impressed quickly.
YEP!
It's a little known fact but these prodigies are just fragments of Ling Ling, only through joining all these prodigies together does Ling Ling finally become whole again.
Ey
Didn’t know you watched violin
Justin Y.
We'll meet again, dont know where dont know whennn~~~
We meet again Justin
We have to collect all 7 Ling Ling fragments
Can’t get enough of this absolutely overwhelming cuteness. Just look at these pigtails!
Everyone be praising the Prodigy but I'm gonna give the teacher a standing ovation.
The kid pick and learn new things impressively fast, but it takes a lot for the teacher too
exactly, she must have a great teacher
How messed up would it be if she was mostly self taught...
Kit Rose a two year old being self taught? Doubt it.
*laughs nervously*
if she's Ling ling's descent then no doubt she practiced in her mother's womb lmao
And some supportive parenting as well.
This isn't a video of Brett and Eddy roasting, it's a video of *her* roasting *them*
i wanted to like but the comment was already at 69 :)
Made it 600 likes c:
I destroied your 666 likes comment. Now is 667 😈
them as in literally everyone :c
Yeahhh
I found out surprising at how much she genuinely seemed like she was enjoying herself as often kids don't really want to practice that much.
12 34 she’s actually still playing and seems genuinely happy playing and in interviews!
did you know the channel name in original korean text is 여은서
12 34 yeah. Now she giggles and smiles as she plays paganini.
man I miss twosetviolin
I just found their channel today, what happened to them?
Of course she's good, she's probably been playing for like half her life. Duh
That's a good one Im crying ahahahahah
Lmao this comment deserves more likes tbh
You sir are a comedic genius... you deserve my lol.
@@nil_morphine greatly appreciated, my drug drenched friend
Lolsss
Her teacher probably utilizes A LOT of ear training, esp when she first started. It's a lot easier to mimic a rhythm you've heard than to read it dry and try to figure it out mathematically. Most young children can't figure it out. I started at 3 and my teacher didn't even try, a lot of what she taught was by rote. The only thing I looked at when I first started were the numbers for the fingering. Note values and pitches came later as my understanding of music got more advanced.
I guess this is how everyone should learn.
The classic way of teaching is underestimating the power of Human mind... (After Understanding the music it is a lot easier)
@@Ahmed-mz7xo I mean it depends on the person. People who are super analytical would benefit more from applying music theory to their playing, but people who are more creative might learn better with lots of ear training. The sign of a good teacher is one who can recognize what each student needs, since everyone learns differently. With most super young kids, the ear training is very effective because their cognitive skills are still super low just due to age. But it really depends. In the vid, that little one was already reading advanced sheet music at 4, so you never know.
It is apparent that she's going through the suzuki method, given that a couple clips are at suzuki institutes, going through the suzuki books, and performing with piano accompaniment.
You can review the teaching technique concepts summarized on wikipedia for those unfamiliar and it covers what you've said.
But beyond the basics described, Part of suzuki concept is the repertoire is the same, and there are weekly performances by everyone in the class, so you not only learn the songs from recordings but every week you sit and hear other students play the pieces. So by the time you get to the new piece you already heard it 100+ times from other students, even if you weren't studying it yet you already know how the piece goes. Just like how 3yo can sing babyshark and complex pop songs that has rhythm shifts because they've heard it 100times. Kids even can parrot back the entirety of bohemian rhapsody with no concept of music theory.
@@raytseng1979 I was about to say the exact thing :D
Yeah, I've been trained through the Suzuki Method, so I really know that she was also trained by the same method. Even the pieces (some I think cause I never went past Book 2) that she played came from Suzuki Books. :)
Yeh me and my siblings learnt the piano really young and we were all taught to "play by ear" first and learnt how to read sheet music alittle later
To a completely non-musical person, this consisted of two nerds fangirling over a two year old prodigy.
And I LOVED IT.
They are just nerding out!! Lol 🤣🤣🤣🤪🤪☺️☺️☺️❤️❤️
Even to a person who plays violin, that is what it looks like
To me as a weightlifter, this is the equivalent of seeing 14 year old chinese girls squatting a metric shit ton more than i can and then crying in the corner
EDIT: heres an example if you're curious
th-cam.com/video/KyW967OvQC8/w-d-xo.html
lol
broke your 666 likes
It's truly amazing to see children find their natural talents at such a young age. Some people go their entire lives without experiencing that. I hope she understands (eventually) how incredible that is ❤️
"How do you explain that to a kid?"
As evidenced by this young lady, you don't. She explains it to you.
"She explains it to you" lmfaooo
In russia you dont teach kid
Kid teach you
Jennicorn Playz 🤣🤣🤣🤣
I eman kids like that have brains that develop way faster than other kids so that’s why people can explain advanced stuff like that to them and they get it. It’s why you see 10 year olds doing college kind of stuff
"how do you teach that" you don't, in Korea kid teaches you
Brett and Eddy are just throwing themselves into the land of no self esteem.
Y’all still have left?
Alternate title
What’s her name?
@@oldbird4601 YoEun Seol
no matter what Eddy himself thinks, if a person throws a child at him and tell him he had to look after the child, he would actually be a great dad
Omg😂😂
Tell me why i instantly imagined eddy standing at the bottom of a cliff and someone just throws a baby from above
Lili L or he would call the cops because someone just threw a child at him and that’s child abuse
Brett would be the funny uncle.
Is that you, or your ovaries talking? I kid I kid.
I can't bring myself to practice anymore. Everything in my life reminds me that they're gone. I'm trying so hard to be mature and let it go.
Same I can’t pick up my violin normally anymore, I’m trying so hard to think that they’ll come back but everything tells me that it’s not gonna happen
same. i literally cant do anything anymore. all i can think about is them, im begging for it to be a joke. i lost sleep over it. i literally cannot stop crying man
@@owusiieme too bro
Her channel is *YoEun Seol* you can find latest update there.
She's nine now.
In interview she said:
When I was 3(Korean age) there was friend one year older than me who played violin and I saw violin it looks really weird/unique in young kid's eyes. So I went to violin class with her since then I didn't lost interest in violin and keep playing since then.
What do you think while playing violin?
Violin gives me support when I feel lonely. I feel happy while playing violin and whe I can't do some technique I would keep practice until I could do when I finally able to do that I feel very proud of myself.
also Yoeun in other TV show about young musicians :
How do you memorize all these notes?
My fingers just go on their own before I actually think.
Hey what's Korean years? I thought years were the same everywhere? Like they start and end at different times but it doesn't make a difference in age does it? Wow I'm dumb-
@@gaanadelrey In Korea, on the day baby born they are 1 years old. international age is 0years old cuz they just born.
and one more thing is that in Korea you don't get old on your birthday. All people automatically get old in 1st of January.
So let's say you born 31th of December 2000.
In 31th Dec 2000, you are 1years old.
In 1st Jan 2001, You are 2years old but actually 2days old in international age.
So generally you are 1 year older than your international age in korea.
In this video. they wrote international age in english and Korean age in korean.
@@ray382vk ah ty💖
She was barely 2 (international age) when she started playing. Whoah! I'm mind-blown!
@@lotion75ml more precisely in original video twoset reacted it said she was 2year 8months old(int' age) when she had her first lesson. still mind blowing🤯
Imagine her one day just saying "sorry mom and dad, but i want to play the bass".
*the viola
@dudedud lol how ironic
Now slap like now mum
BASS
davie504 approves this message.
I love that she’s smiling and genuinely enjoying herself. I can’t wait to see how she plays when she gets older. So talented. Bravo to her parents, her instructor and her.
Have a look at Henry Lau channel. He has her in there and she is now 9 years old. She is amazing.
@@Craz38 What is the name of the video?
@@GPhoenix8913 just in case if you haven't found it yet. Here it is th-cam.com/video/YKcf3prTQyo/w-d-xo.html
@@anggitabrillian6505 Thank you so much for sharing that video! She's indeed playing paganini haha, can't believe it
Don't know why algorithm gave me this, but thanks. These two guys were so respectful and serious about the little girl's talent. They never once made fun of her or laughed at her. Great video.
There's nothing to make fun of, I don't even play violin and it's impressive as hell to me
You don’t necessarily have to “explain” anything to young kids when teaching. You do something and they’ll copy you. Kids are actually great at imitating whatever they see and hear. The biggest challenge is keeping their attention and making learning fun. She definitely has amazing skills, and kudos to parents and teachers for guiding her well. 😊
No Kudos to the parents. The only way a three-year-old gets that good at anything is if they practice 5 hours a day, every day. No exceptions,;no say in the matter. No friends. No playtime. She goes to lessons, does hours of practice, then school, more practics, sleep, repeat.
Kari Ziebarth we don’t know that. I’ve seen her other videos, I think she’s 6? now, and it seems that she really enjoys what she’s doing. Her eyes twinkle when she plays. I don’t want to judge on how her parents brought her up, but if she’s happy playing the violin, I’d say it’s still better than others who leave their kids in front of the tv the whole day.
@@Cesiaj I am still not even remotely convinced that she hasn't had this life forced upon her.
I will however agree with you that it's better to have parents that care too much than ones who don't care enough.
@@kariziebarth7581I guess in your mind it's better to have the kid sit in front of a TV for 5 hours a day instead with candy and soda no?
We dont know the entirerity of the story guys
Ngl everytime I watch this video I'm actually more curious about the kid's teacher rather than the kid itself. The kid's obviously very talented, but can you imagine trying to teach a 2 year old kid play the violin? Her teacher must also be very talented.
I'm always curious about that too. Who has the patience and technique to teach a toddler advanced music?
Same here
My little sister is 7 and hardly paid attention in her guitar class 😂
She is surely a Suzuki music student!
I suddenly got an existential crisis at the "I didn't even have a consciousness when I was 3"
I mean, 99% of kids don't. don't feel bad.
I can barely even remember what I did in primary school... *existential crisis intensifies*
@@vegetaismydad5382 and the kid probably won't even remember, suddenly they are concious and are already good at violin
@@DUSKvsDAWN pff I hope that's a joke or totally made up?
@@kittenmimi5326 nope. most kids that age don't even have a proper functioning memory, let alone a consciousness. Not entirely sure why you thought that was a joke?
I'm not a violinist, but the only way I can explain this is : it just made sense to her. She understands in a way we can't explain. That's it.
For a 4 yr old to have an attention span longer than 15 minutes is an accomplishment in its self
Asian kids are trained if not they get the spanking!
True ~~~~~~~even for a 12 years old child 😮
And not mention having to practice finger placement at 3 YEARS OLD
Literally me in school:
Longer than 5 minutes, you mean.
Violin: is one of the hardest instruments
This girl: *i will end this man's whole career*
Amanda Linde oh yes
thats not how the meme format works......
Umm the cello and the bass are the hardest
@@kyokajiro5440 I said 'one of the hardest' not hardest
🤣🤣🤣🤣
if she doesn't play at my funeral IM NOT DYING
Aaliyah M hahahahaha 😂😂😂
lol
😂😂😂😂
😏... yeah.
Be this the most disliked comment
I HATE STUPID PRODIGIES!!!!,
Looking forward to a recital given by TwoSet🎶🎵🎶❤️❤️
My brother started violin age 5. A year later it was my turn. He was furious when he heard me play so easily. I had spent a year hearing all his practice, so once I could put my fingers on the strings the pieces play themselves from memory.
He took up the trumpet after that. Sacrilegious.
lol, im kinda annoyed that my brother is so good already but i think that now you say it, listening in the backround to me playing could of helped him lol, never-the-less it is really annoying
Lmao happened to my sister with piano, she spent 2 years practicing, I ended up on her level within 3 weeks, if only I started earlier I could've been so good by now
@@detroitbecomedefective2762 damn legend
Hearing his practice would do nothing for knowing where any of the notes are, the technique or the muscle memory it takes to learn an instrument. So im calling BS on this.
@@BnMProductions11 You are bang out of order. It takes only seconds to learn where to put your fingers to make the notes, but repeatedly hearing tunes means replicating them is easy, particularly with perfect pitch.
I really want to see an interview with her parents and or teacher, because it's not that she was born a musical genius, it's about how the teacher explains complexities to a 3 year old.
So do I!
It would great if there was an entire movie about here, I would definitely watch it
Yeah, probably parents contributed a lot as well
The fact that she was having fun - it takes a lot to create that kind of atmosphere
I think it's a combination of both. Yes, the environment matters. But it can only take you so far if you don't have any natural aptitude. Everyone who's taught a significant amount of students knows this.
@@reepicheepsfriend Humans don't have advantages over others intellectually when born, small details that happen around them that we haven't yet figured out from age 0 to age 6 affect what kind of person they turn out to be, It's the most crucial part of a human's life.
@@reepicheepsfriend yes, but my opinion is that sometimes parents should force their kids to do some educational things. Especially when they are that young. I can explain (but sorry my English, I'm from Russia).
When you're 3-6 years old, you're still exploring the world. You have no idea what is funny and what is boring, because there are no examples of people's attitudes towards different kinds of occupation.
If your parents say that you have to learn how to read, you won't mind, because they are the only people in your inner circle and you see that they encourage you in your education!
At the very beginning kids can resist, but if their parents gently and calmly force them to keep practicing, they will become great in the future.
I don't think this girl watches TV or playing with toys, I bet her parents made her love the violin.
She’s 8 years old right now. She’s a literal prodigy. Like she plays Paganiniana.
Goalie Korea I couldn’t even do that when I was 10-
she has perfect pitch to
@ボイス maybe paganini is lingling ? wHaT ?!
I literally played like her when she was 3 at 8 years old i-
Really?
I love how you guys express your appreciation for this young girl's skill, I'm so use to hearing about football, basketball and baseball players talk like that. This is really special from the commentary to the outstanding music.
Seeing her smile and enjoy herself is such a relief because I'd hate to think she was one of the many kids who are forced to give up being 'just a kid' for the sake of their overbearing achievement-obsessed parents, and it looks like she genuinely enjoys this, so as a child psychologist that was my favourite part of this video (and the reactions from the guys, acknowledging her talent)
I read an article about this chess Grand Master who wanted his daughters to learn chess but understood that if he forced them to learn that they would never become great because they would eventually resent him. So he started by putting chess pieces in their cribs and play area to get them interested and used to chess paraphernalia. Then he would play near them and eventually they asked questions about what he was doing and eventually asked to learn how to play. I think both his daughters ended up champions and all because he made it a fun game, not a chore.
go away you child psychologist
@@ayameisastarow that’s really nice- cause my parents wanted me to play piano but I didn’t really wanted to learn anything back then, but my parents said it was either I play piano or I’ll learn tennis. But I’ve never liked tennis so I just went with piano. But now my parents just force me to practice piano every day it’s getting a lot more annoying and it’s also talking away my time. And now they want me to play another instrument and it’s ok not too hard but still! I still have school and homework and other stuff that I have to take care of. It’s really sad. :(
@@ayameisastar He's playing phycological chess and planning for his kids' next few moves. Little did his daughters know that he had a checkmate in four before they were even born...
@@Akari_Yue Playing an instrument is more than entertaining, it's developmental. It shows up in unexpected ways. Like the children with the chess pieces in their crib, the human mind develops in different stages. Not unlike learning an extra language at an early age, music opens doors that might otherwise remain closed. A fundamental early experience with music can positively effect the understanding and aptitude with mathematics. You don't have to completely understand or appreciate that your parents want you to practice, and keep paying for your lessons. Try to appreciate that you have that opportunity, and that millions of children around the world do not. Even if you decide to stop at some point in your life when you make your own decisions, keep your last violin. I promise there will come a point when you miss it, and you'll pick it up again.
They aren't wrong. She literally is playing Paganini now. It's on her youtube channel. CRAZY
What's her yt?
@@skipiscool6792 YoEun Seol
@@ZozoLadybug16 thx
What’s her TH-cam channel?
@@danielavega3693 th-cam.com/channels/X4d7ENVg1bIiw9xs4ch42A.htmlfeatured
Literally everyone: kids suck, like they have no talent.
this 2 year old kid: *are you sure about that?*
Them : um nevermind
Who said kids suck and had no talent?
"Kids suck. Like they have no talent"
This kid: *Aggressive violine noises*
i dont think anyone has said that 🤔
@@xcusemehi4907 *violin
What you have here is an extraordinary endowment of prodigious giftedness for the instrument. It's like she was born with an instinctive intuitive understanding of the essence of violin. It's amazing.
3 year old baby: **playing on stage confidently**
Me, 17 yo, playing the violin since almost 10 years: **shaking bow**
tbh the older i get the more nervous i get when playing on stage/in front of other people
Me, 31 yo, playing piano for 1 year: **one day**
Can relate 😭
The fact that she's playing like that and probably can't even read her own language properly, look at the whiteboard at 5:50, she's learning 한글 (Hangeul - Korean alphabet)!! This is impressive 👏
She met Henry Lau and impressed him as well!
I- Bro my families Korean and I'm sTILl trying to learn the Korean alphabet- TvT
Yes learning korean as a child for me was a little hard but
I got it now
@@floppyfox9614 Actually, Korean alphabets are easier to remember. There are ways to help memorise them in a day like how the letter 'g' in Korean looks like a gun and the first letter of 'gun' is 'g'. There are also two lesser alphabets in Korean alphabets. Don't get me wrong, the language itself is still difficult to learn just like all other languages.
한국인이당!!
We’ve seen a lot of child prodigies on twoset.
Now just imagine a whole orchestra of child prodigies with a child soloist at the front....
Imagine the bloodbath that would happened between the prodigies mothers to fight for that soloist position
Lintang Ayu Ooof true lol
onnoonononoonoononoononononoonononoonnooooooooooooooooooo
lmaoo
@@fukuwota 😂
When it amazes you so much you stop having your esteem destroyed but more in awe and hope she grows into who she wants to be and be able to do what you love.
It's great seeing classical music and the violin still manages to engage such young practitioner !
I got to know this little prodigy on Korea TV show few years ago which introduced many prodigies all different fields. Her name is Yoeun Sul. She loves to play violin all the times as you see her smile all through the videos. Not only that she has such a beautiful heart that kept growing her hair long enough to cut off to donate to other young children patients who suffer for cancer. She loves to help other children. Her parents rise her well.
Thanks for the info. Yes the main thing to me watching this was seeing how much she was enjoying it as prodigy or not that is the important thing for such a young child
I absolutely adore when kids are actually having fun with their instruments. I honestly kind of envy it since I started piano when I was 5-6. I’d have an hour long classes every day (and an hour is rlly long to a little kid, especially when you don’t like what your doing,) and every hour spent playing piano was my mom screaming at me for not knowing the notes, playing or hitting the wrong keys. So I grew up able to play the piano but I hated it so much. It was probably the only skill I wish I didn’t have.
Do you know any other instruments? Ones you enjoy, to make up for this dark part of your life?
The same with my situation, it's hard to like piano again because my mom force me to play when I was small. Not to mention the teacher tend to hit my hand if I play wrongly. At the end, I do hope you try to like playing the piano again or perhasp other instrument that can make you happy.
Well, lucky you, I started piano when I was 8.
I get how you feel! I started at ~6 and definitely didn’t enjoy the piano as much bc my mom would always hover over me and yell at me to restart every time I made a mistake or played “too slow” when learning a piece. She would also distract me by turning the TV/radio on loud so I could “hear myself”. I got to a high level but still can’t bring myself to play around people tbh. I’m glad these kids seem to find joy in practicing/improving and I hope you found a hobby/instrument you enjoy too!
Heh heh you'll get past it! The same thing happened to me. I would literally scream every time I had to practice, and I hated piano and I wanted to quit. But now, it's better. A few years ago I realized I sounded okay, and my parents stopped watching over me while I practiced, and so I just kind of started liking it more. Now I think I'm completely over the "i hate piano" stage, and I can actually be proud of myself and enjoy it (when I have pieces that sound good, of course. A.k.a. anything except for Czerny lol). So don't worry! Keep it up, don't quit, and you will get past it.
This must be what Mozart was like... She hears the notes in her head perfectly, so even if they are not perfectly in tune, she is still playing the music (phrasing) as if they were correct - she is interpreting pure music, and it's all going on inside her head. Astounding. Bit like a composer would do, actually 🙂
I once watched her video (yes, she is poooopular) when she composed a short piece, and present that piece with story. About happy bear or something like that.
exactly what i was thinking!
@@fitriaahsani1286 here:
th-cam.com/video/Dh5DLxMV9XA/w-d-xo.html
@@retiredteacher6289 yes that video! But whay i watch is more official, with subs. It is here th-cam.com/video/5z9R3-biwMQ/w-d-xo.html
At least they didn’t delete this vid 😭
Fr😭😭
Me: "YES I'M BETTER THAN A 2 YEAR OLD!"
Her: turns 3 💀
Look who’s first!
Look who’s not gay!
Look who’s second!
Look who's third!
Look who's fourth
No wonder she looks so familiar! She’s the baby violinist in Henry’s TH-cam channel. Cuuute! Petition for twoset to check that out!
Henry more henryyyy🤣
Exactly!
we really are getting closer to fetus level aren’t we
IIDA KUN!!
its gonna be a freaking fetus playing inside their mom's womb
@@monicapetitebonita218 hmm, like when the mother farts, we can hear paganinia
Oh my goodness she’s amazing! I’d be concerned about her doing this so young but look how much fun she is having and how proud she is. I always think it’s just so amazing. How did her parents and she know that this was the perfect thing for her? That’s divine intervention.
"I didn't even had consciousness when I was 3" 😂😂😂 you cracked me up
I know everybody is impressed by this girl, but we should also acknowledge whoever her teacher is!
True
Yeah! How do you teach a kid that probably can’t understand most words and musics terms
Probably her mum or dad?
I know right? Usually with these videos I have to pick up my confidence from the ground because of how this kids are talented, but this time it's couple of meters lower because I also know I am nowhere as good of a teacher :D
Her little smile whenever she plays is so cute! Like that kind of pure joy is just so contagious and I hope she keeps feeling that kind of happiness whenever she plays
A smile a minute watching this! Amazing young lady and very entertaining hosts. Well done!
Whenever I see young children doing this great at learning the instrument, I can't help but feel how amazing must be their teachers or parents too. Because a child can learn the instrument at a very young age (she obviously has a native talent for that), but that can go to no fruition if she doesn't have a good adult doing amazing supervision.
And she obviously enjoys it, so the adults are also making it fun for her, and not forcing the kid to do it! Kudos to her parents and teachers.
@@artemisia4718 That's what music is all about!
Yes. She was smiling a lot while playing! That was so nice to see.
@@artemisia4718 Yeah I've seen some of her other videos and the best thing about them is the delighted smile she has on her face. It's impressive to hear a prodigy play but it's lovely to see a young child enjoying music so much.
I believe their teacher also learning/studying young kids-children behaviour or parenting things beside being musician. Because teaching young kids is REALLY HARD for me 😭
I went to school with a harp playing prodigy, you'd swear she was made of water the way she flowed along the strings. Doesn't have a happy ending though, turned out her family forced her to practice like half the day and she wasn't allowed to hang out with friends or pursue others hobbies and interests. This led to her committing suicide at age 16. Because of this I always feel bad for child prodigies. I know they could've picked up the instrument themselves and they could be under no pressure from parents, but that story is always the first thing that springs to mind
Cian Nolan oh my god im so sorry
I was wondering how much of her life is completely consumed with practicing and playing. She is so young.
@Moebym Oh frick am I going to turn out like that-
Welcome to being an Asian 😂
@@meowbitch3436 Lmao I am one-
I am very impressed. As a music teacher, I have taught kids below 3 years and its very hard to even get them to focus. Its like,
Teacher: Its time for your Violin lesson
Student: Spongebob
BELOW 3 years?!! Who was the youngest kid you've taught? A 5 month old?
*spongebob.*
lmao
Dude I’m 24 and I love spongebob lol those jokes are classics in culture
oh thats cool you teach music. i teach mayonaise
So charming. She is one with her bow and violin and the joy she has doing "it". ❣❣💛💛❣❣You guys are great. Glad to find you-all.
Her name is YoEun Seol and yes, she's playing Paganini nowadays. You can check on her channel, it's just absurd xD
thanks for this tho, gonna check her out now
What? She’s younger than me, and I’m 11
She played Reiding's concerto at age three... What I'm doing now... What the actually bloody hell...
Yoeun seol
th-cam.com/video/sv9csMGnIJE/w-d-xo.html Not the greatest performance I've heard, but she's 10, I guess! And it's enjoyable to watch because she still has the same smile she did in those clips from when she was 3 and 4.
Can't wait for "2 year old prodigy gives TwoSet a violin lesson"
She's probably a prodigy at violin but no so much language. :-P
Me at three: doesn't talk
This girl at three: plays the violin on a professional level.
Me at two: plays the violin, does taekwondo and does a little bit of swimming
*not trying to flex*
@@foongkengmok4718 Me at 2: *Being one year older every year*
Checkmate
That’s definitely me too. I was so shy and never talked at 3 yo
@@foongkengmok4718 dude you did taekwondo at 2. That's the biggest achievement here
Foonf Keng Mok Ha, disappointing. At one, i did professional powerlifting (200 kg squat) and entered in a military branch and got
a wife and 3 kids (not trying to flex)
I get the feeling she was a violin in a past life. It's part of her. Like, there has to be a ton of practice involved, but she has an understanding of beats, timing, power to put into it, all of it. There is something that is natural about it. Her little giggle shows she really enjoys this and is having fun. I wonder if she is playing with composing her own stuff by now.
the untranslated parts give me shock too, so I’m sharing
1:00 ONE month after
1:45 finished Suzuki 1
4:15 finished Suzuki 3, right before getting into book 4
6:50 took off the fingering tapes
6:57 first song with vibrato
Thanks for the translation ! 🤗
I STARTED AT 5 AND IM BARELY INTO BOOK 2 WHAT LIFE ISNT FAIR
sorry I forgot to mention I’m 13 😀
OMG. Wow... Wow! Suzuki 4??? I'm amazed...
@@MissTwoSetEncyclopedia If you want to know the language its Korean because I'm a Fellow Korean
Only musicians know the pain and how truly unbelievable she is. The skill. Not talent but pure joy and commitment and understanding she has of the violin. SHE IS THE NEW AND IMPROVED LING LING
english translation for anyone who's wondering what the korean subs say
0:42 first lesson
0:55 (it's been) a month since learning. first official playing
1:35 the day she finished suzuki book 1
4:15 finished (suzuki) book 3, right before learning book 4.
4:23 finally a 1/10 violin!
5:09 also learning third position~
6:50 took off the fingering tapes~
6:56 first piece after learning vibrato
7:21 (the banner says)2016 little star summer music camp
9:40 practicing the piece she's recently learning~
@rhysenne 3.14 she is talented
This is so incredibly impressive. My self-esteem just went out the window.
Incrediable and unbelievably perfect... How is she playing violin on a young age with the true notes?? She is the best violinest ever in the world
**Asian child becomes 2 years old**
Parents : “here’s violin. Only talk to me when you’re better than Joshua Bell”
More like only talk to me when you’re better than ling ling
@@lavaalert6923 why are you being racist
@@bigsixtrain why you BREAD!?🐏
Marcie Stewart how tf is that racist
Dad: you Doctor yet?
Kid: no
Dad: talk to me when you Doctor
Family Guy reference
Imagine a tiny orchestra. Kid conducter, 4 y olds playing strings, persucssion, woodwinds etc. It'd be so adorable
Edit- BONUS the audience are their pets and stuffed animals are the body guards😂
Edit- not be that person but yay thx for the likes😁
Are there mini winds tho? I can’t imagine a kid handling a tuba. And usually with winds, the smaller an instrument, the higher the pitch. There must be a reason why all flutes are the same length even if bent around to make it appear shorter
I'm imagining rn n I giggled 😂😂 it would be hella cuteee
@@amalkatrazz i know tonnes of wee kids who play big brass instruments... in the world of brass banding we all know someone who is tiny and plays a big instrument like euphoniums and stuff... maybe not tubas although I know 10 year olds or so who have done so 😂
The way I squealed at the adorable image in my mind.
Just thinking about it makes me gigglle!! 💕💘😂😂
I was told I was "too young" to learn vibrato even though I constantly asked my teacher about it. In the end she said "just shake your hand".... Then I got a new teacher who taught me properly.
Now I am a violin teacher and I make it my missions to teach kids whatever they want to learn. I NEVER tell them they can't do something. And I teach them the goddamn vibrato the right way.
Don't be that teacher. Be someone who can inspire the new world of violinists to be their best... And maybe even better than yourself
maybe she didnt know, that is why she didnt want to teach
YASSSSS
@Lulu Jones I only learned how to do vibrato recently but I can try to explain how to do it. First, put one or more fingers on a string. Try to move your arm/elbow a bit to the right side (if you are a right handed person of course; if not, then do the opposite) and loosen up. Try to make your arm be less underneath the violin, but to the side. After you do that, make sure your finger/fingers are on a string. Use the tip of your fingers so you can easily move them. Make sure you are comfortable. Then try to move your finger/set of fingers up and down and around. Remember to not use too much of you fingers and to keep your arm a bit away from your violin. Also, don't forget to practice. It is very unlikely that you will be able to do vibrato on the first try, but you can do it after you practice it enough.
Hi!
I am from Brazil and I'm a beginner student in Violin. Can you teach me vibrato? Maybe for a video lesson?
“Just shake your hand?” Wow. If you have a self-motivated learner you don’t shut that down!
I love watching this little girl play so much, because she smiles so happily and plays so easily!