Schubert's Arpeggione Sonata: Each String Has Its Own Voice
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 21 ก.ย. 2024
- Frans Helmerson's cello masterclass on Schubert's Arpeggione Sonata, recorded at the International Musicians' Seminar, Prussia Cove. Here he encourages the student to exploit the different colour of each string & highlights how a change of tempo should be accompanied by a change of sound. The full 42-minute class is available to buy here:
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(Student: Adam Krzeszowiec)
The Masterclass Media Foundation films and records world-class musicians giving masterclasses and teaching students. The mission is both to give music students and other music lovers the chance to benefit from the inspired teaching of great musicians and to create an important archive for future generations.
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I love the smile on Frans Helmerson's face at 4:22! The "Arpeggione" is my favorite sonata for any instrument, even though I'm a pianist. Schubert is so wonderful.
The young man is so fortunate to have such a wonderful teacher.
There should be much more of this, for all kinds of instruments in the internet!! I mean this helps so much to get conscious of faults, one could make... and who really has such a master- teacher...
Beautiful playing by the "student". Bravo!!
Adam, bravo! He has some special kind of vibrato, sound, I don't know what, but whatever he plays it is creation.
I am currently working on this piece for my audition for my DMA grad school program and this really helped
wow he (the student)'s amazing!
He gave me chills :)
What an awesome student, I wish the best of luck for him!
Great!
Beautiful! I just started taking cello lessons and I know this is a song I want a goal to learn!
Terrel Harper but it's a very difficult piece!
It's a really hard piece. Wouldn't attempt it before 8-10 years of playing with disciplined pratice. The good news is there are lots of equally beautiful pieces that are a lot less demanding
GREAt student+staff. Amazing. OT. But funny was when the teacher snatched his student out of his groove at 04:46
Who is the accompanist?
How does it sound on an arpeggione?
Give the man some more G-String... 1:55
very nice.... who is he?
i want to sound like the "student"
How a cellist can sit back in his chair and slouch as if he's watching tv is totally beyond me
How anybody can play sat back in the chair and slouching is totally beyond me