-musicians: Chloe Chua and L'Orchestre de Chambre de Genève -piece: Vivaldi: Winter -original video: th-cam.com/video/WT9jOZLFaEY/w-d-xo.html Thank you so much for watching! ❤️
For me, more impressive than her precision with the notes, is her musicality. Her ability to make beautiful, cogent, phrases out of all of the notes is astounding. That can't really be taught.
@@gibusLaLoutre agreed. She possesses it intuitively, and when she collaborates with intuitive or trained musicians, (such as those this excellent ensemble), who also possess it, magical and wonderful things happen. We, the listeners, are invited to experience phrasing/time/context/sensitivity, i.e. “musicality” outside of the dictates of precision and regularity, which is where transcendent music actually starts!
Technical ability is far easier to teach, so the fact that she has such amazing technique at a young age, while impressive, isn't nearly as impressive as her musicianship. She is so musically adept so early in her career.
I always wonder how it feels for the adult musicians the first rehearsal with someone like Chloe Chua. You sit there for a rehearsal having heard it is a young soloist, in walks a shy and awkward 12 year old, pics up the violin and plays like she does. I imagine there were quite a few rehearsals early in her career that started a bit shaky because the orchestra were mind blown.
This was only the second time Chloe had ever been on stage with an orchestra. I think there can only have been one short rehearsal - probably a couple of hours - beforehand.
@@bsharp.classical I apologize. (Thank you for letting me know. I think the issue I am having is with YT more generally. Pretty much any link to a video by Chloe is cool!)
I hear from violinists that Winter is not actually that hard, but godDAMN is her tone quality good. If I hadn’t been listening to classical music for years, I would have mistaken her for a professional adult.
It's like someone who reads a whole books by Stephen King saying [about a 10 year old] "Well, reading the first paragraph isn't THAT hard". Show me a 10-yr-old that reads it *out loud* convincingly! That's what it's like in my opinion as a professional musician.
Chloe is 15 now. She has continued to make incredible progress and is performing at the level of the very best violinists in the world. If you search YT for "Chloe Chua Richmond" and click the video, what she does will blow your mind!
This is by far one of her less technically difficult performance but the way she phrased makes her sound more like a Master whose been through multiple lifetimes of training and has taught hundreds of prodigies rather than a child.
Everyone here, PLEASE look up her recording of Ysaye’s 3rd sonata. She was incredible here, but just a few years later and she’s one of the most talented violinists alive
Can you explain to a novice like me why her Ysaye 3 was so incredible? I saw some contestants at Menuhin 2021 like Hannah Tam playing the same piece. To my untrained ear, they were all equally impressive. What makes Chloe's Ysaye special?
@@张玉明-y9x Hannah Tan’s performance was also pretty insane, but (just in my opinion keep in mind), Chloe Chua’s performance manages to be both technically flawless AND incredibly musical, much more so than most other performances I’ve heard. Since it’s so hard, a lot of violinists use it as a bit of a showoff-y virtuostic piece, while being unable either to A.) emote due to their extreme focus on the technique or B.) play with clean technique due to their focus on emoting. Chua, however, manages to do both (while sounding *completely comfortable* with the piece, like nothing is taking any effort for her) better than most (if not all) professional, adult violinists I’ve heard. Hannah Tan is a really great violinist, and her performance is also exemplary, but there are some moments where you can hear her struggle verrry slightly. Some passages feel a little slower and delayed, like she’s trying to place the notes (rather than slowing down for musical effect). There are a few even smaller unimportant details, like some unclean runs/shifts, that overall make it sound like this piece (although she clearly has a great understanding of it) is a tiiiny bit of a physical stretch for her. I would like to point out again that Hannah Tan is *amazing* and performs both this piece and the rest of her Menuhin program (dear GOD her Dvorak-) INSANELY well for someone her age. All of the small flaws I pointed out were very minor, and her Ysaye has its own special merits as a performance, much like any other performance does. But for me personally, Chloe Chua’s expressiveness, technical prowess, and most importantly the ease and smoothness with which she plays it, almost like *she* wrote it, all stacked on top of each other, make it one of my favorite classical violin performances on TH-cam of all time due to how beautiful and for lack of a better word *listenable* she managed to make what could otherwise be a very busy, unpleasant piece.
@@张玉明-y9x The only contestant other than Hannah to perform Ysaye '#3 at Menuhin 2021 was Karissa Chiu in the senior final. Her performance was not successful: it rambled and at times the phrasing was close to perverse. Hanna's performance was indeed excellent. Even if it were as good as Chloe's performance, Chloe would be the more impressive: Hannah is 18 months older, which is a huge advantage. But Chloe's performance is in fact better still. One feature that makes it so is the more powerful momentum she builds from beginning to end.
@@jackburgess274 I was actually only thinking about Hannah's performance when I asked ElderberryVA. I barely remembered Karisa Chiu playing Ysaye. Lol. My mistake for not being clear in my comment.
This clip is of course just a drop in the ocean of Chloe's genius, and it isn't really representative of either her technique or the depth of her musical understanding even that time (when her age was 11 years and 3 months). Three days earlier she had given a performance of Hubay's Carmen that remains genuinely _great_ by _anyone's_ standards. Indeed, I haven't been able to find a better performance by any violinist, living or dead. Moving ahead 20 months, the sophistication and maturity of the scintillating performance she gave of Piazzolla's Otono Porteno with the China Philharmonic, when she was still only 12, leaves one incredulous. The end of the piece, beginning just before the cadenza as here, is especially mind-blowing. th-cam.com/video/oLI3zb5W0Uo/w-d-xo.html
Naah, that is a typical poker face you can spot on many cellists and doublebassists: "I could work wonders with my instrument, but as long as this magic happens in front of me I stay humble and do my job looking like I didn't care"
Ah Chloe. I wonder how amazed I am at everytime I see her play. She really holds the full size violin and the bow with great control, even at her age 🙈❤
in the baroque period, it was expected that the soloist play in the tutti! but then things changed around classical/romantic where the soloist stops playing in the tutti so that the orchestra has a moment to be in the spotlight. i think it changed because of the bigger focus on the orchestra and its more complex parts, but don’t quote me on that! tldr; depends on the period- baroque? yes. classical and beyond? generally, no.
I haven't been expected to play the tutti parts in baroque (bassoon) concertos before, but the tutti cues are often provided in the soloist's part. I guess it's up to the soloist and the ensemble.
@@dimit1581 it may be also just a violinist thing? whenever i've done a baroque concerto, it was always expected that we play the tutti parts. but it's interesting that you don't have to (and honestly i'm a little jealous lol)
I play violin and bassoon, but this is something I haven't noticed before! I think it's that violin soloists play the tutti because it's still the melody, but if a bassoon soloist played the tutti part they would be playing mostly harmony. The soloist for the most part should be playing the melody, so violins can play the tutti but bassoons shouldn't. For instance, the Bach violin concerto No 2 clearly indicates to play the tutti (notes are the same size as solo notes), while the Vivaldi bassoon concerto rv 498 displays tutti notes as smaller so you don't play it, the same way tutti notes are smaller in the Mozart violin concerto No 5 where soloists don't play tutti. (These are the concertos I've played and have scores on hand lol 😅)
This is why it's a tough decision to pick violin or piano.... I tried violin and I regret with all that money... I'm not going to have both... I also have school, so I went with piano but I also kinda regret it.... Like bruh imagine playing the 3rd mvt brunch violin concerto in your room, but also imagine playing torrent etude... BUT STRING QUARTETS AND EVEN PIANO TRIOS AND SYMPHONIES violin has the largest repertoire.... I guess? There's a piano solo and there's violin solo, there's piano concerto and there's violin concerto (and I enjoy violin concertos more than piano concertos), and there's violin in piano concerto, there's no symphony and there's symphony, there's violin chamber music and there's piano chamber music (but there are really REALLY REALLY little pieces... Especially the amazing, love-to-hear can-be-heard-everytime, never-get-bored-about-it piano chambers, AND THERES VIOLIN IN PIANO CHAMBER MUSIC) ;( I have to force myself to play piano bcs what am I gonna do? Witches dance on 12 years old? Yeah right....
i just don't get it Tiny kids(Chloe at that time) could use a full size bow and reach the tip of that bow And I, a full grown adult lady, cannot??!? How? Like do i have shorter right arm than a tiny kid?
Your left arm and violin might be too far to your left, try to bring your arm in more so the violin is positioned more in front of you. It’s also possible that your arms are actually just short.
"It's like someone who reads a whole books by Stephen King saying [about a 10 year old] "Well, reading the first paragraph isn't THAT hard". Show me a 10-yr-old that reads it out loud convincingly!" - Me.
One thing don't feel good about is the Mark she already has on her cheek due to to the chin rest... it's a proof of how many practice there is behind it. I did here Chloe really enjoy violin so it's fine but still, it's kinda sad to see.
It’s Chloe Chua…. One of the if not the most impressive young violinists…. She has also done more impressive than this….. Child prodigies make me want to jump off a bridge
This is why Asia is going to rule the world soon. While we in the west park our kids in front of the TV with sugar cereal and a cell phone, they're teaching their children to do things like this. When western culture fails it's on us. She did a beautiful job.
@@jackburgess8579 i will be impressed only if she doesn't play same popular violin soloes for the rest of her life, like many other asian young gifted virtuosos
For almost everyone, it is impossible to perform at this level - a level defined not just by technique but by musicality - no matter how much practice is put in. Four years later, she is already one of the very best virtuoso violinists in the world. No one has ever pushed her. She is driven by her inner muse. As is the norm in the case of such genius, she knows her own destiny and she is her own master.
The competition was for under 16's, and the most prestigious in the world. She won it jointly with Christian Li. They were the youngest ever winners. She was 11, he was 10.
@@S3cretGarden The whole performance - which starts with a very edgy and weird modern piece - is extraordinarily magical.. (Link is in the description.)
It is time to get right with Jesus. You aren’t going to automatically enter into heaven if you have lied or stolen or had premarital sex. Even one of those makes you worthy of hell fire. Don’t deceive yourself! The punishment of sin is hell fire. Jesus died so you can get a clean slate and forgiveness of a future sin when we confess it. When you start to follow him you have to strive to obey what he commands. No one will enter heaven without the blood of Jesus over you. No other way but through Jesus.
It is time to get right with Jesus. You aren’t going to automatically enter into heaven if you have lied or stolen or had premarital sex. Even one of those makes you worthy of hell fire. Don’t deceive yourself! The punishment of sin is hell fire. Jesus died so you can get a clean slate and forgiveness of a future sin when we confess it. When you start to follow him you have to strive to obey what he commands. No one will enter heaven without the blood of Jesus over you. No other way but through Jesus.
Torture is a war crime and moral human beings will not subject other people to that. Why is it that I'm supposed to believe this God who would is better than a human being and worth worshipping?
-musicians: Chloe Chua and L'Orchestre de Chambre de Genève
-piece: Vivaldi: Winter
-original video: th-cam.com/video/WT9jOZLFaEY/w-d-xo.html
Thank you so much for watching! ❤️
I play violin for 4 years and I'm in my 7th year at school this video gives me emotional damage lol.
For me, more impressive than her precision with the notes, is her musicality. Her ability to make beautiful, cogent, phrases out of all of the notes is astounding. That can't really be taught.
It can actually, but it's still impressive 😳
@@gibusLaLoutre agreed. She possesses it intuitively, and when she collaborates with intuitive or trained musicians, (such as those this excellent ensemble), who also possess it, magical and wonderful things happen.
We, the listeners, are invited to experience phrasing/time/context/sensitivity, i.e. “musicality” outside of the dictates of precision and regularity, which is where transcendent music actually starts!
It literally is taught. Stop simping, she's just a child.
@@Mokinono45 bruh who’s simping
Technical ability is far easier to teach, so the fact that she has such amazing technique at a young age, while impressive, isn't nearly as impressive as her musicianship. She is so musically adept so early in her career.
I always wonder how it feels for the adult musicians the first rehearsal with someone like Chloe Chua. You sit there for a rehearsal having heard it is a young soloist, in walks a shy and awkward 12 year old, pics up the violin and plays like she does. I imagine there were quite a few rehearsals early in her career that started a bit shaky because the orchestra were mind blown.
This was only the second time Chloe had ever been on stage with an orchestra.
I think there can only have been one short rehearsal - probably a couple of hours - beforehand.
She act soo professional on stage though
@@newbie4789
Yes, incredibly so.
It make you cring alot as you hear all the child sounds and mistakes
She’s 12?! I would’ve thought 7 or 8
When eating sand is underrated.
THANK YOU
@@bsharp.classical
Are you deleting comments that contain links to other performances by this great violinist?
Never deleted a single comment, please share cool links with all of us if you have some :)
@@bsharp.classical
I apologize.
(Thank you for letting me know. I think the issue I am having is with YT more generally. Pretty much any link to a video by Chloe is cool!)
@@jackburgess8579 TH-cam's automated system is really bizarre when it comes to posting links.
I hear from violinists that Winter is not actually that hard, but godDAMN is her tone quality good. If I hadn’t been listening to classical music for years, I would have mistaken her for a professional adult.
It’s not hard to learn but difficult to master. It’s probably the hardest out of the “four seasons” concertos IMO.
@@masantonio8790Autumn is the most tricky,its complicated together with the orchestra in my opinion...
Well, she is more professional then 99% adult violinists in the world today :)
It's like someone who reads a whole books by Stephen King saying [about a 10 year old] "Well, reading the first paragraph isn't THAT hard".
Show me a 10-yr-old that reads it *out loud* convincingly! That's what it's like in my opinion as a professional musician.
it is hard!
As a violinist I can say that winter is underrated difficulty wise. Summer is not very hard but has the wow factor. Winter is much harder.
But is Winter hard?
As a 9th grade Cellist, who has experienced the stress of playing this song. I was legit shaking in my socks hearing this. She is amazing 🤩
Chloe is 15 now. She has continued to make incredible progress and is performing at the level of the very best violinists in the world.
If you search YT for "Chloe Chua Richmond" and click the video, what she does will blow your mind!
Piece
imagine being the violinists behind
It would be my pleasure!
I'll ask myself why I'm even playing the violin
Difference between two mindsets ☝️
@@rusl4nalentiev frfr
watching one of the greatest soloists and playing with them is an achievement to be proud of
Such mature and dynamic playing for such a young age. Incredible!
This is by far one of her less technically difficult performance but the way she phrased makes her sound more like a Master whose been through multiple lifetimes of training and has taught hundreds of prodigies rather than a child.
that's actually more impressive I would say
Everyone here, PLEASE look up her recording of Ysaye’s 3rd sonata. She was incredible here, but just a few years later and she’s one of the most talented violinists alive
Can you explain to a novice like me why her Ysaye 3 was so incredible? I saw some contestants at Menuhin 2021 like Hannah Tam playing the same piece. To my untrained ear, they were all equally impressive. What makes Chloe's Ysaye special?
@@张玉明-y9x Hannah Tan’s performance was also pretty insane, but (just in my opinion keep in mind), Chloe Chua’s performance manages to be both technically flawless AND incredibly musical, much more so than most other performances I’ve heard. Since it’s so hard, a lot of violinists use it as a bit of a showoff-y virtuostic piece, while being unable either to A.) emote due to their extreme focus on the technique or B.) play with clean technique due to their focus on emoting. Chua, however, manages to do both (while sounding *completely comfortable* with the piece, like nothing is taking any effort for her) better than most (if not all) professional, adult violinists I’ve heard. Hannah Tan is a really great violinist, and her performance is also exemplary, but there are some moments where you can hear her struggle verrry slightly. Some passages feel a little slower and delayed, like she’s trying to place the notes (rather than slowing down for musical effect). There are a few even smaller unimportant details, like some unclean runs/shifts, that overall make it sound like this piece (although she clearly has a great understanding of it) is a tiiiny bit of a physical stretch for her. I would like to point out again that Hannah Tan is *amazing* and performs both this piece and the rest of her Menuhin program (dear GOD her Dvorak-) INSANELY well for someone her age. All of the small flaws I pointed out were very minor, and her Ysaye has its own special merits as a performance, much like any other performance does. But for me personally, Chloe Chua’s expressiveness, technical prowess, and most importantly the ease and smoothness with which she plays it, almost like *she* wrote it, all stacked on top of each other, make it one of my favorite classical violin performances on TH-cam of all time due to how beautiful and for lack of a better word *listenable* she managed to make what could otherwise be a very busy, unpleasant piece.
@@张玉明-y9x
The only contestant other than Hannah to perform Ysaye '#3 at Menuhin 2021 was Karissa Chiu in the senior final. Her performance was not successful: it rambled and at times the phrasing was close to perverse.
Hanna's performance was indeed excellent.
Even if it were as good as Chloe's performance, Chloe would be the more impressive: Hannah is 18 months older, which is a huge advantage.
But Chloe's performance is in fact better still. One feature that makes it so is the more powerful momentum she builds from beginning to end.
@@jackburgess274
I was actually only thinking about Hannah's performance when I asked ElderberryVA. I barely remembered Karisa Chiu playing Ysaye. Lol. My mistake for not being clear in my comment.
@@elderberryva9282
Thanks for your detailed explanation, for explaining the subtleties and reasons why her Ysaye is amazing.
Very much appreciated!
This clip is of course just a drop in the ocean of Chloe's genius, and it isn't really representative of either her technique or the depth of her musical understanding even that time (when her age was 11 years and 3 months).
Three days earlier she had given a performance of Hubay's Carmen that remains genuinely _great_ by _anyone's_ standards. Indeed, I haven't been able to find a better performance by any violinist, living or dead.
Moving ahead 20 months, the sophistication and maturity of the scintillating performance she gave of Piazzolla's Otono Porteno with the China Philharmonic, when she was still only 12, leaves one incredulous. The end of the piece, beginning just before the cadenza as here, is especially mind-blowing.
th-cam.com/video/oLI3zb5W0Uo/w-d-xo.html
1:36 Cellist is sitting there thinking 'What am I doing with my life, I could've become that...'
"If only I practiced for 40 hrs/day"
@@Calvin704704 Otherwise this will happen : th-cam.com/video/Y-_GEwaAnlk/w-d-xo.html
@@Calvin704704 ling ling
Naah, that is a typical poker face you can spot on many cellists and doublebassists: "I could work wonders with my instrument, but as long as this magic happens in front of me I stay humble and do my job looking like I didn't care"
@@OrbiliusMagister
Maybe the fact that Orchestra Bass Parts are boring because of the composers!!!
she's gonna be a villain when she grow up and this'll be her awakening
Ah Chloe. I wonder how amazed I am at everytime I see her play. She really holds the full size violin and the bow with great control, even at her age 🙈❤
Ok. Her hair just dancing with the music is kinda fun to look at😂😂😂
She must practice 40 hours a day.
for sure
Ling ling herself
omg twosetter
And 10 days a week
Twosettttt
What's inspiring in this performance is that the orchestra members don't mass quit.
Chloe Chua!!!! She shreds!
Is it customary for the soloist to play the tutti sections. I was a bassoonist and I never did, but perhaps that is the tradition amongst Violinists.
in the baroque period, it was expected that the soloist play in the tutti! but then things changed around classical/romantic where the soloist stops playing in the tutti so that the orchestra has a moment to be in the spotlight. i think it changed because of the bigger focus on the orchestra and its more complex parts, but don’t quote me on that!
tldr; depends on the period- baroque? yes. classical and beyond? generally, no.
I haven't been expected to play the tutti parts in baroque (bassoon) concertos before, but the tutti cues are often provided in the soloist's part.
I guess it's up to the soloist and the ensemble.
@@dimit1581 it may be also just a violinist thing? whenever i've done a baroque concerto, it was always expected that we play the tutti parts. but it's interesting that you don't have to (and honestly i'm a little jealous lol)
I play violin and bassoon, but this is something I haven't noticed before!
I think it's that violin soloists play the tutti because it's still the melody, but if a bassoon soloist played the tutti part they would be playing mostly harmony. The soloist for the most part should be playing the melody, so violins can play the tutti but bassoons shouldn't.
For instance, the Bach violin concerto No 2 clearly indicates to play the tutti (notes are the same size as solo notes), while the Vivaldi bassoon concerto rv 498 displays tutti notes as smaller so you don't play it, the same way tutti notes are smaller in the Mozart violin concerto No 5 where soloists don't play tutti. (These are the concertos I've played and have scores on hand lol 😅)
@@jasschw
Haydn Cello Concerto in C;
I think that one does as well
Amazing, I got goose bumps from this.
The musicians are probably like, “I’m done with life😫” 😂
Amazing ❤️🙏🇨🇦
I'm still tripping over the sand bit...
Winter III _was_ definitely my favourite Vivaldi song aswell
Sublime, and almost unbelievable
Chloe chua!!!
Who else just got their confidence ruined at 8am on a Saturday?
EXACTLy
Thanks for sharing your character weakness to the whole world.
*…when you have a _competition_ one hour later 💀 😂
I was eating legos at that age…
The title of the video I can’t-
Well played young one . 💐
Beautiful tone; wonderful Music performance
This is why it's a tough decision to pick violin or piano.... I tried violin and I regret with all that money... I'm not going to have both... I also have school, so I went with piano but I also kinda regret it.... Like bruh imagine playing the 3rd mvt brunch violin concerto in your room, but also imagine playing torrent etude... BUT STRING QUARTETS AND EVEN PIANO TRIOS AND SYMPHONIES violin has the largest repertoire.... I guess? There's a piano solo and there's violin solo, there's piano concerto and there's violin concerto (and I enjoy violin concertos more than piano concertos), and there's violin in piano concerto, there's no symphony and there's symphony, there's violin chamber music and there's piano chamber music (but there are really REALLY REALLY little pieces... Especially the amazing, love-to-hear can-be-heard-everytime, never-get-bored-about-it piano chambers, AND THERES VIOLIN IN PIANO CHAMBER MUSIC) ;( I have to force myself to play piano bcs what am I gonna do? Witches dance on 12 years old? Yeah right....
There is not enough time to do everything. One makes their choice and tries to do their best with that choice.
Sanjosemike (no longer in CA)
So what did you choose?
Wow nice
Her notes are so bold though
How good is her teacher..
Amazing
I got admitted to Curtis when I was in the womb.
i just don't get it
Tiny kids(Chloe at that time) could use a full size bow and reach the tip of that bow
And I, a full grown adult lady, cannot??!? How? Like do i have shorter right arm than a tiny kid?
Your left arm and violin might be too far to your left, try to bring your arm in more so the violin is positioned more in front of you. It’s also possible that your arms are actually just short.
@@thidang6247 cool thanks for the advice!
John wick is on the backstage loading his guns
Wow😳♥️
You’ve been eating sand, so what? She lives her life, you live yours. Everyone has its own path.
Because Sand! 😂
She can make violin sings like a Bird
I played this piece as a double bass player in school
Cool
Did you end up playing
Treble(Trouble) Clef? 😂
@@artyjaycayairlines No and yes🤣
Very nicely done
Same.
Im still getting used to reading Vivaldi on jazz font but carry on
I was eating soil at that age 🤣🤣🤣
I wonder how they can afford to pay her. Stellar
bruh if i was in that orchestra i'd be so upset
Dont worry guys- two set violin feels emotional damage too
You need chlidhood? No no give me that strings dad. Why are you moving like a robot? Well dad you stuned my emotional growth.
You have absolutely no idea what you are talking about.
I wasn't even able to eat sand at that age
...and I'm still eating sand as an adult!
Me, tears in my eyes: "Beautiful... how hard did you say you had to hit her again?"
The mother: "Mm, quite hard."
Well, ain't you a complete ignoramus.
excuseeeeeeeeeeeee meeeeeeeeee??? did I just see a five string double bass at 1:34?!....
A good spot(!) but not so rare. German orchestras use them. This orchestra is Swiss but I guess it is catching ...
Might just be the ‘shadows’ lol 😂
#OpticalIllusion
I was crying because i accidentally locked the car door at that age lol
I'm still eating sand
i was eating rocks personnally
banger title
"It's like someone who reads a whole books by Stephen King saying [about a 10 year old] "Well, reading the first paragraph isn't THAT hard".
Show me a 10-yr-old that reads it out loud convincingly!" - Me.
🎻✨
One thing don't feel good about is the Mark she already has on her cheek due to to the chin rest... it's a proof of how many practice there is behind it.
I did here Chloe really enjoy violin so it's fine but still, it's kinda sad to see.
👏🏼😍
It’s Chloe Chua…. One of the if not the most impressive young violinists…. She has also done more impressive than this…..
Child prodigies make me want to jump off a bridge
Wanted:
Chloe Chua
For pushing a person off the bridge mentally 😂
bro 💀
Caraca ...SLK
This is why Asia is going to rule the world soon. While we in the west park our kids in front of the TV with sugar cereal and a cell phone, they're teaching their children to do things like this. When western culture fails it's on us. She did a beautiful job.
Ling ling
ling ling 40 hours in hour
Wonderful player but her e-string makes my teeth hurt
In the first half primarily
Cool
Vivaldi and Chloe did a good job
(“Winter” is designed to make your teeth shatter)
wow!!! is it another winter played by asian 5yo kid? wow!...
If you had be arsed to find out, you would have known that it is Winter performed by one of the most gifted violinists who ever lived.
@@jackburgess8579
i will be impressed only if she doesn't play same popular violin soloes for the rest of her life, like many other asian young gifted virtuosos
Racist
So did you look her up at all?
@@handsafter ??????
another day, another reason to quit music
She was actually about like 8 or above idk in this video
She was 11 and 3 months.
It's not that difficult if practiced. Be interesting to hear her as an adult if her parents push her still 🤣
For almost everyone, it is impossible to perform at this level - a level defined not just by technique but by musicality - no matter how much practice is put in.
Four years later, she is already one of the very best virtuoso violinists in the world.
No one has ever pushed her. She is driven by her inner muse. As is the norm in the case of such genius, she knows her own destiny and she is her own master.
i have a question, whats she gonna play when she become an adult. didnt she just hit the top? 😂
Did you hand transcribe it?
btw, b-sharp, interesting girl turned u into a b flat.
Not following the sheet music here at all… lol
Pov : 🙂😮😯😲😱🥵
Did she win tough..
The competition was for under 16's, and the most prestigious in the world.
She won it jointly with Christian Li.
They were the youngest ever winners. She was 11, he was 10.
@@jackburgess274 ok thank you!
@@S3cretGarden
The whole performance - which starts with a very edgy and weird modern piece - is extraordinarily magical..
(Link is in the description.)
Ye sure so classical music sounds boring right 😂😂😂😂
Who the F#@! eats sand?!!!
Hi Tiger Mum 😂
winter isn't that hard, but her tone isn't bad at all
her tone is exceptional for her age
She literally won the Menuhin 😭
Hey lil girl, pls don't dye your hair blonde and pls don't be associated to a pianist boy
It is time to get right with Jesus. You aren’t going to automatically enter into heaven if you have lied or stolen or had premarital sex. Even one of those makes you worthy of hell fire. Don’t deceive yourself! The punishment of sin is hell fire.
Jesus died so you can get a clean slate and forgiveness of a future sin when we confess it. When you start to follow him you have to strive to obey what he commands.
No one will enter heaven without the blood of Jesus over you. No other way but through Jesus.
Jesus is putting a lot of pressure on people and manipulating them after his death.
Didn’t Mary make a cuckold of Joseph?
🤮🤮
Why here???
@@josephhapp9 And why too???
Ling ling
It is time to get right with Jesus. You aren’t going to automatically enter into heaven if you have lied or stolen or had premarital sex. Even one of those makes you worthy of hell fire. Don’t deceive yourself! The punishment of sin is hell fire.
Jesus died so you can get a clean slate and forgiveness of a future sin when we confess it. When you start to follow him you have to strive to obey what he commands.
No one will enter heaven without the blood of Jesus over you. No other way but through Jesus.
Apart from this not being true, what does it have to do with this video? Don't take the spotlight from her
@@lelafritzer2955 its always important to spread the Gospel anywhere, and it saddens me to think you don't take it seriously
@@vanorisk this is harassment. Go away.
@@leonmatterson562 I apologize, but i completely fail to see how it is harassment, please explain!
Torture is a war crime and moral human beings will not subject other people to that. Why is it that I'm supposed to believe this God who would is better than a human being and worth worshipping?