Haakon Solaas plays Fanitullen on the hardanger fiddle

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 17 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 300

  • @chillaxnagain
    @chillaxnagain 13 років тому +215

    I like how his mastery is so casual. He sitting around in a sweater, halfway turned around in his favorite chair absolutely killing this song.

    • @zerokelvinzero
      @zerokelvinzero 2 роки тому +10

      Killing it indeed. Never heard a better version (recorded).

    • @cubestur8157
      @cubestur8157 Рік тому +1

      literally you could put this as scene music almost anywhere in Jo Nesbo novels XD

  • @zerokelvinzero
    @zerokelvinzero 2 роки тому +59

    This is the most beautiful version of fanitullen I have ever heard. He captured the depth, the revolt, the playfulness of this tune. Most people play it politely without the danger, without the edge.

  • @Dabednego
    @Dabednego 2 роки тому +31

    This man gives you a quest. I can practically see the exclamation point over his head

    • @TheCountryPicker
      @TheCountryPicker 2 роки тому +6

      The quest to retrieve the long lost Hardanger bow

  • @Animasana2076
    @Animasana2076 2 роки тому +30

    One man, one fiddle, one entire national musical history

  • @basstrammel1322
    @basstrammel1322 5 років тому +26

    Denne videoen kommer til å ha en stødig vekst de neste 50+ årene, KUN basert på Haakons lynne og talent.

  • @machinima8596
    @machinima8596 2 роки тому +11

    The tuning is less “equal” than most other players I’ve heard on UA-cam-wonderful!

  • @coutiya2007
    @coutiya2007 10 років тому +127

    the skill lies in the beard

    • @antheaxe7340
      @antheaxe7340 6 років тому +7

      yes yes yes allways in the beard

  • @clem-1917
    @clem-1917 13 років тому +13

    @ts2101 "Fanitullen", or "The Devils Tune" was heard for the first time during a wedding in a valley in Norway in 1724. When the toastmaster went down to the cellar to get more beer. In the cellar the toastmaster saw a man sitting on the barrell of beer playing this tune on a fiddle held the wrong way around, pressing the neck of the fiddle against his chest and
    stomping the beat on the barrell with a horse hoof. The fiddler was the devil.

  • @diane9247
    @diane9247 6 років тому +29

    Beautiful music...it is the landscape of Norway in musical form. I've never been there, but this is how I imagine it.

    • @Vingul
      @Vingul 2 роки тому +4

      That's precisely right.

  • @georgemillet2143
    @georgemillet2143 10 років тому +122

    I love the smile and the song is played flawlessly. I watch this video every couple of months just to put a smile on my face. Superb. I love this song and his rendition is perfect.

    • @Aasmundar
      @Aasmundar 6 років тому +6

      George Millet solaas is over three hundred years old. Not many people know this. His people's kind go back a thousand years and are the spawn of Bragi.

    • @Vingul
      @Vingul 2 роки тому +1

      @@Aasmundar Det stemmer.

  • @baldrbraa
    @baldrbraa 7 років тому +52

    In the slow twilight of the bare mountain plains, not sure if you're hearing a fiddle from afar or if it's just the wind gently pulling the mist up the hillside. It's actually this guy, inside the mountain, playing Fanitullen as trolls, goblins, necks and beautiful maidens with long bovine tails stomp around in circles. Go the other way.

  • @mrsorepaws9146
    @mrsorepaws9146 7 років тому +18

    Kommer stadig tilbake til denne. Artig fyr, og den mest fengende versjonen jeg har funnet!

    • @astridverland7419
      @astridverland7419 4 роки тому

      Enig! Hans versjon er alltid den eg finner fram når eg vil høyre Fanitullen. Eg finner ikkje kjekkare versjon i allefall!🥰🥰

  • @snyot
    @snyot 9 років тому +17

    That left hand pizzicato though!

  • @AlayanaSpring
    @AlayanaSpring 12 років тому +53

    I love this! My family came from Hardanger in Norway, where music like this was played a lot. Although I think some people won't like the shrieking sounds that sometimes come from the fiddle, those sounds make me love the melody even more. This is music that I really can relate to, although I'm only a 21 year old girl. I guess this kind of music makes me think of my family. :) Wonderful version of Fanitullen!! :)

    • @alger3041
      @alger3041 2 роки тому

      Fanitullen, perhaps; but not by Halvorsen that I'm familiar with.

    • @tomrogerlilleby2890
      @tomrogerlilleby2890 2 роки тому +3

      This Halvorsen is a classical composer that took this folk tune and made a more classical variation out of it.

    • @alger3041
      @alger3041 2 роки тому +1

      @@tomrogerlilleby2890 And Grieg used some of those, as collected by Halvorsen, and used them in his Slaater for piano, Op. 72.

    • @merqury5
      @merqury5 2 роки тому +2

      Now you are 30. Still like it?

    • @olejohannesbakke6316
      @olejohannesbakke6316 6 місяців тому

      I live in Hardanger. My family (Isak Botnen Skaar) invented the Hardingfele. Not exactly sure how it would pan out, but he's either my great-great-great-etc. grandfather, or the brother of my great-great-great-etc.... Small world.

  • @eckpolmick5080
    @eckpolmick5080 Рік тому +4

    Haakon is the man, totally skilled and cool.

  • @fairdinkum9454
    @fairdinkum9454 2 роки тому +4

    Harding fiddle… amazing!

  • @Ulvetann
    @Ulvetann 4 роки тому +6

    2020. Will see this again.

  • @blueschanter
    @blueschanter 9 років тому +4

    Such a happy song.

  • @baldrbraa
    @baldrbraa 2 роки тому +5

    He speaks through his music. Leaning forward at 0:51 as if to say «I have a knife too»

  • @esmeraldagreen1992
    @esmeraldagreen1992 6 років тому +3

    I love this music and this gentleman.

  • @ggrey5990
    @ggrey5990 9 років тому +15

    Fantastic. I absolutely love the Hardanger and it's played wonderfully.

  • @martyfour
    @martyfour 10 років тому +8

    great tune masterfully played, have loved this music for years

  • @TheNorwegianDudeShow
    @TheNorwegianDudeShow 8 років тому +25

    Denne mannen er bare helt herlig, han ser ut som en koselig bestefar :D skulle likt å bli kjent me denne karen :D

  • @martinknutsen2801
    @martinknutsen2801 11 місяців тому +2

    Hardanger felen er virkelig et særdeles vakkert instrument!

  • @skaijazisdottir9800
    @skaijazisdottir9800 11 років тому +8

    Svært vakker musik. Ligge i fred Haakon.

  • @ukebert
    @ukebert 13 років тому +3

    And ever since then, whenever this tune is played, knives grow loose in their sheaths...

  • @gabydragona
    @gabydragona 15 років тому +3

    I LOVED THAT. Simply hipnotic...

  • @tomrogerlilleby2890
    @tomrogerlilleby2890 6 років тому +38

    The origin of this type of Norwegian folk music is very old and it dates back to antiquity - to the world of the Phoenicians. It was preserved deep in the heartland of Norwegian culture - in the remote valleys that didn't saw much contact with other cultures.
    Way back in time before the waves of Christian Lutheran Puritism swept over the country -
    Norway was very much a hedonistic country - with heavy drinking and everything that follows in that path.
    Especially at weddings, that usually lasted for days, jealousy and pride and old unsettled scores would often end
    in fights - sometimes with the use of weapons such as knives.
    It sometimes ended really tragically.
    The instrument of choice was the Norwegian Hardanger fiddle as it was loud and rhythmic - so you could dance to it.
    The hypnotic feel to this intricate kind of melody and rhythm would sometimes send the virotouse into a trance
    where the instrument itself seemed to take over the control of the musician - and the melodies would go on and on
    without ending. Those strange vibes could fire up the people involved and with consumption of alcohol in addition, things could get out of hand and have a tragic ending.
    The Hardanger fiddle music and the fiddle itself - was by many God-fearing Christians regarded as the instrument and the music of the devil himself - since it had these hypnotic qualities.
    It's been told that sometimes the players could not stop by themselves - and had to be forced to lay down their instruments and brutualy waken up to come out of this hypnotic trance.
    And now this special tune itself is connected to these devilish myths surrounding this type of music.
    The story goes that at one such ongoing fight at a wedding were two men were being tied together with a belt -
    each one holding a knife trying to outdo the other - this melody first occurred.
    As this fight went on upstairs, one other man went down in the cellar to fetch more beer.
    As he came down he said he saw the devil himself playing this very tune on a fiddle while sitting on a barrel of beer and holding the fiddle the wrong way while beating the rhythm with his hoofs on the barrel.
    This melody came to be known as "Fanitullen" - meaning "the tune of Fanden" - "the tune of the Devil. "
    Myths, or stories like these did not help the culture of this type of folk music.
    It was very often suppressed and forbidden by puritan Christians and by the Lutheran State Church.
    This music came close to extinction and had a long way back to being generally accepted and loved.
    Nowadays it is being regarded as our genuine cultural heritage - even though not many are able to fully understand it - because of it's intricate nature.
    This more modern version of "Fanitullen" is one of the most accessible of these tunes for foreigners -
    as it has a relatively clear melody and a steady pattern of rhythm. That is because a fiddler called Odd
    Bakkerud reworked this tune for a competition: "Landskappleiken" in 1968 - and made a more modern,
    and not so weird version. And this modern version is what we hear here.
    In 1972, a folk group called "Christiana Fusel & Blaagress" made a pop-version of this traditional tune
    much in the same way as British groups like "Steeleye Span" and "Fairport Convention" took British folk
    music and gave them a modern makeover in the 70's.
    In 1993 another Norwegian folk music group called "Bukkene Bruse" did a similar modern recording of the tune.

    • @adahs6994
      @adahs6994 6 років тому +1

      Wow thanks for sharing!

    • @knrst9061
      @knrst9061 5 років тому +9

      The origin of this type of Golden UA-cam Commentary is very old and it dates back to the nineties - to the world of the forums. It was preserved deep in the heartland of 4chan culture - in the remote topics that didn't saw much contact with other posters.
      Way back in time before the waves of SJW's swept over the internet -
      The internet was very much a informative place - with heavy debates and everything that follows in that path.
      Especially on forum discussions, that usually lasted for days, controversies and butthurtedness and un-based shadow-banning would often end
      in lawsuits - sometimes with the use of legal aid such as lawyers.
      It sometimes ended really tragically.
      The un-vetted access to information and the internet itself - was by many Zuckerberg-fearing SJW's regarded as the propaganda-machine of Hitler himself - since it had these red-pilling qualities.
      It's been told that sometimes the debatters could not be censored by Zuckerberg - and had to be forced to lay down their keyboards by algorythms.

    • @wms72
      @wms72 4 роки тому

      @@knrst9061 LOL!

  • @honeyspur
    @honeyspur 15 років тому +2

    How flawless and beautiful - sparkling clarity

  • @LucidWanderer
    @LucidWanderer 8 років тому +4

    Beautiful.

  • @Twinhit
    @Twinhit 15 років тому +3

    That's a wonderful instrument and an enchanting performance.
    Thank you for sharing this gentleman's music.

  • @jennykalahar
    @jennykalahar Рік тому +1

    I love these so much that I feature a Hardanger fiddle in one of my novels, The Great Restoration. He's a traveling tent musician who kept a diary in the late 1800s to early 1900s. (Wish I could have found a great HF photo to use for the cover!)

  • @artslife3876
    @artslife3876 Рік тому +2

    Amazing!! Mastery and confidence. Thank you, from Ireland 🙂

  • @patrickmurphy9266
    @patrickmurphy9266 Рік тому +4

    A master .

  • @andyharpist2938
    @andyharpist2938 8 років тому +9

    Incredible playing. What a cool dude! Respekt Håkon

  • @jessyquedens
    @jessyquedens 12 років тому +2

    He's great and his fiddle is beautiful.

  • @ChrisC811
    @ChrisC811 8 років тому +2

    Beautiful. What a master.

  • @SamLamingMusic
    @SamLamingMusic 6 років тому +5

    I heard this years ago and got interested in such instruments, found the Viola D'amore (a very similar instrument) and now, I've finally got one and love it! I think this was the first place I saw such an interesting 'Sympathetic string Violin' and so thanks!

    • @tomrogerlilleby2890
      @tomrogerlilleby2890 2 роки тому +1

      There was a Norwegian viritouso called Ole Bull that got quite world famous in the 17th century.
      I believe he was the very first to bring foreigners attention to the Norwegian folk music.
      People thought that he had an extra violinist hidden behind the curtain when he performed because of these extra sympathetic strings on the Hardanger fiddle.

  • @JohnSelma
    @JohnSelma 12 років тому +47

    The problem with sheet music (as with Old Time Appalachian music) there just isn't the notation to cover everything that is going on. This is the kind of music that you have to learn by listening and copying. Sheet music played to modern orchestral values gets the notes but loses the soul.

    • @davidlinton2799
      @davidlinton2799 3 роки тому

      It’s actually customary and tradition to learn by ear with the Hardanger Fiddle!
      But lots of sheet music exists too.
      Many tunes can be found at HFAA.org

  • @MegaTeddd
    @MegaTeddd 10 років тому +3

    Beautiful playing!

  • @0.innerpixel
    @0.innerpixel 8 років тому +7

    you are having so much fun .. thanks for sharing ...

  • @НинаНовикова-м5у
    @НинаНовикова-м5у Місяць тому +1

    Вижу НОРВЕЖСКИЙ ЛЕС,СНЕГ,ВЫСОКИЕ ДЕРЕВЬЯ,ВЬЮГУ,ЛЕД,СЧАСТЛИВЫХ ТАНЦУЮЩИХ ЗВЕРЮШЕК,ГНОМОВ!!!❤❤❤🦄💚💙💚💦🦄🎻🦄💦

  • @RincsArt
    @RincsArt 12 років тому +2

    That is amazing. He is awesome.. just.. too awesome.

  • @cridow
    @cridow 10 років тому +5

    Hell yes! I needed this for writing reference. Thank you! Sounds beautiful!

  • @LoveAllReality
    @LoveAllReality 12 років тому +3

    what a soulful performance!

  • @michaelh2935
    @michaelh2935 5 років тому +2

    Very beautiful!

  • @rattleshakti
    @rattleshakti 3 місяці тому

    WOW! What an amazing sound, it looks like a cross between a mandolin and a fiddle, guys so cool like, Hardander? Hold my beer! 😂

  • @LG334373
    @LG334373 12 років тому +6

    This is absolutely wonderful, and what a delightful man! I'm so thrilled this was posted, thank you! Tusen takk!

  • @RydENh34d
    @RydENh34d 14 років тому +3

    Utrolig bra spilt, elsker dette musikkstykket!

  • @karelina6674
    @karelina6674 5 років тому +2

    Quite wonderful!

  • @kitaro1007
    @kitaro1007 16 років тому +3

    Amazing! It sounds so beautiful

  • @Jebusisabasser
    @Jebusisabasser 11 років тому +1

    that is exactly why I just came here. Very very cool.

  • @ES-zj2tq
    @ES-zj2tq 9 років тому +4

    Fantastic. (I'm also hearing it even though I'm over here too ;) )

    • @tomrogerlilleby2890
      @tomrogerlilleby2890 6 років тому

      Eric Sutherland - what she tries to say is that the sound of the Hardanger fiddle is very loud -
      as it has 4 underlying strings working as drones - in addition to the ordinary 4 strings that plays the melody.
      When the famous Norwegian violinist - Ole Bull - introduced this instrument to a wider internasjonal audience
      that hadn't heard of it before - it was very often considered a fraud.
      Many thought that it was two players in action - one man upfront that was standing on the scene playing
      while another was hiding behind the curtain.

  • @lumenarctic4571
    @lumenarctic4571 9 років тому +3

    Wonderful!

  • @olejohannesbakke6316
    @olejohannesbakke6316 6 місяців тому +2

    As an old norwegian black metaller, I'll just say it - this was the first black metal tune to come out of Norway. It's literally called the dance of Faen/Satan/the Devil, ffs.... And for at least 150-200 years, the use of Harding fiddle was banned in norwegian churches, as the sound of it was thought at the time to promote dance, drink, promiscuity and violence. All hail the metal fiddlers!

  • @gunn7830
    @gunn7830 2 роки тому +4

    Absolutt strålende!❤👏

  • @Rossssu
    @Rossssu 10 років тому +5

    Fantastic! And the violin is so beautiful..

    • @kitkatfu1908
      @kitkatfu1908 9 років тому

      It's not really a violin though.. Even though it's technically the same instrument, but it's usually referred to as a fiddle :)

    • @plentymore2162
      @plentymore2162 8 років тому

      Hardangerfele.

    • @Lompulf
      @Lompulf 6 років тому

      It’s not a violin. This actually has twice the amount of strings as a violin

    • @tomrogerlilleby2890
      @tomrogerlilleby2890 2 роки тому +1

      It is a violin - but with 4 extra "sympathetic strings" that are not actually being played - but they works as drones that are automatically being activated when playing the violin.
      It's a type of violin that is only being found in Norway - and it's called : "Hardanger fele."

    • @seneca983
      @seneca983 Рік тому

      @@kitkatfu1908 Violin and fiddle are synonyms. A Hardanger fiddle/violin is different from a normal fiddle/violin but I think it's reasonable to say it's a type of violin.

  • @xdemmons
    @xdemmons 7 років тому +5

    Norsk Viking Haakon! Brilliant!!!

  • @EmelieWaldken
    @EmelieWaldken 9 років тому +10

    No stress, man ^^ How distressed he is !
    Wonderful tune, beautifully played !

  • @Uvisir
    @Uvisir 13 років тому +2

    i love old men playing violins alays makes you think of childhood!

  • @jazzochannel
    @jazzochannel 4 роки тому +1

    veldig moderne og jazzet, men ellers konge. takk takk takk

  • @dodraugen
    @dodraugen 15 років тому +3

    Didn´t see this until now.
    Your an inspiration ;) It´s nice that norwegian music expandes to outside the borders :)

  • @ShivSilverhawk
    @ShivSilverhawk 13 років тому +2

    Made my day! Greetings from Poland!

  • @yeah1994E
    @yeah1994E 12 років тому +4

    This is real music!

  • @xdemmons
    @xdemmons 6 років тому +3

    Pure talent!

  • @keisa2011
    @keisa2011 12 років тому +2

    This is awesome

  • @rogerjohansen828
    @rogerjohansen828 6 років тому +2

    Unbeliveable !

  • @torgeir01
    @torgeir01 14 років тому +2

    Really good playing sir.
    Love from Norway

  • @ca1cifer
    @ca1cifer 12 років тому +17

    I feel like you're Santa's musically inclined brother or something.

  • @eboyinc
    @eboyinc 12 років тому +2

    loved it.

  • @Dairina321
    @Dairina321 7 років тому +2

    Thank you!

  • @Wood111112
    @Wood111112 10 років тому +3

    So damn good.

  • @cadillackman
    @cadillackman 15 років тому +2

    utruli bra å spele.kjempe flott.

  • @QuantumVenger
    @QuantumVenger 13 років тому +1

    @QuantumVenger Story is from a wedding in Norway in 1724. It's said the womenfolk used to bring shrouds to parties n those days. Ådne Sindrol and Levord Haga got into an argument. They were tied together with a belt and given a knife each. As they were fighting the master of drink went to fetch more ale. In the cellar he saw someone sitting on the keg. This person was playing a fiddle,backwards, holding the pointy end to his chin..and playing fanitullen, while tapping his hoof against the keg.

  • @ducktapesandwhich
    @ducktapesandwhich 14 років тому +2

    beautiful instrument.

    • @sevvi8096
      @sevvi8096 2 роки тому

      its a hardanger fiddle

  • @irateofwatford
    @irateofwatford 14 років тому +2

    Magnificent!

  • @stellabrook9633
    @stellabrook9633 10 років тому +3

    stellaloved it.

  • @worlock93
    @worlock93 15 років тому +2

    The vibrations of the principal (bowed) strings causes the bottom strings vibrate and sound in sympathy. The simplest example is the tuning fork. If you take a tuning fork tuned for the note "A" strike it and hold it against a stringed instrument the strings also tuned to "A" will begin to vibrate in harmony. There is also some other complicated stuff going on with harmonics and overtones, but that's the basic explanation ;)

  • @holysmokinkitty
    @holysmokinkitty 14 років тому +2

    thank you for sharing it was lovely!

  • @donaldmaurer3505
    @donaldmaurer3505 Рік тому +2

    Sounds at times like there are two instruments playing, I guess because of the sympathetic strings.

  • @melvinklassen
    @melvinklassen 15 років тому +1

    In addition to the comments by 'worlock93', note that the bridge is much flatter than the "ordinary" fiddle, allowing bowing of 2 or even 3 strings at once. It's especially noticeable after the 2:18 mark, where you hear a lower-pitch "drone" while the higher-pitch part moves.

  • @mike53341
    @mike53341 13 років тому +2

    Give this man one million dollars! Or a beer.

  • @NPasch-fd1tj
    @NPasch-fd1tj 6 років тому +1

    Brillant gespielt!Echtes Können!! Noti Pasch

  • @tenchu65
    @tenchu65 7 років тому +3

    Fantastisk spill ...

  • @gusthelesswise
    @gusthelesswise 15 років тому +1

    Yay! a decent and recording of a really nice hardingfele. If I ever manage to go to any of the scandinavian countries then I'll have to get one.

  • @TheDonaldido
    @TheDonaldido 13 років тому +1

    @Sondreinj "This video is of Haakon Solaas, from the Sogn region of western Norway" Tadaa!

  • @不染铅华
    @不染铅华 5 років тому +1

    This is what Gandalf will look like after going through Thor's crap during End Game

  • @emmalouise5467
    @emmalouise5467 8 років тому

    Could you please tell me what tuning this is played in? I have been tuning my fiddle in what seems like every possible way but none of them sound right. I don't have a hardanger, but I hope a normal one will work.

    • @DNephi-xu7gx
      @DNephi-xu7gx 8 років тому

      +emma louise I've heard that the hardanger fiddle has a different number of strings than a traditional fiddle or violin. If that is the case, then it would be a little more complex than just figuring out the tuning.

    • @emmalouise5467
      @emmalouise5467 8 років тому

      D. Nephi Darn it. Now I really need to buy a hardanger! I am borrowing my friends but he doesn't want to sell it to me.

    • @baldrbraa
      @baldrbraa 8 років тому +5

      It's tuned in the "trollstilt" tuning. The four main strings are tuned to A, E, A, C# relatively, although the instrument as a whole is about a whole step higher in pitch than A=440. The "sympathetic" drone strings underneath are tuned to C#, E, F#, A, still relatively.

    • @emmalouise5467
      @emmalouise5467 7 років тому +1

      One year later and I am sitting here with my fiddle tuned G# D G# D# Looked in the comments to see if anyone asked about the tuning.... xD

  • @lizgabay1
    @lizgabay1 14 років тому +1

    The tuning is trollstilt.
    The upper strings A-E-A-C# and the understrings (a) - c# - e - f# - a

  • @fairdinkum9454
    @fairdinkum9454 2 роки тому +1

    Norge! 🇳🇴💯👊🏼💕

  • @Dankzzz
    @Dankzzz 9 років тому +7

    Devils tune, or wild dance... The tale of the tune the devil made when a man was stabbed to death by a knife during a wedding. A sick good tune, so the legend can be true... Bukkene Bruse that Ive met in real life should have this tune on a CD.

    • @lawrencewalston2906
      @lawrencewalston2906 5 років тому

      Annbjørg Lien, a member of Bukkene Bruse, did produce a variation of her own in her album "Annbjørg." Here's the link for the song. ua-cam.com/video/rKBmYg9L42c/v-deo.html

  • @dilwyn1
    @dilwyn1 12 років тому

    Give him BOTH !!!

  • @Sorlendingen82
    @Sorlendingen82 9 років тому +5

    Herlig du kan dine saker godt! Respekt!

  • @ElTeo
    @ElTeo 12 років тому

    Nice. He is just having so much fun, hahaha.

  • @suzearl
    @suzearl 15 років тому +1

    Washington , USA. Jeg bodde i Norge i 1985 og '86.

  • @BackroadsTrips
    @BackroadsTrips 5 років тому +1

    This is great, thank you for sharing! Is there an email address where we can reach you? We are interesting in using this music in a promotional video we are producing about traveling in Norway. Thank you!

  • @adahs6994
    @adahs6994 5 років тому

    Is it posible to learn this song in a violin?, i think the diference is the 4 strings more that this instrument has but would it be kind of posible?

    • @baldrbraa
      @baldrbraa 4 роки тому

      Ada Hs Norway has two kinds of fiddle used in folk music. This, and the «regular» fiddle which is basically a normal violin. The repertoire for each is different but with a lot of crossover. I’m not sure, but there might be a «regular» fiddle version of this tune.

  • @dodraugen
    @dodraugen 15 років тому +2

    Nydelig. Er noen norgerøtter i meg som smiler nå =D
    Jeg skal begynne med fiolin nå selv i en alder av 25 ;) Du har nå gitt meg den sangen som jeg skal kunne. Når jeg kan denne så er jeg så flink på instrumentet som jeg føler er nødvendig :D

  • @dare2eatcandy
    @dare2eatcandy 11 років тому

    Lovely music

  • @crystalrock18
    @crystalrock18 5 років тому +1

    I have a difficult time alone playing a regular 4 stringed violin, and I've been playing the violin for 20 years now. I don't know if my brain could work around another 5 added to same said instrument. Sounds really really pretty though.

    • @runito75
      @runito75 4 роки тому +2

      The exstra strings is for resonance only. You only play on four.

    • @tomrogerlilleby2890
      @tomrogerlilleby2890 2 роки тому

      These extra "sympathetic strings" lies underneath the 4 strings that you actually are playing on as you would on an ordinary fiddle.
      These extra strings work as drones that automatically start to vibrate when the same note in which it's tuned is being played by the fiddler.