Jennifer is as beautiful on the inside as she plays on the outside. What a wonderful video, sublime violin, marvelous playing and charming interaction. Jennifer is a force of nature.
Thanks for this video! Jennifer played the Tchaikovsky with us at the San Juan Symphony a few years ago and she and the violin sounded spectacular! It was a real pleasure to have her as soloist.
I would love to know what bow she uses. That’s also very important. And, how she says she shapes the voice of the violin; what techniques for that is she using or is it just happening from her playing it in normal practice.
Mrs. Frautschi is wonderful, thank you for uploading this wonderful documentation! But, honestly, the sound of this specific Strad does not really excel to my humble ears. Even the colour of its varnish does not specifically look classic Italian to me.
You “gave uP” a Balestrieri just to get ‘what-every-other-professional-violinist’ has, how boring. I really adore my “B” and would never, except maybe for $$$ reasons, give it up. smh
Jennifer is as beautiful on the inside as she plays on the outside. What a wonderful video, sublime violin, marvelous playing and charming interaction. Jennifer is a force of nature.
This is AWESOME. Beautifully performed and produced.
I enjoyed the waltz she played on her stradivari.
Thanks for this video! Jennifer played the Tchaikovsky with us at the San Juan Symphony a few years ago and she and the violin sounded spectacular! It was a real pleasure to have her as soloist.
That’s so kind of her to let others try her Strad!
I would love to know what bow she uses. That’s also very important. And, how she says she shapes the voice of the violin; what techniques for that is she using or is it just happening from her playing it in normal practice.
Wonderful interview.
Great Video.. thank you for this series..
Nice playing.
Hey masumi what kind of shoulder rest do you use?
I’m not playing in this video- Do you mean to ask about Jennifer’s setup?
@@masumirostad no oops sorry for not being specific excellent video I want to know your shoulder rest you use so I can buy it
Ah, sure! Viva La Musica. I added a neoprene stability wedge that I made myself.
@@masumirostad sorry for the misunderstanding! I like your videos!
Thanks for watching!!
Great interview, as always. I’m curious to find out what gear you use to conduct these interviews?
Thanks for watching! Do you mean audio/video setup?
@@masumirostad yes, your audio and video setup
Sony ZVe-10, Zeiss lens, Deity D3, Hollyland wireless. I need everything to be portable enough to always fit in my carry on luggage!
That violin looks just like mine!!!
It does? How so?
It sounds like that one too?
Would love to know the bow she's using!
…it’s great!
This was the concert instrument of the great 20th century virtuoso and pedagogue Joseph Fuchs. The Cadiz
Are the strings original?
No. Strings last, on average, anywhere from 2 weeks to about 4 months.
Nope. We change them every few weeks or months.
Soooo, let's now hear the story of the bow. It is what makes the violin 'sing'.
my violin is skylark
A darker toned sponge cake cremonese con latte please
🤣👍
Mrs. Frautschi is wonderful, thank you for uploading this wonderful documentation! But, honestly, the sound of this specific Strad does not really excel to my humble ears. Even the colour of its varnish does not specifically look classic Italian to me.
I have a real Strad if there is a serious buyer that can afford it out there.
You “gave uP” a Balestrieri just to get ‘what-every-other-professional-violinist’ has, how boring.
I really adore my “B” and would never, except maybe for $$$ reasons, give it up. smh
I must say…that is a somewhat bizarre characterization of a Strad…
Swing to and fro....mowing as a drug addict! Why? Its a shame.