Bomsori conveys emotions with an incredible subtle sense of proportion. Her feelings never deviate from the invisible line of the ideal. Her emotions are delicately balanced, and they are characteristic of a harmonious personality, very sensitive to music and emotionally developed. Bomsori's feelings are never exaggerated - rather, on the contrary, her violin emits emotions sometimes with even less power than the listener would like. However, the effect of muffling the strength of sounds is paradoxical. A lower volume of violin sounds has a stronger effect on the listener. It is clearly seen that it is not the violin that sounds, but the soul of Bomsori. (It seems that as a child, to convey her thoughts and feelings with the help of a violin, Bomsori's soul learned more diversely and earlier than to do it with the help of words). Bomsori was definitely born for violin. She is truly priceless.
Violin: Bomsori Kim (Korea) Piano: Hanna Holeksa Piotr Illych Tchaikovsky (1840-1893) 1. 1:23 - Meditation Gabriel Fauré (1845-1924) Sonata No. 1 for Violin and Piano in A Major 2. 11:17 - I. Allegro molto 3. 18:48 - II. Andante 4. 25:20 - III. Allegro vivo 5. 29:23 - IV. Allegro quasi presto Fritz Kreisler (1875-1962) 6. 35:48 - Schön Rosmarin (G Major) Performed on October 15, 2016 🎵💙🎶🎻🖤🎹🎵💙🎶🎻🖤🎹🎵
I really like the performance of Bomsori. Her play comes from her nature, from her sensitive soul. Her expression (often playful) gives the impression that playing the violin is easy fun for her. Her playing the violin expresses her thoughts, her amazing soul. Without words. Her joy or smiles are not specifically directed at the public. It's just that her joyful and vivid thoughts freely accompany the flight of the melody. Besides all this, she is very attractive and very beautiful.
I'm glad I can hear Bomsori breathing as she plays her violin. It seems to me that thanks to this, I see the efforts of Bomsori's talent and the sincere aspirations of Bomsori's heart to express the eternal human essence of musical composition. And I am very glad that I can see her pretty face and, especially, her beautiful eyes. Her eyes are a great mirror of her amazing and beautiful soul, which is revealed in this stunning violin playing. Thank you very much, dear Bomsori!
I'm fall in love with sound of Guadagnini. As you know, she plays on a 1774 violin by joannes Baptista Guadagnini. It has a charm different from stradi and guarneri.
Bomsori K violinista.im transmite su inspiración musical. Es, según mi opinión, una de las mejores si no la mejor ejecutante clásica que he escuchado. Me agrada. Bomsori Kim es mi predilecta.Excelente y romántica
Bomsori herself sincerely experiences the feelings that the composer wrote down in notes. And since Bomsori is a very sincere and open person, all these feelings are clearly visible on her cute beautiful face.
Um, help, please. This is broken into 6 parts, but the program says there are 3 pieces, so which one doe the 2rd part belong to? Which one does the 3rd part belong to? Which one for the 4th and 5th? Gadz! This is making me crazy!
To answer my own question: Gabriel Fauré's Sonata #1 has four movements. They are 1 Allegro molto 2 Andante 3 Allegro vivo 4 Allegro quasi presto So it works out like this. The first part is Tchaikovsky. The middle four are Fauré's. The last (sixth) is Kreisler's Schön Rosmarin.
I don't know why I am the only one saying that this is one.... strange-ass piece of music... dark...outside the normal scale structures.. built on chromatics with tonics...huge intervallic leaps into darkness.... it's not sad, it's gloomy as hell. It's not pretty, sweet, nice, happy... or any of those things and I am quite sure it's NOT supposed to be, but after a while it's like..... uhhhhhhhmmm.... let's resolve or get off the pot. Play something that say's something absolute. Sorry... no absolutes in subjectivity. She is a great freaking violinist... but... I don't know what it is. Too weird. ... and... why is that dude sitting there next to the pianist? Is he there in case she breaks a string? I mean... a.... key? I've listened to this a number of times just to see if it might just grow on me.. but it doesn't seem to want to. Guess it's just me.
I agree with You. But knowing all the other wonderful music, he has written, such as Sicilienne, Pavane, Berceuse, Apres un reve and Dolly Suite, this has to be good. A lot of his chamber music is also strange-ass, and I haven't quite captured them yet. But I'm still trying. The dude next to the pianist is the pageturner. Some pianist do it themselves, but they are real badasses (Artur Rubinstein, when he plays the Mendelssohn trio in d-minor)
Bomsori conveys emotions with an incredible subtle sense of proportion. Her feelings never deviate from the invisible line of the ideal. Her emotions are delicately balanced, and they are characteristic of a harmonious personality, very sensitive to music and emotionally developed. Bomsori's feelings are never exaggerated - rather, on the contrary, her violin emits emotions sometimes with even less power than the listener would like. However, the effect of muffling the strength of sounds is paradoxical. A lower volume of violin sounds has a stronger effect on the listener. It is clearly seen that it is not the violin that sounds, but the soul of Bomsori. (It seems that as a child, to convey her thoughts and feelings with the help of a violin, Bomsori's soul learned more diversely and earlier than to do it with the help of words).
Bomsori was definitely born for violin. She is truly priceless.
She deserved to win the competition, definitely the best. Excellent violinist and gorgeous violin.
Zdecydowanie tak była najlepsza konkurs ją skrzywdził nie docenili jurorzy przykre że tam wkradła się polityka i pieniądze.🎻🎼
a conheci pelo Spotify
ela é maravilhosa🤩
Mrs Hanna Holeksa! Thank you very much for your attention to Bomsori and for understanding her soul and her bright and unique talent.
Expressive and soulful playing... It is from the heart... Great artist..... No words... All the best
Violin: Bomsori Kim (Korea)
Piano: Hanna Holeksa
Piotr Illych Tchaikovsky (1840-1893)
1. 1:23 - Meditation
Gabriel Fauré (1845-1924)
Sonata No. 1 for Violin and Piano in A Major
2. 11:17 - I. Allegro molto
3. 18:48 - II. Andante
4. 25:20 - III. Allegro vivo
5. 29:23 - IV. Allegro quasi presto
Fritz Kreisler (1875-1962)
6. 35:48 - Schön Rosmarin (G Major)
Performed on October 15, 2016
🎵💙🎶🎻🖤🎹🎵💙🎶🎻🖤🎹🎵
thanks!
I really like the performance of Bomsori. Her play comes from her nature, from her sensitive soul. Her expression (often playful) gives the impression that playing the violin is easy fun for her.
Her playing the violin expresses her thoughts, her amazing soul. Without words.
Her joy or smiles are not specifically directed at the public. It's just that her joyful and vivid thoughts freely accompany the flight of the melody.
Besides all this, she is very attractive and very beautiful.
I keep coming back to her playing...she has a marvelous sound!..
Looks like you are not the only one doing that 🙂
I'm glad I can hear Bomsori breathing as she plays her violin. It seems to me that thanks to this, I see the efforts of Bomsori's talent and the sincere aspirations of Bomsori's heart to express the eternal human essence of musical composition. And I am very glad that I can see her pretty face and, especially, her beautiful eyes. Her eyes are a great mirror of her amazing and beautiful soul, which is revealed in this stunning violin playing.
Thank you very much, dear Bomsori!
The audience are all so nice that some of them would hold their coughing until a brief intermission for each piece.
Excellent Bomsori Kim!
역시 봄소리~♡
최고입니다♡♡
정말 고급진 아름다운 연주 감사합니다
I'm fall in love with sound of Guadagnini. As you know, she plays on a 1774 violin by joannes Baptista Guadagnini.
It has a charm different from stradi and guarneri.
great interpretation and playing of tchaikovsky's meditation.
She speaks to the soul
Bomsori K violinista.im transmite su inspiración musical. Es, según mi opinión, una de las mejores si no la mejor ejecutante clásica que he escuchado. Me agrada. Bomsori Kim es mi predilecta.Excelente y romántica
Wonderful!
Bravo espléndido concierto felicidades bellísima Bomsori Gracias
Excelente excelente felicidades Bomsori
Sound like the glow of sunset
maravillosa !
Great!
M A R A V I L H O S A !
나도 모르게 집중해서 경청하는데 광고 ”아씨“ 너무하는거 아냐. 좀 곡이라도 끝나고 광고 하던가하면 참 좋겠어요.
Nemcsk tehetséges művész de gyönyörű nő.. Az arcával is muzsikál.
Bomsori herself sincerely experiences the feelings that the composer wrote down in notes.
And since Bomsori is a very sincere and open person, all these feelings are clearly visible on her cute beautiful face.
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
Um, help, please. This is broken into 6 parts, but the program says there are 3 pieces, so which one doe the 2rd part belong to? Which one does the 3rd part belong to? Which one for the 4th and 5th? Gadz! This is making me crazy!
To answer my own question: Gabriel Fauré's Sonata #1 has four movements. They are
1 Allegro molto
2 Andante
3 Allegro vivo
4 Allegro quasi presto
So it works out like this. The first part is Tchaikovsky. The middle four are Fauré's. The last (sixth) is Kreisler's Schön Rosmarin.
Lengo67 ㄴ
I don't know why I am the only one saying that this is one.... strange-ass piece of music... dark...outside the normal scale structures.. built on chromatics with tonics...huge intervallic leaps into darkness.... it's not sad, it's gloomy as hell. It's not pretty, sweet, nice, happy... or any of those things and I am quite sure it's NOT supposed to be, but after a while it's like..... uhhhhhhhmmm.... let's resolve or get off the pot. Play something that say's something absolute. Sorry... no absolutes in subjectivity. She is a great freaking violinist... but... I don't know what it is. Too weird. ... and... why is that dude sitting there next to the pianist? Is he there in case she breaks a string? I mean... a.... key? I've listened to this a number of times just to see if it might just grow on me.. but it doesn't seem to want to. Guess it's just me.
I agree with You. But knowing all the other wonderful music, he has written, such as Sicilienne, Pavane, Berceuse, Apres un reve and Dolly Suite, this has to be good. A lot of his chamber music is also strange-ass, and I haven't quite captured them yet. But I'm still trying. The dude next to the pianist is the pageturner. Some pianist do it themselves, but they are real badasses (Artur Rubinstein, when he plays the Mendelssohn trio in d-minor)
Pie Jesu from his Requiem, wauw
He is sitting there because he is the page turner for the Pianist lmaoooo
Too loud the breathing sound👎
what are you deaf