Wow! I would love to visit this museum - and also the spruce forest near the Dolomites. It looks so beautiful there! I bet when the wind blows through those trees you can sometimes hear the music they will one day become.
While talking about woods in my hunter classes I bring a f-style mandolin and tell them. In best case a tree can grow set free on a north side for few hundred years in silence and a little part of it can become an instrument that might sing like those fine old instruments for 400 years. The best that can happen to a tree. I love this tradition and the violin as a lovely built sweet soundbox though I play fretted instruments.
Just a discrepancy I heard........the wood has very low density and weight, yet it is stated that during the period of cold winters and slow growth the wood developed higher density, making it ideal for violin making..........
High density = stronger wood, so perhaps a stronger sound? But also you don’t want too much weight either, since added mass won’t resonate as freely. So maybe these trees can grow to be strong and dense and yet lightweight and flexible at the same time.
Anybody that watch this video can y'all please give me the answers to these questions? 1. What is considered the best violin in the world? Why? 2. What is the science behind making this violin? How is it preserved? 3.What is materials make up the violin and produces its unique sound? Explain.
Like you I did not know much at all about violin making, clearly so much to learn. I watched this video the other day which I feel will answer some of your questions. Enjoy! ua-cam.com/video/79-eaaKLsgU/v-deo.html
Using wood that has been petrified under a lake plus modern preservatives that weren't really well known back then. But most probably craftsmanship blending knowledge, material at the time.
My opinion only: 1) Amati; he taught Stradivari. Far too many people say Stradivari was the best. No one can pick "one best" instrument. 2) the science? Hmm. Geometry, and other math principles, along with the tree's density and the effects they have on sound. It would be best for you to do your own research, that way, your understanding would increase at your rate. 3) Alpine Spruce, high mountain Maple, and Ebony. Cat gut strings, or research a synthetic, or brand of your choice. The linings, soundpost, basebar, and F holes, plus the human element: finger oils, sweat, passion, and hours of deliberate creation. The unique sounds are nuanced by the math, the materials, the chemicals, and the vibrations as applied to every part of the wood in the violin. Just my opinions, but I tried.
It makes me so happy when I come across programs such as this one. Mind numbing to know, however, that utter crap like "Love Island" and anything to do with the Kardashian's will sadly get more views and likes etc...
Classical violinist here I love violin making and it’s history just as much as you probably do but please stop literally being a boomer and participating in juvenoia
@@orangutancoochie6213 So... Using terms like Juvenoia and boomer come across as a bit judgemental. My comment wasn't meant to personally offend anyone. I'm just pointing out the sad fact that a large majority are sucked in by trash tv. Regardless of demographics.
mate, the music is tooooo loud!!! wtf? let the audience hear what the voice wanna say, Jeeez. Good material destroyed by sound levels. At minute 15:00 becomes unwatchable, what a shame. Close frequencies at same levels, everything becomes noise.
How come a documentary presents Guarneri before Stradivari is beyond the pale for me, as if Guarneri had to "worry" about the "newcomer" Stradivari... please, fix your timeline, at least make an effort to understand history altogether.
I love this video about the violin am a violinist teacher my self would love to hear more about the violin making school in cremona
273 visitors a day is very good for a small & specialized museum like this. As always, location is everything.
Wonderful Masterpiece !
Wow! I would love to visit this museum - and also the spruce forest near the Dolomites. It looks so beautiful there! I bet when the wind blows through those trees you can sometimes hear the music they will one day become.
Beautiful Documentary!
Amazing documentary! Thank you so much!
instablaster.
Bellissima città 👍👏🙋♂️🌈💚
Bellissimo video 👍 👏 🙋♂️ 🌈 🌈🌈☀️💚
I would love to see the violin factory in Cremona. Also that museum.
This is quite interesting.
Beautiful documentary about Cremona’s violin history Must visit city
Buongiorno
Hi
Luck will
Orgoglio di essere Cremonese...
Lucky you!
感谢视频的作者,感谢Cremona为人类带来了小提琴这么美妙的乐器!
Cremona is famous for Violins same as Seville Spain is known for classical guitars.
Muy bueno ❤
While talking about woods in my hunter classes I bring a f-style mandolin and tell them. In best case a tree can grow set free on a north side for few hundred years in silence and a little part of it can become an instrument that might sing like those fine old instruments for 400 years. The best that can happen to a tree.
I love this tradition and the violin as a lovely built sweet soundbox though I play fretted instruments.
bagu sekali ! Matur Suksma ❤️🎻❤️🎻❤️🎻😇❤️
Just a discrepancy I heard........the wood has very low density and weight, yet it is stated that during the period of cold winters and slow growth the wood developed higher density, making it ideal for violin making..........
Yeah, I also hear that.
High density = stronger wood, so perhaps a stronger sound? But also you don’t want too much weight either, since added mass won’t resonate as freely.
So maybe these trees can grow to be strong and dense and yet lightweight and flexible at the same time.
Yes, I heardthat contradiction. Light and soft but then dense result of extreme cold. Soft wood , light yet dense.( dense = grains are close together)
A whole 20 minutes. Groundbreaking.....
W:.d-
P=k’XX’>’L. AEFpn4n57ce
Anybody that watch this video can y'all please give me the answers to these questions? 1. What is considered the best violin in the world? Why?
2. What is the science behind making this violin? How is it preserved?
3.What is materials make up the violin and produces its unique sound? Explain.
Like you I did not know much at all about violin making, clearly so much to learn. I watched this video the other day which I feel will answer some of your questions. Enjoy!
ua-cam.com/video/79-eaaKLsgU/v-deo.html
Using wood that has been petrified under a lake plus modern preservatives that weren't really well known back then. But most probably craftsmanship blending knowledge, material at the time.
Not from the video
My opinion only: 1) Amati; he taught Stradivari. Far too many people say Stradivari was the best. No one can pick "one best" instrument.
2) the science? Hmm. Geometry, and other math principles, along with the tree's density and the effects they have on sound. It would be best for you to do your own research, that way, your understanding would increase at your rate.
3) Alpine Spruce, high mountain Maple, and Ebony. Cat gut strings, or research a synthetic, or brand of your choice. The linings, soundpost, basebar, and F holes, plus the human element: finger oils, sweat, passion, and hours of deliberate creation.
The unique sounds are nuanced by the math, the materials, the chemicals, and the vibrations as applied to every part of the wood in the violin.
Just my opinions, but I tried.
❤❤❤
It makes me so happy when I come across programs such as this one. Mind numbing to know, however, that utter crap like "Love Island" and anything to do with the Kardashian's will sadly get more views and likes etc...
Shitty people shity choices..
Classical violinist here I love violin making and it’s history just as much as you probably do but please stop literally being a boomer and participating in juvenoia
@@orangutancoochie6213 So... Using terms like Juvenoia and boomer come across as a bit judgemental. My comment wasn't meant to personally offend anyone. I'm just pointing out the sad fact that a large majority are sucked in by trash tv. Regardless of demographics.
Tutti i violini suonano, ma pochi cantano.!
would be nice To
know which
idioTs have ruinedy life
Choices.
涼水火
What
Should the correct name be Nicolomasculine not Nicola feminine?
I think they are pronouncing the 'o' rather lazily, it sounds like an a. You are correct it is Niccolo.
mate, the music is tooooo loud!!! wtf? let the audience hear what the voice wanna say, Jeeez. Good material destroyed by sound levels. At minute 15:00 becomes unwatchable, what a shame. Close frequencies at same levels, everything becomes noise.
Despierta tuavilidad como violinistaaslo como paratiunico
Alqayim.org nice??
A tragic note: Cremona became one of the worst hits in the China virus pandemic.
luckily we are on the mend now. Hopefully we will get back to normality now.
Clean hands.
It’s not a China virus.
Am1 din1737
Wow … there are people in Cremona who still make violins? You didn’t outsource it to China?
I read there is .
How come a documentary presents Guarneri before Stradivari is beyond the pale for me, as if Guarneri had to "worry" about the "newcomer" Stradivari... please, fix your timeline, at least make an effort to understand history altogether.
I believe Guarnari and Stradivari were both students of Niccolo Amati.
Asisedevemirarunviolinoconunalupagrandeaunviolinverdaderoaikuesacarlesonido comoconvienetienekueescucharseelpotensial
You could be full of sawdust.
Could you please try some punctuation? Or at the least separate each word. Please.