Added: Oct 6, 2008

From: sissy

Duration: 3:13

played by Nathan Milstein

Channel: Music

Tags: bach  milstein  nathan  violin 


Rating: 4.88 (481 ratings)    Views: 142923' favoriteCount='1130    Comments: 271

Violinfanatic Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - He became known as the master of Bach Sonatas and Partitas. Now I know why.

MegaDynamo Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - Definitely better than Heifetz, Ferras, Mae and many, many others (at least for Bach works).

alonso264 Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - this is the greatest interpretetion of this piece, milstein is better tha any one elseperhaps paganini himselfjejejei love milstein!!!!!!!!!!#1

CrowbarUpsideTheHead Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - "You'll see the effect." lol Thumbs up, Dogra!

lookall Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - Someone knows about the others parts of the Partita #3, played by Nathan Milstein, here, at You Tube? That´s just the Prelude.

dizygotegemini Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - Millstein is the best interprettor of Bachs preludes and sonatatas.

HaxIRL Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - Then entire partita is posted by the user 'aimson'.

NestorAudinotviolins Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - all I can say is WOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!child's play for him. pure. crystal clear. Milstein was conversing with the Gods and they were pleased with what he had to say.

iseevideos123 Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - 2:04-2:09 holy crap. didnt know it was possible to do that on violin. truely amazing!

brtl2001 Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - Wow, just marvellous!!!! thanks for posting this beuatiful masterpiece.

burgerwisdim Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - i get into some really great states listening to this piece. there's a wonderful urgency to it.

mannycabrito Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - 0:25-0:40 is EXTREMELY HARD 4 da bowing... im playing it... :)

chickita222 Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - for tat section just use the upper bow. i find it easier to just imitate him an put a little more pressure an use the upper part of my bow (:

mannycabrito Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - y, thx.. ill try dat 2marrow... im still working on it. lolgracias chikita!!!

chickita222 Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - aha im not spanish. its me and my friends spanish names for school (:

nudopiano Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - what a monster!!! Milstein was a really great violinist

henrylee1030 Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - how come he is just so GREAT!Whatever parts does he plays with his bow

heifetznut Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - I love how sweetly Milstein plays this piece. Every single one of the double stops is perfectly played and released at the perfect moment at the end, and this is most definetly my favourite recording of this piece.

chidori195 Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - better then Vanessa

chidori195 Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - better then Vanessa

smudgepots Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - I can't think of a better illustration, apart from Mozart's music, of Heinrich von Kleist's dictum that "When perception has passed through something infinite, gracefulness appears." than this miraculous, performances - as close, one feels, to perfection as we are likely to experience in this world.

lepinkpear Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - this is JOY

calloffthedogs Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - if anyone has anything bad to say about Nathan Milstein, i'm going to introduce them to my cousins Guido and Pauly for a little hospital job with a led pipe and bicycle chain. Milstein's Bach is saintly.

Sibillchen Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - One of the best interpretations, i have ever heared! WOW! Like it a lot...

Mortimer123 Says:

Oct 6, 2008 - Right on, smudgepots! Milstein has this unfathomable, all-knowing naivete, which is perfect for mirroring Bach's divinely joyful creativity. Most other musicians remain stuck in the "knowing" phase and never close the Kleistian circle to regain gracefuless. Who else has this? Perhaps pianists Wilhelm Kempff, Vladimir Horowitz, and Artur Rubinstein, and cellist Pablo Casals. Or soprano Joan Sutherland. But it's really a very rare quality.