Violin Lessons with Todd Ehle
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Rush - Tom Sawyer VIOLIN COVER
Back In Black dumb violin cover
VIOLIN VIBRATO TUTORIAL- New tips for RELAXATION
Violin Solo: 'Silent Night'
'Are You Living?' for Violin and Cello
Violin shifting trick #2 (see description)
Descending Shift Trick for Violin
MY DAD, Robert C. Ehle (Happy Father's Day!!!)
Violin and Cello Duet (duChateau-Ehle duo)
Violin Bow Hold Trick for Relaxation
Continuous Violin Vibrato (vibrato pt. 5)
Violin Method: Lesson #1 - Mary Had A Little Lamb
Violin Lesson #59; Pizzicato (right and left hand)
Violin Lesson #60; 10ths
Violin Lesson 23; Vibrato part 2 (Arm)
Violin Lesson #22; Vibrato (hand/wrist)
Violin Lesson #57; The Glissando
Violin Lesson #58; Fingered Octaves
Violin Lesson #56; The Portamento/Slide
Violin Lesson #54; Playing 5ths
Violin Lesson; Relaxation Techniques
Violin Lesson #55; Springing Arpeggios
Tone Production Techniques for Violin, Part 4
Tone Production Techniques for Violin (part 3)
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professorV
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Profile
 
Name:
R. Todd Ehle
Channel Views:
525,306
Total Upload Views:
5,740,513
Age:
43
Joined:
Jan 4, 2007
Latest Activity:
4 days ago
Subscribers:
24,283
Techniques of the Violin
About Me:
 
Please visit www.toddehle.com where I have posted these videos in a manner that is easier to navigate. There are also practice tips, favorite quotes, etc.
You can also visit www.fiddlercove.org where Al Justice has posted these videos, as well as the wonderful bowing videos by Calvin Sieb (they are highly recommended!).


***Read Hans Jorgen Jensen's very interesting information on 'Playing with a Parallel Bow' on the Ovation String Visions page here: http://stringvisions.ovatio...

*****To see Todd's recent interview with virtualsheetmusic.com follow this link:
http://www.virtualsheetmusi...

***New: Read Loralyn Staples' recent interview with Todd at www.reddesertviolin.com

Todd Ehle is a professor of violin at Del Mar College, a Junior College in Corpus Christi, Texas, where he has taught students of all ages and abilities for the past 12 years. Before arriving in TX, Mr. Ehle taught violin at the Wausau Conservatory of Music, a community music school located in Wausau, WI. Todd spent seven years studying with Professor Richard Fuchs at the University of Northern Colorado. Mr. Fuchs is a protege' of Paul Rolland (a Hungarian-Born violinist and formerly professor at the University of Illinois. Rolland authored 'The Teaching Of Action In String Playing' - much of which influences Todd's videos).
Todd spent four months working with William Starr, renowned Suzuki pedagogue and author of 'The Suzuki Violinist'. Following his work with Mr. Starr, Todd spent a year with Margery Aber, founder of the American Suzuki Institute in Stevens Point, WI.
Todd attended the Eastman School of Music (did not graduate) where he was a student of Catherine Tait, the Meadowmount School (student of Kevin Lawrence) and the Bowdoin Music Festival, where he studied with Lewis Kaplan. He was also a long-time student of both Harold Wippler (former concertmaster of the Denver Symphony and teacher of Eugene Fodor) and Ernest Papavasilion (former violinist with the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, NYC). Todd would also like to give credit to his first violin teacher, Mrs. Pat Zick, who put up with him for so many years, and also taught him so much in the process!
***Possible interest to students of violin pedagogy (and TOO MUCH INFORMATION to others); Todd's teachers have a very interesting "family tree". As mentioned before, Fuchs was as student of Rolland, who studied with Imre Waldbauer. Waldbauer was a student of the great Hungarian violinist, Jeno Hubay.
Suzuki was a student of the German violin pedagogue, Karl Klingler. Klingler studied with the great Hungarian-born violinist Joseph Joachim (Brahms dedicated his violin concerto to Joachim).
Harold Wippler studied with Efram Zimbalist who was a pupil of the great Leopold Auer (also Hungarian, but the head of the famous 'Russian school' of violin and teacher of Heifetz, Elman and Milstein) and Todd's teacher, Ernest Papavasilion, was a pupil of Raphael Bronstein, also a pupil of Leopold Auer.
Tait, Lawrence and Kaplan all were students of Ivan Galamian (teacher of Perlman, Zuckerman, Chung and so many more) Galamian's violin family tree can be traced all the way back to both Vivaldi and Corelli.
Country:
United States
Channel Comments
ajsmusicmadness (1 hour ago)
do you have a video on moving your hand up and down a the finger board? i think what im talking about is call 1st and second and third position.
Tuhinxyz1 (2 days ago)
thanks professor. there are no violin teachers in the place where i live in India. these videos r like jewels to me . u r the best.
jamesosborneuk (3 days ago)
Hiya, thank you so much for these tutorials. I am just starting to learn violin and I have come further in the past two weeks, with your help, than I could have imagined.
vtc011 (6 days ago)
Thank you Tod! I've improved so much thanks to you. I don't have a teacher, so I frequently search up books or websites to improve on my violin. That's when I came across your videos. You have definitely opened up the musical world to me. Thanks again.
Celestinarisai (1 week ago)
Hola profesor violin......me gusta mucho su pagina y como voy a ser una aprendiz, por ahora lo estoy haciendo sola, mas adelante buscare un maestro, pero su pagina es muy buena, interesante y ayuda vastante.

saludos
TheBlackpearl200 (1 week ago)
thank alot prof V for making these very helpful videos.and i like to listen to your playing.
Artisteishful (1 week ago)
dear professor V, I'm learning violin, I know about music, I took theory/composition and classical guitar a couple semesters ago and I'm trying my hand at the violin now. The problem I'm having is I don't know if I'm applying enough or not enough pressure to the strings. I've identified the notes on the fingerboard but I randomly get unwanted squeals and scratchy noises. Also I've been at the point where I'm trying to bow one string and end up hitting another one or two. I'm going through you're videos so hopefully in one of them you explain how to control the bow. I enjoy the lessons and thank you for posting.
deliberatemusician (1 week ago)
Beautiful sound, love the channel.
JeffrayFiset (2 weeks ago)
I'm a drummer as well as a former drum teacher and I now want to learn the violin. I've been searching the net for good violin lessons lately and my search is now over. As soon as I've seen your first video I tought; "that my guy!!!". Thanks for posting these vids. You are not a good teacher... you are an incredibly GREAT teacher! Thanks for providing knowledge so we can gain skill... (10000 repetitions ;-) Keep posting.
peter4presidente (2 weeks ago)
Hey I've been playing violin for 5months now with just your lessons to get the technique right and applying it with songs that I like. My piano and guitar experience helped probably but I managed to advance pretty quick with the violin :) last christmas I played 2nd violin in three concerts! being a poor student I couldn't afford lessons but thanks to you I got the opportunity to start discovering this instrument. Thanks a lot for sharing on youtube!
Regards from the Netherlands
Peter
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