Violin Lessons with Todd Ehle
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Violin Vibrato - Getting Help from a Partner
VIOLIN VIBRATO TUTORIAL- New tips for RELAXATION
'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 #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)
More Violin Vibrato Help
Violin Lesson - Curved Pinky Trick
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professorV
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Profile
 
Name:
R. Todd Ehle
Channel Views:
532,986
Total Upload Views:
5,850,669
Age:
43
Joined:
Jan 4, 2007
Latest Activity:
1 day ago
Subscribers:
24,441
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
jennyvee93 (3 days ago)
good day sir, can i ask for tips on how to set-up the bridge? i'm just a beginner, but when i tried to tune my violin, the bridge fell down. what can i do? thank you sir. ;)
missviolinseeker (3 days ago)
Dear Sir,

thanks for the sharing. all of your lessons r so useful. u r brilliant and great and so kind. Thanks very much!
NightmaresRW (5 days ago)
As many others have said, Thank you and great job on your instructional videos. I have only watched the first three so far but can tell that they all will likely be exactly what I'm looking for. Your approach to these have been better than any other I have seen. You show exactly what needs to be done in extreme detail, in a mild manor. Your voice fits the part well and you teach it all very fluently without having to know anything. I'm 100% new to the violin and your videos teach me exactly what I need to know without being condescending or treating the viewer like their foolish for even asking so to speak.

Again, thank you very much for your lessons. Many will learn from these and be thankful.
devora123ifly (6 days ago)
Hello. I find your videos very helpful, but my vibrato isn't very well because I am tense. Any tips?
iberwil (1 week ago)
Dear Mr. Ehle,

I'm a beginner violin student (with a teacher) and find your videos very helpful.

Thank you for sharing your knowledge.

It is great complimentary material and probably the best online resource I've come across.

Regards, Daniel.

London, UK.
msaito36 (1 week ago)
Hello. Thank you very much for your wonderful violin channel. From Japan.
Peace and love and light to you!
Saito
TheVivaldi666 (1 week ago)
This is an awesome channel.
DarkVoidification (2 weeks ago)
@professorV Dear ProfessorV, I'm currently working on Kreisler's Praeludium and Allegro and there is a section with many quick chords which I struggle to play. It seems that all the recordings that I've heard have played all the notes of the chords at the same time but I struggle to do so. I really would appreciate it if you gave me some tips or make a video on playing them.
saado1o (2 weeks ago)
hello professor v ! could u please teach that acdc song you played!
ajsmusicmadness (3 weeks 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.
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