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Speaking in Strings
Speaking in Strings
Director: Paola Di Florio
Actor: Nadja Salerno-sonnenberg
Studio: New Video Group
Category: DVD

List Price: $24.95
Buy New: $14.48
You Save: $10.47 (42%)
Buy New/Used from $8.99

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars(20 reviews)
Sales Rank: 57520

Format: Color, Dvd-video, Ntsc
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Media: DVD
Running Time: 75 minutes
Number Of Items: 1
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.3 x 0.6

ISBN: 0767034856
UPC: 767685947937
EAN: 9780767034852
ASIN: B00005J75T

Release Date: June 26, 2001
Theatrical Release Date: 1999
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Similar Items:

  • Speaking In Strings - A Musical Companion To The Film (1999 Documentary) / Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg
  • Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg - It Ain't Necessarily So
  • Brahms: Violin Concerto in D/Bruch: Concerto #1 in G Minor; Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg
  • Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg - Mendelssohn, Saint-Saens, Massenet
  • Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg ~ Vivaldi - The Four Seasons

Editorial Reviews:

Description
Described as "possessed, "frightening," and "brilliant," Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg has either enraged or enraptured critics while earning herself the nickname "the bad girl of the violin." Academy Award nominee Speaking In Strings explores the controversial and fascinating life of this funny, fearless, irreverent, and world-renowned musician. A deeply private look at the woman behind all the accolades and controversy.

DVD Features: Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg Biography; Docurama Previews; Interactive Menu; Scene Selection

Amazon.com
Emotional, raw, and revealing--those adjectives apply to the documentary Speaking in Strings and the person profiled, Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg, one of the world's most acclaimed violinists. The intense musician's professional journey, which began at Carnegie Hall when she was a teenager, was sidetracked when she accidentally cut off the tip of a finger and almost ended when she tried to commit suicide. Filmmaker Paola di Florio was a childhood friend, and this intimacy is reflected in frank oncamera interviews. ("Feeling more than anyone I know" can be phenomenal and "a damn curse," she says.) The concert footage is electrifying: Two weeks after the suicide attempt, a possessed Salerno-Sonnenberg once again plays Carnegie Hall. Her mother, friends, fellow musicians, and critics--who say she lets her emotions overpower the music--are heard from. The loudest voice, though, is the honest one of Salerno-Sonnenberg, consumed yet empowered by her talent. "It's amazing what you endure," she says, "when you must." --Valerie Nelson


Customer Reviews:   Read 15 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars A gorgeous tribute to a phenomenal woman   September 11, 2007
  2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I saw this documentary when it was aired on PBS and it made me want to run out in the New York winter and buy every recording Salerno-Sonnenberg ever made. There is footage of her playing winning a competition with the Shostakovich concerto. She seems demonically possessed. She gives you the feeling music is something worth dying for (and living for).

Every musician, nay-- every aspiring artist, nay anyone aspiring in any field of discipline, nay -- every one living, should watch this video for a massive dose of inspiration and enthusiasm for life and art.



5 out of 5 stars wow!   June 14, 2007
  1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I think I had heard of SPEAKING IN STRINGS, in passing, when it first came out in 1998. However, I only knew that it was about Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg, a phenomenally talented violinst. This woman has been called "possessed," "frightening" and "brilliant" with good reason. I can honestly say that I have never heard (or seen) such an incomparable artist perform great classical pieces with such fire and spirit. Nadja has been criticized as much as she has been proclaimed. The intensity of her connection to the music is so strong that she has the tendency to contort her face and physicalize the mood of the pieces she interprets. This, of course, has generated criticism from the press. For me, Nadja really is feeling the essence of the music she expresses through her instrument.

Not only do we hear great excerpts from some of Nadja's finest performances (including her Carnegie Hall debut, at the age of seventeen in 1982, and an interview with Johnny Carson), as well as a really engrossing look at her formative years (complete with clips from home movies and family photos). We also see a very intimate side of Solerno-Sonnenberg and we really see the personal setbacks that almost put a permanent end to her career. Director Paola di Fiorio was granted a well-earned Academy Award nomination for Best Documementary, and you don't have to look too closely to see why.



4 out of 5 stars Excellent Biography With One Disappointment   March 17, 2007
  2 out of 2 found this review helpful



This documentary provides us with a glimpse into the life of a most unusual violinist. Certainly Ms Salerno-Sonnenberg has rightful status as a proficient performer, but beyond that she is well known for her unusual stage presence. She almost literally throws herself into her performance providing the audience with a physical rendition of the music in addition to playing her instrument.

I said above that we get a glimpse of her life, and that is all one can hope for in a 75 minute movie. What we learn here once again is that we can't idealize the lives of talented performers. Nadja's life is a hectic one consisting of up to 200 performances a year. The stress of this routine is manifested in bouts of depression which on one occasion becomes suicidal.

While watching the movie I couldn't help thinking of Jaqueline du Pre, the demonstrative cellist who led a tragic life. Ms Salerno-Sonnenberg tells us that she really feels free only when she is actually performing.

Now to the disappointment. Listening to her recorded performances is very rewarding, but it can be like listening to a Shakespeare play on the radio. The visual part of her playing is an important part of the listening experience. Many of us may never be able to watch her play so I had hoped that the documentary would give us a good sampling of her on stage efforts, but unfortunately the clips of her playing the violin are few, and never more than 60 seconds in length. I wish they had extended the movie another 15 minutes and treated us to the performance of at least one composition. It is for the reason that I gave a rating of four stars instead of five.



5 out of 5 stars Availability   March 8, 2007
  0 out of 3 found this review helpful

Although I haven't watched this DVD yet, I am pleased that it was available on Amazon.


5 out of 5 stars A Great Message For America   May 10, 2006
  4 out of 7 found this review helpful

This is a landmark documentary of home movies, videos, powerful stills and original camera work supported by a unique sound track teasing scenes with audio precursors enabling fast cuts in places where dissolves would be used by less an artist than producer-director Paola di Florio.
Of course Nadja is manic. What could be more unsettling than going from the applause of Carnegie Hall to a lonely life with endless hours of practice, personal denial and dreams that seem more than a little insane?
She is in the prison of great talent. We, who don't know such highs and lows have no way to understand much less judge.
That Nadja is an Italian immigrant, working class; street-smart, scrappy New Yorker drives the aristocracy of the music intelligentsia nuts. How dare she poke into the parlors of the high born and challenge their grip on an art? Blinded by their own glitter, they cannot see that she is a hope for classical music. Her success is an inspiration to the young of all classes proving once again that America works, The New York Times notwithstanding. Careers are open to talent in our free enterprise economy. It is a system that creates what it needs. We needed a Nadja to show the world that classical music is not just for snobs.
Nadja's detractors want to tell us what we like much as their kind have long told us what to think. But, the people are not buying it any more. If Nadja attacks the music with powerful skills we applaud in spite of the blue bloods and not because of them. That makes them crazy. They arrogantly tell us dead composers would not like what Nadja does. Composers only write the outlines. Players bring their work to life. We believe every composer would applaud her.
Reviewer Bernard Chapin made outrageous errors in his analysis of this film. He accused Nadja of having said, "...classical music is a joke," when she actually said, "...classical music is a job," perhaps reflecting her working class regard for employment further offending the effete ear of Chapin. The sound track is thin at this point so this mistake may have been honest, but when he picked out "The only time I feel good is when I play," for his review title he stooped to distortion as she said this only for the time she had a flu. This is very clear misrepresentation by Mr. Chapin. But, he tops this with allusions to her homosexuality in response to the friendship shown Nadja by her female friends. He clearly has no acquaintance with the battlefield mentality of creative people and the kinds of friendships that forms. The only moments where Nadja is seen in anything like an intimate moment with anyone are a still photo with Mr. Mandy Potinkin and rubbing the arm of friend Mats Lidstrom in a textbook hominid friendship gesture plus her smiling expressions while playing in an ensemble, all to men. In the Tonight Show appearance shown her conversation is all about her recently having "broken up" with a "boyfriend." And, her scene with the fortune teller where she is told "you will make your family in a year" her response is, "So there will be at least one child in my life..." and expresses she is happy to hear it. From where comes Chapin's homosexual idea but from the depths of a distorting, destructive, sick mind.


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