Amorim Fine Violins is a violin, viola, and cello workshop based in Cremona. Our mission is to provide musicians with instruments so they can uniquely express themselves. The company assists the most demanding professionals, committed to delivering fine instruments and services, always focusing on ethics, quality, and commitment.
The Amorim Family: A Family That Treats Instruments As Pieces of Art Amorim Fine Violins is a family business, just like the workshops of Stradivari and Guarneri. Founded in 2001 by the renowned violin maker Luiz Amorim and his wife, Betina Schreiner. We bring our fine arts experience into the violin-making field. For more than ten years now, their sons Luan and Gaian have joined the firm bringing strength to make it one of the most innovative and fast-growing companies in the violin business. We are in the market of violin making, restoration, and sale of violins, violas, cellos, and bows.
Such an amazing sounding violin, and brilliantly played by Eric . Of course is the result of a great working by Luis Amorim, i wish I could buy some day at his workshop..🙏👍👏👏👏👏👏
I'm guessing this is a Carrodus model which is currently played by Richard Tognetti (Australia, where I'm based)? It doesn't look like Rachlin's Ex-Carrodus from about the years 1990 - early 2000's. I thought there were only two Ex-Carrodus Del Gesu's. Good to know there are three!
The most under rated violin maker of all time. Rostropovich played a Storioni cello on almost all his recordings, even though he had a Strad. His best instruments sound completely full noble and sonorous, full of silvery sweetness, comparable to any Strad or Del Gesu.
WONDERFUL DOLLS SEEM TO WANT TO MAKE UP FOR VALENTINES DAYS OF MISCONSTRUED DAYS OF ONE'S YOUTH . PETRYSHAK & HOOPMAN ARE GIFTS THAT YOU HAVE TO WONDER IF MOST OF THE PUBLIC DESERVE , INSTEAD OF A SELECT FEW UNDERSTANDING PRETTY , HAPPY , SUCCESSFUL LOVED ONES .
Sry but the violin sounds abit muddy, reminds me of some awful G&B workshop ones, the french sound.. yuck.. Eric is great though. Have you tried to make the violin lighter to have it resonate better? Im sticking to 18th cent. for now LOL
In my opinion as a collector - modern makers who make violins lighter (2mm tops, backs with a maximum thickness of 4mm) tend to "die" after about a year. You need a lot of mass/wood to make a great violin these days, and although they may sound average in infancy, they'll grow within a couple of years and continue to get better and better over the decades. It's a slight shame that the current buyers most likely won't hear the violin's full potential, but the luthiers are still great!
I wonder if Luiz is using modern wood or old from centuries ago ? and if the buying waiting list is long ? 2 years if i recall correctly and probably more now ?
This is the best place to buy a violin nowdays, in a handred years they will be the famous Amorim dinasty, it is beautifull live this momement with these great instruments
@@amorimfineviolinscremona It's very true. Violin makers (who are great) seem to have adjusted and got better and better (factoring in that we use everything from gut strings, to nylon, to steel)! I'm sure that your violins will be even better than Del Gesu's/Amati's/and even Strad's once they age as much as the old master's ones!!
Beautiful violin, but I dislike this type of "modern" music as it is soulless and dark and hollow and depressing, just like the people who write it often are.
😂🎉❤, Thisss Oleee Bull, 😂🎉❤, I likeee it in myyy modest opinionnn😂🎉❤😂🎉❤😂🎉😂❤🎉🎉, I likeee Bothhh , 😂🎉❤❤, Sooo Beautifulll the Famoussss piecesss Youuu re playinggg 😂🎉❤😂🎉❤😂🎉❤😂🎉❤