Cecylia
Arzewski is a Polish (some would say American) violinist and teacher born (in
Krakow, Poland) in 1948. She is known
for playing in some of the top U.S. orchestras as either Concertmaster or
Associate Concertmaster, namely the Cleveland Orchestra, the Boston Symphony,
and the Atlanta Symphony. Although a
highly gifted orchestral violinist, her solo repertoire is very extensive – in
fact, as extensive as almost any concert artist’s. The tradition of the concertmaster-soloist
reaches as far back as William DeFesch and Leopold Mozart. More recent examples of this tradition are Rodolphe
Kreutzer, Ferdinand David, Joseph Joachim, Ferdinand Laub, Eugene Ysaye, Max
Bendix, Karl Halir, Theodore Spiering, Louis Persinger, Abram Shtern, Steven
Staryk, Albert Sammons, Hugh Bean, Calvin Sieb, Sydney Harth, Raymond Cohen, David
Nadien, Richard Burgin, Simon Standage, Frank Almond, and Glenn Dicterow. Arzewski began her violin studies in Poland at
age 5. One of her first teachers was
Eugenia Uminska at the Krakow Music Academy.
Four years later (1957), she and her family moved to Israel where she
was enrolled at the Tel Aviv Conservatory.
Her principal teacher there was Odeon Partos, a violinist I had never
heard of until now; he is better known as a Hungarian composer rather than
violinist. Arzewski later came to the
U.S (probably 1960, though the year is not entirely certain) and studied with
Ivan Galamian at Juilliard (New York) and Joseph Silverstein at the New England
Conservatory (Boston.) She also very briefly
studied under Jascha Heifetz and Joseph Gingold. She played in the Buffalo Philharmonic for
one season – 1969 to 1970. In 1970, at
age 22, she joined the first violinist ranks of the Boston Symphony. She then gradually moved up to the Assistant
Concertmaster position, a position she reached in either 1978 or 1985 – sources
differ. Subsequent to receiving a prize
at the Bach International Competition in Leipzig, she played a debut recital in
New York at Carnegie Hall in 1978. The
program consisted entirely of Bach unaccompanied violin works. From 1987 to 1990, she played as Associate
Concertmaster in the Cleveland Orchestra.
Her tenure as Concertmaster of the Atlanta Symphony began in 1990 and
ended in 2008. She has, of course,
performed as soloist on many occasions with the Cleveland and Atlanta
Symphonies. She played the Wieniawski
concerto in her first appearance with the Atlanta Symphony in 1990 and the
Prokofiev second concerto in her last in 2003.
Today, she devotes herself to solo playing and is also the Artistic
Director of the North Georgia Chamber Music Festival. I do not know what violin she plays. There are several posts of her playing on
YouTube – here is one of them, the Strauss Sonata, said to be one of the best
violin sonatas ever written.
I remember you in high school. You sang solfeggio better than anyone in our class. Perfect pitch.
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