Elizabeth
Wallfisch (Elizabeth Coates Hunt Wallfisch) is an Australian violinist,
teacher, author, and conductor born (in Melbourne, Australia) on January 28,
1952. The greater part of her career has
been spent outside of Australia. Together
with Simon Standage, Fabio Biondi, Andrew Manze, Giuliano Carmignola, Rachel Podger,
and Enrico Onofri, she is one of the better-known proponents of historical
baroque performance practice, a movement which started in the mid-1970s. Nevertheless, besides playing on baroque (period)
violins, Wallfisch also gives concerts on modern instruments. (The photo shows her holding a baroque
violin.) One of her many recordings is
the one featuring the rarely-heard Rosary Sonatas by Heinrich Biber. Another is the Opus 3 concertos (published in
1733) by Pietro Locatelli. Although she began studying piano at age 4, she did
not begin violin lessons until age 10, a rather late age at which to start by
traditional standards. I do not know who
her first violin teachers were. At 18,
she moved to Germany then proceeded to London where she studied at the Royal Academy
of Music with Frederick Grinke. At about
age 23, her professional career began in England with the London Mozart Players
and the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic. Up
to about her mid-twenties, her education had been entirely founded on
traditional modern performance techniques on modern violins. Her switch to baroque (historical) approaches
took place almost by accident. Among the
many ensembles she has led and performed with are the Hanover Band, the
Australian Chamber Orchestra, the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra, Les
Musiciens Du Louvre, the Raglan Baroque Players, the Orchestra of the Age of
Enlightenment, Tafelmusik, the Israel Chamber Orchestra, and the St Paul
Chamber Orchestra. In 1989, she
co-founded the Locatelli Trio. In 2008,
she founded the Wallfisch Band, a baroque ensemble that allows for
apprenticeships for young players alongside the core orchestra members –
personnel changes are made on an on-going basis. Wallfisch has held teaching positions at the
Royal Academy of Music (London), the Royal Conservatory at The Hague, and at
the University of Melbourne. She has
been concertmaster at the Carmel Bach Festival (California, U.S.) for over
twenty years. Among the recording labels
featuring her are Virgin Classics, Hyperion, and Chandos - they are easy to find on the internet. As far as I could determine, Wallfisch plays
a violin by Petrus Paulus (Pietro Paolo) de Vitor (of Brescia) from about 1750. Here is one YouTube audio file of Wallfisch
playing several Bach concertos. Here is
a short video by the Wallfisch Band playing Telemann.
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