Joseph Roisman (Josef Roismann) was a Russian (Ukrainian) violinist born (in
Odessa) on July 25, 1900. He is best
known for playing in the Budapest String Quartet from 1927 to 1967. Prior to 1932 he played second violin and
then played first violin from 1932 onward.
Although he was a very prominent chamber music player, known throughout
the world, there is scant information about him on the internet and no
Wikipedia article on him. He began his
violin studies at age 6. One source
states that his first teacher was Peter Stolyarsky although that is highly debatable
since prominent pedagogues like Stolyarski never take on beginners. From Odessa the family went to Berlin where
Roisman studied with Alexander Fiedemann.
In 1914, they returned to Odessa where the young Roisman studied with
Naoum Blinder at the Imperial Conservatory.
After graduating, he was appointed concertmaster of the Odessa Opera
Orchestra. After the 1917 revolution,
Roisman made a living in Russia playing in farms and factories. In 1923, he left Russia and soon settled in
Prague, playing in the Czech Philharmonic and in cafes. By 1925, he had arrived in Berlin where he
landed a job in a movie theatre orchestra.
According to one source, the theatre orchestra paid better than the
Berlin Philharmonic. He supplemented his
income by playing in cafes there too. He
joined the Budapest Quartet after auditioning in the spring of 1927. He played his first concert with the quartet
on September 17, 1927 in Oslo, Norway – it was an all-Beethoven program. Roisman, as far as I know, never played solo
concerts or recitals. Here is an audio
file of the quartet playing a Haydn quartet in (circa) 1925, prior to
Roisman's joining. Here is a recording (from 1934) of a Mozart
quartet, including Roisman and the players which lasted the longest
with the Budapest String Quartet and are traditionally associated with it. Roisman played a Domenico Montagnana violin constructed
in 1723 and a magnificent 1785 Lorenzo Storioni. Joseph Roisman died on October 10, 1974, at
age 74.
Sunday, December 27, 2015
Sunday, December 13, 2015
Naoum Blinder
Naoum Blinder was a Russian (Ukrainian) violinist and teacher born (in
Lutzk) on July 19, 1889 – since various sources vary his exact date and place
of birth are approximate. He is best
remembered for being one of Isaac Stern’s teachers – between 1932 and 1935. He was a touring concert violinist for a
while but finally settled in San Francisco to become the orchestra’s
concertmaster for 25 years. He began his
violin studies as a child although I don’t know at what age. By age 14 he had graduated from the Imperial
Conservatory in Odessa. There, he had
studied with Peter Stolyarsky and Alexander Fiedemann. He then entered the Moscow Conservatory (in
about 1904) and studied with an unknown teacher there until about 1910. He was by then 21 years old. From there, he went to pursue further study
in England at the Royal Manchester College of Music. His main teacher there was Adolph
Brodsky. Blinder graduated from the RMC in
1913 or 1914 and then returned to Odessa to teach at the Conservatory. He was 25 years old. He remained there until 1920. All the while, he toured (mostly Russia and
the Middle East) as a soloist. Between
1923 and 1927, he taught at the Moscow Conservatory. I don’t know what he did or where he was
between 1920 and 1923. Blinder and his
family (his wife and daughter) came to the US (via Japan) in December, 1927. Between 1929 and 1931, Blinder taught at
Juilliard in New York. In 1931, he
became the concertmaster of the San Francisco Symphony at the invitation of a
friend who had known him in Russia. Blinder
was 42 years old. He continued to tour
intermittently as a soloist and founded the San Francisco String Quartet in
1935 as well. In that year, he and Isaac
Stern played the Bach concerto for two violins with the orchestra. That is fairly typical of teachers and their
favorite students to do. Blinder had a
very large body of students; many of them became members of the San Francisco
Symphony and other orchestras. Glenn
Dicterow and Joseph Roisman also studied with him for a time.
Blinder owned and played several violins – a 1774 G.B. Guadagnini, a
1753 G.B. Guadagnini, and an 1850 J.B. Vuillaume are among them. He died on November 21, 1965, at age 76. Here is a rare solo recording of his.
Sunday, November 29, 2015
Antonio Brosa
Antonio Brosa was a Spanish violinist and teacher born (in La Canonja,
Spain) on June 27, 1894. He is best
known for having premiered Benjamin Britten’s violin concerto. The premiere took place in New York on March
28, 1940 with the New York Philharmonic - John Barbirolli conducted. Brosa was also known for being fluent in 5
languages. It is not unusual at all for
violinists (and conductors) to be fluent in two or three languages but five is
rather unusual. It has been said that
Henryk Szeryng was fluent in seven. According
to one usually-reliable source, Brosa was also the first to record the Britten
concerto – in April, 1952 or September, 1953.
That recording – as far as I know – is not commercially available. The concerto was at first not very successful
but by 2005, there were more than twenty recordings already produced. He began his violin studies with his father
at age 4. At age 10, he made his public
debut in Barcelona. Brosa later studied
in Brussels with Mathieu Crickboom. His
training there must have taken place in the early part of the twentieth
century. He made his debut in London in
1919. He was 25 years old. In 1924 (one source says 1925), Brosa founded
the Brosa String Quartet. The quartet
was disbanded in 1939. His first tour of
the U.S. occurred in 1930. From 1940 to
1942, he was first violinist with the Pro Arte Quartet as well. He later also taught at the Royal College in
London and concertized until his retirement in 1971. Brosa played the 1727 (or 1730) Vesuvius
Stradivarius (now in a Cremona museum) as well as a Giovanni Paolo Maggini
violin from the year 1600 (approximately) which had previously been owned by
Ole Bull. Here is an audio file of a
Brosa recording of the slow movement of the Mendelssohn e minor concerto. Brosa died (in Barcelona) on March 23, 1979,
at age 84.
Sunday, November 15, 2015
Endre Granat
Endre Granat is a Hungarian violinist, music editor, and teacher born (in
Miskolc, Hungary – about 100 miles northeast of Budapest) on August 3,
1937. He is best known for having
recorded prolifically in Los Angeles as a studio (session) musician, (as did
Louis Kaufman, Toscha Seidel, and Israel Baker before him), where he almost always
served as concertmaster. He has played
and recorded for hundreds of movie soundtracks, CDs, and Television shows. Granat is easily the most experienced studio
violinist working today. He may also be
the only concert violinist in history whose wife was a murder victim (1975). His first teacher was his father (Josef
Granat) who was the concertmaster of the Budapest Philharmonic for many years. He then studied with Gyorgy Garay at the
Franz Liszt Academy in Budapest in his native country. I don’t know at what age he entered the
Academy. He fled the country during the
revolution in 1956. He was 19 years
old. He then spent five years living in
Switzerland although his initial plans were to go to Paris, France. Between 1956 and 1964 he was concertmaster or
a section violinist with the Hamburg Symphony, the Orchestra of the Suisse
Romande, and the Gothenburg Symphony. He
also graduated from the conservatory in Basel with a Master’s degree during
that time. In 1962 he entered and won a
violin competition at Heidelberg, Germany.
He was 25 years old. He came to
the U.S. in 1964 and studied further with Josef Gingold at Indiana University’s
Jacobs School of Music. Granat was
assistant concertmaster with the Cleveland Orchestra from 1964 to 1966. In 1967 he participated in the Queen Elizabeth
violin competition and came in lower than fifth place – I don’t know how much
lower. He was 30 years old. He then studied for five years with Jascha
Heifetz in Los Angeles. Between 1975 and
1977, he played very little, spending two years in South Korea studying
God-knows-what. I did not take the
trouble to find out; however, he and pianist Edith Kilbuck did record the complete
works for violin and harpsichord by J.S. Bach in 1976. When he returned from Korea, he began playing
in the studios in Los Angeles where he has been working ever since. Granat has taught at various music schools during
different times in his career, including the Royal Academy of Music in
Gothenburg (Sweden), Seoul National University, the Cleveland Institute of
Music, and USC in Los Angeles, where he might still be teaching. He has also frequently participated in
several music festivals in the U.S. and abroad and intermittently concertized as
a soloist working with some of the world’s conducting luminaries, including George
Szell, Zubin Mehta, and Georg Solti. He
was concertmaster of the Pacific Symphony in California from September 1983 to
June 1993. With regard to that
experience, Granat has said: “It's one thing to have a great number of
wonderful players; it's another thing to have a great orchestra. Eighty extraordinary musicians do not equal an
extraordinary orchestra. That takes
years.” Granat plays a 1721 Domenicus
Montagnana violin which he acquired in 1968.
He may have sold that violin in 2005.
Sunday, November 1, 2015
Nicola Benedetti
Nicola Benedetti (Nicola Joy Nadia Benedetti) is a Scottish violinist and teacher born (in West
Kilbride) on July 20, 1987. (West
Kilbride is a very small village located about 33 miles west of Glasgow) She is known for being a child prodigy. She is a left handed person who plays right handed (as is Caroline Goulding and as was Higinio Ruvalcaba.) She began her violin studies with Brenda
Smith at age 4. By age 8, she was the
concertmaster of the National Children’s Orchestra of Great Britain. In September of 1997, she began studying at
the Yehudi Menuhin School. She was 10
years old. There, she studied with
Natasha Boyarskaya. She made her public
debut one year later at Wigmore Hall in London.
I don’t know what piece (or pieces) she played then.
Her later teachers included Pavel Vernikov (concertmaster of the Chamber
Orchestra of Europe, according to one source - see comment) and Maciej Rakowski,
concertmaster of the English Chamber Orchestra.
She has received quite a number of awards, too numerous to mention; however,
as far as I know, she has never entered a major violin competition. By her late teens, she was already an
established concertizing artist. She
also formed a piano trio in 2008. Benedetti
has played a Stradivarius from 1717 (the Gariel Stradivarius, previously owned
by Jaime Laredo) and the Earl Spencer Stradivarius (1712 or 1723) which she is
probably currently playing. Her
discography is not extensive (quite understandably, given that there’s not much
repertory left to record - new concertos are not worth recording and every
standard concerto has already been recorded dozens of times by very prominent
and some not-so-prominent artists.) Here
is one YouTube video of her playing.
Photo is courtesy of Simon Fowler.
Sunday, October 18, 2015
Emmy Verhey
Emmy Verhey is a Dutch violinist born (in Amsterdam) on March 13,
1949. She is known for having placed
very highly in the 1966 Tchaikovsky Competition. She was only 17 years old. Although she also began concertizing at a
very young age, she kept studying with various teachers. Her first teacher (at age 7) was her father
(Gerard Verhey) but she soon (one year later) began her lessons with one of the
top Hungarian violin pedagogues – Oskar Back.
She later studied with Herman Krebbers, Wolfgang Schneiderhan, and David
Oistrakh. She made her debut on December
7, 1961, playing the Havanaise by Saint Saens.
She was 12 years old. On September
3, 1962, she played the Tchaikovsky concerto.
She was 13 years old. Her career
has mostly been spent in Europe, particularly the Netherlands. Verhey has an extensive discography (more
than 55 CDs) and has collaborated with some of the world’s top artists; Yehudi
Menuhin, David Oistrakh, Mariss Jansons, Bernard Haitink, Neville Marriner, and
Janos Starker are among them. She began
teaching at the Conservatory in Ultrecht in 1983 and retired from there in
2002. According to one source, Verhey
was also the concertmaster of the Ultrecht Symphony Orchestra for 8 years –
possibly from 1977 to 1985. (Ultrecht is
about 20 miles southeast of Amsterdam.) Verhey
has also performed chamber music extensively with a variety of artists. She has frequently brought attention to
little-known composers such as Arthur Laurie, Othmar Schoek, Alphonse
Diepenbrock, Charles Avison, Theo Loevendie, and Chris Duindam. In 1991, she co-founded the Camerata Antonio
Lucio with whom she made several recordings.
Among the violins she has played
are the Earl Spencer Stradivarius from 1723 (or 1712 – accounts vary - now
being played by Nicola Benedetti) and an Andrea Guarneri from 1676. Verhey will play a final public concert
(after which she is retiring from concertizing) on November 29, 2015. The program includes Schubert’s Trout
Quintet, Schubert’s String trio (the one in B flat), a violin sonata by Tristan
Keuris, and another violin sonata by Theo Loevendie. YouTube has many videos of her playing. Here is one featuring the well-known Rondo
Capriccioso.
Sunday, October 4, 2015
Boris Brovtsyn
Boris Brovtsyn is a Russian violinist and teacher born (in Moscow) in
1977. He is known for his amazing
technique and the use of rubato – in the style of many virtuoso violinists of
another generation – violinists such as Mischa Elman, Fritz Kreisler, Jacques Thibaud,
Ida Haendel, Nathan Milstein, and Ivry Gitlis.
He began playing the violin at age 4.
At age 6, he made his public debut at the famous Bolshoi Theatre. His grandfather, a pupil of the famous
pedagogue, Abram Yampolski (teacher of Leonid Kogan) was his first
teacher. At age 7 (1984), Brovtsyn
entered the Central Music School in Moscow and graduated ten years later. Then he entered the Tchaikovsky (Moscow)
Conservatory where he studied with Maya Glezarova. From there he graduated in 1999. He had already made his U.S. debut in 1995
and his U.K debut in 1998. He had
already played for the Pope in 1993. He
studied further at the Guildhall School of Music in London where he won the
Gold Medal in 2004. His main teacher
there was David Takeno. His career has
taken him to places all over the world, but especially Europe. As do practically all concert violinists, he
plays at music festivals all over the world.
Brovtsyn plays an 1862 Vuillaume violin.
Here is a performance of his on YouTube – the Mendelssohn concerto in e
minor with the Academy of St Martin in the Fields. He gets a tremendous ovation and is obliged to
play a very nice encore by Ysaye.
Sunday, September 20, 2015
Valeriy Sokolov
Valeriy Sokolov is a Russian (Ukrainian) violinist born (in Kharkiv) on
September 22, 1986. He has a very busy
concert career and he tours throughout Europe regularly. He is known for having a highly personal (and
distinctive) style of playing. He began
his studies in his native Ukraine but left at age thirteen (1999) upon
receiving a scholarship (from the Sarasate violin competition) to study in
England with Natalya Boyarskaya. He
began his violin studies in Kharkiv at age five but I do not know who his first
teachers were. He later studied with
Felix Andrievsky and in Germany and Vienna with (among others) Ana Chumachenco,
Mark Lubotsky, and Boris Kuschnir. By
2006, his career was firmly established.
He was barely 20 years old. Sokolov
is particularly well known for his interpretation of Bartok’s second concerto
which he has recorded. He made his U.S.
debut in 2007. Sokolov is the subject of
a 2004 documentary about his emerging career.
Here is a short YouTube video of him playing Beethoven. Photo is courtesy of Derry Moore.
Sunday, September 6, 2015
Otto Buchner
Otto Buchner was a German violinist and teacher born (in Nuremberg) on
September 10, 1924. He is well known
(among aficionados) as a specialist in the solo violin sonatas by JS Bach. Buchner founded a string chamber orchestra based in Munich in 1962. He taught at the Munich Conservatory for many
years too. One source states (without citing the years, so it is debatable) he was also concertmaster of the
Bavarian State Opera Orchestra (associated with Carlos Kleiber for many years)
as well as concertmaster of the Munich Philharmonic. His recording of Bach’s Brandenburg
concertos, with the Munich Bach Soloists (founded in 1982), may well be the
best of all time. You can hear the first
movement of number 4 here and judge for yourself. Those of you who know these works or have
played them know how difficult number 4 is for the solo violin. The complete version of the concertos is
here. The first movement of the second Brandenburg Concerto in the set is included among the music works sent into space on the Golden Record which is attached to the spacecraft Voyager 1. If an extraterrestrial finds it, they might like the music and enjoy Buchner's playing although they probably won't know it's him playing - unless that information is included in the Golden Record but I don't think it is. Buchner also recorded many Bach solo
works which are easily found on the internet.
He played a Stradivarius violin dated 1727. Buchner died on September 28, 2008, at age
84.
Sunday, August 23, 2015
Robert Lipsett
Robert Lipsett (Robert Crawford Lipsett Jr.) is an American violinist and
teacher born (in Louisville, Kentucky) on October 23, 1947. He is best known for holding the violin chair
at the Colburn School in Los Angeles, a position named after Jascha Heifetz. He literally teaches in Heifetz’ old music
studio, which was disassembled at Heifetz' home in Beverly Hills and reassembled
on the Colburn School’s campus. The
studio includes almost all of Heifetz’ furnishings and décor as well. He has been on the faculty for more than 25
years. Lipsett gives master classes all
over the world and also teaches at the Aspen School of Music. He began his violin studies as a child, at
age 7, in Dallas, Texas with Zelman Brounoff (concertmaster of the Dallas
Symphony) and Ruth Lasley. After his
family moved to Saint Louis (Missouri), he continued his music studies with
Melvin Ritter (concertmaster of the St Louis Symphony and former student of William
Kroll.) Eventually, he graduated from
the Cleveland Institute of Music and, after graduation, also studied with Ivan
Galamian at Juilliard (New York) and Endre Granat, presumably in Los
Angeles. In 1986, he began teaching at
USC (University of Southern California.)
Lipsett has also worked as a session (studio) violinist in Los Angeles,
recording for movies, television, and CDs.
He has received several awards for his distinguished career as a
teacher. Among his many pupils are Robert
Chen, Tamaki Kawakubo, Kathryn Eberle, Leila Josefowicz, Jennifer Frautschi,
and Lindsay Deutsch. From the photo you
can see Lipsett plays a fine violin but I don’t know what it is. About achieving a top concert career, Lipsett
has said the following: “One eventually has to face a sort of reality. Being a top concert violinist is like running
for President. There’s just not much
room up there at all.”
Sunday, August 9, 2015
Aida Stucki
Aida Stucki was a Swiss violinist and teacher born (in Cairo, Egypt) on
February 19, 1921. She was a concert
violinist who, like countless others, settled down to a teaching career,
although she continued to perform as a soloist and chamber musician even as she
taught many world class violinists. One
of her teachers was Stefi Geyer, Bela Bartok’s beloved muse. Another was Carl Flesch. She began violin lessons at age 10, with
Ernst Wolters, concertmaster of the Winterthur (Switzerland) Symphony
Orchestra. Stucki made her public debut
at age 13, playing Mozart’s third concerto, although I don’t know where it took
place – I’m guessing either Winterthur or Zurich, Switzerland. Stucki’s concertizing career began in
1940. She was 19 years old. She began teaching at the Winterthur
Conservatory in 1948. In 1959, she
founded a string quartet with her violinist-husband, Giuseppe Piraccini. The two would often trade places,
alternatively playing first or second violin.
As far as I know, the first string quartet to regularly alternate first
and second violin parts between violinists was the Jacobsohn String Quartet –
it was founded in Chicago in (approximately) 1890. Stucki frequently partnered with pianist (and
violinist) Clara Haskil to perform as a duo.
Nevertheless, Haskil also performed with other violinists, including
Isaac Stern, Joseph Szigeti, Henryk Szeryng, Eugene Ysaye, George Enesco, and
Arthur Grumiaux. In 1983, Stucki fell
and broke both of her wrists. She had to
stop concertizing but continued teaching.
She left a substantial discography which is easy to find on the
internet. Among her many hundreds of students are Manrico Padovani, Anne Sophie Mutter, Noemi Schindler, and Matthias Enderle. From some recordings I've heard I concluded she must have played a pretty good violin but I was not able to find out what it was. Stucki died on June 9, 2011,
at age 90.
Sunday, July 26, 2015
Ottorino Respighi
Ottorino Respighi was an Italian violinist, composer, and musicologist,
born (in Bologna) on July 9, 1879.
Although making a living by playing the violin for many years, today, he
is known for his very popular tone poems – The Pines of Rome, The Fountains of
Rome, and The Roman Festivals among others.
He also composed at least eight operas which are not as popular. Respighi was very prolific and his music
still sounds modern, even 80 years after his death. His father was his first teacher of both
violin and piano. Respighi later entered
the Music Lyceum in Bologna where he studied violin with Federico Sarti. He graduated in 1899. He was 19 years old. He then traveled to Saint Petersburg, Russia
to play principal viola in the Russian Imperial Theatre. The Russian Revolution would not occur until seventeen
years later. He took advantage of his
stay there by studying composition with Rimsky-Korsakov. After returning to Bologna, he took a degree
in composition, perhaps from the same institution. However, his principal income came from playing
violin. Until 1908, he was first
violinist of the Mugellini Quartet. He
also spent time playing in Germany. Upon
returning from Germany, he turned his attention, almost completely, to
composition. He settled in Rome in 1913
and used it as his base of operations for the rest of his life. He also began teaching composition at the
Rome Conservatory that year. Whether he ever gave violin lessons is unknown to me. By 1917, he
had become famous as a composer. In
1923, he was appointed Director of the Conservatory. Here is Heifetz’ rendition of Respighi’s
violin sonata in B minor – first movement.
Respighi died on April 18, 1936, at age 56.
Sunday, July 12, 2015
Susanne Lautenbacher
Susanne Lautenbacher
is a German violinist and teacher born (in Augsburg) on April 19, 1932. She is known for being an advocate of baroque
music before it was in vogue. She is
also known for recording seldom heard works – the works of Locatelli, Biber,
Rolla, Hummel, Viotti, Weill, Schorr, and Reger for example. One of her early teachers was Karl Freund in
Munich. She later studied with Henryk
Szeryng. She recorded for many labels
and her discography is fairly extensive – her recording activity spans more
than forty years. She was the violinist
of the Bell’ Arte Trio as well. She
taught for many years (beginning in 1965) at the Stuttgart Conservatory. Here is an audio file of one of her
recordings, a concerto by Antonio Vivaldi from the Four Seasons - Summer, taken at a very leisurely pace. Lautenbacher is becoming (or has already become) an iconic figure
for her thoughtful, incisive, and engaging interpretations.
Sunday, June 28, 2015
Stefi Geyer
Sunday, June 14, 2015
Boris Belkin
Boris Belkin (Boris Davidovich Belkin) is a Russian violinist and teacher born (in Yekaterinburg – aka Sverdlovsk) on January 26, 1948. He began his violin studies at age 6. One year later, he made his first public appearance with Kiril Kondrashin on the podium. He was a student at the Central Music School (for specially gifted children) in Moscow, a branch of the Tchaikovsky Conservatory. At the Moscow Conservatory, his teachers – among others – were Yuri Yankelevich (teacher also of Leonid Kogan, Ilya Kaler, Zakhar Bron, Vladimir Spivakov, and Ruben Aharonyan), Maya Glezarova (assistant to Yuri Yankelevich), and Felix Andrievsky. He began his concertizing career in Russia while still a student, a very common practice everywhere. In 1974, at age 26, he left Russia and settled in Western Europe. (He had applied to take part in the Paganini Competition in Genoa but the authorities denied him a visa so he then applied to emigrate to Israel and from there, he made his way to Belgium.) He has appeared with virtually every major orchestra in the world. He performed the Tchaikovsky concerto with the New York Philharmonic and Leonard Bernstein on April 22 and 24, 1975. On June 6 and 7, 1978, he played the Tchaikovsky concerto with the Berlin Philharmonic. Belkin's discography is not extensive by any measure but it includes the rarely performed Strauss concerto. He began teaching in Italy – at the Accademia Chigiana (founded in 1932) – in 1986. He also teaches in the Netherlands at the Advanced Music School (College of Music) in Maastricht (about 90 miles south east of Amsterdam – the city is a lot closer to Cologne, Germany and Brussels, Belgium than it is to Amsterdam.) Belkin has played a Stradivarius from the Russian State collection, a 1754 Guadagnini, and two modern violins (1994 and 2007) by Roberto Regazzi. For many years, he has used a bow made by a famous maker - Daniel Tobias Navea Vera. Here is one of Belkin’s YouTube files.
Sunday, May 31, 2015
Gyorgy Garay
Gyorgy Garay was a Hungarian violinist, teacher, and music editor born
(in Rakospalota) on December 2, 1909. He
is now a very obscure violinist who was well-known in his day. His first teacher was Joseph Bloch at the Budapest
Academy of Music. Garay was 9 years old
when he started his studies. Three years
later, he was a student of Oscar Studer.
In 1925, he began studying with Jeno Hubay and graduated a year
later. Interestingly, his public debut
took place in Vienna (1926.) He made his
debut in Hungary (Budapest) in 1927.
Garay soon gravitated toward a career in chamber music, playing violin
in the Hungarian Trio from 1927 to 1930.
Between 1930 and 1933, he was first violinist with the Garay
Quartet. In the 1930s, he developed a
second career as a soloist in Europe. Between
1940 and 1945, he was a violinist with the Fovarosi Orchestra in Budapest. He became principal violinist at the Hungarian
State Opera House in 1945 and stayed until 1951. From 1951 to 1960, he was concertmaster of
the National Philharmonic (State Concert Orchestra) – this orchestra may or may
not be the same orchestra which exiled itself (to Germany) in 1956 and became
the Philharmonia Hungarica. From 1949 to
1961, Garay was also a violin teacher at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music in
Budapest. In 1960, he became concertmaster
of the Radio Symphony in Leipzig (MDR Symphony Orchestra.) While there, he also taught at the
Mendelssohn Academy of Music. Henceforth,
he performed less and less as a soloist.
He gave many premiere performances of new works (mostly by Hungarian
composers) and recorded some of these works as well. Here is one of several of his audio files on
YouTube - the violin concerto (1973) by Wilhelm Neef. Garay died (in Leipzig) on May 15, 1988, at
age 78. His violin was a Stradivarius of
1733 – as far as I know, it bears no name. It is now played (and perhaps owned) by well-known Hungarian violinist Antal Zalai.
Sunday, May 17, 2015
Hagai Shaham
Hagai Shaham is an Israeli violinist and teacher born (in Haifa) on July
8, 1966. For reasons I know nothing
about, he has never left Israel as his home base, as have so many other concert
violinists – Itzhak Perlman, Pinchas Zukerman, Guy Braunstein, Jonathan Berick,
Lydia Mordkovitch, Vadim Gluzman, and Ivry Gitlis, to name a few. He is also known for recordings of
little-known works by Joseph Achron.
Shaham is often asked whether he is closely related to American
violinist Gil Shaham – he is not. Shaham
began his violin studies at age 6. He
later studied (from age 12) with Ilona Feher (1901-1988) in Tel Aviv - it has been said that
he was her last student. He also studied
with Emanuel Borok (the highest-paid concertmaster in the world), Elisha Kagan,
and Arnold Steinhardt. Shaham has taught
at USC (in the US - 2007), the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance, and Tel Aviv
University, among other places. He has
also given numerous master classes throughout the world. His recording labels have included Decca,
Chandos, Hyperion, Naxos, Nimbus, and Biddulph. His
Achron recordings are on the Hyperion label – some of these works have never
before been available to the general public.
It has been said that he found these forgotten works (in manuscript
form) at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
These recordings have been highly praised. One reviewer stated that “through the richness of his tone, superior vibrato
usage, expressiveness of phrasing and top-drawer facility, he fulfills his
potential in striking fashion. It is a
treat to hear such tonally satisfying violin playing when commonplace sound,
even among accomplished artists, is so prevalent." Another has stated that he has “an impressive
a technique as anyone except Heifetz…” In 2009, he formed a piano trio with Arnon Erez (piano) and Raphael Wallfisch. Since then, the trio has toured regularly but mostly in Europe. Here
is a YouTube video of him playing a well-known piece by Jeno Hubay.
Sunday, May 3, 2015
Stefan Gheorghiu
Stefan Gheorghiu was a Romanian violinist and teacher born (in Galatz) on
March 23, 1926. Although he concertized
around the world, he spent most of his time playing and teaching in Romania. As most professional violinists have done, he
began his violin studies very early in life – at age 5. He later (at age 9) became a student at the
Royal Conservatory in Bucharest and later still at the National Conservatory in
Paris, studying with Maurice Hewitt, a violinist I had never before heard
of. He completed his studies in Moscow
under the tutelage of David Oistrakh. In
1946, he became violin soloist with the George Enesco Philharmonic in
Bucharest. He also formed the Romanian Piano
Trio. He was 20 years old. Using Bucharest as his home base, he toured
various parts of the world (mostly Europe and Russia), championing the music of
Romanian composers, especially George Enesco, recording several first editions
of their works. In 1960, he was appointed
violin professor at the University of Music (Music Academy) in Bucharest. He was 34 years old. Among his many pupils are Angele Dubeau,
Corina Belcea, Liliana Ciulei, and Silvia Marcovici. Gheorghiu
died on March 17, 2010, at (almost) age 84.
Sunday, April 19, 2015
Vladimir Cosma
Vladimir Cosma is a Romanian violinist, composer, and conductor born (in
Bucharest) on April 13, 1940. He is one
of several musicians who began their careers as violinists and digressed to
other (musical) endeavors. In France, he is
well-known as a prolific film composer although he is a composer of classical
(concert) works as well. Perhaps he can
be compared to Victor Young, American violinist-composer. There is scant information about Cosma’s
career as a violinist other than that he began his violin studies while still
quite young and he graduated from the Bucharest Conservatory of Music and then
moved on to the Paris Conservatory in 1963.
In Paris, he also studied with Nadia Boulanger, the famous French
teacher. Up until about 1968 (between
1964 and 1967 approximately), he played in orchestras and toured as a concert violinist. After that, he focused on composition and
(necessarily) on conducting. He credits
a meeting with French composer Michel Legrand with his entry into the world of
soundtrack composing. He was 28 years
old by then. It has been said that one
of his grandmothers (I don’t know which one) studied with the famous piano
player, Ferruccio Busoni. According to
one (usually-reliable) source, Cosma is the composer of more than 300 scores
for films and television programs. Another
source puts the number at 150. He has
conducted a number of orchestras outside of the recording studios though mostly in France. The French government has bestowed several
honors on him as he is considered a national artistic treasure. Several of his scores have also been awarded the French equivalent of an Academy Award. As you can see from the
photo, Cosma has never entirely given up the violin. Whether he has or has ever had any pupils is
something I do not know. He is on record saying that melody is the most important thing in a composition. In an
interview, Cosma was quoted as follows: “In a few centuries, we shall see what
will come of the serial experiments and of these [atonal] composers. I think that all this decadence of the
Viennese romantic music is an end and not a beginning as, for such a long time,
Boulez and the promoters of new music wanted to make us believe.” Here is a YouTube audio file of one of his film works featuring the Berlin Philharmonic - I don't think I need to identify the violin soloist because you will immediately recognize it is the inimitable Ivry Gitlis.
Sunday, April 5, 2015
Vilde Frang
Vilde Frang (Vilde Frang Bjaerke) is a Norwegian violinist and teacher
born (in Oslo) on August 19, 1986. She
is known for having successfully made the jump from child prodigy to mature
violin superstar. That transition does
not always prove successful for artists.
In addition to being technically brilliant, her playing has been
described as being fresh, seductive, sinewy, inspired, voluptuous, and
possessed of startling emotional sincerity. A highly regarded music critic went so far as to say that he had never heard such a great violinist since the late Jascha Heifetz. Her playing is rhythmically and tonally flexible, not straight-laced,
predictable, and pedantic. She began her
violin studies at age four, on a violin built by her father, a professional
bass player. By 1993, she was a student
at the Barratt Due Institute of Music (founded in 1927) in Oslo. She was 7 years old. Her teachers there were Stephan Barratt Due,
Alf Kraggerud, and Henning Kraggerud. Frang
made her public debut at age ten with the Norwegian Radio Orchestra (some
sources say Norwegian Chamber Orchestra.)
She graduated from the Barratt Due Institute in 2002. In 1999, aged 12 (or 13), she debuted with
the Oslo Philharmonic, playing Sarasate’s Carmen Fantasy. Mariss Jansons was on the podium. The concert was a great success and her career
took off after that. However, from 2003
to 2009, Frang studied further with Kolja Blacher at the Advanced School for
Music and Theatre in Hamburg and with Ana Chumachenco at the Kronberg Academy
in Kronberg (about ten miles from Frankfurt, Germany.) She debuted with the London Philharmonic in
2007. Her first album was released in
2009. She records exclusively for
EMI/Warner Classics and has received numerous awards for her recordings,
including the Diapason d’Or, Deutsche Schallplattenpreis, Classical BRIT, and
the ECHO Klassik Award. As far as I
know, Frang has never entered any violin competitions. In 2010, Frang received an award of 1 million
NOK (Norwegian Krone – about 175,000 U.S. dollars) from a large Norwegian
business enterprise. She also received
an award of 75,000 Swiss francs (approximately 79,000 U.S. dollars) from Credit
Suisse (international bank) in 2012. The
award included a performance with the Vienna Philharmonic at the Lucerne
Festival. She made her BBC London Proms
debut in August, 2013, playing Bruch’s first concerto. She was 26 years old. By now, Frang has played with virtually every
major orchestra in the world and been accompanied by most major
conductors. She has also played recitals
or made solo appearances in all of the world’s important venues, including
those in China, Japan, Korea, Austria, Belgium, England, France, Germany,
Holland, Switzerland, Russia, and the U.S.
Frang now teaches at the Norwegian Academy of Music in Oslo. One of her violins is one constructed in 1864
by J.B. Vuillaume, a maker not considered to have the status of a Guarneri, a
Stradivari, or even a Guadagnini. She
has also played (since the summer of 2013) the 1709 Stradivarius known as the Engleman Strad. Frang has made the following interesting
comment regarding her artistic perspectives: “I need things to worry
about. I need some resistance and
struggle. That’s part of my music
making. I think talent has a lot to do
with knowing how to be inspired. Inspiration
is really the most important thing. ” On April 1 and 2, 2015 (last week) Frang was
to have played the Korngold concerto with the Toronto Symphony (and James
Conlon) but had to cancel due to “scheduling difficulties.” What that really means is anyone’s guess
since concerts are scheduled (and contracts are signed) very far in advance
(sometimes three years in advance) in order to avoid this sort of
difficulty. Perhaps all it means is that
her concert managers are disorganized, although that is extremely unlikely. Here is a YouTube video of one of her
performances. Photo is courtesy of Marco
Borggreve, photographer of (mostly European) musicians.
Sunday, March 22, 2015
Jinjoo Cho
Jinjoo Cho is a Korean violinist and teacher born (in Seoul) on July 12,
1988. She is well-known as the winner of
several violin competitions around the world (2005, 2006, 2010, 2013, 2014),
the Indianapolis being the most important among them. It is the nature of competitions that in
2012, Cho entered the Queen Elizabeth (of Belgium) violin competition and did
not make it to the finals. (Igor
Pikayzen, a very successful violinist with a brilliant technique did not make the
semi-finals in that same competition (that year), although he later won other competitions. Erick
Friedman came in sixth place in the Tchaikovsky competition in 1966…, and so it
goes.) Cho has – for the most part -
studied at the Cleveland Institute of Music (CIM) and the Curtis Institute in
Philadelphia. Her main teachers have
been Paul Kantor (for four years), Jaime Laredo, Zakhar Bron, Arnold
Steinhardt, and Mark Steinberg. She
began her violin studies at age 5 and later attended the Korean Art
School. Cho came to the US at age 14
and enrolled at the CIM almost immediately.
In Cleveland, she also attended the Gilmour Academy, a private
(boarding) school. At age 26 (September,
2014), she won first prize in the Indianapolis International violin competition. As a result, she is performing on the Gingold
Stradivarius of 1683 (also known as the Martinelli Stradivarius), a four year
loan from the competition. Prior to
winning the Indianapolis, she had been concertizing for many years (since the
age of 16) and had gained extensive experience in orchestral work and chamber
music playing due to her attendance at various summer music camps. Her technique has been described as stunning
and her playing as being full of passion.
She has been quoted as saying: “I think the importance of music is that it
enables you to reach places in your heart that you might otherwise never reach.
It promotes soul searching. Music also helps you see part of yourself and
better understand people even in diverse situations. Once you've experienced profound art, I really
feel you are a citizen of the world. You
have a whole other means of traveling to different times and places that have
shaped lives.” Here is one YouTube video
of her playing with piano accompaniment – the seldom-heard Francis Poulenc
violin sonata.
Sunday, March 8, 2015
Pamela Frank
Pamela Frank is an American
violinist and teacher born (in New York City) on June 20, 1967. She is now best known as a chamber music
player and teacher, although she has performed as a soloist with many of the
world’s top orchestras and conductors.
In the early 2000s she had to stop performing due to a serious (hand)
injury suffered in 2001. In that regard, she joins (among
others) Rodolphe Kreutzer, Jascha Heifetz, Bronislaw Huberman, Fritz Kreisler, Erick Friedman, Maxim
Vengerov, Emanuel Vardi, Manuel Quiroga, Kyung Wha Chung, Hilary Hahn, and Jacques Thibaud, each of whom had
their career interrupted by hand or arm injuries. After extensive rehabilitation, she returned
to the stage in August of 2012. She has
taught at the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore (since 2003), the Curtis Institute (since 1996) in Philadelphia, and the
State University of New York. She has
also served on several juries of violin competitions around the world and
played at various music festivals, including the well-known Verbier, Salzburg, and Ravinia festivals. Frank has also frequently given masterclasses in Europe, Israel, Canada, and the U.S. She is fluent in German, French, and (of course) English but is one of the few violinists who does not have a website. Frank began her
studies at age 5, studying violin privately with Shirley Givens for about eleven years. She then studied further with Szymon Goldberg
(1909-1993) and Jaime Laredo. Her formal (public) debut took place in 1985 at New York's Carnegie Hall with the New York String Orchestra under Alexander Schneider. She was 18 years old. She had been a section player with that ensemble since the age of 15. Frank later debuted a second time in Carnegie Hall playing a recital there in April of 1995. She graduated
from the Curtis Institute in 1989, presenting her graduation recital on February 15, 1989, playing works by Bach, Ysaye, Kreisler, Schubert, and Beethoven. She
first appeared with the New York Philharmonic on October 27, 1994, playing the
Dvorak concerto. Leonard Slatkin was on
the podium. Her second and last
appearance with the orchestra was on December 1, 1998. On that occasion she played Mozart’s third
concerto. Andre Previn conducted. On September 11, 1996, she appeared with the Berlin Philharmonic alongside cellist Clemens Hagen playing the Double Concerto by Johannes Brahms. Daniel Harding was on the podium. She was 29 years old. Her father, the pianist Claude Frank
(1925-2014), often accompanied her in recital.
(Leonid Kogan and his pianist daughter (Nina) often played together
too.) In December of 1997, she and her father presented the entire Beethoven sonata cycle at London's Wigmore Hall. Frank’s discography is not
extensive although it includes the complete Mozart concertos and the complete
Beethoven and Brahms Sonatas. Her playing is
featured in the soundtrack to the movie “Immortal Beloved.” Among other violins, Frank has played a
Guarnerius Del Gesu from 1736 known as the Wieniawski. Here is a YouTube audio file of one of her
Beethoven performances. Photo is courtesy of Nicolas Lieber
Sunday, February 22, 2015
Adele Anthony
Adele Anthony is an
Australian violinist and teacher born (in Tasmania) on October 1, 1970. She is known for having won first prize in the
(fifth) Carl Nielsen violin competition in 1996 (at age 25) and for being the
wife of Gil Shaham, with whom she frequently performs. Twelve years before that, at age 13, she had
won the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s Instrumental Competition – she
played the Sibelius concerto on that occasion.
Soon afterward, she played the Tchaikovsky concerto in a concert
sponsored by the same organization. That
concert in 1983 is considered her Australian public debut. Anthony began her violin studies at age
3. She studied at the University of
Adelaide with Beryl Kimber. In 1987, she
came to the U.S. to pursue further study at Juilliard (New York City) where her
main teachers were Hyo Kang, Felix Galimir, and Dorothy Delay. According to one source, she studied at
Juilliard for eight years, having received funding from several benefactors, including
the Starling Foundation. However, she
was an active concert artist even while she was still at Juilliard and still
maintains a very active solo concert career.
Her repertoire is very extensive and includes all of the standard violin
literature in addition to many contemporary works less frequently heard by
audiences. As do almost all concert
violinists nowadays, Anthony also plays chamber music at various festivals
throughout the world, but especially in New York, where she resides. She has recorded for various labels and among
her notable recordings are those featuring violin concertos by Carl Nielsen, Ross
Edwards, and Nicolo Paganini. Anthony
plays a Stradivarius violin constructed in 1728. Here is one of her YouTube audio files featuring
the work of Ross Edwards – a refreshing and unusual new work for the violin. A few Stradivarius violins (perhaps one
hundred or so) have been given names which have remained attached to the
instruments for many years but – as far as I know – this one has no specific
name. I have heard it up close a number
of times and it has a wonderful sound. Perhaps
later on, it will be known as the Anthony Stradivarius.
Sunday, February 8, 2015
Sascha Jacobsen
Sascha Jacobsen was a
Russian violinist and teacher born (in Helsinki, Finland) on December 10, 1895. Jacobsen’s birthdate is also given as
November 29, 1895 and December 11, 1895.
Little is known of his early life.
It has been said that he grew up in St Petersburg. He has been often confused with another
violinist (from Philadelphia) named Sascha Jacobson. A humorous song written by George Gershwin in
1921 includes his (first) name (along with those of Jascha, Toscha, and Mischa
– Russian violinists Heifetz, Seidel, and Elman, respectively.) It is known that he enrolled at Juilliard in
1908 where his main teacher was Franz Kneisel.
He graduated from Juilliard (Institute of Musical Art) in June of 1914
(some sources say 1915.) He was 18 years
old. (A fellow-student of his was Elias
Breeskin.) In February of 1915, Jacobsen
played parts of Lalo’s Symphonie Espagnol at an Aeolian Hall concert. On November 27, 1915, he made his official
recital debut at Aeolian Hall playing (among other things) Saint Saens’ third
concerto. After the announced program
was concluded, he had to play numerous encores and he received very favorable
reviews the following day. He first
soloed with the New York Philharmonic on March 9, 1919 (at age 23) playing
Bruch’s first concerto with Walter Damrosch conducting. Jacobsen concertized as a soloist between
1915 and 1925. He began teaching at
Juilliard in 1926. After being hired, he
almost immediately formed the Musical Art Quartet which disbanded in 1945,
after almost 20 years of concert activity.
Recordings of this quartet are not hard to find. Jacobsen also did solo recordings, although
mostly of short works for violin and piano.
A well-known recording of his is the Chausson concerto for string
quartet, violin, and piano with Jascha Heifetz as violin soloist. You can listen to that recording here. He moved to Los Angeles (California, USA) in
1946 and taught at the Los Angeles Conservatory but at other music schools as
well. From September 1947 and May 1949,
he was guest concertmaster of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Some sources say he was concertmaster up to
1952 but I could not confirm that. It
has been said that Albert Einstein was one of Jacobsen’s pupils. (Einstein also took lessons from Toscha
Seidel.) Jacobsen’s most famous pupils
are probably Julius Hegyi and Zvi Zeitlin.
Among the violins he played are the Red Diamond Stradivarius (1732), the
Cessole Stradivarius (1716), the Windsor Stradivarius (1717), a GB Guadagnini
(1779), another GB Guadagnini (1772), and a Del Gesu Guarnerius constructed in
1732. Jacobsen died on March 19, 1972,
at age 76.
Sunday, January 25, 2015
Barnabas Kelemen
Barnabas Kelemen is a
Hungarian violinist and teacher born (in Budapest) on June 12, 1978. He is known for having won the prestigious
Indianapolis Violin Competition in 2002.
His repertoire is very extensive and includes Schumann’s concerto and
Bruch’s second concerto which are seldom heard live. Kelemen also plays a great deal of
contemporary music. On May 2, 2013, he
premiered (in New York’s Carnegie Hall) a long lost concerto by Mihaly Nador,
composed in 1903 (and revised in 1941-42) but never performed. Reviewers of the performance compared Kelemen
to Heifetz. The audience applauded after
each movement of the concerto, which is not typical, especially in the case of
more modern works. Kelemen began
studying violin at age six with Valeria Baranyai. He entered the Franz Liszt Academy at age 11
and studied with Eszter Perenyi. He
graduated in 2001. He was 23 years
old. By then, he had already won first
prize in the Mozart Violin Competition in Salzburg (1999.) Three years after winning the Indianapolis
competition, he began teaching (in 2005) at the same school from which he
graduated. In 2010, he founded (with his
violinist wife Katalin Kokas) the Kelemen Quartet. (Among violinists who married other concert
violinists are Olga Kaler, Adele Anthony, Marina Markov, Ruth Posselt, and
Elizabeth Gilels.) The Kelemen Quartet
has also received top prizes at chamber music competitions. In addition, several of Kelemen’s recordings
have also received awards from music periodicals and critics. Interestingly, except for the cellist, the
Kelemen Quartet players sometimes switch places with each other – alternating
between first violin, second violin, and viola.
Kelemen has taken conducting lessons from Leif Segerstam and has already
conducted a few concerts in Europe. He
often appears in the dual role of soloist-conductor with chamber orchestras. Needless to say, Kelemen has toured the world
several times (and continues to do so) as a soloist and with the quartet. In 2014, he began teaching at the Advanced
School for Music and Dance in Cologne, Germany.
Here is a YouTube video of his playing a well-known Mozart sonata. It shows how different his temperament and
style are from a more conventional concert violinist but you be the judge. After winning the Indianapolis competition,
Kelemen played the 1683 Stradivarius (Martinelli Stradivarius) that all
Indianapolis competition winners get to use for four years. (The Martinelli was “restored” in 2014 and is
currently being played by Jinjoo Cho)
Kelemen is currently playing a Guarneri (del Gesu) constructed in 1742.
Sunday, January 11, 2015
Jose Luis Garcia
Jose Luis Garcia (Jose Luis Garcia Asensio) was
a Spanish violinist born (in Madrid) on February 25, 1944. He is best known for being the concertmaster
of the English Chamber Orchestra for about 25 years. Just as the names Ferdinand David, Raymond Gniewek, Glenn Dicterow, Norman Carol, and Richard Burgin unfailingly bring up the names of their respective orchestras (the Gewandhaus, the Metropolitan Opera, the New York Philharmonic, the Philadelphia Orchestra, and the Boston Symphony, respectively), Garcia's biography is inextricably linked to the history of the ECO. He spent nearly his entire career in England. His first studies were with his father
beginning at age 6. If he studied with
anyone else in Spain, I do not know who that was. In 1960, he received first prize at the
Sarasate competition in Pamplona. He was
16 years old. Thereafter (in 1961) he traveled to
London to study with Antonio Brosa at the Royal College of Music. He appeared in
concert in a Vivaldi concerto (for four violins in B minor) at a Proms concert (in
1963) at age 19 with the BBC Symphony.
Malcolm Sargent was on the podium. Two years later, in 1965, he joined the pit orchestra of the Royal Opera, Covent Garden. In 1967, he toured South America with the English Chamber Orchestra (playing Principal Second Violin.) However, by then, he had already (intermittently) played several concerts with the orchestra. In 1968, he was appointed associate concertmaster of the orchestra. He was 24 years old. In 1970, he made his second debut as a
soloist at another Proms concert. On that
occasion, he played Michael Tippett’s Fantasia Concertante (on a theme by
Corelli) with the English Chamber Orchestra, of which, as previously mentioned,
he was then Associate Concertmaster. The
composer was on the podium. By that
time, Garcia was already teaching at the Royal College of Music, where he had
begun teaching at age 22, being the youngest to ever get a teaching appointment at that school. (Garcia taught at the Royal College of Music until 1982 - a total of fifteen or sixteen years.) At age 23, he
led the string section for one of the Beatles’ most famous albums. With the English Chamber Orchestra, Garcia
would also conduct and perform as soloist.
He eventually toured almost every country in the world. Although he recorded as a soloist, he far
more frequently recorded as an orchestral leader with the ECO. His best-known solo recording is probably
Vivaldi’s Four Seasons. He also recorded
Mozart’s five concertos and the Bach Double Concerto with the ECO. The recordings are easily found on the internet. It has been said that the English Chamber
Orchestra is the most recorded chamber orchestra in the world, having recorded
more than 1,500 individual works, even though multiple recordings of the same
works (the Mozart piano concertos, for instance) are probably included in that number. (Although the orchestra generates quite a bit
of revenue on its own, the orchestra also has an outstanding Patron - the
Prince of Wales.) Garcia never wavered
from his romantic interpretations of baroque works, unlike other British chamber
ensembles (the English Concert, the Academy of Ancient Music, Orchestra of the
Age of Enlightenment, English Baroque Soloists, etc.) which embraced the period
instrument (authentic performance practice) musical movements beginning in the late
1960s. It is quite interesting that in
1983-1984 Garcia offered his services to the musical establishment in Spain to
conduct master classes free-of-charge (in Spain) but never got a call in response. Later on – between 1992 and 1999 – he taught
at the Queen Sofia School of Music in Madrid and conducted the school’s
orchestra with which he also toured extensively. Garcia studied conducting with Sergiu
Celibidache. Among the orchestras he guest
conducted (outside of England and Spain) are the National Symphony (Washington,
D.C.), the Detroit Symphony, and the Israel Chamber Orchestra. He also guest conducted the Ft Worth (Texas,
USA) Chamber Orchestra many times, beginning with a concert going back to
October of 1977. His last concert with
that orchestra was probably in October of 1992.
As does another famous concertmaster in the U.S. (from the Boston
Symphony), Garcia loved golf. He was
also one of the very few musicians (and possibly the only violinist anywhere)
who owned a Rolls Royce automobile. Garcia played the (Fritz) Hirt Stradivarius from 1704, also known as the Prince (Serge) Obolensky Strad and now known as the Hirt-Garcia Strad. Among
the many other violins he played was a modern violin constructed by American
luthier Terry Borman. (Among the many players
who also play Borman violins are Pinchas Zukerman, Jaime Laredo, Pamela Frank,
and Joseph Silverstein.) The Strad is presently owned by a private collector but is on loan to American violinist Esther Yoo. If there are
any videos of Garcia's myriad solo concerts out there, they have not yet been uploaded to
YouTube. Garcia died on August 11, 2011,
at age 67. (Photo is courtesy of the English Chamber Orchestra)