Sergei Stadler is a Russian violinist, teacher, and conductor born (in
Saint Petersburg) on May 20, 1962. Although
he took first prize (alongside Viktoria Mullova) in the famous Tchaikovsky
Competition (in 1982) and the Grand Prize in the Jacques Thibaud Competition
(in 1980 – one source has it as 1979), he is not as well-known as one might
expect. (Please see comment below.) However, he has developed a very
successful career in Russia and Europe, having played in most of the important
concert venues. He is also an opera
conductor. Stadler actually began his
music studies in piano, taking lessons from his parents, although his father
was a professional violinist. He entered
the Saint Petersburg Conservatory at age 12.
He studied violin with Boris Sergeyev in Leningrad (Saint
Petersburg.) He also later studied with
Mikhail Vaiman, Victor Tretyakov, Leonid Kogan, and David Oistrakh. From 1984 to 1989 he taught at the Saint
Petersburg Conservatory. In his career
as a teacher, he has conducted master classes in Europe and the far east. He has also founded several performing
organizations - the Hermitage Music Academy, and the New Saint Petersburg
Symphony are among them. He has about 30
CDs to his credit – one source says 50 – including one with all Beethoven
Sonatas, accompanied by his sister Julia.
Here is one video of his on YouTube.
Viktoria Mullova defected from Russia in 1983, feeling that her career after she won the Tchaikovsky Competition was going nowhere. Perhaps if Stadler had done the same, his professional profile (and his income) would be much higher.
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