Sunday, September 17, 2017

Pekka Kuusisto

Pekka Kuusisto is a Finnish violinist, composer, conductor, and teacher born (in Espoo, Finland – a small city ten miles west of Helsinki) on October 7, 1976.  He is known for presenting unusual programs of music which are quite eclectic while maintaining their seriousness.  He has been known to sing at his recitals.  He also sometimes uses an undulating bow stroke which produces a subtly different sound.  As strange as it might sound, Kuusisto was the first (and – up to the present time - the only) Finn to win, in 1995, the Sibelius Violin Competition.  He was 19 years old at the time.  Here is a YouTube video of his performance at the competition.  Kuusisto began his studies at age 3.  His first teacher was Geza Szilvay at the East Helsinki Music Institute.  (Szilvay is well known for teaching young children.)  Four years later Kuusisto enrolled at the Sibelius Academy in Helsinki.  One of his teachers there was Tuomas Haapanen.  Nine years later, he studied for four years at Indiana University with Miriam Fried and Paul Biss (husband of Miriam Fried.)  He finished his studies there in 1996.  He was 20 years old.  A very curious anomaly about Kuusisto’s career is that his discography is rather slim given his extreme virtuosity as a musician.  (That is very striking and reminds me of Norwegian violinist Mari Samuelsen’s discography which is also rather slender.)  Besides solo concertizing, Kuusisto regularly participates in music festivals around the world and often performs with ensembles focused on contemporary music.  Here is a video of a concert with Kuusisto conducting the Australian Chamber Orchestra in a performance of modern music, including electronics – one of the pieces shows the strings using what look like practice mutes, not regular mutes.  As far as I know, Kuusisto’s violin is still a 1752 G.B. Guadagnini. 

5 comments:

  1. YouTube has a video of a concert Kuusisto gave at the Proms in 2016 - the Tchaikovsky concerto. I didn't include a link to it in the post because it is so well-known due to the encore. That performance almost made Kuusisto a household word.

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  2. Kuusisto recently began using a Stradivari violin from 1709, the Kempner Strad - somewhere along the line, the violin was renamed (for unknown reasons) adding another owner's name and is now known as the Scotta Strad. The fiddle had been previously played by Soovin Kim.

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  3. It was originally named after Frida Scotta, a Danish soloist of the late 19th century. She married Herr Kaulbach. In 1936 it was sold to Barbara Kempner. So it has been called Scotta or Scotta-Kaulbach, then more recently Scotta-Kaulbach, Kempner. Scotta seems simpler and historically accurate.

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    1. Yes, thank you!! I agree that Scotta is both accurate and simpler.

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  4. Thanks for your response. Just for completeness, Frida Scotta married a German painter, Friedrich August von Kaulbach in 1897. Barbara Kempner gave the violin to the Marlboro School of Music in the 1980s, where it remained until last year.

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