Arkadi Futer (Arkadi Naumovitch Futer) was a
Russian violinist and teacher born (in Moscow) on September 6, 1932. He is known for his impressive recording of
Wieniawski’s first violin concerto in F sharp minor, but he is also known for
having spent a large part of his career in Spain. For some time, he was concertmaster of
Vladimir Spivakov’s Moscow Virtuosi, which was founded in 1979. I do not know if he was the initial
concertmaster – he probably was. The
Moscow Virtuosi later resided in Spain for nine years (1990-1999.) When the Moscow Virtuosi left Spain, Futer
stayed behind. He then became
concertmaster of the Oviedo Symphony Orchestra.
He was 67 years old. (Oviedo is
the small capital city of the principality of Asturias, located in northern Spain,
next to the Bay of Biscay.) Prior to his
association with the Moscow Virtuosi, Futer was concertmaster of the Moscow Philharmonic,
the Moscow Radio Orchestra, and the Orchestra of the Film Industry of the
USSR. He was also a member of at least
two string quartets. Futer began his
studies at age 7 in Kiev, in the years of 1939 or 1940, I don’t know which. His first teacher was Nina Dulova. In 1943, he returned to Moscow with his
family. He was 11 years old. He entered the Tchaikovsky Conservatory at
age 18. Yuri Yankelevitch was one of his
teachers. He later graduated from the
conservatory with top honors. He was
named Artist of the Russian Republic in 1998.
Futer died (in Gijon, Asturias, Spain) on September 5, 2011, at (almost)
age 79. His granddaughter, Vera Futer,
is now a professor at the University of Oviedo.
Here is an audio file of Futer’s Wieniawski recording.
Futer's son was murdered in his Moscow apartment a few years before Futer died (though I do not know exactly when the murder occurred.) It is unusual to have a tragedy of this type in the life of a violinist although it also happened to Endre Granat whose wife was murdered in their apartment in Los Angeles in 1975.
ReplyDelete