Sunday, July 28, 2019
Jennifer Pike
Sunday, June 16, 2019
Anna Tifu
Anna Tifu is a Romanian (some would say Italian) violinist born (in
Cagliari, Italy) on January 1, 1986. (Cagliari
is the capital of Sardinia, a large island off the western coast of
Italy.) She is known for having studied
and spent most of her career in Italy.
She was widely recognized as a child prodigy from the age of eight. Her first teacher was her father at age
6. She made such fast progress that by
age 8 she had won the Vittorio Veneto competition with a first prize. (Vittorio Veneto is a small city in northern
Italy, situated 60 miles north of Venice, not far from the southern Austrian
border.) At age 11 Tifu made her first
solo appearance with orchestra. At age 12,
she played the Bruch g minor concerto at the famous La Scala opera house in
Milan. She graduated from the Cagliari
Music Conservatory at age 15. Tifu
studied further with Salvatore Accardo in Italy and with Aaron Rosand (2005 to
2008) in the U.S. Later still, she
studied in Paris also. Along the way,
she won violin competitions in Italy and Romania. It is possible that Tifu stopped taking
lessons when she turned 24 years old but I am not sure about that, although it
can be said that Tifu has been concertizing since age 11. For some time, her violin was the Berthier
Stradivarius from 1716 but I do not know if she is still playing it. She has also played Paganini’s Cannone 1743
Guarnerius. Here is a YouTube video of
Tifu playing Chausson’s Poeme. Here is a
link to a nice article about Paganini’s violin.
Sunday, May 19, 2019
Wilma Neruda
Wilma Neruda (Wilhelmine Maria Franziska Neruda aka Madame Norman-Neruda
aka Lady Halle) was a Czech (Moravian) violinist and teacher born (in Brno) on
March 21, 1838. (As far as I could
determine, her year of birth is still in question - it could be 1838, 1839, or
even 1840.) She was very famous and
influential in her day but now – even among serious music enthusiasts – is largely
forgotten. However, her name will be
immortal in music history for the fact that she married one of the best known
names in the conducting world, Charles Halle, founder of the Halle
Orchestra. She began violin studies with
her father, Josef Neruda, at age 4. At
age six, Neruda began studying with Leopold Jansa, in Vienna. Jansa was also the teacher of Composer Karl
Goldmark. At age 7, she made her public
debut in Vienna, with her sister at the piano, playing a Bach violin
sonata. In 1848, she made her English
debut in London – she was 10 years old. (One source gives the date as June 11, 1849.) In 1852, she presented a series of concerts in Moscow. It has been said that none other than Henryk Wieniawski considered her one of his main rivals. In 1859, Neruda formed the Neruda Quartet,
comprised of three of her siblings and herself as first violinist. She was 20 years old. She subsequently enjoyed a very busy and
successful career. In 1864, she married
F. W. Ludwig Norman, a well-known Swedish musician, and subsequently presented
herself as Wilma Norman Neruda. The
couple separated after four years and she soon moved to London – she had not
returned to England since 1848. She was
now 30 years old. In 1869, she was named
professor of violin at the Royal Music Academy in Stockholm. Many years later, in 1888, Neruda married
Charles Halle and, after Halle was knighted that same year, became Lady
Halle. She and Halle, who was an
accomplished pianist, had participated in many chamber music concerts together
before their marriage and continued to do so afterward. In 1890, they toured Australia. In 1895, they toured South Africa. Shortly after her husband died in October of
1895, she was gifted a palace in Italy (near Venice) by several members of the
aristocracy. She resided there for a
while. In 1899, four years after Halle
died, she toured the United States and Canada.
Although she retired from concert life at age sixty, she continued to
perform sporadically. In late 1898, she
moved to Berlin to teach, but continued to live part of the year in London. In 1907, she played at the memorial concert
for Joseph Joachim. Neruda played a
Stradivarius violin from 1709 (or 1710), known as the Vieuxtemps Strad. The violin was a gift to her made (by several members of the aristocracy) in 1876. She also
owned several other violins. Neruda died
on April 15, 1911, in Berlin, at age 73.
Sunday, March 24, 2019
Alexandra Soumm

Sunday, February 3, 2019
Juliette Kang
Juliette Kang is a Korean violinist (many would say American or Canadian) born (in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada)
on September 5, 1976. She is currently
the associate concertmaster of the Philadelphia Orchestra. She began her career as a soloist but
gravitated toward a high position as an orchestral player, a choice that
possibly provides the best of both worlds since she continues to successfully
concertize as soloist, chamber musician, and recitalist. (Sometimes, orchestral players leave
orchestral work to launch solo careers but that is very rare – only Janos
Starker, Zino Francescatti, Emanuel Vardi, Pablo Casals, William Primrose, Emanuel
Vardi, Berl Senofsky, Lynn Harrell, and Tossy Spivakovsky come to mind. It is far more common for soloists to abandon
the touring life in favor of a more tranquil existence as a first-desk
orchestral player and/or teacher at a top music school.) Kang began violin lessons with James Keene
(concertmaster of the Edmonton Symphony) when she was 4 years old. Three years later, she made her debut in
Montreal. Two years after that, at age 9
(or 10), she entered the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia where her main
teacher was Jascha Brodsky, a well-known violin pedagogue. At Curtis, she also studied chamber music
with Felix Galimir. In 1991 (after
graduating from Curtis), she began studying at the Juilliard School in New York
under Hyo Kang and Dorothy Delay. She
was 15 years old. At 16, Kang made her
New York debut in March, 1993 at the 92nd Street Y. Between 1983 and 1994, Kang won major prizes
at several violin competitions here and abroad, including first prize at the
Yehudi Menuhin violin competition in 1992 and first prize at the Indianapolis
Violin Competition in 1994. She was 18
years old when she won the Indianapolis competition. (Among the top 60 prize winners since the Indianapolis
competition’s inception in 1982, only six or seven players have achieved
high-profile international recognition – Leonidas Kavakos, Simone Lamsma,
Clara-Jumi Kang, Sergei Khachatryan, and Augustin Hadelich.) After many solo appearances, Kang began her
orchestral career in 1999, playing with the Kennedy Center Opera
Orchestra. She was 23 years old. She then played in the first violin section
of the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra from 2001 to 2003 – Raymond Gniewek had
just retired as concertmaster. From 2003
to 2005, Kang was assistant concertmaster with the Boston Symphony. In 2005, at age 29, she was appointed
associate concertmaster of the Philadelphia Orchestra. Now, she has curtailed her solo appearances
to just three or four concerts per season.
As is customary, she also gets to be a featured soloist with her
orchestra. On her first solo appearance
with the orchestra in 2012, she played Prokofiev’s first concerto. In November of 2014 she played the Stravinsky
concerto and in January, 2018 she played Bruch’s Scottish Fantasy with the
orchestra. Her discography includes her
solo recital at Carnegie Hall and the Wieniawski and Schumann concertos with
the Vancouver Symphony. Kang plays a
Camillo Camilli violin constructed in 1730 (approximately.) I do not know whether she has or has had any
students.
Sunday, January 6, 2019
Eda Kersey
Eda Kersey was an English violinist and teacher born
(in Goodmayes, a district of London) on May 15, 1904. She was a very accomplished musician whose
career was mostly spent in England. She
was also one of quite a few female violinists who died young – Maud Powell, Johanna
Martzy, Ginette Neveu, Edith Volkaert, Alma Rose, Alma Moodie, and Arma Senkrah
are among them. Several sources speak
very highly of her and emphasize that she would have left a great legacy if
only she had lived long enough to record the great works of the violin
repertoire. She is also known to have
stated that practicing seven hours a day (which she routinely did) should be
sufficient for any violinist. Her
musical education began on the piano at age four. She took up the violin at age six when she actually
began studying at the Trinity College of Music in London. Two years later, she was awarded a
certificate from the college with very high marks. She was eight years old. After that, she began studying with Edgar
Mouncher (a pupil of Otakar Sevcik.) After
only two years, at age ten, she played Wieniawski’s second concerto (first
movement only) in Southampton, a city which is 65 miles from London. That concert (in 1915) was a great
success. At age 13, she moved to London
to live with an aunt and uncle in London and began studying with Margaret
Holloway, a pupil of Leopold Auer. Her
first London recital took place three years later at the Aeolian Hall when she
was sixteen years old. (New York City
also had its own Aeolian Hall.) Along
the way, she premiered the concertos of Arnold Bax, Erno Dohnanyi, and Stanley
Wilson, as well as works by other contemporary composers. She also gave the first English performance
of the Barber concerto at a Proms concert in 1943. Her first Proms concert had been in 1930
playing the Beethoven concerto with the famous Henry Wood conducting. She was 26 years old. That performance was the first of several
appearances she made at the popular Proms concerts. In 1931, she formed a piano trio which was
simply named The Trio Players. Her last
concert took place in June, 1944, at the Albert Hall in London. Kersey played a Nicolo Amati, a J.B.
Vuillaume, and a Guarnerius del Gesu (which she acquired from Belgian violinist
Alfred De Reyghere in 1942), among other violins. Eda Kersey died on July 13, 1944, at age 40. Negotiations for many recordings of the
standard repertoire had nearly been concluded before her sudden death but she
never got to actually record anything other than some small pieces (with piano
accompaniment) and the Bax concerto (with orchestral accompaniment) several
months earlier.
Sunday, December 9, 2018
Ayla Erduran

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