Suna
Kan is a Turkish violinist and teacher born (in Adana) on October 21,
1936. She is very likely the best-known
Turkish violinist, having concertized throughout the world for many years,
appearing with many high profile orchestras, artists, and conductors, including
Zubin Mehta, Walter Susskind, Arthur Fiedler, Yehudi Menuhin, Pierre Fournier,
and Igor Bezrodny. She began her studies
at age five, making her first public appearance at age 9, playing Mozart’s
Turkish concerto (number 5) and Viotti’s most popular violin concerto - number
22 in a minor – with the Presidential Symphony Orchestra – I don’t know who was
on the podium. (Viotti’s 29 concertos have
been recorded by Italian violinist Franco Mezzena, in case you’re interested.) Kan’s initial teachers included Hulusi Karsel, Walter
Gerhard, Lico Amar, and Izzet Albavrak. At
age 13, she began studying at the Paris Conservatory, graduating in 1952. She was 16 years old. She then began her international career. In 1971, Kan was named State Artist by the
Turkish government. She was also one of
the founders of the Ankara Chamber Orchestra at about the same time. Kan has also received meritorious awards from
the French government. In 1986, she
became violin professor at Bilkent University in Ankara. She was 50 years old. Her most famous pupil is probably Ertan
Torgul, concertmaster of several American orchestras. A violin competition which was very recently
inaugurated is named after Kan. Although
her discography is not extensive, she has recorded several CDs of concertos and
other music by her countrymen, whom she champions. Here is the third movement of Ulvi Erkin’s
violin concerto.
Sunday, July 16, 2017
Sunday, June 25, 2017
Vanya Milanova
Vanya
Milanova is a Bulgarian violinist, teacher, painter, and author born on January
12, 1954. According to at least one
source, she was the first female violinist to record, in 1985, at age 31, the
complete (24) Caprices for solo violin by Nicolo Paganini. That sounds rather unusual but it just might
be true. (see comment below) I didn’t bother to confirm it
by checking further. Surprisingly, she is the first Bulgarian violinist about whom I have written and that is highly unusual too. Milanova is also
known for having a huge repertoire. Her
career has taken her around the world several times and she has performed with
most of the world’s great orchestras and with some of the leading conductors of
her generation in over fifty countries. Although
her discography is not extensive, there are quite a few YouTube files of her
live performances. Milanova took third
prize in the 1973 Paganini Violin Competition (in Genoa, Italy) and third prize
in the 1974 Tchaikovsky Competition (the same one where the late Eugene Fodor
took second prize.) She was known as a
child prodigy - her main teachers were Peter Arnaudov (State Music Academy) in
Bulgaria and Yfrah Neaman (Guildhall School of Music) in England. Her 2016 autobiography is titled Wit and
Wisdom of a Violinist but is presently out of print. Many of her abstract paintings can be seen on
her Facebook page. Milanova has taught
at Bilkent University in Turkey, among other schools. Here are two YouTube files of her
performances, including the complete recording of the Paganini Caprices.
Sunday, May 28, 2017
Henri Dupont
Henri Dupont (Henri Joseph Dupont) was a Belgian violinist, conductor, composer,
and teacher born (in Ensival) on January 3, 1838. Brahms was five years old that year and
Belgium itself was almost a brand new country at that time. Other than that he has a very recognizable
surname, Dupont is not known – with regard to the violin - for anything in
particular. Belgium has for generations
produced many spectacular violin virtuosos but Dupont is not one of them. His name is most often mentioned as a
conductor of opera – according to several sources, he conducted many
outstanding performances in England (Covent Garden) which today (had they been
filmed for posterity) would probably be acclaimed. He received his training from the
conservatories at Liege and Brussels – I don’t know how early he began his
violin studies nor who his teachers were.
In 1863 he won the Belgian version of the Rome Prize (Prix de Rome) for
composition. He was 25 years old. After that, he took off on a study tour throughout
Europe which lasted four years – this excursion was probably subsidized by the
Belgian government, although I am not certain of that. In 1867, he became concertmaster of the
Warsaw Opera House. He was 29 years
old. In 1871, he took a similar post at
the Imperial Theatre of Moscow. One year
later, he was back in Brussels where he was hired as professor of harmony at
the Conservatory while simultaneously serving as concertmaster of the Monnaie
Theatre (Theatre Royal de la Monnaie or Royal Theatre of the Coin – a theatre
dating back to 1700.) He also served as
conductor there beginning that same year.
He was 34 years old. He also
guest conducted operas at the Royal Opera House in London many times. In 1873, he took over as director of the
Popular Concerts (Concerts Populaires) from none other than Henri Vieuxtemps
(who had become incapacitated as the result of a stroke that same year.) Dupont was made a member of the Royal Academy
of Belgium in 1899. He died on December
21, 1899, at age 61, just ten days before the start of the Twentieth
Century.
Sunday, April 30, 2017
Henry Holst
Henry Holst was a Danish violinist and teacher born (in Saeby, Denmark)
on July 25, 1899. He spent quite a bit
of time in England but is not related – as far as I know – to the other
Holst. He was probably the first
violinist to play (in 1921 with the Berlin Philharmonic) three concertos in the
same concert program – before Yehudi Menuhin, Henryk Szeryng, Szymon Goldberg,
and Raymond Cohen did it. (See comment below.) Holst must
have begun his violin studies while still very young but I don’t know how young
nor with whom. In 1913, he was admitted
into the Royal Danish Academy of Music.
He was 14 years old. His teachers
there were Axel Gade (son of Niels Gade) and violinist/composer Carl
Nielsen. At age 18, he made his debut
playing Henri Vieuxtemps’ first violin concerto, the longest violin concerto
Vieuxtemps ever wrote. He then studied
further with Hungarian violinist Emil Telmanyi.
After that, he traveled to Berlin to study with Willy Hess, a German
violinist who played far and wide during his career, including the U.S. In 1923, Holst became concertmaster of the
Berlin Philharmonic. He was 24 years
old. He quit that post in 1931 and went
to live in England where he taught at the Royal Manchester College of Music. There, he founded the Henry Holst String
Quartet which he disbanded in 1941 to start the Philharmonia Quartet which
itself was disbanded in 1952. He was
also active as a soloist. Holst gave the
European Premiere of the Walton violin concerto, a work which had been
championed by Jascha Heifetz for a time, in 1941. Holst also gave the world premiere of the
revised version of the concerto in 1944.
The Walton concerto is very seldom played now. In 1945, Holst moved to London to teach at
the Royal College of Music. He was 46
years old. Holst moved back to Denmark
in 1954 where he taught at the Royal Danish College of Music. I don’t know how many years he was there but
it must have been quite a few. Henry
Holst died on October 19, 1991 at age 92, largely forgotten.
Sunday, February 26, 2017
Eduardo Asiain
Eduardo Asiain (Eduardo Hernandez Asiain) was a Spanish violinist born
(in Havana, Cuba) on May 17, 1911. He is
best known for his interpretations of the works of Pablo Sarasate and for being
one of the longest-lived violinists in history, in the style of Roman Totenberg. He began his studies with his father, a
violinist and composer, at a very early age.
He gave his first concert at age 7.
At age 14, after receiving first prize in violin at the National
Conservatory of Havana, he became concertmaster of the Havana Symphony. If that is factual (I could not verify it
from more than one source), he joins Paul Kochanski in being the youngest
concertmaster (of a professional orchestra) in history. In 1932, Asiain, along with his family, moved
to Spain. He was 21 years old. In Madrid, he studied with Enrique Fernandez
Arbos and Antonio Fernandez Bordas. He
later graduated from the Royal Conservatory of Music in Madrid, obtaining
special mention and receiving the Pablo Sarasate Prize. The major part of his career was spent in
Europe although he did perform outside of Europe a few times. His discography is limited although his recordings
of Sarasate’s music are still highly praised.
He founded the Chamber Orchestra of San Sebastian but I could not
ascertain in what year that was. In
1968, he became first violinist of the RTVE (Spanish Corporation for Public
Radio and Television) Quartet. From 1977
onward, he received various medals and honors from the Spanish government. He played an Amati violin constructed in 1633. Here is a YouTube audio file of Asiain
playing music by Sarasate and here is another.
Asiain died on May 11, 2010, at (almost) age 99.
Sunday, January 22, 2017
Augustin Dumay
Augustin Dumay is a French violinist, teacher, and conductor born on
January 17, 1949. He has enjoyed an
international career since 1979, although he has spent most of his time in
Europe and Japan. He has recorded most
of the standard repertoire (a repertoire consisting of about 15 concertos plus a
few sonatas by the upper crust of composers for the violin – Bach, Vivaldi,
Brahms, Mozart, Beethoven, Franck, Prokofiev, Strauss, and Debussy) on more
than forty discs. Dumay has appeared
with most major orchestras and conductors in the most important and prestigious
venues around the world. He began his
studies as a child but with whom I do not know.
He entered the Paris Conservatory when he was 9 years old. After two years at the Conservatory, he
studied privately with a few teachers, including Nathan Milstein and Arthur
Grumiaux. His public debut came at age
14 at the well-known Montreux Festival in Switzerland. Orchestras he has conducted include the Royal
Chamber Orchestra of Wallonia (since 2003), the Salzburg Camerata, the Picardie
Orchestra, the New Jersey Symphony, the Kansai Philharmonic, the Sinfonia
Varsovia, and the English Chamber Orchestra.
It has been said that none other than Herbert von Karajan gave him
conducting lessons. He has taught at the
Queen Elizabeth College of Music in Brussels. Here is a YouTube video of him playing the
seldom heard Mendelssohn concerto for violin in d minor.
Sunday, December 25, 2016
Higinio Ruvalcaba
Higinio Ruvalcaba (Rodolfo
Higinio Ruvalcaba Romero) was a Mexican violinist, conductor, and composer born
(in Yahualica, Jalisco) on January 11, 1905.
He is probably the best-known Mexican violinist of all time, although
not the best-known Mexican classical musician.
His first lessons began at age 4 with his father, an upholsterer and cellist
and member of the local band. He began
playing violin left-handed because one of his first teachers played left handed
(with the bow held by the left hand) and simply had the young child imitate
him. Later on, while still very young,
Ruvalcaba studied with Federico Alatorre, Ignacio Camarena, and Felix Peredo
(Director of the String Academy in Guadalajara), three violinists from
Guadalajara. With these teachers, he was
obligated to switch from left-handed playing to right-handed playing. (In the history of violin playing, there are
extremely few left-handed players, although there are a few left-handed players who
play right-handed – concert violinist Caroline Goulding is one; Nicola Benedetti is another.) He gave his first public performance at age 5
at the Degollado Theatre in Guadalajara.
Several sources state that his father took him around taverns and dance
halls to earn money to help support the family.
He was also a street musician for some time. There are many other classical musicians who
did the same as kids – Johannes Brahms, Theodore Thomas, Carl Nielsen, and Marie
Hall come to mind. According to one
source, Ruvalcaba made his formal debut with the Guadalajara Symphony playing
the first Bruch concerto (the one in g minor) at age 11 – another source says age
10 and still another says age 12. In
1916, he became a member of the string orchestra directed by Peredo and also
joined Peredo’s string quartet as first violinist – Peredo (who had been
playing first violin) switched himself to second violin. In 1918, Ruvalcaba joined the Guadalajara
Symphony where he played cello and viola in addition to violin. He was 13 years old. In 1920 (some sources say 1922) he relocated
to Mexico City. He entered the National
Music Conservatory in 1922. He was 17
years old. There, he studied with Mario
Mateo, a Spanish violinist, until 1925.
It has been said that he joined the YMCA and took up boxing and physical
fitness at that time. It has also been
said that he fractured the middle finger of his left hand and lost visual
acuity in his right eye as a result of boxing.
For a while – probably while still a student and shortly thereafter – he
played in a local band (conducted by Miguel Lerdo De Tejada) where he was
obligated to wear a police uniform and also (sometimes) play guitar. He had also founded, back in 1921, a string
quartet which took his name – Cuarteto Clasico Ruvalcaba. As far as I know, it remained active until
1942 but it only gave concerts in Mexico.
Ruvalcaba joined the second violin section of the National Symphony in
Mexico City in 1928. He was 23 years
old. In 1931, he soloed with this
orchestra playing Wieniawski’s second concerto.
In 1935, he became concertmaster of the National Symphony. He was 30 years old. Five years later, he was fired by conductor
Carlos Chavez for insubordination. A
similar thing happened to concertmasters Scipione Guidi (in 1942 in St Louis)
and Max Bendix (in 1896 in Chicago) under conductors Vladimir Golschmann and
Theodore Thomas, respectively. One
source states Ruvalcaba was also concertmaster and conductor of the
Philharmonic Orchestra of Mexico City – presumably after his stint with the
National Symphony - although I could not verify that information. Several sources state that for 25 years (1942
to 1967), Ruvalcaba played first violin with the famous Lener Quartet (Joseph
Smilovitz on second, Sandor Roth but later Herbert Froelich on viola, and Imre
Hartmann on cello) but some sources say he joined the quartet in 1959. Still others say he joined the quartet in
1948, after the first violinist (Jeno Lener) died. The actual documented date Ruvalcaba joined
the quartet is (October) 1942 – it gave its first concert on December 4, 1942,
at the Palace of Fine Arts. (The Lener
Quartet, which was founded in 1918 and very famous in its time, was the first
to record all of Beethoven’s string quartets.)
Many sources state that Ruvalcaba loved to play chamber music, a fairly
common sentiment among concert violinists.
Ruvalcaba ultimately concertized in Japan, Europe, and the U.S., playing
under famous conductors such as Erich Kleiber, George Solti, Sergiu Celibidache,
and Antal Dorati. He gave world
premieres of many works by Mexican composers (some of which were dedicated to
him), including the violin concerto by Hermilio Hernandez in 1968. He also formed a duo, in 1946, with pianist
Carmen Castillo Betancourt who also became his third wife in that year. He briefly held the post of Principal
conductor of the Puebla Symphony Orchestra; although I was not able to
determine which years he held the post. Ruvalcaba
was also a studio musician for many years, participating in well over 200 film
soundtrack recordings. As a composer, Ruvalcaba
began early in his career, writing about 14 string quartets by age 15. He wrote eight more after that. Of that total (22), numbers 2, 4, and 6
survived. The others were either
destroyed or lost. Quartet number 6 was
composed in 1919 but not premiered until November 17, 1955 (by the Lener
Quartet in Mexico City.) Here is one
movement from the work. He also wrote
three (or four) violin concertos, a bass concerto (Concierto Miramon), a piano quintet,
two string sextets, many works for violin and piano, many salon pieces for
piano (some including voice), a transcription of 22 of Paganini’s 24 Caprices
for violin and piano (I don’t know which two he left out), and a symphonic
poem. You can listen to his gypsy dance
for violin and piano here. I do not know
whether Ruvalcaba ever owned or played a modern violin or an old, Italian
violin such as a Guadagnini, Guarnerius, or Stradivarius. Here is an audio file of Ruvalcaba playing
Manuel Ponce’s violin concerto – it appears to be a studio recording. In 1970, Ruvalcaba suffered a massive heart
attack and collapsed while playing Bach’s E major concerto. As far as I know, he never played in public
again. He was 65 years old. Ruvalcaba died (in Mexico City) on January
15, 1976, at age 71.
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