Eugen Goffriller Vidéos
artiste lyrique autrichien
Commémorations 2024 (Décès: Eugen Goffriller)
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2024-05-03
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Gautier Capuçon Capuçon Goffriller Emīls Dārziņš Testeļeca Shostakovich Roze Davidov Nicholas Jones 1701
Live cello masterclass of the Riga Jurmala Online Music Academy led by the famous French cellist Gautier Capuçon! Gautier Capuçon is a true 21st century ambassador for the cello. Performing internationally with many of the world’s foremost conductors and instrumentalists, he is also founder and leader of the ‘Classe d’Excellence de Violoncelle’ at the Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris. A multiple award winner, he is acclaimed for his expressive musicianship, exuberant virtuosity, and for the deep sonority of his 1701 Matteo Goffriller cello. More about the artist: (http•••) / Student of the masterclass: Maksims Skibickis, Emīls Dārziņš Music School (E.Testeļeca class) Repertoire: D. Shostakovich - Cello Concerto No.1 in E flat major, Op.107: 1 mvt Allegretto, 2 mvt Moderato, 3 mvt Cadenza Maksims Skibickis started playing cello at the age of 8. He has graduated from Babīte Music School where his teacher was Anita Roze and currently Maksims is the first-course student at Emīls Dārziņš Music School (E.Testeļeca class). He has participated in competitions such as the Latvian State Competition (1st place), Karlis Davidov's International Cellist Competition (1st place), and the JSfest International competition in Finland (1st place). Maksims has also received a prize from the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Latvia. He has also taken part in various masterclasses with such cellists as Nicholas Jones and Alexei Cropotv. / www.riga-jurmala.com
Efrem Zimbalist Brahms Leopold Auer Jascha Heifetz Milstein Elman Seidel Glazunov Tchaikovsky Joseph Silverstein Fritz Kreisler Bach Beethoven Sibelius Leopold Stokowski Goffriller Serafin Lamoureux Pierre Baillot Cho Liang Lin Rafael Druian Shapiro Slatkin Jascha Brodsky Brodsky Vivaldi Paganini Spohr Viotti Vieuxtemps Wieniawski Markov 1715 1718 1728 1733 1735 1775 1890 1907 1911 1915 1926 1928 1929 1941 1949 1968 1985 2009
Efrem Zimbalist: Improvisation on a Japanese tune Efrem Zimbalist, violin; Emanuel Bay, piano Recorded in 1929 / Efrem Zimbalist, Sr. was a Russian violinist, composer, conductor, and teacher, born on April 9, 1890 (Brahms was 57 years old.) Zimbalist’s father was a conductor so (not surprisingly) by the age of nine, Efrem was first violin in his father’s orchestra. At age 12 he entered the Saint Petersburg Conservatory to study with Leopold Auer. He is mentioned everywhere as being one of Auer's outstanding pupils - together with Heifetz, Milstein, Elman, and Seidel. He graduated in 1907 and began a long career as a concert violinist, having made his debut in Berlin and London in that same year. He made his U.S. debut with the Boston Symphony on October 27, 1911. He was 21 years old. According to one source (the New York Times obituary of 2/23/1985), he gave the American premiere of the Glazunov Concerto at that concert. At the time, he even stated that he considered the Glazunov superior to the Tchaikovsky concerto though he may have changed his mind later on. In 1928, Zimbalist began teaching at the Curtis Institute (Philadelphia) and was director of the school from 1941 to 1968. Leopold Auer began teaching at Curtis in the same year - 1928. It has been reported that Zimbalist was very strict, dismissing students who would stray from the school's rules or standards. One such pupil was Joseph Silverstein. Zimbalist actually hired Jascha Heifetz' father (Ruvin Heifetz) to teach at Curtis. Ruvin Heifetz was there one or two years only because, according to Zimbalist, he was "very difficult." I do not know how many recordings Zimbalist made but I’m sure it was not many since he retired from playing in 1949. One such was a recording he did in 1915 with Fritz Kreisler of Bach's Double Concerto with a string quartet accompaniment. A YouTube performance of a Beethoven work, recorded in 1926, is available here. Though he made many recordings of small, short pieces, it is almost certain that he never recorded any major concertos - none that I know about anyway. His interpretation of the Sibelius concerto was praised by none other than Leopold Stokowski. Zimbalist played a 1728 Goffriller, a 1733 Serafin, a 1735 Guarneri, a Guadagnini (GB) from 1775, the Marquis Strad (1718), the Lamoureux Strad (1735), and the Titian Strad (1715) which was at one time owned by the son-in-law of French violinist Pierre Baillot. The Titian is now being played by Cho-Liang Lin. Among his many pupils are Rafael Druian, Eudice Shapiro, Felix Slatkin, Daniel Heifetz, Jascha Brodsky, and Aaron Rosand. Zimbalist's compositions include a violin concerto and an opera, neither of which is now ever performed. Nevertheless, Zimbalist was one of the last great violinist-composers in the tradition of Vivaldi, Tartini, Paganini, Spohr, Viotti, Joachim, Vieuxtemps, Wieniawski, and Markov. He died (in Reno, Nevada) on February 22, 1985, at age 94. ((http•••)
César Franck Matsuo Eugène Ysaÿe Goffriller 1723
César Franck: Sonata for Violin and Piano in A major: II. Allegro Performed by: Violin - Joshua Hugo Gustav von Bohlen Piano - Kumi Matsuo l. Allegretto ben moderato ll. Allegro lll. Recitativo-Fantasia: Ben moderato lV. Allegretto poco mosso Dedicated to Eugène Ysaÿe Performed on a 1723 Matteo Goffriller violin generously loaned by Florian Leonhard Fine Violins. (http•••)
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