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41. Classical Music News And Links QuickShowBiz.
When the difficult parts come, says violinist Francescatti, he He slows down, andthis is the honesty of a great artist. nathan milstein, 57, another native
http://quickfound.net/showbiz/classical_music_news_and_links.html

42. The Miami Herald | 01/12/2003 | Virtuoso Violinist
Doubtless, things will go better when the violinist performs Bach and with the greatRussianborn violinists, Jascha Heifetz, nathan milstein, David Oistrakh
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/entertainment/columnists/james_roos/4923411
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Miami Ft. Lauderdale Tampa Local Events Yellow Pages Discussion Boards Back to Home ... Columnists Wednesday, Apr 02, 2003 James Roos Posted on Sun, Jan. 12, 2003 Virtuoso violinist BY JAMES ROOS jroos@herald.com Recalling his 67-year career as an acclaimed violinist, Aaron Rosand seems to remember more disasters than delights. ''Years ago in Paris the conductor Georges Sebastian asked me to learn the Khachaturian Concerto,'' he says by phone from Connecticut. ``But when I walked out onstage to play it with no rehearsals [because of a flood], what I heard was the opening of Lalo's Sympho nie Espagnole! It was a nightmare.'' The conductor neglected to inform Rosand of the switch, and because he hadn't played the Lalo in literally months, he had to shift gears and retrieve it from his memory on the spot. Even Leonard Bernstein let Rosand down. At his 1962 New York Philharmonic debut, though he got to play the Barber Concerto with Bernstein, the conductor was so busy fretting about the acoustics of then new Philharmonic Hall, he spent barely 10 minutes rehearsing the piece causing Rosand to stalk out fuming.

43. Cellist, Chapter Twenty
Merovitch, who had arrived a short time ago from Soviet Russia, together with VladimirHorowitz, the pianist, and nathan milstein, the violinistall three
http://www.cello.org/heaven/cellist/chap20.htm
CELLIST, the autobiography
of Gregor Piatigorsky (1903-1976)
Chapter Twenty
IT was a busy morning. I made telephone calls and wrote letters of apology, but it was like trying to mend the unmendable. Reciprocating the hospitality of many, I had arranged a dinner for forty many weeks in advance. Food and wine chosen, invitations sent out, caterers and help hired, I had marked the date on my calendar "At Home." Satisfied with my efficiency and feeling that I had been a good host already, I had left for a concert tour. Shortly after returning I saw "At Home" on the calendar and, delighted to be free, went in the early evening to see a murder movie featuring my friend Peter Lorre. I had a long walk after the show and a sandwich in a Bierstube . Content with the time so pleasantly spent, I unhurriedly approached the street in which I lived. It was a little after ten. The air was calm and there were lights in the windows, and what a joy it was to run so unexpectedly into a group of friends. "What are you doing in my neighborhood at this hour? How wonderful!" My jovial greeting had a somewhat subdued reception. A little later there were more acquaintances, and when I stopped to greet them I saw more coming toward me. "

44. HallClassicalMusic.com :: Tchaikovsky: Concerto For Violin In D
Product Reviews nathan Milsten the best violinist that ever graced earthnathan milstein is the most amazing violinist that ever has been alive.
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Featured Composers, A-Z ( S ) Stravinsky, Igor Tchaikovsky: Concerto for violin in D
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Tchaikovsky: Violin Concerto Op35; Brahms: Violin Concerto in D Op77
80% Recommended by our customers.
Catalog: Music Manufacturer: Angel Records Artist: Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky, Johannes Brahms, William Steinberg, Anatole Fistoulari, Nathan Milstein Release Date: 17 October, 1995 Availability: Usually ships within 24 hours List Price: Our Price: Used Price: ThirdPartyNewPrice Price: More Details from Amazon.com Amazon international Product Reviews: Exceptional Value, Marvelous Music! Soloist Nathan Milstein has a new fan! His technical mastery and emotional expressiveness when performing both Tchaikovsky and Brahms is stunning. The composers respective musical opposites, but Milstein captures the spirit of each piece with great vigor. The pieces themselves are thoroughly enjoyable as well. They seem hand-picked to showcase the abilities of the soloist but are easy on the ears. Tchaikovsky's Allegro Moderato (track 1) in particular, is a triumphant and passionate piece that celebrates the width and breadth of orchestral music. Brahms' creations are equally emotive, but in more subtle ways.

45. Buy Related The Art Of Nathan Milstein In Our Simplest-shop.com
The Art Of nathan milstein. set clearly highlights the musical giant that is milstein. Theviolinist's violinist milstein was a contemporary of Jascha Heifetz
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The Art Of Nathan Milstein 80% Recommended by our customers. Catalog: Music Manufacturer: Angel Records Author: Release Date: 20 July, 1993 Availability: Usually ships within 2 to 3 days List Price: Our Price: Used Price: ThirdPartyNew Price: or: Enlarge image Product Reviews: Scintillating Tone, Enthralling Musicallity This volume set clearly highlights the musical giant that is Milstein. Piquantly and thoughfully phrased with such a clear sense of motion... a must have for any musician! The Violinist's Violinist Milstein was a contemporary of Jascha Heifetz, and, like Heifetz, was Russian-born, taught by Leopold Auer and emigrated to the USA. Though he had a phenomenal technique and a pure, lyrical, elegant musical style, he spent his career in the shadow of Heifetz's technical perfection. These recordings show him at his best. The remasterings are sonically excellent, and the quality of the sound holds its own against current standards (this is modern, not vintage, sound, despite the fact that some of the recordings are mono).

46. Buy Nathan Milstein: The 1946 Library Of Congress Recital In Our Simplest-shop.c
milstein is a phenomenal violinist and this recording captures him at his best. TheArt Of nathan milstein, The Art Of nathan milstein from Angel Classics List
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Nathan Milstein: The 1946 Library Of Congress Recital
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Catalog: Music
Manufacturer: Bridge
Release date: 20 February, 1996
Media: Audio CD
Artists: Tommaso Antonio Vitali see more Classical Music by Tommaso Antonio Vitali Johann Sebastian Bach see more Classical Music by Johann Sebastian Bach Nathan Milstein see more Classical Music by Nathan Milstein Felix Mendelssohn see more Classical Music by Felix Mendelssohn Fryderyk Chopin see more Classical Music by Fryderyk Chopin Henryk Wieniawski see more Classical Music by Henryk Wieniawski Josef Blatt see more Classical Music by Josef Blatt Top stores Description Price amazon.com Availability: Usually ships within 24 hours our shop Used offers, as low as...

47. Faculty 2003
SUNY at Stonybrook, Masters Juilliard, student of nathan milstein and Joseph representationby Columbia Artists Management, Inc.; founding violinist of New
http://www.summertrios.org/Programs/Regular/faculty_2003.htm
REGULAR PROGRAMS
for Concerto Program faculty see Concerto Faculty 2003
for Premium Program faculty see Premium Faculty 2003 Comments on the Faculty Concerts:
Phenomenal, do not shorten, would be happy to listen all week - Sue Entmacher, violin I thoroughly enjoyed all the concerts; wish there could be more - Elizabeth Blatt, violin The quality of the faculty concerts was world class - Susan Spevak, piano Faculty concerts rival those of any festival in the world - Francis Church, cello Superb; well worth the cost of the program - Leonard Krawitz, violin, clarinet In general the level is very high, a thrill to us amateurs - Marjorie Duncalfe, piano Fabulous; the highest level of professional performance - Marty Lipnik, oboe Faculty are organized below by instrument: The listings below reflect our current information about which faculty are attending. Expect that faculty will be added, drop out or change to other weeks. piano violin viola cello ... woodwind. § PIANO Lily Friedman. Music Director of Summertrios ; Master of Music, Juilliard; student of Beveridge Webster; further study with Irma Wolpe; chamber music study with Arthur Balsam, Isidore Cohen, Joseph Fuchs, Rudolph Serkin and Menahem Pressler; founding member of the New York Piano Trio, an Artists International award winner. The trio has performed in the New York area for 25 years.

48. Artek Recordings - Classical
rarely heard transcriptions by the 19th century German violinist August Wilhelmj Csharpminor Nocturne was brilliantly transcribed by nathan milstein ­ one of
http://www.artekrecordings.com/artek/CD11contents.htm
ARTEK Recordings
Contents of CD11 Booklet
Click to Order Recordings
I am dedicating this album of Polish composers to my beloved father, who was
born in Lowicz, Poland, at the turn of the last century. It was his intense
love of music and the violin that had prompted my early musical training in
Chicago before my 4th birthday. His devotion and sacrifice to pay for a
violin and music lessons during the depression years cannot be forgotten.
Recording the Szymanowski works has special significance as these pieces
were written for Paul Kochanski, the previous owner of my violin ­ a
Guarnerius Del Gesu, that is still known as the "Ex-Kochanski". Karol
Szymanowski, Paul Kochanski and the incomparable pianist, Artur Rubinstein,
were very close friends. This may account for the extraordinary difficulty of the piano scores. It seems only fitting to record these works for the violin for which they were conceived. The Chopin Nocturnes adapt so beautifully to the violin. The expressive use of the vibrato and portamento enhance the lyric line. In this recording, I have included two rarely heard

49. Artek Recordings - Classical
Jascha Heifetz, nathan milstein, Fritz Kreisler, or Michael Rabin, and experiencedcollectors will doubtless not only link the piece to the violinist (in the
http://www.artekrecordings.com/artek/CD7reviews.htm
ARTEK Recordings
Reviews of CD 7
Click to Order Recordings
Fanfare: Nov/Dec 2001 Elmar Oliveira's own notes to his Artek recital makes it clear that the pieces he has included aren't just "favorite encores" but rather works associated with violinists who made a deep impression on him. Michael Rabin: Meditation Whatever the violinist's reverence for earlier performances, though, most of these stand on their own two feet. Oliveira possesses a transcendental technique and a magnificently commanding tone in all registers. He plays in tune and reaches the core of the musical materials he explores. For the most part, in addition, he's able to call to mind his four heroes without sounding derivative. He does that in the Hebrew Melody, the Hopak, and, perhaps most of all, in the Jota . At times, too, as in the Meditation and Banjo and Fiddle , he achieves almost complete independence, despite the strong impress his predecessors left on these pieces. Still, not all of the performances lay the ghosts of the past. In general, he's at his strongest in the best works and at his weakest (although this can hardly be a word for Oliveira) in the worst. Perhaps, like Rabin, Oliveira lacks some of the alchemistic power, which Kreisler and Heifetz possessed in full measure, to convert even the basest metal into gold. Because of all its allusions, the program seems to require a special sort of consideration, and listening to it, at least for a member of my generation, elicits a complicated response. For sure, though, it stands head and shoulders above almost all other tributes to violinists of a recently bygone but deeply lamented era, a time when artists served, in Milstein's view, as priests of a musical religion rather than as trendy hucksters of a depersonalized, even dehumanized, "art." Finally, the very complexity of that response earns the recital a strong recommendation. As Bein and Fushi's

50. String Instrumentalists, String Instruments
violinist. Directory of musicians, discussion board, web pages. . Yehudi Menuhin.Article in Culturekisoque. milstein, nathan . Mutter, AnneSophie.
http://www.zeroland.co.nz/classical_string.html
Film Music Literature Philosophy ... Bookstore
String Instrumentalists, String Instruments
A Web Directory
Cello
Cimbalom Dulcimer Guitar ... Violin Back to General Music Index: A - E F - J K - 0 P - R ... Women in Music CELLO, CELLISTS Cello Heaven.
Great cellists of the past

Internet Cellists Society. The Cellist's Gateway to the Net.

Oxford Cello School, UK.
... Yo-Yo Ma tribute site
CIMBALOM The Art of the Cimbalom, by Alexander Fedoriouk
The Cimbalom

THE DULCIMER Australian Duclimer page. Dulcimer, cimbalom, hackbrett, salterio, santur, sandouri and more.
Duclimer Players News
The Hammered Duclcimer Page. History, festivals, groups, workshops, sheet music. THE GUITAR Bach Plucked, Bach for the guitar. CrossRoads. CrossRoads offers a new way to learn to play guitar with guitar tabs, steaming videos, sound clips, tablature, live on-line lessons and much more. Guitar. The Baroque Guitar Guitar. Classical guitar websites. ... Just Classical Guitar. A site by Vincenzo Pozzi. Guitarists Directory of guitarists from the Guitar Foundation of America. Williams, John THE HARP The harp. Harpa.com. Links, newsletters, harpists.

51. Interview With Dylana Jenson, Page 2
Interview with violinist Dylana Jenson Then, my father heard about nathan milstein,who was giving master classes when I was about twelve, and my father
http://www.flash.net/~park29/jenson2a.htm
Interview with Violinist Dylana Jenson
(Continued from page 1)
Interviewer: Along with Milstein, what violinists inspired you? Does that inspiration find its way into your own playing? Jenson: Interviewer: How did you start playing the violin? Jenson: I started on the violin when I was two and-a-half with my mother, who is not a violinist. She learned how to play the violin from library books Interviewer: Really! Jenson: she would teach herself the night before and teach us the next day, with another brother and sister, the three of us; initiation by just doing it. She taught me for a few years, and then she got up to the Bach Double with me and then couldn't keep up with me, so then I went to a regular teacher. I studied with Manuel Compinsky until I was twelve. He was a wonderful teacher: He really did what my father called "supervised practice." That is, I would have four or five lessons a week, and he would practice with me. What he taught me was how to practice. For example, just to say to somebody, "well, go home and work on your intonation." People have no idea what that requires, and this is what Mr. Compinsky taught me, was how to practice and he was meticulous. I remember many lessons in which I would be exhausted (laughs), practically falling asleep, but he wouldn't let one note go by if it was out of tune. He was such an incredible teacher. Interviewer: Were you formally trained in an musical institute, such as Juilliard or Curtis?

52. Great Performances . The Art Of Violin | PBS
Enjoy nathan milstein's rendition of Brahms' Violin Concerto in D Major, op and fholesof a violin; Jascha Heifetz, for many, the greatest violinist who ever
http://www.pbs.org/gperf/shows/artofviolin/artofviolin.html
Enjoy Nathan Milstein's rendition of Brahms' "Violin Concerto in D Major, op. 77."
Violink
ThinkQuest: The Violin Photostory: How to Make a Violin STRINGS Magazine ... Yahoo! Music: Classical: Violinists
Following the success of GREAT PERFORMANCES: THE ART OF CONDUCTING (1995), THE ART OF SINGING: GOLDEN VOICES, SILVER SCREEN (1998), and THE ART OF PIANO
Learn more about the violin and bow in our special multimedia presentation, Anatomy of the Instrument (the free Flash 5 plug-in is required). Read biographies of three modern-day violinists whose commentary is featured in THE ART OF VIOLIN: Ivry Gitlis Hilary Hahn , and Itzhak Perlman Ask the Experts . Also included is an interview with Hilary Hahn , in Dialogue
Top banner photos: A detail of the top, bridge, strings, and f-holes of a violin; Jascha Heifetz, for many, the greatest violinist who ever lived.
Hilary Hahn, one of America's best young classical musicians, provides commentary on the past century's violin greats.

53. Great Performances . Dialogue . Hilary Hahn | PBS
Hahn speaks about the documentary "The Art of Violin", and her interest in violinists from Category Arts Music Violin violinists Classical Hahn, Hilary...... to see Mischa Elman, Efrem Zimbalist, nathan milstein, Joseph Szigeti to go to sleepto milstein playing the life as a precocious child violinist, thrived, and
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/gperf/dialogue/dialogue_violin_hahn.html
Hilary Hahn describes the playing technique of Mischa Elman.
GP : How and why did you become involved with this documentary, THE ART OF VIOLIN?
HH
GP
: Did you listen to the recordings of violinists from earlier eras as part of your violin study?
HH
GP
: Are there any particular 20th-century violinists who have influenced you or whose playing you greatly admire?
HH : I was surely most influenced by my two teachers Klara Berkovich in Baltimore, from age five to ten, and Jascha Brodsky in Philadelphia, from age ten to 17. Both were very demanding teachers, but very kind, superb violinists: musicians of style and taste who allowed no technical shortcuts. I was extremely lucky to grow up under their guidance.
GP : Is there anyone who should have been included in the film who wasn't?
HH
GP
: How should the archival material featured in the film be viewed, and what is its value to young artists?
HH : It gives young players and old ones, for that matter an opportunity to see that they are part of a long and very rich tradition of violinists, each of whom played differently, each of whom played effectively. And for those who are studious, it is a great resource for studying the technique of playing the violin. Nearly every school, every body type, every possible manner of holding the violin and bow is represented. GP : The filmmakers touch on the fact that the careers of some child prodigies were cut short due to the pressures of stardom. Is this a concern among contemporary artists like yourself, who have been in the spotlight from such a young age? How do you cope with the rigors of performing and being in the public eye?

54. Violinist - Acapedia - Free Knowledge, For All
violinist. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Yehudi Menuhin; nathan milstein;Jeannette Neveu; David Oistrakh; Oscar Shumsky; Isaac Stern; Henryk Szeryng.
http://acapedia.org/aca/Violinist
var srl33t_id = '4200';

55. Classical Net Review - Maestrino - Dvořák/Glazunov - Violin Concertos
All right, if asked to name the finest violinist of this century I wouldprobably hesitate only a bit before suggesting nathan milstein.
http://www.classical.net/music/recs/reviews/e/emi67250a.html
  • : Violin Concerto, Op. 53 (1883) Alexander Glazunov : Violin Concerto, Op. 82 (1905) Franz Schubert : Symphony #2, D.125 (1814-15)
Nathan Milstein, violin
Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra/William Steinberg
EMI 67250
All right, if asked to name the finest violinist of this century I would probably hesitate only a bit before suggesting Nathan Milstein. Time and again I find myself hearing more music in the music than I hear from other violinists. I prefer Milstein to Heifetz any day. Perlman, in contrast, seems like he is on automatic pilot most of the time. This disc offers me even more evidence for Milstein's case. Anyway, what Milstein does here, as always, is "get inside" the music. Somehow Milstein's playing immerses itself into the role, much like a consummate actor does. Whenever I listen to Heifetz or Perlman I am aware of the musicians first and then the music. This is not the case with Milstein. This may be why this recording is the first to open my ears. Perhaps some comparisons are in order. If I confess a perverse preference for Silvia Marcovici with Stokowski (if you can get it, on London Phase 4 455157) it is Perverse. Much slower, much darker than Milstein and Steinberg. The very opening solo has a more gypsy flavor to it. The flautist in the second movement is also darker, more with an almost reedy quality to the playing. As for more recent comparisons, I certainly prefer Milstein to the recent, critically hailed, Vengerov recording on Teldec. While Vengerov is very good, Milstein is the enemy of the very good.

56. Classical Net Review - Tchaikovsky & Mendelssohn - Violin Concertos
His fans have included nathan milstein, whom anyone would be proud to count as an SpanishDances was a most welcome addition to the violinist's record shelf.
http://www.classical.net/music/recs/reviews/v/vox08207a.html
Violin Concertos
  • Tchaikovsky : Concerto in D for Violin and Orchestra, Op. 35 Mendelssohn : Concerto in E Minor for Violin and Orchestra. Op. 64
Aaron Rosand, violin
Orchestra of Radio Luxembourg/Louis de Froment
Vox Allegretto ACD 8207 1996 ADD 58:01
Rosand brought to this enterprise a rich, buttery tone, which he nevertheless deployed with the austerity of a Cistercian monk (it may have been this chasteness that Milstein so admired). His somewhat heavy bow arm was coupled with a solid left-hand technique (reminiscent of Paganini's foil, Spohr), complementing an unerring sense of pitch. He had a tendency like David Oistrakh's to slow down in technical passages, adding extra weight to them, and a flair for the occasional dramatic, even eccentric, gesture. But the underlying virtuoso excitement of a Heifetz, a Milstein - or even a Szigeti - was always lacking; taking its place was the kind of benign placidity that now puts the final dehumanizing touch on the younger generation of contest winners. If it's there at all, Rosand's "ultra-romanticism" lies buried in the phrases and sentences, not in the paragraphs and chapters. Still, Rosand is always worth hearing. He is not faceless like the generation of violinists that succeeded him. And he never fails to turn in a well-crafted, polished performance. He certainly doesn't fail to do so in these reissues of the Mendelssohn and Tchaikovsky violin concertos, originally recorded in 1972. Like most of his readings, these are rich in detail - he has discovered poetic moments in the Tchaikovsky's slow movement where others have found only prose, and he is commanding in the finale in passages where others are perfunctory. The Mendelssohn concerto is harder to personalize without risking mannerism; and, despite his reputation, Rosand on the whole is a classical rather than a mannered player.

57. Classimuse's Home Page
Two of the first four releases in this wonderful series star nathan milstein, anelegant violinist second to none (except, perhaps, Jascha Heifetz) thanks to a
http://members.aol.com/classimuse/
Classical Music Record Reviews, Interviews, and General Opinionatedness from Steve Holtje
CONTENTS
Reason for Being
Bridge Records Licenses Library of Congress Concerts
Reviews (alphabetical by composer)
Collection reviews (alphabetical by performer)
Eliahu Inbal feature interview

As a music critic who gets a lot more work in the fields of rock and jazz than in my first love, classicaland who is continually frustrated by magazines that take months to publish, edit reviews down to meaningless sizes, and drop pieces arbitrarilyI have decided to take matters into my own hands. Here are interviews, overviews, and album reviews I've done for small magazines with tiny circulations, updated where appropriate. New material that will be seen nowhere else (not that anything in the current album review has actually gone to a printer as I write this) will eventually be incorporated.
Steve Holtje's Home Page

JazzZine's Home Page

These are my other identities. Check them out too.
Bridge Licenses Library of Congress Concerts Bridge Records has inaugurated a series issuing Library of Congress recitals featuring some of the most distinguished instrumentalists active in the 1940s and '50s. The sound may be mono, but the performances shine.

58. Stephen Redrobe, Violinist
now the European Teaching Assistant of the American virtuoso violinist, Erick Friedman longterm protege of Jascha Heifetz and a disciple of nathan milstein.
http://www.stephenredrobe.com/
Born in 1957, Stephen Redrobe has been a solo violinist in concerto dates and recitals since a very early age. He has also been a successful violin teacher since the mid 1970s. He is now the European Teaching Assistant of the American virtuoso violinist, Erick Friedman
Professor of Violin at Yale University, U.S.A. Professor Friedman is the only long term protege
of Jascha Heifetz and a disciple of Nathan Milstein. Mr. Redrobe is also the personal assistant of Professor Friedman. Mr. Redrobe teaches in London and accepts students of all ages and levels. FAQs on Violin Technique www.stephenredrobe.com/faqs.htm For free downloads click here. www.stephenredrobe.com/Stringsetc.htm Tel: 0208 888 8278
Mobile: 07951 659949

38a Park Avenue, London N22 7EX, England. Email: steve@stephenredrobe.com

59. Instr
McPherson Trio Canadian. Midori - violinist. nathan milstein - violinist.Muse-Art - guitar duo. Neidich, Charles - clarinet. Perahia, Murray - pianist.
http://www.clasica.com/instr.htm
Stanley Alexandrowicz - guitar Amadeus Guitar Duo Amadeus Trio Amsterdam Guitar Trio (BMG) Atamian, Dickran - pianist Bachmann, Maria - violinist (BMG) Manuel Barrueco - Guitarist Bashmet, Yuri - violist (BMG) Joshua Bell - violinist Bellugi, David - recorder Bart Berman - piano - piano duo Bottesini Duo - double bass and piano duo Brain, Dennis - horn Bream, Julian - guitarist Brendel, Alfred - pianist Bronfman, Yefim - piano (Sony) Jui-Chen Chang - Cellist Chee-Yun's Room - Violinist Chee-Yun (official) Choong-Mo Kang - piano Cliburn, Van - pianist James Dick - pianist Dragon, Carmen - harp James Ehnes - violinist Irwin I. Eisenberg - violinist Julia Fischer - violinist Florestan Trio Deniz Arman Gelenbe - piano Arthur Greene - piano Jeffrey Grice - piano Hansen, Thomas - piano Hayden, Angelica - pianist, singer Honigberg, Steven - cellist Vladimir Horowitz - pianist Hsing-ay Hsu - piano Jacqueline du Pre Piano Quartet Emma Johnson - clarinetist Kim, David Korfker and Yamaguchi - violin-piano duo Wilhelm Kempff - pianist Misha Keylin - violinist Osman Kivrak - violist/composer Junko Kobayashi - piano Kreisler, Fritz

60. Violinist Gérard Poulet, The Remington Story And Don Gabor
talented youngster, Gaston Poulet, himself a noted violinist, conductor and He studiedfurther with Zino Francescati, Yehudi Menuhin, nathan milstein and above
http://www.xs4all.nl/~rabruil/rempoulet.html
THE REMINGTON SITE LP LIST THE REMINGTON SITE 7" RECORD GALLERY BACK Mozart's K216 was coupled with Handel's Water Music also conducted by Gustav Koslik Mozart's K218 was coupled with 3 Mozart Overtures conducted by Gustav Koslik On Side 2 of Philips 6500 038: Poulet together with Szeryng in Concertone für zwei Violinen (Mozart) Mozart's Early Violin Sonatas with Blandine Verlet View Maestro Poulet's biography (in French). For more violinists visit The World Violinist Links
His performance recorded with the Austrian Symphony Orchestra is lyrical, has perfect timing and beautiful phrasing, and the young violinist has an outstanding technique. The mature interpretation has no haste, but depth and calmness when demanded and lightness in the outer movements.
This not only proves Gerard Poulet's musicianship but also the excellent teachers he must have had all along. One of them is the father of the talented youngster, Gaston Poulet, himself a noted violinist, conductor and pedagogue.
Mozart's K218 can be found on R-199-125.

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