Violinland Links Page The World violinist Links Page Akiko Kose's web site is the best if you rachel BartonOf the younger violinists on the American concert platform today, rachel http://www.cremona.u-net.com/violinks.htm
Extractions: Violinland Home Contents Page VIOLINLAND RESOURCE PAGE Connie's Violin Page Connie's Violin pages are among the best presented and most informative to be found anywhere on the web. I am proud to count Connie Sunday as my friend and have always found her ready to help for the benifit of the violin community. Sheila's Corner Shiela's Corner is a great resource for both teachers and students alike. It is also one the most beautifully designed web sites you will find on the Internet today. Jose Sanchez Violin Site This is another of the webs great violin sites. There is information too numerous to detail here. But outstanding is the "Discography of Violins used on Recordings (a collaboration between Cheniston K Roland and Jose Sanchez)together with a definitive discography of Carl Flesch again a collaboration between Jose and I.) The World Violinist Links Page Akiko Kose's web site is the best if you are looking for a list of the worlds great violinists home pages. Violinland is more than pleased to be associated with her site and has in the past supplied information to help make it the most definitive of its kind. Violink One of the oldest violin sites on the Internet, and is without doubt one of the best and most reliable available today...so much information and so useful.
Arts/Music/Instruments/Stringed/Bowed_Strings/Violin/Violinists/Classical URL http//classicalmus.hispeed.com/barrie/ Baraldi Roberto Homepage of Italianviolinist. URL http//joshuabell.artshost.com/main.html barton rachel Fan site http://www.arts-entertainment-recreation.com/Arts/Music/Instruments/Stringed/Bow
Extractions: Search: Welcome to arts-entertainment-recreation.com, the comprehensive search portal dedicated to the arts. We have located some of the finest art and entertainment resources from across the Web and accumulated them into a single directory. Here you can choose from a wide variety of documents, reviews, articles, and Web sites about your favorite activities. Whether you enjoy film, Broadway shows, television, books, fine art, or travel, there is something here for you. As you peruse the directory, you will notice several categories pertaining to the arts. Feel free to navigate through these categories, from broad art-related topics to specific information on selected subjects. Our search portal also gives you the option to conduct a query using our intelligent search feature. Arts Music Instruments Stringed ... Violinists Classical Barachovsky Anton
Chicago Symphony Orchestra marginally behind her. But since the soloist was the brilliant Chicagoviolinist rachel barton, no one feared the musical outcome. http://www.tenorissimo.com/domingo/Articles/cst052600.htm
Extractions: Wynne Delacoma, Chicago Sun-Times , May 26, 2000 Star power was on prominent display at Thursday night's Chicago Symphony Orchestra subscription concert in Symphony Center. Supertenor Placido Domingo was on hand for the program of Wagner, Mendelssohn and Beethoven, though as conductor rather than vocal soloist. And Rachel Barton was guest artist in the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto. Last year the Chicago-born Barton was front page news for weeks while the court case stemming from her 1995 train accident in Winnetka went to trial. Happily, the evening's star power was exactly where it belonged, in service to the music. Now in her mid-20s, Barton played with the fearless confidence that has been her hallmark since she first caught the ear of Chicago music lovers as a grade schooler on the youth competition circuit. When her accident turned her into a local celebrity, many casual observers questioned her talent. Maybe, they thought, this tale of a tragically interrupted international career was simply hype. Hype it wasn't. Barton is the real thing, a prodigious talent with obvious personality and a clear-eyed vision of what she wants her performances to convey. The Mendelssohn concerto is a classical music warhorse, a lyrical and virtuoso extravaganza that audiences adore and soloists can play in their sleep. Neither Barton nor Domingo were sleep walking Thursday night.
ArtistsAtoC Maestosa Sonata Sentimentale; barton, rachel (violin) Le Streghe. http://psnedden.tripod.com/paganini/AtoC.htm
Extractions: N i c o l ò P a g a n i n i Discography A Abadiev , Vasco ( violin Abramovic , Charles ( piano accompanist Academic Symphony Orchestra Academy of St. Martin in the Fields Accardo , Salvatore ( violin viola* contraviola** Adolph , Henry ( conductor Agaronyan , Ruben ( violin Agosti , Guido ( piano accompanist Agosti , Riccardo ( cello Agoston , Andrei ( violin Aitken flute Akiyama , Kazuyoshi ( conductor Allers , Franz ( conductor Allocco , Gian Luca (
Summation Testimonials: Litigator Profile 95L929, $29.6 million, March 1, 1999. rachel barton was a 19year-old violiniston her way to teach at a music school in a suburb on Chicago's north shore. http://www.summation.com/profiles/profile.asp?ID=2
Summary He became a fencing champion, classical composer, violinist and conductor. It featuresRachel barton on Violin, with the Encore Chamber Orchestra under Daniel http://chevalierdesaintgeorges.homestead.com/Summary.html
Extractions: FRANCAIS William J. Zick, Webmaster ... AFRICAN DESCENT Introduction This page is a concise summary of ten Web pages devoted to composers and musicians of African descent. It identifies some of the principal reference sources used on the pages, and provides links useful for further study of the topic by teachers and other interested persons.
Valparaiso University: News And Press Releases String Day set for Sept. 28. Tue, September 24, 2002. Worldrenownedviolinist rachel barton will teach violin classes and perform Sept. http://www.valpo.edu/news/index.php?action=display&newsid=777
Louisville Scene | Arts | Performing Arts doing. There was plenty to think about, particularly during guestviolinist rachel barton's performance of the concerto. Midori http://www.louisvillescene.com/arts/performing/2002/p20020125orc.html
Extractions: The Courier-Journal It takes daring to couple Alban Berg's Violin Concerto with Joseph Suk's Symphony No. 2 ("Asrael"), as the Louisville Orchestra is doing this week. You don't typically prompt a run on the box office with such a program, and listeners accustomed to more familiar pairings must exercise a certain degree of faith that planners know what they're doing. There was plenty to think about, particularly during guest violinist Rachel Barton's performance of the concerto. Midori gave a luminous account of the work with this orchestra a little more than 10 years ago. Barton's advocacy, too, was strong and sustained, born of interpretive convictions that respected Berg's unusual gloss on the concerto form. The concerto does not reward flashiness, but neither does it ask a soloist to recede so into the background that all sense of propulsion is lost. Much of the concerto has a transcendental quality, which Barton acknowledged from early in her performance. Before beginning, she spoke at length to her Whitney Hall audience, taking them through the concerto's oft-repeated connections (a memorial to 18-year-old Manon Gropius), plus more recent scholarship that's revealed Berg's fascination with numerol-ogy. Barton's words became virtually superfluous once the score's extraordinary, hushed introduction had sounded. Complete technique is needed to make this work persuade and beguile, yet typical effects are employed quite atypically. Extended harmonics and left-hand pizzicati, for instance, are not attached to the exterior of the music; instead they rise up from its interior. Barton's affection for the piece, expressed through playing that was gentle yet resolute, was precisely what was demanded.
Extractions: Your browser does not support inline frames or is currently configured not to display inline frames. Your browser does not support inline frames or is currently configured not to display inline frames. Join the Wisconsin Chamber Orchestra for our Masterworks series, a special series showcasing some of the best classical music artists from around the globe. From master flutist Sir James Galway to critically-acclaimed violinist Rachel Barton, the 2002-2003 season is truly spectacular. Join us and enjoy a mid-week break on Wednesday evenings at 7:00 p.m., complete with free parking (for subscribers), meals, pre-concert talks and spectacular guest artists. Sir James Galway, Flute Sir James Galway, Flute Flutist James Galway is internationally regarded as both a matchless interpreter of the classical repertoire and a consummate entertainer whose charismatic appeal crosses all musical boundaries. His unique sound, superb musicianship, and dazzling virtuosity have made him one of the most respected and sought-after performing artists of our time. From the outset of his career, James Galway has dazzled viewers young and old through appearances on such television programs as the Tonight Show, the Today Show, Good Morning America, Sesame Street, PBS's Live from Lincoln Center and more.
Kansas City Symphony Kansas City, MO. The Kansas City Symphony announced today that violinist RachelBarton will be replacing violinist Pamela Frank for three performances. http://host03.anobi.net/kcsymphony/press_03_29_01_b.html
Extractions: March 29, 2001 Kansas City Symphony announces Rachel Barton as new guest soloist for April 6-8 Classical Performances Kansas City, MO. - The Kansas City Symphony announced today that violinist Rachel Barton will be replacing violinist Pamela Frank for three performances. Barton will perform two evening concerts on Friday and Saturday, April 6 and 7, beginning at 8 p.m., and a matinee concert on Sunday, April 8 at 2 p.m. All performances will take place in the Lyric Theatre, 11th and Central. Pamela Frank was scheduled to perform, but due to a hand injury has canceled all engagements. The program will include Brahms' Symphony No. 3 and Beethoven's Violin Concerto featuring guest violinist Rachel Barton. The 25-year-old American violinist Rachel Barton is a native of Chicago and began studying violin at the age of three. She made her professional debut four years later with the Chicago String Ensemble and gave her earliest performances with the Chicago Symphony at ages 10 and 15 for public television. She has appeared as a soloist with many prestigious ensembles, including the Chicago, St. Louis, Dallas, Montreal and Vienna Symphonies, as well as international engagements with the New Zealand Symphony and Camerata Academica of Salzburg. She has recorded eight albums thus far and her most recent releases include "Storming the Citadel" and an album of duos with cellist Wend Warner, "Double Play." Visit
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