All News articles – Page 278

  • Article

    Marina Yashvili, violin teacher who taught at the Moscow Conservatoire, dies

    2012-07-09T00:00:00Z

    Georgian violinist and teacher Marina Yashvili has died at the age of 79. For 32 years she taught violin at the Moscow Conservatoire, having previously been a teacher at the Tbilisi Conservatory in Georgia, and at the University of Novi Sad Academy of Arts in the former Yugoslavia. Born ...

  • Article

    Canada Council acquires violins and cellos valued at C$1.6m

    2012-07-08T00:00:00Z

    The Canada Council for the Arts has acquired three violins and two cellos for its musical instrument bank. The five instruments are together valued at CAD$1.6m (£1m), bringing the total value of the 19-instrument collection (plus one cello bow) to CAD$28m. The Canada Council used funds from a CAD$1.1m ...

  • Article

    London Music Masters launches Lost and Sound violin recycling campaign

    2012-07-05T00:00:00Z

    A music charity in London has launched a city-wide instrument recycling campaign, called Lost and Sound. London Music Masters (LMM), which provides music education to children in inner-city primary schools, is calling for supporters to donate any disused violins, cellos, trumpets, flutes and clarinets. The instruments will be ...

  • Article

    Over 100 double bassists join battle in Copenhagen

    2012-07-05T00:00:00Z

    Next month's Bass 2012 convention in Copenhagen will include a combined art event and concert featuring at least 100 double bassists. Inspired by an 1801 naval engagement in which a British fleet led by Nelson defeated the Danish fleet, the 'Battle of Copenhagen' on 17 August will see the ...

  • Article

    US violin collector Tom Roberts dies aged 75

    2012-07-03T00:00:00Z

    US businessman and violin collector Tom Roberts died on 11 June at the age of 75. At one point his collection included 36 instruments, many of which he loaned to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington DC, where he lived from 1980.   Among Roberts’s violin collection were two Stradivaris: the ...

  • Article

    Juilliard plans China institute to offer postgraduate and pre-professional music tuition

    2012-07-02T00:00:00Z

    New York's Juilliard School has signed a framework agreement to set up an educational institute in Tianjin, 75 miles south-east of Beijing. If the project goes ahead, it will be the 107-year-old conservatoire's first physical expansion beyond its New York City campus. 'This is certainly the first project of ...

  • Article

    Amaryllis Quartet awarded €60,000 career-development prize by Frankfurt foundation

    2012-06-30T00:00:00Z

    The German–Swiss Amaryllis Quartet is the first recipient of a major new chamber music prize awarded by the Frankfurt-based Jürgen Ponto Foundation. The €60,000 award will be given every two years to a young German, Swiss or Austrian quartet that has already won an international chamber music competition. The ...

  • Article

    Could violin concerto found in Dresden be the work of Antonio Vivaldi?

    2012-06-27T00:00:00Z

    An 18th-century violin concerto, possibly by Antonio Vivaldi, has been discovered in the archives of the Dresden State Library.  The technically demanding 17-minute work has been attributed to the Italian composer by Baroque expert Michael Talbot, and may receive its modern premiere this September.   The work in A major ...

  • Article

    Violinist Sheldon Rotenberg, who played with Boston Symphony Orchestra for 43 years, dies

    2012-06-27T00:00:00Z

    US violinist Sheldon Rotenberg died on 23 June at the age of 95. A veteran of the Boston Symphony Orchestra (BSO), he was originally hired by music director Serge Koussevitzky in 1948. Rotenberg retired from the orchestra 43 years later in 1991, having played under four subsequent music directors: Charles ...

  • Article

    Cellist Sol Gabetta wins €10,000 Würth Prize

    2012-06-27T00:00:00Z

    Cellist Sol Gabetta has been named the winner of the 2012 Würth Prize. Worth €10,000, the award is given annually to musicians and ensembles considered to be role models for encouraging young people’s interest in classical music. It is organised by the German branch of the Jeunesses Musicales international youth ...

  • Article

    Violinist Nicola Benedetti to open final day of Scotland's T in the Park festival

    2012-06-25T00:00:00Z

    Nicola Benedetti is set to become the first classical artist to perform on the main stage at Scotland’s biggest annual pop and rock music festival. The violinist will be the first act on stage for the final day of T in the Park, which takes place from 6 to 8 ...

  • Article

    Guarneri 'del Gesù' c.1725 'Folinari' violin sells for £1.5m

    2012-06-25T00:00:00Z

    The c.1725 'Folinari' violin, one of the earliest known instruments made by Guarneri 'del Gesù', has sold for £1.52m at auction. The violin was the star lot in yesterday's Tarisio sale in London, and according to Tarisio director Jason Price, was only the second 'del Gesù' to have appeared at ...

  • Article

    Flemish Baroque group La Petite Bande has its government subsidy withdrawn

    2012-06-24T00:00:00Z

    The Flemish Baroque orchestra La Petite Bande will lose its government subsidy in January 2013. The decision by the Flemish government comes despite almost 19,000 people worldwide signing a petition against cuts to the ensemble's funding.   La Petite Bande was founded in 1972 by violinist, violist and conductor Sigiswald ...

  • Article

    Players and scientists to discuss music and the brain at festival

    2012-06-21T00:00:00Z

    This August, the New Mexico city of Santa Fe will host a symposium on music and its effects on the human brain. Orchestral musicians, soloists and chamber music players will take part in the conference, entitled ‘Music, the Brain, Medicine and Wellness’, held as part of the annual Santa Fe ...

  • Article

    Cellist and teacher Gerhard Mantel dies at 82

    2012-06-19T00:00:00Z

    The cellist and pedagogue Gerhard Mantel has died at the age of 82. A longtime professor at the Hochschule in Frankfurt, he wrote books about cello technique and string topics such as intonation, as well as a cello method for children and a set of 25 cello duos. Born ...

  • Article

    Haiti and El Salvador launch El Sistema music education programmes

    2012-06-17T00:00:00Z

    Two countries in Latin America have launched programmes based on El Sistema, Venezuela’s hugely successful music education scheme. Haiti and El Salvador have recently announced their own versions of the initiative, which aims to bring about social change through music. In Haiti, the government-backed programme will involve the creation ...

  • Article

    Violinists win Khachaturian contest

    2012-06-17T00:00:00Z

    The jury of the Aram Khachaturian International Competition in Yerevan, Armenia, awarded the Grand Prix to French–Russian violinist Fedor Roudine, and joint first prize to Ayako Tanabe, from Japan, and Pavel Milyukov, from Russia. There was no second prize. Third prize went to another Japanese violinist, Daichi Nakamura.

  • Article

    Composer Jeff Myers wins violinist Hilary Hahn's encore contest

    2012-06-17T00:00:00Z

    American composer Jeff Myers has won an online competition to complete Hilary Hahn's encores project. The violinist had already commissioned 26 composers from 17 countries to write new short-form pieces for violin and piano for the project, named 'In 27 Pieces: the Hilary Hahn Encores'. The 27th piece, Myers's The ...

  • Article

    Violinist Frank Almond to chronicle life of his 1715 'Lipinski' violin

    2012-06-17T00:00:00Z

    Frank Almond, the concertmaster of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, is set to celebrate the history of the Stradivari violin that he has played on since 2008 – the 1715 'Lipinski'. He aims to raise $30,000 via crowdfunding website Kickstarter to make a recording of violin music associated with the instrument's ...

  • Article

    Violinist Tessa Lark takes first prize at Naumburg Competition

    2012-06-14T00:00:00Z

    Tessa Lark, 23, won first prize at the Naumburg International Violin Competition in New York. The Kentucky native, who studied with Miriam Fried, Paul Biss and Lucy Chapman at the New England Conservatory, received $10,000. Second prize went to Elly Suh, 23, from South Korea. Another South Korean violinist, 26-year-old ...