Itzhak Perlman and Emanuel Ax – each winners of multiple Grammy
Awards among a myriad of other honors – have teamed up for the exquisite
album of Romantic-era masterpieces: the Violin Sonata No. 1 in A Major
by Gabriel Fauré and the lone Violin Sonata by Richard Strauss. In
addition to this being Perlman’s first new solo recording in over a
decade, it is also the first recording by this violin-piano team after
years of performing together on stage, and the first time Perlman has
recorded these two major sonatas. Perlman and Ax will also kick-off a
series of concert dates later this year.
Describing the Fauré sonata, Perlman says: “It smells like ambrosia –
the essence of French music, a lovely piece. For a violinist, its
phrases are a real satisfaction to play, as they’re so rich.” As for the
Strauss sonata, Perlman says, “It’s by the young Strauss – emotionally
heroic, very appassionato. I like to write stories in my mind about the
music I play, to help me with the phrasing. This is a dramatic story –
although in the slow movement, I imagine it in a coffeehouse, intimate
and warm.”
Born in 1945 in Tel Aviv, Itzhak Perlman began playing the violin
when he was so small that all he could hold was a toy fiddle. Although
he was disabled by polio at age 4, he played his first recital by age
10. He studied at the Juilliard School with Dorothy DeLay and Ivan
Galamian and made his Carnegie Hall debut in 1963. He was introduced to a
wider American public via multiple appearances on the Ed Sullivan Show,
including a 1964 episode that also featured the Rolling Stones. After
winning the prestigious Leventritt Competition the same year, Perlman
went on to a career as a soloist that has seen him appear to acclaim on
all the world’s great stages and make hundreds of recordings.
His prize-winning discography not only covers the width and breadth
of the great classical violin repertoire; he has also made ventures into
Klezmer music and film soundtracks, including the Oscar-winning score
to Schindler’s List. He received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement
Award in 2008. Perlman has won four Emmy Awards, including for the 1998
PBS documentary Fiddling for the Future, about the Perlman
Music Program and his work as a teacher. Having collaborated with all
the world’s major orchestras as a soloist, Perlman has for years
performed with many of them as a conductor. A rarity for a classical
artist, he has appeared everywhere from Sesame Street to the White House
including a performance for the first inaugural of President Obama. In
2000, he was awarded a National Medal of Arts, and in 2003, Perlman
earned a Kennedy Center Honor celebrating his distinguished achievements
and contributions to the country’s cultural and educational life. He
currently holds the Dorothy Richard Starling Foundation Chair at the
Juilliard School. (Universal Music)
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario