Tag: Cellist

  • Filming Leonard Rose A Cello Legend’s Story

    Filming Leonard Rose A Cello Legend’s Story

    Here are a few photos of our most recent day of filming for an ongoing project, a documentary about the great American cellist Leonard Rose.

    Rose was the first American-born and trained cellist to achieve a world-class solo career. He played in the NBC Symphony Orchestra under Arturo Toscanini, and as principal cellist in the Cleveland Orchestra and New York Philharmonic under Artur Rodzinski, before making the courageous decision to support himself as a star soloist. Unusually, he also developed into as a marvelous chamber musician, performing and recording with such artists as Isaac Stern, Eugene Istomin, and Glenn Gould. For most of his career he was also a perceptive teacher whose influence is still felt today. (Yo-Yo Ma was a pupil.)

    I was in the DC area on Tuesday and Wednesday for our latest interview. This was an important one, as our subject was none other than Arthur Rose, the cellist’s son. Art was full of helpful information about, and insights into, Rose’s personality, his family life, and his personal dealings with his associates.

    Art still works in radio after half a century as an engineer. This room is adorned with a Victrola, a vintage radio, and a harpsichord of Art’s own construction. In an adjacent room is a clavichord he also built. The walls are hung with inscribed photos of a number of Rose associates, including Pablo Casals, Jascha Heifetz, and Dimitri Mitropoulos.

    Art also allowed us access to unpublished photos, a manuscript of a Rose memoir, with handwritten corrections, that the cellist was at work on at the time of his death, and rare audio recordings such as the world premiere performance of Alan Shulman’s Cello Concerto, which Rose never recorded commercially. All very exciting.

    That’s H. Paul Moon behind the camera. Paul and I met when I interviewed him on the radio prior to the PBS broadcast of his award-winning documentary “Samuel Barber: Absolute Beauty.” I conduct all my interviews for the current project off-camera, with the intention of having the subjects tell Rose’s story themselves, through the magic of attentive editing.

    We have a few more interviews before we wrap, at least one of them with a classical music legend. Paul has many projects going simultaneously, but we are getting there.

  • János Starker Cellist Legend at 100

    János Starker Cellist Legend at 100

    The great cellist János Starker would have been 100 years-old today. Hard to make out what this commercial might actually be for, since he’s living quite large, enjoying some music (on vinyl), a cigarette, and what looks like a glass of scotch – interestingly at odds with his ascetic sartorial and decorative choices. Spoiler: the ad is for a stereo system.

    That looks like a portrait of composer Zoltán Kodály on the wall. By coincidence, Kodály’s educational system of solfège hand signs plays an important part in Steven Spielberg’s “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” which I only just posted about this morning. Starker knew Kodály, who was on the faculty while he was a student at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest.

    Starker survived internment in a Nazi concentration camp (he was Jewish) to become one of the world’s most celebrated cellists. He served as principal with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, at New York’s Metropolitan Opera, and with the Chicago Symphony, and left his mark as an outstanding soloist and chamber musician. In all, he made over 150 recordings.

    For over 50 years, he was on the faculty of Indiana University Jacobs School of Music. He died in 2013 at the age of 88. Not bad, considering he smoked 60 cigarettes a day and consumed copious amounts of scotch.

    It’s doubtful American television would have aired a 90-second ad like this, even back in 1982.

    Starker plays the third movement of Kodály’s Sonata for Solo Cello

    Starker first played the sonata for the composer in 1939, at the age of 15. He did so again, shortly before Kodály’s death in 1967. Kodály told Starker, “If you correct the ritard in the third movement, it will be the Bible performance.” The cellist recorded the work four times, in 1948, 1950, 1956, and 1970.

    François Truffaut lectures on Kodály hand signs in this scene from “Close Encounters of the Third Kind.”

  • Lynn Harrell Legendary Cellist Dies at 76

    Lynn Harrell Legendary Cellist Dies at 76

    The music world has lost a giant of the cello – Leonard Slatkin described him as a bear! – and of course, that means a tremendous loss for us all.

    Lynn Harrell has died at the age of 76.

    The son of baritone Mack Harrell, Lynn matured into one of the world’s most sought-after cellists. He recorded with Ashkenazy and Perlman and Zukerman and Kipnis, and Boulez and Maazel and Marriner and Levine, among others.

    I remember seeing him in Philadelphia, when he was in his prime, in a wondrous performance of Witold Lutoslawski’s Cello Concerto. About 20 years ago, his career as a performer was jeopardized by carpal tunnel syndrome, which led him to undergo corrective surgery.

    Harrell made go-to recordings of works by composers from Shostakovich to Victor Herbert. Like so many artists who have held an honored place in my record collection for decades, it’s a shock to realize that suddenly 30 or 40 years have passed.

    R.I.P., and thanks for all the music.


    Schumann: Cello Concerto in A minor (with Marriner)

    Beethoven: Cello Sonata No. 3 in A major (with Ashkenazy)
    I. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UqHsPIe7n0Q
    II. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=89J6uLwiuUM
    III a. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bcqa02-FkOU
    III b. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lH5tsTPewdw

    Herbert: Cello Concerto No. 2 in E minor (with Marriner)

    Brahms: Cello Sonata No. 2 in F major (with Ashkenazy)

    Lalo: Cello Concerto in D minor (with Chailly)

    Beethoven: String Trio in G major, Op. 9, No. 1 (live, with Perlman & Zukerman):

    Elgar: Cello Concerto in E minor (live, with Mattias Bamert, on the strad formerly owned by Jacqueline Du Pré)

  • Heinrich Schiff Celebrated Cellist Dies at 65

    Heinrich Schiff Celebrated Cellist Dies at 65

    I am very sorry to have to share the news that one of the great cellists of our time has passed. Heinrich Schiff is dead at 65.

    I’ll include a little musical remembrance, if I can, just before my sign-off at 2:00 this afternoon, on WRTI 90.1 FM and at wrti.org

    http://www.dw.com/en/cellist-heinrich-schiff-dies-age-65/a-36891728

    http://www.gramophone.co.uk/classical-music-news/the-cellist-and-conductor-heinrich-schiff-has-died

  • Jules Eskin Boston Symphony Cellist Dies at 85

    Jules Eskin Boston Symphony Cellist Dies at 85

    The beloved cellist Jules Eskin has died. Eskin was principal cellist of the Boston Symphony Orchestra for 53 years. Eskin was living history. His association with the orchestra extended back to the days of Serge Koussevitzky.

    Born in Philadelphia in 1931, Eskin was picked up by the Dallas Symphony at the age of 16, where he performed under the direction of Antal Dorati. He studied with Janos Starker in Dallas, then with Gregor Piatigorsky and Leonard Rose at the Curtis Institute of Music. In 1948, he was a fellowship student at the Tanglewood Music Center, where he performed in the TMC Orchestra under Koussevitzky. He then spent three years as principal cello of the Cleveland Orchestra under George Szell and seven years with the New York City Opera. In addition, he participated in the Marlboro Music Festival and played in the Casals Festival Orchestra in Puerto Rico. He joined the BSO as principal cello in 1964, when Erich Leinsdorf was music director.

    Eskin died yesterday at his Brookline home. The cause of death was cancer. Earlier, he had withdrawn from the Boston Symphony for a season to undergo cancer treatments in 1981. He is survived by his wife, BSO violinist Aza Raykhtsaum. The couple celebrated their 30th wedding anniversary in January. Eskin announced his retirement from the orchestra only last month. He was 85 years-old.

    We’ll honor him with some of the recordings he made with the Boston Symphony Chamber Players, of which he was a founding member, this afternoon from 4 to 7:00 EST on WWFM – The Classical Network and at wwfm.org.

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