Violinist GIDON KREMER has a "cult" following - and I am the leader of that cult - ROFLOL. There has never been, nor is there today, a violinist of this man's stature or passion. Stern, Perlman, Mutter and all the others, can eat Kremer's dust, as far as I am concerned. :-) Here is a short biography on the amazing man, whom I first heard dance across his Stradivarius with his bow, way back in 1980. It was this man who caused me to fall headlong into the world of classical music, when everybody else was either dancing at discos or playing the latest Black Sabbath album. I was no different, but Kremer, his class, his style and his PASSION winkled me into another world altogether. I will always be grateful for his influence on my life, as I spent it flirting with beautiful music. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Of all the world's leading violinists, Gidon Kremer has perhaps had the most unconventional career. Born in Riga, Latvia, he began studying the violin at the age of four with his father and grandfather, who were both distinguished string players. At the age of seven, he entered Riga Music School. At sixteen he was awarded the first Prize of the Latvian Republic and two years later he began his studies with David Oistrakh at the Moscow Conservatory. He went on to win prestigious awards including the 1967 Queen Elizabeth Competition and the ...
Friday, November 16, 2012
Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto in D, Op. 35 - Violin, GIDON KREMER - Berliner Philharmoniker.
Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto in D, Op. 35 - Violin, GIDON KREMER - Berliner Philharmoniker. Video Clips. Duration : 41.82 Mins.
Violinist GIDON KREMER has a "cult" following - and I am the leader of that cult - ROFLOL. There has never been, nor is there today, a violinist of this man's stature or passion. Stern, Perlman, Mutter and all the others, can eat Kremer's dust, as far as I am concerned. :-) Here is a short biography on the amazing man, whom I first heard dance across his Stradivarius with his bow, way back in 1980. It was this man who caused me to fall headlong into the world of classical music, when everybody else was either dancing at discos or playing the latest Black Sabbath album. I was no different, but Kremer, his class, his style and his PASSION winkled me into another world altogether. I will always be grateful for his influence on my life, as I spent it flirting with beautiful music. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Of all the world's leading violinists, Gidon Kremer has perhaps had the most unconventional career. Born in Riga, Latvia, he began studying the violin at the age of four with his father and grandfather, who were both distinguished string players. At the age of seven, he entered Riga Music School. At sixteen he was awarded the first Prize of the Latvian Republic and two years later he began his studies with David Oistrakh at the Moscow Conservatory. He went on to win prestigious awards including the 1967 Queen Elizabeth Competition and the ...
Violinist GIDON KREMER has a "cult" following - and I am the leader of that cult - ROFLOL. There has never been, nor is there today, a violinist of this man's stature or passion. Stern, Perlman, Mutter and all the others, can eat Kremer's dust, as far as I am concerned. :-) Here is a short biography on the amazing man, whom I first heard dance across his Stradivarius with his bow, way back in 1980. It was this man who caused me to fall headlong into the world of classical music, when everybody else was either dancing at discos or playing the latest Black Sabbath album. I was no different, but Kremer, his class, his style and his PASSION winkled me into another world altogether. I will always be grateful for his influence on my life, as I spent it flirting with beautiful music. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Of all the world's leading violinists, Gidon Kremer has perhaps had the most unconventional career. Born in Riga, Latvia, he began studying the violin at the age of four with his father and grandfather, who were both distinguished string players. At the age of seven, he entered Riga Music School. At sixteen he was awarded the first Prize of the Latvian Republic and two years later he began his studies with David Oistrakh at the Moscow Conservatory. He went on to win prestigious awards including the 1967 Queen Elizabeth Competition and the ...
Labels:
Berliner,
Concerto,
KREMER,
Philharmoniker,
Tchaikovskys,
Violin
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