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Itzhak Perlman

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About Me

Born in Israel in 1945, Itzhak Perlman completed his initial training at the Academy of Music in Tel Aviv. He came to New York and soon was propelled into the international arena with an appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1958. Following his studies at the Juilliard School with Ivan Galamian and Dorothy DeLay, Mr. Perlman won the prestigious Leventritt Competition in 1964, which led to a burgeoning worldwide career. Since then, Mr. Perlman has appeared with every major orchestra and in recitals around the world. During the past several years Mr. Perlman has also appeared on the conductor’s podium, and through this medium he is further delighting his audiences. He has performed as conductor with the Chicago Symphony, Philadelphia Orchestra, Boston Symphony, National Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, and the symphony orchestras of San Francisco, Dallas, Detroit, Houston, Pittsburgh, Seattle and Toronto, as well as at the Ravinia and OK Mozart festivals. In January 2000 he was named Principal Guest Conductor of the Detroit Symphony. In July 2002 Mr. Perlman was appointed Music Advisor of the St. Louis Symphony through the 2003/2004 season. In addition to performances this season in Detroit and St. Louis, Mr. Perlman will conduct the Chicago, Pittsburgh, Montreal, Toronto, and National symphonies.Internationally, Mr. Perlman has expanded his career as soloist to include conducting engagements with the Berlin Philharmonic, Concertgebouw Orchestra, London Philharmonic, the English Chamber Orchestra, and the Israel Philharmonic. As soloist, Mr. Perlman continues to delight audiences in major centers throughout the world. During the 2001-02 season, he appeared as soloist/conductor with the Utah Symphony at the Winter Olympic Games in Salt Lake City. He also participated in the gala opening of Philadelphia’s Verizon Hall, with Emanuel Ax and Yo-Yo Ma performing Beethoven’s Triple Concerto. He closed out the season with a tour of Asia that brought him to ecstatic audiences in Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou, Hong Kong, and Taipei. Mr. Perlman has a long association with the Israel Philharmonic, and he has participated in many groundbreaking tours with this orchestra from his homeland. In November of 1987 he joined the IPO for history-making concerts in Warsaw and Budapest, representing the first performances by this orchestra and soloist in Eastern bloc countries. He again made history as he joined the orchestra for its first visit to the Soviet Union in April/May of 1990, and was cheered by audiences in Moscow and Leningrad who thronged to hear his recital and orchestral performances. In December of 1994 he joined the Israel Philharmonic for their first visits to China and India.Itzhak Perlman's extensive repertoire is well represented on EMI Classics. The great violin concertos form the core of his recorded repertoire, which ranges from the baroque to the contemporary. His recorded repertoire for EMI Classics includes violin concertos by Bach, Beethoven, Brahms, Bruch, Dvorák, Glazunov, Goldmark, Khachaturian, Korngold, Mendelssohn, Paganini, Prokofiev, Sibelius, Shostakovich, Tchaikovsky and Vivaldi. Mr. Perlman's chamber music recordings include Beethoven Piano Trios with Vladimir Ashkenazy and Lynn Harrell; Beethoven String Trios with Pinchas Zukerman and Lynn Harrell; Brahms Violin Sonatas with Vladimir Ashkenazy; Dvorák's Sonatina and Smetana's From my Homeland with Samuel Sanders; the Tchaikovsky Piano Trio with Vladimir Ashkenazy and Lynn Harrell and a solo disc of the Paganini Caprices. Popular repertoire includes Tradition, a collection of Jewish melodies; Together, a programme of duets with Placido Domingo, issued as a tribute to Fritz Kreisler and John McCormack; Rag-Time Music accompanied by André Previn and a disc entitled My Favourite Kreisler with Samuel Sanders.In June 1990 Mr. Perlman signed a new five-year contract with EMI Classics, for a minimum of ten recording projects. November 1992 saw the release of the Brahms Violin Concerto with the Berlin Philharmonic conducted by Daniel Barenboim: a performance which was subsequently released on Laserdisc and VHS, together with the Beethoven Violin Concerto. A rare coupling of the Ben-Haim and Castelnuovo-Tedesco concertos, recorded with the Israel Philharmonic and Zubin Mehta, was released in Spring 1993, as was The Art of Itzhak Perlman, a four-CD edition celebrating the range of his EMI Classics recordings, chosen by Mr. Perlman himself, to mark his 21 years with the label. In 1994 a 2CD set of Brahms Piano Trios was released on EMI Classics, for which Mr. Perlman was joined by Vladimir Ashkenazy and Lynn Harrell, and Perlman's recital album with Samuel Sanders, entitled Bits and Pieces was released in August 1994.Itzhak Perlman’s recordings regularly appear on the best-seller charts and have garnered fifteen Grammy Awards. His latest Grammy was awarded for The American Album, with Seiji Ozawa and the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Other recent releases include a Grammy-nominated live recording with pianist Martha Argerich performing Beethoven and Franck Sonatas, and A la Carte, a recording of short violin pieces with orchestra. Throughout 1995, EMI honored Mr. Perlman on the occasion of his 50th birthday as “Artist of the Year” with the release of a 21-disc set entitled The Itzhak Perlman Collection. The release of this set coincided with The Definitive Perlman Experience festival in London in which Mr. Perlman performed seven concertos in four concerts at the Royal Festival Hall. In November 1995 EMI Classics issued (on CD and video) a live recording of Beethoven's Triple Concerto, recorded at a concert Perlman gave with Daniel Barenboim, Yo-Yo Ma, and the Berlin Philharmonic in January 1995.A major presence in the performing arts on television, Itzhak Perlman has been honored with four Emmy Awards, most recently for the PBS documentary Fiddling for the Future, a film about the Perlman Music Program and his work as a teacher and conductor there. His third Emmy Award recognized his dedication to Klezmer music, as profiled in the 1995 PBS television special In the Fiddler's House, which was filmed in Poland and features him performing with four of the world’s finest Klezmer bands. Subsequent to this program’s release on home audio and video (EMI), there have been several highly successful North American tours of In the Fiddler's House and a second CD, Live in the Fiddler’s House (EMI) recorded at Radio City Music Hall. In 1992, Mr. Perlman received an Emmy for the PBS documentary of his historic trip to the Soviet Union with the Israel Philharmonic entitled Perlman in Russia(Angel/EMI Video), which was chosen as best music documentary; the trip coincided with the 150th anniversary of Tchaikovsky's birth.Mr. Perlman has entertained and enlightened millions of TV viewers of all ages on popular shows as diverse as The Late Show with David Letterman, Sesame Street, the PBS series The Frugal Gourmet, the Tonight show, the Grammy awards telecasts, and numerous Live From Lincoln Center broadcasts and PBS specials, including A Musical Toast and Mozart by the Masters, both of which he served as host and featured performer. In July 1994, Mr. Perlman hosted the U.S. broadcast of the Three Tenors, Encore! live from Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. In March 2001, a worldwide audience in the hundreds of millions saw Mr. Perlman perform live on the 73rd Academy Awards telecast, as he and cellist Yo-Yo Ma performed excerpts from the five film scores nominated in the category of Best Original Score. One of Mr. Perlman’s proudest achievements is his collaboration with film score composer John Williams in Steven Spielberg’s Academy Award winning film Schindler’s List in which he performed the violin solos.His most recent release with EMI Classics in March 1999 is a disc entitled Concertos from my Childhood with the Juilliard Orchestra and Lawrence Foster which features many "student" violin pieces, which Mr. Perlman himself studied at the Juilliard School of Music in America and was the subject of a PBS TV documentary. Mr. Perlman is also the focus of a multimedia CD-ROM entitled 'Interactive Tchaikovsky' which was produced by Robert Winter and Jay Heifetz of Calliope Media.Itzhak Perlman's hold on the public imagination stems from a unique combination of talent, charm and humanity unrivalled in our time. His personality has created an artistic force of compelling nature. Audiences all over the world respond not only to his flawless technique but to his irrepressible joy of making music which he communicates so effectively. Newsweek magazine featured him with a cover story in April of 1980, and in 1981 Musical America pictured him as Musician of the Year on the cover of its Directory of Music and Musicians. Harvard University, Yale University, Braendis University, Yeshiva University and Hebrew University in Jerusalem are among the institutions which have awarded him honorary degrees. President Reagan honored Mr. Perlman with a “Medal of Liberty” in 1986, and in December 2000, President Clinton awarded Mr. Perlman the “National Medal of Arts.” His presence on stage, on camera and in personal appearances of all kinds speaks eloquently on behalf of the disabled, and his devotion to their cause is an integral part of Mr. Perlman’s life.

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 9/23/2007
Band Website: perlmanmusicprogram.org
Band Members: violin: SOIL stradivarius 1714

Influences: Isaac Stern; Yehudi Menuhin; Niccolò Paganini, * Salvatore Accardo * Jean-Baptiste Accolay * Jean Alard * Tomaso Albinoni * Pierre Amoyal * Dorota Anderszewska * Gilles Apap * Juan Crisóstomo de Arriaga * Jean-Marie Auberson * Leopold Auer * Johann Sebastian Bach * Pierre Baillot * Chiara Banchini * Amandine Beyer * Giovanni Battista Bassani * Joshua Bell * Franz Benda * Charles-Auguste de Bériot * Heinrich Ignaz Franz Biber * Fabio Biondi * Lola Bobesco * Willi Boskovsky * Norbert Brainin * Florent Brannens * George Bridgetower * Iona Brown * Ole Bull * Adolf Busch * Edwin Bélanger * Bartolomeo Campagnoli * Lucien Capet * Renaud Capuçon * Giuliano Carmignola * Sarah Chang * Olivier Charlier * Kyung-Wha Chung * Haim Fabrizio Cipriani * Thomas Clayton * Dominique Clérambault * Hélène Collerette * Arcangelo Corelli * Mathieu Crickboom * Evaristo Felice dall' Abaco * Charles Dancla * Lukas David * Arnold Dolmetsch * Angèle Dubeau * Alfred Dubois * Matthew Dubourg * Augustin Dumay * Georges Enesco * André-Joseph Exaudet * Carlo Farina * Enrique Fernández Arbós * Christian Ferras * Willem de Fesch * Julia Fischer * Grzegorz Fitelberg * Carl Flesch * Patrice Fontanarosa * Zino Francescatti * Ignaz Fränzl * Jacob Gade * Sylvie Gazeau * Francesco Geminiani * Ivry Gitlis * Mira Glodeanu * Reinhard Goebel * Johann Gottlieb Graun * Geoffrey Grey * Arthur Grumiaux * François-Antoine Habeneck * Hilary Hahn * Maurice Hauchard * Jascha Heifetz * Bronis--aw Huberman * Pierre Huguenet * Gérard Jarry * Frantz Jehin-Prume * Joseph Joachim * Hélène Jourdan-Morhange * Chantal Juillet * Jean-Jacques Kantorow * Nigel Kennedy * Sergueï Khatchatrian * Henri Koch * Leonid Kogan * Laurent Korcia * Fritz Kreisler * Gidon Kremer * Rodolphe Kreutzer * Josef Krips * Sigiswald Kuijken * Georg Kulenkampff * Jeanne Lamon * Charles Lamoureux * Joseph Lanner * Jaime Laredo * Jean-Marie Leclair * Gilles Lefebvre * Pietro Locatelli * Alfred Loewenguth * Louis-Luc Loiseau de Persuis * Maïté Louis * Vanessa-Mae * Michael Thomas Mann * Carlo Mannelli * Andrew Manze * Albert Markov * Alexander Markov * Neville Marriner * Martin-Pierre Marsick * Johanna Martzy * Michele Mascitti * Joseph Massart * Jacques Féréol Mazas * Eduard Melkus * Teresa Milanollo * Nathan Milstein * Shlomo Mintz * Jean-Joseph Cassanéa de Mondonville * Leopold Mozart * Viktoria Mullova * Anne-Sophie Mutte * Václav Neumann * Ginette Neveu * Carl Nielsen * David Oïstrakh * Igor Oïstrakh * Eugene Ormandy * Niccolò Paganini * Itzhak Perlman * Johann Georg Pisendel * Rachel Podger * Olivier Pons * Gérard Poulet * Gaëtane Prouvost * François Prume * Gaetano Pugnani * Julian Rachlin * Jean-Féry Rebel * Daniel Rémy * Vadim Repin * Silvestre Revueltas * Ruggiero Ricci * Oscar Rieding * André Rieu * Jean-François Rivest * Marianne Rivière * Pierre Rode * Sacha Rojdestvenski * Audrey Roncigli * Max Rostal....Klezmer.Jazz.Pop.Rock....Hip Hop ...................
Record Label: EMI classics
Type of Label: Major