Gidon Kremer
Lingua disponibile: ingleseGidon Kremer's technical brilliance, inward but passionate playing, and commitment to both new works and new interpretations of old works have made him one of the most respected violinists in the world today. He is widely known as the director of his own ensemble, Kremerata Baltica, which has explored a wide range of new music from the Baltic region and other areas. Kremer was born on February 27, 1947, in Riga, Latvia, then part of the Soviet Union. The Latvian form of his name is Gidons Krēmers. His parents were both professional violinists (his father, a Jew, survived the Holocaust), and, as with so many virtuosi, Kremer's gift was apparent almost immediately after a violin was put in his hands. His grandfather, Georg Bruckner, concertmaster of the Riga Opera, is credited with having guided the development of his formidable talent. Kremer won the first prize of the Latvian Republic at age 16 and entered the Moscow Conservatory to study under the legendary violinist David Oistrakh, who eventually offered him a position as an assistant after he graduated. By that time, however, Kremer had already won numerous violin competitions (most notably the 1970 Tchaikovsky Competition), and his star was rising as a soloist. Kremer had been denied permission to travel abroad but was finally allowed to leave the country in 1975. He became a sensation in the West when conductor Herbert von Karajan in 1976 proclaimed Kremer the greatest violinist in the world after recording the Brahms violin concerto with him. A remarkably versatile player, Kremer has a repertory encompassing the standard Baroque, Classical, and Romantic literature, as well as new works by composers such as Stockhausen, Henze, and Adams, and music from the Baltic countries. Always a champion of the new and the rare, he has rhetorically asked: "Why ride the same old warhorses to success?" He also enjoys thumbing his nose at conventional wisdom, regularly creating radical reinterpretations of the classics, as in his 1980 recording of the Beethoven Violin Concerto with somewhat bizarre cadenzas by Schnittke. He disdains virtuosity for virtuosity's sake but is nonetheless one of the most technically proficient violinists in the world. His playing tends toward a thoughtful austerity rather than the extroversion of a Jascha Heifetz, but when he is in top form, he is a mesmerizing performer. Kremer has kept apartments around the world but became particularly fond of the Austrian town of Lockenhaus. He founded the Lockenhaus Chamber Music Festival there in 1981 but ended the festival in 1990, deciding to stop before the task became too exhausting. In the late '90s, he created the punningly named Kremerata Baltica with a group of young Latvian players; the group's recordings of Arvo Pärt and Astor Piazzolla placed them out in front of two of the hottest trends of the 20th century's end. His recordings with the group have won numerous international awards, including a Grammy in 2002. In the early 2010s, Kremer withdrew from several high-profile appearances, citing weariness with the machinery of musical celebrity. His recording career, however, has possibly become even more prolific, encompassing chamber music, recordings of mainstream repertory, and continued exploration with Kremerata Baltica, on the ECM label, of contemporary music from the Slavic countries, his native Baltic region, and the Russian sphere. He has devoted a pair of albums to Shostakovich's protégé Mieczyslaw Weinberg; one was honored with a Grammy nomination in 2015, and a second, devoted to the composer's chamber symphonies, appeared in 2017. He was once again nominated for a Grammy in 2019 for a recording of Weinberg's Symphonies Nos. 2 & 21 under Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla. Kremer's more mainstream recordings, such as a 2012 album devoted to Vivaldi's Four Seasons, have appeared on Deutsche Grammophon and Decca. His recording pace slowed hardly at all, as he issued several recordings annually during the late 2010s and early 2020s, by which time he was in his mid-70s. Kremer is not known as a chamber music player but has issued recordings with younger performers whose careers he has helped along; in 2020, he released an album of trios by Beethoven (an arrangement of the Triple Concerto, Op. 56) and Chopin with cellist Giedré Dirvanauskaité and pianist Georgijs Osokins. In 2022, Kremer issued a recording of Weinberg's difficult Sonatas for violin solo. By that time, his catalog contained nearly 200 recordings.
© Andrew Lindemann Malone & James Manheim /TiVo Continua a leggere
Gidon Kremer's technical brilliance, inward but passionate playing, and commitment to both new works and new interpretations of old works have made him one of the most respected violinists in the world today. He is widely known as the director of his own ensemble, Kremerata Baltica, which has explored a wide range of new music from the Baltic region and other areas.
Kremer was born on February 27, 1947, in Riga, Latvia, then part of the Soviet Union. The Latvian form of his name is Gidons Krēmers. His parents were both professional violinists (his father, a Jew, survived the Holocaust), and, as with so many virtuosi, Kremer's gift was apparent almost immediately after a violin was put in his hands. His grandfather, Georg Bruckner, concertmaster of the Riga Opera, is credited with having guided the development of his formidable talent. Kremer won the first prize of the Latvian Republic at age 16 and entered the Moscow Conservatory to study under the legendary violinist David Oistrakh, who eventually offered him a position as an assistant after he graduated. By that time, however, Kremer had already won numerous violin competitions (most notably the 1970 Tchaikovsky Competition), and his star was rising as a soloist. Kremer had been denied permission to travel abroad but was finally allowed to leave the country in 1975. He became a sensation in the West when conductor Herbert von Karajan in 1976 proclaimed Kremer the greatest violinist in the world after recording the Brahms violin concerto with him.
A remarkably versatile player, Kremer has a repertory encompassing the standard Baroque, Classical, and Romantic literature, as well as new works by composers such as Stockhausen, Henze, and Adams, and music from the Baltic countries. Always a champion of the new and the rare, he has rhetorically asked: "Why ride the same old warhorses to success?" He also enjoys thumbing his nose at conventional wisdom, regularly creating radical reinterpretations of the classics, as in his 1980 recording of the Beethoven Violin Concerto with somewhat bizarre cadenzas by Schnittke. He disdains virtuosity for virtuosity's sake but is nonetheless one of the most technically proficient violinists in the world. His playing tends toward a thoughtful austerity rather than the extroversion of a Jascha Heifetz, but when he is in top form, he is a mesmerizing performer.
Kremer has kept apartments around the world but became particularly fond of the Austrian town of Lockenhaus. He founded the Lockenhaus Chamber Music Festival there in 1981 but ended the festival in 1990, deciding to stop before the task became too exhausting. In the late '90s, he created the punningly named Kremerata Baltica with a group of young Latvian players; the group's recordings of Arvo Pärt and Astor Piazzolla placed them out in front of two of the hottest trends of the 20th century's end. His recordings with the group have won numerous international awards, including a Grammy in 2002.
In the early 2010s, Kremer withdrew from several high-profile appearances, citing weariness with the machinery of musical celebrity. His recording career, however, has possibly become even more prolific, encompassing chamber music, recordings of mainstream repertory, and continued exploration with Kremerata Baltica, on the ECM label, of contemporary music from the Slavic countries, his native Baltic region, and the Russian sphere. He has devoted a pair of albums to Shostakovich's protégé Mieczyslaw Weinberg; one was honored with a Grammy nomination in 2015, and a second, devoted to the composer's chamber symphonies, appeared in 2017. He was once again nominated for a Grammy in 2019 for a recording of Weinberg's Symphonies Nos. 2 & 21 under Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla. Kremer's more mainstream recordings, such as a 2012 album devoted to Vivaldi's Four Seasons, have appeared on Deutsche Grammophon and Decca. His recording pace slowed hardly at all, as he issued several recordings annually during the late 2010s and early 2020s, by which time he was in his mid-70s. Kremer is not known as a chamber music player but has issued recordings with younger performers whose careers he has helped along; in 2020, he released an album of trios by Beethoven (an arrangement of the Triple Concerto, Op. 56) and Chopin with cellist Giedré Dirvanauskaité and pianist Georgijs Osokins. In 2022, Kremer issued a recording of Weinberg's difficult Sonatas for violin solo. By that time, his catalog contained nearly 200 recordings.
© Andrew Lindemann Malone & James Manheim /TiVo
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Weinberg: Sonatas for Violin Solo
Gidon Kremer
Classica - Pubblicato da ECM New Series il 18 feb 2022
Choc de ClassicaLatvian violinist Gidon Kremer’s repertoire is so very wide and varied, and his collaborations so very generous, creative and non-standard &ndas ...
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"Preghiera" (Rachmaninov : Piano Trios)
Gidon Kremer
Classica - Pubblicato da Deutsche Grammophon (DG) il 24 feb 2017
4 étoiles ClassicaDiapason d'or5 Sterne Fono Forum KlassikThis group of Rachmaninov piano trios was released in celebration of the 70th birthday of Latvian violinist Gidon Kremer. One might have expected some ...
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Arvo Pärt: Tabula Rasa (Remaster)
Gidon Kremer
Classica - Pubblicato da ECM il 1 set 1984
La discografia ideale di QobuzThe 1984 ECM album Tabula Rasa was the vehicle that introduced the revolutionary music of Arvo Pärt to audiences outside Eastern Europe and initiated ...
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Vivaldi: Four Seasons
Gidon Kremer
Classica - Pubblicato da Deutsche Grammophon (DG) il 12 nov 2021
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
Weinberg: Violin Concerto & Sonata for 2 Violins (Live)
Gidon Kremer
Classica - Pubblicato da Accentus Music il 15 gen 2021
While Mieczyslaw Weinberg's instrument was the piano, he wrote extensively and wonderfully for the violin, which makes sense both on artistic and pers ...
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Bartók: Sonata For Violin And Piano No.1, Sz. 75 / Janácek: Violin Sonata / Messiaen: Theme And Variations For Violin And Piano
Gidon Kremer
Classica - Pubblicato da Deutsche Grammophon (DG) il 1 gen 1990
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New Seasons (Glass, Pärt, Kancheli, Umebayashi)
Gidon Kremer
Classica - Pubblicato da Deutsche Grammophon (DG) il 29 mag 2015
Prise de Son d'Exception5 de DiapasonThe New Seasons referred to in the title here are the so-called American Four Seasons, the Violin Concerto No. 2 of Philip Glass, which has even less ...
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Weinberg : Chamber Music
Gidon Kremer
Classica - Pubblicato da Deutsche Grammophon (DG) il 18 ott 2019
Le Choix de France MusiqueDiapason d'or...
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Mendelssohn: Concerto for Violin, Piano and Strings; Violin Concerto
Gidon Kremer
Classica - Pubblicato da Deutsche Grammophon (DG) il 1 gen 1989
La discografia ideale di Qobuz16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Weinberg : Violin Sonatas, Concertino, Symphony no.10... (Live In Lockenhaus & Neuhardenberg / 2012 & 2013)
Gidon Kremer
Classica - Pubblicato da ECM il 7 feb 2014
Choc de ClassicaChoc Classica de l'annéeDiapason d'orGramophone Editor's ChoiceHi-Res Audio24-Bit 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Brahms: Violin Concerto, Op. 77 & Double Concerto, Op. 102
Gidon Kremer
Classica - Pubblicato da Warner Classics il 1 gen 1997
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Giya Kancheli: Chiaroscuro
Gidon Kremer
Classica - Pubblicato da ECM New Series il 2 ott 2015
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
Schnittke: Complete Violin Concertos
Gidon Kremer
Musica concertante - Pubblicato da Warner Classics il 1 gen 2000
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Piazzolla: Maria de Buenos Aires
Gidon Kremer
Classica - Pubblicato da Warner Classics il 16 feb 1998
A rendition of a tango operita, commissioned by the Argentinian Ministry of Culture (this rendition anyway), was revived by violinist Gidon Kremer, wh ...
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Sofia Gubaidulina (Live)
Gidon Kremer
Classica - Pubblicato da ECM New Series il 27 gen 2012
Hi-Res AudioSofia Gubaidulina doesn't designate either of the pieces on this recording as concertos even though they feature a solo and ensemble, and that logic i ...
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Bach: The Sonatas and Partitas for Violin Solo
Gidon Kremer
Classica - Pubblicato da ECM New Series il 24 ott 2005
Never one to shy away from challenges, Gidon Kremer often confronts them in his recordings of new or unusual music, yet his expression is often under ...
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Beethoven: The Violin Sonatas
Gidon Kremer
Classica - Pubblicato da Deutsche Grammophon (DG) il 7 nov 1994
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Weinberg : 24 Preludes, Op. 100 (Arr. G. Kremer for Violin)
Gidon Kremer
Assoli per violino - Pubblicato da Accentus Music il 22 feb 2019
Diapason d'or / ArteThe Polish Jewish-born Mieczyslaw Weinberg made his way to Moscow during World War II and was lucky enough to have his music championed by Shostakovic ...
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Glass : Violin Concerto - Schnittke : Concerto Grosso 5
Gidon Kremer
Classica - Pubblicato da Deutsche Grammophon (DG) il 1 gen 1993
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Shostakovich: Chamber Symphonies (2 CD's)
Gidon Kremer
Classica - Pubblicato da Universal Music Division Classics Jazz il 1 gen 2005
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Hommage a Piazzolla
Gidon Kremer
Classica - Pubblicato da Nonesuch il 18 mar 1996
From the violinist and Piazzolla fanatic Gidon Kremer comes this album of works by Piazzolla, along with one song in tribute to the legend. He covers ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo