Nathan Milstein - Bach Chaconne BWV 1004
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Nathan Mironovich Milstein (
January 13, 1904 [
O.S. December 31, 1903] --
December 21, 1992) was a Russian-born
American virtuoso violinist.
Widely considered one of the finest violinists of the
20th century, Milstein was known for his interpretations of
Bach's solo violin works and for works from the
Romantic period. He was also known for his long career: he performed at a high level into his mid 80s, retiring only after suffering a broken hand.
He was born in
Odessa, then part of the
Russian Empire (now in
Ukraine), the fourth child of seven, to a middle-class
Jewish family with virtually no musical background. It was a concert by the 11-year-old
Jascha Heifetz that inspired his parents to make a violinist out of Milstein. As a child (of seven years old), he started violin studies (as suggested by his parents, to keep out of mischief) with the eminent violin pedagogue
Pyotr Stolyarsky, also the teacher of renowned violinist
David Oistrakh.
When Milstein was 11,
Leopold Auer invited him to become one of his students at the
St. Petersburg Conservatory. Milstein reminisced:
Every little boy who had the dream of playing better than the other boy wanted to go to
Auer. He was a very gifted man and a good teacher. I used to go to the
Conservatory twice a week for classes. I played every lesson with forty or fifty people sitting and listening. Two pianos were in the classroom and a pianist accompanied us. When Auer was sick, he would ask me to come to his
home. [1]
Milstein may in fact have been the last of the great
Russian violinists to have had personal contact with Auer. Auer did not name Milstein in his memoirs but mentions "two boys from Odessa
... both of whom disappeared after I left
St. Petersburg in June
1917." [2] Neither is Milstein's name in the registry of the
St Petersburg Conservatory.
Milstein also studied with
Eugène Ysaÿe in
Belgium. He told film-maker
Christopher Nupen, director of
Nathan Milstein --
A Portrait, that he learned almost nothing from Ysaÿe but enjoyed his company enormously. In a
1977 interview printed in
High Fidelity, he said, "I went to Ysaÿe in 1926 but he never paid any attention to me. I think it might have been better this way. I had to think for myself." [3]
Milstein met
Vladimir Horowitz and his pianist sister
Regina Horowitz in
1921 when he played a recital in
Kiev. They invited him for tea at their parents' home. Milstein later said, "I came for tea and stayed three years."[4] Milstein and Horowitz performed together, as "children of the revolution," throughout the
Soviet Union and struck up a life-long friendship. In 1925, they went on a concert tour of
Western Europe together.
He made his American debut in 1929 with
Leopold Stokowski and the
Philadelphia Orchestra. He eventually settled in
New York and became an
American citizen. He toured repeatedly throughout
Europe, maintaining residences in
London and
Paris.
A transcriber and composer, Milstein arranged many works for violin and wrote his own cadenzas for many concertos. He was obsessed with articulating each note perfectly and would often spend long periods of time working out fingerings which would make passages sound more articulated. One of his best known compositions is Paganiniana, a set of variations on various themes from the works of
Niccolò Paganini.
In 1948, his recording of
Mendelssohn's Violin Concerto in
E minor, with
Bruno Walter conducting the
New York Philharmonic, had the distinction of being the first catalogue item in
Columbia's newly introduced long-playing twelve-inch 33 rpm vinyl records, Columbia ML 4001
Juila
Fischer, Nathan Milstein, jascha heifetz,
Maxim vengerov, ruggiero ricci, hilary hahn, itzhak perlman,
Pinchas Zukerman,
Frank Peter Zimmermann,
Leonidas Kavakos,
Alexander Markov, violino