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Music

The new Jacqueline du Pré? Barenboim might just agree

Alisa Weilerstein is the cellist trusted by Daniel Barenboim.

October 7, 2010 10:35
Alisa Weilerstein: played Elgar’s Cello Concerto

ByJessica Duchen, Jessica Duchen

4 min read

Alisa Weilerstein, one of the cello's brightest rising stars, was accorded a huge honour earlier this year when she performed Elgar's Cello Concerto under the baton of Daniel Barenboim. Barenboim is said to have associated the work so deeply with his first wife, the cellist Jacqueline du Pré, that for many years after her death he preferred not to conduct it at all. Weilerstein was in effect stepping into du Pré shoes.

"For me it was very intense because Jacqueline du Pré was the cellist I worshipped," the 28-year-old musician confirms. "I saw all those Christopher Nupen films about her and I listened to most, if not everything, she ever recorded."

Weilerstein played the Concerto with the Berlin Philharmonica in Berlin, London and Oxford, where du Pré was born. "I learned so much from Barenboim: he has a unique mind, real genius, and no one knows that piece the way he does. It was one of the most exhilarating experiences of my life."

This ebullient and forthright young American isn't a new du Pré, however, but an entirely individual and thoroughly modern musician. She was born in Rochester, New York, to a pianist mother, Vivian Hornik Weilerstein, and violinist father, Donald Weilerstein, the former leader of the Cleveland Quartet. Donald was a second-generation American and Vivian's family had escaped from Vienna to the States at the time of the Anschluss in 1938. Today they often perform as a piano trio; and Alisa's younger brother, Joshua, has also entered the family profession as a violinist and conductor.