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Vadim Gluzman, The accidental virtuoso

A chance encounter with Isaac Stern in Israel propelled violinist Vadim Gluzman on the road to classical music success

April 14, 2011 11:02
Gluzman says he began playing out of jealousy

By

Jessica Duchen,

Jessica Duchen

4 min read

One hallmark of the truly great violinists is a sound on the instrument that can be recognised at once as uniquely theirs. Vadim Gluzman has just such a tone, and not just because he plays the Stradivarius that once belonged to Leopold Auer, teacher of the legendary Jascha Heifetz. There is an all-out passion to Gluzman's playing, a gorgeousness that leaves you wanting more of it, fast.

The 37-year-old Ukrainian-Israeli violinist is one of classical music's most exciting younger stars. His recordings have drawn rave reviews and this weekend he is in London to play the UK premiere of Michael Daugherty's violin concerto, Fire and Blood, with the London Symphony Orchestra at the Barbican. He will be back in the autumn, performing the Korngold violin concerto with the London Philharmonic.

"I was born in Ukraine, but most of the USSR portion of my life I lived in Riga," Gluzman says. "That's where I started my music studies. I think the real reason I began was a case of childhood jealousy. My father is a conductor and my mother a musicologist, they both teach - and I wanted them to pay the same attention to me that they were paying to their students! So I demanded that they teach me. Very wisely, they sent me instead to a specialist music school."

After the fall of the Iron Curtain, the family left for Israel - "it was only natural for Soviet Jews to want to live in Israel," he says. Here, an extraordinary stroke of luck set the then-teenage violinist on an unexpected path. Namely, he met Isaac Stern.

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