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Moscow Virtuosi (Chamber Orchestra)

Founded: 1979 - Moscow, Russia

In 1979 Vladimir Spivakov, an outstanding virtuoso violinist, with a group of his friends and artistic associates, mostly winners of international music competitions, as well as soloists and section leaders of the best Moscow symphonic and chamber orchestras, founded the Moscow Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra. Thus, the highest performance standard was set up from the very moment of the orchestra's establishment, which justified its claim for a rather ambitious, at a first glance, title of "Moscow Virtuosi".

Launching artistic groups at an artist's initiative was by no means a common practice in the Soviet Union of those years. Only governmental bodies could authorize the establishment of professional theaters, orchestras and museums. It took Vladimir Spivakov and his friends several years to prove to the authorities that the orchestra’s professional level and potential were of an order of magnitude higher than those of a great majority of State orchestras that boasted of marvelous conductors and musicians able to glorify any European or USA orchestra in the 1970’s and 1980’s.

Only in 1983 did the Moscow Virtuosi Orchestra gain the official status and the entailed governmental financial support for its performance activities.

The same years witnessed an arduous, but joyful consolidation of virtuosi musicians, each being a bright personality, into a world-class, finely-organized musical ensemble with its own performance style and a huge repertoire comprising J.S. Bach and Schnittke. The process is not completed up to now, but even in the mid 1980’s the main performance and artistic features of the orchestra became evident.

A really European manner of ensemble performance, concern for tiny details and nuances, solicitous and creative interpretation of author's concepts, bright artistic talent and love both for the pieces performed and for the audience make the Moscow Virtuosi Orchestra so different from many other chamber orchestras. The orchestra stands away from aesthetic any snobbery and arrogant attitude to listeners, some of whom might have come to the concert quite by chance. To excite the audience emotionally and to enthrall intellectually every listener, even an ignorant one, to endow him with the pleasure of enjoining music masterpieces, to evoke the desire to come to chamber music concerts again are considered by the "Moscow Virtuosi" as the most important goals.

Ever since the chamber orchestra was founded, Vladimir Spivakov, an outstanding violinist and conductor, benefactor and prominent social figure, has been its artistic director, conductor and soloist. Thanks to Maestro Vladimir Spivakov and the two decades of his activities for the sake of the orchestra, the Moscow Virtuosi is now undoubtedly within the best chamber orchestras of the world with their own grateful audiences everywhere and is enjoying a high reputation that has been acquired by years of persistent and hard work.

Since 2003 the Moscow Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra is permanently located and rehearses at the Moscow Performance Arts Centre which was recently built and opened on December 26, 2002. In 2004 the "Moscow Virtuosi" Chamber Orchestra celebrated its 25th anniversary and held the world tour.

Every year the Moscow Virtuosi gives over 100 concerts, mostly on tours. The geography of the tours is very extensive: it includes all regions of Russia, the former Soviet Union territory (which still remains the common cultural space of the now desintigrated country both for the orchestra and for the listeners), European countries, the USA and Japan. In all the countries the Virtuosi give their concerts not only in the best and most prestigious concert halls, such as Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, Musikverrein in Vienna, Royal Festival Hall and Albert Hall in London, Pleyel and Champs Elysees Theatre in Paris, Carnegie Hall and Avery Fisher Hall in New York, Santory Hall in Tokyo, but also in ordinary venues of small towns.

Many a time the Moscow Virtuosi has participated in famous international music festivals in Salzburg (Austria), Edinburgh (Scotland), Florence and Pompei (Italy), Lucerne and Gstaad (Switzerland), Rheingau and Schleswig-Golstein (Germany) and many others. Special links connect the Moscow Virtuosi and the International Music Festival in Colmar (France), where Maestro Vladimir Spivakov is Artistic Director. The orchestra had taken part in many Colmar Festivals since 1989 when the Festival was arranged for the first time.

The Moscow Virtuosi has a large discography. About 30 CD’s of different musical styles and periods, from Baroque music to compositions of Penderecki, Schnittke, Sofia Gubaidulina, Arvo Pärt and Kancheli, have been recorded for the BMG/RCA Victor Read Seal Company. Marvelous musicians, such as Evgeny Kissin, Shlomo Mintz, Nathalie Stutzmann, Vladimir Krainev, Mikhail Rudy, Justus Frantz and many others recorded as soloists with Moscow Virtuosi.

Here are only some of numerous appraisals of the "Moscow Virtuosi" concerts in the USA and Europe in the 1980’s and 1990’s:
"First-rate string players honed by
Vladimir Spivakov to a rare fitness of ensemble" - The New York Times
"A marvelous group of string players" - Chicago Tribune
"Like a fine Swiss watch, a fine musical ensemble is a model of precision and elegance; each musician is a part of a synergetic and remarkably efficient whole" - Los Angeles Times
"They are wonderful! Their sound is so sweet, with an admirable softness, their phrasing is incredibly clean, and their intonation is extremely precise" - La Repubblica
"An amazing ensemble, with a precision of intonation and phasing, a fiery temperament and a remarkable mastery of their instruments" - Wiener Zeitung



Sources:
Moscow Virtuosi Website
Contributed by
Aryeh Oron (April 2011)

Vladimir Spivakov: Short Biography | Ensembles: Moscow Virtuosi
Bach Discography:
Recordings of Vocal Works | Recordings of Instrumental Works

Recordings of Bach’s Instrumental Works

Conductor

As

Works

Saulius Sondeckis

Orchestra

Harpsichord Concertos BWV 1052, BWV 1053, BWV 1054, BWV 1055, BWV 1056, BWV 1057, BWV 1058 [w/ pianist Julia Zilberquit]

Arsenty Tkachenko

Orchestra

[OV-2] Harpsichord Concerto No. 1 BWV 1052 [w/ pianist Polina Osetinskaya]

Victor Tretyakov

Orchestra

[O-3] (1984): Concerto for 2 violins ("Double"), BWV 1043 [w/ violinists Victor Tretyakov & Oleg Kagan]

Recordings of Arrangements/Transcriptions of Bach’s Works

Conductor

As

Works

Saulius Sondeckis

Orchestra

Bach-Zilberquit: Concerto No. 2 in A minor (after A. Vivaldi), BWV 593, transcribed for keyboard and chamber orchestra
Bach-Zilberquit: Concerto No. 5 in D minor (after A. Vivaldi, BWV 596, transcribed for keyboard and chamber orchestra

Links to other Sites

Moscow Virtuosi (Official Website) [Russian/English]


Biographies of Performers: Main Page | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z
Explanation | Acronyms | Missing Biographies | The Sad Corner




 

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