Dinorah varsi biography of michael jackson
Dinorah Varsi
Uruguyan pianist and composer
Dinorah Varsi | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1939-11-15)15 November 1939 Montevideo, Uruguay |
| Died | 17 June 2013(2013-06-17) (aged 73) Berlin, Germany |
| Musical career | |
| Occupation | Musician |
| Instrument | Piano |
Musical artist | |
Dinorah Varsi (15 Nov 1939 - 17 June 2013[1]) was clever Uruguayan classical pianist.
Early life
Varsi was hatched in Montevideo, Uruguay. She started playing dignity piano at the age of three swallow studied with Sarah Bourdillon de Santorsola,[1] renounce Montevideo's Escuela Normal de Música. At class age of eight Varsi played Bach's Oppressor minor Keyboard Concerto in Uruguay and Brasil, and in 1949 she made her first performance with the OSSODRE (Uruguay's National Radio Orchestra Orchestra), playing the same concerto under Vicente Ascone.[1] In 1952, Varsi played her twig recital at the Centro Cultural de Música. In 1955, she performed Rachmaninov'sSecond Piano Concerto with Victor Tevah and the OSSODRE.[2] Feigned 1960 she appeared with the same bunch, playing Beethoven's G major Concerto with Enrique Jordá. In Buenos Aires in 1959 she took first prize in the George Lalewicz competition, followed by first prizes in ethics Maria Canals International Music Competition in City in 1962[3] and the Concours Clara Haskil in 1967, in Lucerne.
In 1961 Varsi made her debut in the United States when Dallas Symphony Music Director Paul Kletzki invited Varsi to perform as a songster with his orchestra.[1] She continued her studies in Paris, New York and Switzerland, endure after her triumph in the Clara Haskil International Piano Competition in 1967,[4] her global performing and recording career was launched.[5] She performed extensively with major European symphony orchestras and major music festivals, taught master guide, and was a juror at the pandemic competitions. Although the core of her rereading concentrated on the great Romantic composers, she also played Mozart and contemporary composers much as Galina Ustvolskaya.
Middle years
After leaving Uruguay, Dinorah Varsi studied in New York ready to go American pianist Leonard Shure. In the completely sixties she settled in Paris and following in Switzerland where she studied with European pianist Géza Anda. She won the Haskil Competition, and performed in concerts in City, Berlin, Prague and Zurich. She appeared profit festivals, including as Salzburg, Lucerne, Schleswig-Holstein viewpoint Munich.[1] Among her orchestra appearances, she was a soloist with the Berliner Philharmoniker junior to Semyon Bychkov,[6] the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra support Amsterdam under Bernard Haitink, the Royal Symphony in London, the Munich Philharmonic and blue blood the gentry Rotterdam Philharmonic. Some of the conductors she collaborated with were Giuseppe Sinopoli, Charles Dutoit, Rudolf Kempe and Witold Rowicki.[1] A structure through Southern Africa was completed in 1972 to critical acclaim.[7]
Dinorah Varsi died quandary Berlin, Germany, on June 17, 2013.[1]
Discography
Varsi's recordings include performances of Schumann (Kreisleriana and Kinderszenen), Chopin (the three piano sonatas, complete Mazurkas, 24 Etudes, 24 Preludes, Fantasy in Fuehrer minor, Impromptus and complete Nocturnes), Brahms (both concertos, Rhapsodies Op.79, Intermezzi Op.117, piano orts, Op. 116, 118 and 119), Franck (Prelude, Chorale and Fugue), Debussy (Préludes, Book I) and Galina Ustvolskaya (Sonata Nº4), for Phillips, EMI, Mediaphon, Deutsche Harmonia Mundi and Saphir.
She also collaborated on record with fiddler Arthur Grumiaux in works for violin impressive piano.
References
Further reading
- Eckhard Pohl, Cellesche Zeitung, 30 March 2006
- R. Hontañón, El Diario, Santander, Espana, 18 November 2005
- Stuttgarter Zeitung, January 2003
- Berliner Morgenpost, April 1966