viernes, 22 de abril de 2016

Recordando a Menuhin

In 1987, Yehudi Menuhin – one of the greatest violinists of the 20th century – was invited by the highest Soviet authorities to come to the USSR to play, after 17 years of absence. Filmmaker Bruno Monsaingeon followed Yehudi Menuhin during three weeks of rehearsals, concerts and meetings with the audience. This experience resulted in a three-hour long documentary, Return to the Roots. Here is the first part...



Movie director : Bruno Monsaingeon 

Collection : Our latest VOD releases 


Así empieza el artículo de Medici.TV sobre este documental dividido en tres partes que se rodó en los ya lejanos años 80 del siglo pasado y en el que podemos ver y escuchar a uno de los grandes violinistas de nuestro tiempo.
La página recuerda a este gigante de la música en un conjunto de actos que lleva por título Menuhin 100, ya que de haber vivido aún habría cumplido este 22 de abril los 100 años.


Homage to the world-famous violinist and conductor Yehudi Menuhin, who would have celebrated his 100th birthday on 22 April 2016:
Though he never lost his gentleness of mien, Yehudi Menuhin possessed great inner strength and a philosophy that sustained him through a hectic existence, lived out in the public gaze. As a child he seemed to have a charmed life. As an adult he appeared to wake up and find that he did not really know how to play the violin. Critics were forever comparing him with his younger self, even though the mature Menuhin was five times the musician. When he was at his best, the music seemed to flow out of him and infect all those around him. He cast a spell on all who met him.

1921: First violin lessons with Sigmund Anker.
1924: Official début in San Francisco with Lalo’s Symphonie espagnole; becomes a pupil of Louis Persinger.
1927: Meets George Enescu in Paris and becomes his pupil; earliest concerts in Paris and New York.
1929–30: Legendary concert under Bruno Walter in Berlin (concertos by Bach, Beethoven and Brahms), confirming his reputation as a child prodigy; studies with Adolf Busch in Basel.
1931–35: First world tour involving 110 concerts, taking Menuhin to the very limits of his endurance.
1935: Artistic crisis and temporary withdrawal from the world of music.
1938–45: Resumes his career and gives some 500 concerts for Allied troops during the Second World War.
1952: First visit to India; meets Ravi Shankar, with whom he subsequently gives many concerts and makes numerous recordings.
1957: First Menuhin Festival at Gstaad, Switzerland.
1959: Becomes Artistic Director of the Bach Festival; starts to conduct.
1963: Founds the Yehudi Menuhin School in England, where young musicians can receive their scholastic and musical education under one roof.
1969: Elected President of the International Music Council of UNESCO.
1976: Publishes his autobiography, Unfinished Journey.
1977: Founds the International Menuhin Music Academy for young graduate string players in Gstaad.
1992: Named UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador.
1993: Queen Elizabeth II creates Menuhin a life peer (as Baron Menuhin of Stoke d’Abernon); he had already been knighted in 1966 and received the Order of Merit in 1987.
1997: Inaugurates the Assembly of the Cultures of Europe under the auspices of the European Parliament.

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