Violinist | A Young Violinist Clout - Augustin Hadelich
A young violinist who refuses applause? That the origin - and only a surface manifestation of what happens when a great talent grows outside the mainstream. Not only Hadelich raised on a farm in Tuscany, but his teacher and for years was his father a cellist, who took home the scores for modern violinists work hard the rest fled.
He spent his adolescence even more crucial in isolation, recovery from a fire at the age of 15 years, almost killed him and left him with scars.
Now, 27 years, Hadelich Juilliard graduate, spent three summers playing chamber music at the Marlboro Festival, and won many awards at 2006 International Violin Competition of Indianapolis. He has recorded four albums, a good schedule of commitments, but not overwhelming, from 80 a year, and the weight to deviate from the norm, if the public wants to hold applause during a program unorthodox, or ads not known, but looking acclaimed Thomas Violin Concerto (Concentric Paths) in front of a crowd considered moderate Chautauqua Institution in upstate New York.
"It 's difficult for all' ll be hard work. But the concert has an important place in the repertoire, and it is important that I learn whenever I can," he said.
His sense of urgency about the time arises repeatedly in a one-hour conversation in his spartan apartment in Upper West Side. He has already spent six months learning a modern solo to decide that he really loves you. "I wish I could get six months ago," he said.
He spent his adolescence even more crucial in isolation, recovery from a fire at the age of 15 years, almost killed him and left him with scars.
Now, 27 years, Hadelich Juilliard graduate, spent three summers playing chamber music at the Marlboro Festival, and won many awards at 2006 International Violin Competition of Indianapolis. He has recorded four albums, a good schedule of commitments, but not overwhelming, from 80 a year, and the weight to deviate from the norm, if the public wants to hold applause during a program unorthodox, or ads not known, but looking acclaimed Thomas Violin Concerto (Concentric Paths) in front of a crowd considered moderate Chautauqua Institution in upstate New York.
"It 's difficult for all' ll be hard work. But the concert has an important place in the repertoire, and it is important that I learn whenever I can," he said.
His sense of urgency about the time arises repeatedly in a one-hour conversation in his spartan apartment in Upper West Side. He has already spent six months learning a modern solo to decide that he really loves you. "I wish I could get six months ago," he said.
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