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Josef Gingold Turns 100

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  • Josef Gingold Turns 100

    JOSEF GINGOLD TURNS 100
    Isidor Saslav

    Swans.com
    Dec 28 2009

    (Swans - December 28, 2009) Well, he would have turned 100 if he had
    still been alive. But no, Josef Gingold, one of the most celebrated
    teachers of the violin of the 20th century, had died in 1995 at the age
    of 86 after a lifetime of artistic achievement and the nurturing of
    great string-playing talent. Filled with deep appreciation thousands
    of attenders, including Mrs. Saslav and the author, became part of
    the audience at two concerts held in his memory, the first in the
    Main Auditorium on the campus of Indiana University in Bloomington on
    November 1, 2009. The next night, in downtown Indianapolis' Historical
    Society, a second and different concert was given, which we also
    attended, this one sponsored by the International Violin Competition
    of Indianapolis (IVCI), a competition that Gingold himself had helped
    to found in 1982.

    In fact, when one of the organizers conferred with Gingold about
    the parameters of the proposed competition he mentioned the prizes
    planned to be given, including prestigious tours and appearances
    and a first prize of $25,000. Gingold, at that time 73, blinked
    and humorously replied, "I'll start practicing myself!" Today Jaime
    Laredo, Gingold's one-time student, has taken over the directorship
    of that competition, which his erstwhile teacher had helped to found
    and which he had entreated Laredo to take over.

    Gingold can be counted as one of three celebrated American teachers
    of the violin who held the spotlight for most of the previous century.

    The Armenian-Parisian-American Ivan Galamian (1903-1981) had as two
    of his most outstanding prodigies Michael Rabin and Itzhak Perlman;
    while his one-time associate, the Kansan Dorothy DeLay (1917-2002)
    could count among her stable Midori and Sarah Chang. But the
    Polish-American Gingold (1909-1995) needed to take second place to
    no one, having produced such celebrated artists as Jaime Laredo and
    Joshua Bell as well as numerous subsequent concertmasters of leading
    American orchestras.

    In the midst of the two concerts described above, screenings were
    exhibited onstage of films documenting the life of the esteemed
    maestro, showing him arriving liner-borne in the United States as a
    boy and not long after, at age 18, residing in the country of Belgium.

    He had gone there to continue his studies with one of the most
    respected violinists and musicians of the age, Eugene Ysaye. When
    Gingold arrived back in the U.S. three years later he brought with
    him one of the greatest of 20th-century compositions soon to enter
    every concert violinist's repertoire and of which he was to give the
    North American premiere in New York, Ysaye's Ballade, Op. 27, No. 3,
    for unaccompanied violin. The Ballade was one of six sonatas for
    unaccompanied violin that Ysaye had modeled formally after the famous
    J.S. Bach solo sonatas for the same instrument. Ysaye had written these
    sonatas in the 1920s shortly before Gingold arrived. Evidently highly
    impressed by his young student's talents and capabilities Ysaye gave
    to Gingold the responsibility of giving the actual world premiere of
    the Ballade right there in Belgium.

    Jacques Israelovitch, former concertmaster of the Toronto Symphony,
    and, like me, also a former Gingold student, told us the story of this
    momentous premiere, as recounted to him by Gingold personally. The
    premiere was to take place at a banquet. And while the diners,
    including Ysaye himself, were busy enjoying themselves gastronomically,
    there was Gingold practicing away in the kitchen in preparation for
    the big event. Suddenly there came a moment when Gingold realized
    that he had forgotten how the work, then so new and unfamiliar,
    began. Quietly and carefully Gingold sneaked his way unobtrusively
    among the diners to where Ysaye himself was seated and explained his
    dilemma. Ysaye first laughed but then a quizzical look came over his
    face and he said, "You know, I've forgotten it myself!"

    One of Gingold's concert events in Belgium was his performance
    of Beethoven's Violin Concerto in Waterloo. Many decades later he
    was invited to perform the same concerto in the other Waterloo, the
    one in Iowa. Gingold said to me, during the days I studied with him,
    1961-64, "I'm probably the only violinist in the world who has played
    the Beethoven Violin Concerto in both Waterloos."

    Ysaye dedicated each sonata to a different celebrated violinist
    colleague: Szigeti, Kreisler, Enesco, etc. The Ballade was dedicated
    to Georges Enesco (1881-1955), like Ysaye himself not only a violinist
    but a composer as well. In the late 1940s in New York Enesco was still
    giving concerts and master classes. About to participate in one of
    these master classes was the soon-to-be-celebrated young violinist
    Sidney Harth, later concertmaster of the Chicago and other prestigious
    American orchestras. According to the story he told us, Harth, then
    a student in New York, decided to perform Ysaye's Ballade for Enesco
    inasmuch as the work had been dedicated to that very master class
    maestro. Enesco queried Harth, "What are you going to perform for me?"

    "Ysaye's Ballade, Maestro." "Show me that music," demanded Enesco.

    Enesco then proceeded to study the work very carefully for what seemed
    to Harth a long while. Finally Enesco handed the music back to Harth,
    looked up, and declared, "I hate this piece!"

    The fates of Josef Gingold and Indiana University had become entwined
    in 1959 when the noted musical empire builder, the late Dean Wilfred
    C. Bain, just recently arrived from the University of North Texas
    where he had accomplished a similar departmental buildup, had lured
    Gingold from his highly prestigious concertmastership of the Cleveland
    Orchestra under George Szell to join the faculty of illustrious stars
    Bain was just in the process of building in Bloomington. Already part
    of the brilliant array were pianist Menahem Pressler, by then famous
    as the founder of the Beaux Arts Trio; and cellist Janos Starker,
    who, besides his world-wide concertizing and recording, had been the
    principal cellist of the Dallas and Chicago Symphonies. Many another
    star was to join the ranks over the decades on other instruments as
    well: Philip Farkas on horn, James Pellerite on flute, Ted Baskin
    on oboe, Leonard Sharrow on bassoon, etc. When Dean Charles Webb
    succeeded Bain he carried on the traditions that made the (now
    "Jacobs") School of Music at Indiana University the largest, (1500
    students) and considered by many to be the finest university-based
    music school in the U.S., perhaps the world, highlighted especially by
    its long-renowned opera program ("A performance every Saturday night"
    was its slogan when I served as the opera orchestra's concertmaster in
    1961. Now several more nights of the week have also been added.) and
    its eight student orchestras. (There were only four when I was there.)

    Today the pattern of a star-filled faculty is being continued under
    the leadership of the present dean, Gwyn Richards, with such luminaries
    as Jaime Laredo, Joshua Bell, Mark Kaplan, and Jorja Flezanis forming
    the spine of the violin faculty. (Many further prominent names could
    of course be added, such as violinist Henryk Kowalski and conductors
    Arthur Fagen and David Effron.)

    After Gingold's auspicious New York debut in 1930, he settled in
    around town as a prominent freelancer and chamber musician. But
    when the legendary Arturo Toscanini was offered by NBC his own
    studio-based orchestra, soon to become famous over nationwide radio,
    and led by the "concertmaster of the century," Mischa Mischakoff,
    Gingold gladly accepted his invitation to join it. After some years
    in the NBC Symphony Gingold was offered the concertmastership of the
    Detroit Symphony under Karl Kruger, who had succeeded the late Ossip
    Gabrilowitsch, the orchestra's founder and only conductor up to his
    death in 1938. Gingold spent but a few seasons in Detroit before
    he was drafted by the Prague-American maestro George Szell to lead
    Szell's Cleveland Orchestra as concertmaster and help to turn his
    new orchestra into a world class ensemble with its own characteristic
    middle-European sheen and perfection of execution. In between symphony
    seasons Gingold would perform at various western music festivals
    including many years of collaboration with pianist Ralph Berkowitz
    in Albuquerque NM's annual chamber music events.

    But while in Detroit Gingold was able to exercise his
    later-to-become-legendary expertise as a teacher and developer of
    string talent. A young violin prodigy was brought to him and Gingold
    became his teacher for about six months. But at the end of that time
    Gingold went to the young boy's parents and said, "Your child has
    extraordinary talent and he must be sent to a famous teacher and
    a famous school where they can develop his talent to the full. I
    recommend Efrem Zimbalist and the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia."

    So the young boy left for Curtis at age 13 in 1945 and eventually
    became the prizewinner, concertmaster, chamber musician, and conductor
    whom we know so well, Joseph Silverstein.

    This procedure was paralleled in later years when another talented
    young teenager came to Gingold from San Francisco. This time Gingold
    spent two years with the young lad before also sending him on to
    where his talent could be most effectively developed. Thus did the
    young Jaime Laredo become a student of Ivan Galamian, likewise at
    the Curtis Institute, there to be prepared to eventually win the most
    prestigious violin prize in the world, The Queen Elizabeth of Belgium
    Prize, in 1959 at age 18, a prize established by the queen in honor
    of Gingold's one-time teacher, Ysaye.

    Galamian, when he established his world-renowned violin camp,
    Meadowmount, in the 1940s, could think of no one better to lead his
    chamber music department than Gingold; and Gingold served there in
    that capacity for decades. When Gingold arranged for me to attend
    Meadowmount in 1962 he indeed became my string quartet coach for that
    summer. Gingold astounded many by his ability to sing everyone's part
    by memory in the quartets he coached.

    But besides Gingold's expertise in chamber music his wealth of
    experience in the orchestra repertoire earned him the gratitude
    of aspiring orchestra violinists everywhere thanks to his 3-volume
    collection of orchestral excerpts. This rich and detailed compendium,
    filled with Gingold's own fingerings and bowings, has formed down
    through the years a most treasured item of assistance in the knapsack
    of many an ambitious audition taker.

    But as to his own teaching again, in his later years in Bloomington
    Gingold was once more approached by the parents of a great violin
    talent. This time the young performer didn't have to travel from
    anywhere to take his lessons with Gingold because his family lived
    right there in Bloomington. And this time Gingold felt no need to
    send his so-promising pupil anywhere else because he himself took
    over the full training of the young Joshua Bell and developed him
    into the prize-winning celebrity he was soon to become.

    (Speaking of Bell's prizes, when he was 13 Bell won the nationwide
    prize given by the American String Teachers' Association. I attended
    not long ago an annual ASTA convention in Albuquerque, where Bell was
    invited to perform a recital with pianist Jeremy Denk. Bell had just
    turned 40 and explained to the audience before the concert began
    that the last time he had performed for them was when he had won
    their prize 27 years before. It was nice to be invited back after
    all those years. Did I detect a note of sardonic irony in Bell's
    statement about his long-delayed re-invitation?)

    It was Bell, along with Laredo, and other former Gingold students
    like Andres Cardenes and Miriam Fried, who, during the two memorial
    concerts recently, filled the Bloomington and Indianapolis stages
    not only with their brilliant and affective performances but with
    their spoken reminiscences of Gingold and how he had invited them so
    warmly into his world and made them feel so welcome and appreciated
    and thus furthered their development both as human beings as well
    as performers. This was indeed my own experience of the man and his
    humanity and he served for me the same much-needed service in my own
    development as I'm sure he did for many of his other former students,
    many of whom were, no doubt, part of the audience as were we.

    To my mind a notable absentee at all these proceedings was the
    brilliant Canadian violinist, pianist, mathematician, and one-time
    Gingold student Cory Cerovsek. Cerovsek became at 12 years of age the
    youngest student in the history of Indiana University's music school
    in Bloomington. There he studied with Gingold in his mid-teens and
    graduated from Indiana University in both music and mathematics at
    the age of 17. Cerovsek, now at age 37, is in the midst of a highly
    successful touring and recording musical career. Gingold counted
    him as one of his favorite students and they even made a Canadian
    documentary film together about Cory's studies with him. I was highly
    surprised not to see him among the performers or attenders.

    Besides his encouragement and support, Gingold became the matchmaker
    to me and my wife of now 47 years, pianist Ann Heiligman, by putting
    us together as a collaborating pair in his studio. And not only that,
    he sent us off by playing at our wedding and convinced two other of
    our teachers, his colleagues Pressler and Starker, to join him! (We've
    been told that never before or since had this particular group of
    three stars performed publicly together as a chamber music ensemble
    except on this very special occasion.)

    So, Joe, wherever you may be on your hundredth anniversary, keep
    developing the violin talent of any angels you may find. They don't
    have to stick to just harps.
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