Violins Musicians


Violins Musicians
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Violins musicians includes composers and violinists. Some violins musicians listed below lived before 20th century:

  • Yehudi Menuhin (New York 1916 - Berlin 1999)
    A violinist and later an orchestra conductor.
  • At the age of 7 he became world famous when he performed Eduardo Lalo’s "Spanish Symphony".

  • Arcangelo Corelli (Fusignano, Ravenna 1653 - Rome 1713)
    An Italian composer and violinist whose playing style was to launch the technique of the 18th and 19th centuries, Corelli created chamber music that had a great influence on his successors.


  • Antonio Vivaldi (Venice 1678 - Vienna 1741)
    Composer and impresario for a theatre in Venice. It was Vivaldi who established the ternary format of the concerto (lively, slow, lively). He was also amongst the first to introduce the cadenze for soloists. The principle of the modern concerto, which implies a virtuoso interpretation of a perfect composition, is an integral part of Vivaldi’s last works. Besides his choral and religious compositions, Vivaldi left an enormous instrumental work, including 456 concertos, of which 223 for violin and orchestra, 22 for two violins, 27 for cello, 39 for bassoon, 13 for oboe as well as other concertos for viola d’amore, lute, theorbo, mandolin, piccolo, and 73 sonatas.


  • Johann-Sebastian Bach (Eisenach 1685 - Leipzig 1750)

  • He was a german composer and organist of the baroque period, and is almost universally regarded as one of the greatest composers of all time. His works, noted for their intellectual depth, technical command, and artistic beauty, have provided inspiration to nearly every musician in the European tradition, from Mozart to Schoenberg.

  • Giuseppe Tartini (Pirano 1692 - Padua 1770)
    Tartini, considered as one of the greatest violin masters. He left a vast repertoire for violinists: almost 150 concertos and 100 sonatas for the violin, the most famous being "The Devil’s Trill". He also wrote several theoretical treatises.


  • Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Salzburg 1756 - Vienna 1791)

  • The quantitative (over 600 works!) and qualitative significance of his music shows an immense power of imagination from his earliest years. He approached all genres with talent. Mozart composed with amazing facility and very often without even correcting his scores, as though inspired by the Hand of God...

  • Niccolò Paganini (Genoa 1782 - Nice 1840)
    Paganini’s influence on his contemporaries (Schubert, Schumann, Liszt) is without measure. He overshadowed even the greatest violinists of his day.



Links to Other Sources of Violins Musicians:


Violins Musicians http://library.thinkquest.org/27178/en/section/3/1.html
Violins Musicians http://www.theviolinsite.com/composers/index.html

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Violins Musicians