account
basket
Challenge Records Int. logo
Ivry Gitlis – in memoriam
Various composers

Ivry Gitlis

Ivry Gitlis – in memoriam

Price: € 89.95
Format: CD
Label: Rhine Classics
UPC: 4713106280196
Catnr: RH 019
Release date: 03 December 2021
Buy
CD (9 items)
✓ in stock
€ 89.95
Buy
 
Label
Rhine Classics
UPC
4713106280196
Catalogue number
RH 019
Release date
03 December 2021
Album
Artist(s)
Composer(s)
EN
DE

About the album

Ivry Gitlis (Haifa, 25 August 1922 – Paris, 24 December 2020)
In his latest years, Ivry listened to all our restored & remastered audio tracks, also via video-chats and over the phone, and being very pleased with the final result, he approved them for release, as his greatest wish was that his live legacy would never be forgotten. This CDs collection has been conceived as a double tribute to Ivry’s Art: posthumous, “in memoriam” of his death, and, in perspective, as a celebration for the Centenary of his birth.
Ivry Gitlis (Haifa, 25. August 1922 - Paris, 24. Dezember 2020)
In seinen letzten Lebensjahren hörte sich Ivry alle unsere restaurierten und neu gemasterten Tonspuren an, auch per Videochat und am Telefon, und weil er mit dem Endergebnis sehr zufrieden war, gab er sie zur Veröffentlichung frei, denn es war sein größter Wunsch, dass sein lebendiges Vermächtnis nie in Vergessenheit gerät. Diese CD-Sammlung wurde als doppelte Hommage an Ivrys Kunst konzipiert: posthum, "in memoriam" seines Todes, und perspektivisch als Feier zum hundertsten Jahrestag seiner Geburt.

Artist(s)

Ivry Gitlis (violin)

Yitzhak-Meir (Isaac) Gitlis was born in Haifa, Palestine Mandate to Jewish parents, who emigrated in 1921 from Kamianets- Podilskyi, Russia, now Ukraine. Gitlis acquired his first violin when he was five years old and started lessons under M.me Velikovsky together with his friend Zvi Zeitlin. He then studied privately with Mira Ben-Ami, a pupil of Joseph Szigeti. When he was eight, she arranged for him to play for Bronisław Huberman, which prompted a fundraising campaign to allow him to study in France. In 1933 he arrived with his mother in Paris and started to take lessons with Marcel Chailley, husband of the pianist Céliny Chailley-Richez. Being very close to their family, he was introduced to George Enescu and Jacques Thibaud. In that period he...
more

Yitzhak-Meir (Isaac) Gitlis was born in Haifa, Palestine Mandate to Jewish parents, who emigrated in 1921 from Kamianets- Podilskyi, Russia, now Ukraine.

Gitlis acquired his first violin when he was five years old and started lessons under M.me Velikovsky together with his friend Zvi Zeitlin. He then studied privately with Mira Ben-Ami, a pupil of Joseph Szigeti.

When he was eight, she arranged for him to play for Bronisław Huberman, which prompted a fundraising campaign to allow him to study in France.

In 1933 he arrived with his mother in Paris and started to take lessons with Marcel Chailley, husband of the pianist Céliny Chailley-Richez. Being very close to their family, he was introduced to George Enescu and Jacques Thibaud.

In that period he decided to change his birth name (Isaac) to Ivry. At 11, Gitlis (Jitlis) entered the Conservatoire de Paris in the class of Jules Boucherit, and graduated in 1935.

In 1938–1940, his teachers included George Enescu and Jacques Thibaud in Paris and Carl Flesch in Spa, Belgium and later in London.

In 1940, during World War II, he went to London where he first worked for two years in a war factory and was then assigned to the artists branch of the British Army. He gave numerous concerts for the Allied soldiers and in war factories.

After the war he made his successful debut with the London Philharmonic Orchestra and subsequently played with the BBC and all other principal orchestras of Great Britain.

In 1950, in Vienna, he made his first commercial recording with the Paganini/ Wilhelmj Concerto under the baton of Kurt Woss (Remington RLP-149-20).


less

Composer(s)

Press

Play album Play album

You might also like..

George Frideric Händel
Freedom - Oratorio Arias
La Sfera Armoniosa | Oscar Verhaar | Mike Fentross
Fratellanza
Paulus Schäfer - Joost Zoeteman Quartet
Bernhard Romberg
Good bye, great artist. Truly yours, Beethoven | 3 Grand Sonatas, Op. 5 for Harp and Cello
Simona Marchesi | Bartolomeo Dandolo Marchesi
Various
Feast of the Swan - Den Bosch Choirbook Vol. 4
Cappella Pratensis | Stratton Bull | Sollazzo Ensemble
Dedication II
Moisés P. Sánchez
Sunland
Olivier Le Goas
Max Richter
Recomposed, Vivaldi's Four Seasons
Daniel Rowland
Narcis
Jonas Timm
Gnar Gnar Rad | Jazz Thing Next Generation Vol. 102
Gnar Gnar Rad
Catharsis
Michiel Stekelenburg
Frédéric Chopin
The poor, sad angel (re-issue)
Nikolai Lugansky
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
The First Vienna Concertos | Piano Concertos Nos. 11-12-13
Ben Kim | Concertgebouw Chamber Orchestra