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21. Artists & Bios
both the william Kapell and Naumberg competitions and a Bronze Medalist at the TchaikovskyCompetition in Moscow, American pianist william wolfram has gained
http://www.cewm.org/aboutartist.html
Yehuda Hanani's Since winning or placing in numerous international violin competitions in the early 90s, violinist Kyung Sun Lee Brian Suits As violinist, violist and narrator, Toby Appel has appeared in recital and concerto performances throughout North and South America, Europe and the Far East. A most versatile artist, he has been a member of such renowned ensembles as TASHI, and the Lenox and Audubon String Quartets, a guest performer with the Vermeer, Manhatten and Composers Quartets, as well as a frequent guest with the Lincoln Center Chamber Music Society and with jazz artists Chick Corea and Gary Burton. He has participated in many of the leading music festivals in North America and Europe, including Mostly Mozart, Santa Fe, Bravo! Colorado, and Marlboro. Mr. Appel can be heard in chamber and recital recordings on the Columbia, Delos, Desto, Koch International, Opus 1, and Musical Heritage Society labels. He is currently on the viola and chamber music faculties at The Juilliard School and Carnegie Mellon University. Since making his debut with the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra under Zubin Mehta, twenty six year old pianist

22. The Seattle Times: Classical Music & Dance: Soprano's Opening Act Is Evening's H
On Friday evening, Sieden and pianist william wolfram offered a recital of six opulentRichard Strauss songs that were a perfect showcase for Sieden's radiant
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/classicalmusicdance/134497800_fest22.html

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Monday, July 22, 2002 - 12:00 a.m. Pacific
Concert Review
Soprano's opening act is evening's high note By Melinda Bargreen

Seattle Times music critic E-mail this article Print this article Search web archive This time, the best came first. The pre-concert recital at the Seattle Chamber Music Society's Summer Festival brought forth soprano Cyndia Sieden, best known for her international opera appearances as the coloratura Queen of the Night. On Friday evening, Sieden and pianist William Wolfram offered a recital of six opulent Richard Strauss songs that were a perfect showcase for Sieden's radiant, crystal-clear soprano. Wolfram was a supportive, but not overly retiring, partner at the keyboard. Sieden's voice sounded easy, natural and exquisitely controlled (as in the gorgeous fadeout at the end of "Sehnsucht"). The emotional spectrum of the songs was fully rendered, and Sieden proved that she can be utterly charming without any of the cloying mannerisms all too often characteristic of lieder singing. Concert review
The Seattle Chamber Music Society's Summer Festival, recital and concert, Friday night (concerts continue through this Friday), Lakeside School, Seattle; 206-283-8808.

23. The Seattle Times: Arts & Entertainment: Chamber Festival Ends With Flair
Violinist Scott Yoo, cellist Ronald Thomas and pianist william wolfram blazed throughthe four movements, squeezing out every drop of mellifluous sound from
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/artsentertainment/134502339_fest29.html

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Monday, July 29, 2002 - 11:38 a.m. Pacific
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Concert Review
Chamber festival ends with flair By Emily Russin

Special to The Seattle Times E-mail this article Print this article Search web archive The all-around stellar performances made it all the more difficult to accept that we're going to have to wait until the Seattle Chamber Music Society's January events to outdo Friday's combinations of players and pieces. The Seattle Chamber Music Society's Summer Festival
St. Nicholas Hall at Lakeside School, Friday evening. Frautschi, in an elegant red top surrounded by men in white dinner jackets (violinist David Chan, violist Marcus Thompson and cellist Bion Tsang), is someone to keep tabs on; let's hope she books a return trip next year. Anton Nel, who nearly took the roof off Lakeside's MacKay Chapel with his staggeringly varied recital of Handel, Debussy, and Liszt earlier in the evening, joined violinist Viviane Hagner, violist Cynthia Phelps and cellist Toby Saks for Fauré's devastating Quartet for Piano and Strings in C Minor (started by the composer when he was engaged and finished after his love dumped him). The three women, who glided onstage in eye-popping floor-length gowns, played with absolute conviction and wonderful unison during lyrical moments and frenzied tempos alike. Phelps' viola didn't quite emerge from the maelstrom until a lovely solo passage in the final

24. The Juilliard School - Press Release Archives
pianist Willian wolfram is a former medalist at the william Kapell, Naumburg, andTchaikovsky competitions and an active recitalist, concerto soloist, and
http://www.juilliard.edu/press/archive/pr122000_2.html
mmRelative = "../../images/mainmenu/"; mmActive = ""; subRelative = "../../images/submenu/"; subActive = ""; targRelative = "../../images/"; Select... Application, College Audition Requirements Bookstore Contact Us Dance Division Directions Drama Division Faculty - Dance Faculty - Drama Faculty - Music FAQs Financial Aid Jazz Studies Job Openings Music Division Residence Life Vocal Arts/Opera
mmActivate(mmActive); Press Release December 20, 2000 Contact: Jenna Soleo
Violist and Violinist Toby Appel and Friends Continue
The Juilliard School's
Daniel Saidenberg Faculty Recital Series in January
With a Concert Featuring the World Premiere of
Kenji Bunch's Trio on Tuesday, January 23
At 8 PM in the Juilliard Theater Repertoire also includes Rebecca Clarke’s
Passacaglia on an Old English Tune for Viola and Piano (1943) and Prelude, Allegro and Pastorale

25. Shepherd Express Metro: Night And Day
Almond's recording of the complete Brahms violin sonatas, with pianist william wolfram,was an auspicious CD release and another major accomplishment of recent
http://www.shepherd-express.com/shepherd/22/26/night_and_day/night_and_day.html
June 28, 2001 Volume 22, Issue 26
Night and Day - by Rick Walters Classical Hit Parade
The best concerts from the season just ended

After more than 20-plus adult years of constant concert-going, I still feel that sense of possibility at most concerts. My appreciation of the art of live performance continues to grow, as does the realization that the undistracted focus it allows is a treasured luxury, even a refuge. I certainly didn't make it to every performance in town this classical season, but I suppose I was able to take in more than most. The structure of reviewing one event per week makes it tough at times to choose just one performance to cover. Luckily, my appetite for live music gets me to quite a few more concerts than those I review. In no particular order, here are the top ten highlights of the 2000-2001 Milwaukee classical season: 2. The thick melancholia of the second movement of the Piano Concerto by Samuel Barber, as played by John Browning, the original performer from the 1962 premiere, was the most moving moment of the MSO season. Barber's spirit was in the room. 3. Chamber music in Milwaukee got a good kick in the pants with the debut of the Prometheus Trio, featuring Samatha George on violin, Scott Tisdel on cello and Stefanie Jacob on piano. Their April performance of the Ravel Piano Trio was sizzling.

26. Shepherd Express Metro: A List
Piano Jazz Veteran East Coast jazz pianist Fred Hersch filled and wowed a smallvenue in william wolfram Almost all of Chopin's output was for solo piano.
http://www.shepherd-express.com/shepherd/22/11/night_and_day/a_list.html
March 15, 2001 Volume 22, Issue 11
A List Spotlight: Tinker with Rock
Honesty is a ragged flag still flown by a few rock 'n' roll artists in this plastic age of prefab pop, and it flutters like a banner in the wind on Tinker's CD, Blackthorn . There isn't a false emotional note to be heard, not a posture in evidence or a pretense trying to express itself. On disc, the Milwaukee songwriter and band leader (he answers to Tinker as a soloist and the band also bears his name) has assembled a collection of songs that hover uneasily between folk and rock. Their origins on acoustic guitar are audible. "Music by people who mean it: that's the credo we live by," Tinker says softspokenly, without a hint of bombast. Blackthorn is hard to categorize; it's difficult to find a comparison, but when Tinker, pressed for a musical role model, cites Throwing Muses, the reference makes sense. Tinker doesn't actually sound like them as much as inhabit a space similarly free from the tired expectations of how a rock band, even an alternative one, should position itself. The group of old friends who helped Tinker record Blackthorn -drummer Dave Hahn, guitarist Michael Brandenburg (who also plays in Ka) and bassist Andy Schneider-gradually coalesced into a working unit behind their band leader's earnest, often pensive, spiritually searching lyrics and melodies. They have played around Wisconsin and neighboring states, even as their leader launches his own solo coffeehouse tours and pens the poems he plans to publish as a booklet this summer. "It's the rock 'n' roll of today," he says of the group effort. "If you're looking for 12-bar blues or Bob Seger barroom brawling, that's not what we are."

27. March 2003 Music Calendar
Opera of Chicago, Northwestern faculty pianist Elizabeth Buccheri the world premiereof william Bolcom’s by mimes Alexander Neander and wolfram von Bodecker.
http://www.northwestern.edu/univ-relations/media_relations/releases/2003_02/musi
Northwestern University News Release
MEDIA CONTACT: Judy Moore at (847) 491-4819 or at jkm229@northwestern.edu February 10, 2003 March 2003 Music Calendar A variety of choral groups, instrumental ensembles and dramatists will showcase their talents in the unique format of the School of Music Prism Concert (March 6). Guitarist Oscar Ghiglia will make his annual visit to Northwestern (March 30) to perform baroque to contemporary guitar works. For more information, call the Pick-Staiger Concert Office at (847) 491-5441, or go to the Pick-Staiger Web site at www.northwestern.edu/pick-staiger . To order tickets, call the Pick-Staiger Ticket Office at (847) 467-4000. University Chorale, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, March 2, Pick-Staiger Concert Hall. This annual Chicago-area event showcasing dozens of student composers will be held at Northwestern for the first time. Featuring student and professional performers from several Chicago colleges and universities. Distinguished composer and pianist William Bolcom will present a public lecture and coach student performance. All five concerts are admission-free. Elizabeth Buccheri, opera master class, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 4, Lutkin Hall.

28. Media RelationsNews Releases
Leo Sowerby, George Crumb and william Albright Performers include pianist PatrickSinozich and horn will present three world premieres wolfram Wagner's Second
http://www.northwestern.edu/univ-relations/media/news-releases/*archives97-98/*f
CONTACT: Judy Moore at (847) 491-4819 or by e-mail at jkm229@nwu.edu FOR RELEASE: Immediate
    February 1998 Music Calendar
    MUSIC
    The Northwestern University School of Music has scheduled a variety of musical events during the winter quarter. Among the highlights in February are the Alice Millar Birthday Concert, the performance of all six Beethoven Quartets, a musical theater production of ³The Tales of Hoffmann,² orchestral concerts, jazz and contemporary musical performances, faculty recitals and several exciting guest artists and renowned international ensembles including the Albert McNeil Jubilee Singers, the Bartok Quartet, organist Martin Jean and legendary classical and flamenco guitarist Pepe Romero. The following performances will take place at Pick-Staiger Concert Hall, 1977 South Campus Drive on the Arts Circle, Evanston Campus, unless otherwise noted. Cahn Auditorium is at 600 Emerson Street. Lutkin Hall is at 700 University Place. Alice Millar Chapel is at 1870 Sheridan Road. Regenstein Recital Hall is at 1965 South Campus Drive. All are located on the Evanston campus of Northwestern University and are accessible to the disabled. To order tickets by phone, call (847) 467-4000. For information, call (847) 491-5441. For a recorded listing of upcoming performances, call the Concert Hotline: (847) 467-PICK (7425). The Pick-Staiger Web site is >www.nwu.edu/pick-staiger FEBRUARY 1998 Martin Jean, organ: 5 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 1. Winner of the Grand Prix de Chartres and the American Guild of Organists¹ National Young Artists Competition, Yale Professor Martin Jean presents the second in a yearlong series of organ recitals at the Alice Millar Chapel. This concert is cosponsored by the North Shore Chapter of the American Guild of Organists. Tickets are $11 for the general public; $7.50 for senior citizens and Northwestern faculty and staff; and $5 for full-time students.

29. Chamber Music Festival Concert Taps Rich Vein Of Emotions
a work rich in the sensuous discoveries of that emotion, brought out in a splendidperformance by violinist Jennifer Frautschi and pianist william wolfram.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/classical/79845_sfest24q.shtml
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OUR AFFILIATES
Chamber music festival concert taps rich vein of emotions Thursday, July 25, 2002 By PHILIPPA KIRALY
SPECIAL TO THE POST-INTELLIGENCER Seattle Chamber Music Festival opened its last week on the same high notes that have characterized it this year beautiful weather and high-class music making. MUSIC REVIEW SEATTLE CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL COMPOSERS: Faure, Cotton, Schubert
WHERE: Lakeside School
WHEN: Monday night; festival ends tomorrow night And the first work on Monday night's program also followed a probably unwitting mini-theme of the festival a piece written in the throes of love. This one, a Sonata for violin and piano in A Major, was by a young Faure: a work rich in the sensuous discoveries of that emotion, brought out in a splendid performance by violinist Jennifer Frautschi and pianist William Wolfram. Frautschi, a 1999 Avery Fisher Career Grant winner, is one of several talented newcomers to the festival this year who are adding a fresh and youthful look to the roster of players. The honeyed tone she draws from her violin has depth as well as sweetness, and both she and Wolfram, a

30. Chamber Program Features Exceptional Music-making
the three musicians captured deftly. pianist william wolfram wasan effective partner. Mozart's Quartet in C (K. 465) followed.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/classical/79466_sfest22q.shtml
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OUR AFFILIATES
Chamber program features exceptional music-making Monday, July 22, 2002 By R.M. CAMPBELL
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER MUSIC CRITIC Pleasures were abundant Friday night at the Seattle Chamber Music Festival. The concert had much to offer, in music and music-making. There was a Mozart string quartet, a late song cycle of Dmitri Shostakovich and Dvorak's felicitous Piano Quintet in A. MUSIC REVIEW SEATTLE CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL COMPOSERS: Popper, Mozart, Shostakovich and Dvorak
MUSICIANS: Ronald Thomas, Toby Saks, Viviane Hagner, Cyndia Sieden and others
WHEN: Friday night, through July 26
WHERE: Lakeside School, 14050 First Ave. N.E.
TICKETS: $25-$32, with student/senior discounts; 206-283-8808 However, none of these works opened the concert: Instead, it was David Popper's warm and embracing "Requiem," a moving tribute to Carol Gellert, a member of the festival's board who died in January. This no ordinary requiem. There is no text, no orchestra, no chorus, indeed, no singers at all, just three cellos with discreet piano accompaniment. Nevertheless, the intent of the late-19th and early-20th-century Czech composer was the same.

31. WVMA Alpha Listing Of Programs
Mantovani Orchestra. 198788. Mantovani Orchestra. 2000-01, Marion PhilharmonicOrchestra with william wolfram. 1989-90. Marvin Hamlisch - pianist and Comedian.
http://www.mgins.com/WVMA/wvmaalpha.htm
Wabash Valley Music Association
List of Programs Through The Years
List of Programs by Year "1776" - Musical Celebration of American's Bicenten n ial "42nd Street" "A Christmas Carol" "A Christmas Carol" "A Christmas Carol" "Anything Goes" "Babes In Toyland" "Brigadoon" "Bye Bye Birdie" "Cabaret" "Carousel" "Carmen" "Children of a Lesser God" "Cinderella" "Evita" "Hello Dolly" "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dream Coat" "Madama Butterfly" "Mame" "Merry Widow" "Mikado" "Music Man" "My Fai r Lady" "Nunsense" "Peter Pan" "Porgy & Bess" "Shenandoah" "Show Boat" "South Pacific" "Swan Lake" by the St Petersburg State Ice Ballet "The Will Rogers Follies A Life In Revue" "Victor, Victoria"

32. 1921-2001: Omaha Symphony's 80th Anniversary Season
Internationallyacclaimed pianist william wolfram has earned awards, praise andmillions of listeners, having appeared prominently in the public television
http://www.omahasymphony.org/news/0102Season/091802.html
Home
To Receive Images, Additional Information,
or To Schedule Interviews -
CONTACT: Gil Cohen, Director of Marketing
gcohen@omahasymphony.org

Yampolsky receives doctorate from UNO (photo)
Is there a doctorate in the house?
Omaha Symphony conductor to be honored with UNO degree
First Symphony CD Tugs at the Heart Strings

New Music Competition 2002!

Omaha Symphony Announces 2002 -2003 Season
Symphony Hires Planned Giving Manager
The University of Nebraska at Omaha granted Omaha Symphony music director Victor Yampolsky an honorary doctor of letters degree at commencement, May 10. For seven seasons Yampolsky has served as music director of the Omaha Symphony, raising the artistic level of the orchestra through his work on the symphony's MasterWorks and Chamber series. "I am able to accept this honor in part because of the knowledge that I share with the musicians and the public in the Midlands," said Yampolsky. "But the honor reflects on those in this city and in my own life from whom I have learned so much." "I'm lucky to be here in this very special community, which combines deep understanding of classical music with modesty and unselfishness."

33. Jupiter Symphony Reviews
Famous soloists like pianist Ruth Laredo and Sara Davis Buechner would concert featuringflutist Barry Crawford and pianists Adam Neiman and william wolfram.
http://www.jupitersymphony.com/Reviews.htm
" Music-making at its very best." Harris Goldsmith New York Post "Concerts by the Jupiter Symphony are among the most consistently satisfying in town. Mr. Nygaard's music-making is wonderfully natural; his program is refreshing." Anthony Tommasini, The New York Times. "If you haven't heard Jupiter, your idea of what a classical concert can communicate is rather limited." Leighton Kerner, The Village Voice. "Nygaard-style Mozart means some of the finest Mozart available these days." Leighton Kerner The Village Voice "The performance of Respichi's Triptych was a dazzler. Carnegie Hall was washed in some really gorgeous tone." Leighton Kerner The Village Voice "Jens Nygaard made of Beethoven's Eighth Symphony a sparkling, beautifully proportioned jewel. It must be a pleasure for an orchestra musician to play under so secure a technician." Harold C. Schonberg

34. Biographical Listing/W - Wikipedia
turned hostage negotiator; Waits, Tom, singer, songwriter, pianist; wolfram, Stephen,computer scientist and author; Wollaston, william Hyde, chemist;
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biographical_Listing/W
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35. Brahms Violin Sonatas, Soundpost Online Spring '01
Frank Almond, concertmaster of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra since 1995, is joinedby pianist william wolfram in Brahms’ Three Sonatas for Violin and Piano
http://www.soundpostonline.com/archive/spring2001/BrahmsViolinSonatas.htm
..cd review:
Brahms Without Airs Reviewed by Michael Adams In an era when classical recordings are disappearing from store shelves about as fast as DVD players (but for sadly different reasons), it’s refreshing to see a disc by a violinist other than the usual suspects, like Shaham, Perlman, Mutter, Kennedy, Zukerman et.al.
Frank Almond, concertmaster of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra since 1995, is joined by pianist William Wolfram in Brahms’ Three Sonatas for Violin and Piano. (Boolean Recordings; available at www.sonatabop.com ) Rare are the people who can wear two hats - of both concertmaster and soloist - with distinction. They are very different roles, requiring unique skills. However, this disc shows that the small fraternity that includes Joe Silverstein and Glenn Dicterow might well have a new member. Let me start by saying what this recording does NOT have. There is a refreshing lack of affected gesture, like glissandos, rubatos and agogic accents in the predictable places. Almond is clearly a musician of exquisite taste and technical polish. Missing are distracting instrumental mannerisms which so often get in the way of simple music making. The same can be said of Wolfram. His playing is warm and finely attuned to the unique characters of each sonata, and he handles the often athletic and unwieldy piano writing with great finesse and expressive touch.

36. Dallas Symphony Orchestra
American pianist william wolfram headlines concerts October 911,2003, which include Liszt’s popular tone poem Les Preludes.
http://www.dallassymphony.com/?crs=pr&article=56

37. Artist Roster
s Best New Artist in 1998 Earl Wild Classical pianist, transcriber, composer NancyWeekley Robert Weirich The Wentworths Earl Wild John williams william wolfram,
http://www.baldwinpiano.com/about/roster.html
Download The Artist Program which includes selected profiles of Baldwin Artists, Legends and Baldwin onstage, plus a complete artist roster.
You will need Adobe Acrobat Reader to view this document. Go here to download Acrobat Reader 5.0
With a high-energy stage show and a steady stream of smart pop songs, Ben Folds Five has become one of the top performing and recording acts today. The group, featuring pianist, vocalist and principal composer Ben Folds at the Baldwin grand piano, is currently on tour around the world to support its latest recording.
Since the release of his first album in 1986, Bruce Hornsby has amassed an impressive list of credits. In addition to winning multiple Grammy Awards, Hornsby has composed Top Ten songs for artists including Don Henley and Huey Lewis. He has also performed on more than 70 recordings, including albums by Bob Dylan, Bonnie Raitt and The Grateful Dead.
For more than two decades, Diane Schuur has set the musical world on fire with her jazz-drenched vocal and piano style. She has taken her talent on tour around the world, worked with master musicians including B.B. King, Ray Charles and Quincy Jones, recorded more than a dozen albums and earned two Grammy Awards in the process.
John Willams is one of the most respected and honored composers of film and concert music today. He has composed the music for more than 70 feature films including “Schindler’s List,” “Jurassic Park,” “E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial,” “Star Wars” and "Superman." He has received dozens of Academy Award nominations as well as Emmy, Oscar and Grammy awards.

38. City Pages: Grand Teuton
club. Beautiful black Steinways were dutifully tuned to order for theafternoon's featured pianist, william wolfram. The Orchestra's
http://www.citypages.com/databank/20/971/article7770.asp
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  • MPR's Broadcasts of the Minnesota Orchestra by Peter Ritter THE MINNESOTA ORCHESTRA'S 20th Viennese Sommerfest got off in grand style last week with much waltzing and fanfare courtesy of the Strausses. There was moonlit dancing in the "Marktplatz" (Peavey Plaza), an occasional
  • 39. Meet The Composer - Composer Contacts
    william Harper No Age music for stage and air; John Winsor; Steven Winteregg Composer,pianist, improviser and Kirk Whipple; Mark wolfram Includes musical samples
    http://www.meetthecomposer.org/contacts.htm

    Please send us an e-mail with your full name, web address, snail mail address and phone number (optional). Please be careful when typing in your web address ! You may also send us a one-line description of yourself and/or your music, which we'll post under your URL. Meet The Composer is not a membership organization, and there is no charge for this service. This area of the site is updated on a regular basis.

    40. Www.parkerartists.com
    with American String Quartet 4/3/2003 (8pm) MUSIC OF THE SPHERES Ethical CultureSociety (NYC) Brahms Clarinet Sonata 2 with william wolfram, pianist 4/26
    http://www.parkerartists.com/NewPages/manspage.html
    Among the most distinguished classical artists of his generation, the American clarinetist JON MANASSE is internationally recognized for his inspiring artistry, uniquely glorious sound and charismatic performing style. at the international ClarinetFest '97 at Texas Tech University in Lubbock. Of special distinction is Mr. Manasse's 2002 London debut in a Barbican Centre performance of Mozart's Clarinet Concerto with Gerard Schwarz and the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields. An avid chamber musician, Jon Manasse has been featured in New York City programs with The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center and at Carnegie Hall's Weill Recital Hall, Alice Tully Hall, Walter Reade Theatre (on Lincoln Center's "Great Performers Series"), The Sylvia & Danny Kaye Playhouse and Merkin Concert Hall; at the Caramoor International Music Festival, Newport Music Festival, Seattle Chamber Music Festival, Colorado's Colorado Springs Music Festival and Crested Butte Chamber Music Festival, the Cape and Islands Chamber Music Festival in Massachusetts, Sarasota Music Festival, Tucson Winter Chamber Music Festival, St. Bart's Music Festival and France's Festival International des Arts; and with Germany's Trio Parnassus and the Manhattan, Shanghai, Borromeo, Moscow and Ying String Quartets. His week-long residency at the University of Massachusetts culminated in a wildly received, sold-out recital.
    Following a summer highlighted by his London debut in a Barbican Centre performance of Mozart's

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