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== Biography ==
== Biography ==
=== Child prodigy ===
=== Child prodigy ===
Starker was born in [[Budapest]] to a father of [[Poles|Polish]] descent and a mother who had immigrated from [[Ukraine]], both Jewish. His two older brothers were violinists, and the young János (named for the hospital in which he was born) was given a cello before his sixth birthday. A child prodigy, Starker made his first public performances at ages six and seven. He entered the [[Franz Liszt Academy of Music]] in [[Budapest]] to study with [[Adolf Schiffer]] and made his debut there at age 11. Starker began teaching other children at age eight, and by the time he was 12, he had five pupils. Starker counts among his strongest influences [[Leo Weiner]], a composer who taught chamber music. [[Zoltán Kodály]], [[Béla Bartók]] and [[Ernő Dohnányi]] were also members of the Liszt Academy faculty.
Starker was born in [[Budapest]] to a father of [[Poles|Polish]] descent and a mother who had immigrated from [[Ukraine]], both Jewish. His two older brothers were violinists, and the young János (named for the hospital in which he was born) was given a cello before his sixth birthday. A child prodigy, Starker made his first public performances at ages six and seven. He entered the [[Franz Liszt Academy of Music]] in [[Budapest]] to study with [[Adolf Schiffer]] and made his debut there at age 11. Starker began teaching other children at age eight, and by the time he was 12, he had five pupils. Starker counted among his strongest influences [[Leo Weiner]], a composer who taught chamber music. [[Zoltán Kodály]], [[Béla Bartók]] and [[Ernő Dohnányi]] were also members of the Liszt Academy faculty.


Starker made his professional debut at age 14, playing the [[Cello Concerto (Dvořák)|Dvořák concerto]] with three hours' notice when the originally scheduled soloist was unable to play. He left the Liszt Academy in 1939 and spent most of the war in [[Budapest]]. Because of his youth, Starker escaped the tragic fate of his older brothers, who were pressed into forced labor and eventually murdered by the Nazis. Starker nevertheless spent three months in a [[Nazi concentration camps|Nazi internment camp]].
Starker made his professional debut at age 14, playing the [[Cello Concerto (Dvořák)|Dvořák concerto]] with three hours' notice when the originally scheduled soloist was unable to play. He left the Liszt Academy in 1939 and spent most of the war in [[Budapest]]. Because of his youth, Starker escaped the tragic fate of his older brothers, who were pressed into forced labor and eventually murdered by the Nazis. Starker nevertheless spent three months in a [[Nazi concentration camps|Nazi internment camp]].
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He gave a successful concert in Vienna, then remained there to prepare for the [[Geneva]] Cello Competition, held in October 1946. He lost to his student, [[Eva Janzer]].
He gave a successful concert in Vienna, then remained there to prepare for the [[Geneva]] Cello Competition, held in October 1946. He lost to his student, [[Eva Janzer]].


After observing a horrific concert by the former child prodigy [[Yehudi Menuhin]], Starker had an epiphany. He describes himself as becoming physically ill from the realization that he had little idea, from a technical standpoint, how he really played the cello. "I played like a blind man," he has said. "What happens to the bird who flies and doesn't know how it flies? That's what happens to child prodigies."<ref>[http://www.cello.org/Newsletter/Articles/hoffman.htm Conversation with Gary Hoffman (one of Starker's students)]</ref> Starker spent a year analyzing all aspects of his technique. By October of the following year, he had regained his confidence. His studies and exercises he wrote for his friend [[George Bekefi]] ultimately resulted in his famous essay and published cello method, "An Organized Method of String Playing".
After observing a horrific concert by the former child prodigy [[Yehudi Menuhin]], Starker had an epiphany. He describes himself as becoming physically ill from the realization that he had little idea how he really played the cello from a technical standpoint. "I played like a blind man," he has said. "What happens to the bird who flies and doesn't know how it flies? That's what happens to child prodigies."<ref>[http://www.cello.org/Newsletter/Articles/hoffman.htm Conversation with Gary Hoffman (one of Starker's students)]</ref> Starker spent a year analyzing all aspects of his technique. By October of the following year, he had regained his confidence. His studies and exercises he wrote for his friend [[George Bekefi]] ultimately resulted in his famous essay and published cello method, "An Organized Method of String Playing".


Starker, still in [[Visa (document)|visa]] limbo, went from Geneva to Paris, where he spent a year. There he made his first recording of [[Zoltán Kodály|Kodaly's]] monumental [[Sonata for Solo Cello (Kodály)|Solo Cello Sonata, Op. 8]],<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4MEUIGjfHNw&feature=related Kodaly Cello (Solo) Sonata]</ref> a work which some people considered technically unplayable before that time. The recording earned him the [[Grand Prix du Disque]] and cemented his fame. He went on to make three more recordings of the work.
Starker, still in [[Visa (document)|visa]] limbo, went from Geneva to Paris, where he spent a year. There he made his first recording of [[Zoltán Kodály|Kodaly's]] monumental [[Sonata for Solo Cello (Kodály)|Solo Cello Sonata, Op. 8]],<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4MEUIGjfHNw&feature=related Kodaly Cello (Solo) Sonata]</ref> a work which some people considered technically unplayable before that time. The recording earned him the [[Grand Prix du Disque]] and cemented his fame. He went on to make three more recordings of the work.
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== Playing style ==
== Playing style ==
Starker's playing style was intense and involved great technical mastery. According to some of his students, his technique revolved around long, [[legato]] notes, with very little shifting noise from his left hand, resulting in smooth, pure tones, "each note sounding like a jewel." Starker himself described his sound as "centered" and "focused." He was known for his ability to produce an extremely wide range of sounds and tone shading. He eschewed the wide vibrato favored by some of his peers—which he views as a cover for poor intonation—and was known for his patrician stage presence, preferring to let the music do the emoting. He quoted his long-time friend and colleague, [[György Sebők]], who said, "Create excitement. Don't get excited."
Starker's playing style was intense and involved great technical mastery. According to some of his students, his technique revolved around long, [[legato]] notes, with very little shifting noise from his left hand, resulting in smooth, pure tones, "each note sounding like a jewel." Starker himself described his sound as "centered" and "focused." He was known for his ability to produce an extremely wide range of sounds and tone shading. He eschewed the wide vibrato favored by some of his peers—which he viewed as a cover for poor intonation—and was known for his patrician stage presence, preferring to let the music do the emoting. He quoted his long-time friend and colleague, [[György Sebők]], who said, "Create excitement. Don't get excited."


== Trivia ==
== Trivia ==

Revision as of 18:05, 6 November 2013

János Starker in 2009.

János Starker (Hebrew: יאנוש סטארקר, Hungarian: Starker János; July 5, 1924 – April 28, 2013[1]) was a Hungarian-American cellist. From 1958 until his death, he taught at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music, where he held the title of Distinguished Professor.

Biography

Child prodigy

Starker was born in Budapest to a father of Polish descent and a mother who had immigrated from Ukraine, both Jewish. His two older brothers were violinists, and the young János (named for the hospital in which he was born) was given a cello before his sixth birthday. A child prodigy, Starker made his first public performances at ages six and seven. He entered the Franz Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest to study with Adolf Schiffer and made his debut there at age 11. Starker began teaching other children at age eight, and by the time he was 12, he had five pupils. Starker counted among his strongest influences Leo Weiner, a composer who taught chamber music. Zoltán Kodály, Béla Bartók and Ernő Dohnányi were also members of the Liszt Academy faculty.

Starker made his professional debut at age 14, playing the Dvořák concerto with three hours' notice when the originally scheduled soloist was unable to play. He left the Liszt Academy in 1939 and spent most of the war in Budapest. Because of his youth, Starker escaped the tragic fate of his older brothers, who were pressed into forced labor and eventually murdered by the Nazis. Starker nevertheless spent three months in a Nazi internment camp.

Professional career

After the war, Starker became principal cellist of the Budapest Opera and the Budapest Philharmonic Orchestras. Starker, who had never been granted Hungarian citizenship, left the Soviet-occupied country in 1946.

He gave a successful concert in Vienna, then remained there to prepare for the Geneva Cello Competition, held in October 1946. He lost to his student, Eva Janzer.

After observing a horrific concert by the former child prodigy Yehudi Menuhin, Starker had an epiphany. He describes himself as becoming physically ill from the realization that he had little idea how he really played the cello from a technical standpoint. "I played like a blind man," he has said. "What happens to the bird who flies and doesn't know how it flies? That's what happens to child prodigies."[2] Starker spent a year analyzing all aspects of his technique. By October of the following year, he had regained his confidence. His studies and exercises he wrote for his friend George Bekefi ultimately resulted in his famous essay and published cello method, "An Organized Method of String Playing".

Starker, still in visa limbo, went from Geneva to Paris, where he spent a year. There he made his first recording of Kodaly's monumental Solo Cello Sonata, Op. 8,[3] a work which some people considered technically unplayable before that time. The recording earned him the Grand Prix du Disque and cemented his fame. He went on to make three more recordings of the work.

Starker emigrated to the United States in 1948 to become principal cellist of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra under Antal Doráti. In 1949, he moved to New York to become principal cellist of the Metropolitan Opera under Fritz Reiner. It was in New York that Starker made the first of his acclaimed recordings of the Bach Cello Suites. Starker's technical mastery led some to suspect, incorrectly, that the recordings were electronically altered; his experiments with microphone placement and recording techniques drew the attention of engineers at MIT.

In 1952, Starker became principal cellist of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra when Fritz Reiner became the music director. In 1958, Starker moved to Bloomington, Indiana, where he settled for the rest of his life. At the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music he became a professor and resumed his solo career, giving hundreds of concerts on every continent.

Since 2005, Starker had limited his activities to teaching, master classes and occasional performances with his longtime partner, the pianist Shigeo Neriki, and his son-in-law, daughter and granddaughter, violinists William, Gwen, and Alexandra Preucil. In his late years, he still actively taught and viewed teaching as his responsibility to the next generation of cellists. Former students of Starker's include Tsuyoshi Tsutsumi; Maria Kliegel; Paul Katz; Gary Hoffman; Kathy Kee (formerly of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra); Francisco Vila; Laurien Laufman (Former cello professor at the University of Illinois); Chih-Hui Chang, Felix Fan; David Shamban; Anthony Elliott; Jeremy Shih,; Jules Eskin (principal cellist of the Boston Symphony Orchestra),; Nella Hunkins (Principal Cellist of the Singapore Symphony Orchestra); Sebastian Toettcher (Hollywood motion picture A-List); Damián Martinez,; Pamela Smits; Elizabeth Simkin (Professor of Cello at Ithaca College Conservatory); Emilio Colón (cello professor at Indiana University), Dennis Parker (a cellist virtuoso and pedagogue, who has recorded all Popper Etudes on DVD entitled The Popper Manifesto [1]); Mark (Principal Cellist of the Cleveland Orchestra) and Paula Kosower; Regina Mushabac ( also a former Starker teaching assistant); David Premo ( the associate Principal Cellist of the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra); Marc Coppey; Alan Harris (Professor of cello at the Eastman School of Music); Rafael Figueroa (the Principal Cellist of the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra); Susan Seligman (the Principal Cellist of the Hudson Valley Philharmonic); Joyce Geeting (soloist and teacher of young pupils at California Lutheran University in Southern California); Lubomir Georgiev (principal cello of the Sacramento Symphony and later professor of cello at Florida State University); Hamilton Cheifetz (Professor of Music at Portland State University and founding member of the Florestan Trio); Marc Johnson (cellist of the Vermeer Quartet); Mihaly Virizlay (late Principal Cellist Emeritus of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra); Jakob Ludwig (Second Principal Cellist of La Scala Theatre in Milan) and Robert K. Dodson, member of the Vaghy String Quartet and leader of music academia (Royal Conservatory of Music, Lawrence University, Oberlin College, New England Conservatory, Southern Methodest University, and Boston University).

Recorded repertoire

One of the most recorded cellists in the world, Starker made over 160 recordings of virtually the entire cello literature. He recorded the Bach solo cello suites five times, most recently for RCA in 1992 for which he won a Grammy award. He was also nominated for a Grammy award for his 1990 recording of the extremely demanding works of David Popper. He had concerti written for him by David Baker, Antal Doráti, Bernhard Heiden, Jean Martinon, Miklos Rozsa, and Robert Starer.

Celli

From 1950 to 1965, Starker played and recorded on the Lord Aylesford Stradivarius, the largest instrument made by Antonio Stradivarius. In 1965 Starker acquired a Matteo Goffriller cello believed to have been made in Venice in 1705.

Reviews and published works

Many documentaries, articles in magazines, and newspaper stories have acknowledged János Starker's virtuosity. He published numerous books and musical scores through Peer International, Schirmer, and International Music. His autobiography, The World of Music According to Starker, was published in 2004 by Indiana University Press.

Playing style

Starker's playing style was intense and involved great technical mastery. According to some of his students, his technique revolved around long, legato notes, with very little shifting noise from his left hand, resulting in smooth, pure tones, "each note sounding like a jewel." Starker himself described his sound as "centered" and "focused." He was known for his ability to produce an extremely wide range of sounds and tone shading. He eschewed the wide vibrato favored by some of his peers—which he viewed as a cover for poor intonation—and was known for his patrician stage presence, preferring to let the music do the emoting. He quoted his long-time friend and colleague, György Sebők, who said, "Create excitement. Don't get excited."

Trivia

  • Starker preferred his name to be pronounced with a hard "S", rather than the German pronunciation "Shtarker", meaning "stronger".

References

Further reading

  • The World of Music According to Starker, Janos Starker, Bloomington & Indianapolis, Indiana University Press (2004). ISBN 0-253-34452-2.
  • The Roll Call of the Blessed Ones. Text by Janos Starker. Drawings by Jorge Sicre., Occidental Press, Washington D.C. (1985). ISBN 0-911050-60-4.
  • Von Budapest nach Bloomington. Janos Starker und die ungarische Cello-Tradition. From Budapest to Bloomington. Janos Starker and the Hungarian Cello Tradition, Anna Dalos, Melinda Berlasz, Janos Starker, Janos Breuer, and Peter B. Jacobi, Kronberg Academy Verlag, Kronberg/Taunus (1999). This is book is in German and in English. ISBN 3-934395-00-7
  • Janos Starker. "King of Cellists". The Making of an Artist, Joyce Geeting, Chamber Music Plus Publishing, Los Angeles (2008). ISBN 0-9754734-0-4.
  • Artists as Professors. Conversations with Musicians, Painters, Sculptors, Morris Risenhoover and Robert T. Backburn, pp. 171–185 are an interview with Janos Starker. Urbana, University of Illinois Press (1976). ISBN 0-252-00574-0.

External links

János Starker pages maintained by the Internet Cello Society:

Interviews

Listening

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