MATT HAIMOVITZ |
Since
his auspicious debut in a televised appearance with the Israel Philharmonic and
Zubin Mehta in 1985, cellist Matt Haimovitz has displayed an independent spirit
and creative vision rare among artists of his caliber and status in the concert
world. Boldly making the transition from his youthful success as a prodigy, Mr.
Haimovitz, now 30, is a mature artist with a core intensity and a palpable
dedication to his art. The breadth of his repertoire today is rich and ever
expanding. Informed by historical performance practice, Mr. Haimovitz approaches
familiar pieces with a fresh ear and open mind, allowing them to speak to us
anew with insightful lyricism and emotion. With equal focus, he also embraces
new music and 20th century pieces. Mr. Haimovitz works closely with living
composers, engaging in their compositional process, thereby communicating with a
direct passion the essence of each work. All over the globe, from New York's
Lincoln Center to the Beijing Concert Hall, from a remote Kibbutz in northern
Israel to Vienna's Musikverein, Matt Haimovitz' performances create an aura of
intimacy between himself and the listener which is as captivating as it is
organic.
Born
in Israel, Mr. Haimovitz has been honored internationally by his colleagues and
critics with awards such as the Avery Fisher Career Grant (1986). His recording
"Suites and Sonatas for Solo Cello" was awarded the Grand Prix du
Disque (1991) and le Diapason d'Or (1991). He has also received the Louis Sudler
Prize in the Arts from Harvard University (1996) and was the first cellist ever
to receive the prestigious Premio Internazionale "Accademia Musicale
Chigiana" (1999) for artistry and achievement. Matt Haimovitz has been
featured in numerous publications, including Newsweek, The New Yorker, People,
and Connoisseur. He has been the subject of full length televised features on
CBS' "Sunday Morning with Charles Kuralt" and Germany's ZDF station
and has appeared on PBS' "Salute to the Arts" and "Nova".
Most recently, Mr. Haimovitz participated in celebrating the 250th anniversary
of J.S. Bach's death with a performance of the solo Bach Suite cycle at the
Schwetzingen castle. This performance was filmed live by the German SWR station
and has been broadcast nationally as part of a Bach tribute.
Mr.
Haimovitz has been deeply influenced by the early mentoring of Itzhak Perlman,
Zubin Mehta, Daniel Barenboim, and James Levine. He has also performed with such
conductors as Semyon Bychkov, Myun Whun Chung, Charles Dutoit, Sir Neville
Marriner, Seiji Ozawa, Guiseppe Sinopoli, Leonard Slatkin, Michael Tilson
Thomas, and David Zinman. He has appeared in North America with many of the
great symphony orchestras and philharmonics including those of Boston, Chicago,
Cleveland, Los Angeles, Montreal, New York, Philadelphia, and San Francisco, as
well as worldwide with the Berlin Philharmonic, the Orchestre de Paris, London's
Philharmonia Orchestra, the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, the Radio Orchestras
of Frankfurt, Cologne, Leipzig and Hanover, the Israel Philharmonic, the New
Japan Philharmonic, the Beijing Opera Orchestra, and many others.
In
addition to his extensive concerto appearances, Mr. Haimovitz has been strongly
impacted by collaborations with distinguished musicians. A notable performance
of Schubert's cello quintet at Carnegie Hall was a turning point for Haimovitz
who, at age 15, replaced his teacher Leonard Rose at a moment's notice, joining
Isaac Stern, Mstislav Rostropovich, Shlomo Mintz, and Pinchas Zukerman. This
performance was followed by a personal invitation from Mr. Stern to join him,
Cho-Liang Lin, Jaime Laredo, Michael Tree and Yo-Yo Ma in both Brahms Sextets at
Tanglewood and Carnegie Hall. Matt Haimovitz has gone on to perform at the
world's most celebrated chamber music festivals including those of Marlboro,
Aspen, Lucerne and Shleswig Holstein. Concurrently, Matt Haimovitz performs
extensively with pianist Itamar Golan presenting the complete works for cello
and piano of Beethoven, Schumann, Brahms and Enescu. Together with Mr. Mintz and
Mr. Golan, with whom he tours regularly, he has explored among other repertoire
the complete cycle of Beethoven piano trios, as well as an all-Shostakovich
program of piano trios and other chamber works.
Never
shy to challenge himself with new artistic horizons, Matt Haimovitz has been
enriched by the musical choreography of Mark Morris, the adventurous innovations
of Tod Machover and improvisations with various artists. Mr. Haimovitz has
worked with the Mark Morris Dance Group in Lou Harrison's "Rhymes with
Silver" and Robert Schumann's "Five Pieces in Folkstyle" in New
York, Boston, Seattle, London and Genoa. At the first ever Lincoln Center
Festival in 1996, Mr. Haimovitz gave the New York premiere of Tod Machover's
work "Begin Again, AgainŠ", playing the newly developed Hypercello;
he subsequently recorded the source material for Machover's composition "Meteor
Drone", now on permanent display at Meteorite, an interactive museum in
Essen, Germany. Most notably documented of his improvisational forays are his
two improvisations on Romanian folk tunes with jazz bassist Rob Wasserman and
former Kronos Quartet cellist Joan Jeanrenaud for Wasserman's album entitled Trios
which also features Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir, Elvis Costello and Branford Marsalis
on the GRP Records label.
Matt
Haimovitz' ten year exclusive recording relationship with the Deutsche
Grammophon (DG) label has resulted in six acclaimed recordings which document
his development from a cellist firmly rooted in the romantic virtuoso tradition
to an artist not afraid to delve into all corners of the contemporary
imagination. Mr. Haimovitz' recordings have received universal praise for their
deep expressiveness, interpretive acumen, flawless technique and burnished tone.
His 1989 debut recording of Saint-Saens,
Bruch and Lalo
with James Levine and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra was lauded by Gramaphone
Magazine as heralding "the arrival of a new star in the cello
firmament." Following a recording of Boccherini,
C.P.E. Bach, and Haydn concerti
with Sir Andrew Davis and the English Chamber Orchestra, Mr. Haimovitz embarked
on a four album journey through the 20th Century repertoire for unaccompanied
cello. The recordings encompass the complete solo works of Benjamin
Britten,
the Kodaly
Solo Sonata,
and works by Max Reger, Paul Hindemith and Roger Sessions. Also represented are
living composers Luciano Berio, George Crumb, Mario Davidovsky, Henri Dutilleux,
John Harbison, Hans Werner Henze, György Ligeti, and George Perle, with whom
Mr. Haimovitz consulted closely before and during the recording of each work. Portes
Ouvertes,
recorded in part with pianist Philippe Cassard, was released in 1999 and
includes music for cello and piano by Anton Webern, Claude Debussy and Britten.
Mr.
Haimovitz' evolution as a recording artist now enters a new phase in a joint
project with American composer, Luna Pearl Woolf. Their creative collaborative,
Oxingale, is an amalgam of the record label, a limited edition press, a concert
content incubator and the website, Oxingale.com. Oxingale Records is releasing
Matt Haimovitz' unabridged recording of J.S. Bach's 6 Suites for Cello Solo.
On the occasion of the 250th anniversary of the composer's death, Mr. Haimovitz
has yielded to his life-long dream of recording these beloved works.
Matt
Haimovitz also performs on the Oxingale private press release, Lemons Descending - Music • Poetry • Etchings.
This recording is elegantly boxed with a limited edition fine-art book featuring
the etchings of Michael Kuch. The richly-woven collection of music for voice and
cello includes works by Hildegard von Bingen, Heitor Villa-Lobos, John Tavener,
William Sydeman and Luna Pearl Woolf, setting the poetry of Emily Dickinson,
Anna Akhmatova, and others. Mr Haimovitz, together with soprano Eileen Clark,
also improvises a setting of the Pablo Neruda poem, "Ode to the Lemon"
and overlays all eight cello parts in Villa-Lobos' popular "Bachianas
Brasilieras No. 5."
Alongside
his performance and recording activities, Mr. Haimovitz is committed to teaching
private and masterclass students in his travels throughout the world. His depth
of experience gives him the knowledge and the tools to bring new talent to its
potential and to the fore. He now heads the cello
program at the University of Massachusetts (Amherst)
where he devotes a portion of his time to nurturing graduate and undergraduate
cellists toward promising careers as soloists, chamber and orchestral musicians,
and teachers.
Matt
Haimovitz began his own studies at the age of seven with Irene Sharp, and later
studied with Gabor Rejto and Ron Leonard in California. He continued his studies
with Leonard Rose at the Juilliard School. Although success came early to Mr.
Haimovitz, in 1992 he chose to reduce his public appearances in order to pursue
a liberal arts education at Harvard University, where he was immersed in a
community of intellectual exchange. Mr. Haimovitz graduated in 1996 with high
honors. Mr. Haimovitz and Ms. Woolf met while studying at Harvard. They were
married in 1997 and reside in Massachusetts with Shoko, a Tibetan Spaniel. Mr.
Haimovitz plays a Matteo Gofriller cello of 1710.
| NOT TO BE USED IN ANY FORM OTHER THAN ABOVE WITHOUT PRIOR CONSULTATION |