September 16, 2004
WFIU celebrates
music professor's 80th birthday
By Eric Anderson
| "As long as I can walk
into my studio or the students can walk to my house, I will
teach them." |
-Janos Starker
Music professor |
Classical music fans in the Bloomington
area have just two chances left to hear broadcasts of selected
performances by Janos Starker, internationally acclaimed cellist and IU
distinguished professor of music. In honor of Starker's 80th birthday,
which he celebrated over the summer, WFIU, IU's educational radio
station, has declared Starker its Artist of the Month for September.
"It's a designation we do to focus on someone in the community, and we
feature their performances," WFIU Music Director Robert Lumpkin said.
WFIU has already broadcast Starker's recordings of Bach's "Suite No. 2"
and Antonin Dvorak's "Cello Concerto in B" as part of its evening
classical music programming. At 7:07 p.m. Sept. 23, WFIU will broadcast
a performance by Starker and Piano Professor Shigeo Neriki of
Rachmaninov's Cello "Sonata in G." The last featured broadcast of the
month will take place at 7:07 p.m. Sept. 29 with Starker's recording of
Zoltan Kodaly's Cello Sonata.
Starker, a native of Budapest, Hungary, joined the IU School of Music
faculty in 1958 after spending a decade as principal of three of the
United States' leading orchestras. In addition to teaching, Starker
continued to give concerts worldwide and create countless recordings of
the cello repertoire.
Many of these performances and recordings have been the result of
collaborations with other former and current School of Music faculty
members. He has edited and recorded jazz professor David Baker's piece
for cello and percussion, "Singers of Songs, Weavers of Dreams," an
homage to jazz greats of the past, as well as Baker's "Sonata for Cello
and Piano." Starker also performed frequently with the late Professors
Emeriti Josef Gingold, violin, and Gyorgy Sebok, piano.
One collaboration in particular led to the rare opportunity to perform
the American premiere of a Haydn composition. Haydn's "Cello Concerto in
C" was lost to the world until its discovery in Prague, Czech Republic,
in 1961. It was subsequently performed by Starker with the New York
Festival Orchestra, founded and directed by IU choral conducting faculty
member Thomas Dunn.
"He possessed a technical mastery and a clear, clean tone that made him
easy to accompany," Dunn said. "He was admired by many a young cellist."
This admiration has attracted countless numbers of students to Starker's
studio, many of whom go on to achieve positions in the world's leading
orchestras or, as in the case of Cello Professor Tsuyoshi Tsutsumi,
return to IU to teach alongside their former teacher. And even as
Starker marked his 80th year in July, he has no plans to turn any
students away.
"As long as I can walk into my studio or the students can walk to my
house, I will teach them," Starker said.
WFIU's decision to honor Starker as its Artist of the Month also
coincides with the upcoming publication of "The World of Music According
to Starker," a compilation of essays and autobiographical anecdotes, and
this weekend's 26th annual Eva Janzer Memorial Celebration Sunday.
Janzer, a childhood friend of Starker's in Budapest, Hungary, joined the
School of Music in 1972. After her death in 1978, Starker established
the Eva Janzer Memorial Cello Center, which provides scholarships for
outstanding cello students and annually honors the achievements of
professional cellists for their contribution to the music community.
This year's celebration will feature masterclasses by honorees Bonnie
Hampton and Alan Harris Sunday in Recital Hall, as well as a Saturday
afternoon masterclass by Starker, which is not officially part of the
celebration.
-- Contact staff writer Eric Anderson at
eraander@indiana.edu |