Also known as Fritz Kreisler International Violin Competition
classical music competition
Fritz Kreisler
fritzkreisler.com →The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you. As one of the largest international violin competitions – established in 1979 by Wolfgang Schneiderhan and managed by Michael Frischenschlager since 1989 – the Fritz Kreisler International Competition, which to date has taken place nine times, is a source of attraction for young violinists from all over the world and is an event through which the City of Vienna pays tribute to one of its great artists and musicians. 1932-38 • The ‘Fritz Kreisler Competition’, as it was originally known, was an internal violin competition organized every year by the Vienna Music Academy — today the University of Music and Performing Arts — for the violin students. The first prize, donated by Kreisler, was given to the best violin student of the year. 1956 • Formative meeting between the young violin student from Salzburg, Michael Frischenschlager (19), with Fritz Kreisler (81) in New York. 1975 • On the occasion of a commemorative concert organized by Prof. Frischenschlager at the Vienna Music University, the idea arises together with Prof. Wolfgang Schneiderhan and Prof. Franz Samohyl to establish an international Fritz Kreisler Competition in Vienna. 1983 • II. International Fritz Kreisler Violin Competition. The competition takes place again in the Vienna Musikverein. Unfortunately, it ends with a large deficit of over 2 million Schillings. This means that — despite its successful debut — the Fritz Kreisler Competition had to wait until 1992 to mark its return. 1984-88 • Irmgard Seefried and Wolfgang Schneiderhan convince the City of Vienna and the bank Creditanstalt Bankverein to pay off the debts. Prof. Schneiderhan asks Prof. Frischenschlager to become his successor and to rebuild the competition. He resigns as President and becomes an Honorary President. 1989-91 • Frischenschlager prepares to resume the competition by looking for sponsors, PR, and organizing promotional concerts. A Kreisler concert in the Café Central in Vienna, broadcast on the ORF television, Kreisler concerts in New York (Carnegie Hall, Chamber Music Hall) and Washington (Georgetown University) are such examples. Dr. Helmut Zilk — The Mayor of Vienna — welcomes the return of the competition. 1992 • III. International Fritz Kreisler Violin Competition. This time in the Vienna Konzerthaus. Gala-Final in the Great Hall with the Vienna Symphony Orchestra. At the end, the prize winners perform on Kreisler’s famous Guarneri violin (brought to Vienna from the Library of Congress in Washington with sponsorship from the Austrian National Bank). The ORF television broadcasts the Gala-Final. The primary funders are the City of Vienna and several Federal Ministries. The competition becomes part of the musical life in Vienna and thus, every four years, Vienna becomes the goal for the world’s best young violinists. 2000 • V. International Fritz Kreisler Violin Competition. In the Vienna Konzerthaus. As always, the competition is highly successful with a large number of participants. The culture department of the City of Vienna can no longer finance the Gala-Final, instead the Gerber Foundation (Zurich) provide additional funding. 2005 • VI. International Fritz Kreisler Violin Competition. In the Vienna Konzerthaus. Again, a highly successful event. Due to the passing of Mrs. Gerber (President of the Gerber Foundation), the Swiss funding for the Gala-Final is no longer possible. Due to this large loss in income and many increased costs, there is once again a deficit. 2010 • VII. International Fritz Kreisler Violin Competition. In the Vienna Konzerthaus. The quality and success p
Excerpt from the official site · 3,950 chars · not written by Vinony
via Wikidata · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).