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  1. Leopold Auer, who taught all three, pulled up stakes in 1918, saying work in Russia had become impossible. Milstein’s leaving must have felt like a final indignity. Check out more from our Essential Historical Recordings series. Luckily for Russian violin playing, David Oistrakh was just coming of age. With his effortless technique, enormous ...

  2. 25. Okt. 1974 · AMSTERDAM, the Netherlands, Oct. 24—David Oistrakh, the premier Soviet violinist, died today in a hotel here. He was 65 years old. Mr. Oistrakh had a history of heart trouble, but the cause of ...

  3. 75 years after David Oistrakh’s triumph at the Queen Elisabeth International Violin Competition, the First Violinist of the Quartet, Andrey Baranov, won the first prize in 2012. Baranov is also laureate of more than a dozen international competitions including the David Oistrakh, Benjamin Britten, Henri Marteau and Liana Isakadze competitions. His international career has led him to perform ...

  4. Oistrakh was born in Odessa, to a Jewish family. the son of Tamara Rotareva and the violinist David Oistrakh. [3] He began studying violin with Valeria Merenbloom at age 6, [4] though his main teacher was his father. [5] [6] In 1943, the 12-year-old Oistrakh enrolled in the Central Music School, Moscow, studying with Pyotr Stolyarsky who had ...

  5. David Óistraj. David Óistraj (izquierda) con Franz Konwitschny (centro) e Ígor Óistraj (derecha), en 1957. David Fiódorovich Óistraj (en ruso: Дави́д Фё́дорович О́йстрах) ( Odesa, 30 de septiembre de 1908- Ámsterdam, 24 de octubre de 1974) fue un violinista soviético, uno de los de mayor prestigio del siglo XX .

  6. About. David Oistrakh was a giant among 20th-century musicians, a violinist whose calm, unruffled demeanour belied both his genius as a performer and the particular circumstances of his life and career as a Soviet artist. With the warm, powerful tone that he obtained from the instrument, and the contained virtuosity of his playing he ...

  7. 24. Okt. 2014 · On October 24, 1974, the great Russian-Jewish violinist David Oistrakh died at the age of 66. Oistrakh is recognized as one of the 20th century’s finest violinists, but he is remembered for being that rare Soviet Jewish artist who was able to survive – not to mention continue working and performing – during the reign of Stalin, and beyond.