Anne Akiko Meyers: Difference between revisions
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==Background== |
==Background== |
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Meyers was born in San Diego, California. Raised in Southern California she studied with Shirley Helmick, and then went on to study with Alice and [[Eleonore Schoenfeld]] at the [[Colburn School]] of Performing Arts in Los Angeles, CA. She then proceeded to study with [[Josef Gingold]] at Indiana University and [[Dorothy DeLay]], [[Felix Galimir]] and Masao Kawasaki at the [[Juilliard School]] in New York City. Combining her junior and senior high school years and graduating early from the [[Juilliard School]] at the age of 20, she was touring the world and recorded exclusively for [[RCA Red Seal]].<ref>http://wapedia.mobi/en/RCA_Red_Seal</ref> |
Meyers was born in San Diego, California. Raised in Southern California she studied with Shirley Helmick, and then went on to study with Alice and [[Eleonore Schoenfeld]] at the [[Colburn School]] of Performing Arts in Los Angeles, CA. She then proceeded to study with [[Josef Gingold]] at Indiana University and [[Dorothy DeLay]], [[Felix Galimir]] and Masao Kawasaki at the [[Juilliard School]] in New York City. Combining her junior and senior high school years and graduating early from the [[Juilliard School]] at the age of 20, she was touring the world and recorded exclusively for [[RCA Red Seal]].<ref>http://wapedia.mobi/en/RCA_Red_Seal</ref> |
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==Early career== |
==Early career== |
Revision as of 18:14, 17 June 2010
Anne Akiko Meyers |
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Anne Akiko Meyers (born May 15, 1970 in San Diego, California) is an American concert violinist. Meyers has toured and collaborated with a number of symphony orchestras and Il Divo, Chris Botti and Wynton Marsalis. Meyers tours with a 1730 Stradivarius violin called the 'Royal Spanish'.[1]
Background
Meyers was born in San Diego, California. Raised in Southern California she studied with Shirley Helmick, and then went on to study with Alice and Eleonore Schoenfeld at the Colburn School of Performing Arts in Los Angeles, CA. She then proceeded to study with Josef Gingold at Indiana University and Dorothy DeLay, Felix Galimir and Masao Kawasaki at the Juilliard School in New York City. Combining her junior and senior high school years and graduating early from the Juilliard School at the age of 20, she was touring the world and recorded exclusively for RCA Red Seal.[2]
Early career
Meyers began studying the violin at age 4 and debuted with an orchestra at age 7. She was featured twice on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson and the Emmy Award Show at the age of 11. She also performed with the Los Angeles Philharmonic and made her debut with the New York Philharmonic at age 12, with Zubin Mehta conducting. At the age of 16 she signed with ICM Artists and began touring and recording. Her first album in London was at the Abbey Road Studios featuring the Barber and Bruch Concertos with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra at the age of 18. Having signed an exclusive RCA Red Seal contract at 21 years of age, she went on to record a comprehensive discography. At 23, she was awarded the prestigious Avery Fisher[3] Career Grant, the only artist to be the sole recipient of this annual award.
Professional works
Meyers has been a regular guest at venues including Carnegie Hall, the Hollywood Bowl, Lincoln Center, Suntory Hall, Sydney Opera House and a soloist with orchestras such as BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Boston Symphony, Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Budapest Festival Orchestra, London's Philharmonia Orchestra, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Orchestre de Paris, Minnesota Orchestra, Montreal Symphony, Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra, New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Royal Philharmonic, Swedish Radio Orchestra, Sydney Symphony Orchestra, Tokyo's NHK Symphony Orchestra, Toronto Symphony, Vienna Symphony and the Warsaw Philharmonic.
An avid supporter of contemporary composers, she has premiered works by David Baker, John Corigliano, Nathan Currier, Roddy Ellias, Karl Amadeus Hartmann, Jennifer Higdon, Wynton Marsalis, Olivier Messiaen, Akira Miyoshi, Arvo Pärt, Manuel Maria Ponce, Somei Satoh, Teddy Shapiro, Joseph Schwantner, and Ezequiel Viñao. Recently, Meyers asked jazz legend, Wynton Marsalis to write cadenzas for her in Mozart's Violin Concerto in G Major, #3 which she premiered with the Utah Symphony.[4]
Meyers has recorded music on the Avie Records, Camerata, Hyperion Records, Naxos Records, RCA Red Seal Records, RPO labels and Warner Classics Japan. Her debut disc, recorded at the age of 18, included the Samuel Barber "Violin Concerto" and the Max Bruch "Violin Concerto No.1" with Christopher Seaman and the Royal Philharmonic Concert Orchestra. RPO Records recorded the sonatas of Saint-Saëns and Fauré. Her RCA catalogue includes Lalo's "Symphonie Espagnole" and Bruch's "Scottish Fantasy" with Jesus Lopez-Cobos and the Royal Philharmonic; the Franck and Strauss sonatas; the Felix Mendelssohn "Concerto in E minor" and a selection of other works with Andrew Litton and the Philharmonia Orchestra and Prokofiev Violin Concertos with the Frankfurt Radio Symphony under Dmitri Kitajenko. Sonata albums include "Salut d’Amour" featuring many encore pieces with classic Japanese folksongs and an album featuring works by Copland, Ives, Piston, and David Baker with pianist André-Michel Schub.
She recorded works by Debussy, Messiaen, Ravel, Satoh and Takemitsu for Avie Records. Two works written expressly for Meyers include a live performance of the Somei Satoh Violin Concerto with Tetsuji Honna and the Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra on the Camerata label and 'Angelfire’ by Pulitzer-prize winning composer Joseph Schwantner with Andrew Litton and the Dallas Symphony Orchestra on Hyperion Records.[5] Naxos Records also released a performance of Jennifer Higdon's piano trio, featuring Meyers, live from the Bravo! Vail Valley Music Festival and she recorded the Bruch Concerto live with the Orchestra Ensemble Kanawaza with Maestro Iwaki on Warner Classics Japan.
'Smile', was released in 2009 on E1 Entertainment with Akira Eguchi. It features pieces by Harold Arlen, Charlie Chaplin, Olivier Messiaen, Michio Miyagi, Arvo Pärt, Piazzolla, Schubert, and Rentaro Taki.[6]
In September 2010, 'The Seasons, Dreams' will be released and feature works by Beethoven, Wagner, Schnittke, Debussy, Vernon Duke with a pianist and harpist on E1 Entertainment.
Meyers was the special guest violinist as part of Il Divo's Christmas Tour 2009 [7] and toured with Chris Botti in 2010.[8]
Discography
2009 'Smile', E1 Entertainment (2008) Arlen, Chaplin, Miyagi, Pärt, Piazzolla, Messiaen, Schubert, Taki[9]
2006 Jennifer Higdon Piano Trio (2003), Naxos Records
2006 Max Bruch Violin Concerto No.1 in g minor Live from Japan, Warner Classics
2006 ‘Angelfire’ (2001) Joseph Schwantner ‘Fantasy’ for amplified violin and orchestra (Written for Ms. Meyers), Hyperion
2004 ‘Kisetsu’ (2002) Somei Satoh Violin Concerto (Written for Ms. Meyers), Camerata Records
2004 'East Meets West' (Japanese/French Album), Avie Records
2003 ‘Smooth Classics’, ClassicFM Records
2001 ‘Romantic Violin’ RCA/BMG
2000 ‘Violin for Relaxation’ RCA/BMG
1999 ‘UltraSound’ Music for the Unborn Child, RCA/BMG
1997 'Sergei Prokofiev Album' with the Frankfurt Radio Orchestra/Kitajenko, RCA Red Seal
1997 'Franz Schubert', NPR Records
1996 'American Album', RCA Red Seal
1996 ‘Classical Ecstasy’, RCA Red Seal
1995 ‘French Orchestral Works’, RCA
1994 ‘Salut d’Amour’, RCA Red Seal
1993 Felix Mendelssohn Violin Concerto and other works with the Philharmonia Orchestra & Andrew Litton, RCA Red Seal
1993 Cesar Franck and Richard Strauss Sonatas, RCA Red Seal
1992 Max Bruch and Edouard Lalo Album with the RPO and Jesus Lopez-Cobos, RCA Red Seal
1989 Gabriel Fauré & Camille Saint-Saëns Album, Canyon Classics
1988 Debut Disc-Samuel Barber/Max Bruch Concertos with the RPO and Christopher Seaman, Canyon Classics
Television and advertising credits
Meyers' television credits include an A&E Networks telecast from the Casals Festival with the Montreal Symphony and Krzysztof Penderecki, a PBS broadcast with the Boston Pops Orchestra and John Williams and her appearances on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson and the "Emmy Award Show" attracted national attention. She was also featured performing with Keith Lockhart and the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra in Holland. She also performed in front of 750,000 people in Sydney, Australia's Harbour, celebrating their 250th Bicentennial.
Teaching
Meyers was a panelist, recitalist and teacher at the Juilliard School's Starling-DeLay Symposium in 2006 and in May, 2008 was invited by UCLA as Regent's Lecturer in violin.[10]
In the fall of 2009, Meyers joined the Butler School of Music at University of Texas at Austin as Distinguished Artist and Professor of Violin.[11]
References
- ^ http://www.cozio.com/Instrument.aspx?id=9637
- ^ http://wapedia.mobi/en/RCA_Red_Seal
- ^ http://new.lincolncenter.org/live/index.php/career-grant-recipients
- ^ http://www.deseretnews.com/article/705320917/Symphony-guest-conductor-impressive.htm
- ^ http://www.anneakikomeyers.com/pdf/Muso.pdf
- ^ http://www.kochentertainment.com/artists/detail/?Artist=Anne+Akiko+Meyers
- ^ http://forums.ildivo.com/index.php?showtopic=34537&st=20
- ^ http://interchangingidioms.blogspot.com/2010/01/anne-akiko-meyers-on-tour-with-chris.html
- ^ http://www.kochentertainment.com/artists/detail/?Artist=Anne+Akiko+Meyers
- ^ http://www.music.ucla.edu/blog/2008/02/21/anne-akiko-meyers-2008-regents-lecturer-in-the-ucla-department-of-music/
- ^ http://www.statesman.com/blogs/content/shared-gen/blogs/austin/seeingthings/entries/2009/06/25/ut_butler_school_of_music.html?cxntfid=blogs_austin_arts_seeing_things
External links
- Articles needing cleanup from June 2010
- Articles with bare URLs for citations from June 2010
- Cleanup tagged articles without a reason field from June 2010
- Wikipedia pages needing cleanup from June 2010
- Living people
- American classical violinists
- American musicians of Japanese descent
- Musicians from California
- Violinists
- 1970 births