Vivaldi Mari Samuelsen



Vivaldi

  1. Vivaldi Spring Mari Samuelsen
  2. Mari Samuelsen Tour

Artist Biography by James Manheim

View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 2019 File release of 'Mari' on Discogs. Mari Samuelsen: Vivaldi - 'Summer' from Four Seasons. What's new Vimeo Record: video messaging for teams Vimeo Create: quick and easy video-maker Get started for free. Imaginative and eloquent, violinist Mari Samuelsen is known for her breath-taking artistry and adventurous approach to programming and presentation.

Vivaldi inverno mari samuelsen

Norwegian violinist Mari Samuelsen has often been heard in concert with her brother, cellist Håkon Samuelsen. As she completed her education in the early 2010s, she began to emerge into a solo career.

Born in 1985, Samuelsen began playing the violin at age three and took lessons at a music school near her home in Hamar, Norway. Soon she attracted the attention of violinist Arve Tellefsen in Oslo and studied with him for ten years. The Mari-Håkon partnership flowered during their teens, when they presented novel concerts such as one in 2003 where they both played Stradivarius instruments. Samuelsen also took lessons at Oslo's Barratt Due Institute of Music and then moved to Zurich to study with Zakhar Bron at the Zurich University of the Arts. She received two master's degrees there in 2012 and has also taken master classes with Ana Chumachenco, Ivry Gitlis, Donald Weilerstein, and Pamela Frank.

Vivaldi Spring Mari Samuelsen

Samuelsen has given solo recitals at New York's Carnegie Hall; Wolf Trap outside Washington, D.C.; the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées in Paris; and Zurich's Tonhalle. Her concerto appearances have featured collaborations with David Zinman, Seiji Ozawa, Vasily Petrenko, and Howard Griffiths, among others. Samuelsen has played in chamber ensembles with Leif Ove Andsnes, Igor Levit, and many other top players. Her recording debut came with Håkon Samuelsen in 2015 on the album Pas de Deux, featuring an original composition by the late American film composer James Horner; the work was one of his last before his death in a plane crash. In 2017 she once again joined Håkon for the recital Nordic Noir, where they were backed by the innovative Trondheimsolisten chamber orchestra.

Mari Samuelsen Tour

Samuelsen plays a fine G.B. Guadagnini (Turin 1773) generously on loan from Anders Sveaas charitable foundation, Oslo, and a Dominique Peccatte bow on loan from Sparebanken Hedmark.





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