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3rd Prize "Paganini International Competition" in 1973 / one of the first female violinists to record Paganini's 24 Caprices – LP Simax PS 1020 (p)1985 Ishikawa, Shizuka: 1954: Tokyo, Japan: living: Japanese: 2nd prize Henryk Wieniawski Violin Competition, 1972 Carruzzo, Madeleine: 1956: Sion, Switzerland: living: Swiss
Vanessa-Mae (British, violin techno-acoustic fusion) Maxim Vengerov (Israeli) April Verch (Canadian) Sarana VerLin (Dark Carnival) (electric 5-string) (rock, folk) Susan Voelz acoustic electric 5 string, Poi Dog Pondering, Alejandro Escovedo, rock, electronica; Josh Vietti (hip hop, pop)
Campbell was born in Albany, New York, and grew up in Hawaii, Nevada, and northern California.She began playing violin in a Suzuki method preschool class at age three. [1] At age eight, she performed solo with the Reno Philharmonic Orchestra. [1]
Ann Marie Calhoun (née Simpson; born May 26, 1979) is an American classically trained violinist who has performed as a bluegrass and rock musician in a number of prominent acts, including Jethro Tull, Steve Vai, Widespread Panic, Dave Matthews Band, Ringo Starr, A.R. Rahman and Mick Jagger's SuperHeavy.
Lindsay Planer from AllMusic praised the album, saying that Rivera "has consistently found specific and viable places for the violin in rock". [7] Rivera has recorded multiple albums as a composer in numerous styles, instrumental, new-age, Celtic [4] and world music. She has performed in the US, Europe and Japan with her Celtic group.
In 2017, Classic FM compiled a list of the 300 best selling classical albums in the 25 years it has been running. Vanessa-Mae entered three times. The Classical Album 1 reached 244, Storm reached 135 and her debut mainstream album The Violin Player is the 76th best selling. The site claims that her total album sales make "her the biggest ...
This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:American violinists. It includes violinists that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing ...
Tracy Kristin Bonham was born in Eugene, Oregon, on March 16, 1967, the only child of Donald Lewis Bonham and Lee Anne Leach. [2] Her father was the city editor of The Eugene Register-Guard, and her mother was a music teacher; the two had met while Leach was attending the University of Oregon. [2]