Geoffrey Michaels Explained

Background:person
Birth Date:19 June 1944
Birth Place:Perth, Western Australia
Death Place:Voorhees Township, New Jersey, United States
Occupation:Violinist
Instrument:Violinviola
Spouse:Patricia Walmsley

Geoffrey Michaels (19 June 1944 – 17 February 2024) was an Australian violinist and violist.[1] A child prodigy in Australia during the 1950s, he performed and taught primarily in the United States.

Early life and education

Born in 1944 in Western Australia,[2] Michaels began taking violin lessons at the age of five, and soon was recognized as a prodigy.[3] At 14, he became the youngest performer ever to win the Australian Broadcasting Commission's concerto competition,[4] and made his first recording, which sold out within weeks of its release.[5]

At the age of 16 he went to the United States to attend the Curtis Institute of Music, where he studied violin with Efrem Zimbalist, and violin and viola with Oscar Shumsky.

Career

While still a student he became a member of the Curtis String Quartet. He then pursued a solo career, winning the fourth annual Emma Feldman Competition[6] in Philadelphia, and placing among the finalists in the Long-Thibaud-Crespin Competition in Paris, the Queen Elizabeth Competition in Brussels, and the Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow, where he played Zimbalist's "Coq d'Or Fantasy".[7]

Michaels was a professor at Florida State University and the University of British Columbia, and also maintained teaching affiliations with The New School of Music, Princeton University and Swarthmore College.

Performances

Notable contemporary concerto performances include the US premiere of Alfred Schnittke’s Concerto Grosso[8] (broadcast on Voice of America), and Arvo Pärt's Tabula Rasa for Two Violins and Strings[9] and Fratres,[10] both at Lincoln Center in New York City.

During his many tours of Australia, he collaborated with pianist and composer Roger Smalley. Smalley's "Trio for Violin, Cello, and Piano" (1990–91), commissioned by the Melbourne International Chamber Music Competition, bears the dedication "To Geoffrey Michaels".[11]

Michaels was a founding member of the Liebesfreud Quartet, and also performed in many other chamber ensembles, including the Janus Piano Trio, Performers' Committee for Twentieth Century Music (New York), Richardson Chamber Players (Princeton), and Vancouver New Music Society.

Death

Geoffrey Michaels died on 17 February 2024, aged 79, at the Samaritan Center in Voorhees Township, New Jersey, from complications of Parkinson's disease.

Notes and References

  1. News: Miles . Gary . Geoffrey Michaels, celebrated violin prodigy and longtime music teacher, has died at 79 . 25 February 2024 . The Philadelphia Inquirer . 23 February 2024 . en.
  2. Web site: Geoffrey Michaels – Australie, °1944. Queen Elisabeth Competition. 22 February 2024.
  3. News: Talent for Violin: "Phenomenal" Boy in Perth. 1 September 2013. The West Australian. 1 May 1951.
  4. Boy Wins Concerto Contest. Music and Dance. 1958. 49–50. 61. 1 September 2013.
  5. Listen Here: Classics. The Australian Women's Weekly. 21 October 1959. 79. 1 September 2013.
  6. Violin Prizes Announced. Music Educators Journal . September 1970. 57. 1. 22.
  7. Book: Malan, Roy. Efrem Zimbalist: A Life. 2004. Amadeus Press. Pompton Plains, NJ. 978-1574670912. 279. registration.
  8. News: Rothstein. Edward. Evening With a Lively Composer From Soviet. New York Times. 8 January 1982. .
  9. News: Holland. Bernard. Music: Continuum. New York Times. 12 March 1984. .
  10. Part: Revels in Sonority. High Fidelity Musical America. 1984. 34. 2. 29.
  11. Web site: Smalley. Roger. Trio for violin, cello and piano . Australian Music Centre. Facsimile of composer's score held at the Australian Music Centre. 8 October 2013.