Kerry DuWors (born September 26, 1980) is a Canadian violinist, chamber musician and educator.
Praised as a “dynamic performer” [1] (Scott St. John) with “fearless competence” [2] (Winnipeg Free Press), Kerry DuWors is the first prize winner of the 26th E-Gré National Music Competition [3] and has been among the winners of the Canada Council’s Musical Instrument Bank Competition in 2009, [4] 2006 [5] and 2003. DuWors has collaborated with many acclaimed soloists and ensembles including James Ehnes, Yo-Yo Ma, Isabel Bayrakdarian, Dame Evelyn Glennie, Martin Fröst, Marc-André Hamelin, Andrew Dawes, Scott St. John, St. Lawrence and Penderecki Quartets, and the Gryphon Trio.
Recently, DuWors has performed as a soloist with the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra [6] (2009), Red Deer Symphony (2010), Manitoba Chamber Orchestra (2010) and Brandon Chamber Players (2011). In 2010–2011 she joined New York based The Knights for performances with Yo-Yo Ma and a tour of Germany with Jan Vogler. She also toured the US with the Galileo Piano Trio and held a residency at the Banff Center for the Arts while collaborating with pianist Futaba Niekawa.
DuWors began her musical training while growing up in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. She furthered her studies at University of Victoria with Ann Elliot-Goldschmid (B.Mus.) of the Lafayette String Quartet; and University of Toronto under Lorand Fenyves (M.Mus.). While at University at Toronto she was awarded the Eaton Graduate Scholarship, the Yo-Yo Ma Fellowship for Strings and the Felix Galimir Award for Chamber Music Excellence. DuWors has been assistant professor of Violin and Chamber Music at Brandon University since 2003. In 2010 she began a Doctorate in Musical Arts at Eastman School of Music as a student of Charles Castleman.
Isaac Stern was an American violinist.
Yo-Yo Ma is an American cellist. Born and partially raised in Paris to Chinese parents and educated in New York City, he was a child prodigy, performing from the age of four and a half. He graduated from the Juilliard School and Harvard University, attended Columbia University, and has performed as a soloist with orchestras around the world. He has recorded more than 90 albums and received 19 Grammy Awards.
Itzhak Perlman is an Israeli-American violinist. He has performed worldwide and throughout the United States, in venues that have included a state dinner for Elizabeth II at the White House in 2007, and at the 2009 inauguration of Barack Obama. He has conducted the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, the Philadelphia Orchestra, and the Westchester Philharmonic. In 2015, he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Perlman has won 16 Grammy Awards, including a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, and four Emmy Awards.
James Ehnes, is a Canadian concert violinist and violist.
Wu Man is a Chinese pipa player and composer. Trained in Pudong-style pipa performance at the Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing, she is known for playing in a broad range of musical styles and introducing the pipa and its Chinese heritage into Western genres. She has performed and recorded extensively with Kronos Quartet and Silk Road Ensemble, and has premiered works by Philip Glass, Lou Harrison, Terry Riley, Bright Sheng, Tan Dun, Zhao Jiping, and Zhou Long, among many others. She has recorded and appeared on over 40 albums, five of which have been nominated for Grammy Awards. In 2013, she was named Instrumentalist of the Year by Musical America, becoming the first performer of a non-Western instrument to receive this award. She also received The United States Artists Award in 2008.
Sérgio Assad is a Brazilian guitarist, composer, and arranger who often performs with his brother, Odair in the guitar duo Sérgio and Odair Assad, commonly referred to as the Assad Brothers or Duo Assad. Their younger sister Badi is also a guitarist. Assad is the father of composer/singer/pianist Clarice Assad. He is married to Angela Olinto.
Michael Tree, born Michael Applebaum, was an American violist.
Emanuel "Manny"Ax is a Grammy-winning American classical pianist. He is a teacher at the Juilliard School.
Sophie Carmen Eckhardt-Gramatté was a Russian-born Canadian composer and virtuoso pianist and violinist.
Margaret Brouwer is an American composer and composition teacher. She founded the Blue Streak Ensemble chamber music group.
Gabriela Lena Frank is an American pianist and composer of contemporary classical music.
Lynn Chang is a Chinese American violinist known for his work as both a soloist and a chamber musician. Chang is a founding member of the Boston Chamber Music Society and is currently a faculty member at MIT, Boston University, the Boston Conservatory, and the New England Conservatory of Music.
Beth Levin is an American classical pianist in the Romantic tradition of her teachers Marian Filar, Rudolf Serkin, Leonard Shure, and Dorothy Taubman at the Taubman Institute. Levin is devoted to the highly expressive and demanding repertoire of Beethoven, Schumann, Chopin, Brahms, Rachmaninoff, and Ravel, as well as to the work of leading modernists such as Anders Eliasson, David Del Tredici, Alexander Goretzky, Louis Karchin, and Scott Wheeler.
Stephanie Ann Chase is an American classical violinist.
Laura Elise Schwendinger was the first composer to win the American Academy in Berlin's Berlin Prize.
Rachel Kolly, born 21 May 1981 in Lausanne, Switzerland, is a Swiss violinist. Considered a child prodigy at the violin, she started playing at the age of five.
David Serkin Ludwig is an American composer, teacher, and Dean of Music at The Juilliard School. His uncle was pianist Peter Serkin, his grandfather was the pianist Rudolf Serkin, and his great-grandfather was the violinist Adolf Busch. He holds positions and residencies with nearly two dozen orchestras and music festivals in the US and abroad. His choral work, The New Colossus, was performed at the 2013 presidential inauguration of Barack Obama.
Blake Pouliot is a Juno-nominated Canadian professional classical violinist. Pouliot is currently Soloist-in-Residence at the Orchestre Métropolitain in Montreal.
Tessa Lark is an American concert violinist.
Robert Herschel Silverman, CM, born May 25, 1938, in Montreal is a noted Canadian pianist and piano pedagogue. He was made Member of the Order of Canada in 2013. In 1998 he became the inaugural recipient of the Paul de Hueck and Norman Walford Career Achievement Award of the Ontario Arts Foundation. His widely acclaimed 10-CD recording of all thirty-two Beethoven sonatas was short-listed for a Juno Award for Best Classical Album: Solo or Chamber Ensemble. His Liszt recording was awarded the 1977 Grand Prix du disque by the Budapest Liszt Society. He lives in Vancouver with his wife and occasional duet partner, pianist Ellen (Nivert) Silverman.