Gwendolyn Masin

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Gwendolyn Masin
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Background information
Born (1977-11-17)November 17, 1977
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Genres Classical music, Chamber music
Occupation(s) Violinist, Author, Pedagogue,
Instruments Violin
Website Gwendolyn Masin
File:Gwendolyn Masin by RetoAndreoli.jpg
Masin performing in concert in Bern, 2007

Gwendolyn Masin (born 17 November 1977) is a violinist.

Early Biography

Born in Amsterdam, Gwendolyn Masin is the descendant of a long line of professional musicians from Central and Eastern Europe.

Masin began to play the piano at the age of 3. She took up the violin at the age of 5 and within her initial year of schooling, gave her first public performance in the Franz Liszt Academy in Budapest. Aged 11, Gwendolyn was introduced to the Irish public, giving a recital in the National Concert Hall, Dublin, and later that year appeared on the country’s most popular television programme, The Late Late Show.

She continues to perform live broadcasts and, reputed as an engaging, charismatic speaker, is a regular guest on TV and radio shows.

Education

Gwendolyn Masin began learning the violin in the class of Coosje Wijzenbeek. Following a move to South Africa, she continued her studies with her parents in Cape Town. She was the youngest violinist to receive a Grade 6 diploma with distinction from the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music at the age of 6. Discovered as an exceptional talent at a young age, she studied in Amsterdam with Herman Krebbers between 1990 and 1996.[1] She has received degrees and diplomas from four countries and her graduate studies were guided by Igor Ozim, Ana Chumachenco, Professor Zakhar Bron and Professor Shmuel Ashkenasi.

Career

Masin tours extensively as a soloist and chamber musician. Appearances with orchestras include the performance of concertos with the Hungarian National Philharmonic, the State Symphony Orchestras of Saint Petersburg and Belarus, the Bern Symphony Orchestra, the MÁV Symphony Orchestra, Musica Viva Chamber Orchestra, and the Savaria Orchestra. She performs and records regularly with Ireland's major orchestras, RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra and RTÉ Concert Orchestra, and with youth orchestras such as the National Youth Orchestra of Ireland, the Chamber Orchestra of the Young European Strings School of Music and Portugal's Concerto Moderno.

Chamber music collaborations include concerts with musicians such as violinist Yuzuko Horigome, violists Isabel Charisius and Roger Chase, cellists Alexander Baillie, Pavel Gomziakov, Gavriel Lipkind, Martti Rousi, Alexander Rudin, Julian Steckel and István Várdai, pianists Kit Armstrong, Julia Bartha, Finghin Collins, Robert Kulek, Peter Frankl, Aleksandar Madzar and György Sebök, conductors Janos Fürst and Gerhard Markson, and the actor Hanns Zischler. Gwendolyn has premiered works from Raymond Deane, Urs Peter Schneider, Eric Sweeney, Martijn Voorvelt and John Buckley. Buckley's Violin Concerto was premiered by Gwendolyn on 21 September 2013 in Savannah, Georgia's Lucas Theater with the Savannah Philharmonic conducted by Peter Shannon. It received its European premiere in the National Concert Hall in Dublin, Ireland, on 3 February 2015 with the RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra of Ireland conducted by Gavin Maloney. Don Li has specifically composed for her, both solo pieces and film music, releasing the works on Tonus-Music Records.

Gwendolyn Masin holds a teaching position for violin studies at Haute école de musique de Genève in Geneva, Switzerland, since September 2013.

Festivals and Music Series

Gwendolyn Masin established the international, multidisciplinary series In Search of Lost Time in 2004, continuing it in 2010 with a commissioned work inspired by Paul Klee’s writings, composed by Thorsten Encke. In 2006, she founded the annual GAIA Music Festival, described as one of the most important festivals in Switzerland,[2] and in 2007 she was appointed Carrick Water Music Festival's artistic director, a post she held in Ireland for 3 years.

Pedagogy

Gwendolyn Masin gives violin and chamber music masterclasses in Switzerland, Ireland, the Netherlands, Hungary, Italy, Germany, Turkey, and Portugal. She holds a PhD from Trinity College where she has completed a doctoral thesis examining the similarities and differences of 20th century violin pedagogy. Her award-winning book on violin teaching Michaela’s Music House, The Magic of the Violin,[3] was published in 2009 by Müller & Schade.[4] At the time of publication, she was the youngest female accredited with her own violin method.

Awards & recognitions

Masin has won national and international prizes and awards in Ireland, South Africa, Switzerland, the UK and the Netherlands. As the Dutch representative at the Global Stipends Awards, she received the International Music Award.[5] She was nominated for The Outstanding Young Persons of Switzerland award for her achievements.

Instrument

Gwendolyn plays a Lorenzo Carcassi violin made in Florence in 1761 which has been in her family for more than 50 years.

Bibliography

  • Michaela's Music House, The Magic of the violin (Müller & Schade, 2009) ISBN 978-3-905760-04-0, ISMN M-50023-448-7
  • Violin Teaching in the New Millennium: In Search of the Lost Instructions of Great Masters - an Examination of Similarities and Differences Between Schools of Playing and How These Have Evolved, or Remembering the Future of Violin Performance (Trinity College Dublin, 2012) Abstract

Articles

Further reading

References

External links