Lakeside
Listen to WKSU Online choose to listen in realplayer or windows media (more choices)
Search WKSU
Site Features
Programs ScheduleMake A PledgeMember BenefitsFAQ/HelpContact Us
nowplaying
July 4, 2009
What’s On Now?

Car Talk®


NPR's hilarious, fast-paced call-in program with Boston brothers Tom and Ray Magliozzi takes the fear out of car repair and finds the fun in engine failure.



Also Playing Now:

 WKSU On Air:

 WKSU 2 News:

 WKSU 3 Classical:




Later Today On WKSU

11:00
Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!®



12:00
Whad 'Ya Know?® Radio Hour

Michael Feldman and his zany crew brew a weekly concoction of comedy quizzes, quirky interviews, unusual news, jazz interludes, and more.

1:00
The Splendid Table



2:00
Marketplace Money

Each week on Marketplace Money, host Tess Vigeland looks at major national and international stories that impact the average listener's wallet. It's "the money show for the rest of us."

What’s On Now?

Car Talk®


NPR's hilarious, fast-paced call-in program with Boston brothers Tom and Ray Magliozzi takes the fear out of car repair and finds the fun in engine failure.



Also Playing Now:

 WKSU On Air:

 WKSU 2 News:

 WKSU 3 Classical:




Later Today On WKSU's News Channel

11:00
Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!®



12:00
Whad 'Ya Know?® Radio Hour

Michael Feldman and his zany crew brew a weekly concoction of comedy quizzes, quirky interviews, unusual news, jazz interludes, and more.

1:00
The Splendid Table



2:00
Marketplace Money

Each week on Marketplace Money, host Tess Vigeland looks at major national and international stories that impact the average listener's wallet. It's "the money show for the rest of us."

What’s Playing Now?

Classical Music
With Gillian Martin

10:35
Robert Beaser: Mountain Songs (Alexandra Hawley, flute)


10:50
Stephen Foster: Beautiful Dreamer (Thomas Hampson, baritone)


10:54
Louis Moreau Gottschalk: The Banjo (Paul Bisaccia, piano)


11:01
Kenneth Frazelle: Fiddler's Galaxy (Joseph Swensen, violin)


11:06
Jay Ungar: Ashokan Farewell (Nashville Chamber Orchestra)



Also Playing Now:

 WKSU On Air:

 WKSU 2 News:

 WKSU 3 Classical:




Later Today On WKSU's Classical Channel

12:00
Classical Music with Mindy Ratner



6:00
Classical Music with Bob Christiansen





Sunday On WKSU 3

12:00
Classical Music with Scott Blankenship



5:00
Classical Music with Scott Blankenship



WKSU Support
Funding for WKSU is made possible in part through support from the following businesses and organizations.

Metro RTA

Akron Children's Hospital


For more information on how your company or organization can support WKSU, download the WKSU Media Kit.

(WKSU Media Kit PDF icon )


Donate Your Vehicle to WKSU

QuickLinks
Classical Music

Gil Shaham (Photo: J Henry Fair / DG)
Gil Shaham (Photo: J Henry Fair / DG)

American-born violinist Gil Shaham had just finished playing Sarasate at Lincoln Center Thursday night (20 November 2008), performing live on PBS’s Live from Lincoln Center.   He was about to exit the stage when a voice rang out from the audience: "Stop!"

It was the young Venezuelan conductor Gustavo Dudamel, with whom Shaham played the Dvorak concerto in a much discussed New York Philharmonic concert last year.  "My friend, nice to see you," Dudamel continued.  "I have the honor to tell you that you have won the Avery Fisher Prize for 2008."

The Avery Fisher Prize, one of music’s most prestigious, is awarded from secret nominations.  The recipients are always surprised with the announcements.

Shaham’s musical life story reads almost like a classical music fairy tale.  Born of scientist parents, he began studying violin at the age of seven.  He played with the Israel Philharmonic when he was eleven.  The same year, he was admitted to the Juilliard School in New York.  He studied with Dorothy DeLay and Hyo Kang.

Gil Shaham got his big break in 1989 when Itzhak Perlman took ill and couldn’t play a solo gig with the London Symphony Orchestra.  Shaham flew to London on a day’s notice and played two concertos — the Bruch and the Sibelius.  The critics took note and so did concert-goers.  Shaham was only eighteen.

The following year, 1990, Shaham received the Avery Fisher Career Grant.  (His younger sister, pianist Orli Shaham, received the Fisher Career Grant in 1997.)

Both the grant and the prize are named for audio researcher and philanthropist Avery Fisher.  Fisher, an amateur violinist and lifelong music lover, served on the boards of the New York Philharmonic and the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center.  Forty to fifty years ago, a range of consumer audio equipment bore his name ("The Fisher").  Fisher sold his audio business to Emerson Electric in 1969 and, five years later, founded the Avery Fisher Prize.  He died in 1994.

"My father loved surprises," says Fisher’s daughter Nancy.

Listen:

Violinist Shaham Surprised With Music Prize at NPR

Share This Entry:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google
  • e-mail
  • Reddit
  • Technorati
  • TwitThis
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb

Tags: , ,

Leave a Reply






Support for "In Performance" provided by:

Kendal at Home

Copyright © 2009 WKSU Public Radio, All Rights Reserved.

 
In Partnership With:

NPR PRI Kent State University

listen in windows media format listen in realplayer format Car Talk Hosts: Tom & Ray Magliozzi Fresh Air Host: Terry Gross A Service of Kent State University 89.7 WKSU | NPR.Classical.Other smart stuff. NPR Senior Correspondent: Noah Adams Living on Earth Host: Steve Curwood 89.7 WKSU | NPR.Classical.Other smart stuff. A Service of Kent State University