Saturday 12 March 2011, 7:30pm
Peterhouse Theatre

VIKTORIA MULLOVA, violin, & KRISTIAN BEZUIDENHOUT, fortepiano

This concert was generously supported by Mr Dilip Chandra
Beethoven
Sonata for violin and piano in E flat major, Op. 12, no. 2
Beethoven
Sonata for violin and piano in A 'Kreutzer', Op. 47
Schubert
Fantasie for violin and piano in C major, D. 934

Viktoria Mullova studied at the Central Music School of Moscow and the Moscow Conservatoire. Her extraordinary talent captured international attention when she won first prize at the 1980 Sibelius Competition in Helsinki and the Gold Medal at the Tchaikovsky Competition in 1982 which was followed, in 1983, by her dramatic and much publicized defection to the West. She has since appeared with most of the world's greatest orchestras and conductors and at the major international festivals. She is now known the world over as a violinist of exceptional versatility and musical integrity. Her curiosity spans the breadth of musical development from baroque and classical right up to the most contemporary influences from the world of fusion and experimental music.

Her interest in the authentic approach has led to collaborations with the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, Il Giardino Armonico, Venice Baroque and Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique. She has a close association with harpsichordist Ottavio Dantone with whom she tours and which led Tim Ashley to write, “To hear Mullova play Bach is, simply, one of the greatest things you can experience…” in The Guardian. Her most recent recording of Bach’s solo sonatas and partitas represents a significant milestone in Viktoria’s personal journey into this music. The recording has received 5-star reviews from all over the world and she is embarking on an international, several season-long, series of solo Bach recitals.