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Editor’s letter

ANGELA LYONS

When Chad Hoopes won the Junior division of the 2008 Menuhin Competition aged 13, life as an international soloist may well have beckoned. Still only 27, the American violinist has certainly packed in an array of performances in the ensuing years, yet his career has been more varied and nuanced than one might expect – primarily due to decisions taken by Hoopes himself. Yes, there have been glittering concerto appearances aplenty, but also time taken to study in Europe, a long-standing association with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, and most recently a teaching position at the Meadows School of the Arts in Dallas – an opportunity to share his knowledge with a new generation of players. ‘As I get older, I see how so many things are connected in music and in art and culture,’ he tells Toby Deller on page 28, ‘and I’m constantly trying to learn more.’

Hoopes’ current instrument is a 1991 copy by Sam Zygmuntowicz of the 1740 ‘Ysaÿe’ Guarneri ‘del Gesù’, once owned by Isaac Stern –a violin with which Hoopes immediately fell in love due to its ‘ease and immediacy’. On page 42, Zygmuntowicz details an experiment comparing the sounds of three outstanding violins by Stradivari and ‘del Gesù’ with his own faithful copies. Is it possible to replicate the tone of a Cremonese masterpiece by duplicating its design? As always, the answer is more complicated than we might wish, but acoustic spectral analysis provides some very interesting results.

Also in this American-themed issue, Pauline Harding speaks to black US string players about their experiences of prejudice and under-representation in the classical music industry on page 34, while on page 50, Raphael Gold recounts the story of the bow makers of San Francisco’s Bay Area during the early 20th century. Plus, as concerts and festivals welcome the return of live audiences, turn to page 26 for a Postcard from the Sun Valley Music Festival in Idaho by Laurence Vittes.

Email me at thestrad@thestrad.comor tweet @TheStradMag

This article appears in November 2021

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November 2021
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Editor’s letter
ANGELA LYONS When Chad Hoopes won the Junior
Contributors
ITZEL ÁVILA (Making Matters, page 72) is a
SOUNDPOST
Letters, emails, online comments
Open for business
America’s concert halls have flung open their doors to welcome back audiences – who are still showing reluctance to return. What can orchestras do to alleviate their concerns?
NEWS IN BRIEF
‘Musical segregation’: Nigel Kennedy pulls out of Classic
OBITUARIES
SEBASTIAN HESS German cellist Sebastian Hess has died
In a new light
A quartet revelling in the peculiarities of Beethoven
COMPETITIONS
1 Maria Ioudenitch 3 Seiji Okamoto 4 Yo-Yo
Against the grain
A modified beechwood that gives ebony a run for its money
RED HOT
Violin Varnish Italy’s new rosin-based oil varnish uses
FORCE OF NATURE
This plant-based, biodegradable and low-to-medium-traction rosin has been
Life lessons
The celebrated American solo bassist discusses the importance of expression and communication in music making
Back to business
Following 2020’s Summer Season of broadcasts, this year’s Sun Valley Music Festival returned to free live performances, much to the delight of its thousands of fans, writes Laurence Vittes
STATE OF INDEPENDENCE
Chad Hoopes launched his career with a spectacular win aged 13 in the Junior division of the Menuhin Competition in 2008, but in subsequent years, the forward-looking, innately positive US violinist has deliberately taken less obvious paths to musical success, as he tells Toby Deller
A RACE FOR CHANGE
Still now, in the 21st century, black people are inadequately represented within classical music. Pauline Harding talks to string players in America about lingering social oppression and what the wider community can do to bring about progress
SOUNDS LIKE A MATCH?
If someone makes an exact copy of a Stradivari, will it sound like a Stradivari? Sam Zygmuntowicz attempts to answer the question by making duplicates of the ‘Titian’ and ‘Willemotte’ Strads, as well as the ‘Plowden’ Guarneri ‘del Gesù’
A QUESTION OF BALANCE
Italian violinist Fabio Biondi’s new album of Bach Sonatas and Partitas for solo violin marks a unique opportunity to challenge established interpretations and beliefs surrounding these seminal works,
BOWS ON THE BAY
With a large and growing music community, the San Francisco Bay Area became a hotbed of violin and bow making talent in the early 20th century. Raphael Gold tells the stories of the most prominent bow makers of the day
WHEN WORLDS COLLIDE
In the Baroque and early Classical eras a succession of Scottish and Italian composers took an interest in fusing Scots fiddle and song melodies with Italian art music structures. Kevin MacDonald investigates the trend
IN FOCUS: JOHN FRIEDRICH
A close look at the work of great and unusual makers
Making a custom cutter for a Parisian-eye ring
A necessary piece of equipment to tackle an uncommon problem in bow repair
MY SPACE
A peek into lutherie workshops around the world
Fifth harmonies
If 5ths are driving you nuts, it may be to do with your violin nut. Itzel Ávila explains how luthiers can help by customising the piece at the top of the fingerboard to the player’s hand
BRAHMS STRING QUARTET NO.3 OP.67
Richard O’Neill of the Takács Quartet looks at the first and third movements of this well-loved B flat major work, where the viola is thrown into a rare spotlight
Working on open strings
Exercises to help you build up a strong, reliable right hand, with a consistently beautiful sound
CONCERTS
Your monthly critical round-up of performances, recordings and publications
RECORDINGS
THÈME RUSSE BEETHOVEN String Quartet no.7 in F
BOOKS
The Paganini of the Double Bass: Bottesini in
From the ARCHIVE
FROM THE STRAD NOVEMBER 1911 V OL.22 NO.259
JEFFREY SOLOW
Brahms’s First Symphony was the piece that inspired the American cellist to dedicate his career to music, and prompts a reminiscence of his teacher Piatigorsky
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