Arnold Steinhardt was born in Los Angeles, receiving his early training
from Karl Moldrem, Peter Meremblum, and Toscha Seidel, and making his
solo debut with the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra at age fourteen.
He continued his studies with Ivan Galamian at the Curtis Institute of
Music and with Joseph Szigeti in Switzerland in 1962 under the
sponsorship of George Szell.
Winner of the Philadelphia Youth Competition in 1957, the 1958
Leventritt Award, and Bronze Medallist in the Queen Elizabeth
International Violin Competition in 1963, Mr. Steinhardt has appeared
throughout North America and Europe as a recitalist and soloist with
orchestras including the New York Philharmonic, Detroit Symphony, and
the Cleveland Orchestra, among others.
Mr. Steinhardt is first violinist and a founding member (1964-2009) of
the
internationally acclaimed Guarneri String Quartet with which he has
made innumerable tours across the globe and recorded dozens of albums
for RCA Victor, Philips, Arabesque, and Surrounded By Entertainment. He
is professor of violin at the Colburn Conservatory of Music, the
University of Maryland, Bard College, and the Curtis
Institute of Music.
Arnold Steinhardt has written two books: Indivisible by Four: A String Quartet in
Pursuit of Harmony (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1998); and Violin Dreams (Houghton Mifflin,
2006). He is the author of articles which have appeared in Chamber Music America, Musical America, and Keynote. Recipient of Honorary
Doctorates from the University of South Florida and Harpur College,
Arnold Steinhardt has also received an award for distinguished cultural
service from the City of New York presented by Mayor Koch. He was
inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2010
Mr. Steinhardt’s solo recordings include Franz Schubert’s complete
works for violin and piano with Seymour Lipkin on Newport Classic; American Journey on Naxos Records
featuring a variety of seldom heard American music and three new works
written for him; two CD’s on Sheffield Lab with pianist Lincoln
Mayorga: Strauss and Dvořák and Romantic Music for Violin and
Piano which he recorded “direct-to-disc”; and a TownHall recording of
unaccompanied Bach works.
Arnold Steinhardt plays a Lorenzo Storioni violin from Cremona, Italy,
late 18th century.
[October 2010]