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Violinist Vartan Manoogian Dies

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  • Violinist Vartan Manoogian Dies

    VIOLINIST VARTAN MANOOGIAN DIES
    Jacob Stockinger

    http://www.madison.com/tct/mad/topstor ies/201218
    7/13/2007 10:05 am

    Virtuoso violinist and longtime University of Wisconsin-Madison
    Professor Vartan Manoogian died Thursday in Spain. He was 71.

    Manoogian was also the director of the annual Madeleine Island Chamber
    Music Festival, held each summer on the Apostle Islands in northern
    Wisconsin on Lake Superior. He also returned each summer to a festival
    in Spain where he taught and performed, and frequently performed at
    festivals in Germany, Italy and Switzerland.

    "We are shocked and devastated. This was such a surprise," said John
    Schaffer, director of the UW School of Music, who has worked with
    Manoogian for 20 years. "Yesterday there was a pall over the whole
    school. Vartan was so alive and vibrant. He was such a elegant and
    kind man."

    According to Schaffer, the cause of death is still not known exactly,
    although cardiac problems are suspected.

    "Vartan was one of the most valuable members of the music faculty,"
    Schaffer said. "He is going to be seriously missed. I think that's the
    sentiment all my colleagues feel. It's a sudden loss, and he left such
    a legacy. To replace him and move on just won't be possible. Whatever
    happens will have to be different."

    At the time of his death, Manoogian was working on a multiple-CD
    recording project of violin trios for students. He wrote a four-volume
    series of books on violin technique and created a video guide to
    orchestral bowing. He also recorded the complete solo sonatas and
    partitas of J.S. Bach, which he performed together for the first time
    in 2000 in Madison.

    Manoogian was known for his devotion to both the classical repertoire
    and new music, and he enjoyed unusual crossover performances, such
    as playing Mendelssohn's Violin Concerto with the UW Marching Band
    and doing improvisational performances with UW jazz saxophonist
    Roscoe Mitchell.

    Manoogian was born in 1936 in Baghdad to Armenian parents, who had
    sought political asylum there. At age 16, he went to France to study
    at the National Conservatory in Paris where he won top prizes and
    took master classes from composer and violinist George Enescu. He
    then came to America and studied under master violin teacher Ivan
    Galamian at the Juilliard School of Music in New York City.

    He returned to Europe, where he took a post with the Lausanne Chamber
    Orchestra in Switzerland and then became the concertmaster of the
    renowned Orchestre de la Suisse Romande under famed conductor Ernest
    Ansermet.

    Back in the U.S., Manoogian taught at the prestigious North Carolina
    School of the Arts, where he also played in the Claremont String
    Quartet, and at Indiana University. In 1976, he won an Emmy for a
    performance of a Mozart violin concerto on educational television. Many
    prominent composers dedicated new works to him.

    He came to the UW-Madison in 1980, where he performed solo and often
    with other faculty members. He quickly established a reputation
    for teaching top-ranking students who went on to major professional
    music careers.

    Manoogian is survived by his wife of 40 years, artist Brigitte
    Manoogian, and their son, Avedis, a pianist in Minneapolis who often
    performed with his father.
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