Vlado Perlemuter
Vlado Perlemuter (26 May 1904 – 4 September 2002) was a Lithuanian-born French pianist and teacher.
Biography
Vladislas (Vlado) Perlemuter was born to a Polish Jewish family, the third of four sons, in Kovno, Russia (now Kaunas in Lithuania). At the age of three, he lost the use of his left eye in an accident.
His family settled in France in 1907. In 1915, aged just 10, he was accepted by the Paris Conservatoire, studying first with Moritz Moszkowski (1915–17) then with Alfred Cortot. At 15, he graduated from the Conservatoire, where he won the First Prize playing Gabriel Fauré’s Thème et variations before the composer, although Fauré was already deaf by that time. In 1925 he met Maurice Ravel, and in 1927 studied all of Ravel's solo works for piano with the composer himself for a period of six months. Thereafter, he became one of the leading exponents of Ravel's music. In 1929 in two public recitals both attended by the composer, Perlemuter played Ravel's complete piano works, a feat he repeated in 1987 at London’s Wigmore Hall to mark the 50th anniversary of Ravel’s death.
His fascination with the works of Charles Dickens, William Shakespeare, William Turner and John Constable brought him to England in the early 1930s, and he returned frequently for concerts. He gave his first Wigmore Hall recital in 1938. During World War II, as a Jew he was in danger in Nazi-occupied France, and was hunted by the Gestapo, barely managing to escape to Switzerland, where he lived until 1949. In 1951 he joined the teaching staff of the Paris Conservatoire, where he remained until 1977. Students from around the world, such as Catherine Thibon, Claudio Herrera and Christian Zacharias, were also attracted by his fame as a pedagogue.
In 1958 Perlemuter was invited to the Dartington Summer School of Music in Devon, where he returned many times. He also taught at the Yehudi Menuhin School. His dicta included that a pianist must pedal not with the foot but with the ear; and must be able to make a crescendo without hurrying, and a diminuendo without slowing down. His art is characterized by shimmering tonal colours and a singing legato combined with an effortless ease of interpretation. Those who heard him live say that his playing was characterized by an enchantingly subtle tone that recordings fail to capture fully. He approached new pieces through the left hand, reading the piece from the bass upwards and he always practiced slowly, focusing on each hand separately.
His international career spanned over seventy years. He recorded the entire piano works of Ravel, as well as works by Chopin, Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Schumann and Fauré for Nimbus Records, as well as a complete Mozart sonatas for Vox Records. He returned to the Wigmore Hall in 1987 to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Ravel's death with two recitals comprising all the composer's piano works; a feat he repeated at the age of 89, with a valedictory recital at the Victoria Hall in Geneva.
His final years compromised by memory loss and failing sight, he died at the American Hospital in Paris in 2002 at the age of 98.
Private life
Perlemuter married Jacqueline Deleveau in 1934; she died in 1982.
Students
- Konstanze Eickhorst - German pianist
- Guillermo González Hernández - Spanish pianist
- Jean-François Heisser - French pianist
- Carter Larsen – American pianist/composer
- Avi Schönfeld - Dutch-Israeli pianist/composer
- Melvyn Tan[1]
- Christian Zacharias - German pianist and conductor
- Gwendolyn Mok - Asian-American pianist
Writings
- Ravel According to Ravel. London: Kahn & Averill. 2006. ISBN 1-871-08278-1.
References
- Nimbus Records – notes accompanying CD NIM5012 "Chopin Nocturnes" (1984)
- The Guardian: Obituary (2002)
- Pianist #13, Vlado Perlemuter 1904–2002, p. 76
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