Violinist, born in New York City, New York, USA. A Kneisel student, he was concertmaster of the Cleveland Orchestra (192640) and thereafter pursued an active solo and teaching career.
Joseph Fuchs (April 26, 1899-March 14, 1997) was one of the most important American violinists and teachers of the 20th century, and the brother of Lillian Fuchs.
Born in New York, he graduated in 1918 from the Institute of Musical Art in New York where he studied with Franz Kneisel.
He toured extensively in Europe, appearing at the 1953 and 1954 Prades festivals, and in South America, the USSR, Israel and Japan;
A Ford Foundation grant in 1960 enabled him to commission Walter Piston’s Violin Concerto, the première of which he gave that year in Pittsburgh. of Martinů’s Madrigaly for violin and viola, dedicated to Fuchs and his sister Lillian (1947); of the revised version of Vaughan Williams’s Violin Sonata, with Artur Balsam (1969); and of the posthumous American première of Martinůu’s Sonata for two violins and piano (1974).
Fuchs became a violin professor at the Juilliard School of Music in 1946, and in 1971 he received the Artist Teacher’s Award from the American String Teachers’ Association.
He played the ‘Cádiz Stradivarius’ violin of 1722. Creighton: Discopaedia of the Violin, 1889–1971 (Toronto, 1974), 226ff D.
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