Cecil Aronowitz
Born(1916-03-04)4 March 1916
Died7 September 1978(1978-09-07) (aged 62)
Ipswich, England
OccupationClassical viola player
Organizations

Cecil Aronowitz (4 March 1916  7 September 1978) was a British viola player, a founding member of the Melos Ensemble, a leading chamber musician, and an influential teacher at the Royal College of Music and the Royal Northern College of Music.

Career

Cecil Aronowitz was born on 4 March 1916 in King William's Town, South Africa.[1] In 1933 he began studying the violin in Durban with Stirling Robbins.[2] After two years he came to England on an overseas scholarship to study at the Royal College of Music in London. In 1939, World War 2 interrupted his studies and he spent the next six years in the army. When he returned to England, he switched to the viola.[1]

The Amadeus Quartet asked him regularly to play second viola in the string quintet and the string sextet repertoire. In spring 1949 he joined the violas of the London Philharmonic Orchestra.[3] In 1950 he co-founded the Melos Ensemble.[4] Aronowitz was the violist of the group for decades, and Terence Weil was the cellist. Bassoonist William Waterhouse wrote in 1995, "It was the remarkable rapport between this pair of lower strings, which remained constant throughout a succession of distinguished leaders, that gave a special distinction to this outstanding ensemble."[5] He played and recorded with the Pro Arte Piano Quartet, with Kenneth Sillito playing violin, and Terence Weil and Lamar Crowson playing piano. Aronowitz played regularly with the London Mozart Players and was the principal violist with the Goldsbrough Orchestra (later to become the English Chamber Orchestra). He also appeared at the Aldeburgh Festival every year from 1949 until his death in 1978. At Aldeburgh, Aronowitz was a soloist, chamber musician, and leader of the violas in the English Opera Group.[2]

Benjamin Britten wrote many viola parts with Cecil Aronowitz in mind, particularly in his chamber operas and church operas.[2] The chamber music in his War Requiem was written for the Melos Ensemble and was conducted by Britten in the first performance at Coventry in 1962. The first recording was made in 1963.[6] Cecil Aronowitz also participated in the premiere and first recording of Britten's Curlew River in 1964.[7] In 1976, Britten wrote Aronowitz a version of his Lachrymae (written for William Primrose in 1950, originally for viola and piano) for viola and string orchestra.[8]

In 1951, he premiered the Suite for Viola and Cello by Arthur Butterworth with Terence Weil.[9] Alun Hoddinott wrote a Viola Concertino for him in 1958.[10] Variations for Viola and Piano (1958), the Op. 1 of Hugh Wood, was premiered by Margaret Kitchin and Cecil Aronowitz on 7 July 1959 at a concert in the Wigmore Hall given by the Society for the Promotion of New Music. In the 1960s, he played in the Cremona Quartet with leader Hugh Maguire, Iona Brown, and Terence Weil.[11] At the 1976 Aldeburgh Festival he and his wife Nicola Grunberg gave the first public performance outside Russia of Shostakovich's last work, the Sonata for Viola and Piano, Op. 147, in the presence of Britten and Shostakovich's widow.[2]

He taught viola and chamber music at the Royal College of Music for 25 years, then in 1973 became the first Head of Strings at the newly formed Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester. The RNCM has regularly awarded a Cecil Aronowitz Prize for viola.[12]

In 1978 he suffered a stroke in a performance of Mozart's String Quintet in C major at Snape Maltings and died in Ipswich, England, on 7 September.[1][2]

Recordings

His long discography includes many notable recordings with the Melos Ensemble. Their recordings of chamber music for both woodwinds and strings were reissued in 2011, including the works for larger ensembles which were the reason to found the ensemble, such as Beethoven's Septet and Octet, Schubert's Octet and Ravel's Introduction and Allegro, played with Osian Ellis (harp), Richard Adeney (flute), Gervase de Peyer (clarinet), Emanuel Hurwitz and Ivor McMahon (violin), and Terence Weil (cello).[13]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Grunberg, Nicola. "Cecil Aronowitz: reminiscences". British Viola Society. Retrieved 5 September 2020.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Biography Archived 28 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine detailed personal memories of Nicola Grunberg 2004
  3. Concert Programmes, London Philharmonic Orchestra, Central Hall, East Ham, Eduard van Beinum's conductorship, January to May 1949. His name does not appear in subsequent listings.
  4. Melos Ensemble
  5. Obituary Terence Weil The Independent, William Waterhouse, 9 March 1995
  6. War Requiem
  7. 1 2 Curlew River
  8. Classical Archives quote (All Music Guide): In the last year of his life Britten ... kept a promise made to Cecil Aronowitz ... and wrote a version of Lachrymae with an ... arrangement for string orchestra.
  9. Works by Butterworth
  10. Hoddinott review
  11. Obituary Iona Brown The Guardian, Anne Inglis, 10 June 2004
  12. Royal Northern College of Music Archived 18 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine quote: In 7 June she won the RNCM's Cecil Aronowitz Prize for viola.
  13. Melos Ensemble – Music among Friends EMI
  14. 1 2 3 Recordings New York Viola Society
  15. Recording War Requiem
  16. "Brahms String Quintets & String Sextets". Archived from the original on 6 March 2010. Retrieved 13 October 2009.
  17. Holst review Colin Clark, 2004
  18. "Mozart String Quintets". Archived from the original on 8 June 2011. Retrieved 13 October 2009.
  19. Biography Eugene Chadbourne
  20. Strauss review Christopher Fifield, 2001
  21. Brahms review Christopher Howell, 2002
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