Eugen Sîrbu or Sârbu, known professionally as Eugene Sârbu (6 September 1950 – 21 July 2024), was a Romanian classical violinist. He had an international career as a soloist, recitalist and conductor (from the violin). In 1978, he won both the Paganini Competition and the Carl Flesch International Violin Competition. He premiered works from living composers including Einojuhani Rautavaara, written for him, he recorded violin concertos by Sibelius and Mozart.
Life and career
Born as Eugen Sîrbu (under the spelling used at the time) on 6 September 1950,[1] the future violinist hailed from the village of Pietrari, currently in Dâmbovița County.[2][3] Growing up during the early stages of the Romanian communist regime, he received his first violin training at age five from his father[4] and played his first solo concert at age six.[3][4] The boy attended Galați music school, studying under S. Nahmanovici (from 1957 to 1968),[2][4] but was also enlisted at the city's No 2 School, where he was reportedly a grade-10 student.[5] Before the age of eight, he had already performed at the Romanian Atheneum in Bucharest.[5] Sârbu went on to study at the Bucharest Conservatory, from 1968 to 1970; his professors included G. Avakian and Ionel Geanta.[2][4] He won the National Festival of Music award in Bucharest in 1958,[4] and he played his first international concert in Roubaix, France, in 1960.[2]
Sârbu also directed from the violin, and in 1982 he became the European Master Orchestra's conductor and soloist.[2][4][17] He recorded violin concertos by Mozart as the conductor–soloist.[2] His other notable recordings include the Sibelius Violin Concerto with the Hallé Orchestra conducted by Ole Schmidt (1981).[2] Sârbu reconnected with his Romanian colleagues after the Romanian Revolution of 1989 and the end of communism; in 1995, he began a series of concerts in Romania, declaring that the Romanian public was his favourite audience in the entire world.[6] In 1994–1995 he toured the United States, appearing at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.[6] His Romanian honours include the George Enescu Prize (1995) and honorary membership of the Bucharest Academy of Music (1997);[2] he was made honorary director of the National Radio Orchestra of Romania in 1997.[8][6] Setting up a scholarship for Romanian music students, in December 1997 he also held a concert in honour of those killed during the Revolution.[6] He continued to appear at various events in Romania, including with a guest appearance at a Bucharest gala in December 2014, where he accompanied nai virtuoso Gheorghe Zamfir.[18] Sârbu died in a hospital in London, after a long illness, on 21 July 2024, at the age of 73.[4]
References
^"Calendar". Timpul. Cotidian Social-Politic-Cultural Independent. 5 September 1998. p. 8.
^ abcJoyce Kennedy; Michael Kennedy; Tim Rutherford-Johnson, eds. (2013), "Sarbu, Eugene (b Bucharest, 1950)", The Oxford Dictionary of Music (6th ed.), Oxford University Press, ISBN9780191744518
^"Competitions", The World of Music, 18 (1): 11–12, 1976, JSTOR43563073
^"Competitions", The World of Music, 18 (3): 9–10, 1976, JSTOR43563567
^Victor Ginsburgh; Marie-Paule Orban (2002), "Le concours Reine Élisabeth Que sont les lauréats devenus?", Revue belge de Musicologie (in French), 56: 279–298, JSTOR3687016