Leon Sametini (16 March 1886 – 20 August 1944) was an American virtuoso violinist and music pedagogue who originated from Rotterdam, Holland.[1] Sametini was born to Samual Sametini and Rose De Groot.[2] He initially studied violin in the Netherlands with his uncle, M. De Groot, and from 1892 until he was 10 years of age with Dutch violinist Felice Togni and Bram Eldering at the Amsterdam Conservatoire.[2][3] In 1902, Sametini went to Prague to study violin for one year with Otakar Ševčík.[3] He also studied with notable teacher Eugène Ysaÿe.[2][4]
As a violin virtuoso, Sametini gave concert tours from which he became well known in Europe, particularly in the Netherlands, Belgium, England and Austria.[5] He was a protégé of Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands who enabled him to continue his studies in Prague under Otakar Ševčík[6] and she gave him a violin made in 1730 by the Venetian violin makerSancto Seraphin.[5]
When I was twelve years old, my great teacher Leon Sametini told me to focus my attention on my bow arm. 'Your left hand is a machine,' he said. 'Your right hand produces tone and nuance, and adds style to your playing.'
^ abcVlekke, Bernard Hubertus Maria; Beets, Henry (1942). Hollanders who Helped Build America. American Biographical Company. p. 198. Leon Sametini, a son of Samual Sametini and Rose De Groot, studied in the Netherlands under his uncle, M. De Groot, F. Togni and Bram Eldering of Amsterdam.
^Somerford, Peter (1 September 2019). "Mutual exchange - Obituaries". Strad. 130 (1553): 14. From the age of twelve he studied at the Chicago Music College with Leon Sametini, a student of Ševčík and Ysaÿe...
^ ab"The Project Gutenberg eBook of Violin Mastery, by Frederick H. Martens". www.gutenberg.org. p. 198. Retrieved 17 January 2023. It is to be regretted that he has not played in public in the United States as often as in Europe, where his extensive tournées in Holland—Leon Sametini is a Hollander by birth—Belgium, England and Austria have established his reputation as a virtuoso,...
^Vlekke, Bernard Hubertus Maria; Beets, Henry (1942). Hollanders who Helped Build America. American Biographical Company. p. 198. As a protégé of Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands, he was enabled to continue his studies under Sevcik at the Conservatory at Prague...
^The Strad. Vol. 105. Lavendar Publications. 1994. p. 617. LCCNca05002289. Menges (1893-1976) studied with Leon Sametini and Emile Sauret but was principally a student of Leopold Auer in St. Petersburg.
^"Faculty Bios by Name". Curtis Institute of Music. International Narcotics Control Board. 2009. Archived from the original on 9 September 2012. Retrieved 16 January 2023. Aaron Rosand, world-renowned violin virtuoso and pedagogue, carries on the tradition of Leopold Auer and Eugène Ysaÿe, having studied with their disciples Efrem Zimbalist and Leon Sametini.
^Ford, Clifford (1982). Canada's Music: An Historical Survey. GLC Publishers. p. 129. ISBN978-0-88874-054-0. Harry Adaskin was born in Riga, Latvia and studied with von Kunits and Arthur Hartmann in Toronto, Leon Sametini in Chicago and with Marcel Chailley in Paris.
^Vallois, Nathaniel (February 2004). "Hostage to fortune". Strad. 115 (1366): 128–132 – via EBSCOhost. As young Guila's talent became more apparent, mother and five-year old daughter moved to Chicago to pursue violin studies with Leon Sametini, a pupil of Ysaÿe.