He performed numerous recitals in the United States, Mexico, Central America, the Caribbean, Canada, Australia, Europe, Israel, Russia and the Far East including the Marlboro Festival in Vermont, Casals Festivals in Puerto Rico, Grand Teton Festival in Wyoming, where he was concertmaster, the Royal Chamber Orchestra of Japan, New York Philomusica Chamber Ensemble, St. Louis Sinfonietta, and was first violinist in the New York String Quartet.
Mr. Ceci made many solo appearances including the Denver Chamber Orchestra, Royal Metropolitan Orchestra of Japan, Shizuoka Symphony Orchestra, Osaka Municipal Band, The Mozart Festival in Whistler, British Columbia, Bach Carmel festival in Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, Colorado Music Festival, Minnesota Orchestra, Esterhazy Orchestra, New Orleans Philharmonic Orchestra and with the Denver Symphony Orchestra as soloist in over thirty major works.
He was also concertmaster of four major ballet companies—the Pennsylvania Ballet from Philadelphia, the New York City Center Ballet, the Harkness Ballet of New York and the National Ballet of Canada in Toronto where he did all of the solo work for Rudolf Nureyev.
For many years, Jesse Ceci played in the Denver Duo with pianist Zoe Erisman, a colleague of his at the University of Colorado at Denver (UCD). The duo performed complete cycles of the Beethoven Violin and Piano Sonatas and the Beethoven Piano Trios. He also taught violin and chamber music at UCD.
Recordings
Ceci recorded with all of the major symphony orchestras, and was a member of the Esterhazy Orchestra, Zimbler Sinfonietta, New York Philomusica Chamber Ensemble, Marlboro Orchestra under the direction of Pablo Casals, and the Royal Chamber Orchestra of Japan. He worked on numerous film, Broadway and television soundtracks and a myriad of recordings with artists such as Bill Jackson, Images, Bryan Savage, the Moody Blues, James Wilt, John Tesh, Newton Wayland, and The Denver Pops Orchestra.
Humanitarian
Ceci also taught violin privately, often giving extra lessons and spending extra time with students at no charge. He loved coaching young people and mentored many of them, many of which now enjoy successful careers in music. Jesse was a humanitarian and gave scores of benefit performances to support and help raise awareness of various causes throughout the world including most recently the Colorado AIDS ProjectArchived 2006-06-15 at the Wayback Machine, and Afghan Ed, which helped return young Afghan girls to school after 10 years of oppression by the Taliban.