"A master musician at the height
of her powers," violinist Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg
is celebrated worldwide as one of the most original and
fearless artists on the concert stage today. Renowned
for her electrifying performances, passionate interpretations
and musical depth, she is sought after by today's
greatest conductors and orchestras, as well as by fellow
artists, for collaborations in classical and other genres.
Acclaimed by the press in the performance and recording
arenas, she is an artist whose talent "will make
you hang breathlessly on every note."
Following the EMI Classics
re-issue of her recording of Dmitri Shostakovich's
Violin Concerto No. 1 and Samuel Barber's Concerto
for Violin and Orchestra, Op. 14 with the London Symphony
Orchestra, Salerno-Sonnenberg was heard playing both
works in concert throughout the 2005 season, beginning
with her summer performances at some of the most prestigious
US music festivals, including Ravinia, Aspen and the
Eastern Music Festival. Additional orchestral engagements
in 2005 included the Vancouver Symphony in Canada, and
the National Symphony Orchestra at the Kennedy Center
in Washington, DC, where she joined violinist Mark O'Connor
to perform his Double Violin Concerto. Salerno-Sonnenberg
has been heard in orchestral engagements throughout North
America, including appearances with the Los Angeles Philharmonic,
Seattle Symphony Orchestra, Minnesota Orchestra, and
Toronto Symphony Orchestra. She continues her highly
successful collaboration with duo guitarists The Assads,
and performed Sergio Assad's Concerto Originis,
written for her and the two brothers, with the Milwaukee
Symphony Orchestra in February 2005. With pianist Anne-Marie
McDermott, she tours in recital in 2006, with appearances
at Ithaca College, Lincoln Center¹s Alice Tully
Hall, Philadelphia's Kimmel Center, Finney Chapel
in Oberlin, at Jesse Auditorium in Missouri, Hill Auditorium
in Michigan and Lund Auditorium in Illinois.
Considered a groundbreaker
in the recording field, Salerno-Sonnenberg remains on
the cutting edge with the creation of her own record
label, NSS MUSIC (nssmusic.com). The label launched in
summer 2005 with an August 1 release of two live recordings:
a recital CD at New York's Merkin Hall entitled "LIVE" with
pianist Anne-Marie McDermott performing Schubert's
Rondo brillant, Poulenc's Sonata for Violin & Piano
and Beethoven's Sonata No. 7 in c, Op. 30/2; and
the other a concerto album featuring Tchaikovsky's
Concerto for Violin in D, Op. 35 and Clarice Assad's
Violin Concerto. With over 20 recordings to her credit,
Nadja has also recorded for the Nonesuch and Angel/EMI
Classics labels. She has received critical acclaim for
several "crossover" discs as well: a self-titled
recording of gypsy music from Eastern Europe with the
Assads (Nonesuch 2000); "Humoresque" (Nonesuch
1998), a CD of music from the 1947 film Humoresque that
combines classical works and pop standards, which the
New York Times has called "a valuable historical
document"; and "It Ain't Necessarily So"
(Angel/EMI 1995) which includes works by Gershwin, Kreisler,
and Scott Joplin, among others. An admirer of all musical
genres, she has made guest appearances on recordings
by Mandy Patinkin, Joe Jackson and Keith Jarrett, and
has also collaborated with such artists as Judy Blazer,
Roger Kellaway, Bob James, Regina Carter, Eileen Ivers
and Janis Siegel. Additonal recent releases include Mark
O'Connor's Double Violin Concerto with the
violinist/composer on the OMAC label, and Concerto Originis
by Sergio Assad on the GHA label.
Salerno-Sonnenberg has
been featured on a variety of television programs, not
only as a guest on talk shows, but as a host and featured
actress/musician. She has appeared in a cameo on ABC's
prime time comedy Dharma & Greg (2001); in a special
segment on Sesame Street; and as the subject of a 2000
Academy Award nominated documentary film on her life,
entitled "Speaking In Strings" (which premiered
at the Sundance Film Festival). She has hosted PBS'
Backstage/Live from Lincoln Center and has been featured
in a commercial for Signet Bank. Her guest appearances
are numerous, and include 60 Minutes, 60 Minutes II,
and Sunday Morning; CNN's Newsstand; NBC's National
News and The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson (several
times); A & E's Artist of the Week with Elliot Forrest;
Bravo's Arts & Minds and The Art of Influence; The Charlie
Rose Show, and City Arts, as well as the PBS/BBC series
The Mind. In 1989, Crown Books published Nadja: On My
Way, an autobiography written for children in which she
shares her experiences as a young musician building a
career. In 1999, Ms. Salerno-Sonnenberg was featured
in a book on celebrities entitled The Virtuoso.
Salerno-Sonnenberg's
professional career began in 1981 when she won the Walter
W. Naumburg International Violin Competition. In 1983
she was recognized with an Avery Fisher Career Grant,
and in 1988 was Ovations Debut Recording Artist of the
Year. In 1999 she was honored with the prestigious Avery
Fisher Prize, awarded to instrumentalists who have demonstrated "outstanding
achievement and excellence in music." In May of
that same year, Salerno-Sonnenberg was awarded an honorary
Masters of Musical Arts from the New Mexico State University.
An American citizen, Salerno-Sonnenberg
was born in Rome and emigrated to the United States at
the age of eight to study at The Curtis Institute of
Music. She later studied with Dorothy DeLay at The Juilliard
School.
Websites: nadjasalernosonnenberg.com
A complete season performance
schedule for Ms. Salerno-Sonnenberg can be obtained from
this general website: nssmusic.com |
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