Jean Ter-Merguerian (Armenian: Ժան Տեր-Մերկերյան; Marseille, 5 October 1935 – Marseille, 29 September 2015) was a French-Armenian virtuoso violinist and violin pedagogue.[1][2][3][4]
Jean Ter-Merguerian | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Jean Ter-Merguerian |
Also known as | Merguirian / Mergherian / Mergerian / Mergerjan |
Born | Marseille, France | 5 October 1935
Died | 29 September 2015 (aged 79) Marseille, France |
Genres | Classical |
Occupation(s) | Violinist, pedagogue |
Instrument(s) | Nicolò Amati, violin |
Years active | 1946–2015 |
Biography
editJean Ter-Merguerian has got the first prize for violin at the Marseille Conservatoire at the age of 11. In the same year, his first recital took place, where he performed Vivaldi's Concerto in A minor and Mendelssohn's Concerto in E minor with conductor André Audoli. In 1947 he immigrated in Soviet Armenia, where he continued his musical studies in Yerevan with prof. Karp Dombaïev and then in the Moscow Conservatory in the class of David Oistrakh. Jean Ter-Merguerian is a prizewinner of international violin competitions, such as Prague Spring (1956), Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow, Queen Elisabeth in Bruxelles (1963). He also got the first Grand Prix at the Long-Thibaud Competition in Paris (1961). Along with his concert activities, in ex-USSR, Western Europe, Lebanon,[5] South America, the United States, and Canada, he gave lectures at the Yerevan Komitas State Conservatory. He got the title of "People's Artist of the Armenian SSR". In 1981 he moved to his birthplace of Marseille.
In 1975, during his USA tour, he played in Boston the Violin Concerto by Brahms; The story goes that, at the conclusion of the concert, the conductor Arthur Fiedler, who was very hard to please and given to lavishing praise, embraced the young violinist on stage with paternal love and wished him success. This was the ringing endorsement of the talent of Jean Ter Merguerian, who had just given his first performance in the United States.
His solo performances were accompanied by orchestras of different countries conducted by famous conductors, also Aram Khachaturian having conducted his own violin concerto. Jean Ter-Merguerian was also member of juries of international competitions: "Paganini" in Genoa, Italy, "Sarasate" in Pamplona, Spain, "Tchaikovsky" in Moscow and "Khachaturian"[6] in Yerevan. He lived in France, giving master classes there and abroad. He played on a Nicolò Amati violin. Jean Ter-Merguerian died of cancer, after a long illness at his home, in Marseille, on 29 September 2015.[7] He is survived by his wife, the pianist Lilia, his son Vagram and his daughter.
Recordings
editAmong recital and concerts recordings by Jean Ter-Merguerian are two CD-Rs of live and archive broadcast material (CD-R 1 : "Selection from Performances" / CD-R 2 : "Khachaturian 100th").[8] The 1966 Armenian Radio broadcast recording of Bach Double Concerto is part of a 2CDs compilation dedicated to his colleague, the violinist Anahit Tsitsikian. In 1999 Jean Ter-Merguerian recorded his only commercial release: Gérard Gasparian's Violin Sonata (1990), with the composer himself at the piano (CD Timpani 1C1055).[9] Armenian Radio TV archives are full of Jean Ter-Merguerian's audio and video recordings, yet to be discovered, some of them already on YouTube
CDs
editIn 2020 Rhine Classics label has released a 5CD box dedicated to his art "The soul of violin":
- RH-016 | 5CD | JEAN TER-MERGUERIAN - violin’s soul
Live, private, radio TV archives, uncommercial
editcomposer | work | orchestra / conductor / accompanist | recording | source | note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bach, Johann Sebastian | Chaconne, in D minor, BWV 1004 | violin solo | live(1) | CD-R 1 | |
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus | Rondò (Serenade No.7 "Haffner" KV 250) | Zemphira Barseghian, piano | live(2) | CD-R 1 | |
Beethoven, Ludwig van | Violin Concerto Op.61, II. Larghetto | Armenian State Symphony O. / Loris Tjeknavorian, cond. | live(3) | CD-R 1 | recording of 1st and 3rd mvmt. is probably lost |
Beethoven, Ludwig van | Violin Concerto Op.61, III. Rondò (Allegro) | ORTF / Louis Fourestier, cond. (prize winner concert of the Marguerite Long–Jacques Thibaud Competition) | live Paris, 27 June 1961 | VIDEO | |
interview | ORTF interview at the "1st Grand Prize", Jean Ter-Merguerian, with Henryk Szeryng (Jury member) | after Prize winners Concert of the 9th Marguerite Long–Jacques Thibaud Competition | live Paris, 27 June 1961 | VIDEO | |
Sarasate, Pablo de | Habanera, Op.21/2 (Spanish Dance No.2) | Nelli Daniel-Bek, piano | studio(4) | CD-R 1 | |
Sarasate, Pablo de | Romanza andaluza, Op.22/1 (Spanish Dance No.3) | Nelli Daniel-Bek, piano | studio(4) | CD-R 1 | |
Sarasate, Pablo de | Capricho vasco (Caprice Basque), Op.24 | Zemphira Barseghian, piano | live(2) | CD-R 1 | |
Scott, Cyril | Lotus Land, Op.47 No.1 | Zemphira Barseghian, piano | studio(5) | CD-R 1 | |
Szymanowski, Karol | La Fontaine d'Arethousa, Op.30 No.1 ("Mythes") | Zemphira Barseghian, piano | studio(5) | CD-R 1 | |
Prokofiev, Sergei | Masks ("Romeo and Juliet", Suite Op.75) arr. Jascha Heifetz | Nelli Daniel-Bek, piano | studio(6) | CD-R 1 | |
Khachaturian, Aram | Ayshe's Dance ("Gayane", Ballet Suite No.2) | Nelli Daniel-Bek, piano | studio(6) | CD-R 1 | |
Komitas | Keler tsoler (Striding, Beaming), arr. Aram Shamshyan | Nelli Daniel-Bek, piano | live(7) | CD-R 1 | |
Komitas | Akh Maral jan (Ah, Dear Maral), arr. Aram Shamshyan | Nelli Daniel-Bek, piano | live(7) | CD-R 1 | |
Komitas | Groong (The Crane) | violin solo | live(8) | CD-R 1 | |
Sibelius, Jean | Violin Concerto, in D minor Op.47, II. Adagio di molto | Armenian State Symphony O. / Michael Malountian, cond. | live 1970s | I & III recording probably lost | |
Khachaturian, Aram | Violin Concerto, in D minor (1940) | Armenian State Symphony O. / Michael Malountian, cond. | radio(9) | CD-R 2 | |
Khachaturian, Aram | Dance in B-flat Major, Op.1 | Nelli Daniel-Bek, piano | studio(6) | CD-R 2 | |
Khachaturian, Aram | Violin Concerto, in D minor (1940) | URSS State Symphony O. / Aram Khachaturian, cond. | live, 1970s | recording probably lost | |
Bach, Johann Sebastian | Double Concerto for 2 violins, in D minor, BWV 1043 | Anahit Tsitsikian (I), Jean Ter-Merguerian (II) / Armenian Radio TV Symphony O. / Raphael Mangassarian, cond | live, 1966 | CD [10][11] | |
Brahms, Johannes | Violin Concerto, in D major Op.77 | Boston Symphony O. / Arthur Fiedler, cond. | live, 1975 | ||
Khachaturian, Aram | Violin Concerto, in D minor (1940) | Erevan Symphony O. / Loris Tjeknavorian, cond. | late 1970s | VIDEO | recording of 2nd movement only |
Gasparian, Gérard | Violin Sonata (1990) | Gérard Gasparian, piano | studio, 1999 | CD Timpani 1C1055 |
Bibliography
edit- Jean Ter-Merguerian - L'Âme du violon (Ջութակի հոգին / Violin's soul), 176 pages, 2012, Armenian, Russian, French | ISBN 978-9939-0-0463-1
References
edit- ^ Interview with Jean Ter-Merguerian, Asparez, 17 April 2013.
- ^ AV Production, Jean Ter-Merguerian, violinist - photo gallery
- ^ Photo of Jean Ter-Merguerian by Zaven Sargsyan
- ^ Jean Ter-Merguerian - Armenian National Music
- ^ Chance to witness brilliance of a violinist from the old school, The Daily Star, Lebanon News, February 25, 2000
- ^ Jury members Archived 2014-04-26 at the Wayback Machine, "Aram Khachaturian Competition", 2005
- ^ SAD NEWS | French-Armenian Violinist Jean Ter-Merguerian Has Died
- ^ YouTube playlist: Jean Ter-Merguerian Legacy
- ^ CD review, Gwyn Parry Jones (MusicWeb International)
- ^ The Art of Anahit Tsitsikian, CD 1 & 2
- ^ by "Anahit Tsitsikian Cultural Foundation" Archived 2009-11-30 at the Wayback Machine