Davidov Stradivarius

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The Davidov Stradivarius (also: Davidoff or Davydov), is an antique cello fabricated in 1712 by Italian luthier Antonio Stradivari of Cremona. It is very similar in construction and form to the equally famed Duport Stradivarius built a year earlier and played by Mstislav Rostropovich until his death in 2007. The varnish is of a rich orange-red hue, produced with oil color glazes. Its owners have included Jacqueline du Pré, and it is currently used by Yo-Yo Ma.

In 1870, it was given to Karl Davydov (1838-1889) by patron, Count Wielhorsky at the court of Tsar, Alexander II, and it is Davydov's name the cello bears today.[1] Davydov was a Russian cellist of great renown at the time, described as the "czar of cellists" by Tchaikovsky, though far less successful as a composer. The cello body has a few marks and scratches due to mishandling from this period.

After Davydov's death, the cello was sold in Paris in 1889. In 1928 it was purchased by Herbert N. Straus, an American business executive. When he died, his widow asked New York City musical instrument dealer Rembert Wurlitzer to sell the instrument for her. In 1964 the Davydov cello was purchased for US$90,000 by Ismena Holland who in turn presented the instrument to her goddaughter, the English cellist, Jacqueline du Pré. Upon receiving the Davydov, Du Pre's instructor, William Pleeth, declared it as “one of the really great instruments of the world.” Practically all of du Pré's recordings from 1964 to 1970 were made on this instrument. By 1970, du Pré complaining of the instrument's “unpredictability,” began using a cello fabricated for her by Sergio Peresson purchased by her husband Daniel Barenboim. Cellist Yo-Yo Ma later commented, “Jackie's unbridled dark qualities went against the Davydov. You have to coax the instrument. The more you attack it, the less it returns.” The Peresson was her primary instrument for the remainder of her career.

Upon her death in 1987, the Davydov was made available for use by Ma, owned by the Vuitton Foundation. Ma has since performed and recorded with the instrument in Baroque music, specifically, the Simply Baroque and Simply Baroque II recordings. It was modified especially for the task of creating a more authentic sound for that era. The Davydov has subsequently been reconfigured for modern music once again.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Beare, Charles; Carlson, Bruce (1993). Antonio Stradivari: The Cremona Exhibition of 1987, Ma, Yo Yo (forward), London: J. & A. Beare. ISBN 095193970X. 
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