Leventritt Competition

This article is about the musical competition. For the bridge championship, see Leventritt Silver Ribbon Pairs.

The Leventritt Competition was a highly prestigious international competition for classical pianists and violinists. It was founded in 1939 by the Edgar M. Leventritt Foundation Inc. of Cold Spring, New York, in memory of jurist Edgar M. Leventritt.

More recently, the Cliburn contest in Fort Worth, Texas, has attracted more publicity. By contrast, the now discontinued Leventritt Competition, held in New York City, did not court popularity but set higher standards and produced more outstanding musicians, including Van Cliburn himself.[1] The Leventritt award was sparingly given, and there was no award presented if the judges felt the required standard was not achieved.

Award winners

References

  1. Horowitz 1990
  2. "Pianists Fail to Win Leventritt Prize", The New York Times, 1976-05-27, retrieved 2011-09-25
  3. Hughes, Allen (1969-05-28), "Joseph Kalichstein Wins Leventritt Piano Award", The New York Times, retrieved 2011-09-25
  4. Sullivan, Dan (1965-10-27), "Korean Pianist, 23, Is Winner Of 24th Leventritt Competition", The New York Times, retrieved 2011-09-24
  5. Strongin, Theodore (1964-04-22), "Violinist Wins Prize, Loses a Guarnerius", The New York Times, retrieved 2011-09-25
  6. Taubman, Howard (1959-10-01), "Music: A Step Forward; Leventritt Competition Grows in Stature", The New York Times, retrieved 2011-09-25
  7. Schonberg, Harold C.; Hughes, Allen (1960-11-01), "Music: Frager, a Confident Pianist; Competition Winner in Carnegie Hall Debut Shows Virtuoso Skill in Prokofieff Sixth", The New York Times
  8. Parmenter, Ross (1958-10-02), "Violinist, 21, wins Leventritt Prize; Arnold Steinhardt of Los Angeles Is Victor Over 5 Other Finalists Here", The New York Times, retrieved 2011-09-25
  9. http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/articles/emc/bettyjean-hagen Missing or empty |title= (help)

Bibliography