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  1. Adolph Davidovich Brodsky (Russian: Адольф Давидович Бродский, Adolf Davidovič Brodskij; 2 April [O.S. 21 March] 1851 – 22 January 1929) was a Russian Empire violinist who later moved to the United States.

  2. Adolph Davidovich Brodksy was born in 1851 in the southern Russian city of Taganrog. Both his father and grandfather were violinists and Adolph had his first violin lesson at the age of five. Aged nine he gave his first concert in Odessa.

  3. Russian violinist (b. 21 March/2 April 1851 in Taganrog; d. 22 January 1929 in Manchester) born Adolf Davidovich Brodsky (Адольф Давыдович Бродский). Biography Son of the violinist David Brodsky, Adolph took up the instrument even before his fifth birthday, soon becoming a pupil of Joseph Hellmesberger (1828–1893) at ...

  4. www.enciclopedia.cat › gran-enciclopedia-de-la-musica › adolph-brodskyAdolph Brodsky | enciclopedia.cat

    Adolph Brodsky | enciclopedia.cat. Temps de lectura: 1 min. Adolph Brodsky. (Taganrog, Rússia, 1851 — Manchester, 1929) Violonista rus. Entre el 1860 i el 1863 estudià a Viena amb Joseph Hellmesberger. Posteriorment inicià la seva tasca docent als conservatoris de Moscou i Leipzig.

  5. Overview. Adolph Brodsky. (1851—1929) Quick Reference. ( b Taganrog, Russia, 1851; d Manchester, 1929). Russ. violinist and teacher. Joined staff of Moscow Cons. and later Leipzig. Gave f.p. of Tchaikovsky vn. conc., Vienna, 1881. From 1890 to 1894 was leader of NYSO.

  6. Adolph Brodsky. THE MUSICAL TIMES.- April I, 1903. 225. THE MUSICAL TIMES the Wunderkind to play at many concerts in Vienna, and finally admitted him into his own. AND SINGING-CLASS CIRCULAR. celebrated quartet, then in the height of its. popularity, the personnel being Hellmesberger, APRIL i, 1903. Brodsky, Bachrich, and Popper. At Vienna he.

  7. tarisio.com › lso-digital-exhibition › tchaikovsky-brodsky-znaiderTchaikovsky Violin Concerto - Tarisio

    No one seems to be sure when Adolph Brodsky acquired the 1702 Strad now known as the ‘Brodsky’, but he certainly used it for his later performances of the concerto: in 1891–94 he led the New York Symphony and on January 6, 1893 he played a much-praised Tchaikovsky with them.