- William Primrose
William Primrose CBE (
August 23 ,1904 -May 1 ,1982 ) was a Scottish violist and teacher, probably the best known viola player of his and all time.Primrose was born in
Glasgow and studiedviolin there and, later, at the thenGuildhall School of Music inLondon . From there he moved toBelgium to study underEugène Ysaÿe who encouraged him to take up the viola instead. In 1930, he joined Warwick Evans, John Pennington, and Thomas Petre as the violist in theLondon String Quartet . The group dissolved in 1935. In 1937, he began playing in theNBC Symphony Orchestra underArturo Toscanini . When it was rumored that Toscanini would leave the Symphony in 1941, Primrose resigned. His career as a soloist took off when he started touring withRichard Crooks . He later signed withArthur Judson , an influential concert manager. In 1946, he was the soloist in the first recording ofBerlioz 's "Harold in Italy ".In 1944 he had commissioned a viola concerto from
Béla Bartók . This was left incomplete at Bartók's death in 1945, and had to wait four years for its completion byTibor Serly . Primrose was the soloist in the world premiere performance of the concerto, on 2 December 1949.In 1953 he was made a Commander of the
Order of the British Empire (CBE) by Queen Elizabeth II.Primrose was known for his tremendous technique. When he performed Paganini's violin caprices on viola,
Mischa Elman is said to have exclaimed, "It must be easier on viola!" Primrose wrote many transcriptions and arrangements for viola, often technically dazzling, including "La Campanella" (from Paganini's second violin concerto) and the famous "Nocturne" from Borodin's second string quartet, the latter "out of jealousy" for the cello's long melodic lines.Later in his life, Primrose became a noted teacher, writing several books on viola playing and teaching widely in
Japan and the USA, occasionally at the University of Southern California (withJascha Heifetz ),The Juilliard School ,Eastman School of Music ,Indiana University Jacobs School of Music , and theCurtis Institute of Music . In 1972, he published his memoirs, "A Walk on the North Side".The
Primrose International Viola Competition , created in 1979 in honor of William Primrose, was the first international music competition for viola players.Primrose played an
Amati viola, formerly owned by his father [ [http://www.cozio.com/Instrument.aspx?id=3489 Cozio.com page on Primrose's inherited Amati] ] . The ex-Primrose Amati is now owned by Roberto Díaz, who is currently the president of Curtis and recorded a CD of Primrose's transcriptions forNaxos Records . Prior to the recording, the viola was inspected and was found to have had adjustments of questionable workmanship, which were subsequently repaired. Primrose had noted that the viola had awolf tone and did not project easily. He was also known to have owned and played on at least one viola by William Moennig Jr. of Philadelphia.William Primrose died from
cancer inProvo, Utah on 1 May 1982. His large collection of annotated viola scores became the nucleus for the William Primrose International Viola Archive at theHarold B. Lee Library ,Brigham Young University . For his contribution to the recording industry, Primrose has a star on theHollywood Walk of Fame at 6801 Hollywood Blvd.External links
* [http://members.aol.com/abelard2/marian.htm A discussion of one of Primrose's greatest recordings]
* [http://magazine.byu.edu/?act=view&a=1335 An article on Primrose from BYU Magazine]
* [http://viola.byu.edu Primrose Archive at Brigham Young University]Notes
References
*cite journal
last = Dalton
first = David
title = [http://music.lib.byu.edu/PIVA/WPbio.html Celebrating 100 Years: William Primrose's Life and Career]
journal = Journal of the American Viola Society
volume = Vol.20
issue = No.1
pages = pp.13–17
publisher =
date = Spring 2004
accessdate = 2006-10-08
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