Charles Cyroulnik

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Charles Cyroulnik (born March 1, 1923 in Paris ; † March 10, 2003 there ) was a French violinist.

Life

Charles Cyroulnik studied at the Paris Conservatory with Jules Boucherit and Marcel Chailley and graduated in 1939 with a First Prize. The outbreak of the Second World War initially prevented the beginning of his concert career; his brother Emile was deported in 1942 and murdered in Auschwitz . After the war Charles went on concert tours through France, Spain, Belgium, Switzerland, Tunisia, Morocco and Mexico. At the Lamoureux Concerts in 1946 he played Georges Dandelot's violin concerto, and at the Salle Gaveau in 1947 he played works by Jean-Marie Leclair , Johann Sebastian Bach , Robert Schumann , Camille Saint-Saëns , Isaac Albéniz and Manuel de Falla .

In 1957 he played at Radiodiffusion-Télévision Française with Bernard Cottret , Jean-Pierre Rampal , Micheline Collot , Serge Collot , Louis Ingigliardi and Hélène Salomé at the "Festival Martini - Schwarzendorf" on unpublished works by Jean-Paul-Égide Martini , the Carl de Nys had rediscovered. Since 1945 he has also appeared regularly at the Paris concerts of the Jeunesses Musicales de France , where he met the composer Jean Barraqué , with whom he was friends until his death in 1973. A muscular disease ended his career as a violinist in 1962.

In 1949 his twins Philippe and Alain were born. Philippe Cyroulnik became known as an art critic, Alain Cyroulnik became an educator and took part in two films by Romain Goupils . One of Cyroulnik's students is the violinist Nell Gotkovsky .

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