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Theodore Lettvin

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Name
  
Theodore Lettvin

Role
  
Conductor


Died
  
2003

Theodore Lettvin


Saint sa ns concerto 2 in g minor op 22 with theodore lettvin as the soloist tibor sz sz


Theodore Lettvin (1926–2003) was an American concert pianist and conductor. He was one of the four children of Solomon and Fanny Lettvin, two Ukrainian immigrants who settled in Chicago. Neurophysiologist and MIT professor Jerome Lettvin was his eldest brother.

Contents

Theodore Lettvin 1950 Press Photo Concert Pianist and Conductor Theodore Lettvin

Lettvin's first concert was at the age of 5 at the Lyon & Healy in Chicago. On March 15, 1939, he appeared as a soloist with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under conductor Frederick Stock, performing the first movement of Mendelssohn's Piano Concerto no. 1. As a teenager, he was accepted as a scholarship student of Rudolf Serkin and Mieczysław Horszowski at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. In his twenties, he won the Michaels Memorial Award, First Prize in the Queen Elisabeth of Belgium International Piano Competition. He made his European debut touring France with violinist Sidney Harth in 1951-1952 in a concert series organized by the National Music League and the Jeunesses Musicales International.

Theodore Lettvin Theodore Lettvin Wikipedia

Honored by audiences, critics, colleagues and students throughout a musical career spanning more than sixty five years, Theodore Lettvin enthralled, engaged and entertained as he performed and taught from the piano.

Some of the orchestras with which Lettvin performed include the New York Philharmonic, and the symphony orchestras of Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Washington, Atlanta, Vienna, Tel Aviv, and Tokyo. He also participated in the summer festivals at Tanglewood, Ravina, Saratoga, Sarasota, Salzburg and Interlochen.

Prior to his appointment as Professor Emeritus by Rutgers University and the University of Michigan, Lettvin was a Distinguished Professor in their music departments where he directed their Doctor of Musical Arts and Artist Diploma programs. Before joining these universities, Mr. Lettvin was on the faculty of the New England Conservatory of Music, the Cleveland Music School Settlement, and Artist in Residence at the University of Colorado in Boulder.

Some of the foremost teachers and performers have been his students.

After his death in August 2003, many of his students and family have continued his legacy. There is a concert series in Bradford, New Hampshire, named for him, as a testament to his impact on the community and on the music world.

Jeffrey Wagner: Interview of Theodore Lettvin (Part 1 of 4)


Discography

From IPAM (International Piano Archive at University of Maryland).

Online recordings

Six sample recordings are available online at http://theodore.lettvin.com

References

Theodore Lettvin Wikipedia