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Veronika Hagen

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Name
  
Veronika Hagen


Role
  
Violist

Veronika Hagen httpss3euwest1amazonawscomhellostagefoto

Movies
  
Hagen Quartett: Mozart Quintet for Clarinet and Strings & Beethoven String Quartet No. 16

Albums
  
String Quartets Nos. 3, 7, 8, The String Quartets

Music group
  
Hagen Quartet (Since 1981)

Similar People
  
Clemens Hagen, Andras Schiff, Franz Schubert

Antonín Dvořák: Terzetto in C, Op. 74


Veronika Hagen (born 5 May 1963 in Salzburg) is an Austrian violist.

Contents

Veronika Hagen HAGEN QUARTETltbrgtltbgtHaydnltbgt String quartet op 76 No 3

Dvořák: String Quintet No. 2 / Baiba Skride, Sol Gabetta, Veronika Hagen


Biography

Veronika Hagen Home Artists

Born in Salzburg, Hagen began to learn music at the age of six with her father, who was at that time concertmaster of the Mozarteum Orchestra of Salzburg. She then continued her studies at the Musik Hochschule of Salzburg with Professor Helmut Zehetmair and at the Musik Hochschule of Hanover with Professor Hatto Beyerle. During her studies she won several prizes, including the Budapest International Viola Competition in 1984.

Veronika Hagen Veronika Hagen on HELLO STAGE

Hagen is a founding member of the Hagen Quartet, along with her siblings Lukas, Angelika (later replaced by Rainer Schmidt) and Clemens. The quartet has performed across the world.

Among a number of recordings for the Deutsche Grammophon label, Hagen collaborated with the pianist Paul Gulda on the Brahms Sonatas in 1997 and, with the violinist Augustin Dumay and the Salzburg Camerata, on Mozart's Concertante. As well as her activity as a soloist, she has performed with other leading musicians, including Elena Bashkirova, Joshua Bell, Gérard Caussé, Ivry Gitlis, Paul Gulda, Tatjana Grindenko, Steven Isserlis, Gidon Kremer, Alexander Lonquich and Heinrich Schiff. She has also played at many international music festivals, and has performed with orchestras such as the Tokyo Symphony Orchestra and Orchestre de la Suisse Romande.

Hagen plays a Giovanni Paolo Magini (Brescia) Viola from the collection of the National Bank of Austria.

References

Veronika Hagen Wikipedia