Truls Olaf Otterbech Mørk (born 25 April 1961) is a Norwegian - TopicsExpress



          

Truls Olaf Otterbech Mørk (born 25 April 1961) is a Norwegian cellist. He was born in Bergen, Norway, the son of two professional musicians, his father a cellist and his mother a pianist. His mother began teaching him the piano when he was seven. He also played the violin, but soon switched to the cello, taking lessons from his father. Mørk began his studies with Frans Helmerson at 17 at Edsberg Music Institute. An admirer of Mstislav Rostropovich and the Russian school of cello, Mørk went on to study with the Russian cellist Natalia Shakhovskaya. In 1982, Mørk became the first Scandinavian musician to reach the finals of the Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow since Arto Noras in 1966, and won the sixth prize. He subsequently went on to win second prize at the 1986 Naumburg Competition in New York and, in 1986, the Cassado Cello Competition in Florence. In 1989, he embarked on his first major concert tour, soloing with many of the finest orchestras of Europe. In 1994, he toured the United States with the Oslo Philharmonic, including debuts at Carnegie Hall and the Kennedy Center. Mørks extensive discography spans from a Grammy-award-winning recording of the Shostakovich Cello Concertos to a Grammy-winning recording of Bachs Suites for Solo Cello. Mørks interest in chamber music led to the foundation of the International Chamber Music Festival of Stavanger. Mørk plays a rare Domenico Montagnana cello (Venice, 1723), the scroll of which was made by Stradivarius. It was bought by a bank in Norway (SR Bank), and is on loan to him. Valued at around 12 million NOK it once belonged to a Belgian man who named it the Esquire. He holds a Professorship at the Norwegian Academy of Music, Oslo. In April 2009, Mørk experienced an infection of the central nervous system, presumably caused by a tick bite he received in the United States in 2006, with subsequent encephalitis, and paralysis in the shoulder muscles of the left arm. In the autumn of 2009 he expressed concern that he might never be able to perform again. However, as of January 2011, Mørk has been back on stage, returning also to the studio with a recording of concertos by C. P. E. Bach. youtu.be/rcdL26qm70Y
Posted on: Tue, 12 Aug 2014 06:26:32 +0000

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