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| Judith Aller conducting in Finland |
Biography
JUDITH ALLER is an American-born violin virtuoso, a product of the vanishing romantic-expressionist tradition. Guided by her father, the late Victor Aller, a piano virtuoso and a Capitol recording artist, and her teacher, Jascha Heifetz, the nonpareil violinist of the 20th Century, she has become, and remains, a completely individual artist. There is no other like her on the scene today. She is capable of re-establishing that grand tradition of which Heifetz, Kreisler, and Piatigorsky, and so many great composers from Brahms to Bloch, are a part.
For years, during the '70s, she maintained a successful solo career in Scandinavia and throughout Europe generally, operating from a base in Finland. She has received recognition both there in Europe and here in America and has an established audience for her work.
Aller comes from a family with a musical heritage that goes back many generations in Europe. She grew up in the midst of Hollywood's classical music golden era. Her father, pianist Victor Aller, best known for his chamber recordings with the Hollywood String Quartet, served as musical supervisor at Warner Brothers Studio. Ms. Aller started taking lessons on the violin at seven, and as a teenager, she began her studies with Jascha Heifetz in his master class at the University of Southern California. After three years with Heifetz, and an impressive debut tour, Aller married a Finnish musician and relocated to Finland, residing first in Helsinki and subsequently in Pori. She toured Europe in recital and with the Pori Symphony Orchestra, in which she performed as soloist and served as concertmaster and assistant conductor. From Helsinki she toured as soloist with the Finnish Radio Symphony, made many recordings for Finnish radio, and taught at the Sibelius Academy. During this period the Helsinki newspaper Helsingin Sanomat wrote: "Judith Aller is in the midst of an indisputably bright career. Her technique is already so highly polished that she can be counted among the elite. Her tone is mellow and intensive and its purity exemplar."
The fatal illness of her father brought Judith Aller and her family back to America. In Los Angeles, she performed as a principal and frequent soloist with the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra and the Oregon Bach Festival Orchestra, and played literally on hundreds of sound tracks for motion pictures, television productions, and popular music recordings. In her conducting debut with the Los Angeles Accademia Filarmonica, a Los Angeles critic wrote that "Aller's…results were…so illuminating — particularly in Mozart's 29th symphony — that one caught a glimpse of the days before World War II, when such conductors as Furtwangler and Stokowski ruled the musical firmament."
After remarrying, she moved to Paris with her husband, Bruce Cook, a writer known on both continents. While dividing her time between Paris and Los Angeles, Aller recorded the CD "ARCHANGEL!" (on the USA Music Group label), a selection of the Opus 5 violin sonatas by the great Italian Baroque master, Arcangelo Corelli. These sonatas, which she describes as "music that exists outside of time," were recorded in a single day, and are among the finest recorded renditions of these virtuoso pieces. Following that recording, Aller returned to England, and soloed on a soundtrack for a film, titled "Maestro," about a violinist. She continued to perform recitals in France with pianists from the Paris Conservatory, and in Los Angeles with the Judith Aller Quartet.
Aller has taught at Indiana University, as well as the University of Judaism in Los Angeles, where she continues to teach. In the 2007-2008 season, she will be performing concerts in the United States, Mexico, and Europe.
The Victor Trio, which she directs and which is named for her late father, Victor Aller, rehearses in her home, using Mr. Aller's Steinway grand, a musical icon from her childhood. For Aller, her father's piano is a physical link to a transcendental musical past: Some of her most precious memories revolve around performing chamber music on the violin with her father at the piano.
Contact
judith@judithaller.com
Tel: (323) 578-9661. |