David Fyodorovich Oistrakh (Russian: Давид Фёдорович Ойстрах), David Fiodorovič Ojstrah; [[September 30]], 1908 – October 24, 1974) was a Soviet violin virtuoso who made many recordings and was the dedicatee of numerous violin works.
His recordings and performances of Shostakovich's concerti are particularly well known, but he was also a performer of classical concerti. He worked with orchestras in Russia, and also with musicians in Europe and the United States. The violin concerto of Aram Khachaturian is dedicated to him, as are the two violin concerti by Dmitri Shostakovich.
Early years
He was born in the cosmopolitan city of
Odessa on the
Black Sea in
Russian Empire into a
Jewish family of merchants of the second guild. His father was Fishl Oistrakh and his mother was Beyle (nee Stepanovsky)

At the age of five, young David began studying violin and
viola seriously with a local teacher named
Piotr Stolyarsky. He was Oistrakh's first and only teacher. Stolyarsky also taught
Nathan Milstein, with whom Oistrakh was to share his first concert appearance in 1914, when Milstein graduated from the Conservatoire. Having made his debut in Odessa at the age of 6, Oistrakh entered the Odessa Conservatory in 1923 where he studied until 1926. There he played the
Bach A minor Concerto. His 1926 graduation concert consisted of Bach's Chaconne, Tartini's Devil's Trill Sonata, Rubinstein's Viola Sonata, and Prokofiev's D major Concerto. He appeared as soloist playing the
Glazunov Violin Concerto under the composer's direction in
Kiev in 1927 - a concert which earned him an invitation to play the Tchaikovsky violin concerto in
Leningrad with the Philharmonic Orchestra under
Nikolai Malko the following year.
In Moscow
In the same year, Oistrakh decided to move to
Moscow where he gave his first recital and met his future wife
Tamara Rotareva, a pianist, whom he was to marry a year later. In 1931, their only child
Igor was born, a son who was to follow in his father's footsteps and would be heard later playing violin with his father in works such as the
Bach Double Concerto and
Mozart's
Sinfonia Concertante. From 1934 onwards, he obtained a position teaching at the
Moscow Conservatoire where he was made professor in 1939. There, he was among such greats as
Yuri Yankelevich and
Boris Goldstein. Oistrakh also taught many prodigies such as
Nina Beilina,
Stefan Gheorgiu,
Eduard Grach,
Olga Kaverzneva,
Mihail Gotsdiner,
Oleg Kagan,
Gidon Kremer,
Oleg Krysa,
Igor Oistrakh,
Victor Danchenko,
Olga Parkhomenko,
Victor Pikaisen,
Simeon Snitkovsky,
Cyrus Forough, and
Liana Isakadze.
Awards
Oistrakh found international fame by winning several national and international competitions including the 1935
Soviet Union competition. Oistrakh won second prize at the
Henryk Wieniawski Violin Competition in
Warsaw in the same year, losing first prize to the 16-year-old prodigy
Ginette Neveu. However, in 1937 he captured top prize in the Queen Elisabeth Competition (then known as the Eugene Ysaÿe Competition) in
Brussels. During this period, he also began a lengthy friendship and partnership with the great pianist
Lev Oborin, as well as coming under the influence of violinist
Jacques Thibaud.
During WWII
During World War II, he was active in the Soviet Union, premiering new concerti by
Nikolai Miaskovsky and
Khachaturian as well as two sonatas by his friend
Sergei Prokofiev. He was also awarded the Stalin Prize in 1942. The final years of the war saw the blossoming of a friendship with Shostakovich, which would lead to the two violin concertos and the sonata, all of which were to be premiered by and become firmly associated with Oistrakh in the following years. Oistrakh's career was set from this point, except for one small hitch - the Soviet Union was "protective" of its people and refused to let him leave. He continued to teach in the Moscow Conservatory, but when Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union, he went to the front lines, playing for soldiers and factory workers under intensely difficult conditions. The most heroic act in his life was his performance of Tchaikovsky's violin concerto to the end in the downtown music hall during the
Battle of Stalingrad in winter 1942 while downtown Stalingrad was being massively bombed by the German Luftwaffe.
International travel
Oistrakh was allowed to travel after the end of the war. He traveled to the countries in the Soviet bloc and even to the West. His first foreign engagement was to appear at the newly founded "Prague Spring" Festival where he met with enormous success. In 1949 he gave his first concert in the West - in Helsinki. In 1951, he appeared at the "Maggio Musicale" Festival in Florence, in 1952 he was in East Germany for the Beethoven celebrations, France in 1953, Britain in 1954, and eventually, in 1955, he was allowed to tour the United States. By 1959, he was beginning to establish a second career as a conductor, and in 1960 he was awarded the coveted Lenin Prize. His Moscow conducting debut followed in 1962, and by 1967 he had established a partnership with the celebrated Soviet pianist
Sviatoslav Richter.
Later years
1968 saw wide celebrations for the violinist's sixtieth birthday, which included a celebratory performance in the Great Hall of Moscow Conservatory of the Tchaikovsky concerto, one of his favourite works, under the baton of
Gennady Rozhdestvensky. Oistrakh was now seen as one of the great violinists of his time, in the same league as such luminaries as Romania's
George Enescu and the United States'
Jascha Heifetz.
For around ten years, Oistrakh played the 1702 Conte di Fontana Stradivarius that he traded for the 1705 Marsick Stradivarius in June 1966.
Oistrakh suffered a heart attack as early as 1964. He survived and continued to work at a furious pace. He had already become one of the principal cultural ambassadors for the Soviet Union to the West in live concerts and recordings. After conducting a cycle of Brahms with the Concertgebouw Orchestra, he died of another heart attack in Amsterdam in 1974. His remains were returned to Moscow where he was interred in Novodevichy Cemetery.
The asteroid 42516 Oistrach is named in honour of him and his son, the violinist Igor Oistrakh.
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