Dong-Suk Kang

Hailed for his outstanding artistry, musicianship and virtuosity, violinist Dong-Suk Kang has performed on five continents to extraordinary acclaim. Dominic Gill, a London music critic, describes Kang in his book “The Book of the Violin,” as “already one of the world’s great violinists. His flawless technique and perfect bow arm certainly produce one of the most beautiful violin tones to be heard anywhere today.” Ormandy, Serkin, Menuhin, Francescatti, and other eminent musicians also have praised him as one of the most outstanding violinists of his generation and a musician of the highest order.

Born in Korea, Dong-Suk Kang went to New York in 1967 to study at The Juilliard School and later at the Curtis Institute with Ivan Galamian. He first came to the attention of the American public in 1971 when he created a sensation by winning both the San Francisco Symphony Foundation Competition and the Merriweather Post Competition in Washington, D.C. Following a debut at the Kennedy Center and an appearance with Seiji Ozawa, he went on to win top prizes in a number of international competitions including the Montréal, the Carl Flesch in London and the Queen Elisabeth in Brussels. Since then, he has appeared with many great orchestras of the world including those of Philadelphia, Cleveland, Los Angeles, Saint Louis, San Francisco, Baltimore, Washington and Montréal in North America, and Royal Philharmonic, London Philharmonia, BBC Orchestras, Halle, Birmingham, Scottish National, Munich, Stuttgart, Gewandhaus, French and Belgian National Orchestras, Gothenburg, Saint Petersburg, Moscow, Polish National and Rotterdam in Europe. Tours of Asia have brought performances with the orchestras of NHK, Yomiuri, Tokyo Metropolitan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Beijing, Shanghai, KBS and Seoul Philharmonic with whom he has toured the United States and Europe. He also toured extensively in Australia performing with all six orchestras of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

Dong-Suk has collaborated with conductors including Dutoit, Ozawa, Mazur, Järvi, Menuhin, Salonen, Slatkin, Chung, Barshai, Jansons, Norrington, Foster, Svetlanov, Berglund, Lazarev and Herbig. He has performed at major music centers and festivals throughout the world and his concerts, such as London Proms, were frequently televised and broadcast on the radio in many countries. His strong interest in chamber music has resulted in his participation at various chamber music festivals including those in Spoleto, Santa Fe, Kuhmo, Korsholm, Seattle, Vancouver, Newport and Australian Festival of Chamber Music. As a guest artist with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, he has performed in New York and toured throughout the country.

Dong-Suk Kang’s wide-ranging repertoire includes all the standard works as well as many unusual and neglected works. He has recently given the premier of the violin concerto Mistral by Alan Hoddinott in Great Britain, which was commissioned by BBC as well as the Asian premier of the Third Concerto by Isang Yun at the opening concert of World Music Days Festival after having performed Isang Yun’s First Concerto earlier.

In the field of recording, in addition to the well-known works, such as Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons (with The Academy of St Martin in the Fields), he has recorded the Nielsen and Elgar concertos, complete chamber music of Honegger and Alkan, and the Furtwängler Sonata. His recordings have won critical acclaim and awards among which are the Grand Prix du disque from both the Académie Charles Cros and the Nouvelle Académie du disque. His Walton Concerto CD was chosen as the CD of the month by Gramophone magazine and nominated for the Gramophone Award 2000. Dong-Suk Kang is a professor at Yonsei University in Seoul and artistic director of MusicAlp Festival in France and the Seoul Spring Festival in Korea.