Johannes Bastiaan

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Johannes Hans Bastiaan (1 February 1911 – 11 October 2012[1]) was a German violinist. He was a member of the Berlin Philharmonic for over 40 years. From 1945 to 1970, he served as primarius of the Bastiaan Quartet.

Life

Bastiaan was born in 1911 in Nuremberg as the son of the Dutch[2] musician Gerrit Bastiaan. He attended primary schools in Berlin. When he was eight years old he received violin lessons from his father. From 1920 to 1924, he was taught by Robert Zeidler in Berlin. From 1925 to 1928, he attended the orchestra school in Berlin, where Carl Seidel was one of his teachers.

From 1928, he studied violin and

Universität der Künste Berlin. From 1931 to 1933, he attended the violin class of Max Rostal. After that he was his private pupil for a short time. Max Strub then taught him further at the Musikhochschule from 1933.[3]

Bastiaan joined the chamber orchestra of

Berliner Philharmoniker until he became a permanent member of the orchestra under Wilhelm Furtwängler on 1 October 1934. In 1939, he received the position of the 3rd concert master. In the course of the "raids" by the Nazis he was given a precious Giovanni Battista Guadagnini violin on loan.[4] During the 1945 denazification, he appeared as an advocate for his friend violinist Hans Gieseler.[5] After the War, he acted as foreplayer and deputy principal of the 1st violins of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra. In addition to Furtwängler, he also experienced Leo Borchard, Sergiu Celibidache and Herbert von Karajan as principal conductors. In 1965, Bastiaan became a member of the Council of Five and in 1967 of the orchestra's Staff Council. In 1968, he became vice-chairman. In 1964 he was awarded the Golden Ring of Honour of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra. He left the orchestra on 31 August 1976.[6]

From 1939 to 1945, Baastian played chamber music in the Pozniak-Trio in Breslau. In 1945, he founded the Bastiaan Quartet in Berlin, which he led as primarius until 1970. Concert tours have taken the ensemble to Germany and abroad.[7] In 1963, he received the honorary title of Berlin chamber virtuoso.

From 1962 he was a lecturer for violin at the Berlin Conservatory. After the transformation of the Conservatory into the Julius Stern-Institute, he was a member of the teaching staff of the Berlin Academy of Music. In 1971 he became professor.

Bastiaan was a member of the

Internationale Gesellschaft für Neue Musik
.

In 2007 he took part in the documentary film Das Reichsorchester[8] about the history of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra.[9] An interview conducted with Bastiaan can be found in the booklet accompanying the CD edition Berliner Philharmoniker – im Takt der Zeit.[10]

Bastiaan was married and father of two children. He died a centenarian in 2012 in Berlin aged 101.

Recordings

Further reading

  • Hedwig and Erich Hermann Mueller von Asow (edit.):
    Walter de Gruyter
    , Berlin 1954.
  • Gerassimos Avgerinos: Künstler-Biographien: die Mitglieder im Berliner Philharmonischen Orchester von 1882–1972. Selbstverlag, Berlin 1972, : 21f .
  • Who's who in Germany. 5th edition, R. Oldenbourg Verlag, Ottobrunn 1974, , p. 67.

References

  1. ^ Obituary in the Tagesspiegel dated 21 October 2012.
  2. , p. 123.
  3. ^ Bastiaan, Hans on LMU
  4. , p. 127.
  5. , : 334f .
  6. , p. 4.
  7. , p. 71.
  8. IMDb
  9. ^ Kai Luehrs-Kaiser: Ein Ständchen für Hitler. In Die Welt, No. 255, 1 November 2007, p. 29.
  10. ^ Carola Pompetzki: Berliner Philharmoniker: "Im Takt der Zeit". In Welt am Sonntag, Nr. 49, 9 December 2007, p. 84.

External links