Anne-Sophie Mutter (born 29 June 1963) is a German violinist. Born and raised in
Rheinfelden, Baden-Württemberg, Mutter started playing the violin at age five and continued studies in Germany and
Switzerland. She was supported early in her career by
Herbert von Karajan and made her orchestral debut with the
Berlin Philharmonic in 1977. Since Mutter gained prominence in the 1970s and 1980s, she has recorded over 50 albums, mostly with the
Deutsche Grammophon label, and performed as a soloist with leading
orchestras worldwide and as a
recitalist. Her primary instrument is the
Lord Dunn–Raven Stradivarius violin.
Mutter founded the Association of Friends of the Anne-Sophie Mutter Foundation e.V. in 1997 and the Anne-Sophie Mutter Foundation in 2008, which support young string musicians. She frequently gives benefits concerts and, since 2021, has been the president of the
German Cancer Aid.
Early life
Mutter was born in the German town of
Rheinfelden, Baden-Württemberg. Her parents were Karl Wilhelm Mutter and Gerlinde Mutter and she was raised with two older brothers. While Mutter's father was a journalist who edited a newspaper in
Baden-Württemberg, her mother was the first woman in her family to graduate from college. Although no one in the home played a musical instrument, all were passionate about classical music.[1]
Mutter began piano lessons at age five but after a few months switched to the violin after listening to an album of the
Mendelssohn and
Beethoven violin concertos that her parents had given to each other as an engagement present. At age six, after only one year of study, Mutter won the National Music Prize, and in 1972 she gave her first concert, with the then 343-year-old
Musikkollegium Winterthur.[2]
Inspired by another recording, of violinist
Yehudi Menuhin with
Wilhelm Furtwängler, she then began studying with Erna Honigberger, a pupil of
Carl Flesch; and when Honigberger died, in 1974, she continued with
Aida Stucki [
de], also a former student of Flesch, at the Winterthur Conservatory.[3]
Career
1970s–1980s
Mutter's playing began to receive attention and she stopped attending school to devote herself full-time to music. Conductor
Herbert von Karajan arranged for her to play with the
Berlin Philharmonic. Only 13 years old at the time, she made her public debut on stage in 1976 at the
Lucerne Festival, where she played
Mozart's
Violin Concerto No. 4 in D major. In 1977, she performed at the
Salzburg Festival and with the
English Chamber Orchestra conducted by
Daniel Barenboim. Critics praised the level of maturity in Mutter's performance, with one reviewer of Die Welt writing, ""She played it ravishingly, and above all, she did not play it at all like a child prodigy. Her technique is fully mature."[4]
At 15, Mutter made her first recording of the Mozart
Third and
Fifth violin concerti with Karajan and the Berlin Philharmonic.[3]
After three years of her debut with the
London Symphony Orchestra in 1980, in which she played Mendelssohn's Violin Concerto under
Claudio Abbado, Mutter was named the honorary President of
Oxford University's Mozart Society.[10][11]
In 1985, at the age of 22, she was made an honorary fellow of the
Royal Academy of Music (London) and head of its faculty of international violin studies and in 1986 an honorary member.[12]
Beginning in the late 1980s, Mutter expanded her repertoire and devoted herself more to contemporary works, a focus that would become a significant component of her career. In 1986, Mutter premiered
Witold Lutosławski's Chain 2, Dialogue for Violin and Orchestra, with the Zurich Collegium Musicum.[13]Norbert Moret composed his Violin Concert En rêve for Mutter in 1988.[14]
By the 1990s, Mutter had established herself as an international star, transitioning from Wunderkind to mature artist[25][26][27] The press described her as a "master of the violin" and "musician of near peerless virtuosity and unimpeachable integrity," with critics noting her glamorous image.[28][29][30] One author of Der Spiegel wrote in regards to Mutter's rise to fame: "In the meantime, the entire classical music world knows these tones and this musical master: Anne-Sophie Mutter, now 25, is probably the only world star made in Germany in today's instrumentalist trade and the first violinist from [Germany] who can keep up with the world's violin standard. After
Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau's flight of fancy, no other serious musician from Germany – gender notwithstanding – has succeeded in rising more quickly from the first floor to the penthouse of the international guild of interpreters. In her line of work she is at the top: Frau Fiddler on the roof."[31]
In 1998 she played and recorded for CD and DVD the complete set of
Beethoven's Violin Sonatas (released 1999), accompanied by
Lambert Orkis; these were broadcast on television in many countries. Mutter devoted an entire year to performing all ten of Beethoven's
violin sonatas in the "Beethoven: Face to Face" tour in cities throughout North America and Europe, including additional modern pieces.[35][36] Music critic
Anthony Tommasini of the New York Times wrote on a concert of the Beethoven tour, "Ms. Mutter's playing had its trademark qualities: rich yet focused tone, striking varieties of sound, articulate yet supple rhythmic play. But her increasing work in recent years with living composers has brought a new kind of intellectual energy to her playing, for she was particularly attentive to the bold turns in this youthful music."[37]
2000s
With the turn of the century, Mutter continued supporting new music and began collaborating with composer and conductor
André Previn, who dedicated several works to Mutter. Mutter premiered a Tango Song and Dance in 2002, which Previn composed for her.[38] Mutter also gave the first permanence and recording of Previn's
Violin Concerto with the
Boston Symphony Orchestra the same year,[39] of which the recording became a critical success.[40][41] Mutter toured with orchestras under the direction of Previn, performing his concerto and later premiering Previn's double concerto for violin and contrabass in 2007 with Roman Patkoló.[42] Two years later, she premiered his Second Piano Trio with
Lynn Harrell and Previn and Concerto for Violin and Viola with
Yuri Bashmet.[43][44]
In October 2006, on French television, Mutter appeared to indicate that she would be retiring when she turned 45, in 2008.[50] However the following month she said that her words were "misinterpreted" and that she would continue to play as long as she felt she could "bring anything new, anything important, anything different to music".[51]
2010s-present
Mutter performed classical and contemporary works during the 2010s, touring Europe, North America, Asia, South America, and Australia. For her yearly tours and performances, she continued her collaborations with
Lambert Orkis and performed the major concertos of the classical repertoire.[52][53][54][55][56] She premiered Wolfgang Rihm's "Lichtes Spiel" with the New York Philharmonic and "Dyade" with double bass player Roman Patkoló in 2010 and
Sebastian Currier's "Time Machines" with the New York Philharmonic conducted by
Alan Gilbert in 2011 to critical acclaim.[57][58]
In 2011, Mutter established the Mutter Virtuosi, composed of select students and graduates of the Anne-Sophie Mutter Foundation (established 2008) that perform with Mutter. The chamber ensemble has toured multiple times throughout different continents in the 2010s, performing modern works and classics such as
Vivaldi's
Four Seasons.[59] As part of
Deutsche Grammophon's series to introduce classical music to broader audiences, Mutter and the Mutter Virtuosi performed works by
Bach,
Vivaldi,
Gershwin and
John Williams in a night club at Berlin's venue Neue Heimat in 2015. The performance was recorded for The Club Album – Live from the Yellow Lounge.[60]
Mutter gave the world premiere of Previn's "Violin Concerto no. 2 for Violin and String Orchestra with the
Trondheim Soloists in 2012,[61] the premier of Sebastian Currier's "Ringtone Variations" for violin and double bass in 2013,[62] and the premiere of
John Williams' Markings for solo violin, strings and harp with the Boston Symphony Orchestra under
Andris Nelsons in 2017.[63] In 2018, Mutter premiered Previn's The Fifth Season,[64] Krzysztof Penderecki's Sonata for Violin and Piano No. 2, and his Duo concertante per violino e contrabbasso.[65]
In September 2019, Mutter stopped during a performance of Beethoven's
Violin Concerto with the
Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra to ask a cellphone user to stop recording. The incident received significant press coverage and refueled debates about concert cellphone etiquette.[72][73][74][75][76]
Mutter's works include traditional classic pieces that are part of the violin repertoire. Mutter has performed and made recordings of the major violin concertos by
Bach,
Bartók,
Berg,
Brahms,
Bruch,
Beethoven,
Dvořák,
Mendelssohn,
Mozart,
Sibelius,
Tchaikovsky, and
Vivaldi. Her repertoire includes performances and recordings of the double and triple concertos by
Brahms and
Beethoven, violin romances by Beethoven, Bruch, and Dvořák, and popular orchestral works by
Massenet,
Sarasate, and
Saint Saëns, and standard solo works by Bach and
Paganini. Part of her repertoire encompasses chamber works such as the complete violin sonatas by Beethoven, Brahms, and Mozart, other sonatas by
Bartók,
Franck, Mendelssohn,
Prokofiev and
Tartini, trios by Beethoven and Mozart, and string quartets by Mozart, Beethoven and Haydn, and Schubert's
Trout Quintet and
Fantasy in C Major.[82]
Though her repertoire includes many classical works, Mutter is particularly known for her performances of contemporary music. Several pieces have been specially written for or dedicated to her, including
Henri Dutilleux's Sur le même accord, Krzysztof Penderecki's Second Violin Concerto, Witold Lutosławski's Chain 2 and the orchestral version of Partita, and Wolfgang Rihm's Gesungene Zeit ("Time Chant"), Lichtes Spiel, and Dyade and Sofia Gubaidulina's Violin Concerto No. 2 "In tempus praesens," among others. Mutter premiered André Previn's
Violin Concerto "Anne-Sophie", whose recording received a
Grammy Award.[83] Mutter's recordings of Penderecki's Violin Concerto No. 2, Metamorphosen, and Rihm's Time Chant also received Grammy Awards.[84]
World renowned film score composer and five times
Academy Awards winner John Williams composed original music for her, including a pièce for violin, strings and harp called "Markings" (2017), a collection of arrangements of
movie themes composed by him for violin and orchestra (recorded by Mutter and Williams with the
Recording Arts Orchestra of Los Angeles in "Across the Stars", 2019[85]) and Williams' second violin concerto (composed 2021, to be recorded by Mutter with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the author as conductor, in 2022[86]). Mutter also appeared as soloist in John Williams' debut concert with the
Wiener Philharmoniker on 28 and 29 January 2020, recorded by
Deutsche Grammophon and released in the live album "John Williams in Vienna", which became the best-selling album of orchestral music in 2020.[87]
Playing style and appearance
Anne-Sophie Mutter is known for her versatile technique, dynamic range of style, richness of tone and articulate, colorful sound.[88][89][90] Critics have noted Mutter's personal and thorough interpretation of the music and dedication to the musical works she plays, as she often studies the letters, original scores, and other historical documents by the composer to guide her interpretation.[91][92][93][94] Mutter often divides critics: some praise the sublimity, gracefulness, dexterity, intellectual energy, and sophistication of her music, while others view her playing overly refined, idiosyncratic and caught up in minute details and maintain that Mutter over-interprets works and imposes herself on the music.[95][96][97][98]
Mutter is known for performing in strapless gowns. Mutter explained that she felt having fabric on her shoulder made it too slippery to hold her violin firmly while she was playing.[99][100]
Mutter has described her Stradivarius violin as her soul mate, saying "It sounded the way I (had) always been hoping. It's the oldest part of my body and my soul. The moment I am on stage, we are one, musically." Mutter ascribes the personal fit of her Stradivarius violin to the "depths of the colors and the incredible amount of dynamic range."[108] She prefers the Lord Dunn-Raven, stating that the Emilia lacks "a dimension: It has no edginess. I miss the unbridled power. I need this roughness for the eruptive moments of the
Beethoven sonatas. You need it for
Brahms,
Sibelius and contemporary works."[109]
Public engagement
Throughout her career, Mutter has held many benefit concerts for various organizations such as Save the Children Japan, Save the Children Yemen, Artists against Aids, the Swiss Multiple Sclerosis Society, the Hanna and Paul Gräb Foundation's Haus der Diakonie in Wehr-Öflingen, the Bruno Bloch Foundation, Beethoven Fund for Deaf Children, SOS Children's Villages in Syria and others.[110] In 2018, Mutter gave a benefit concert commemorating a liberation concert in May 1945 for
Holocaust survivors by Jewish musicians at the
St. Ottilien Archabbey.[111] In 2022, the
New York Philharmonic and Mutter performed Jewish music, including Previn's violin concerto at
Peenemünde, a former
Nazi army research center site.[112][113] Since March 2022, Mutter has been giving benefit concerts for Ukrainians in light of the
Russian invasion of Ukraine.[114]
Mutter founded the Association of Friends of the Anne-Sophie Mutter Foundation e.V. in 1997 and further established the Anne-Sophie Mutter Foundation in 2008, which supports young stringed instrument players and provides scholarships for talented individuals.[115] Mutter initiated the foundation based on her belief that "Music should grip people, move people; it should tell stories; it should have an impact." Since 2011, the ensemble group Mutter's Virtuosi performs with Mutter and includes students supported by the foundation that also commissions new works for its students.[116] Notable former scholarship holders and Mutter's Virtuosi members include violinists
Timothy Chooi,
Fanny Clamagirand,
Vilde Frang,
Sergey Khachatryan,
Arabella Steinbacher,
Noa Wildschut, and
Nancy Zhou and cellists
Pablo Ferrández,
Maximilian Hornung,
Linus Roth,
Daniel Müller-Schott, and
Kian Soltani, among others.[117][118]
During the
COVID-19 pandemic, Mutter voiced her concerns about the impact of lockdowns on musicians, particularly classical musicians, and called for the
German government to provide financial support.[119][120]
In 1989, Mutter married her first husband, Detlef Wunderlich, with whom she had two children, Arabella and Richard. Wunderlich died of cancer in 1995.[122] She dedicated her 1999 recording, Vivaldi: The Four Seasons, to his memory.[123] She married the pianist, composer, and conductor
André Previn in 2002.[124][125] The couple divorced in 2006,[126] but continued to collaborate musically and maintained their friendship.[127]
^Cunningham, Harriet (2 December 2011).
"Interview: Anne-Sophie Mutter". The Sydney Morning Herald.
Archived from the original on 1 June 2022. Retrieved 1 June 2022.
^"Solti 58: Anne-Sophie Mutter". Chicago Symphony Orchestra Archives. 14 May 2012.
Archived from the original on 14 February 2023. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
^Perkins, David (14 November 2006).
"Mutter still takes her music seriously". The Boston Globe.
Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 3 May 2008. Yes, yes, I said it. It is my plan to stop when I reach my 45th birthday.
^Schweitzer, Vivian (19 November 2010).
"Pairing Wolfgangs From Two Eras". The New York Times. The New York Times.
Archived from the original on 16 February 2023. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
^Hillenbrand, Barry; Moor, Paul (27 April 1998). "Playing the World: When violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter takes Beethoven on the road, the halls are full and the music sublime". No. 17. Time International.
^Henry, Derrick (28 February 1997).
"Contemporary Twist". The Atlanta Constitution. p. 128.
Archived from the original on 8 August 2022. Retrieved 31 March 2022.
^Kjemtrup, Inge (January 2006).
"Goddess with a Gift". Strings (135).
Archived from the original on 15 March 2015. Retrieved 30 December 2015. Every tragedy, or every really wonderful moment in your life, changes you as a person, and hopefully makes you a better person, more sensible, more sensitive, more caring — more thankful for life.
^Druckenbrod, Andrew (4 February 2010).
"Anne-Sophie Mutter Druckenbrod". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. 54.
Archived from the original on 15 August 2022. Retrieved 31 March 2022.