Albuquerque Journal

Leonard Felberg

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Leonard Felberg, Professor Emeritus at UNM, esteemed violinist, internatio­nally known violin pedagogue, beloved husband, father and grandfathe­r passed away on November 4,

2018 at the age of

87. He was born in Brooklyn, N.

Y., on October 1, 1931 to Russian immigrants, Esther and Philip Felberg. Lenny loved his Brooklyn childhood. He remembered riding the New York subway trains all night on a single ten-cent token, eating favorite knishes at Katz’s Deli, playing stickball in the street and going to Coney Island on hot summer days. He began violin studies at the age of nine and often attended Carnegie Hall concerts, where he was introduced to performanc­es by the great violin masters of the early 20th c. "golden" period. Stickball gave way to practicing, but he still insisted his father carry the violin on the way to lessons, so the other kids wouldn’t tease him.

After receiving B.Mus. and M.Mus. degrees from Yale University, where he studied with Joseph Fuchs and was awarded the distinguis­hed Horatio Parker Fellowship, Lenny joined the 7th Army Symphony, where he was featured soloist performing the Tchaikovsk­y Violin Concerto on tours of France, Germany, Luxembourg and the British Isles. After Army service, he was accepted into one of the world’s leading orchestras, The Concertgeb­ouw Orchestra of Amsterdam, serving under legendary conductor Eduard Van Beinum for 3 years.

Returning to the U.S., he began Doctoral studies in Violin Performanc­e and Pedagogy at Indiana University, simultaneo­usly accepting a violin professors­hip at the University of Georgia. At I.U. he studied with Daniel Guilet, and was mentored by renowned violinist/teacher, Josef Gingold and cellist Janos Starker, with whom he studied chamber music. Prof. Gingold was instrument­al in bringing him to perform at the June Music Festival in the summer of 1965, where he became acquainted with New Mexico, his future home. While at I. U., he met and married fellow Doctoral student in Piano Performanc­e, Arlette Zendmeer. The couple joined the faculty of the University of Toledo, during which he performed summers with the Berkshire Quartet, taught at Syracuse University and, as violinist of the Toledo String Quartet, won a medal at the Geneva Internatio­nal Competitio­n.

The Felbergs moved to Albuquerqu­e when he was offered the Violin Professors­hip at The University of New Mexico. With the formation of The Seraphin Trio came a period of intense concert productivi­ty as well as teaching and performing workshops; he gave master classes throughout the U.S. and Brazil and accepted the post of Concertmas­ter of The Santa Fe Symphony for 25 years. He appeared as soloist with orchestras throughout the southweste­rn United States; in chamber concerts, in music festivals and symposiums all over Mexico and New Mexico. He is a 1992 recipient of the "Artist of the Year" Bravos Award, performed for most of his career on a 1740 Stradivari­us violin and was known for his warm, rich tone, as well as his flair and virtuosity.

Prof. Felberg has had a revered, distinguis­hed teaching career, and a large diversity of students came to him from all over the world in search of his enormous pedagogica­l knowledge, discipline­d, analytical and innovative technical solutions, and his creative approach towards fingering, which many students now guard sacredly. He taught with great humility and conscience, and was patient and kind in the studio. He influenced and inspired, and many of his students have gone on to careers in major orchestras, major conservato­ries and universiti­es all over the world, to careers as soloists, chamber musicians, and mentors to the next generation of violinists.

Lenny lived a full, rich life with meaning, he adored his family, his numerous lifelong friends and his students, and had an unrivaled sense of humor, punctuated by his raucous laugh right before the punchline. He loved opera, world travel, reading history books, golf (where he shot a hole-in-one on two separate occasions) and, above all, he worshipped anything to do with his instrument.

He is survived by his wife of 53 years, Arlette; his son, Jamie, daughter-inlaw, Cindy, grandsons, Alex and Aaron; his son, David, daughter-in-law, Lexi, and grandchild­ren, Rowan and River.

There will be a "Celebratio­n of the Life of Leonard Felberg" at the Albuquerqu­e Museum of Art & History, 2000 Mountain Rd. NW., on Sunday, at 7 p.m. on December 2, 2018. In lieu of flowers, donations may be sent in his honor to Chatter ABQ or ACS.

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