Joseph De Pasquale

American musician
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican musician
PlacesUnited States of America
wasMusician Violist
Work fieldMusic
Gender
Male
Instruments:Viola
Birth14 October 1919, Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death22 June 2015Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, USA (aged 95 years)
Star signLibra
Family
Spouse:Maria Magdalene Herzogin von Leuchtenberg (7 August 1949-)
Children:Marie Alexandra de Pasquale Elizabeth Ann de Pasquale Joseph Serge de Pasquale Charles Nicholas de Pasquale
Education
Curtis Institute of MusicPennsylvania, USA(1938—1942)
Employers
Curtis Institute of MusicPennsylvania, USA(1964—2015)
Boston Symphony OrchestraBoston, Suffolk County, USA(1947—1964)
Peabody InstituteBaltimore, Maryland, USA
Jacobs School of MusicBloomington, Monroe County, USA
New England ConservatoryBoston, Suffolk County, USA
The details

Biography

Joseph de Pasquale (October 14, 1919 – June 22, 2015) was an American violist.

Career

Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Joseph de Pasquale was a student of Louis Bailly, Max Aronoff and William Primrose at the Curtis Institute of Music. He was the principal violist of the Boston Symphony Orchestra from 1947 to 1964, and then, at the request of Eugene Ormandy, principal violist of the Philadelphia Orchestra until 1995. At a certain point, three of his brothers (William, Robert, and Francis; who formed the de Pasquale String Quartet with him) played with him in the Philadelphia Orchestra, with three of the brothers boasting first desk seatings.

Joseph de Pasquale performed and recorded with Angelin Chang, Jascha Heifetz, Ruggiero Ricci, Isaac Stern, Gregor Piatigorsky, Norman Carol, and Anshel Brusilow, among others. He also premiered several important compositions of the viola repertoire, including the Viola Concerto by Walter Piston and the Viola Sonata by George Rochberg, and recorded for the RCA, Sony, Boston, Albany Records, and Decca labels.

Until his death at age 95, Joseph de Pasquale was Professor of Viola at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. He raised a whole generation of prominent violists, among them Roberto Diaz, Stephen Wyrczynski, Viacheslav Dinerchtein, Richard Fleischman and Cathy Basrak. At the time of his retirement from the Philadelphia Orchestra, 2/3 of the violators section's players were his former students.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 30 Apr 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.