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| | Interview with Norbert Brainin, Violinist, Amadeus Quartet and Friend of LaRouche |
 | | I was, in point of fact, on the verge of a soloists career, in the Autumn of 1946, after winning the Carl Flesch Competition at London, which I had entered essentially as a tribute to my great professor Carl Flesch, who had just died. |
 | | I'd won the Carl Flesch prize for interpeting the Brahms violin concerto, and as I did not want to play the same concerto twice, I chose Beethoven. |
 | | While I practiced for the concert, which was to take place one year later, I began to play quartets with other string players, and, increasingly frequently, with some students of Max Rostal, who had been Carl Fleschs assistant. |
| www.schillerinstitute.org /music/brainin_interview-2005.html (5797 words) |
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