Dov Scheindlin
Acclaimed by the New York Times as an "extraordinary violist" of
"immense flair," Dov Scheindlin has been violist of the Arditti,
Penderecki, and Chester String Quartets. His chamber music career has brought him
to 28 countries around the globe and won him the Siemens Prize in 1999. He has
appeared as soloist with the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra of Amsterdam, the
Radio Symphony Orchestra of Berlin, the Paris Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, and
the Munich Philharmonic. Mr. Scheindlin has recorded extensively for EMI, Teldec,
Auvidis, Col Legno, and Mode, and won the Gramophone Award in 2002 for the
Arditti Quartet's recording of Sir Harrison Birtwistle's Pulse Shadows. As a
member of the Arditti Quartet, he gave nearly 100 world premieres, among them
new works by Elliott Carter, György Kurtág, Thomas Adès, and Wolfgang Rihm.
He has also been broadcast on NPR, BBC, CBC, and on German, French, Swiss,
Austrian, Dutch, and Belgian national radio networks.
Dov Scheindlin was raised in New York City, where he studied with Samuel
Rhodes and William Lincer at the Juilliard School. He has taught viola and
chamber music at Harvard, Wilfrid Laurier University, and Tanglewood. He has
regularly participated in summer festivals such as Salzburg, Luzern, and
Tanglewood, and has also been acting violist of the Mendelssohn String Quartet.
He has performed with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center and the Met
Chamber Ensembles, and his chamber music partners have included members of the
Juilliard, Alban Berg, Tokyo, and Borodin String Quartets, as well as
concertmasters of many major symphony orchestras.
Dov Scheindlin currently lives in New York, where he is a frequent performer
with the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra. He
plays a viola by Francesco Bissolotti of Cremona, made in 1975.