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Published: Monday, 28 October 2024 at 09:00 AM


2024 marks the 100th anniversary of János Starker‘s birth, a legendary cellist who redefined the future of classical music. Fellow Hungarian cellist Ildikó Szabó – who Starker dubbed ‘an exceptionally gifted young cellist’ when she was just 14 – spoke about her memories of the great musician...

I first met János Starker in Bloomington, in the corridor of Indiana University’s round building. I was 14, attending the summer string academy on a scholarship. I didn’t speak English (my first foreign language was German), so encountering a living legend was both astonishing and oddly comforting because of our shared ‘secret’ language. Having been brought up in the David Popper tradition at the Liszt Academy, I likely practised on the same chairs as Starker.

János Starker… ‘acerbic humour’, but ‘never demeaning’

I soon became a frequent guest in Studio 155, the only room without smoke detectors. I attended as many classes as possible and, thanks to Starker’s generosity, received numerous lessons. He loved teaching in front of an audience, reminiscent of the methods of the old Liszt Academy and that generation of artists, like Leo Weiner, later György Kurtág, Ferenc Rados, etc. His acerbic humour and rigour were well-known, yet he ensured criticism was constructive, never demeaning. He was like a doctor with X-ray eyes, diagnosing and curing problems efficiently. I remember him as an elegant, generous gentleman who took his profession seriously, but not himself.