Roman Kim

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Roman Kim
Born (1991-10-11) 11 October 1991 (age 32)
Alma materCologne University of Music
Occupation(s)Violinist, composer
Years active2000–present

Roman Kim (born 11 October 1991) is a Kazakhstani violin virtuoso, composer and inventor.

Biography[edit]

Roman Kim was born in the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic two months before the dissolution of the Soviet Union to a family with Tatar, Belarusian and Korean origins. He received his first violin at the age of five and at the age of seven he won first prizes in national competitions. He studied at the Central Music School in Moscow from 2000-2008 with Galina Turchaninova and was a scholarship student of the Mstislav Rostropovich Foundation. He won the first International Russian Rotary Children’s Music Competition in 2002. He attended master classes with Maxim Vengerov, Midori Goto, Lewis Kaplan, Miriam Fried and Gidon Kremer.[1][2]

In 2008, at the age of 16, Roman Kim was admitted to the Cologne University of Music, where he studied with Viktor Tretyakov. In 2012 he won the first prize of the 28th Valsesia Musica in Italy. As a winner of the Cologne International Music Competition (2011), he played with the WDR Radio Orchestra of Cologne. Kim plays a violin by Giuseppe Guarneri (Cremona, 1695), owned by the Deutsche Stiftung Musikleben Foundation.[3] “My most important teachers were Moscow State Conservatory instructor Galina Turchaninova and Viktor Tretyakov,” Kim says. “Turchaninova gave me a wonderful technical basis, and Tretyakov affected me very strongly musically.”[4] Kim specializes in violin concertos of the Romantic period and virtuoso works for the violin. Kim has studied the bow and finger techniques of the legendary violinist Paganini in depth, and like Paganini, has created new arrangements for various musical works.

Kim has also stated that Jimi Hendrix is another source of inspiration for him. Kim’s version of Bach's "Air on a G String" brought him international recognition in 2011 and has been viewed over 1.3 million times on YouTube.[5][6]

Acclaim and honors[edit]

Israeli virtuoso Ivry Gitlis described Kim's mastery of his instrument as "one of the most incredible playing I have heard since I was born!“[2] In 2016 he won the Ivry Gitlis prize at the Festival Le Printemps du Violon in Paris.[1]

YouTube channel[edit]

He joined YouTube at December 9, 2011, where he posts his compositions and transcriptions, which are listed below. In his violin solo videos, he plays up to four strings at the same time, often 'mimicking' the sounds of kettle drums, woodwinds and horns.[7]

Transcriptions[edit]

As a composer, Kim has created various transcriptions as well as works for violin and piano, and a violin concerto premiered in Cluj-Napoca, Romania in 2017.

Transcriptions and compositions for solo violin

For violin and piano

  • Three Romances (2012–14)
  • Sonata in G (2023)
  • Cri de l'âme (2024)

Style[edit]

Kim is known for wearing prismatic glasses that he invented in 2014, believed (by himself) to improve focus and concentration.[2]

Quotes[edit]

"I believe that when you really use your brain when you practice, after really concentrated work after 4 hours, you will be really tired, but you do much more than just mechanically standing for 9 hours." -Roman Kim during an interview with a channel named ViolinMechanic[8]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Roman Kim". Anticonnuovo Music.
  2. ^ a b c "Roman Kim". Berlin Iglesias.
  3. ^ "Roman Kim". Stretta Artists Management.
  4. ^ Harris, Vincent (3 March 2017). "Roman Kim accomplishes feats on the violin no one else has before". Greenville Journal. Retrieved 3 March 2017.
  5. ^ Kim, Roman. "J. S. Bach - Air [Violin Solo]". YouTube. Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  6. ^ Niles, Laurie. "For the Record, Op. 65: Roman Kim's 'Kimpossible'; Viktoria Mullova/Arvo Pärt; Danish String Quartet; Lucia Micarelli". Violinist.com.
  7. ^ a b Kim, Roman. "Beethoven 5th Symphony for Violin Solo - Roman Kim". YouTube. Retrieved 13 May 2022.
  8. ^ EXCLUSIVE Roman Kim Interview ft. ViolinMechanic. Retrieved 2024-05-03 – via www.youtube.com.