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・ Sascha Burchert
・ Sascha Bürringer
・ Sascha Dhillon
・ Sascha Dum
・ Sascha Fischer
・ Sascha Gerstner
・ Sascha Goc
・ Sascha Gorodnitzki
・ Sascha Görres
・ Sascha Hehn
・ Sascha Herröder
・ Sascha Heyer
・ Sascha Hommel
・ Sascha Horvath
・ Sascha Imholz
Sascha Jacobsen
・ Sascha Jusufi
・ Sascha Kever
・ Sascha Kindred
・ Sascha Kirschstein
・ Sascha Klein
・ Sascha Konietzko
・ Sascha Kotysch
・ Sascha Lenhart
・ Sascha Lense
・ Sascha Lewandowski
・ Sascha Ley
・ Sascha Licht
・ Sascha Lobo
・ Sascha Maassen


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Sascha Jacobsen : ウィキペディア英語版
Sascha Jacobsen
Sascha Jacobsen (Helsinki, Finland, 11 December (29 November ) 1895 – Los Angeles, California, 19 March 1972) was a Jewish-American violinist and teacher born in Russia, now Finland.〔In his book "Great Masters of the Violin", Boris Schwarz claims that Jacobsen was born in New York in 1897 and that his manager tried to turn him into a “Russian fiddler” for publicity purposes〕 He grew up in St. Petersburg, then moved with his family to New York City as a boy.
He graduated from Juilliard School in 1915 as a pupil of Franz Kneisel and upon graduation received the Morris Loeb Memorial Award. He founded the Musical Art Quartet from 1927-33. Later he taught at Juilliard; among his pupils were Julius Hegyi and Zvi Zeitlin.
In the 1950s Jacobsen served as concertmaster in the Los Angeles Philharmonic under Alfred Wallenstein. He played the Red Diamond Stradivarius violin (see the story about its loss and restoration at ()).
Jacobsen is one of the subjects of George Gershwin's 1922 song "Mischa, Jascha, Toscha, Sascha".
Sascha also gave violin lessons to his dear friend Albert Einstein, and recorded the Chausson Concerto for Violin, Piano and String Quartet with Jascha Heifetz, Jesus San Roma, and the Musical Art Quartet.
==References==




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