He graduated from the Vilna Conservatory of Music and the Warsaw Conservatory.
He produced and directed the opera Aida in Hebrew.[1]: 44
Wolf Durmashkin was appointed conductor of the Vilna Symphony in 1939 at the age of 25.
He organized a symphony orchestra and a 100-voice Hebrew choir while incarcerated in the Vilna Ghetto.
The ghetto orchestra performed 35 chamber and symphonic concerts in the 15 months of its existence under his direction.
The Wolf Durmashkin Composition Award (WDCA) is an international composition contest, as well as a music- and composition award designed by the German cultural society dieKunstBauStelle in Landsberg am Lech. It is named after Wolf Durmashkin.
The award was founded in 2018 by Karla Schönebeck and Wolfgang Hauck.[2] The cause was the 70th anniversary of a concert played by Jewish Holocaust survivors from the DP-Orchestra in Landsberg am Lech on 10 May 1948. It was conducted by Leonard Bernstein.[3]
Literature
Herman Kruk, "The Last Days of the Jerusalem of Lithuania, Chronicles from the Vilna Ghetto and the Camps, 1939–1944, trans. By Barbara Harshav (New York: YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, 2002)
Cantore natan Stolnitz, "Akiva Durmashkin and His Influence on Liturgical Music in Old Radom", The Radomer Voice, April 1964
References
^ abBeker, Sonia (2007). Symphony on Fire: A Story of Music and Spiritual Resistance During the Holocaust. USA: The Wordsmithy LLC. ISBN978-0974885759.
^Stürz, Franziska (May 9, 2018). "Zum Gedenken an Ex-KZ-Orchester" [Remembering the former concentration camp orchestra]. BR-Klassik (in German). Archived from the original on February 22, 2021. Retrieved December 21, 2020.