Mikhail Emmanuilovich Goldstein, was a German-Israeli composer, violinist and violin teacher of German-Russian-Jewish origin, brother of prominent violinist Boris Goldstein. His great uncle was the physicist Eugen Goldstein.
Biography
Goldstein was born in Odessa in 1917, the son of Emanuel Goldstein from Leipzig, Germany, who moved to Odessa in 1910 to become a professor for mathematics in Odessa. The Goldstein family became naturalized Soviet citizens in 1918. Michael Goldstein started studying the violin at age four at the School of Stolyarsky in Odessa with Pyotr Stolyarsky who was also the teacher of David Oistrach and Nathan Milstein. He was the author of the celebrated musical hoax "Ovsianiko-Kulikovsky's Symphony No. 21" as well as several others, notably "Expromt" by Balakirev", "Albumblatt" by Glazunov"' the "Viola Concerto in C Major by Ivan Khandoshkin", etc. He concentrated on composition after his career as a violinist was curtailed by a hand injury. On New Year's Eve 1942, Goldstein was at an open airparty held by the Soviet commissars to honor visiting artists, musicians, and actors during a lull in the Battle of Stalingrad. Horrified by the utter destruction all around, he played his violin over the loudspeakers, playing even German music, though it had been banned by the Soviets and all went quiet. After he had finished, the German lines shouted for a ceasefire so he could play more Bach. Goldstein obliged. He was a winner of three prizes at the 1963 All-Union Composers' Competition. Apparently he submitted his entries under pseudonyms. After this incident his political difficulties increased. He took a teaching position in East Berlin in 1964. He moved to Vienna and Jerusalem in 1967, moved to London in 1968, and finally to Hamburg, Germany in 1969.
Michael Goldstein: Ukrainische Rhapsodie für Klavier und Orchester. Aufnahme des NDR mit Galina Kowal, Klavier, und dem Rundfunkorchester Hannover des NDR unter Richard Müller-Lampertz
Johann Sebastian Bach: Partiten für Violine solo. Michael Goldstein, Violine.
Johann Sebastian Bach: Sonaten für Violine solo. Michael Goldstein, Violine.
Bekannte und unbekannte Werke von Bach. Michael Goldstein und Heinz Wunderlich.
Russischer Geiger und Virtuose Michael Goldstein spielt Sonaten und Partiten von J. S. Bach auf einer Weidler-Geige ganz aus Ahornholz
Works
Michael Goldstein: Peter Stoljarskij. Der Violin-Pädagoge und seine Fabrik der Talente in Odessa. Aus dem Nachlass herausgegeben von François Maher Presley, in-Cultura.com, Hamburg 2015,.
Michael Goldstein: Michail Ignátieff und die Balalaika – Die Balalaika als solistisches Konzertinstrument. Zimmermann, Frankfurt am Main 1978,.
Michael Goldstein: 20 kleine Präludien für Viola. Möseler, Wolfenbüttel, 1982.
Michael Goldstein: Michael Goldsteins Methode im ersten Violinunterricht. J. Schuberth & Co., Hamburg 1978.
Michael Goldstein: Kinder musizieren for violin and piano. J. Schuberth & Co, Hamburg 1982.
Alexander Glasunow: Albumblatt for violin and piano. M. P. Belaieff, Frankfurt/M. Herausgegeben von Michael Goldstein.
Michael Goldstein: Gavotte über B-A-C-H for solo violin.
Joseph Reicha: Konzert Es-dur Op 2/1 für Viola. Verlag Anton J. Benjamin. Bearbeitet von Michael Goldstein.
Giuseppe Tartini: Sonate in E. Heinrichshofen Verlag. Herausgegeben von Michael Goldstein.