Elsa Grether (born 28 June 1980) is a French classical violinist, laureate of the International Pro Musicis 2009 Prize unanimously by the jury (with pianist Delphine Bardin), who made her recital debut at Carnegie Hall in New York and in Boston in 2012.
Born in Mulhouse, Grether began playing the violin at the age of five. She obtained a first prize in violin unanimously from the jury at the Conservatoire à rayonnement régional de Paris on her fifteenth birthday. She continued her training abroad at the Mozarteum University Salzburg with Ruggiero Ricci, then in the United States with Mauricio Fuks at the Indiana University Bloomington and Donald Weilerstein at the New England Conservatory of Music of Boston. She also benefited from the advice of Régis Pasquier in Paris.
As a soloist with orchestra, she has played numerous concertos (Bach, Vivaldi, Mozart, Haydn, Beethoven, Bruch, Brahms, Tchaikovsky, Shebalin, Dvorak, Prokofiev, Saint-Saëns, Ravel's Tzigane etc.)
She performs in recital in prestigious festivals and venues in France and abroad: Printemps des arts de Monte-Carlo[1] Bozar and Le Flagey in Brussels, Salle Cortot in Paris, Musica Festival in Strasbourg, Forest Festival, Sully Festival,[2] Festival Lille Clef de Soleil, Palazzetto Bru-Zane in Venice, Radio Suisse-Romande in Geneva, Festival Musiques en Eté in Geneva,[3] Festival Cully Classique (Switzerland), Flâneries musicales de Reims,[4] Festival de Saint-Lizier, Festival des Abbayes en Lorraine,[5] Festival de Musique Sacrée de Perpignan, Festival Berlioz, Grandes Heures de Cluny, Chicago Myra Hess Concert Series, Mozarteum in Salzbourg, Radio Nationale d’Alger, Scène Nationale de Martinique etc.
, Festival de MentonShe collaborates in particular with pianists David Lively, Ferenc Vizi, François Dumont, Marie Vermeulin, Johan Schmidt, Delphine Bardin, as well as with Jérémy Jouve (guitar), Régis Pasquier (violin) etc.
She is also fond of the solo violin repertoire, performing in very eclectic programmes.[6]
Alain DuaultFrance 3) and she is regularly invited on France Musique,[7][8][9] France Culture, Musiq’3, RTS Suisse et Accent4.[10]
devoted a program to her in "Toute la musique qu'ils aiment" (Her first three CDs, released by Fuga Libera,[11] got unanimous reviews, especially in specialized magazines (Gramophone,[12][13] 5 Diapasons,[14] 4 étoiles Classica,[15] Concertclassic[16][17][18] Classiquenews[19] ResMusica ,[20] Musicologie.org,[21][22] La Libre Belgique, Artamag,[23] Wunderkammern,[24] la Revue du Spectacle,[25] etc.)