Press

…a master musician. A true violist, Mr. Neubauer exults in his instrument’s dark, rich, sumptuous tone. He combines an unerring sense of pitch with affecting lyrical warmth; he even proved himself unafraid of a little honest sentiment, a rarity among perfectionists.
— The New York Times
He plays his instrument with the kind of poise and maturity that place him at the top of the upper crust of musicians. Neubauer balances unflinching control, fluid bowing and sure-fire intonation with extraordinary depth of vision.
— Los Angeles Times
If there has been a better violist since William Primrose was in his prime more than a half-century ago, this listener does not know of him or her.
— The Baltimore Sun
The viola soloist, Paul Neubauer, with his clean, firmly focused tone, keeps the music flowing in the hauntingly lyrical first movement [of the Walton Viola Concerto]. He is brilliant and incisive in the central Scherzo, and again in the finale he keeps the music flowing, relaxing seductively for the haunting epilogue, and using the widest possible dynamic range.
— The Guardian
Neubauer probed the dark nostalgia of Robert Schumann’s “Marchenbilder” for Viola and Piano with acute sensitivity, then teased two wonderful Fritz Kreisler pieces into radiant bloom. More wonderful still were pieces by Georges Boulanger that pushed the Kreisler tradition of elegant salon miniatures into the stratosphere. How composition this outrageously sly can be so vivid, touching and hilarious is Neubauer’s secret: He owns this music, and to hear it from him is to inhabit a unique playground of delights.
— The Washington Post
Neubauer is one of America’s finest concert artists. His intonation was flawless, and the deep, rich tone he drew from his instrument was the purest imaginable. Neubauer met its every demand with easy grace and elegance, and achieved an extraordinary ethereal serenity with the evenness of his bowing.
— The Atlanta Journal
Chen’s tonal silk and Neubauer’s velvet made them complementary on a basic level, but their deep musicality, their poised, seamless way of echoing and completing each other’s melodic lines were little short of astonishing for artists who cannot have had much chance to play together, if at all. Their pinpoint intonation, finely synchronized vibrato and Neubauer’s chocolately, never nasal, sound were remarkable enough in themselves. What really made this Mozart special was the feeling of enlarged orchestral chamber music everyone, including the attentive Muti and Chen’s colleagues, brought to the piece.
— Chicago Tribune
Neubauer made his viola sing in all its ranges and timbres. The pure, distilled beauty of the slow movement produced a hush in the hall, while the dark plangence of the lower strings showcased the instrument’s distinctive contralto. Neubauer displayed his arresting virtuosity by racing easily up and down the fingerboard, demonstrating that the viola can hold its own with its more popular cousins, the violin and cello.
— The Cincinnati Post
The string-playing world was heavily represented in the audience, and no wonder. His aristocratic posture offers the eye a complement to the virtues the ear perceives. Mr. Neubauer’s seamless control of the bow, his intonation, his rich and varied tonal palette, mark him as a member of the elite.
— The New York Times
A bigger more beautiful viola tone or a better command of the instrument’s technical and interpretive possibilities seems inconceivable.
— Daily News (New York)
His exquisite playing and his obvious love for the Bartók Viola Concerto, the work he helped revise, made an unstoppable combination. Neubauer’s huge tone, warm yet animated, easily hit the back wall of the Eastman Theatre. You hung onto the energy of every note. He centered the work, musically and literally. The range of emotion in Neubauer’s playing compares with the expressiveness of a great singer.
— Democrat and Chronicle (Rochester)
Mere inches from that glorious sound, many were made weak at the knees. If it were socially acceptable, I might have kneeled. And while violist Paul Neubauer’s technique was admirable, it was the introspection, the variations of tone and straightforwardness of his music-making that left me spinning.
— San Jose Mercury News
The afternoon was a revelation…he is acclaimed everywhere as a string player without peer among his generation of soloists. He probed to the heart of each work he played with unerring musical perception.
— The Courier-Journal (Louisville)
Paul Neubauer is the Sir Yehudi Menuhin of the viola. Think of the purity, simplicity and frail beauty of Menuhin’s violin playing and transpose to an alto without any loss of clarity, purity and refinement. You will then have an idea of the sound Neubauer can draw from his viola.
— The Greenville News
It’s hard to imagine the solo viola part in Harold in Italy – better played than it was by Paul Neubauer. With a tone of depth as well as satin finish, he presided masterfully over ruffles and flourishes as well as lyric effusions.
— The Dallas Morning News
Neubauer possesses a beautiful tone; his playing is musical and expressive and filled with some of the most compelling lyricism of any concert artist today. He also has tremendous technical acumen. Nothing is impossible for him; he can dazzle his audience with his virtuosity and thrill them with his soft-edged melodicism. Together with Kogan, Neubauer gave one of the most dramatic and at the same time subtle and nuanced performances of the Berlioz imaginable.
— Deseret News (Salt Lake City)
Neubauer is a pleasure to watch as well as to hear. His physical motion when performing is both economical and elegant and that elegance is also expressed in his tone – colorful without a trace of throatiness – and his phrasing. His playing was highly atmospheric and evocative.
— The Strad
For a modern reading that comes nearer than any to the original approach sanctioned by the composer (Walton), my own choice is Paul Neubauer with Andrew Litton and the Bournemouth orchestra…
— Gramophone
Neubauer makes the cascade of notes positively fly off the page with brilliant panache. That he is a multi-linguistic musical stylist is made equally evident in his thoroughly Iberian-flavored “Rapsodie” from the Suite Hebraïque, as well as plenty of heartfelt but never flamboyant lyricism in the other movements. On every page of each score, Neubauer evinces sovereign interpretive and technical majesty.
— Fanfare
Here were scoops and slides, an amazing array of tone colors, and pyrotechnics tossed off with mischievous humor. The extraordinary thing was that it all seemed absolutely right, natural, and in good taste. Neubauer’s tone is invariably beautiful, at the service of mood and expression, his bowing smooth, his phrasing elegant.
— Strings Magazine
There are not enough superlatives to express how fine these performances are. Throw away all those tired old viola jokes. This is some of the finest string playing I have ever heard. Maestro Neubauer is a phenomenal musician of great artistry combined with impeccable, effortless technique...Neubauer exhibits a magnificent tone with an infinite palette of colours.
— Stringendo
Neubauer is one of the finest violists alive. His intonation and technical claims are faultless, and his bow arm seems to be seamless. He is able to inflect the usually timid viola with a warmth and expressiveness that command the hall. Neubauer played superbly.
— The San Juan Star
Next came the viola transcription of Schumann’s Five Pieces in Folk Style, in such a ravishing account by Paul Neubauer that you were left never wanting to hear them performed on cello again.
— Townsville Bulletin (Australia)
Surely the best violist I have ever heard…virtuoso playing caused no difficulty for Neubauer whose faultless intonation, lack of technical problems and artistic playing place him among the foremost artists of the world.
— Dnevnik (Ljubljana)

Paul Neubauer, violist

ORCHESTRAL REPERTOIRE LIST

BACH, J.C.

Concerto in C minor

Concerto for Piano and Viola

BACH, J.S.

Brandenburg Concerto No. 6, BWV 1051

BARTOK

Concerto, Op. Posth. (Revised Version)*

BENJAMIN, A.

Romantic Fantasy for Violin and Viola (1935)

BERLIOZ

Harold in Italy, Op. 16

BERMEL, D.

Soul Garden for Viola and String Orchestra (2007)*

BLOCH

Suite (1919)

Suite Hebraique (1953)

Concertino for Flute and Viola (1951)

BRAHMS/BERIO

Sonata in F minor, Op. 120, No. 1 (orchestrated by Luciano Berio)

BRITTEN

Double Concerto for Violin and Viola (1932)

BRUCH

Romance, Op. 85

Concerto for Clarinet (or Violin) and Viola, Op. 88

DALE, B.

Romance (1913)

DAVID, G.

Concerto (1951) [in gypsy style]

FRANCAIX

Rhapsodie (1946) [no strings in Orchestra]

FRIEDMAN, J.P.

Concerto (1989)*

GLAZUNOV

Elegie, Op. 44

GLIERE

Two Concert Pieces for Viola and Strings*

GOULD, M.

Concertette for Viola and Band (1943)

HANDEL

Concerto in B minor

HAYDN

Divertimento (orchestrated by Ingolf Dahl)

HINDEMITH

Der Schwanendreher (1935)

Trauermusik (1936)

HOFFMEISTER

Concerto in D Major

HUMMEL

Fantasie

JACOB, G.

Concerto No. 2 (1980)*

KANCHELI, G.

Styx for Viola, Chorus and Orchestra (1999)

KERNIS, A.J.

Concerto (2014)*

KHANDOSHKIN

Concerto

LAZAROF, H.

Viola Rhapsody (1996)*

MARAIS

Five Old French Dances

MARTINU

Rhapsodie (1952)

MOZART

Sinfonia Concertante for Violin, Viola and Orchestra

OTT, D.

Concerto (1988)*

PAGANINI

Sonata per la Gran Viola

PENDERECKI, K.

Concerto (1983)**

PICKER, T.

Concerto (1994)*

ROZSA, M.

Concerto, Op. 37 (1979)

SCHNITTKE, A.

Concerto (1985)

SCHUBERT

“Arpeggione” Concerto, D. 821

SUTER, R.

3 Nocturnes (1968/69)**

TELEMANN

Concerto in G Major

Concerto for 2 Violas

TOWER, J.

Purple Rhapsody for Viola and Orchestra (2005)*

VAUGHN WILLIAMS

Flos Campi for Viola, Chorus and Orchestra

WALTON

Concerto

WEBER

Andante and Rondo ungarese, J. 158

WIENIAWSKI

Legend, Op. 17 (originally for Violin)

 

* World Premiere given by Paul Neubauer

** New York Premiere given by Paul Neubauer