0 Entertainment 6 oaftoster 9tvideve 1f2 f CHINESE RESTAURANT 27626 Middlebelt Road Farmington Hills, MI 48334 248-474-8183 Gold Medalist Luncheon Specials ® A Large Selection of Dinner Entrees • Party Room Small or Large Groups 0 Recipient of top three violinist awards joins DSO at Meadow Brook. Suzanne Chessler Special to the Jewish News V Restaurant it.than cuisine 248.476.0044 Buy any dinner entree and receive 6 00 off the second dinner entree Salads, pizza, sandwiches and ribs for 2 excluded. One coupon per table Expires: 8/15/09 Farmington Hills • Corner of Grand River & Haggerty Road Auburn Hills • 1 1/2 miles south of the Palace of Auburn Hills • Lamb Chop Dinner, $14.95 Fri. • Salmon Fri. • Whitefish Tues. Homemade Soups & Desserts --I- A Family Diner Serving Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner (248) 682-3400 4170 Orchard Lake Rd. (near Pontiac Trail) Orchard Lake, MI 48323 Sun. — Thurs 6:30am 10pm Fri. & Sat ... 6:30am — lam ° 3° o any bill $15 or more (w/coupon only) 1520560 THE GALLERY RESTAURANT SAVE $10.00 How does $io.00 off your check sound? Easy, just pay your dinner check for $25.00 or more and we will give you a certificate worth $1.o.00 toward your next $25.00 or more meal. And that's till the end of August wog. You'll save a bundle? MON.- SAT. 7 a.m.- 9:30 p.m. SUN. 8 a.m.- 9 p.m. Bloomfield Plaza • 6638 Telegraph Road and Maple • 248-851-0313 OPEN 7 DAYS: 1526960 B10 July 30 2009 iolinist Ilya Kaler is about to perform for only the sec- ond time with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, but many of his classical concerts and recordings have a strong tie to Michigan: Joseph Curtin, an instrument craftsman in Ann Arbor, has made Kaler's violins. The musician, who will appear in an "All Beethoven" program with the orchestra, will play his third Curtin violin at an 8 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 1, concert at the Meadow Brook Music Festival. "I've had this violin since 2003',' says Kaler, 46, whose wife, violinist Olga Kaler, also uses a Curtin instrument. "His vio- lins are bright and warm in sound, very responsive and very reliable:' Kaler will need responsive strings as he takes on Beethoven's Violin Concerto in D major, one of three pieces conduct- ed by Thomas Wilkins. The orchestra also will play the Leonore Overture No. 3 and Symphony No. 6 ("The Pastoral"). "This concerto is a big piece that goes about 45 minutes, depending on the interpretation': says Kaler, who appeared with the orchestra in 1993 to play a Mendelssohn concerto. "I've performed the Beethoven work many times with many different orchestras, and there's always a happy reunion with the music. It requires full control of the instrument:" Kaler knew he would be a profes- sional violinist since childhood. Born into a family of professional musicians, he went to many concerts and watched many rehearsals. After studying at the Central Music School in Moscow, he attended the Moscow Conservatory and began his concert career. He is the only violinist to win top awards at all three of the world's most prestigious competitions: the Tchaikovsky, Sibelius and Paganini. "Because of the Paganini award, I was eligible to play a few pieces on the famous violin that once belonged to Ilya Kaler Paganini," he recalls. As Kaler built his international concert and recording career, he also established himself as a teacher with work at the Peabody Conservatory of Music in Baltimore, Eastman School of Music in Rochester, N.Y., Indiana University School of Music in Bloomington and now at the DePaul University School of Music in Chicago, where his wife also teaches. "I think one of the most important components of teaching is being able to solve problems in the context of each student's personality," he says. "Teaching also creates a laboratory that allows the teacher to see techniques differently." Kaler, whose two sons plan to follow the family's musical tradition, is part of the Tempest Trio with pianist Alon Goldstein and cellist Amit Peled, both Israelis. The violinist, who plans family activities so his sons understand their Jewish identity, has performed in Israel with a chamber orchestra. Kaler's recent recordings have included Bach sonatas, and upcoming releases will feature a concert suite by Russian composer Sergey Taneyev. The instrumentalist, who has enjoyed Russian translations of American nov- els for relaxation, now likes reading the same books in English. "I'm reading A Farewell to Arms': he says. "It's fascinating to read in its origi- nal language." [1] Ilya Kaler performs with the DSO 8 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 1, at the Meadow Brook Music Festival on the grounds of Oakland University in Rochester. $15-$30. (313) 576-5111; www.palacenet.com .