Category Archives: StringDocs

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Jochen Blum

Jochen Blum (born January 22, 1959 in Ludwigshafen) is a German specialist in surgery and trauma surgery, professor of music physiology, and author of specialist books.

He is a co-founder and long-standing board member of the German Society for Music Physiology and Musicians’ Medicine (DGFMM).

Excerpt from an interview:

Back then, a violin maker and now chief physician for trauma surgery, orthopedics, and hand surgery, what motivated you to become a doctor—the decision to ultimately pursue a career in medicine?

It’s been around for a while; it was already an idea when I was at school. They’re two parallel worlds. I also studied instrument making during my school years.

I trained with Stelio Rossi in Siena; this is what his instruments sound like:

Towards the end of this time, I also considered possibly going into music therapy, because I was an avid musician. However, I was already aware that working at a professional level, as a professional musician, was something I had a different view of. I didn’t necessarily want to eke out a life in the back row of a small orchestra, and I didn’t really have the skills to pursue a major solo career.

In addition to classical music, I did indeed play rock and jazz in bands, but that was simply for the joy of playing rather than the idea of ​​making it a career. But I knew that after finishing school and graduating from high school, I didn’t want to immediately continue on to university the next day, so to speak, but rather wanted to deepen my knowledge of this practical area, and I had the opportunity to learn the craft of violin making from a luthier in Italy.

Viola Stelio Rossi

Although it was already clear to me back then that I wanted to go on to university again, and that’s exactly what happened. During my time as a violin maker, I had a few customers – in this case, they weren’t patients, but customers who wanted things changed – and I asked myself whether it wasn’t more of a medical problem that was bothering them. But of course it was all a bit vague, so I’d say the roots of both were there early on, but ultimately it developed in such a way that after completing my violin making training, I definitely wanted to study medicine, and I was then able to combine the two areas a bit later on.

https://www.medpertise.de/musikerkrankheiten-krankheitsbilder-prof-blum

https://dgfmm.org/blum

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jochen_Blum


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Matthias Weikert

Dr. Weikert ist im Amateurbereich als Geiger- und Kammermusiker engagiert und in dieser instrumentalen Ausübung u.a. Mitglied des Bayerischen Ärzteorchesters (ehem. unter der Leitung von Prof. Dr. R. Steinberg; jetzt Projektorchester mit wechselnden Dirigenten) und des Orchesters am Singrün Regensburg (Dirigent Michael Falk).

Klaviertrio der UEP (Union Europäischer Phoniater), 2019 im Galakonzert Helsinki, House of Gentlemen.
Prof. Dr. Dirk Deuster, Münster (Klavier), Dr. Matthias Weikert, Regensburg (Violine) und Frau Kathrin Neumann, Münster (Violoncello).

https://der-stimmarzt.jimdofree.com

https://www.youtube.com/@matthiasweikert2362


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Horst Hildebrandt

Horst Hildebrandt, born in Marburg (Germany), completed violin studies in Freiburg (Germany) and London, and studied medicine in Freiburg. He has furthered his training in movement therapy, dispokinesis, mental training, and pain therapy. He is a member of the German National Youth Orchestra and the Junge Deutsche Philharmonie. He has worked as a violinist in opera and radio orchestras. He is the first violinist of the Hilaros Quartet, the Ensemble Aisthesis, and various orchestras. From 1988, he was a violinist and violist with the Ensemble Aventure Freiburg for over 30 years. He has taught for many years at music schools, as well as at music academies and professional orchestras. He has been the head of the Music Physiology/Music and Preventive Medicine department at the Zurich University of the Arts (since 1997) and the Basel University of Music (since 1999). His areas of expertise include teaching and research in psychophysiology, prevention, and health promotion. He is the director of the MAS continuing education program in Music Physiology at the Zurich University of the Arts. Founder and management team member of the Zurich Center for Musicians (ZZM) and the Swiss University Center for Music Physiology (SHZM).

https://www.zhdk.ch/person/prof-dr-horst-hildebrandt-150695


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André Lee

He has been playing the violin since he was 6 years old and has studied with Prof. Michael Goldstein (Hamburg University of Music, First Concertmaster of the Hamburg Philharmonic State Orchestra), Prof. Wilfried Laatz (Lübeck University of Music), and Prof. Ingolf Turban (Munich University of Music), among others, and continues to be active in various orchestras and chamber music.
Since November 2020, he has returned to the IMMM as a tenure-track junior professor.

https://dgfmm.org/die-gesellschaft/vorstand-beirat/dr-andre-lee

https://www.akademie-fuer-handrehabilitation.de/handtherapeut/das-team/prof-dr-andre-lee.php#reloaded

https://iabnetz.de/?author=48407

https://www.bundesakademie.de/akademie/dozent-innen/details/dozent/andre-lee

https://www.immm.hmtm-hannover.de/de/institut/personen/andre-lee


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Adolf-Friedrich Holstein

Statements spoken by Adolf Friedrich Holstein

Wolfgang Ellenberger was one of Prof. Holstein’s anatomy students and was able to provide the musical accompaniment for his 80th birthday.

The history of the Hamburg Museum of Medical History began in 2007. The UKE board of directors asked the UKE’s Friends and Supporters Association to restore what is now the Fritz Schumacher House after the Institute of Pathology had moved out and to find a new use for it. The idea of ​​establishing a medical history museum in the restored building was welcomed by all involved. Prof. Holstein, the then chairman of the Friends and Supporters Association, took on the task and initially sought funding for the upcoming work and the museum’s establishment.
In close cooperation with the monument preservation authority, the individual construction phases were completed and presented to the public step by step. In 2010, the restored dissection room was unveiled, accompanied by an exhibition that provided an initial insight into the diversity of the exhibits. In October 2013, the first part of the permanent exhibition “The Emergence of Modern Medicine” opened. In December 2014, the museum opened the recently completed small dissection room and the rooms on the first floor.

https://www.uke.de/kliniken-institute/institute/geschichte-und-ethik-der-medizin/medizinhistorisches-museum/index.html

90. Geburtstag im UKE Erikahaus mit Feier. 2024
Sculpture of Fritz Schumacher, the builder of the building that now houses the Hamburg Museum of Medical History. Created by Adolf-Friedrich Holstein.

Dear Mr. Ellenberger,

Thank you very much for your kind email. I am touched by everything you want to share about me. Of course, I agree. During my professional career, I was highly committed to medical teaching and research on spermatogenesis, and after my retirement, I devoted myself to monument preservation, painting, and sculpture. After restoring the rooms in the Erika House, I founded a center for communication and culture there. I then took over the task of restoring the pathology institute building from the medical director, Prof. Jörg Debatin. I created a new use for it as the Hamburg Museum of Medical History. At my request, the building was named Fritz Schumacher House after its builder, to house a new cultural institute. To illustrate this, I created a sculpture of the famous building director, which stands in front of the museum.

If you give me your address, I will be happy to send you a small booklet published by the Friends and Supporters Association for my 90th birthday.

But now I’d also like to know how you’re doing? How do music and medicine fit into your life?

Best regards

Adolf-Friedrich Holstein

Prof. Dr. Adolf-Friedrich Holstein
Medizinhistorisches Museum Hamburg
Martinistr.52
20246 Hamburg


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Karl-Wilhelm Fritz

He is DivingDoc, ViolinDoc, CollectorDoc, PoliticDoc, BenefizDocHobbies:
-classical literature
-history
-politics
-classical music (viola and violine in several orchestras:
–Gehrdener Chamber Orchestra until 1993-1-31
–New Wilhelmshaven symphony orchestra
–Hamburg doctors orchestra
–German doctors orchestra
— participating at the EDO (European Doctors Orchestra) from Nov 2004
-Sports: surfing, diving (5 times as medical doctor on Maledives for TUI), bicycle

Newspaper Liver transplant story


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Tamás Hacki

Tamás Hacki (Budapest, February 18, 1944) is a Hungarian ENT doctor, university professor and art-whistler.

At the age of five, he began whistling, learned to play the violin, and was also a choir member. He shared first prize in “Who Knows What?” in 1962. That same year, he graduated from Kölcsey Ferenc Gymnasium in Budapest. He began university studies and graduated as an ENT specialist in 1970. He then worked in the ear, nose, and throat department of Budapest’s MÁV Hospital and participated in the MIDEM Festival in Cannes that same year. His albums have been released in several countries. In 1983–1984, he went on a phoniatric study trip to Germany and subsequently completed his specialist examination in Budapest. In 1986, one of his German professors called him back, and he taught at the Hanover Medical School for six years. He completed his habilitation in 1990 and became a university professor at the Medical Faculty of the University of Regensburg in 1992. On New Year’s Eve 2007, he performed with the Munich Symphony Orchestra, and on March 20, he gave a concert in Munich with his former backing band, the Ex-Antiquis Band. He currently lives in Regensburg, where he worked at the University Hospital.

He founded the Clinic for Phoniatrics and Pediatric Audiology and the associated Speech Therapist Training Institute, as well as a rehabilitation department that treats voice and swallowing disorders. He is also a frequent guest in Hungary, leads several specialist and speech therapist training courses, organizes conferences, and gives lectures. In 2008, he received the Federal Cross of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany1 and in 2015, the Pro Cultura Hungarica Award. In 2022, he was elected an external member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

Die Lerche und Playlist auf youtube where he accompanies himself on the guitar

wikipedia HU


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Kim Chang

     Dr. Kim Chang graduated from the Taipei Medical School Department of Dentistry, and is an Attending Dentist at the Taipei Jen-Ai Hospital.  Dr. Kim Chang was first taught to play violin by Professor Lin Tong-Che, and began studying under Professor Yang Tsu-Hsien while an elementary school pupil.  Throughout the last 30 years of professional career as a dentist, Dr. Chang never ceased to pursue his passion in music.  To this day, he still frequently performs in classical music concerts.

   Dr. Chang started entering into violin competitions since an early age, and has received first place awards in All-Taiwan Violin Competitions and Taipei’s Municipal Violin Competition several times.  He was the Second Place Winner in the 1972 All Taiwan Music Competition, and was the First Place Winner of the same competition in 1976 and 1985.  In 1979, he was awarded the first place awards in both the string quartet and the piano trio categories of the All Taiwan Chamber Music Competition.  In addition to the awards won, he was invited many times to perform in concerts featuring concertos as well as chamber music pieces.  He has worked with many orchestras, including the Physicians Chamber Orchestra of Taiwan, the National Taiwan University Symphony Orchestra, the Taipei Civic Symphony Orchestra, the Eurasia Chamber Orchestra Taipei, the Physicians Chamber Orchestra of Hong Kong, the Macau Youth Symphony Orchestra, the World Doctors Orchestra, the Taipei Youth Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra, and so on.  His repertoire spans a wide range of musical compositions, covering classical music, modern music, as well as musical compositions by current Taiwanese composers.  

   In September of 2001, At Taipei’s Novel Hall, Dr. Chang held his first and very successful recital, entitled “Music Without Boundaries”.  Since then, Dr. Chang has given 9 concerts under such name, to critical acclaim.  At these “Music Without Boundaries” concerts, Dr. Chang challenges himself each time with different master pieces, giving professional-level performances as an amateur musician.  He also has been joined by his many renowned fellow musician friends who share his passion for music.

   Dr. Chang has been the Concert Master and Co-Founder of the Physicians Chamber Orchestra of Taiwan and the Taipei Civic Symphony Orchestra.  He has also served as the Director of the Physicians Chamber Orchestra of Taiwan since its establishment in 1990.  In addition, Dr. Chang is a lifetime member and Concert Master of the World Doctors Orchestra.  

Profile PCOT

youtube

instagram


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Gloria Bruni

Gloria Bruni (born Brünhild Ulonska in 1955 in Oschersleben) is a German singer (soprano), violinist, composer and dentist.

Gloria Bruni is the daughter of a physicist and grew up with her sister in Hamburg.[3] She graduated from the Charlotte-Paulsen-Gymnasium in 1973. She received piano and violin lessons as a child and sang during her school years. In addition to studying dentistry and obtaining a doctorate,[4] she also studied composition with Diether de la Motte and singing with Naan Pöld in Hamburg, as well as in Munich and Milan.[3][5]

Bruni played as a violinist in the Hamburg Camerata Accademica and the Salzburg Mozarteum Orchestra, and performed on tours at venues including Carnegie Hall and the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.[3]

As a singer, she was signed by Polydor and performed at the Puccini Festival and La Scala in Milan, with the London Mozart Players at the Dresden Semperoper and at the Leipzig Gewandhaus.[3]

Bruni is married, has a daughter and lives in Hamburg.

courtesy Gloria Bruni´s press kit

Bruni composes primarily for choir and vocal soloists. Her compositions often incorporate elements of folk or sacred music, combining different musical genres.

Her Requiem a Roma was premiered in the Holy Year 2000[6] as a commission from the Vatican in the church of Sant’Ignazio[4] and excerpts were also performed before Pope John Paul II.[3] In 2008, the children’s opera Pinocchio, which she composed, premiered in the Laeiszhalle with the Hamburg Symphony Orchestra.[7][3] Further performances of the work followed, including at the Teatro di San Carlo in Naples and the Teatro Regio di Parma.[7][8] The musical The Thorn Birds (“The Thorn Birds”), based on the libretto by Colleen McCullough, premiered in 2009 by the Wales Theatre Company, followed by a tour of Great Britain.[3][9] Other works include the fairytale mini-opera The Enchanted Pancake and Symphony No. 1 – Ring Parable (after G. E. Lessing’s Nathan the Wise), which also premiered in the Laeiszhalle.[10] This symphony has been performed not only as a concert, but also several times as a ballet.

web

youtube

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gloria_Bruni

Verlag Hartmann & Stauffer Profil


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Reingard Glehr

Category : StringDocs , Viola

Glehr plays in the chamber orchestra of Hartberg, in Streich4Hartberg (photo) as well as in other ensembles and she participated in the Musical-Festspiele im Schloss Hartberg. Other than that she makes Jazz in her family Jazz band. Her main instrument is the violin but she also plays the viola.

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work