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December 31, 2010

E-learn with musicians

Victor Goldberg is an ambassador on the ivories.
ABIGAIL KLEIN LEICHMAN ISRAEL21C

For a charitable donation of 76 euros, anyone with Internet access can purchase a live tutorial from United States-based Israeli concert pianist Victor Goldberg, the newest executive professor at the online Academy for Classical Music of Lions Club Vienna MozART.

“This is something very unique and new, allowing anybody to get exposed to music and have a lesson with a famous performing artist,” Goldberg said. “This will allow me to teach while traveling.”

The 33-year-old pianist certainly spends considerable time on the road. He is in the midst of a months-long Far East tour that started in China and was extended, at the request of Israel’s embassies in the Philippines, Myanmar and Thailand.

When he returns, he will play engagements in Washington, D.C., Virginia and Maryland. Last season, he had a recital at Carnegie Hall in New York and an appearance at the Dame Myra Hess Memorial Concerts in Chicago. He has also played in Canada, Tel Aviv, Germany, Kiev and Tenerife.

“I perform in many cities and I feel I represent Israel everywhere I go,” he said of his travels.

Goldberg and his family immigrated to Israel from Ukraine in 1991. He received his musical foundation from Mark Shaviner and the late Alexander Volkov of the Rubin Academy of Music at Tel Aviv University. He went on to earn degrees at New York’s Juilliard School and Manhattan School of Music and, most recently, at the Peabody Conservatory at Johns Hopkins University in Maryland.

Now residing in New York City, Goldberg spends time in Israel at least twice a year, sometimes for extended periods. “Actually, I had planned to be in Israel now, but this Asian tour turned into a long trip. I don’t know when I’m returning; maybe in the late winter or early spring,” he said.

His current tour began with an invitation from a professor in Beijing who had heard Goldberg perform in New York. Following his appearances at Tianjin Concert Hall and Wuhan Qintai Concert Hall there in July, Israeli ambassadors in Southeast Asian countries began to ply him with invitations.

“I was not [previously] aware that the Israeli embassies and the Foreign Ministry have a mandate to promote Israeli culture and cultural cooperation,” Goldberg explained in an interview from Hong Kong.

Goldberg has performed in Manila, Yangon and Mandalay in Myanmar, and Bangkok and Chiang Mai in Thailand. He was recently interviewed on Radio Television Hong Kong and agreed to make a recording for its classical music station in January.

A frequent headliner for benefit concerts, Goldberg was happy to present some classical selections on an electronic keyboard at a Buddhist refuge for 6,000 children while in Mandalay.

“I couldn’t play most of my pieces on such a small keyboard, so I played two works by Mozart and Tchaikovsky,” he recounted. “Most of the teachers and kids had never heard of these composers, and their reaction was very touching.”

Goldberg understands the importance of showing the world that Israel is not only about conflict. He said he finds that the Far East is, however, generally free of antisemitism and that the people he meets know little about the Jewish state. “These countries have many millions of people, so you reach masses who don’t have any preconceptions about Israel,” he said.

Fluent in Russian, Hebrew and English, Goldberg communicates with his enthusiastic audiences more through his talented fingers than via speech.

Goldberg was the first instrumentalist in the history of the Manhattan School of Music to be awarded the prestigious Artist Diploma in Performance. He also won a Pro Musicis International Award, an Artist Recognition Award at the International Keyboard Festival in New York, the World Congress of Russian Jewry Award, and first prize at the Arianne Katcz Piano Competition.

Goldberg spends time at the keys every day that he’s not in transit. When his schedule allows, he indulges his passions for cinema and literature, as well as Jewish history and religion.

Israel21C is a nonprofit educational foundation with a mission to focus media and public attention on the 21st-century Israel that exists beyond the conflict. For more, or to donate, visit israel21c.org.

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