
Liza Ferschtman
VIOLINIST
"Enter the Russian-Dutch violinist Liza Ferschtman whose dramatic platform appearance perfectly suited a superbly passionate performance. Her playing was authoritative, decisive, virtuosic and brave... [Bruch: Violin Concerto No. 1]."
LONDON PHILHARMONIC
THE ARGUS
BIOGRAPHY
Dutch violinist Liza Ferschtman is renowned for her passionate performances, superlative musicianship, and imaginative programming. Proficient as a virtuosic performer and impactful artistic director, Ms. Ferschtman holds a deep love for music as a student, interpreter, and creator. Following her sensational performance of Bernstein’s “Serenade” with the Budapest Festival Orchestra at Avery Fisher Hall in 2013, the York Times wrote “But with Dutch violinist Liza Ferschtman bringing refined beauty and character to the solo part of the Bernstein…the concert was nothing short of revelatory.” Shortly thereafter she made her U.S. orchestral debut in 2015 with the Dallas Symphony and Jaap van Zweden, playing the same work. During the following season, she debuted with the San Francisco Symphony, playing the Beethoven Violin Concerto, with Edwin Outwater conducting. As the Artistic Director of the Delft Chamber Music Festival—a position she accepted at the young age of 27—Liza Ferschtman earned the festival a reputation for adventurous programming as well as dynamic performances by international artists. In her 14-year tenure, she expanded the festival into an interdisciplinary artistic event occupying a unique, creative niche of Dutch musical culture. The 2025/2026 season promises thrilling collaborations for Ms. Ferschtman, including with the Brussels Philharmonic at the Iedereen Klassiek Festival, Benjamin Moser for the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde Coburg, the Iceland Symphony Orchestra for the Valleiconcerten Leusden, the Sinfonieorchester Aachen at Theater Aachen, the Phoenix Symphony, and her own mother, pianist Mila Baslawskaj, and father, cellist Dmitri Ferschtm/an, at Utrecht’s TivoliVredenburg, to list a few. Recent highlights include performing with the La Jolla Music Society for their Summerfest and serving on the faculty of the Steans Institute's Piano & Strings Program at the Ravinia Festival. International engagements have included solos with the philharmonics of Bergen, Bremen, Essen, Hong Kong, London, Malaysia, Minas Gerais in Brazil, and Warsaw, as well as the BBC National Orchestra of Wales, Malmö Symphony, Orchestre National de Belgique in Brussels, Nuremberg Symphony, Radio Symphony Orchestra of Prague, Schleswig-Holstein Festival Orchestra, Staatskapelle Weimar, Symphony Orchestra of Flanders, and the Yomiuri Nippon Orchestra. She has performed at such venues as Alice Tully Hall in New York, the Library of Congress in Washington, Wigmore Hall in London, Musikverein in Vienna, Liederhalle in Stuttgart, and Beethoven Haus in Bonn. Among the conductors with whom she has collaborated are Stephan Blunier, Martyn Brabbins, Frans Brüggen, Christoph von Dohnanyi, Iván Fischer, Claus Peter Flor, Neeme Järvi, the late Yakov Kreizberg, Zdenek Mácal, Jun Märkl, Ludovic Morlot, Gianandrea Noseda, Arild Remmereit, Leonard Slatkin, Thomas Søndergård, Marc Soustrot, Jac van Steen, Karl-Heinz Steffens, Otto Tausk, Christian Vásquez, Mario Venzago, Jan Willem de Vriend, and Jaap van Zweden. Liza Ferschtman concertizes regularly with Jonathan Biss, Nobuko Imai, Elisabeth Leonskaja, Christian Poltera, Lars Anders Tomter, István Várdai, and Alisa Weilerstein. Among her duo partners are pianists Enrico Pace and Inon Barnatan. Other recital collaborations include trios with Elisabeth Leonskaja and István Várdai in Spain with subsequent performances at Wigmore Hall and the Musikverein. Ms. Ferschtman's recording of the Beethoven Concerto and Romances was reviewed with great critical acclaim alongside her recorded concertos of Dvorák and Röntgen, solo works of Bach and Ysaÿe, and duo works of Beethoven and Schubert. Her albums for Challenge Classics include works for solo violin by Bach, Biber, Bartók and Berio, as well an all-Mendelssohn CD of his violin concerto and string octet. Her 2018 release features her rendition of Korngold’s violin concerto with the Prague Symphony Orchestra conducted by Kiri Malát, followed by Bernstein Serenade (after Plato’s ‘Symposium’) with the Het Gelders Orkest and conductor Christian Vásquez. The daughter of Russian musicians, Liza Ferschtman began playing the violin at the age of five. Violinist Philipp Hirschhorn, a close family friend, is foremost among her earliest influences. She formally trained at the Amsterdam Conservatory with Herman Krebbers, the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia with Ida Kavafian, and with David Takeno in London. In 2006, she received the Dutch Music Prize, the highest accolade awarded to a musician in the Netherlands.
RECORDINGS

Liza Ferschtman

PRESS ACCLAIM
BUDAPEST FESTIVAL ORCHESTRA
“ … with Dutch violinist Liza Ferschtman bringing refined beauty and character to the solo part of the Bernstein [Serenade] … the concert was nothing short of revelatory.”
NEW YORK TIMES
DALLAS SYMPHONY
"Liza Ferschtman was a late replacement...but gave no hint of second-fiddle status. She delivered reflective music with strikingly creamy tone and impeccably tossed off the finale's fireworks [Barber: Violin Concerto]."
DALLAS MORNING NEWS
LONDON PHILHARMONIC
"Enter the Russian-Dutch violinist Liza Ferschtman whose dramatic platform appearance perfectly suited a superbly passionate performance. Her playing was authoritative, decisive, virtuosic and brave ...[Bruch: Violin Concerto No. 1]."
THE ARGUS
BOSTON PHILHARMONIC
"...with Ferschtman, Zander found a simpatico partner. The Dutch violinist possesses a crisp and tastefully understated technique. Throughout her performance, her tone had a silvery radiance that blended gracefully with the chamber-like orchestral accompaniment [Beethoven: Violin Concerto]."
DALLAS SYMPHONY
“Comprising the [Bernstein] Serenade after Plato’s 'Symposium' and the orchestra’s first-ever performance of his Third Symphony, it was compelling start to finish … Dutch violinist Liza Ferschtman gave a commanding performance, by turns gutsy and sweetly singing …”
DALLAS MORNING NEWS
BBC NATIONAL ORCHESTRA OF WALES
"The highlight of a 'five-star' concert was the performance of Dvorák's strangely neglected violin concerto. It contains all the lyricism, virtuosity, scale and, in the typically Dvorákian final movement furiant, high spirits, that one could wish for in a Romantic concerto. In the marvellously persuasive hands of the brilliant young Dutch violinist Liza Ferschtman it could not have wished for a more convincing endorsement – passionate and totally committed."
SOUTH WALES ARGUS
BREMEN PHILHARMONIC
"... With a forceful manner of playing, which thanks to immaculate bowing pays ample tribute to the tiniest details, the violinist Liza Ferschtman of Russian birth conveyed the vast palette of changing mood themes. Opening with a brief and inspirational violin solo, eruptions of sound form in a highly charged alternation of sequences, in turn opulent and driven by overflowing emotional force, also delicately conveyed and lyrical, or lively and cheerful, all seamlessly connected. Thunderous applause.[Prokofiev: Violin Concerto No. 2]."
WESER-KURIER
BRUSSELS PHILHARMONIC
"...The Serenade after Plato's 'Symposium' for Violin and Orchestra (same formation as for the Chichester Psalms)...above all allowed [one] to hear a high-class performer, the Dutch violinist Liza Ferschtman, who approached the demanding solo part with a total technical safety (bow conduct and use of remarkable vibrato), a sensibility without affectation, and a magnificent purity of sound expression, illustrating in particular in the fourth movement Agathon, [the] emotional heart of this Serenade."
BACHTRACK.COM
WIGMORE HALL RECITAL
"Classy, cultured playing comes naturally to Liza Ferschtman...Beauty of sound was a priority, ranging from the softest, cleanest entries to rich depths and sonorous voicing. Taking dynamics to degrees of daring quietness, almost coaxing hairpin swells out of nowhere, characterized the more fantastical moments of her Bartók. When bite and attack was needed, it was forthcoming – albeit with a feeling that purity, bell-like intonation and quality of tone mattered necessarily more than gratuitous bravura or extravagant theatre. Both the Bartók and Lutoslawski [Subito] are works of exacting difficulty and detail, metrically and expressively on the edge. Ferschtman made light of the complexities."
CLASSICAL SOURCE [UK]
"... The achievement of violinist Liza Ferschtman and pianist Roman Rabinovich was to transcend the superficially rebarbative nature of this piece [Bartók: Violin Sonata No. 1], and to display its underlying unity. They triumphantly brought out the poised beauty of the Adagio and the wild fiddle-dance of the finale."
THE INDEPENDENT [London]
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS RECITAL
“The high point was the [Schubert] Fantasy in C. No music was on hand for either Ferschtman or Barnatan, for one of the longest, most difficult duos ever written. I'd never seen this feat attempted anywhere, and the performance was extraordinary at all levels...the unanimity between the artists, down to the tiniest nuance, was almost eerie. It was a true tour de force of ensemble playing.”
WASHINGTON POST
CD: KORNGOLD • BERNSTEIN (Challenge Classics)
KORNGOLD Violin Concerto
Prague Symphony Orchestra, Jiri Malát, conductor
BERNSTEIN Serenade after Plato’s ‘Symposium’
Het Gelders Orkest, Christian Vásquez, conductor
“… In this live performance [of the Korngold], Ferschtman’s sound is big and rich, full of personality and fizzing with ideas, but she’s also capable of that special trick of melting while maintaining poise and elegance.”
BBC MUSIC MAGAZINE
“Ferschtman is one of a generation of violinists for whom Bernstein’s sometimes ungainly writing for the instrument holds no terrors … Ferschtman’s intonation is well-nigh flawless.”
GRAMOPHONE MAGAZINE
"This is a work [Bernstein: Serenade] that both Stern and Francescatti recorded with the composer, and Ferschtman doesn't suffer in comparison with either....From her opening solo, she catches the work's balancing of the spiritual with the flesh, and later in the movement, her phrasing is wonderfully imaginative. in "Agathon," time stands still, as Ferschtman spins a thread of sound that is at once ethereal and eternal. At the same time, she lets her hair down in the jazzy, drunken "Alcibiades" movement, which closes the work....If you want a modern recording of this work, Ferschtman's is more idiomatic than Lenny's (relatively) late-career effort with Gidon Kremer. I have nothing but enthusiasm for this release, and I look forward to getting to know this violinist's work better ... she is the real thing."
FANFARE
“… in this live recording Dutch violinist Liza Ferschtman sets on Korngold’s score with spontaneity and abandon…With lithe virtuosity she describes just the right amount of light and shade, particularly in the richly imploring opening of the second movement Romanze."
"… in Bernstein’s five-movement Serenade after Plato’s ‘Symposium,’ Ferschtman takes a subtly shaded approach, the brilliance and energy of her performance thoroughy compelling. The moments when the texture clears and the solo violin emerges alone are particularly entrancing, and Ferschtman’s artistry and flair never falter.”
THE STRAD
CD with HET GELDERS ORKEST (Challenge Classics)
FELIX MENDELSSOHN
Violin Concerto, Op. 64 – Kees Bakels, conductor
String Octet, Op. 20
"Oh, not another Mendelssohn Violin Concerto recording, I hear you cry. Well, yes, but wait: this one is worth exploring. These Dutch musicians treat the piece as a chamber work, the cut-down forces of the Het Gelders Orkest giving light and airy support to Liza Ferschtman's carefully judged, singing solo line. It works beautifully ... Ferschtman changes gear for the Octet, Op. 20, driving the inexhaustible exuberance of this youthful piece with thrilling intensity ..."
THE GUARDIAN
"Does the world need another recording of Mendelssohn's Violin Concerto? Liza Ferschtman bravely asks this question herself in the CD booklet, before telling us her new insights and her desire to share her discoveries. These don't leap out at you, but this is certainly an attractive performance. She has a focused, silvery tone, and her playing has constant energy."
THE STRAD
CD with THE NETHERLANDS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Challenge Classics)
LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN
Violin Concerto – Jan Willem de Vriend, conductor
“It’s not easy to bring off this wonderful piece on the violin … but she succeeds triumphantly … Ferschtman’s interpretation is constantly illuminating.”
GRAMOPHONE MAGAZINE
REPERTOIRE LIST
BACH
Concerti in E Major and A Minor
Double Concerto in D Minor
Concerto for 3 Violins
BARBER
Concerto, Op. 14
BARTÓK
Concerto No. 1
BEETHOVEN
ConcertoRomances Nos. 1 and 2Triple Concerto
BERG
Violin Concerto
BERNSTEIN
Serenade
BLOCH
Violin Concerto
BRAHMS
Violin ConcertoDouble Concerto
BROSSE
Sophia (Symphonic Poem for Violin and Orchestra)
BRUCH
Viollin Concerti in D Minor and G Minor
DVORÁK
Violin Concerto in A MInor, Op. 53
GLAZUNOV
Concerto
J. HAYDN
Violin Concerto in C Major
M. HAYDN
Violin Concerto in A Major
HENKEMANS
Concerto, 1950
HINDEMITH
Kammermusik No. 4
MENDELSSOHN
Violin Concerti in D Minor and E Minor
Double Concerto in D Minor
MOZART
Violin Concerti Nos. 3, 4, and 5
Sinfonia Concertante
PIAZZOLA
The Four Seasons of Buenos Aires
PROKOFIEV
Violin Concerti Nos. 1 and 2
RAVEL
Tzigane
RÖNTGEN
Violin Concerti in A Minor and F Minor
Suite for Violin and String Orchestra
Ballade
SAINT-SAËNS
Violin Concerto No. 3
Havanaise
Introduction and Rondo Cappriccioso
SARASATE
Zigeunerweisen
SCHNITTKE
Concerto grosso No. 6
SCHUBERT
Rondo in A Major
SHOSTAKOVICH
Violin Concerto No. 1
SIBELIUS
Violin Concerto, Op. 47
STRAVINSKY
Violin Concerto
SUK
Fantasie for Violin and Orchestra in G Minor
SZYMANOWSKI
Violin Concerti Nos. 1 and 2
TAKEMITSU
Nostalgia
TCHAIKOVSKY
Violin Concerto
Souvenir d'un lieu cher, Op. 42
Serenade melancholique in B Minor, Op. 26
Valse Scherzo
VIEUXTEMPS
Violin Concerti Nos. 4 and 5
VIVALDI
Concerto for 2 Violins in D MinorConcerto for 4 Violins
The Four Seasons
DISCOGRAPHY
BIBER Passacaglia "The Guardian Angel" C. 105
BARTÓK Sonata for Solo Violin Sz.117
BERIO Sequenza VIII for violin
BACH Partita no.2 in d minor BWV 1004
Challenge Classics
DVORÁK
Violin Concerto in a minor op. 53
GERSHWIN
An American in Paris
Netherlands Philharmonic Orchestra Amsterdam
Mario Venzago, conductor
Challenge Classics
KODÁLY Duo for violin and violoncello op. 7
RAVEL Sonata for violin and violoncello
SCHULHOFF Duo for violin and violoncello
Dmitry Ferschtman, violoncello
Challenge Classics
RÖNTGEN
Violin Concerto in A minor
Ballad for Violin & Orchestra
Violin Concerto in F sharp minor
Deutsche Staatsphilharmonie Rheinland-Pfalz
David Porcelijn, conductor
CPO
BEETHOVEN
Concerto
Romance Nos. 1 and 2
The Netherlands Symphony Orchestra
Jan Willem de Vriend, conductor
Challenge CC
BACH
Sonata No. 1
Partita No. 3
YSAŸE
Sonata Nos. 1 and 2
CD OF THE MONTH, THE STRAD (2010)
Challenge CC
BEETHOVEN
Sonata Op. 96
SCHUBERT
Fantasy D. 934
Sei mir Gegrüsst
with Inon Barnatan, piano
Challenge CC
FRANCK Sonata
POULENC Sonata
TCHAIKOVSKY
Humoresque Op. 10 No. 1
Souvenir d'un lieu cher, Op. 42
STRAVINSKY
Divertimento for violin & piano "Le baiser de la fée"
Pas de deux
L'Oiseau de feu (arr. Dushkin)
DEBUSSY Sonata
SHOSTAKOVICH Four Preludes from Op. 34
with Bas Verheijden, piano
Brilliant Classics
MENDELSSOHN
Violin Concerto, Op. 64
String Octet, Op. 20
Het Gelders Orkest
Kees Bakels, conductor
Challenge Classics
KORNGOLD
Violin Concerto
Prague Symphony Orchestra
Jiri Malát, conductor
BERNSTEIN
Serenade after Plato's 'Symposium'
Het Gelders Orkest
Christian Vásquez, conductor
Challenge Classics











