
"Her talent has blossomed into consummate instrumental mastery. Her intonation is perfect, and her tone is gorgeous, intense, and variable, flawlessly pure and beautiful in every register, under all circumstances."
“The soloist Judith ingolfsson was convincing in the Violin Concerto No. 1 of Nikolai Roslavets. She effortlessly mastered the unusual melodies and double stops. Especially her clear sound - even in the most technically challenging passages - was a real treat.”
“Glazunov's Violin Concerto in A minor (1904) begins with a plaintive theme played by the solo violinist. Ingolfsson brought the music to life with her warm interpretation and impeccable technique. In a long, difficult cadenza, she gave a stunning display of pizzicato and double-stop bowing and finger work. The concerto is played without a pause, with the second movement acting as an interlude within the first. Ingolfsson handled the polyphonic variations with grace and skill, rewarded by a standing ovation from the enthusiastic audience.” Hamburger Abendblatt (Germany) July 2010 “The violinist from Iceland movingly performed Chopin’s Nocturne in C sharp minor with a clearly chiseled and yet languorous sound. Laks’s lost version of the “Trois Pieces de concert” for cello and piano she reconstructed for violin and piano. Her playing was accordingly intense and authentic. The first movement came across dance-like, fanciful, and with subtle humor. In the “Romance” her crystal clear playing enthralled with a mournfully beautiful melody, while in the last movement she allowed lots of room for the comical accents. In Ravel’s Sonata for violin and piano, the duo displayed wonderful unity. Ingolfsson particularly brought out the light, lapidary, resigned character of the blues. The boisterous ballad-like character of the composition succeeded so well that it almost seemed like Kurt Weill’s Pirate Jenny was singing. The duo played fabulously.”
"Ingolfsson possesses artistic fire to be sure, but her playing is not flamboyant nor is it infused with hot theatrics. Rather she is a performer who projected qualities of depth, graceful mastery and serene assurance as she approached even the most daredevil passages of the richly layered and demanding Barber concerto. Her violin, crafted at the end of the Baroque era by Lorenzo Guadagnini, delivers an unusually gorgeous sound. Ingolfsson seems to dissolve into her playing such that the listener is drawn fully into the music. Her technical brilliance and poetic musicality illuminated the score Monday evening and her collaboration with Bragado and the orchestra was fluid and elegant.
She played an unusually long encore from Baroque composer Tartini's famous "Devil's Trill" sonata, an utterly captivating performance that displayed another facet of her artistry while honoring the violin's 18th century origins."
Violinist Ingolfsson demonstrated a charming personality on stage even before applying bow to fiddle. When she played, she produced a big gorgeous sound that enveloped you and carried you along on a rich and exciting musical journey. The concerto she chose for the occasion was Samuel Barber's Violin Concerto, Op. 14, and its flowing rhapsodic nature suited her to a "T."
In the first two movements she gave us solid rich playing, lovely shaping of phrases and an intensity that commanded your attention every inch of the way. Her frenzied last movement, Presto in moto perpetuo, was a knockout. Responding to audience applause, Ms. Ingolfsson played one encore for us, selections from Tartini's famous Sonata, "The Devil"s Trill," in an arrangement for unaccompanied violin that included some of the continuo parts woven into the texture - a few of these sections we heard in multiple versions, both semplice and embellished. Her beautiful playing in this encore featured double stops, with contrapuntal lines twisting through them, and some occasional harmonics. It was spectacular!"
Brandenburg State Orchestra with exciting music in tow
“Piotr Tchaikovsky’s monster of a violin concerto was mastered by an Icelander. Judith Ingolfsson, who trained in the USA, sensationally swept through the abundance of notes, tone colors, and emotions. She mastered the depths of the instrument and, without batting an eyelash, took up the challenges of the Allegro with its technical refinements. She managed the turbo arpeggios, multiple stops, glissandi, wild octave leaps, and the flutelike harmonics so well that she received spontaneous applause after the movement’s highly dramatic conclusion. At the end of her thrilling ride through hell on her 1750 Guadagnini violin she received prolonged applause, and reciprocated with an encore by Paganini.”
Judith Ingolfsson conjured up landscapes of the soul
“Einojuhani Rautavaara’s two-movement Violin Concerto was convincingly presented by Judith Ingolfsson. The composition itself is marked by contradictions that are not resolved. On the one hand, a modern progression of intervals in the solo part displays twelve-tone sounds that are contrasted with traditional arpeggios, on the other. The orchestration is oriented on an interesting combination of percussion and celesta with pleasant, transparent timbres. The soloist thus succeeded in lending the composer a touch of likableness in spite of the intended stiffness, and the listeners acknowledged this with considerable applause.”
"Guest soloist Judith Ingolfsson's amazing violin virtuosity highlighted a Midland Symphony Orchestra concert that had a particularly diverse program. So skilled was Ingolfsson that her playing on Saturday night sometimes sounded like that of two violins instead of one. She was featured on a solo sonata by Eugene Ysaye, who taught her teacher Jascha Brodsky. The piece certainly was a showcase for her impressive technique. Ingolfsson, an Iceland native now resident in Germany, then joined the MSO for Sarasate's "Carmen Fantasy," which uses mostly familiar themes from Bizet's opera "Carmen" to highlight the violin. Ingolfsson again made the most of the opportunity, and cameras allowed the audience to watch her fast fingering and her intense facial expressions. She and the orchestra were rewarded with an enthusiastic ovation for their efforts."
"Ingolfsson's recital was an absolute treat. A performer of consummate artistry, she wowed the audience with her musicality and technique. Ingolfsson is one of the rare breed of performers who looks past the notes into the heart and soul of the music. A recital with her is a journey of discovery. It's as if one is hearing these works for the first time." read entire review
"The audience was enthralled by the Icelandic violinist Judith Ingolfsson, who opened the evening with Giuseppe Tartini’s (1692–1770) Sonata in G Minor (“Devil’s Trill”). Extraordinary music that one does not get to hear every day.
Three pieces by Piotr I. Tchaikovsky (1840–1893) concluded the concert. The Serenade melancolique, op. 26, played delicately and with a lot of soul, the very intimate Meditation, op. 42, no. 1, in which Ingolfsson’s violin playing plucked at one’s heartstrings, and, finally, a vivacious Valse-Scherzo, op. 34. So much vitality and virtuosity, combined with high spirits and joyful music-making, were audible that the audience could not help but respond with shouts of bravo, stomping of feet, and enthusiastic applause."
"Outstanding solo performance – Judith Ingolfsson hit the bull’s-eye with Giuseppe Tartini’s “Devil’s Trill” Sonata in G Minor. In consummate Baroque style, she deciphered the intense masterpiece with her master instrument. The three works by Tchaikovsky, the Serenade melancolique, op. 26, the Meditation, op. 42, no. 1, and the Valse-Scherzo, op. 34, delighted with their sonorous melodiousness and virtuoso impetuosity. One was thus able to once again admire the violinist’s brilliant playing."
"Violinist Judith Ingolfsson and pianist Vladimir Stoupel brought power and purpose to a varied duo program at the National Gallery on Sunday. 'Offerto' by Icelandic composer Haflidi Hallgrímsson (b. 1941) is a four-movement essay for solo violin with a lot of twittering and shimmering. One often heard a surprising connection between Iceland and Japan in the pointillistic sounds. Ingolfsson draws a clear, ringing tone from her instrument, the overtones enhanced by pinpoint intonation. She applied vibrato only to longer notes, which is a risky choice, but the purity and detail of her playing compensated. When they played together, the sum of these two fine artists produced moments of great imagination."
"Heavenly Devil’s Trills - The violinist Judith Ingolfsson, who won the 1998 “International Violin Competition of Indianapolis,” performed in Frankfurt/Main at the highest level with her duo partner, pianist Vladimir Stoupel.
The Icelandic violinist and the Russian pianist rendered with distinct agogic Beethoven’s Violin Sonata no. 10 in G Major, op. 96 – at once brilliant, nimble, tendentiously soft, discreet, and with thoughtfully chosen tempos. As a duo, they showed themselves to be most advantageously attuned to each other. Their sensitive communication made an impeccably refined impression. Judith Ingolfsson displayed enormous solistic virtuosity in Giuseppe Tartini’s Sonata in g-minor “Il trillo del diavolo.” As she explained, this is her own version of the “Devil’s Trill Sonata,” which “incorporates” the continuo accompaniment through the addition of supplementary voices. This made this technically difficult composition even more complicated and led to an almost permanent two-part or polyphonic texture. Judith Ingolfsson, employing a modern violin bow, mastered all this with instinctive certainty, fluency, and ease.
In contrast to the agogics in the Beethoven and the strong rubato with which Stoupel played Robert Schumann’s Arabesque in C Major, op. 18 at the beginning of the concert, Stravinsky’s Divertimento for violin and piano, based on his ballet “The Fairy’s Kiss,” came across as vigorously kinetic, often boisterous and dance-like."
"Vital violin - In December Ingolfsson was joined here by her recital partner Vladimir Stoupel in a program that set new standards for CU recitals. Eugene Ysaye's works for violin solo have made a sudden return to the repertory, and in most performances one wonders why. They often come across as poor man's Bach. Ingolfsson unveiled both the power and the beauty of Ysaye's Ballade No. 3 in a performance that had the audience on the edge of its seat."
“In Stravinsky’s L’Histoire du soldat, her tone and her timbres carried just the right insouciance to join convincingly in the battle for the soldier’s soul... the violinist confirmed her status among the top laureates in the IVCI’s history.”
“It is a disconcerting world that inhabits Sibelius' Violin Concerto... the violin is a furious, stormy wind, and Ingolfsson rode that wind with aplomb. Her best tone was her singing low strings, as though a human voice is offering solace. She negotiated the virtuoso sections of the finale like a kayaker in ruinously difficult river rapids -- not one wipe-out.”
“The violinist Judith Ingolfsson was musically outstanding in her performance of Mozart’s Violin Concerto in A major.”
"Violinist Judith Ingolfsson gave a knockout performance of the Tchaikovsky Concerto"
"Ingolfsson... played with a pure, singing tone and projected ease and confidence from the stage. So masterful were the virtuoso sections that they became truly expressive gestures rather than piles of notes. Combined with her exotic beauty and widely-noted style sense, Ingolfsson's musicality kept the audience rapt."
“The naturalness of her artistic message, beautiful, deep sound, meticulously pure intonation, along with her lovely appearance and stage presence, made an extremely strong impression.”
"Mozart's K. 219 concerto benefited from Ingolfsson's balance of assertiveness and cool precision. Few violinists can play softly without sacrificing the fullness of their musical lines; Ingolfsson succeeded whenever the challenge presented itself."
"Internationally acclaimed violinist Judith Ingolfsson was the splendid soloist in Mozart's 'Turkish' Violin Concerto No. 5 in A major. Her playing was characterized by a clear yet sweet tone, immaculate pitch, digital integrity and touching lyricism."
"Mendelssohn was also the highlight of a Solstice Music Festival performance. An intriguingly diverse set of songs was followed by Wieniawski's Fantasie Brillante on themes from Gounod's Faust and Mendelssohn's Octet. Violinist Judith Ingolfsson, the festival's artistic director, is a fine player; Her octaves were clean, her left hand agile and her tone often seductively sweet... The Mendelssohn was an unmitigated delight. Ingolfsson led a lithe, lively performance, joined by violinists Gil Morgenstern, Stefan Milenkovich and Wen Qian, violists Daniel Panner and Vivek Kamath, and cellists Wendy Warner and Hai-Ye Ni. The Andante offered lots of lovely, soft playing; the Scherzo was deliciously poised and delicate; and, some tonal gruffness aside, the finale's vivacity was bracingly conveyed. Ingolfsson was a confident leader and not at all domineering (a common fault in this work), and all the musicians seemed to relish the music and each other's company."
"Ingolfsson brought an affecting sense of commitment to the piece [Barber Violin Concerto], wonderfully poetic and even improvisational in the first movement, darkly expressive and dramatic in the second. She commands both the technique to take the Moto perpetuo finale at breakneck speed and the tone to make it sound."
"In the Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto...Ingolfsson was able to effectively execute the acrobatics of the piece with ease and keen musical insight. Her playing was most enjoyable during the more intimate, melodic moments of the piece, when she lingered on phrase endings and harmonics to let us hear the lustrous sound of her 1736 Stradivarius, "Muntz"."
"For concertgoers who had enjoyed individual performances by Ingolfsson or Milenkovich before, it might have been gratifying to hear the almost overwhelming synergy they produced in the Prokofiev sonata from the 1930s. The sonata began rather inconspicuously with an "Andante" movement mainly marked by symmetry of the players in imitative passages. The ensuing "Allegro" brought out Prokofiev's crackling percussiveness, and the violinists seemed to drive each other on, in a sort of perpetual cat-and-mouse game. Emotive playing from Ingolfsson distinguished the third movement, marked "Commodo." The finale brought out busy textures of almost orchestral proportions."
"The best piece on Saturday night was the Violin Concerto by Samuel Barber, played by the superb young violinist Judith Ingolfsson. Ingolfsson ingratiated her sound superbly with the ensemble; she was at once a part of the orchestra, and above it. Her instrument, a priceless Stradivarius made in 1736, projected a meaty, gorgeous sound in all registers, and Ingolfsson negotiated the lyrical melodies and the more agitated measures with soulful assurance. In the "perpetual motion" third movement, Ingolfsson displayed the precise bravura technique that won her the top prizes at several prestigious competitions."
"The best seats in the house for the Barns of Wolf Trap concert Friday were in the back rows. From there, the jeweled intensity of Judith Ingolfsson's Stradivarius, her finely honed bowing and stylistic finesse had their most telling effect. This was all the more impressive in that these aspects of her playing suited two works worlds apart: Bach's Solo Partita in B Minor, BWV 1002, and songs from Gershwin's "Porgy and Bess", arranged by Jascha Heifetz. In the Bach, Ingolfsson's bow defined the minute yet determining stylistic subtleties that divulge the particular character of each dance in the suite. Then she transformed her violin into a voice easily calling on the "portamento" swoops that capture the precise qualities of Gershwin's dramatic intent."
"Guest soloist Judith Ingolfsson is a violinist whose star has risen, the winner of the prestigious gold medal in the quadrennial International Violin Competition of Indianapolis in 1998, and a native of Iceland. She tucked her 1683 Stradivarius under her chin and played the early upper-register strains of the neo-Romantic and arresting Violin Concerto in D major by Korngold. Ingolfsson used every millimeter of the bow and dispatched upper-register scale runs with searing intensity. Most impressive was her ability to make the instrument sing, communicating emotion with an ethereal magic. The balance between the orchestra, with its bell-like wind passages, and the soloist was dynamically perfect. The playful and frenetic third-movement allegro and vivace showed Ingolfsson at her finest."
"This authentic virtuoso gave a lesson in good taste, interpreting with warm sound and grand sonorous phrasing. The artist revealed not only her almost inhuman virtuosity, but also her magnificent musicality."
"Judith Ingolfsson played Samuel Barber's Violin Concerto with just the right mixture of easy grace, sonic luster and patrician refinement."
"Judith Ingolfsson...captivated the audience with a romantic work by Wieniawski. Despite difficult passages, she played the piece deftly, producing a bittersweet effect by neither using too much force nor too much coloration. The audience's standing ovation rewarded her emotional performance."
"The performance was spectacular. It goes without saying that this violinist has mastered the mechanics of her craft, but what this budding superstar revealed went beyond technical command. She made this concerto absolutely and unmistakably her own...and approached it all with a panache of a true virtuoso. Nothing was held back...she was out to galvanize the orchestra and her listeners with the energy and power of Khachaturian's music."
"...an individuality one cannot ignore."
"She is a truly outstanding player. Her effortless virtuosity is a tool in the service of the music; her tone is ravishingly beautiful, pure and adaptable, her sense of style is unerring, her expressiveness simple, direct, and strongly felt. Most striking, however, was Bach's C-major Solo Sonata: grand and noble in concept and execution, with every chordal and contrapuntal voice standing out, it was played with flawless sound and intonation, perfectly controlled pacing, phrasing and dynamics."
"On Saturday evening she gave a technically assured and interpretively astute recital at Carnegie Hall. Ms. Ingolfsson produced a tone that is firmly centered, gracefully rounded and tinted to match the score at hand...a sizzling account producing both fireworks and a singing tone...She moved easily between the work's ruminative and ecstatic passages and made her performance a journey to the soulful core."
THE DEBUT ARTIST OF THE YEAR AWARD recognizes a performer or ensemble for an outstanding radio debut: "Ms. Ingolfsson's personality and temperament are reminiscent of a pre-WWII violinist. She plays with a remarkable intelligence, musicality, and sense of insight."