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Prizewinners

2007 - Steve Reich and Sonny Rollins

2006 - Valery Gergiev and Led Zeppelin

2005 - Gilberto Gil and Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau

2004 - B. B. King and György Ligeti

2003 - Keith Jarrett

2002 - Sofia Gubaidulina and Miriam Makeba

2001 - Burt Bacharach, Robert Moog and Karlheinz Stockhausen

2000 - Bob Dylan and Isaac Stern

1999 - Stevie Wonder and Iannis Xenakis

1998 - Ray Charles and Ravi Shankar

1997 - Eric Ericson and Bruce Springsteen

1996 - Pierre Boulez and Joni Mitchell

1995 - Sir Elton John and Mstislav Rostropovitch

1994 - Nikolaus Harnoncourt and Quincy Jones

1993 - Dizzy Gillespie and Witold Lutoslawski

1992 - Sir Paul McCartney and The Baltic States


The Prizewinners of 2000

Isaac Stern and Bob Dylan

Sound samples from Isaac Stern (from the album "My First 75 Years")

Clip 2, Clip 3,
Clip 4, Clip 5,
[Requires Real Player]

Photo:Arnold Newman

Samples from Bob Dylan's works!

"Things Have Changed" Audio Video
"Love Sick" Audio Video
[Requires Real Player]

Citations

The prize committee´s citation for Isaac Stern:

Music is Life. Life is Music. This is one way of expressing violinist Isaac Stern’s lifetime credo, a credo that has resounded with unflagging strength throughout a long career, all the way from a sensational début in San Francisco during the 1930s to the beginning of the new millennium, which finds Isaac Stern as indefatigable as ever in the cause of international music. He himself has said: "Our responsibility is to continue the search for beauty and humanity. That is what survives." Music, for Isaac Stern, is a gift to mankind. It has been so from the dawn of history and must forever remain so. This is the artist’s duty, or, as Stern has put it in this age of machinery and computers: "To perform, any machine can play better than a human. But only a human being can look at somebody and say, ‘I love you’."

Isaac Stern is awarded the 2000 Polar Music Prize for a unique and consummate artistry distinguished by a personal musicianship without compare for over half a century, for his pioneering achievement on behalf of young people the world over, for his patient and energetic commitment to preserving and developing places where music is played, and for his uncompromising attitude concerning the humanistic power of music.

Through concerts in practical every venue of significance, or through gramophone recordings, Isaac Stern has enabled millions of listerners all over the world to experience his creative interpretations of the classics and also his première performances of works by such contemporary composers as Penderecki, Dutilleux, Rochberg, William Schuman and Peter Maxwell Davies. His extensive activity as a soloist has been matched by chamber music performances together with such eminent musicians as Emanuel Ax, Yo-Yo Ma, Yefim Bronfman and Jaime Laredo.

No less important than his own musicianship is Stern’s inspiring educational achievement on behalf of young people the world over. He sees an obvious duty in transmitting to the young generation, not only the skills he possesses, but also the joy and dedication with which music inspires him. And he has found it no less natural to guide and assist young musicians at the beginning of their careers, as for example with violinists Schlomo Mintz, Ithzak Perlman and Pinchas Zukerman. It was also Stern’s personal involvement and sense of responsibility for the young generation that led him to take part in a seminar in Cologne. As a Jew he had once vowed, out of respect for the Jews killed in the Holocaust, never to set foot in Germany. But he changed his mind on that score, feeling that it was time for him to see the country of Bach, Beethoven and Mendelssohn. He also wanted to see and hear how young German musicians are absorbing their musical heritage, as well as passing on his own experience by teaching 28 students o a nine-day seminar.

The most palpable proof, and the crowning success, of his untiring endeavour to sustain, renew and develop venues for music is the Carnegie Hall, which but for his personal intervention, would have been razed to the ground in the 1960s. The battle to save the Carnegie Hall, and Stern’s personal experience of it, have been and remain a source of inspiration for promoters, managers and cultural policymakers the world over. For more than 35 years now, Isaac Stern has been President of the Carnegie Hall, in which capacity he has helped to make it one of the world’s foremost concert venues.

Past, present and future are always embodied by Isaac Stern as artist and human being. To him, Music is timeless, Music is Life, and Life is Music.

www.isaacstern.com

The Prize committee's citation for Bob Dylan:

Bob Dylan´s influence, as a singer-songwriter, on the development of 20th century popular music is indisputable. His achievements encompass almost four decades of constantly changing modes of creativity, always innovative, but always based on American musical traditions and roots. Starting with folk music and reaching the heights of critical and public fame, he set aside the rules of the day, appearing no longer alone with his acoustic guitar, but in the company of a rock and roll band. It was a development that required both integrity and determination, a move that cemented his role as one of the greatest rock artists of our time.

Bob Dylan’s ability to combine poetry, harmony and melody in a meaningful, often provocative context, has captivated millions in all age groups, and in most cultures and societies. Through his modest, persuasive musical approach, he has demonstrated an impressive ability to question the most determined political forces, to fight all forms of prejudice, and to offer inflinching support for the less fortunate. Even those who might not have shared his views would find it impossible to argue against Bob Dylan’s musical and poetic brilliance.

www.bobdylan.com


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