Background
Camilla Dolores Wicks was born in Long Beach, California.
Camilla Dolores Wicks was born in Long Beach, California.
Her pianist mother studied with composer, Xavier Scharwenka.
Her performing career included solo appearances with leading European and American symphony orchestras including the New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra and Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Her Norwegian born father, Ingwald Wicks, was a distinguished violinist and teacher. Wicks made her name as a child prodigy, making her solo debut at age 7 with Mozart"s Violin Concerto Number.
4 at the Long Beach Municipal Auditorium.
At 8, she performed Bruch"s First Concerto and a year later Paganini"s First Concerto. She went to study with Louis Persinger at the Juilliard School in New York City.
In 1942, Persinger accompanied Wicks when she made her solo debut at age 13 with the New York Philharmonic. In the next decade, she performed regularly with many of the world"s finest conductors (Walter, Reiner, Stokowski, Rodzinski, Ehrling) and orchestras.
She went on extensive European tours and was a quite popular in Scandinavia.
Finnish composer Jean Sibelius greatly admired her interpretation of his concerto, of which she made a recording in 1952 for the Capitol label. She also made a number of recordings for HMV, Mercury and Philips. Camilla Wicks explored a wide range of repertoire and promoted many lesser-known works, in particular by Scandinavian composers, who in turn wrote many works for her.
Norwegian composer and violinist, Bjarne Brustad dedicated a number of solo violin works to her.
Wicks was an advocate of contemporary Scandinavian composers: she performed concertos by Fartein Valen and Hilding Rosenberg, and gave the world premiere of those by Harald Saeverud and Klaus Egge. She also enjoyed a close collaboration with Ernest Bloch Wicks later resumed her performing career intermittently and became a much sought-after teacher.
She taught in a number of American faculties including Louisiana State University, University of Michigan, and Rice University. She was invited to head the String Department at the Oslo Royal Academy in the early 1970s and was awarded a lifetime Professorship there.
Many of the violinists of the leading Norwegian orchestras, including Henning Kraggerud, were among her former students.
Wicks held the Isaac Stern Chair at the San Francisco Conservatory before retiring in 2005. Studio and concert recordings have been reissued on the Music & Arts, Biddulph and Simax labels.