Background
Peter Prier was born on 27 February 1942 in Schlesien, Germany in 1942, the youngest of four children. His father was killed in World World War World War II His remaining family (Peter, his mother and three siblings) moved to Bavaria in 1945 to escape the advancing Soviet forces.
Education
He then attended a violinmaking school in Mittenwald, graduating four years later.
Career
In 1972 he expanded his violin-fabricating business as a teaching school, in which several present-day craftsmen learned their art He also founded the Bow Making School of America (1998). In 1955 he began attending a music school in Munich, but dropped out to help support the family.
In 1960 he immigrated to the United States, eventually settling in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Foreign three years (1961-1964) he also held a post in the Utah Symphony, which at the time consisted of part-time musicians. He also served an enlistment in the United States Army before marriage and his 1965 founding of a violinmaking shop, the Violin Making School of America, in which he made violins, cellos and violas.
In 1972 he began accepting students, transforming the violinmaking shop into a true instructional laboratory. He later expanded this instruction to the fabrication of violin bows (1998), with the founding of the Bow Making School of America.
He continued in these endeavors until his 2006 retirement, at which time he sold the school to a former student (graduated 1991), Charles Woolf.
Prier died in Salt Lake City, Utah on 14 June 2015.