Ionel Budișteanu
Ionel Budișteanu was a renowned Romanian violinist, conductor and musical arranger, of Roma ethnicity, often called "the lord of Romanian popular music".
Biography
He was born on 8 October 1919, in a family of famous musicians from Budești commune, Ilfov county. From the name of the commune he got his name "Budișteanu". His father, Vasile Budișteanu, played the cimbalom in various Bucharest formations, being later co-opted into the orchestra of Grigoraș Dinicu, participating in the Universal Exhibitions in Paris (1937) and New York (1939).He followed his musical studies at the Royal Academy of Music and Dramatic Art in Bucharest, having as teachers Vasile Filip, Victor Gheorghiu and Ioan D. Chirescu, Constantin Brăiloiu, Mihail Andricu. Unable to attend classes regularly, he transferred to the "Pro Arte" Private Conservatory of Music in Bucharest, where he had Alexandru Theodorescu, concertmaster of the Philharmonic, as teacher. Although he performed at the Sala Dalles with the "Pro Arte" Orchestra in 1938, when he performed the Concerto in E major for violin and orchestra by J.S.Bach, Budișteanu went on to abandon classical music, turning to popular music.
In the period from 1940 to 1946 he was a violinist in the orchestra of Victor Predescu and that of Petrică Moțoi in Bucharest. He later became a violinist-soloist in the Orchestra of the "Banu Mărăcine" Ensemble from Bucharest between 1946 and 1947.
In 1947 he became violinist-soloist of the "Barbu Lăutaru" folk music orchestra in Bucharest, and from 1950 became its conductor, leading the orchestra in parallel with Nicu Stănescu for almost two decades, until 1970.
He followed two tours at the International Youth Festivals in Warsaw and Moscow, where he had exceptional successes. Budișteanu took over the management of popular music bands and began touring in Greece, United States, France, Belgium, Netherlands, Germany, Austria, Israel, Algeria and Morocco.
Between 1970 and 1991 he was the conductor of the "Romanian Rhapsody" Orchestra from Bucharest, supporting tours in Poland, France, USSR, Cyprus, Greece, Bulgaria, United States, Mexico, Japan, Israel, Egypt, Argentina, Brazil, England, China, Mongolia, Spain, Italy, Switzerland, Sweden, Finland, Norway, Austria, Germany, Belgium, Netherlands, Turkey, Ceylon, India, Burma, Yugoslavia, Hungary, Albania and Denmark.
Many important folk music singers and instrumentalists performed under his baton.