Aleksandr Snytkin
Violinist/Lithuania-USA
Lithuanian-American violinist Aleksandr Snytkin has been praised by critics as “a virtuoso with delicate touch and a sense of intimacy, technical and artistic maturity.”
Member of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra since 2011, Aleksandr served as guest concertmaster in Texas’ Irving and Plano Symphony Orchestras and the Bergen Philharmonic (Norway), where he served as a full-time associate concertmaster for 2009-2010 seasons before returning to Dallas.
Born in 1977 in Potsdam, Germany, he began his musical education at the age of seven, studying violin at the B. Dvarionas Music School. He received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees at Lithuanian Music Academy and Malmo Music Academy (Sweden). In 2001, Snytkin came to the United States to pursue a doctoral degree at the University of Kansas and later was accepted into Artist Certificate program at the Southern Methodist University in Dallas, TX in the class of Prof. Eduard Schmieder.
Snytkin has been soloist with several chamber orchestras in his native country, as well as being an active chamber musician, performing at festivals and participating in competitions in Lithuania, France, Sweden, Norway, Holland, Italy, the Czech Republic, Slovenia, Austria, Israel and the United States. He made his American orchestral solo debut, performing the Brahms Violin Concerto with the Springfield (Missouri) Symphony Orchestra, as a result of his winning the Hellam Young Artists Competition. He has also performed with many renowned musicians such as members of Accorda String Quartet (Kansas City), pianist Stanislav Ioudenitch, violinist Anne Akiko Meyers, violist Mikhail Iakovlev, Hansa String Quartet (Norway) and is a founding member of the ART Piano Trio (Lithuania) and the Emerald Piano Trio (Dallas, TX). He frequently performs in various chamber music groups and is a member of the PLUS string quartet. Most recent solo performances include Vivaldi’s Four Seasons with the Lithuanian Chamber Orchestra. Snytkin is a member of iPalpiti since 2005, including three tours to Israel (2006, 2011 and 2017).