In 1962 at age 27, Charles Treger became the first and only American to win first prize at the
Henryk Wieniawski Violin Competition in
Poznań, in Poland. This win came during the
Cold War and prompted congratulations from President
John F. Kennedy. He performed his repertoire of more than fifty concertos with orchestras worldwide and conductors including
Claudio Abbado,
Seiji Ozawa, and
Pierre Boulez. He appeared with the
Pittsburgh Symphony as soloist for a 30-concert tour of 14 European and Middle Eastern Countries. Other notable performances are a series of three Town Hall concerts entitled "A Romantic Revival For The Violin" and three
Carnegie Hall performances in celebration of his 25th anniversary season. A founding member of the
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, Treger further performed with pianist
André Watts as the Treger-Watts duo by touring for 7 years. He also performed in chamber music and recital with such artists as
Rudolf Serkin,
Emanuel Ax,
Isaac Stern,
Pinchas Zukerman,
Itzhak Perlman,
Mstislav Rostropovich,
Yehudi Menuhin and The Bach Aria Group. Charles Treger returned to Poland, where he had previously won the Wieniawski Competition, for 5 tours. Treger's instrument was the "Hartmann" Stradivarius, made in 1723, described as "a prime example of Stradivarius' golden period." == Teaching career ==