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Henry Doktorski is an American classical accordionist, composer, and teacher. He was born on January 30, 1956 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He is 64 years old.
Henry Doktorski is a graduate of the University of Pittsburgh, where he earned a Bachelor of Music degree in Music Education. He also holds a Master of Music degree in Music Theory from the University of Michigan.
Henry Doktorski is a virtuoso accordionist and has performed with the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, the Cleveland Orchestra, the Philadelphia Orchestra, the National Symphony Orchestra, and the Los Angeles Philharmonic. He has also performed with the Pittsburgh Opera, the Pittsburgh Ballet, and the Pittsburgh New Music Ensemble.
Henry Doktorski is the author of several books on the accordion, including The Classical Accordionist, The Accordion in Chamber Music, and The Accordion in Contemporary Music. He has also composed numerous works for the accordion, including the Concerto for Accordion and Orchestra, the Sonata for Accordion and Piano, and the Suite for Accordion and Orchestra.
Henry Doktorski is the founder and director of the Accordionists and Teachers Guild International, an organization dedicated to the promotion of the accordion as a serious musical instrument. He is also the founder and director of the Accordionists and Teachers Guild of America, an organization dedicated to the promotion of the accordion in the United States.
Henry Doktorski is married and has two children. He currently resides in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Henry Doktorski's net worth is estimated to be around $1 million. He has earned his wealth through his career as a classical accordionist, composer, and teacher.
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Henry Doktorski Height, Weight & Measurements
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He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Henry Doktorski Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Henry Doktorski worth at the age of 68 years old? Henry Doktorski’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from . We have estimated
Henry Doktorski's net worth
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$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Timeline
Doktorski is the author of Killing for Krishna: The Danger of Deranged Devotion (2018), a 660-page nonfiction true-crime book about history of the New Vrindavan Hare Krishna community and the assassination of an American Hare Krishna devotee in 1986. He is also the author of Eleven Naked Emperors: The Crisis of Charismatic Succession in the Hare Krishna Movement (1977-1987), published in 2020.
Henry Doktorski III was born in New Brunswick, New Jersey, to Polish-American parents Henry A. Doktorski and Theresa Maria Czartowicz, and grew up in East Brunswick. He cites his Polish background—accordions being often featured in Polish folk music—as a main factor in his childhood decision to take up the accordion rather than a different instrument. At the age of seven he began studying accordion and early on was considered a prodigy.
Doktorski has had articles and letters printed in diverse publications ranging from the scholarly journal Music Theory—Explorations and Applications to Rolling Stone; from the new-age journal Uzubuh to the Danish accordion magazine Harmonikacentret; from The Pittsburgh Catholic to Playboy and USA Today.
He has written over 130 reviews as well as dozens of articles which can be read on The Classical Free-Reed, Inc. website. His pioneering research work, The Classical Squeezebox—A Short History of the Accordion in Classical Music was published by the British international journal Musical Performance. His book, The Brothers Deiro and Their Accordions, was the first published biography of those two early accordion pioneers: Guido Deiro and Pietro Deiro. His How To Play Diatonic Button Accordion Method Book & CD was published by Santorella Publications. He has also recorded for Santorella Publications.
Doktorski has written CD booklet notes for Bridge Records and Archeophone Records. His Complete Works of Guido Deiro printed music anthology was published by Mel Bay Publications in 2008. He is still involved somewhat in the Hare Krishna movement, and has had articles published in the Brijabasi Spirit and Sampradaya Sun. Along with E. Burke Rochford, Jr., he co-authored a chapter in the 2013 SUNY Press book, "Homegrown Gurus."
From 1997 to 2015 Doktorski served as Instructor of Accordion on the faculty of The City Music Center at Duquesne University. He also served for two seasons as Instructor of Accordion at the Fairbanks Summer Arts Festival at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.
In 1997, Doktorski founded The Classical Free-Reed, Inc.—a nonprofit educational organization devoted to the accordion and classical music. He has presented concerts and workshops at national and regional accordion conventions including the Coupe Mondiale (World Cup) for accordionists during August 2007 in Alexandria, Virginia. He has performed in Chicago, Cleveland, Dallas, Duluth, Fairbanks, Indianapolis, Milwaukee, New York City, Orlando, Pittsburgh, San Diego, San Francisco, San Jose, and Waverly, Iowa.
Doktorski also played accordion with Itzhak Perlman and the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra under the direction of John Williams on the 1997 Sony Classical Records CD (SK 63005) Cinema Serenade which appeared on the Billboard Classical Crossover Chart for 92 weeks, where it reached number one.
After moving to Pittsburgh, Doktorski attempted to capitalize on his classical accordion expertise, with some success. Between 1995 and 2005 he performed with the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra forty times (on accordion, piano, harpsichord, organ, and celesta) and appeared as guest accordionist with the Tanglewood Music Festival Orchestra, the Cleveland Chamber Symphony, the New Philharmonic Orchestra (Glen Ellyn, Illinois), the Northwest Indiana Symphony (Merrillville, Indiana), the Loudoun County Symphony (Leesburg, Virginia), the Butler County Symphony (Butler, Pennsylvania), the Wartburg Community Symphony (Waverly, Iowa), the McKeesport Symphony (McKeesport, Pennsylvania), the Carnegie Mellon Philharmonic, the Duquesne University Contemporary Ensemble, the River City Brass Band, the Pittsburgh Civic Light Opera Orchestra, the Westmont Philharmonia Accordion Orchestra (Haddon Township, New Jersey) and the Pittsburgh New Music Ensemble.
Doktorski left the community in April 1994, and moved to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where he was awarded a Graduate Assistantship at Duquesne University. He received a Master of Music degree with a major in composition in 1997. From 1997 to 2015 he served on the faculty of the City Music Center of Duquesne University Mary Pappert School of Music.
In October 1993, Doktorski abandoned his service at the New Vrindaban Community when he became convinced about allegations regarding his guru's inappropriate sexual conduct with young men. Doktorski participated in the grassroots movement which questioned Bhaktipada's qualifications for leadership, and eventually recommended returning New Vrindaban to the temple worship style as advocated by the ISKCON founder and acharya, Swami Prabhupada.
In 1990, the American composer Alan Hovhaness composed a brief work entitled Hymn for Doktorski, which Doktorski recorded on his 2005 CD Classical Accordion Recital. This CD was selected for admission into the collection of The Alan Hovhaness International Research Centre in Yerevan, Armenia.
He formed and directed an accordion orchestra which gave their debut performance at the Wheeling City of Lights parade on November 17, 1989. This accordion ensemble won trophies at the American Accordion Musicological Society convention (King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, March 1990), the American Accordionists Association convention (Washington D.C., July 1990), and the Accordion Teacher's Guild 50th Anniversary Celebration (Kansas City, Missouri, August 1990). Doktorski himself won first place in the American Accordion Musicological Society virtuoso solo competition.
Later Doktorski served as the Minister of Music (principal organist, choirmaster, orchestra director and composer-in-residence) during the New Vrindaban "City of God" interfaith era from 1986 until 1993. He composed music and performed for the three daily temple services (5 a.m., noon, and 7 p.m.) During this time, at the request of his guru, he picked up his accordion again after many years, and began playing it during the evening services. The accordion was a hit and several monks asked him to teach them how to play.
During his time in the New Vrindaban Community, Doktorski helped build Prabhupada's Palace of Gold and briefly taught at the gurukula (grade school). In 1985 he helped establish the first office for the publication and distribution for Bhaktipada's books (Bhakti Books, later to be known as Palace Publishing). He traveled to India four times, including one trip to Mayapur, near Navadvipa in West Bengal, for the 1986 festival commemorating the quincentennial of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu's appearance.
Doktorski began following the principles and practices of Gaudiya Vaishnavism as delineated by A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada (1896–1977), the Indian guru and Founder-Acharya of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON). He accepted initiation on March 13, 1979 from Kirtanananda Swami Bhaktipada (1937–2011), the ISKCON guru and founder of New Vrindaban, and was awarded the Sanskrit name "Hrishikesh dasa" ("Servant of Krishna, who is master of the senses").
In August 1978, hardly three months after finishing college, Doktorski's life changed dramatically when he joined the Hare Krishna movement at the rural New Vrindaban Community in Marshall County, West Virginia. He explained that he was unhappy with his life, and wanted to develop his spiritual side: "In college, I discovered music; the answer to my search for happiness. . . . But I was miserable. . . . If I wanted to compose, conduct and perform music which would awaken suffering humanity to the platform of love of God, first I would have to become a pure devotee [of God]. Only then would my talent have any value."
He was elected to Who's Who Among Students at American Universities and Colleges from 1976–1978, and was nominated as a candidate for the post of 1977 Harvest Festival King. Doktorski graduated summa cum laude from Park College in 1978 with a Bachelor of Arts degree with a double major in Music Performance and Music Education.
On June 7, 1971, he was awarded the rank of Eagle Scout in the Boy Scouts of America (Troop 28 in East Brunswick), and received a Good Citizen Award from The American Legion.
As a pre-teenager during the mid-1960s he played ethnic music and jazz standards (inspired by Myron Floren from the Lawrence Welk television show), but as a teenager during the late 1960s and early 1970s his musical tastes changed, and he began playing the accordion in a rock band which performed the music of The Beatles, Grand Funk Railroad, Carlos Santana and Black Sabbath.
Gramophone magazine reported highly of his two-disc album of historic original works for accordion from the 1910s and 1920s released by Bridge Records—Vaudeville Accordion Classics: "It takes only a few tracks—impeccably performed by Henry Doktorski and, just as importantly, superbly engineered to Bridge's standards—to show the visceral appeal to audiences of its day."