A virtuoso soloist and concertmaster with
Boston Baroque, violinist
Christina Day Martinson has impressed early music connoisseurs with her bravura performances of Baroque repertoire. A native of Saskatchewan, Canada,
Day Martinson began studying modern violin at age four and later attended the New England Conservatory. While studying technique in the Netherlands, she injured her hand and went on hiatus, devoting two years to further study. She took up Baroque violin at Boston University, where she was given a Baroque bow for playing
Bach. Since her recovery, she has established herself as a brilliant performer and has been in demand for performances with many period ensembles, including the
Handel and Haydn Society, for whom she served as associate concertmaster, the
Bach Ensemble,
Tempesta di Mare, the UNICAMP Symphony Orchestra of Brazil, Symphony Orkest Mozart of Amsterdam, and
Boston Baroque, which has featured her in the 2009 release of
Antonio Vivaldi's Four Seasons on Telarc, and the 2018 Linn Records album of Heinrich Biber's Mystery Sonatas.
Day Martinson has performed the Mystery Sonatas with harpsichordist and
Boston Baroque director
Martin Pearlman on radio broadcasts, and their recording of the complete cycle was nominated for a Grammy Award in 2018.