Sarah Gurowitsch

[6][7] While in Europe, Gurowitsch played Eugen d'Albert's cello concerto, with the composer himself accompanying her on piano.

[2][8][9] In 1913 she made a recording of the Kol Nidre,[10] and headlined a "Russian Music Carnival" at Carnegie Hall.

[13] "She has a splendid command of her instrument," commented one reviewer in 1919, "gets a beautiful tone, and plays with sureness and soulful interpretation.

"[14] Gurowitsch left the professional stage after marriage in 1919, but she occasionally played at Jewish women's events in Bergen County, New Jersey.

[16] Sarah Gurowitsch married a fellow Russian immigrant, Samuel Benjamin Leight, in 1919.