XXII MUSIC FESTIVAL STARS OF THE WHITE NIGHTS
AVI files
Program
PROGRAMME:
Nikolai Medtner
Tales, Op. 9 No 2, Op. 14 No 2, Op.42 No 2
Mily Balakirev
Sonata No 2 in B flat Minor, Op. 5
Johannes Brahms
Seven Fantasies, Op. 116
Franz Liszt
Invocation from Harmonies poйtiques et religieuses, S. 173
Hungarian Rhapsody No 19 in D Minor, S. 244
Nikolai Medtner
Tales, Op. 9 No 2, Op. 14 No 2, Op.42 No 2
Mily Balakirev
Sonata No 2 in B flat Minor, Op. 5
Johannes Brahms
Seven Fantasies, Op. 116
Franz Liszt
Invocation from Harmonies poйtiques et religieuses, S. 173
Hungarian Rhapsody No 19 in D Minor, S. 244
Piano
In June 2013 Vadym Kholodenko
became the recipient of the Nancy Lee and Perry R. Bass Gold Medal
at the Fourteenth Van Cliburn International Piano Competition. Since
then it has been a busy and exciting time for the young pianist with
extensive touring throughout Europe, Asia and the USA to great critical
acclaim. His recent debut with the Philadelphia Orchestra led to Daniel
Webster of the Philadelphia Enquirer praising Kholodenko’s “absorbing
melodic shadings, glittering passage work, and a sense of sound that
erased any fears about the stereotype of the competition winner.”
Kholodenko’s international concert career in the 2013-2014 season will see him travel the breadth of the United States, performing in recital and as an orchestral soloist at more than fifty concerts as part of the Cliburn’s top prize. This is in addition to a host of engagements across Europe, Russia and Asia, and some of the biggest festivals worldwide. This season’s European highlights include a residency at the Mariinsky Concert Hall, and a debut with the Orquestra Sinfónica Do Porto Casa Da Música. Kholodenko’s Radio France recital debut in Paris in May 2014 is kindly sponsored by the Safran Foundation.
Prior to his Van Cliburn win, Kholodenko has played in recital and as soloist with orchestras throughout the Ukraine, Russia, USA, China, Japan, France, Italy, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Finland, Czech Republic, Romania, Poland, Lithuania and Israel. He has collaborated with many distinguished conductors including Yuri Bashmet, Vladimir Spivakov, Mark Gorenstein, Alexander Rudin, Dmitry Liss, Eugeny Bushkov and Alexander Sladkovskiy. Also he has collaborated in concert and on a recording project with violinist Alena Baeva in Japan.
Not restricted to solo recitals and playing as a soloist with orchestra, Vadym Kholodenko is a dedicated performer of chamber music and, in addition to the Cliburn’s gold medal, he won the competition’s prize for best chamber music performance with César Franck’s piano quintet. Vadym Kholodenko wowed the Cliburn audience and jury with his impressive cadenzas to Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 21, written especially for his competition performance, which were described by Scott Cantrell, music critic of the Dallas News, as “replete with witty side-steps of melody and harmony.” Vadym Kholodenko’s gifts for arranging music can be heard in his work with pianist Andrey Gugnin. Since 2007 he has been collaborating with Gugnin, subsequently founding the duet iDuo, touring throughout Europe and Russia, and recording together. Vadym Kholodenko has also made many other CD recordings, featuring works by Schubert, Chopin, Rachmaninov, Medtner and various contemporary composers. The 2013-2014 season saw the release of two solo CDs: his first CD for Harmonia Mundi, featuring Stravinsky’s Trois Mouvements de Petrouchka and Liszt’s Transcendental Études, and his latest CD for Delos, featuring works by Rachmaninov and Medtner’s Night Wind Sonata.
Vadym Kholodenko was born in 1986 in Kiev, Ukraine. The first musician in his family, in 1994 he enrolled at Kiev’s Mykola Lysenko Special Music School under Prof. Natalia Grydneva and Prof. Borys Fedorov. At the age of just 13, Vadym Kholodenko made his first appearances in the USA, China, Hungary and Croatia. In 2004 Vadym Kholodenko was awarded the Russian Youth National Prize Triumph and in 2005 moved to Moscow to study at the Moscow State Conservatoire under the tutelage of the Honoured Artist of the USSR, Professor Vera Gornostaeva.
In 2011 Kholodenko won First Prize at the Schubert Piano Competition (Dortmund, Germany) and in 2010 First Prize at the Sendai Piano Competition (2010, Sendai, Japan), preceded by another notable victory at the Maria Callas Competition in Athens, Greece, where he received the Grand Prix. The special Maria Callas’ commemorative concert at the Herod Atticus theatre marked his debut with the Novaya Rossiya (New Russia) orchestra, led by the orchestra’s Chief Conductor Yuri Bashmet. Vadym Kholodenko has enjoyed an enriching collaboration with Yuri Bashmet and his orchestra since.
Vadym Kholodenko is based in Moscow where he lives with his wife and young daughter. In addition to his current studies at the Moscow Conservatoire, he has recently accepted a teaching position at the prestigious school.
Kholodenko’s international concert career in the 2013-2014 season will see him travel the breadth of the United States, performing in recital and as an orchestral soloist at more than fifty concerts as part of the Cliburn’s top prize. This is in addition to a host of engagements across Europe, Russia and Asia, and some of the biggest festivals worldwide. This season’s European highlights include a residency at the Mariinsky Concert Hall, and a debut with the Orquestra Sinfónica Do Porto Casa Da Música. Kholodenko’s Radio France recital debut in Paris in May 2014 is kindly sponsored by the Safran Foundation.
Prior to his Van Cliburn win, Kholodenko has played in recital and as soloist with orchestras throughout the Ukraine, Russia, USA, China, Japan, France, Italy, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Finland, Czech Republic, Romania, Poland, Lithuania and Israel. He has collaborated with many distinguished conductors including Yuri Bashmet, Vladimir Spivakov, Mark Gorenstein, Alexander Rudin, Dmitry Liss, Eugeny Bushkov and Alexander Sladkovskiy. Also he has collaborated in concert and on a recording project with violinist Alena Baeva in Japan.
Not restricted to solo recitals and playing as a soloist with orchestra, Vadym Kholodenko is a dedicated performer of chamber music and, in addition to the Cliburn’s gold medal, he won the competition’s prize for best chamber music performance with César Franck’s piano quintet. Vadym Kholodenko wowed the Cliburn audience and jury with his impressive cadenzas to Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 21, written especially for his competition performance, which were described by Scott Cantrell, music critic of the Dallas News, as “replete with witty side-steps of melody and harmony.” Vadym Kholodenko’s gifts for arranging music can be heard in his work with pianist Andrey Gugnin. Since 2007 he has been collaborating with Gugnin, subsequently founding the duet iDuo, touring throughout Europe and Russia, and recording together. Vadym Kholodenko has also made many other CD recordings, featuring works by Schubert, Chopin, Rachmaninov, Medtner and various contemporary composers. The 2013-2014 season saw the release of two solo CDs: his first CD for Harmonia Mundi, featuring Stravinsky’s Trois Mouvements de Petrouchka and Liszt’s Transcendental Études, and his latest CD for Delos, featuring works by Rachmaninov and Medtner’s Night Wind Sonata.
Vadym Kholodenko was born in 1986 in Kiev, Ukraine. The first musician in his family, in 1994 he enrolled at Kiev’s Mykola Lysenko Special Music School under Prof. Natalia Grydneva and Prof. Borys Fedorov. At the age of just 13, Vadym Kholodenko made his first appearances in the USA, China, Hungary and Croatia. In 2004 Vadym Kholodenko was awarded the Russian Youth National Prize Triumph and in 2005 moved to Moscow to study at the Moscow State Conservatoire under the tutelage of the Honoured Artist of the USSR, Professor Vera Gornostaeva.
In 2011 Kholodenko won First Prize at the Schubert Piano Competition (Dortmund, Germany) and in 2010 First Prize at the Sendai Piano Competition (2010, Sendai, Japan), preceded by another notable victory at the Maria Callas Competition in Athens, Greece, where he received the Grand Prix. The special Maria Callas’ commemorative concert at the Herod Atticus theatre marked his debut with the Novaya Rossiya (New Russia) orchestra, led by the orchestra’s Chief Conductor Yuri Bashmet. Vadym Kholodenko has enjoyed an enriching collaboration with Yuri Bashmet and his orchestra since.
Vadym Kholodenko is based in Moscow where he lives with his wife and young daughter. In addition to his current studies at the Moscow Conservatoire, he has recently accepted a teaching position at the prestigious school.
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