previous: international concert opportunities  

New Masters on Tour

 

New Masters on Tour (selected in 2007)

The following musicians were selected during the Summer Academy 2007 and will perform in the international New Masters on Tour concerts 2008-2009:

VIOLIN:
Saténik Khourdoian (France/Armenia)
Timothy Braun (USA)
Agata Szymczewska (Poland)
Andréa Tyniec (Canada)

CELLO:
Sebastien van Kuyk (France)
Simon Veis(Tsjechia)
Luka Sulic (Slovenia)

PIANO:
Peter Fancovic (Slovakia)
Amandine Savary (France)
Vestard Shimkus (Latvia)

New Masters on Tour 2007-2008 (selected in 2006)

The following musicians were selected during the Summer Academy 2006 and will perform in the international New Masters on Tour concerts 2007-2008:

VIOLIN:
Margareta Benkova, Serbia
Birthe Blom, The Netherlands
Joanna Frankel, United States of America
Emmanuel Bernard, France

CELLO:
Leonard Elschenbroich, Germany
Håkon Samuelsen, Norway

PIANO:
Miroslav Kultyshev, Russia
Sam Armstrong, United Kingdom
Matej Arendarik, Slovakia
Romain David, France

New Masters on Tour 2006-2007 (selected in 2005)

The following musicians were selected during the Summer Academy 2005 and will perform in the international New Masters on Tour concerts 2006-2007:

VIOLIN:
Diana Galvydyte (Latvia)
Evgeny Sorkin (Russia)
Joanna Wronko (Poland)

CELLO:
Petr Nouzovsky (Czech Republic)

PIANO:
Guillaume Coppola (France)
Balázs Fülei (Hungary)
Satu Paavola (Finland)
Reinis Zarins (Latvia)

New Masters on Tour 2005-2006 (selected in 2004)

The following musicians have been selected to perform in the international New Masters on Tour concerts 2005-2006:

Violin:
Elise Goodman (U.S.A.)
Nadia Wijzenbeek (The Netherlands)
Cello:
Giorgi Kharadzé (Georgia)
Gemma Rosefield (United Kingdom)
Piano:
Geoffroy Couteau (France)
Laco Fancovic (Slovakia)
Adam Golka (U.S.A.)
Colleen Lee (Hong Kong)
Extra concerts:
(in the Netherlands)
Alice Sara Ott (Germany) (piano)
Oleg Bugaev / Pyotr Kondrashin (Russia) (cello duo)

Photos / Concert program information

(The text refers to the New Masters on Tour concert series 2005-2006 in Amsterdam, The Concertgebouw and The Hague, Theater Diligentia.)

Adam Golka

Dutch violinist Nadia Wijzenbeek has already performed in concert with such celebrities as Leon Fleisher and just recently with the pianist Ingrid Fliter in the Main Hall of the Concertgebouw where she also once appeared as soloist in the Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto. Now, with the Swedish pianist Martin Sturfält, she returns in a varied program including the Sonata by Maurice Ravel, an early work of Messiaen and the lively Rondo brillant by Schubert.

The 18-year-old Polish-American pianist Adam Golka won the first prize as the youngest participant in the 2003 International Piano Competition in Shanghai. We hear him in a trio of sparkling sonatas by Scarlatti and in the expressive sound-world of Nikolai Medtner, a Russian composer who is generating increasingly more interest among musicians.

Amsterdam Concertgebouw, Sunday September 25, 2005, 14.30 hours

The Hague Diligentia, Sunday October 2, 2005, 14.30 hours

Nadia Wijzenbeek, violin / Martin Sturfält, piano

Olivier Messiaen
Thème et Variations (1932)

Franz Schubert
Rondo brillant in b minor, D. 895

Maurice Ravel
Sonata for violin and piano

--intermission--

Adam Golka, piano

Domenico Scarlatti
Sonata in F-sharp major, L. 35
Sonata in b minor, L. 33
Sonata in G major, L. 286

Nikolai Medtner
Sonata in e minor, opus 25 no. 2 ‘Night Wind’ 

 


 

Gemma Rosefield

The English cellist Gemma Rosefield was called the most promising musical talent of 2005 by the British press. Assisted by the Israeli pianist Inon Barnatan, who was himself a former New Masters on Tour guest soloist, she performs Variations on a Slovak Theme by Martinu, Brahms' beautiful First Sonata and a festive Hungarian Rhapsody by master cellist David Popper.

The French pianist Geoffroy Couteau, who recently graduated with the highest honors from the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique in Paris, plays Brahms' monumental Third Sonata and closes with two lovely songs by Schubert and Schumann in Franz Liszt's sonorous adaptations.

Amsterdam Concertgebouw, Sunday November 20, 2005, 14.30 hours

The Hague Diligentia, Sunday November 27, 2005, 14.30 hours

Gemma Rosefield, cello / Inon Barnatan, piano

Bohuslav Martinu
Variations on a Slovak theme

Johannes Brahms
Sonata in e minor, opus 38

David Popper
Hungarian Rhapsody, opus 68

--intermission--

Geoffroy Couteau, piano

Johannes Brahms
Sonata in f minor, opus 5

Franz Schubert/Franz Liszt
Der Wanderer

Robert Schumann/Franz Liszt
Widmung

 
 

Oleg Bugaev and Pyotr Kondrashin

The 17-year-old German - Japanese pianist Alice Sara Ott, trained in the renowned piano school of Prof. Karl-Heinz Kämmerling, demonstrates in her recital the poetic side of Liszt (in the Consolations), as well as his unlimited virtuosity with a performance of the complete Paganini Etudes and his best-loved second Hungarian Rhapsody.

The gifted Russian cellist Pyotr Kondrashin makes his debut in the Concertgebouw where his famous grandfather celebrated many triumphs as a conductor. In a program for two cellos, which includes works by Servais, Offenbach and Paganini / Mifuse, he plays with another Moscow-trained talent: Oleg Bugaev. The 'Haagsche Courant' wrote about Bugaev last season: 'This is cutting-edge music-making; his talent for creating different sound-characters appears to be unlimited.'

Amsterdam Concertgebouw, Sunday February 26, 2006, 14.30 hours

The Hague Diligentia, Sunday February 19, 2006, 14.30 hours

Alice Sara Ott, piano

Works by Franz Liszt

• Hungarian Rhapsody no. 2 in c-sharp minor

• 6 Consolations

• 6 Grandes Études de Paganini

- g minor, Preludio, non troppo lento
- E-flat major, Andante
- g-sharp minor., ‘La Campanella’
- E major, Vivo
- E major, ‘La Chasse’
- a minor, Thème et variations

--intermission--

Oleg Bugaev / Pyotr Kondrashin, Cello Duo

Jacques Offenbach
Grand Duo Concertant, opus 34 no. 1

Adrien François Servais
Caprices, opus 11 nos. 2 and 4

Nicolò Paganini / arr. W.Thomas-Mifuse
Variations on one string on themes by Rossini

 

 

Colleen Lee

The Georgian cellist Giorgi Kharadzé won third prize in the prestigious Pablo Casals Competition 2004 as well as the Beethoven Prize, presented to him personally by Mstislav Rostropovich. With the Armenian pianist Varduhi Yeritsyan Kharadzé plays a late work of Robert Schumann and Sergei Prokofiev's only Cello Sonata.

Pianist Colleen Lee, originally from Hong Kong, has already won several important prizes in international competitions and was in 2004 the discovery at the renowned Polish Chopin Festival in Dusznicki. In her program we find two of the most monumental works in the entire piano literature: Beethoven's Sonata opus 101 and Chopin's Third Sonata.

Amsterdam Concertgebouw, Sunday April 2, 2006, 14.30 hours

The Hague Diligentia, Sunday March 26, 2006, 14.30 hours

Giorgi Kharadzé, cello / Varduhi Yeritsyan, piano

Robert Schumann
5 Stücke im Volkston, opus 102

Sergej Prokofjev
Sonata in C major, opus 119

--intermission--

Colleen Lee, piano

Ludwig van Beethoven
Sonata in A major, opus 101

Frédéric Chopin
Sonata in b minor, opus 58

 

 

Elise Goodman

Drama, imagination and virtuosity are the ingredients in the recital by the Slovak pianist Laco Fancovic. Following Beethoven, Liszt and Balakirev, he closes with the spectacular and festive adaptation by Leopold Godowsky of themes from Johann Strauss, Jr.'s operetta Die Fledermaus.

The American violinist Elise Goodman, with her countryman Steve Beck at the piano, chooses a 'classical meets jazz' program - not so surprising for this great-niece of the legendary clarinetist Benny Goodman. The Blues from Ravel's Violin Sonata leads effortlessly into master violinist Jascha Heifetz' richly colored arrangements of the most beautiful melodies from Gershwin's opera Porgy and Bess. A foursome of contemporary Rags by the American composer John Novacek closes the program.

Amsterdam Concertgebouw, Sunday June 18, 2006, 14.30 hours

The Hague Diligentia, Sunday June 11, 2006, 14.30 hours

Laco Fancovic, piano

Ludwig van Beethoven
Sonate in f minor, opus 57 ‘Appassionata’

Franz Liszt
Waldesrauschen

Mili Balakirev
Islamey (Fantasie Oriental)

Leopold Godowsky
Paraphrase ‘Die Fledermaus’ (op themes by Johann Strauss, Jr.)

--intermission--

Elise Goodman, viool / Steve Beck, piano

Maurice Ravel
Sonata for violin and piano

George Gershwin/arr. Jascha Heifetz
From the opera ‘Porgy and Bess

- Summertime
- A Woman Is a Sometime Thing
- My Man's Gone Now
- It Ain't Necessarily So
- Bess, You Is My Woman Now

John Novacek
Four Concert Rags

 


New Masters on Tour 2004-2005

Here are the names of the artists that were selected for the TIHMS New Masters on Tour 2004-2005:

Violin:
Soojin Han (Korea)
Mirjam Tschopp (Switzerland)
Cello:
Oleg Bugaev (Russia)
Laura Buruiana (Romania)
Ruslan Vilensky (Latvia)
Piano:
Chu-Fang Huang (China)
Emmanuelle Swiercz (France)
Jean-Philippe Sylvestre (Canada)

Their biographies

(Alphabetical order, including information about the accompanist)

Oleg Bugaev cello

Russian cellist Oleg Bugaev was born in Ekaterinburg and began playing the cello at the age of 7. He is an honors graduate of both Ekaterinburg Music College (1998) and the Moscow State Conservatory (2003) and is currently a post-graduate student in performance at the Moscow State Conservatory in the class of Prof. Alexander Kniazev.

He has been a prizewinner in international cello competitions in Russia, Italy and France, and he is a Laureate of the V. Berlinsky fund 'Russian Musical Art'. Oleg Bugaev made his debut in the Great Hall of Moscow Conservatory in December 2000 as a soloist with chamber orchestra under the direction of Yuri Bashmet. He has performed throughout Russia, France, Germany, Italy, Norway and Sweden and is a frequent participant of the 'Sacro Art' Festival in Germany and the 'Ars Longa' Festival in Moscow. His extensive repertoire includes the complete solo suites of J.S. Bach, the complete sonatas of Beethoven, as well as concertos and other works by composers ranging from Boccherini and Haydn to Shostakovich and Schnittke.

He joined The International Holland Music Sessions as a participant in 2003, studying with Johannes Goritzki and Harro Ruijsenaars.


Mirsa Adami was born in Tirana in Albania. Already at age 11 she performed as soloist with orchestras in her homeland. At 15 she came to the Netherlands where she studied with Jan Wijn at the Conservatory of Amsterdam, graduating in 2000. In the same year, she was named ‘Musician of the Year’ at the Summer Academy of TIHMS. Mirsa performs as soloist and as accompanist in many countries. She made her debut in Japan early in 2003.

Laura Buruiana, cello

Romanian cellist Laura Buruiana (1980) was born in Bucharest and began playing the cello at the age of 10. She continued her education in her native city at the Georges Enesco University of the Arts and the National University of Music, working with Marin Cazacu. She currently studies with Frans Helmerson in Cologne.

A first-time participant in The International Holland Music Sessions in 2003, Laura studied with Johannes Goritzki and Harro Ruijsenaars. She was winner of the 2002 Young Concert Artists European Auditions in Leipzig, Germany and the 2003 Young Concert Artists International Auditions in New York, earning five special prizes: The Jerome L. Greene Foundation Prize, which will sponsor her New York debut at the 92nd Street Y in March 2004; The Pennsylvania Prize, which brings concert engagements throughout the state; the Usedom Music Festival Prize, for an engagement in Germany; The Slomovic Prize; and The Miriam Brody Aronson Prize. She will make her Washington, DC debut at the Kennedy Center on March 21, 2004. Her 2003-2004 season also includes a recital at the University of Pittsburgh and a performance as soloist with the Chamber Orchestra of the Triangle in Raleigh, North Carolina.

Laura Buruiana has performed in Greece, Germany and France. In Spain, she has been heard in recital and as soloist with the Cordova Orchestra in Santander. At the Spoleto Festival in Italy, she has appeared in recital and as soloist with the Bari Orchestra. In her native Romania she has performed with numerous orchestras including the Romanian National Radio Orchestra.


Hungarian pianist Martin Tchiba (1982) was born in Budapest and raised in Germany. Following studies in Hannover with Prof. Karl-Heinz Kämmerling, he currently studies at the Musikhochschule Saarbrücken with Prof. Thomas Duis. In addition, he has pursued master classes with Lazar Berman, Marie-Françoise Bucquet, Jan Marisse Huizing, György Kurtág and Jan Wijn as well as Prof. Kämmerling, many of them as a participant since 1997 in The International Holland Music Sessions.
He has given recitals throughout Germany and in Hungary, Austria and the Netherlands (inlcuding at the Concertgebouw), and he has toured Italy and Germany as soloist with the Sinfonietta Köln. He has been heard on numerous radio and television broadcasts. Mr. Tchiba is the recipient of several prestigious awards, including first prizes in the German competition 'Jugend musiziert' in 1999 and 2000 and awards from the German Music Council and the Federal State Capital Saarbrücken (Cultural Award 2002). He has also won awards as a composer whose compositions have been performed widely in Germany, Italy, Russia and in the Netherlands during International Gaudeamus Music Weeks in 2001.

Soojin Han, violin

Soojin Han (1986) was born in Korea and began playing the violin at the age of 8. Now a citizen and resident of the United Kingdom, she is currently a scholar at the Purcell School in London, studying with Dr. Felix Andrievsky. She has performed in recital and as soloist with orchestras in the UK, Europe and the United States of America in such venues as the Royal Festival Hall, Purcell Room, Wigmore Hall, Barbican Hall, St. Martin-in-the-Fields, Linbury Studio, Britten Theatre and Witold Lutoslawski Hall. She has broadcast on Polish and Korean Radio.

In the year 2001 she won second prize as the youngest competitor at the Wieniawski International Violin Competition in Poznan, Poland, where she was also awarded the Critics and Journalists Prize as well as the Listeners Prize by Polish Radio.

As a participant in The International Holland Music Sessions since 2002, Soojin has pursued master classes with Herman Krebbers.


Gerard Boeters studied at the Rotterdam Conservatory with Istvan Hajdu and Luba Edlina-Dubinsky and continued his studies at the Conservatory of Amsterdam with Danielle Dechenne and Jan Wijn. He graduated in 1989 and has made a successful career as a solo and duo pianist. Gerard is accompanist at the Royal Conservatory in The Hague, and at TIHMS where he has accompanied classes given by Herman Krebbers, Igor Oistrakh, the late Viktor Liberman, Igor Ozim, Eduard Schmieder, Erick Friedman, Aaron Rosand, Yfrah Neaman, György Pauk and Valentin Zhuk.

Chu-Fang Huang, piano

Chinese pianist Chu-Fang Huang (1982) is a student of Claude Frank at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She is the top prizewinner of numerous international competitions and has concertized throughout major cities in China and the United States. She has appeared as soloist with the Pacific Symphony (California), Hong Kong Youth Symphony, Shenyang Symphony Orchestra, Eastern Symphony Orchestra, Fort Collins Symphony Orchestra and Hilton Head Symphony.

Her recital performances in the US have taken her to California (Los Angeles, San Francisco, Escondido, Irvine, La Jolla, Pasadena), New York, Denver, Chicago, Washington, Wilmington and Philadelphia. Engagements in 2003-2004 include a guest appearance at the Klavier Festival Ruhr in Germany, recitals in Chicago, a concert tour in Northeastern China and solo appearances with the Victoria Symphony, the Corpus Christi Symphony, the Hilton Head Symphony and the Illinois Philharmonic. Ms. Huang made her Carnegie Hall debut in November 2003 following her live recital broadcast over Washington Public Radio.

She attended The International Holland Music Sessions for the first time in 2003, studying with Karl-Heinz Kämmerling and Mikhail Voskresensky.

Emmanuelle Swiercz, piano

French pianist Emmuanuelle Swiercz (1978) has been a student at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique in Paris since 1994, first with Pascal Devoyon en Michel Beroff and since 2000 in the post-graduate course of Marie-Françoise Bucquet. She has followed masterclasses with Lev Naoumov, Paul Badura-Skoda, Anne Queffélec, Jean-Claude Pennetier and György Sebók. As a participant in The International Holland Music Sessions since 2000, she has studied with Lazar Berman, Jan Marisse Huizing, Karl-Heinz Kämmerling and John Perry in addition to Mrs. Bucquet. She has been awarded prizes by such organizations as the Yamaha Foundation of Europe, the Cziffra Foundation, the Meyer Foundation and the Forum Musical de Normandie. In 1999 she was third prize winner in the Camaiore International Piano Competition.

She has performed in recital and as a chamber musician throughout France, Poland, the Netherlands, Italy and Russia and has appeared on national radio and television. Her orchestral performances have included the symphony orchestras of Novosibirsk, Kazan, Douai and Via Reggio.

Jean-Philippe Sylvestre, piano

Jean-Philippe Sylvestre (1982) is a graduate of l'École de Musique, Vincent-d1Indy and the Université de Montréal where he studied with Marc Durand. He is currently a student of John Perry at the Glenn Gould Studio of The Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto. He has also studied with Louis Lortie, Mikhail Voskresensky, Marie-Françoise Bucquet, Jan Marisse Huizing, Anton Kuerti, André Laplante and Menahem Pressler, several as a participant in The International Holland Music Sessions in 2003.

He is the winner of numerous prizes and awards, among them the OSM Competition in 2000 (first prize, the 'People's Choice' award and the Paul Merkelo scholarship), the CBC Radio National Competition for young performers in 2001 (second prize, the 'People's Choice' award and a special prize for best interpretation of the required work) and first prizes at various Canadian and regional music competitions. His prize at the 1997 Concertino Praga Competition included a series of concerts in 1998 as part of the South Bohemian Festival, and in 1999 he was invited to perform as a soloist and accompanist during the Czech and Slovakian Musical Encounters in Montreal.

Jean-Philippe Sylvestre has appeared with many orchestras in Canada. In 2003 he performed in recital and as soloist with l'Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal at La Place des Arts. In February 2002 he gave a recital at the National Arts Center in Ottawa, and in October 2000 he was chosen by Louis Lortie to perform with him at the Beethoven Plus Festival in Montréal. In addition, he has frequently taken part in radio and television broadcasts for Radio-Canada.

Mirjam Tschopp, violin

Swiss violinist Mirjam Tschopp (1976) studied with Aïda Stucki, Franco Gulli and Thomas Brandis and holds teaching, concert and soloist's diplomas with honors. Since her solo debut at age 13, she has been active internationally as a violinist and violist, appearing as soloist with the Berlin Symphony Orchestra, the St. Petersburg Camerata and the Suk Chamber Orchestra Prague.

As a chamber musician she has performed in concert with Josef Suk and Ana Chumachenco among others. She has been seen in numerous television productions and a CD was released in 2003 on the CPO label. As a result of her interest in contemporary music, several composers have dedicated works to her. Ms. Tschopp was the only prizewinner in the 2000 Max Rostal Viola Competition in Berlin and she is the holder of the 2001 Swiss Ambassador's Award, which earned her a recital at Wigmore Hall in London.

A first-time participant in The International Holland Music Sessions in 2003, she studied with Herman Krebbers, György Pauk and Anatoly Resnikovsky.


Riccardo Bovino was born in Turin, Italy in 1975. He studied at the Turin Conservatory and at the Basel Academy of Music with Jürg Wyttenbach and Gérard Wyss, earning his soloist's diploma with honors in 1998. He has been a prizewinner at national and international competitions in Italy, Switzerland and Slovakia, both as a soloist and a chamber music partner. He regularly appears as soloist with the Basel Symphony Orchestra and the Zurich Chamber Orchestra and he performs with such musicians as Ivan Monighetti, Sol Gabetta, Reto Bieri, Ransom Wilson and his own Vega Trio in concerts throughout Europe and America. He has recorded for Swiss Radio DRS 2, ORF 1, for Pan Classics and CPO. Since 1996 he has been accompanist at the Basel Academy of Music.

Ruslan Vilensky, cello

Latvian cellist Ruslan Vilensky (1985) has been a student at the Jormala Music School in his native land since 1992, first with Vija Ozola and currently with Prof. Eleonora Testelec. He has also participated in master classes with Prof. Natalia Shakhovskaya in Russia and Prof. Raimo Sariola in Finland. He has won several awards including 1st prize at the K. Davidov International Cello Competition in 2000 and 2002 and 1st prizes at the Latvian State Contest and the Eurovision Young Musicians Latvian final, also in 2002. In addition he has twice been the recipient of awards from the Latvian Minister of Culture for his outstanding achievements in Lavtian culture.

Ruslan has given concerts in prestigious halls in Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Germany, Sweden, Hungary and other European countries and has appeared with such orchestras as the Latvian National Symphony Orchestra, Riga Festival Orchestra, Liepaja Symphony Orchestra, Riga Youth Chamber Orchestra, and the Vidzemes and Kaunas chamber orchestras. In 2001 he performed as soloist and chamber musician at the Rostropovich cello festival in Riga. A highlight of 2003 is an Asian concert tour in which he performs Dvorák1s Cello Concerto.

He was a first-time participant at The International Holland Music Sessions in 2003, studying with Dmitri Ferschtman and Harro Ruijsenaars.


Vestard Shimkus, born in 1984 in Latvia, started his piano studies at the age of five in Emils Darzins Music School in Riga. In the academic year 2002-03 he was a student of Daniel Pollack at the University of Southern California. Vestard has also studied composition for five years with world-famous composer Peteris Vasks and has participated in several piano master classes with Lazar Berman, Joan Havil and Igor Zukov. In the summer of 2003 Shimkus studied in professor Dmitri Bashkirov's master classes in Savonlinna, Finland. Currently he continues to study with Dmitri Bashkirov. Vestard Shimkus is a laureate of the "Grand Music Prize of Latvia 2002"

if you do not see a menu, please 'click here'

previous: international concert opportunities  

© 2007 TIHMS