Jump to content

2012 Queen Elisabeth Music Competition

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Opto kitty (talk | contribs) at 10:23, 1 December 2018 (added link to Vera Tsu Weiling's wiki page). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The 2012 Queen Elisabeth Music Competition is the competition's 50th edition, comprising its 17th Eugène Ysaÿe Violin Competition and its 19th Composition Competition.

The violin competition took place between 30 April and 26 May 2012 in Brussels' Centre for Fine Arts. Andrey Baranov won it to become the first Russian violinist to do so since the collapse of the Soviet Union, while Tatsuki Narita and Su-shin Hyun were awarded the silver and bronze medals.[1]

Violin competition

Jury

Results

Contestant R1 SF F
Russia Andrey Baranov
Japan Tatsuki Narita
South Korea Su-shin Hyun
United States Esther Yoo 4th
Taiwan Yu-chien Tseng 5th
Belarus Artem Shishkov 6th
Albania Ermir Abeshi Lrt.
Belgium Marc Bouchkov Lrt.
Canada Nikki Chooi Lrt.
South Korea Dami Kim Lrt.
Czech Republic Josef Špaček Lrt.
United States Nancy Zhou Lrt.
South Korea Ga-hyun Cho
South Korea Jin-joo Cho
France Kristi Gjezi
Finland Petteri Iivonen
South Korea Bomsori Kim
Kazakhstan Erzhan Kulibaev
South Korea Marisol Lee
Taiwan Richard Lin
France Maria Milstein
Russia Lev Solodovnikov
Russia Valentina Svyatlovskaya
Romania Stefan Tarara
Germany Lea Birringer
France Radu Bitica
Netherlands Birthe Blom
Latvia Elina Buksha
France Louise Chisson
United States Stefani Collins
Belgium Claire Dassesse
Romania Cristian Fatu
Switzerland Elena Graf
South Korea Soo-jin Han
Argentina Xavier Inchausti
South Korea Yoojin Jang
Japan Aiko Kamishikiryo
Armenia Haik Kazazyan
South Korea Fabiola Kim
South Korea Jae-young Kim
South Korea Jee-won Kim
South Korea Soh-yon Kim
Japan Yu Kurokawa
Australia Harriet Langley
South Korea Hyun-woong Lee
South Korea Myung-eun Lee
Germany Maria-Elisabeth Lott
Belgium Jolente de Maeyer
Russia Sergey Malov
Czech Republic Matouš Michal
Czech Republic Simon Michal
Canada Boson Mo
Japan Daichi Nakamura
Japan Ami Oike
Bulgaria Liya Petrova
Russia Igor Pikayzen
Estonia Mari Poll
Russia Aylen Pritchin
Canada Stanislav Pronin
Russia Yury Revich
Canada Michelle Ross
Belgium Eugenia Ryabinina
Greece Arsenis Selalmazidis
Ukraine Oleksii Semenenko
United States Emma Steele
Japan Mai Suzuki
France Julien Szulman
United States Stephen Tavani
France Gabriel Tchalik
United States Suliman Tekalli
Ukraine Diana Tishchenko
Norway Christopher Tun Andersen
Dominica Yuuki Wong
South Korea Jung-yoon Yang
South Korea Sulki Yu
Latvia Laura Zariņa
China Yuqing Zhang

References