Kristian Chong
Kristian Chong is an Australian concert pianist who has performed extensively throughout Australia, the UK, and in China, France, Hong Kong, New Zealand, Singapore, Taiwan, USA, and Africa.[1]
Early life
His early studies were at the Elder Conservatorium of Music in Adelaide, Australia, where he was accepted at the age of 9 on piano with Stefan Ammer and Noreen Stokes, and violin with Beryl Kimber. He went on to study at the Melbourne Conservatorium of Music under Stephen McIntyre, and then the Royal Academy of Music in London with Piers Lane and Christopher Elton.
His early competition successes included the Symphony Australia Young Performers Award (keyboard) and the Australian National Piano Award.
Career
Chong has performed extensively throughout Australia and the UK, and in China, France, Hong Kong, New Zealand, Singapore, Taiwan, USA, and Zimbabwe.
His performances and recordings are frequently broadcast on ABC Classic FM.[2] and on the MBS network (2MBS/3MBS/4MBS/5MBS) in Australia.
As concerto soloist, he has appeared with the Adelaide, Canberra, Melbourne,[3] Queensland, Sydney and Tasmanian symphony orchestras, and orchestras in the UK, New Zealand and China under conductors such as Werner Andreas Albert, Andrey Boreyko, Nicholas Braithwaite, Jessica Cottis, Roy Goodman, Sebastian Lang-Lessing, Nicholas Milton, Benjamin Northey, Tuomas Ollila, Fabian Russell, Markus Stenz, Arvo Volmer and Marco Zuccarini .
Concerto highlights have included Rachmaninoff 3rd with the Sydney Symphony, the Rachmaninoff Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini in Beijing and Canberra, and Britten with the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra. Recent concerto highlights include Rachmaninoff 3rd, Chopin 2nd, Beethoven's Emperor, Ravel's Left Hand concerto in Melbourne and New Zealand, and Saint-Saêns 2nd with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra.[3]
Described by The Age as "a true chamber musician at work",[This quote needs a citation] Chong has performed often with musicians such as the Tinalley String Quartet and the Australian String Quartet, violinists Sophie Rowell, Natsuko Yoshimoto, cellist Li-Wei Qin, flautist Megan Sterling and baritone Teddy Tahu Rhodes, with whom he has recorded for ABC Classics. Other collaborations include violinists Ilya Konovalov, (concertmaster Israel Philharmonic), Adam Chalabi, Alexandre Da Costa, Dale Barltrop, Jack Liebeck and Vadim Gluzman, violists Christopher Moore and Caroline Henbest, and clarinetists Philip Arkinstall and Michael Collins amongst many others.
Recent festival performances include the Australian Festival of Chamber Music, the Huntington Estate Music Festival[4] for Musica Viva Australia, the Adelaide Festival, Adelaide International Cello Festival, the Xing Hai Festival in Guangzhou, the Port Fairy Spring Music Festival, where Chong performed the complete Rachmaninoff Preludes, the Mimir Chamber Music Festival[5] and the Bangalow Festival.[6] He also completed a cycle of the complete Beethoven piano and violin sonatas with Natsuko Yoshimoto and Sophie Rowell at the Melbourne Recital Centre.
Chong has recorded the complete Rachmaninoff Preludes for piano for ABC Classic FM in May 2011, and has several pending recordings including the Brahms Op. 120 Sonatas for Clarinet and Piano with Philip Arkinstall and with flautist Megan Sterling, works by Miriam Hyde, Anne Boyd, Carl Vine, Frank Martin, Francis Poulenc and Philippe Gaubert.
He currently is based in Melbourne, and teaches piano, chamber music at the Faculty of Fine Arts and Music, University of Melbourne.
References
- ^ "Kristian Chong – Biography". kristianchong.com. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
- ^ "ABC Classic FM – Music Listings – Recent". ABC Classic FM. Retrieved 2017-08-12.[failed verification]
- ^ a b "Benjamin Northey Conducts Enigma – Melbourne Symphony Orchestra". Melbourne Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 2017-08-12.
- ^ "2011 Festival". huntingtonestate.com.au. Retrieved 2017-08-12.
- ^ "Mimir Chamber Music Festival 2017 – Melbourne Conservatorium of Music". mcm.unimelb.edu.au. Retrieved 2017-08-12.
- ^ "2016 Bangalow Music Festival | Southern Cross Soloists". Retrieved 2018-07-29.