Elisabeth Leonskaja
Elisabeth Leonskaja (born November 23, 1945) is a distinguished Soviet and Austrian pianist and teacher. She was born to a family of Jewish and Polish extraction living in Tbilisi,[1][2] then the capital of the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic.
When she was six and a half, her parents were able to buy her her first upright piano. At 7, she passed the entrance to one of Tbilisi's sixty music schools. At 11, she gave her orchestral debut with Beethoven's Concerto No. 3, at 13 her first solo recital. At 14, she began an intense four-year period of study at the secondary school with a new piano teacher from Kiev, influenced by the Russian school of piano. In 1964, Elisabeth Leonskaja won the Enesco International Piano Competition in Bucharest. The judges included the composer and conductor Aram Khachaturian and the pianist Arthur Rubinstein.[3]
In 1964, she began studies in the Moscow Conservatory. During her conservatory years she won prizes in the prestigious Enescu, Marguerite Long–Jacques Thibaud and Queen Elizabeth international piano competitions in Bucharest, Paris and Brussels.
She left the Soviet Union in 1978 and has since then resided in Vienna. A notable recording of hers is of Edvard Grieg's piano transcriptions of Mozart's piano sonatas K. 545 and K. 533/494, accompanied by Sviatoslav Richter, with whom she built a close friendship and collaboration. She recorded many years for Teldec, now for German label MDG and gives many Masterclasses.
Decorations and awards
- Austrian Cross of Honour for Science and Art, 1st class (2005)[4]
- Honorary citizen of Deutschlandsberg (1999)
References
- ^ Interview in the Irish Times
- ^ Elisabeth Leonskaja, Queen Elizabeth Hall, London
- ^ http://www.cosmopolis.ch/english/music/e0018800/elisabeth_leonskaja_franz_schubert_e01880000000000000.htm
- ^ "Reply to a parliamentary question" (pdf) (in German). p. 1683. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
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External links
- 1945 births
- Living people
- People from Tbilisi
- Classical pianists from Georgia (country)
- Russian classical pianists
- Long-Thibaud-Crespin Competition prize-winners
- Soviet classical pianists
- 20th-century classical pianists
- Recipients of the Austrian Cross of Honour for Science and Art, 1st class
- Jewish classical pianists
- Russian female musicians
- Russian classical pianist stubs
- Georgia (country) people stubs
- European musician stubs
- Classical musician stubs