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Leeds International Piano Competition

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Leeds International Piano Competition
Leeds Town Hall in 2006
DescriptionExceptional piano performance
LocationGreat Hall of the University of Leeds
Leeds Town Hall
CountryUnited Kingdom
Presented byLeeds International Piano Competition
Formerly calledLeeds International Pianoforte Competition
First awarded1963
Websitehttp://www.leedspiano.com/

The Leeds International Piano Competition, informally known as The Leeds and formerly the Leeds International Pianoforte Competition,[1] takes place every three years in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. It was founded in 1961 by Marion, Countess of Harewood, Fanny Waterman, and Roslyn Lyons, with the first competition being held in 1963. Waterman was the chair and artistic director up to the 2015 competition. The competition takes place in the Great Hall of the University of Leeds and in Leeds Town Hall.

History

The Great Hall (2007)

The competition was first held in September 1963. It joined the World Federation of International Music Competitions (WFIMC) in 1965.[1] After the 1996 competition, there was a four-year break before the 2000 competition, to coincide the next edition with the turn of the millennium. Competitors were formerly housed at Tetley Hall, a residence hall at the University of Leeds, which closed in 2006. For many years, the supervisor of Tetley Hall during the competition was Elizabeth Arnold.

Sofya Gulyak, placed first in the 16th competition of 2009, was the first female top prize winner.[2] An Orchestra Prize, awarded to one of the six finalists, was introduced in 2012.

Waterman was the competition's chair and artistic director until her retirement after the 2015 event. She was replaced as artistic director by Paul Lewis (who will chair the jury from 2018) and Adam Gatehouse, with Mark Wingate taking over as chief executive and Linda Wellings as operations manager.[1][3]

Several changes were announced for the 2018 competition. The preliminary round of the competition will take place in Berlin, New York and Singapore, and will occur in April, five or six months ahead of the main competition. The semi-finalists will give two different recitals. A chamber music round will also be introduced. The concerto round will be reduced to five finalists, who will play two concertos, one "classically oriented"[4] and one from the Romantic period or later. Three main prizes will be awarded, and an audience prize will be introduced, which will be voted for online. The prize benefits will include an offer of mentoring by Lewis and other pianists for multiple competitors, as well as a management package with Askonas Holt for one of the three top-placed finalists. Medici.tv will stream all rounds on the internet. Masterclasses, talks, educational events and other activities will also be included in the competition.[3][4]

Orchestra

Since 2003, the competitors have been accompanied by the Hallé Orchestra, under the leadership of Mark Elder. Previous partnerships include the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra under Simon Rattle (1987–2000), the BBC Philharmonic with Vernon Handley in 1984 and the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic with Charles Groves (1963–1975).

Prize winners

Year 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th
2018 United States Eric Lu* Germany Mario Häring** China Xinyuan Wang***
2015 Russia Anna Tsybuleva South Korea Heejae Kim* Russia Vitaly Pisarenko United States Drew Petersen Japan Tomoki Kitamura China Yun Wei
2012 Italy Federico Colli Switzerland Louis Schwizgebel China Jiayan Sun Latvia Andrejs Osokins United States Andrew Tyson* Australia Jayson Gillham
2009 Russia Sofya Gulyak Ukraine Alexej Gorlatch Italy Alessandro Taverna France David Kadouch Hong Kong Rachel Cheung China Jianing Kong
2006 South Korea Sunwook Kim United States Andrew Brownell Russia Denis Kozhukhin China Siheng Song South Korea Sung-hoon Kim United States Grace Fong
2003 Finland Antti Siirala Uzbekistan Evgenia Rubinova Japan Yuma Osaki Ukraine Igor Tchetuev Taiwan Chiao-Ying Chang United Kingdom/Nigeria Sodi Braide
2000 Italy Alessio Bax Italy Davide Franceschetti Germany Severin von Eckardstein Italy Cristiano Burato United Kingdom Ashley Wass Russia Tatiana Kolesova
1996 Russia Ilya Itin Italy Roberto Cominati Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Aleksandar Madžar China Sa Chen Armenia Armen Babakhanian Israel Ekaterina Apekisheva
1993 Brazil Ricardo Castro United Kingdom Leon McCawley United States Mark Anderson Italy Filippo Gamba Russia Maxim Philippov Russia Margarita Shevchenko
1990 Portugal Artur Pizarro Germany Lars Vogt France Éric Le Sage Hungary Balázs Szokolay South Korea Haesun Paik Soviet Union Andrei Zheltonog
1987 Soviet Union Vladimir Ovchinnikov Australia Ian Munro Japan Noriko Ogawa Soviet Union Boris Berezovsky Republic of Ireland Hugh Tinney United States Marcantonio Barone
1984 Canada Jon Kimura Parker South Korea Ju Hee Suh Japan Junko Otake Canada Louis Lortie United States David Buechner Bulgaria Emma Tahmizian
1981 United Kingdom Ian Hobson Germany Wolfgang Manz France Bernard d'Ascoli United States Daniel Blumenthal United States Christopher O'Riley United Kingdom Peter Donohoe
1978 France Michel Dalberto Brazil Diana Kacso United States Lydia Artymiw United Kingdom Ian Hobson United Kingdom Kathryn Stott Japan Etsuko Terada
1975 Soviet Union Dimitri Alexeev Japan Mitsuko Uchida Joint 3rd prize:
Hungary András Schiff
France Pascal Devoyon
Joint 5th prize:
New Zealand Michael Houstoun
United States Myung-whun Chung
1972 United States Murray Perahia United States Craig Sheppard United States Eugen Indjic
1969 Romania Radu Lupu France Georges Pludermacher Brazil Arthur Moreira Lima Soviet Union Boris Petrushansky France Anne Queffélec
1966 Spain Rafael Orozco Joint 2nd prize:
Soviet Union Viktoria Postnikova
Soviet Union Semyon Kruchin
Soviet Union Alexey Nasedkin France Jean-Rodolphe Kars
1963 United Kingdom Michael Roll Soviet Union Vladimir Krainev France Sebastien Risler United States Armenta Adams

*Winner of the Terence Judd–Hallé Orchestra Prize.[5][6][7]

**Winner of the Yaltah Menuhin Award.[7]

***Winner of the medici.tv Audience Award.[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c http://www.wfimc.org/Webnodes/en/Web/Public/Competitions/Competition+info?org=16625
  2. ^ Andrew Clements (14 September 2016), "Leeds International Piano competition final – first prize for Anna Tcybuleva, not the obvious choice", The Guardian, retrieved 3 January 2017
  3. ^ a b 'New Vision' announced for 2018 Competition, Leeds International Piano Competition, 18 October 2016, retrieved 2 January 2017
  4. ^ a b Paul Lewis (18 October 2016), "Paul Lewis: how we're transforming 'the Leeds' to nurture tomorrow's pianists", The Guardian, retrieved 2 January 2017
  5. ^ James McCarthy (18 September 2012), "Leeds International Piano Competition 2012 Winner Announced", Gramophone, retrieved 3 January 2017
  6. ^ Heejae Kim piano, Leeds International Piano Competition, 5 April 2016, archived from the original on 3 January 2017, retrieved 3 January 2017 {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  7. ^ a b c "And the Winner Is… | Leeds International Piano Comp". www.leedspiano.com. Retrieved 22 September 2018.

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