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Introduction
Your possibilities are endless. We are here to help you break expectations and reframe tradition. By developing your technical excellence and being immersed in an environment which nurtures the curious and daring, you will define your artistic voice here at Trinity Laban.
From the traditional to the cutting edge, you will be encouraged to pursue innovative projects that push the boundaries of what is possible with keyboard instruments. In addition to exploring the traditional canon, you will collaborate with our composers, staff and visiting artists, exposing you to new waves within the contemporary music scene.
As a Trinity Laban pianist you will receive individual lessons with our internationally renowned teachers, regular tutorials, repertoire and performance seminars and be encouraged to explore other keyboard instruments. Regular masterclasses from visiting artists will inspire you to take new approaches.
We are committed to preparing our students for a dynamic musical future and nurturing creativity and individuality through student-centred teaching and learning, cutting-edge research, and numerous performance opportunities. We aspire to ignite and support young artists to excel on and beyond the keyboard and to make a significant impact in the ever-evolving world of music.
Dr Ji Liu, Head of Piano and Keyboard

Auditions
Our audition process is designed to help us find out about your performance or composition style, interests, and personality. We want to assess whether you have the potential to benefit from our approach, and we aim to provide a positive and friendly atmosphere, allowing you to enjoy yourself.
Undergraduate Courses
Join our community of global arts collaborators and creators for your undergraduate study. From classical to jazz and popular music, our wide selection of courses seek to redefine musical and performing excellence.
Postgraduate Courses
Lead the arts beyond convention with our postgraduate music courses, with pioneering master’s and diplomas allowing you to challenge musical convention and direct the spotlight.

Open Days
Discover your future in Music, Dance, and Musical Theatre at one of our upcoming open days.
We’ll show you how studying at Trinity Laban equips you with the tools to develop your career, build a network and become the artist you want to be.
Staff
Key Faculty

Dr Ji Liu
Head of Keyboard
Learn about Dr Ji Liu

Dr Ji Liu
Ji Liu combines a distinguished and multifaceted career as a pianist, composer, scholar and educator. As an international soloist, he has performed at venues and festivals including Royal Albert Hall, Carnegie Hall, Auditorium du Louvre, Royal Concertgebouw and the National Centre for Performing Arts in Beijing. At Classic FM’s 25th anniversary, Ji Liu performed for His Majesty King Charles III and other distinguished guests at Dumfries House.
Research interests and areas of supervision:
- Programming strategy
- Historically informed and contemporary performance practices
- Participatory performance and audience studies
- Performing (and composing and reworking) unfinished works and works with extended form
- Researching silence
- Schubert studies
- Performance Science
- Applied Technology in Music-Making (machine learning and generative AI)
Biography
Ji Liu has worked with orchestras including the Philharmonia Orchestra, Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, Beijing’s NCPA Orchestra, Xiamen Philharmonic Orchestra, Shanghai Philharmonic Orchestra, etc. He gave the world premieres of Ludovico Einaudi’s Piano Concerto Domino with RLPO and Boris Bergmann’s The Richter Scale and China premieres of Philip Glass’s Complete Piano Etudes and Frederic Rzewski’s People United Will Never Be Defeated! Variations.
As a published composer, Ji Liu has written for orchestras, chamber ensembles and solo instruments. His 18-hour Sonata Fantasy was certified as “The Longest Ever Released Instrumental Work” by the Guinness World Record. His discography encompasses repertoires from the Baroque period to the 21st century.
His research has been presented at institutions such as the University of Oxford, the Sydney Conservatorium of Music, the Orpheus Institute and the University of California.
Ji Liu studied Piano Performance with Professor Christopher Elton and Composition with Professor Ruth Byrchmore at the Royal Academy of Music. He holds a PhD in Music (supervised by Professor Daniel Leech-Wilkinson) from King’s College London and received the Forrest Creative and Performance Leadership Fellowship. Shanghai FM94.7 appointed him the Inaugural Music Ambassador. Since 2018, Ji Liu has served as the Head of Performance at the Kent International Piano Course and is a visiting professor at Shenzhen University.
Professorial Staff
- Alexander Ardakov
Alexander Ardakov
Piano
Learn about Alexander Ardakov
Alexander Ardakov
Born in Samara, Russia, Alexander Ardakov studied under the renowned pianist and professor Vera Gornostaeva at Moscow Conservatoire. Upon graduating, he joined the Moscow State Philharmonia as a performer.
Alexander won prizes at the Kabalevsky Piano Competition in Russia and the Viotti International Music Competition in Vercelli, Italy.
Moving to Britain and Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance, where he has been teaching since 1991, have helped him develop as an international recitalist of exceptional versatility and musical integrity.
Biography
Alexander has made notable radio recordings for BBC Radio 3 and Classic FM. His extensive discography consists of 20 different CD albums. Among them is a remarkable recording of Rachmaninov’s Second Piano Concerto, with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Sir Alexander Gibson.
Alexander has given recitals at the Bösendorfer Hall in Vienna, Southbank Centre, Wigmore Hall, St Martin-in-the-Fields and St John’s Smith Square in London; Carnegie Hall in New York; Gasteig and Carl-Orff-Saal in Munich; Benaroya Hall in Seattle; and Herbst Theatre in San Francisco.
He frequently gives masterclasses in the UK and abroad.
Listen to Alexander Ardakov’s recordings on his YouTube channel
Photo: Alexander Dymnikov
- Can Çakmur
Can Çakmur
Piano
Learn about Can Çakmur
Can Çakmur
Can Çakmur (Pronounced: Djahn Tchakmur) is the first prize winner of the 2018 Hamamatsu International Piano Competition (where he also was awarded the chamber music prize) and the 2017 Scottish International Piano Competition.
His recordings for the label BIS have been received enthusiastically by the international press and have been awarded two consecutive ICMA Awards (a first in the awards’ history) for the Solo Recording of the Year and Young Artist of the Year, as well as Choc de Classica, Diapason d’Or, Album of the Month by International Piano and full marks by Crescendo, Gramophone, Pizzicato and many more.
Biography
Can is currently working on an 11 album survey of Schubert’s complete major works in combination with other pieces inspired by Schubert for BIS Records which will be released between 2023 and the 200th anniversary of Schubert’s death, 2028. Praising the Vol. 1 of the series, Bryce Morrison (International Piano) wrote “Truly great recordings of Schubert’s piano sonatas are rare (Schnabel, Kempff, Brendel and, more recently, Volodos come to mind), but I know of few to match Can Çakmur’s supple and penetrating confirmation of Schubert’s genius.”
Can has performed in a variety of concert halls worldwide, including Wigmore Hall in London, Glasgow Concert Hall, Eindhoven Muziekgebouw, Tokyo Opera City, Suntory Hall, Fondation Louis Vuitton as well as the most prestigious concert venues in his homeland, Turkey. He has appeared in the most important classical music festivals in the country including the Istanbul Music Festival, where he headlined the opening concert in 2015 with Borusan Istanbul Philharmonic Orchestra under Sascha Goetzel. Recent highlights include the Japanese premiere of Thomas Adés’ In Seven Days at the Suntory Hall with Yomiuri
Nippon Symphony Orchestra conducted by Masato Suzuki, the closing concert of Festa Musica MUZA Kawasaki with Tokyo Symphony Orchestra conducted by Tadaaki Otaka and an excellently received recital debut at Fondation Louis Vuitton. Can’s recitals and concerts have been recorded and broadcast by BBC 3, Radio Musique France, Arte, NHK, Turkish National Radio and Television, Deutschlandfunk and Classic FM.
Among Can’s regular chamber music partners are Veriko Tchumburidze and Dorukhan Doruk (as Vecando Trio formed in 2021), cellist Alexandre Castro-Balbi and double-bassist Dominik Wagner. Alexandre and Can are currently working on a recording of Beethoven’s complete works for Passavant, to be released in 2024.
Can was appointed to a piano professorship at Trinity Laban Conservatoire for Music and Dance in 2022, at the age of 24, becoming one of the youngest professors to date at the institute.His first musical impulses came with Emre Şen, Jun Kanno and Marcella Crudeli. He has later studied with Diane Andersen privately and with Grigory Gruzman at the Franz Liszt University of Music Weimar. His studies were made possible by generous guidance and support by G & S Pekinel Young Musicians on World Stages.
- Deniz Arman Gelenbe
Deniz Arman Gelenbe
Piano, Chamber Music and Collaborative Piano
Learn about Deniz Arman Gelenbe
Deniz Arman Gelenbe
Deniz Arman Gelenbe has been acclaimed as one the best chamber musicians of our time. Critics have been unanimous in hailing her prodigious technique, compelling artistic personality and poetic interpretations. As a versatile artist, she combines an international performing career as a soloist and chamber musician, and teaching piano and chamber music at the highest level. Her students have been successful in several international and national competitions and perform at prestigious venues internationally.
Biography
As an accomplished soloist, she pursues an international performing career. She has performed with the Japan Philharmonic, Ensemble Orchestral de Paris, Slovak Chamber Orchestra, North Carolina Symphony, the Presidential Orchestra of Ankara, and with several other orchestras in Turkey, the Philippines, Spain and USA. She has played many solo recitals at Salle Gaveau in Paris, Tonhalle in Zurich, Wigmore Hall and St John’s Smith Square in London, the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C., and in major cities in France, Belgium, Germany, Japan, Israel, Turkey and the Netherlands. She has regular series at St John’s Smith Square in London where she performed three programmes of Mozart during 2016/17 and will perform several piano trios during the next season.
Deniz Gelenbe founded and directed the summer academies and chamber music festivals Semaines Musicales de Rouen and Semaines Musicales d’Orsay in France for eleven years. She has performed in Europe and USA with the Haydn, Enesco, Alexander, Borromeo, Talich and Ciompi Quartets and performed in piano duo concerts with Charles Webb.
In 1994, she founded the Arman Ensemble and the Arman Trio which performs regularly in Europe and the United States in chamber music series, festivals and prestigious venues including Carnegie Weill Hall and Wigmore Hall. She founded and directed for five years the Chamber Arts Series and the Schubertiad Series in Orlando, USA.
The Arman Ensemble premiered the recordings of chamber music by Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco for the Albany label. Works by Turkish composers Erkin and Kodalli were released on the Hungaroton label. CDs with the Haydn Quartet were released by Arcobaleno, and with the Arman Trio by Musician’s Showcase label and Akmuzik/EMI.
She has adjudicated the International Chamber Music Competition in Paris, several competitions in UK including the BBC Young Artist Competition, Hastings International Piano Competition and Windsor International Piano Competition. She was also twice an adjudicator at the Chopin Competition in Marianske Lazne in the Czech Republic, judged the International Piano Competition at Gnessin Academy in Moscow, Dallas International Piano Competition in Dallas, Texas, Santa Cecilia Competition in Porto, and competitions in Tunisia and China among others.
She is regularly invited to give masterclasses in China, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, USA, Russia, Italy, France, UK, and the Netherlands. She teaches at the prestigious Académie internationale de Nice, and at the Chetham’s International Piano Summer School at Airas Nunes Aula de Camera in Santiago de Compostela.
A native of Turkey, Deniz Arman Gelenbe holds Bachelor of Music and Master of Science degrees from the Juilliard School. Her teachers included Rudolf Ganz, Cecile Genhart, Adele Marcus and Gyorgy Sandor.
Formerly Artist-in-Residence and Associate Professor of Piano at the University of Central Florida, Orlando, Deniz Gelenbe joined Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance in 2003, where she held the position of Head of Piano and Keyboard Instruments Department from 2007 to 2015. She is currently Professor of Piano and Chamber Music at Trinity Laban in London and Professor of Piano at Schola Cantorum in Paris.
- Douglas Finch
Douglas Finch
Piano, Chamber Music and Collaborative Piano
Learn about Douglas Finch
Douglas Finch
Douglas Finch was born in Winnipeg and began improvising, composing and performing on the piano from an early age with the help of his mother. He later continued studying with Winnifred Sim, Jean Broadfoot and at the University of Western Ontario with William Aide. After receiving a Masters from Juilliard in New York under Beveridge Webster, Douglas won several awards and was a finalist at the Queen Elisabeth International Piano Competition in Brussels. After moving to London, he co-founded The Continuum Ensemble in 1994 and has collaborated in premiering many new works. He appears regularly with the ensemble at festivals including Spitalfields and at Southbank Centre, featuring composers such as Julian Anderson, Georges Aperghis, Henri Dutilleux, Charles Ives, Claude Vivier, Errollyn Wallen, Iannis Xenakis and many others. He has composed for piano, chamber ensemble, orchestra, theatre and film and his score for the feature film Painted Angels was described in The Independent as “an extraordinary triumph of artistic will”.
Research interests and areas of supervision:
- Transcription and borrowing approaches in musical composition
- Overlapping working methods in improvising and composing
- Contemporary music practice / collaboration / curation
- Composing music for independent art films
- Elena Riu
Elena Riu
Piano, Contemporary Piano
Learn about Elena Riu
Elena Riu
Venezuelan-born pianist Elena Riu “brings all the virtuosity, colour and refinement one could hope for in her interpretations” (American Record Guide). “The delicate precision of her playing leaves a wonderful sense of anticipation before every next move” (The Observer) Born and bred in El Sistema, Elena’s infectious enthusiasm for “boundary- jumping” (Time Out), and for bringing new music to a wider audience has brought her accolades all over the world. A leading exponent of the Hispano-American, her CD of Sonatas by Soler was released to great acclaim by the Spanish label Ensayo. She is a regular visitor to the Festival Latinoamericano.
Biography
Elena has commissioned, edited, published, performed and recorded over 40 new works giving countless world premieres including Sir John Tavener’s “Ypakoe”, written especially for her. Elena’s efforts on behalf of new music and as a keen educationalist led to the publication by Boosey & Hawkes of Salsa Nueva in 2006 – now on its second run and in 2009 Elena Riu’s R’n’B Collection and Out of the Blues CD. “My disc of 2000 is without hesitation Elena Riu’s extraordinary CD of 20th century piano music” (Gramophone) Elena has toured extensively and has performed in all major concert halls in the UK and abroad. An eclectic artist, Elena has pioneered collaborative work. She was the brain behind the sell-out multicultural Spanish Plus Series at the SBC and re-launched their Childrens and Families series. Her most recent collaboration: The Adventures of Tom Thumb was awarded a coveted Fringe First Edinburgh Festival Fringe.
Riu studied at Trinity College of Music in London with Joseph Weingarten where she won many prizes ands competitions. She was also a student of Neil Immelman, Maria Curcio and Roger Vignoles. Later, Elena won a scholarship from to travel to Paris for advanced tuition from Vlado Perlemuter in Paris.
Elena has led numerous master classes and courses throughout the world including several residencies at Dartington International Summer School, Jackdaws Music Trust, CALARTS in LA, Royal Northern College of Music, Trinity College of Music Junior Department, Royal College of Music, EPTA, Simon Bolivar University in Caracas and Anglia Ruskin University among many.
She holds positions at Trinity Laban and Highgate School and has published two books with Boosey and Hawkes focusing on newly commissioned solo piano music.
- Eugene Asti
Eugene Asti
Art Song and Collaborative Piano
Learn about Eugene Asti
Eugene Asti
Much in demand as an accompanist, Eugene Asti has performed with many great artists including Dame Felicity Lott, Dame Margaret Price, Nancy Argenta and Elizabeth Connell, in places such as the Wigmore Hall, the Rome Opera House, the Musikverein in Vienna, the Aix-en-Provence Festival, Paris, Madrid, Brussels, Düsseldorf, Vancouver, and New York. He devised recital series for St. John’s Smith Square and St. George’s Brandon Hill to mark the Brahms and Mendelssohn anniversaries in 1997, and in 1999 planned a series for St. John’s Smith Square to mark the Poulenc and Strauss anniversaries. For the 2002/3 season, he devised a recital series involving many high-profile musicians for St. John’s Smith Square to honour Robert Schumann.
Biography
He has done much recording work for the BBC, most recently including several broadcasts for Radio 3’s Voices programme with Sophie Daneman, Sarah Connolly, Christine Rice, Stephan Loges and Rebecca Evans. Other engagements have included recitals with Dame Felicity Lott, Alison Buchanan, Sophie Daneman, Rebecca Evans, Susan Gritton, Stephan Loges and James Rutherford, including live broadcasts from Wigmore Hall, the Waterfront Hall in Belfast, Bridgewater Hall in Manchester and at New York’s Weill Recital Hall and Lincoln Center.
Eugene Asti studied at the Mannes College of Music, New York with Jeannette Haien where he earned his BMus and MA.
- Gabriele Baldocci
Gabriele Baldocci
Piano, Chamber Music and Collaborative Piano
Learn about Gabriele Baldocci
Gabriele Baldocci
Gabriele Baldocci’s unique style, visionary programming and versatile artistic personality have garnered him worldwide critical acclaim and a wide following on the world stage.
Described by Jed Distler on Gramophone as a “A pianist of formidable capabilities”, Baldocci has given concerts at such distinguished venues as Tonhalle in Zürich, Musikverein in Vienna, Auditorium Parco della Musica in Rome, Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires, Auditorio Nacional in Madrid, Palau de la Música Catalana in Barcelona, Ceramic Crystal Hall in Seoul, Teatro Sala Verdi in Milan, Teatro Ghione in Rome, Politeama Rossetti in Trieste, Teatro Comunale Ponchielli in Cremona, Parnassos Hall in Athens, Teatro Lirico in Cagliari, Poisson Rouge in New York.
Biography
A passionate advocate for live classical improvisation, Baldocci’s eclectic personality made him develop innovative events where he tastefully breaks boundaries of genres and styles. Among his successful recordings, a live recital in duo with Martha Argerich, Nino Rota’s complete works for piano and violin and piano and viola with Marco Fornaciari, Chopin’s Complete Ballades and Impromptus. His latest recording, Sheer Piano Attack, rapidly became a best-seller after being promoted by the rock band Queen on all their media outlets. His performances are regularly broadcasted on TV and radios internationally and he was featured in a very successful documentary produced by Sky Classica.
A child prodigy of the piano, he started giving public concerts at the age of nine, and he maintained a successful career since then, winning prizes in numerous piano competitions such as the The Alessandro Casagrande International Piano Competition in Italy and the Martha Argerich Competition in Buenos Aires. After his studies at Imola with Franco Scala, he studied at the prestigious International Lake Como Piano Academy with William Grant Naboré, Lèon Fleisher, Alicia De Larrocha, Dmitri Bashkirov, Fou Ts’Ong, Charles Rosen, Andreas Staier and Claude Frank. He completed his studies at the Santa Cecilia Academy in Rome with Sergio Perticaroli.
A very active educator, he is a professor at Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance and of The Purcell School. He is also the founder of the London Piano Centre and of the Milton Keynes Music Academy and he is often invited to give masterclasses at some of the most important universities and academies worldwide.
- Helen Yorke
Helen Yorke
Piano, Chamber Music and Collaborative Piano
Learn about Helen Yorke
Helen Yorke
Critically acclaimed as an edgy and dynamic interpreter, the pianist Helen Yorke performed with Renée Fleming throughout America and Europe for over a decade. Helen trained as a soloist at the RNCM, and then specialised in ensemble playing on scholarships at the RAM and thereafter in Germany, at the Frankfurt and Cologne conservatoires, with Hartmut Hoell, Rainer Hoffmann, and the late Leonard Hokanson. She then lived and worked in New York for a decade, teaching at the Juilliard School, Westminster Choir College in Princeton, and at the Manhattan School of Music.
Biography
Helen leads a varied career as a performer and teacher. Her appearances as soloist, and chamber music pianist have taken her to distinguished venues worldwide; such as festivals in Salzburg, Tanglewood, Edinburgh, Buxton and Bayreuth, and to many leading concert hall venues in Oslo, Seoul, Amsterdam, Washington D.C. New York, Paris, Prague, Los Angeles, Atlanta and Brussels, performing a broad and varied repertoire. She has collaborated with several foremost artists, such as Gerald Finley, Sally Burgess, Hilary Hahn, Raphael Wallfisch, Tom Randle, Hans-Peter Blochwitz and Cornelius Hauptmann.
Helen has recorded with the BBC London and Scotland, as well as with the Tanglewood Festival. Her solo concert programmes are created around an innovative, conversational idea, originating from her training as a professional speaker. In these concerts, she re-creates the story of composer’s lives through journals and contemporary accounts, alongside playing performances of their solo compositions. Helen has taken this programme to Japan, the U.SA and to venues around the U.K, including Fairfield Halls, London.
Helen has held teaching positions at the Julliard School, NY, Westminster Choir College, Princeton, the Manhattan School, NY and the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama, Glasgow. In addition she has led numerous master classes throughout the United States, Canada, the UK, Hong Kong, and Australia, and directed her own course of coaching for singers and pianist called “The Energy and Dynamics of Performance”.
Helen is a recipient of the ARAM, a diploma awarded by the Royal Academy of Music for the achievemnt of distinction in the music profession.
- Hilary Coates
Hilary Coates
Piano
Learn about Hilary Coates
Hilary Coates
Hilary Coates made her professional debut at the age of 19 performing Grieg’s Piano Concerto in the Royal Festival Hall at London’s Southbank Centre. She made extensive concert appearences as concerto soloist, recitalist and chamber music player in Britain as well as frequent performances on radio and television. Overseas concert tours included France, Italy, South America and Germany, the latter revisited after an outstanding success there. For several years she taught at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, before joining the staff of Trinity Laban. Her teaching is equally divided between her work there and her long-standing work with some of the most talented younger specialist pianists at Wells Cathedral School, where her students have had outstanding successes in the Audi and BBC Young Musician Competitions.
Biography
Hilary gained a scholarship, aged 16, to the Royal Academy of Music, from which she graduated with the Recital Diploma – the RAM’s top examinable award. She then continued her studies with Ilona Kabos and Maria Curcio.
Hilary has given masterclasses in recent years at conservatoires in Hong Kong, Vietnam, and Australia, as well as in various venues in the UK for the Yamaha Music Foundation.
- James Johnstone
James Johnstone
Early Keyboard Instruments
Learn about James Johnstone
James Johnstone
James Johnstone studied in London and The Hague with Jill Severs and Ton Koopman respectively. He has forged a career as a recitalist, continuo player and teacher.
Biography
As a recitalist he has performed throughout Europe as well as Israel, Colombia, Ecuador and the United States.
As a principal keyboard player for the Gabrieli Consort and Players for 17 years, he took part in some 22 landmark recordings for Deutsche Grammophon. As a member of the chamber ensemble Florilegium for 10 years he performed throughout Europe and North and South America (and was the first European to record on an 18th century organ built by the indigenous Indians in Santa Ana, Bolivia). He recorded eight solo discs of works by Blow, Gibbons, E Pasquini, Cornet, Elizabethan Virginalists and a Bach recital (on the Waalse Kerk organ, Amsterdam). He is currently principal keyboardist with Sir John Eliot Gardiner’s Monteverdi Choir.In 2016 he undertook a series of critically acclaimed Bach recordings for Metronome Recordings: Clavierübung Part III, Fantasias and Fugues, the 18 Chorales and Canonic Variations. The complete organ works of François Couperin and d’Anglebert was released in 2020. Current new releases include Bach’s Art of Fugue on harpsichord, the six violin and obbligato harpsichord sonatas with Rodolfo Richter and Volume 4 of the Bach series (Bader organ, Zutphen).
James also teaches early keyboards at the Guildhall School of Music & Drama and the Royal Academy of Music London.
- Jonathan P. Eyre
Jonathan P. Eyre
Chapel Organist
Learn about Jonathan P. Eyre
Jonathan P. Eyre
Widely regarded as a leading liturgical organist, improviser and choral director, Jonathan has been involved in music making at the Old Royal Naval College since 2016.
Biography
A prize winning graduate of The University of Sheffield, Jonathan joined Trinity Laban and the ORNC having spent four years as Sub-Organist and Assistant Director of Music at Bradford Cathedral. During his time there, he recorded numerous CDs, played for a number of high profile services, radio and television broadcasts, and gained ever increasing popularity as a liturgical and silent film improviser. His community outreach work saw engagement with over 1,000 school children in his popular ‘Peter and the Wolf’ series.
As a theatre organist, Jonathan is resident silent film artist for the Cinema Organ Society Northern District, based at the Victoria Hall, Saltaire. He features regularly at theatre venues throughout the UK as a concert and silent film artist.
As a choral director he became well-known through his work with the Bradford Cathedral Girls’ Choir, and was Master of the Choristers at Willington Prep School. Jonathan continues to work as a freelance choral conductor nationally.
- Martino Tirimo
Martino Tirimo
Piano, Chamber Music and Collaborative Piano
Learn about Martino Tirimo
Martino Tirimo
Martino Tirimo was born into a musical family in Cyprus and began piano and violin lessons with his father, a conductor and violinist. He gave his first concert at the age of six and when only twelve he conducted seven performances of Verdi’s La traviata, including soloists from La Scala, Milan. He has appeared with many of the world’s leading orchestras, including all the major British orchestras and those in Berlin, Cleveland, Dresden, Leipzig, Munich, Prague, Vienna and other centres, with conductors including John Barbirolli, Adrian Boult, John Pritchard, Kurt Sanderling, Kurt Masur and Simon Rattle.
Biography
At the age of sixteen, Martino won the Liszt Scholarship to the Royal Academy of Music, graduating with the highest honours, after which he completed his studies in Vienna. He later worked closely with Gordon Green, whom he regarded as his greatest mentor.
He has also played and directed many cycles of the five Beethoven Concertos with the Dresdner Philharmonie in Germany and at the Royal Festival Hall in London. He has often appeared with this orchestra, both as soloist and conductor. His repertoire is enormous, including 70 concertos and most of the major works of the great composers, and he has become a champion of the Tippett Concerto, which he performed several times with the composer conducting. Tirimo is particularly renowned for his Schubert interpretations, and in 1975 became the first pianist to perform a truly complete cycle of the 21 sonatas in public, with his own completions to the unfinished movements, at the Queen Elizabeth Hall. The eight CDs were released throughout 1997 and in the same season he presented six concerts at Wigmore Hall devoted to all of Schubert’s major piano works.
At the age of sixteen Martino won the Liszt Scholarship to the Royal Academy of Music, graduating with the highest honours, after which he completed his studies in Vienna. He later worked closely with Gordon Green, whom he regarded as his greatest mentor.
- Mikhail Kazakevich
Mikhail Kazakevich
Piano, Chamber Music and Collaborative Piano
Learn about Mikhail Kazakevich
Mikhail Kazakevich
Born in Gorky (Russia), Mikhail Kazakevich made his western debut at the International Schubert Competition in Dortmund, Germany, in 1991. As a result of his success there, he was engaged to play with the Dortmund Philharmonic Orchestra and also gave numerous solo recitals in Germany and France, where he was awarded a Special Prize of SACEM (France) for the performance of 20th-century music. In 1992, he came to London, where he made his debut at Wigmore Hall. Soon afterwards, Kazakevich was signed exclusively by the BMG/Conifer recording label, for which he has made numerous recordings. He has played solo and with orchestras at prestigious venues and festivals in Austria, Germany, France, Russia, Switzerland, Denmark, South Korea and the Middle East.
Biography
In the United Kingdom, he has given numerous recitals at London’s Wigmore Hall, St John’s Smith Square, the Southbank Centre, and has made many live broadcasts for BBC Radio 3. He regularly performs at the Brighton Festival and the Newbury Spring Festival. Other projects include a performance and recording of Bach’s 48 Preludes and Fugues (The Well Tempered Klavier) at St George’s, Bristol. He played with the European Chamber Orchestra and made his return concert tours to Denmark and Russia, where he performed Mozart Concertos No. 20 and No. 25 with the Philharmonic Orchestras.
Mikhail Kazakevich studied at the Gorky State Conservatoire, opened as a division of Moscow Conservatoire, from 1980-86, with the well-known pianist and teacher Isaak Katz, who was a pupil of the legendary professor Alexander Goldenweiser. After graduating with highest honours, he taught as a Professor at the conservatoire until 1992.
Mikhail has combined his intensive concert activity with teaching, which he enjoyed doing since after his graduation when he was appointed Professor at the Gorky State Conservatoire. In the UK, he taught at the Welsh College of Music and Drama (Cardiff) from 1994-96.
Currently, he is a Professor of Piano at Trinity Laban. He frequently gives Master Classes and adjudicates at the London Guildhall School of Music and Drama, the Royal Academy of Music, the Royal College of Music and the Atlantic College of Wales. His Master Classes at St George’s Brandon Hill (Bristol) is an annual event. He also gave Masterclasses in Jordan National Conservatoire, University of Aberdeen, Art Centre in Newport, where he was a member of a jury panel at the Newport International Piano Competition.
- Mikhail Shilyaev
Mikhail Shilyaev
Piano
Learn about Mikhail Shilyaev
Mikhail Shilyaev
Mikhail Shilyaev was born in Izhevsk, Russia. He started learning piano at the age of six and won several regional piano competitions at a young age. He studied in Russia in Moscow State Conservatoire, in Germany and in the UK. Mikhail has studied in Trinity Laban with Deniz Gelenbebe for his Master’s Degree.
Biography
As a soloist with orchestra, he has performed with Musikkollegium Winterthur, the London Soloists Chamber Orchestra, the Georgian Philharmonic Orchestra and with the Gulbenkian Symphony Orchestra among others.
He has worked with leading conductors including Christopher Warren-Green, Pascal Rophé, Nikoloz Rachveli and Gianluca Marcianó.
In July 2010 Mikhail won the Bronze Medal at the prestigious Vianna da Motta International Piano Competition in Lisbon.
Mikhail lives in London and plays mostly in the UK and Europe. He has been taking part in numerous festivals across Europe including Zaubersee festival in Lucerne and Suoni dal Golfo in La Spezia, Italy.
Among his chamber music partners are Boris Brovtsyn, Anastasia Kobekina and Natalie Clein. He is interested in historical performance practice and gives recitals on fortepianos.
Mikhail is also known for his collaboration with singers including Anna Gorbacheva, Nardus Williams, Yuri Yurchuk, Tuuli Takkala and Anush Hovhannisyan.
Mikhail’s repertoire stretches from early Baroque to contemporary music with its focus on J. S. Bach, Viennese classics, German romantics and Chopin.
He has recently released two critically acclaimed CDs on Toccata Classics and Stone Records. His new record made on historical Bechstein has been released by Willowhayne Records.
- Pascal Rogé
Pascal Rogé
Visiting Artist
Learn about Pascal Rogé
Pascal Rogé
Pascal Rogé exemplifies the finest in French pianism. Born in Paris, he was a student of the Paris Conservatory and was also mentored by Julius Katchen and the great Nadia Boulanger. Winner of Georges Enescu International Piano Competition and the Marguerite Long Piano competition, he became an exclusive Decca recording artist at the age of seventeen. His playing of Poulenc, Satie, Fauré, Saint-Saëns and especially Ravel, is characterised by its elegance, beauty and stylistically perfect phrasing.
Biography
Mr. Rogé has performed in almost every major concert hall in the world and with every major orchestra across the globe and has collaborated with the most distinguished conductors in history, including Lorin Maazel, Michael Tilson Thomas, Mariss Jansons, Charles Dutoit, Kurt Masur, Edo de Waart, Alan Gilbert, David Zinman, Marek Janowski, Sir Andrew Davis, Raymond Leppard and others.
One of the world’s most distinguished recording artists, Pascal Rogé has won many prestigious awards, including two Gramophone Awards, a Grand Prix du Disque and an Edison Award for his interpretations of the Ravel and Saint-Saëns concertos, along with the complete piano works of Ravel, Poulenc and Satie.
Several years ago, Mr. Rogé began a new and ambitious recording project for Onyx called the Rogé Edition. With the Vienna Radio Symphony under Bertrand de Billy, he has recently recorded two CDs of both of the Ravel Piano Concertos and the Gershwin Concerto in F and Rhapsody in Blue.
Recently, he has enjoyed playing recitals for four-hands/two-pianos with his partner in life and in music Ami Rogé. Together, they have travelled the world appearing at prestigious festivals and concert halls and recorded several CDs dedicated to the French 2 piano and 4 hands repertoire. In 2011 they gave the premiere of a newly commissioned Concerto for Two Pianos by the composer Matthew Hindson with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Vladimir Ashkenazy.
Recently chairman of the Geneva Piano competition, Pascal Rogé is also dedicated to teaching and gives regular masterclasses in France, Japan, United States and United Kingdom.
- Penelope Roskell
Penelope Roskell
Piano
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Penelope Roskell
Penelope Roskell is an extremely dedicated, inspiring teacher, who aims to guide each individual student to reach his/her full potential as a pianist- musically and technically – and as an artist in the broadest sense. She is extremely experienced in all aspects of advanced teaching, having taught at undergraduate and postgraduate level for thirty years.
She was a Professor of Piano at the London College of Music from 1982 until 1999 when she moved to Trinity College of Music. At Trinity, in addition to her piano teaching, she is involved in examining and auditioning and runs a regular class on piano pedagogy. She frequently gives masterclasses at UK and foreign conservatories and has taught regular postgraduate classes at the Royal Academy of Music.. She has been resident at many summer schools including Chetham’s and Dartington International Summer Schools, and has been on the jury for major competitions such as BBC Young Musician of the Year. Her London Advanced Piano Courses attract students from all over the world.
From 2000 to 2002 she was also Director of the EPTA Piano Pedagogy Course. She has a special expertise in the field of piano technique and is the only piano teacher in England registered with British Association for Performing Arts Medicine as dealing effectively with physical tension and injuries.
Biography
Penelope Roskell combines an international performing career with posts as Professor of Piano at Trinity Laban, and as visiting artist at Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama. She is also the author of the award-winning book The Complete Pianist: from healthy technique to natural artistry, published by Peters Edition. She has performed as soloist at major concert halls throughout Britain, including the Barbican Concert Hall, Wigmore Hall, Bridgewater Hall, Queen Elizabeth Hall and Purcell Room. She has also travelled widely throughout the world, playing in over thirty countries in Western and Eastern Europe, the United States, Africa, Asia, and the Middle and Far East. She plays and teaches a very wide range of repertoire. Her first prize at the British Contemporary Piano Competition resulted in numerous invitations to festivals of contemporary music, including eight recitals in Hans Werner Henze’s festivals in Montepulciano and Munich. Her performances of Bach, Mozart, Schubert, Schumann and Shostakovich have been particularly acclaimed. She has played Mozart Concertos with numerous orchestras, including the London Mozart Players at the Barbican Concert Hall and on tour with Sir Simon Rattle. She has also played both Shostakovich Concertos in the Queen Elizabeth Hall with the Docklands Sinfonietta. She is also a committed chamber musician and has performed with many distinguished artists. Over the last twelve fifteen years she has played piano quintets regularly with the Fitzwilliam String Quartet, and plays in the Roskell Piano Trio with the violinist and cellist from the quartet. At Trinity she founded Meridian, a piano and wind ensemble with Trinity professors. Her work with dance companies has included a season of solo performances with Twyla Tharp Dance Company at Sadlers Wells.
- Dr Aleks Szram
Dr Aleks Szram
Artistic Director
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Dr Aleks Szram
Dr Aleks Szram joined Trinity Laban’s teaching staff 15 years ago and was appointed Artistic Director in September 2024. Aleks is additionally a Reader in Performance Studies and a Senior Teaching Fellow, where he supervises creative practice PhDs. Previously, Aleks was programme leader of the BMus and Foundation programmes.
Research interests and areas of supervision:
- Piano performance
- 20th and 21st century performance practice
- Indeterminacy, aleatoric music and graph scores
- Chamber music
- Critical pedagogy
- Online and blended learning environments
Biography
As a council member of MusicHE, Aleks has been involved in recent cross-institutional campaigns to safeguard the future of music at UK conservatoires and universities. He is a QAA performing arts subject specialist assessor. He has written several articles and a book chapter on blended learning and critical pedagogy and is an external specialist at BIMM.
As a performer, Aleks specialises in performing music of the 20th and 21st Centuries and has released several albums of contemporary repertoire on the Prima Facie record label, including the Piano Concerto by Daryl Runswick, Inner Landscapes (Douglas Finch), A Land so Luminous (Kenneth Hesketh), and the album Aztec Dances with the recorder player Jill Kemp. He has recorded for Nimbus with the flautist Wissam Boustany, and given premieres of works by Frederic Rzewski, Dai Fujikura, Haris Kittos, Edward Gregson, Nicola LeFanu, Sam Hayden and David Bedford, among others.
As pianist in the ensemble Gemini, he has recorded three albums with Métier, including works by Jonathan Harvey, Sadie Harrison, Huw Watkins, Philip Grange, and the first recording of Mandala 3 by David Lumsdaine. As well as Gemini, Aleks works with Lontano, rarescale and the Continuum Ensemble. He has performed in more than forty countries over six continents, on BBC Radio 3, Classic FM, Channel 4, and Colombian and Lebanese television.
- Peter Tuite
Peter Tuite
Visiting Artist
Learn about Peter Tuite
Peter Tuite
Praised for his ‘“astonishing technical facility” (Worcester Telegram & Gazette, Massachusetts), “engaging self-assurance” (The Washington Post) and “extraordinary calculation and tonal refinement” (The Irish Times), Peter Tuite has garnered international acclaim for his recital and concerto appearances throughout the world. From acclaimed performances of Beethoven Concertos to his joint traversal of the complete fifty-two Sonatas for Keyboard by Joseph Haydn, his engagement with the music of the 18th century in particular has been widely praised.
Biography
In May 2020, concurrent with the completion of a new film of the Goldberg Variations (recorded in the Long Room Library of Trinity College Dublin) he was named Founding Fellow of the Glenn Gould Bach Fellowship awarded by the City of Weimar. As the joint creator of the Fellowship, he was appointed Founding Fellow in order to establish the Fellowship parameters, and through direct experience, to set its project milestones. He has since completed a series of innovative recordings and films exploring different perspectives on the late works of Johann Sebastian Bach – with the complete collection presented in September 2021 at a special exhibition featured in the Kessler Rooms of the State Museum of Weimar. He was afterwards named Custodian of the Fellowship in 2021.
As a concerto soloist, he has worked with many renowned conductors from Andrei Boreyko to Courtney Lewis, from Colman Pearce to Gerhard Markson – with classical concerti forming a key part of his repertoire. At the same time, as a devoted chamber musician, he has collaborated with numerous artists, from Hakan Hardenberger to the Vanbrugh String Quartet, from Pekka Kuusisto to singers such as Robin Tritschler and Claudia Boyle. He was one of the regular artists that attended the International Piano Week in Montepulciano, Tuscany, and continues to engage in innovative projects that explore the repertoire in unique and path-breaking ways. Notable amongst these, is his recent project around the Art of Fugue, scheduled for completion in 2024, which involves multiple kinds of technical innovation.
With the Canadian composer and pianist Douglas Finch, he co-founded the New Lights Festival in London in 2018 – a major festival devoted to contemporary currents in music. The festival explores ideas of newness – from unique collaborations to new compositions, from innovative performance approaches to improvisatory works. The festival has continually expanded since its inception; and for this season (2024), in addition to those performances taking place at the historic King Charles Court at the Old Royal Naval College, performances will also take place at both the Cutty Sark in Greenwich and at the Albany Theatre in Deptford.
In 2023, he also started the New Lights Forum – which involves in-depth interviews with artists and intellectuals and for which he serves as principal curator. Arising from his engagement with documentary form, he released Fugal Travels in 2020 – a contrapuntal radio documentary work which weaves together the voices of six eminent experts speaking about the music of JS Bach. The structure of the work was inspired by the six-part ricercare from the Musical Offering, using some of textures as an model for its construction.
In 2020 he became a Loubser Fellow – joining a small number of internationally acclaimed artists. While in 2022, he was appointed Lead Curator of the new digital exhibition space, PLF Projects & Artefacts. The design-faze for this new initiative has just been recently completed and is set to be unveiled in the spring of 2024. The projects and artefacts on the site are presented in both two-dimensional and three-dimensional formats; with the latter presented as a digital gallery space, where people can explore the projects in a more interactive way.
Educated at Trinity College Dublin, the University of Oxford and as a Fulbright Scholar at the Peabody Institute of the Johns Hopkins University, he subsequently went on to become Head of the Keyboard Faculty of the Royal Irish Academy of Music – one of the youngest such appointments in its 175-year history. Between 2015 and 2018, he was Head of Piano and Keyboard Instruments at Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance in London and while continuing to serve on the faculty of both these institutions, was appointed Full Titled Professor of the RIAM in June 2021.
He has given master classes around the world – from the United Kingdom to China, from Italy to Japan, from the United States to South Korea, and many other countries besides. Whilst, since 2016, he has served on numerous occasions, as External Specialist for the Royal College of Music in London and the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland in Glasgow.
From his longstanding interest in literature, he produced his first poetry collection which was highly commended in the 2015 Patrick Kavanagh Poetry Awards. In more recent years, he has developed new hybrid works, featuring poetic declamation and drama accompanied by ancient instruments. The first of these was completed in 2023 and is scheduled for its premiere in London on June 22nd, 2024.
- Rolf Hind
Rolf Hind
Visiting Artist
Learn about Rolf Hind
Rolf Hind
Rolf Hind has worked closely with living composers across a broad range of styles: from John Adams and Tan Dun, to Ligeti and Lachenmann; Xenakis and Messiaen, to Simon Holt and Judith Weir.
Born in London and now living there after studies at the Royal College of Music and Los Angeles, his career has many facets. He appears regularly at new music festivals throughout Europe: in Brussels, Oslo, Stockholm, Copenhagen, Darmstadt, Vienna, Strasbourg and Paris. He is in demand as a soloist with all the major BBC orchestras and plays regularly with the London Sinfonietta. Further afield, he has made numerous appearances, including with the Danish Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Munich Radio Orchestra, Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, the Chamber Orchestra of Europe, the South West German Radio Orchestra, the Stockholm Sinfonietta, Vienna Chamber Orchestra, and orchestras in Holland, Italy, Ireland, Norway, France, Portugal and the USA. As a performer he has had a number of concertos written for him, by Unsuk Chin (BBC National Orchestra of Wales) Poul Ruders (London Philharmonic Orchestra) Bent Sørensen (BBC Symphony Orchestra/Danish Radio) and Simon Holt (London Sinfonietta).
Biography
In his fifth appearance at the BBC Proms in 2002, he premiered a new concerto by David Sawer with the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Leonard Slatkin. Recently he has also performed concertos by Thomas Agerfeldt Olesen, Roger Smalley and Lou Harrison, and worked with high-calibre conductors including Vladimir Ashkenazy, Sir Simon Rattle, Leonard Slatkin, Andrew Davis, Markus Stenz, Oliver Knussen and Franz Welser-Möst. He has been chosen to give a recital as part of Southbank Centre’s Xenakis Weekend and was requested by Elliot Carter to play at the BBC Barbican Weekend with a programme of the composer’s choice. In 2010’s landmark performance of Lachenmann’s Ausklang at the Festival Hall with the London Sinfonietta, the composer asked specifically for Rolf to be the pianist.
Rolf played a leading role in the BBC’s Adams Festival at the Barbican in 2002, as soloist in Phrygian Gates and Grand Pianola Music conducted by the composer; the latter was reprised in 2003 at Alice Tully Hall, New York. As a result, John Adams asked him to play on his disc, Road Movies, released by Nonesuch. Rolf has also recorded for Factory Classics, Virgin, Teldec, Bridge, DaCapo and NMC records, including repertoire from Messiaen as well as works written especially for him. He also recorded the complete solo piano works of Peter Maxwell Davies for the composer’s own internet record label, MaxOpus.
Further afield, he has toured Korea, Taiwan and Cuba and made recital and concerto appearances at the Festivals of Perth (Australia) and Wellington (New Zealand). Rolf has also worked with some of the world’s greatest dancers and choreographers, including Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker at Rosas, Richard Alston and the London Contemporary Dance Theatre. In 2012 he worked with the leading Portuguese choreographer/director Rui Horta on Danza Preparata in which he plays the Sonatas and Interludes of John Cage in a “danced concert”.
In the last few years, he has developed a growing reputation as a composer. Keith Potter of The Independent called him “One of the rare examples of a performer who can make a successful career as a composer”. His piano pieces and a chamber work, The Horse Sacrifice, have been broadcast by the BBC. He wrote a score for Michael Frayn’s Copenhagen, broadcast on German radio, and was commissioned by the 2003 Huddersfield Festival for Das Unenthullte, as premiered with his regular duo partner, David Alberman. Recent commissions include Eye of Fire, which he played with The Duke Quartet, and Sunnata for five pianos and one honky-tonk, as well as a piano concerto, Maya-Sesha, for the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra. Maya Sesha, and a solo piano piece “a single hair, a jasmine petal, seven mattresses, a pea..” were both shortlisted for a British Composers Award.
In 2012, Maya-Sesha was played by the Netherlands Radio Chamber Orchestra under the baton of Sir James MacMillan, and Rolf’s largest orchestral score, The Tiniest House of Time, a concerto for accordion (James Crabb) will be premiered in the Barbican by the BBC Symphony Orchestra in November. Future plans include a work for two pianos and ensemble, and a music-theatre piece.
Rolf is a professor at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, teaching piano and composition and coaching chamber music. He has also taught at the Royal Academy of Music and regularly gives masterclasses at Dartington Summer School and throughout Britain and Europe.
In recognition of his high standing within British music, Rolf was Artistic Director of the Society for the Promotion of New Music for two years. He planned a nationwide concert series for 2005-6 on their behalf; he was also for several years the Chairman of International Society for Contemporary Musicians (ISCM) Britain. He planned a large-scale day of music for multiple pianists at London’s Roundhouse, Many Hands, in 2010’s Reverb festival.
- Sergio De Simone
Sergio De Simone
Piano
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Sergio De Simone
Sergio is currently Professor of Piano at Trinity Laban, Potenza State Conservatoire ‘Gesualdo da Venosa’ and Sesto Fiorentino Music School, where he is also Director. Sergio has been invited to give piano and chamber music masterclasses and summer courses by Split Music Academy (Croatia), Music Academy of Sarajevo (Bosnia), Perugia Music Fest (Italy), Roncofreddo in Musica (Cesena, Italy), Musica e Mare (Marina di Pietrasanta, Italy) and Luke Sorkočevića Art School, Dubrovnik (Croatia), for the Achucarro Foundation and in universities in the USA: California State University, Fresno; University of California, Santa Barbara; Southern Methodist University, Dallas. Sergio is Artistic Director of Intersezioni festival in the historical villas of Florence.
Biography
Born in Florence, Italy, Sergio De Simone is laureate of numerous international piano and chamber music competitions, including the V. Bellini International Piano Competition, the Premio Trio di Trieste International Chamber Music Competition and the Beethoven International Piano Sonata Competition (Memphis, Tennessee). Sergio has performed extensively as a soloist and chamber musician in Italy, Spain, France, Slovenia, Croatia, Hungary, Argentina, Brazil, Chile and the USA for prestigious concert societies. Examples include La Società dei Concerti in Milan, Amici della Musica in Florence, Sagra Musicale Umbra, Verdi Theater in Pisa, Maggio Musicale Fiorentino, Biennale Musica of Venice, Harris Auditorium in Memphis, Tennessee (USA), International Music Festival in Torroella de Montgrì-Barcelona, Mills College Hall in Oakland, California (USA), Settimana Musicale Chigiana, Valli Theatre in Reggio Emilia, Bellini Theatre in Catania, Winter Festival in Sarajevo, Tartini Atelier in Ljubljana and the National Theatre in Sarajevo.
He has performed as a soloist with orchestras such as the Romanian State Orchestra, Orchestra di Padova e del Veneto, Meadows Symphony Orchestra, Camerata Strumentale-Città di Prato, Orchestra Sinfonica Siciliana and Sarajevo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Solisti di Città Lirica Orchestra of Pisa and Intersezioni Festival Orchestra, conducted by Jonathan Webb, Anton Nanut, Paul Philips, Alessandro Pinzauti, Augusto Vismara, Giuseppe Camerlingo and Daniele Giorgi, amongst others. His chamber music repertoire is vast and ranges from duo to quintet. He dedicates part of his activity to contemporary music both as solo and ensemble performer. Since 2000, he has been ‘pianist in residence’ at the Chigiana Academy in Siena for the Composition Summer Course given by Azio Corghi and Giorgio Battistelli and the Film Music Course given by Academy Award winner Luis Bacalov.
Sergio De Simone graduated from the A. Boito Conservatory of Music in Parma with full marks, summa cum laude and honourable mention. His musical development was deeply influenced by the cellist of the Quartetto Italiano, Franco Rossi (with whom he studied chamber music) and by Joaquin Achucarro with whom he studied at the Chigiana Academy in Siena, (where he was awarded the Diploma of Merit as well the Guido Agosti, SIAE, and the E. Contestabile scholarships) and at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas (USA) as a recipient of the Joel Estes Tate Scholarship and where he was winner of the the Von Mickwitz Prize for Piano Performance. He also has attended masterclasses with Murray Perahia, Aldo Ciccolini, Philippe Cassard, Bruno Canino, Pier Narciso Masi and Christopher Elton.
- Steven Devine
Steven Devine
Early Keyboard Instruments
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Steven Devine
Steven combines a performing career with the post of Assistant Curator to the Finchcocks Collection, one of the principal collections of historical keyboard instruments in Europe. In 1993 he won the Broadwood Harpsichord Competition and made his London recital debut shortly afterward. Additional performances include chamber music on fortepiano with Ensemble Galant and the Fitzwilliam Quartet as well as conducting new productions with New Chamber Opera and Opera Restor’d. He went on tour to the USA, where he played the complete Brandenburg Concertos with the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment.
Biography
English conductor and historical keyboard specialist Steven Devine studied at Chetham’s School of Music and the University of Oxford.
He is Associate Musical Director of Opera Restor’d, Professor of Fortepiano at Trinity Laban and a member of the staff at Dartington International Summer School.
He has recorded four solo discs and has played on over 30 recordings with other artists. Steven is a regular continuo player with several major UK period instrument orchestras, including the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, the Academy of Ancient Music and the New London Consort. Steven has performed as conductor and soloist throughout the world; recent highlights including being pianist and director in a Mozart Concerto in London, Dublin and Manchester, as well as conducting and acting as Master of Ceremonies for Raymond Gubbay Productions at the Royal Albert Hall, Symphony Hall (Birmingham), Bridgewater Hall (Manchester) and across the rest of UK.
- Yekaterina Lebedeva
Yekaterina Lebedeva
Piano
Learn about Yekaterina Lebedeva
Yekaterina Lebedeva
Yekaterina is an innovative contemporary artist with a passion for making classical music accessible to all. Her concerts speak in more ways than one. She believes that the fusion of various arts creates a richer experience of living beauty.
Biography
Yekaterina has launched an initiative of performances that have combined music with images, dance, poetry, and film, both as solo piano or chamber music. Examples include:
- a sell-out recital in the Southbank Centre, where she used colour and light to enhance Scriabin’s music;
- a programme for the International Herald Tribune London Arts season with Rambert Dance Company performing an original choreography, contemporary music and discussions on the interplay of Soviet culture, music and politics;
- a series of concerts for piano and cello or piano and flute with a black and white film of Paris and Buenos Aires in the 1930s;
- a concert for piano and violin with live poetry;
- a series of concerts for piano, flamenco dance, and original paintings projection, with voice and flute (London, Cairo Opera House, Istanbul, Germany); and
- a concert that speaks in more ways than one: “(Im)mortality and weather changes for beginners” – classical piano music and film about change of seasons with sounds of Nature (UK).
Yekaterina Lebedeva made her performance debut in an extensive national concert series in her native Russia. In 1988 she entered the Kiev State Conservatoire in the Ukraine. There, she became in constant demand as a recitalist, performing solo and chamber concerts, and appearing at major festivals in both the Ukraine and Russia. She graduated from the Conservatoire with Distinction in 1993.
Yekaterina moved to London to establish a European base from which to develop her solo career further. In March 1998, she made a debut in the Purcell Room, invited to play as part of the SBC Young Musician’s Platform ‘FRESH’. Since then, she has appeared regularly at the Southbank Centre and abroad.
Highlights of past seasons included Schnittke’s Concerto for Piano and String Orchestra (Cairo Symphony Orchestra), sell-out return performances in the Purcell Room (Southbank Centre), and Stravinsky’s Concerto for Piano and Winds at the Athens Megaron (Orchestra of Colours, Athens). Her performing career has also taken her to France, Austria, Russia, Greece, Sicily, Turkey, Dubai and Jordan where she performed under the Patronage of HRH Prince Ali Bin Al-Hussein. Most recently, she took part in the International Forum on music performance and pedagogy in India, resulting in the recital at the most prestigious hall of New Delhi – Teen Murti Bhavan in the former residence of ex-Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru.
Yekaterina was invited to create the musical programme of the ‘Breathless’ London art season, sponsored by the International Herald Tribune. In three “stunning” concerts, she performed major classical works (with Rambert Ballet dancers and original choreography), confirmed her versatility with further concerts of contemporary global music and uncovered hidden gems of Soviet music, while discussing the relationship between music and society with the IHT European editor.
Yekaterina has launched an initiative of performances aimed at making classical music accessible and appealing to all audiences, while exploring ways of linking music with other art forms such as dance, poetry and visual arts. Most recently she has given a sold-out recital in the Southbank Centre where she used colour and light to enhance music of Scriabin according to the instructions he had left himself.
Yekaterina is teaching piano at the Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance and the Royal College of Music, as well as at the City Lit Institute in London. Her students have won many international prizes including first prize in the Concours International de Piano Lalla Meryem in Morocco, second prize in the Young Pianist of the North International piano competition in UK, first prize in the Beethoven Piano Society of Europe piano competition, second prize in the Scriabin International piano competition in Paris, second prize in Piano Talents International piano Competition in Milan, second prize in Valletta International Competition and others. Her students regularly perform at Wigmore Hall and broadcast on BBC Radio 3. A special relationship has been developing between her students and Lang Lang. Two of her students were Lang Lang Award winners and have played in the Royal Festival Hall at the ‘Lang Lang Inspires’ concert and follow-up concerts in the Purcell Room and the Queen Elizabeth Hall. Two of them have had masterclasses with him in London and at the Stowe School.
Yekaterina has been an Artistic Director of Young Virtuosi Festival in France for five years. She is a Founder and an Artistic Director of the Musical Odyssey Masterclasses in Nafplio, Greece.
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