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Beethoven Ilya Kaler Tchaikovsky Sibelius Paganini Gilels Leonid Kogan Victor Tretyakov Stern Valery Gergiev Kitayenko Mariss Jansons Jerzy Semkow Leonard Bernstein Annie Fischer Fischer Bradshaw Marvin Hamlisch Ward Marsh Gaby Casadesus Casadesus Sheridan Dresden Philharmonic Detroit Symphony Seattle Symphony Chicago Symphony Orchestra Chicago Philharmonic Symphony Center 1802 1981 1985 1986 1990 2014 2017
Video by: (http•••) (http•••) NORTHBROOK PUBLIC LIBRARY FINE ARTS FALL FINALE Sunday, January 15, 2017 2pm All-Beethoven Program Ilya Kaler, violin Susan Merdinger, piano Sonata No. 8 in G major for Piano and Violin, Op. 30 No. 3 (1802) Allegro assai Tempo di Minuetto, ma molto moderato e grazioso 7:20 Allegro vivace 16:48 ARTISTS BIOS: ILYA KALER Described by London’s Gramophone as a “magician, bewitching our ears”, Ilya Kaler is one of the most outstanding personalities of the violin today whose career ranges from that of a soloist and recording artist to chamber musician and professor. Ilya Kaler has many awards to his credit and is the only violinist to have won Gold Medals at the Tchaikovsky (1986), Sibelius (1985) and Paganini (1981) Competitions. The Washington Post lauds him as “a consummate musician, in total control at all times, with a peerless mastery of his violin.” Ilya Kaler was born in Moscow, Russia into a family of musicians. Major teachers at the Moscow Central Music School and the Moscow Conservatory include Zinaida Gilels, Leonid Kogan and Victor Tretyakov. Ilya Kaler later continued his studies under the guidance of Abram Stern. Mr. Kaler has earned rave reviews for solo appearances with distinguished orchestras throughout the world , which include the Leningrad, Moscow and Dresden Philharmonic Orchestras, Montreal Symphony, Danish and Berlin Radio Orchestras, Detroit Symphony, Baltimore Symphony, Seattle Symphony, New Japan Philharmonic and Moscow and Zurich Chamber Orchestras, among others. Kaler collaborated with a number of outstanding conductors such as Valery Gergiev, Dmitry Kitayenko, Mariss Jansons and Jerzy Semkow. His solo recitals have taken him throughout the former Soviet Union, United States, East Asia, Europe, Latin America, South Africa and Israel. One of the most sought-after teachers in the world, Ilya Kaler has served as Distinguished Professor at Indiana University School of Music in Bloomington, IN, Eastman School of Music in Rochester, NY, and is currently a Professor of Violin at DePaul University School of Music in Chicago. www.ilyakaler.com SUSAN MERDINGER Steinway Artist, Susan Merdinger has been internationally acclaimed in prestigious newspapers and journals for her stunning performances. The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung described her recital as a “daring, enormously joyous presentation which captured and transfixed the audience”. Fanfare Magazine ( March/April 2014) declared that her “Carnival” CD was “exquisitely detailed and full of life”, likening her playing to that of legendary pianists Leonard Bernstein, Annie Fischer and Nadia Reisenberg. Among her many honors, Merdinger is a First Prize Winner Bradshaw and Buono International Piano Competition, a Gold Medalist of the Global Music Awards, and Winner of the 1990 Dewar’s Young Artists Award in Music (presented by the late Marvin Hamlisch), the Artists International Young Musicians Competition, and the Artists International Distinguished Alumni Winners Prize. She is also a laureate of prestigious international piano competitions including the Harveys Leeds International (UK), and Montreal International Concours de Musique (CAN). Performing her sold-out solo recital debut at Carnegie Recital Hall at age twenty-four, Merdinger has continued to grace the stages of some of the world’s best concert halls and her performances and recordings have been broadcast on radio and television in the USA and Europe. Ms. Merdinger has been a frequent Visiting Artist of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, garnering standing ovations for her performances with the Tononi Ensemble at The Art Institute, Symphony Center and the Logan Center for the Arts. She has soloed under many distinguished conductors with numerous orchestras including the State Symphony Orchestra of Mexico, the Chicago Philharmonic, the Highland Park Strings, Rockland Symphony Orchestra, Yonkers Philharmonic Orchestra, and Metropolitan Orchestra of New Jersey. Merdinger completed her formal education at Yale University, the Yale School of Music, and the Manhattan School of Music. Her distinguished teachers included such luminaries as Constance Keene, Claude Frank, Ward Davenny, Ozan Marsh, Seymour Lipkin, and Gaby Casadesus. Susan Merdinger is a Professor of Piano (Adjunct) at Concordia University Chicago, Artist Faculty of the Summit Music Festival in New York, and Artistic Director and Founder of Sheridan Music Studio Presents, a not-for-profit organization representing Sheridan Solisti, Pianissimo!, and the Five Greenes. www.susanmerdinger.com
Dino Ciani Schumann Alfred Cortot Liszt Bartók Pleyel Claudio Abbado Beethoven Prokofiev Riccardo Muti Weber Schubert Chopin Debussy Thomas Schippers John Barbirolli Gianandrea Gavazzeni Carlo Maria Giulini Claudio Desderi Salle Pleyel Carnegie Hall Teatro Scala Chicago Philharmonic 1941 1958 1961 1962 1967 1968 1970 1972 1974
Dino Ciani (June 16, 1941 – March 28, 1974) was an Italian pianist. Ciani was born in Fiume (now Rijeka in Croatia) and studied piano with Martha Del Vecchio in Genoa. He obtained his diploma at the Conservatory in Rome at the age of 14 and later, from 1958 to 1962, attended the advanced courses of Alfred Cortot, whom he greatly revered, in Paris, Lausanne and Siena. Cortot described Ciani in most enthusiastic terms: "miraculously gifted ... one of the most remarkable examples of the rarest talents one could hope to find". Ciani's career begun when he won second prize at the Liszt-Bartók Competition in Budapest in 1961. The venues in which he performed included Salle Pleyel, Carnegie Hall and Chicago Philharmonic, Kennedy Center. He made his debut at Teatro alla Scala under the baton of Claudio Abbado with Beethoven's Fourth Piano Concerto in 1968. With Abbado he also performed Prokofiev's Fifth Piano Concerto in 1968 at RAI Auditorium in Rome (then also at La Scala) and Mozar's D minor Concerto at the Salzburger Mozarteum. Ciani also played with the young Riccardo Muti Beethoven's Choral Fantasy at La Scala and the Second Piano Concerto by Bartók at Milan RAI. His repertoire was broad and diverse for a pianist of his age. It encompassed the complete sonatas of Beethoven, works by Weber (he was the first to record the complete sonatas, in 1967), Schubert, Schumann, Chopin, Debussy and Bartók. His recordings for Deutsche Grammophon of the complete Debussy Préludes (1972), Schumann's Novelettes (1968) and Weber's second and third piano sonatas (1970) are particularly renowned. He collaborated with such conductors as Claudio Abbado, Riccardo Muti, Thomas Schippers, John Barbirolli, Gianandrea Gavazzeni and Carlo Maria Giulini. Among his last concerts were renditions of the complete set of Chopin's Nocturnes and Schubert's Winterreise with baritone Claudio Desderi. His final live performance was Beethoven's Third Concerto with Giulini in Chicago. Ciani was killed in a road accident in Rome at the age of 32. Wikipedia)
Beethoven Michaela Paetsch Paetsch Bradshaw Schubert Haydn Mozart Schnabel Sheridan Tchaikovsky Fischer Paganini Szymon Goldberg Ivan Galamian Chicago Symphony Orchestra Chicago Philharmonic Nhk Symphony Orchestra Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra Residentie Orchestra Orchestre Suisse Romande Carnegie Hall Gewandhaus 1980 1987 2018
Michaela Paetsch, violin Susan Merdinger, piano Live concert at Concordia University Chicago Chapel of Our Lord Steinway Piano Edward Ingold, Video/audio engineer Saturday January 13, 2018 Merdinger and Paestch are Alumna of the Yale School of Music Merdinger and Paetsch have recently joined forces performing as a trio and duo after not having seen each other or performed together since the artists were students at the Yale School of Music in the 1980’s. Both hailing from musical families, they share a common bond through their musical heritage and instructional lineage. Steinway Artist Susan Merdinger, who Fanfare Magazine has hailed for her “magic touch” and for keeping audiences “spellbound from first note to last”, recently performed at the Logan Center for the Arts on the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Chamber Music Series in her sixth engagement on the CSO series. Merdinger has graced the New York stages of Carnegie and Merkin, as well as many of the finest venues of Europe, Canada and Mexico, performing with orchestras such as The Chicago Philharmonic and the Symphony Orchestra of the State of Mexico. She has appeared live on radio stations such as WQXR and WFMT, as well as BBC Television in the UK, and is a First Prize Winner of the Bradshaw and Buono International Piano Competition, the Artists International Young Musicians Competition and Distinguished Artists Awards, the Dewar’s Young Musicians Award in Music, and a Gold Medal in the Global Music Awards. Merdinger is completing the entire cycle of Sonatas for Piano and Violin and Piano and Cello by Beethoven in an ongoing project for Live from WFMT. A noted interpreter of Beethoven, Schubert, Haydn and Mozart, Merdinger was fortunate to study with some of the world’s expert “Beethoven pianists” such as Claude Frank, Walter Hautzig, and Karl Ulrich Schnabel at Yale University, Manhattan School of Music and privately in New York City. Merdinger currently lives in Highland Park, IL, where she teaches privately at Sheridan Music Studio. Michaela Paetsch’s playing has been described as “gloriously charged…beguilingly velvety” (The Strad). Her captivating artistry is celebrated for the soaring vitality and the personal commitment she shows her audiences. Michaela garnered international attention and numerous awards, including first prize in the G.B. Dealey International Competition, a bronze medal in the Queen Elisabeth International Competition, and the prize for the Russian Composition by Juri Falik at the International Tchaikovsky Competition. Paetsch has performed as soloist, recitalist, and chamber musician in the major musical centers of the world, including New York’s Carnegie Hall and Avery Fischer Hall, and the Library of Congress (in Washington, D.C.). She has collaborated with major orchestras throughout the world, including the NHK Symphony Orchestra (Japan), the Philharmonics of Osaka (Japan), Seoul (Korea), Liége (Belgium) and Bergen (Norway); the National Orchestra of Belgium, the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, the Frankfurt Radio Symphony, the Residentie Orchestra, the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, and the BBC Symphony, among others. Her extensive discography began with the 1987 recording of the 24 Caprices by Niccolo Paganini for TELDEC, making her the first female performer to record the complete work. Die Zeit, a German newspaper, described the disc as a “sensation in the history of record-making.” A native of Colorado Springs, CO, Paetsch currently lives in Switzerland and concertizes throughout Europe with various ensembles, including Prima Carezza and the Paetsch Family String Ensemble. Paetsch was a protegé of Szymon Goldberg at the Yale School of Music and the Curtis Institute of Music and Ivan Galamian at the Meadowmount Music Festival.
Beethoven Michaela Paetsch Paetsch Bradshaw Schubert Haydn Mozart Schnabel Sheridan Tchaikovsky Fischer Paganini Szymon Goldberg Ivan Galamian Chicago Symphony Orchestra Chicago Philharmonic Nhk Symphony Orchestra Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra Residentie Orchestra Orchestre Suisse Romande Carnegie Hall Gewandhaus 1980 1987 2018
Michaela Paetsch, violin Susan Merdinger, piano Live from WFMT, Broadcast Live on Monday January 15, 2018 Kerry Frumkin, Host Mary Mazurek, Audio Engineer and Producer Edward Ingold, Videographer Merdinger and Paetsch have recently joined forces performing as a trio and duo after not having seen each other or performed together since the artists were students at the Yale School of Music in the 1980’s. Both hailing from musical families, they share a common bond through their musical heritage and instructional lineage. Steinway Artist Susan Merdinger, who Fanfare Magazine has hailed for her “magic touch” and for keeping audiences “spellbound from first note to last”, recently performed at the Logan Center for the Arts on the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Chamber Music Series in her sixth engagement on the CSO series. Merdinger has graced the New York stages of Carnegie and Merkin, as well as many of the finest venues of Europe, Canada and Mexico, performing with orchestras such as The Chicago Philharmonic and the Symphony Orchestra of the State of Mexico. She has appeared live on radio stations such as WQXR and WFMT, as well as BBC Television in the UK, and is a First Prize Winner of the Bradshaw and Buono International Piano Competition, the Artists International Young Musicians Competition and Distinguished Artists Awards, the Dewar’s Young Musicians Award in Music, and a Gold Medal in the Global Music Awards. Merdinger is completing the entire cycle of Sonatas for Piano and Violin and Piano and Cello by Beethoven in an ongoing project for Live from WFMT. A noted interpreter of Beethoven, Schubert, Haydn and Mozart, Merdinger was fortunate to study with some of the world’s expert “Beethoven pianists” such as Claude Frank, Walter Hautzig, and Karl Ulrich Schnabel at Yale University, Manhattan School of Music and privately in New York City. Merdinger currently lives in Highland Park, IL, where she teaches privately at Sheridan Music Studio, and is on the Piano Faculty at Concordia University Chicago in River Forest. Michaela Paetsch’s playing has been described as “gloriously charged…beguilingly velvety” (The Strad). Her captivating artistry is celebrated for the soaring vitality and the personal commitment she shows her audiences. Michaela garnered international attention and numerous awards, including first prize in the G.B. Dealey International Competition, a bronze medal in the Queen Elisabeth International Competition, and the prize for the Russian Composition by Juri Falik at the International Tchaikovsky Competition. Paetsch has performed as soloist, recitalist, and chamber musician in the major musical centers of the world, including New York’s Carnegie Hall and Avery Fischer Hall, and the Library of Congress (in Washington, D.C.). She has collaborated with major orchestras throughout the world, including the NHK Symphony Orchestra (Japan), the Philharmonics of Osaka (Japan), Seoul (Korea), Liége (Belgium) and Bergen (Norway); the National Orchestra of Belgium, the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, the Frankfurt Radio Symphony, the Residentie Orchestra, the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, and the BBC Symphony, among others. Her extensive discography began with the 1987 recording of the 24 Caprices by Niccolo Paganini for TELDEC, making her the first female performer to record the complete work. Die Zeit, a German newspaper, described the disc as a “sensation in the history of record-making.” A native of Colorado Springs, CO, Paetsch currently lives in Switzerland and concertizes throughout Europe with various ensembles, including Prima Carezza and the Paetsch Family String Ensemble. Paetsch was a protegé of Szymon Goldberg at the Yale School of Music and the Curtis Institute of Music and Ivan Galamian at the Meadowmount Music Festival.
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