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INTERNATIONAL PIANO-E-COMPETITION
ANNOUNCES FIELD OF 24 COMPETITORS FOR 2004
Yamaha Technology Lets the Publicand
the JudgesListen in from Afar
MINNEAPOLIS, MN (April 23, 2004)The International
Piano-e-Competition has announced the slate of 24 young musical
artists who will compete for top honors from May 25 to June 5 at
Hamline University in St. Paul, MN. Representing 15 nationalities
and ranging in age from 15 to 32, the competitors will vie to succeed
Mei-Ting Sun, who won the first International Piano-e-Competition
in 2002 at age 21.
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Tatiana
Kolessova from Russia was 17 years old when she won 5th prize
and $5,000 in the inaugural Piano-e-Competition in 2002. This
spring, she and 23 other young artists will try for the Grand
Prize.
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The complete list of contestants is attached. More information
about each artist, and about the competition itself, is available
online at www.piano-e-competition.com.
"The first International Piano-e-Competition in 2002 was a
wonderful experience, and with the quality of young artists in this
year's competition, we look forward to matching that success at
a minimum," says competition founder, president and artistic
director Alexander Braginsky.
The biennial event is distinguished for both its quality and its
technical sophistication. International authority Gustav Alink ranked
the inaugural International Piano-e-Competition among the top 30
piano competitions in the world in his book Piano Competitions
Worldwide.
What makes it completely unique, however, is the ability of Yamaha
Disklavier technology to record and later transmit the competitors'
performances over the Internet. The Disklavier is a concert-quality
piano with a built-in system to record live performances as MIDI
(Musical Instrument Digital Interface) data and recreate them from
disk using the same hammers and strings a live artist plays, with
every nuance delivered faithfully.
This method was used to select the 24 final contestants from 60
artists who were invited, based upon performance recordings at live
screening auditions in December 2003 in Hamamatsu, Japan; Paris,
France; Los Angeles, CA and New York, NY.
The contestants' audition performances were digitally videotaped
and recorded as MIDI data on a Yamaha Disklavier concert grand piano
at each of the respective audition sites. In early January 2004,
a six-member screening panel judged the contestants' performances
using another Disklavier and a large projection video screen at
Sundin Hall at Hamline University in Minneapolis, where the Recital
and Final Rounds will take place this spring. This is the first
time in the history of piano competitions that a screening round
was successfully completed with the "live" contestants
not actually present.
In addition, members of the general public will be able to download
and hear the Audition, Recital and Final Round performances as MIDI
files on their own computers from the e-competition home page. In
the final round of the 2002 competition, acclaimed pianist Yefim
Bronfman even participated as a remote "e-judge" from
Tokyo, Japan using this method.
This year's jury for the Recital and Final Rounds in Minneapolis-St.
Paul will be chaired by Menahem Pressler of the United States, and
will include Dmitri Bashkirov of Russia, Gyorgy Sandor of the U.S.,
Sontraud Speidel of Germany, Maria Tipo of Italy, Dubravka Tomsic
of Slovenia and Liqing Yang of China.
In addition to a cash award of $25,000, the first-prize winner
of this year's International Piano-e-Competition will receive a
Yamaha DC3A 6' 1" Disklavier polished ebony grand piano, a
Spring 2005 New York City Debut Recital at Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln
Center sponsored by Yamaha Corporation of America, a CD issued on
the Ten Thousand Lakes label, a Yamaha PianoSoft recording for the
Yamaha Disklavier reproducing piano and engagements with the Dame
Myra Hess Memorial Concert in Chicago, IL; the Minnesota Orchestra;
the Schubert Club and the Richmond Symphony Orchestra. The second-
through sixth-prize winners will receive cash prizes as well.
Two years after the 2002 competition, its participants continue
to make their mark around the world. After a busy international
touring schedule, Sun returned to Hamline Universitys Sundin
Music Hall in St. Paul, MN for a benefit concert on March 5, 2004.
Petronel Malan, a special prize winner in the 2002 competition,
was recently nominated for three Grammy® Awards, including Best
Solo Album.
For more information about Yamaha pianos, write Yamaha Corporation
of America, Piano Division, P.O. Box 6600, Buena Park, CA 90622-6600;
email infostation@yamaha.com;
visit www.yamaha.com or telephone (714) 522-9011.
2004 International Piano-E-Competition Contestants
| Name |
Age |
Nationality |
Residence |
| Murad Adigezalzade |
30 |
Azerbaijan |
Azerbaijan |
| Marouan Benabdallah |
21 |
Hungary / Morocco |
Hungary |
| Ilya Blinov |
28 |
Russia |
Russia |
| Jie Chen |
18 |
China |
United States |
| Ekaterina Danilowa |
23 |
Russia |
Germany |
| Denis Evstioukhine |
23 |
Russia |
Russia |
| Inna Faliks |
25 |
Ukraine |
United States |
| Grace Fong |
25 |
United States |
United States |
| Kook Hee Hong |
24 |
South Korea |
United States |
| Brenda Huang |
31 |
China |
United States |
| Judy Huang |
30 |
Taiwan |
United States |
| Tatiana Ivleva |
25 |
Russia |
Russia |
| Tanya Karyagina |
24 |
Kazakhstan |
United States |
| Benjamin Kim |
20 |
United States |
United States |
| Tatiana Kolessova |
19 |
Russia |
Russia |
| Konstantin Krasnitsky |
28 |
Belarus |
Belarus |
| Ko-Eun Lee |
18 |
South Korea |
United States |
| Jia Ran |
15 |
China |
People's Rep. of China |
| Elizabeth Schumann |
22 |
United States |
United States |
| Hanna Shybayeva |
25 |
Belarus |
Holland |
| Yevgeny Sudbin |
24 |
Germany |
United Kingdom |
| Inesa Synkevych |
27 |
Israel |
United States |
| Nino Ushikishvili |
32 |
Georgia |
United States |
| Yung Wook Yoo |
26 |
South Korea |
United States |
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