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Donald E. Osborne, Director California Artists Management 564 Market Street, Suite 420, San Francisco, CA 94104-5412 415 362-2787 / fax: 415 362-2838 / Skype: calartistsdon / Email |
Susan Endrizzi Morris, Director California Artists Management P.O. Box 2479, Mendocino, CA 95460-2479 707-937-4787 / cell: 415-302-1083 / Skype: sueendrizzi / Email |
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![]() Download Bio Listen |
Elisso Virzaladze
(Updated: January 2010 – please discard any
previous versions) |
Elisso Virsaladze grew up in a family in
Tbilisi, which was for generations involved in the art and culture of Georgia.
She received her first piano lessons from her grandmother, Professor Anastasia
Virsaladze. After attending the conservatory, she left her native city and moved
to Moscow, where, at the age of twenty, she won the third prize in the
Tchaikovsky Competition.
She continued her studies in Moscow with
Heinrich Neuhaus and Yakov, gifted teachers who had not only a deep influence on
her artistic development, but also immersed her in the renowned tradition of
Russian piano pedagogy. Elisso Virzaladze is now a professor at both the Moscow
Conservatory and the Musikhochschule in Munich, where she is recognized as an
exceptional teacher whose students have won sensational distinction. She
regularly servies as a judge for the most prestigious international competitions
including the Santander, Geza Anda in Zurich, Rubinstein in Tel Aviv the
Tchaikovsky Richter competitions in Moscow.
Her deepest love is for composers of the late
18th and 19th centuries, especially Mozart, Beethoven, Chopin and Schumann. At
the age of twenty-four, she won first prize at the Schumann Competition in
Zwickau, and she has been described by the international press as one of the
great contemporary interpreters of Schumann. At the same time, she is also well
known for her wide repertoire including modern Russian composers. The Soviet
Union has honored her with its highest artistic awards.
Elisso Virsaladze performs regularly in London,
Milan, Rome, Paris, Lisbon, Berlin and Barcelona. She is known for her
partnership with the cellist Natalia Gutman with whom she has performed recently
in Spain, Belgium, Italy, the United Kingdom (London’s Wigmore Hall), the
Netherlands and Germany. In addition she served on competition juries throughout
the world, including Brussels, Japan, Busoni and Portuga. She has toured
extensively in North America, Japan and Europe in recitals, chamber music and as
guest soloist with such orchestras as the St. Petersburg Philharmonic and the
Royal Philharmonic in London. She has appeared with with the most prestigious
orchestras of France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Switzerland, Japan and the United
teste working with such conductors as Rudolf Barschai, Kyril Kondraschin,
Ricardo Muti, Kurt Sanderling, Wolfgang Sawallisch Evgeny Svetlanov, Juri
Temirkanov and Antoni Wit.
During the 2009 season Elisso Virzaladze
performed concerti of Brahms, Beethoven and Mozart throughout Europe and Russia
and gave numerous recitals and chamber music concerts. Some of her most renowned
recordings have been released on the Live Classics label offering a wide
perspective into her musical personality.
Critical acclaim for
Elisso Virzaladze:
“Elisso is an
unforgettable Schumannist.
Elisso is an
artist of great distinction, perhaps the greatest woman pianist of our time.
She is a serious, deeply sincere and unpretentious musician. Also, she
comes from an old noble family, which can be heard in her playing. She
impresses me in every respect.
Can one imagine a more beautiful Schumann than Elisso
offered us this evening? I haven’t heard such Schumann since Neuhaus.”
Sviatoslav Richter:
In
Bruno Mansaingeon,
Richter, Ecrits, conversations
Van de Velde, Arte Editions, Actes Sud 1998
Soloist with the O rquesta Sinfónica de Galicia, Carlo Ricci, conductor:
“Elisso Virzaladze gave a
fine concert performance of the Piano Concerto No. 3 by Beethoven. The Russian
interpreter, born Georgia, showed her impeccable technique, with a clean and
clear fingering, and a dynamic control of delicate nuance perfectly coordinated
with the conductor. Her version was
full of musicality, highlighted by her elegant phrasing and a beautiful use of
rubato, being filled with the basic logic that each note must have meaning in
relation to the one preceding and following it. The concerto was a climax of
emotion. Overwhelming.”
El Pais – January 18, 2010
It was an exemplary
performance, imbued by the Italian conductor Carlo Rizzi, a frequent guest who
always delivers professional sound and absolutely correct delivery. This time,
he effectively made a concerted effort in the Beethoven to lean on the expertise
of the great Georgian pianist, who had last visited us in December 2005, who
gave a wonderful interpretation of the Beethoven concerto and offered as an
encore a mazurka by Chopin.”
La Opinion Coruña – January 17, 2010
“Yuli Turovsky
seems to enjoy good relations with his fellow former citizens of the Soviet
Union. On Wednesday he brought Elisso Virsaladze, a Georgian-born pianist who
studied in Moscow with the likes of
Heinrich Neuhaus and Yakov Zak, to play Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 3 with I
Musici de Montréal in Théâtre Maisonneuve of Place des Arts. The famous Russian
school is no fable. This was wonderfully vivid playing, firm without sounding
percussive and positive without sounding loud. The Largo movement had an honest
sort of solemnity and the outer movements were brimming with keen expressive
touches. Virsaladze and Turovsky repeated the finale as an encore.”
Montreal Gazette, January 25, 2008
Gala Concert: 300 Years of St. Petersburg,
Euroarts DVD
2053408:
“I found
Elisso Virsaladze's Ravel Left-hand Concerto a breath-taking experience. Her
interpretation was one of the finest I've ever heard, perhaps surpassed only by
the Browning-Leinsdorf recording from around 1960. I hope to hear more from
Virsaladze, who has made a number of recordings of works by Chopin, Beethoven,
Prokofiev and others. She plays with a nearly perfect marriage of technique and
feeling here, and is abetted brilliantly by the young conductor Nikolai
Alekseev.”
Classical.net 2006