Tuesday, December 8, 2015




LINCOLN CENTER

Alice Tully Hall
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center

  • Konstantin Lifschitz - Piano
Frescobaldi - Toccatas Nos. 1 and 2 in G minor from Primo libro di toccate
 for Keyboard (1615)
Frescobaldi - Toccata No. 5 in G major from Secondo libra for Keyboard (1627)
L. Couperin - Chaconne et Passacaille in C major for Keyboard
Rameau - Six Selections for Keyboard
J.S. Bach - Partita No. 2 in C minor for Keyboard (1731)
F. Couperin - Ordre No. 7 in G major for Keyboard (1716-17)
Scarlatti - Fourteen Sonatas for Keyboard


A site with a video explaining more about the artist...

Well, tonight was a moment.  The pianist was truly gifted.  Every time we think we've climbed the mountain of hearing the best the world has to offer, a new artist (to us) presents and raises the altitude of the mountain a little higher.

After two hours of recital he played the Bach Chaconne for the left hand alone and amazed everyone attending.

Below is another artist playing this piece.  What we heard this evening was as good or better.

Bach's Chaconne for left hand alone...

Lipschitz studies under Leon Fleisher who was tragically reduced to playing only with his left hand. I think this was a tribute to Fleisher.

About Leon Fleisher...





Konstantin Lifschitz was born in 1976 in Kharkov. Already at the age of 5 he began his studies at the Gnessin Special Music School in Moscow, where Tatiana Zelikman was his teacher. He furthered his studies in Russia, England and Italy under such musicians as Alfred Brendel, Leon Fleisher or Charles Rosen.  
Since his debut in Moscow, Lifschitz has performed with famous orchestras e.g. the New York Philharmonic, Chicago Symphony Orchestra or the London Symphony under conductors including Mstislav Rostropovich, Sir Neville Marriner, Bernard Haitink, Sir Roger Norrington, Mikhail Yurovsky, Marek Janowski, Andrey Boreyko, Vladimir Spivakov, Yury Temirkanov, Dmitry Sitkovetsky, Alexander Rudin. He also performs solo recitals at major festivals and in the most important concert halls worldwide.
As a passionate chamber musician, Konstantin Lifschitz has collaborated with such artists as Patricia Kopatchinskaja, Gidon Kremer, Maxim Vengerov, Leila Josefowicz, Misha Maisky, Mstislav Rostropovich, Lynn Harrell, Carolin Widmann, Natalia Gutman, Jörg Widmann, Sol Gabetta, Vadim Repin, Eugene Ugorski, Alexander Rudin, Dmitry Sitkovetsky.  
His recording of Ludwig van Beethoven complete Violin Sonatas with Daishin Kashimoto, the concertmaster of the Berliner Philharmoniker, was released by Warner Classics in January 2014.  
Konstantin Lifschitz's diverse repertoire is reflected through his numerous discography, which includes Bach Musical Offering, Gottfried von Einem Piano Concerto with the ORF- Symphony Orchestra (Vienna Radio) under Cornelius Meister, Brahms Second Piano Concerto and Mozart Piano Concerto KV 456 under Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, as well as Bach Art of Fugue, which has been an important focus of his work over the years. Konstantin won the German award Echo Klassik already with his debut recording, featuring Music by Bach, Schumann, Medtner and Scriabin.  
In 2008, a live recording of Lifschitz's performance of Bach Well-Tempered Clavier (Books I and II) at the Miami International Piano Festival was released on DVD by VAI. Many of his CDs have reaped exceptional reviews. He has recorded all seven keyboard concertos of J.S. Bach with the Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra, leading from the piano; he also appears more and more as a conductor with such ensembles as the Philharmonic Chamber Orchestra Wernigerode, St. Christopher Chamber Orchestra Vilnius, Musica Viva Moscow, Lux Aeterna and Gabreli Choir Budapest, Moscow Virtuosi, Solisti di Napoli Naples, Dalarna Sinfonietta Falun or Chamber Orchestra Arpeggione Hohenems. In February 2015, he will be collaborating with the Century Orchestra Osaka on an all-Mozart program, to be performed in Osaka Izumi Hall.  Konstantin Lifschitz is a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Music in London and has been appointed a professor of the Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts since 2008.






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