VLADIMIR FELTSMAN

Vladimir Feltsman

'Vladimir Feltsman' (, ''Vladimir Oskarovič Felitsman''; born in January 8, 1952, Moscow) is a Russian-born, naturalized in USA pianist of Jewish origin. His father is Russian composer Oscar Feltsman well-known in the Soviet Union mostly due to his popular songs and musical comedies.
Vladimir Feltsman was born in Moscow in 1952 and developed his love for music at a young age. His public debut was at the age of 11, when he performed as a soloist with the Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra. He won first prize at the Concertina International Competition in Prague at 15, an award that later led him to enroll in the Moscow Conservatory. After winning first prize at the Marguerite Long Competition in Paris (1971), he felt he was ready to perform with the major Soviet orchestras and at music festivals in the USSR. During this time, Feltsman performed recitals in Eastern Europe, France, Italy, Belgium and Japan.
In the summer of 1987, Feltsman arrived in the United States after finally receiving permission to leave the Soviet Union. The PBS television documentary ''Journey From Home: Vladimir Feltsman'' in Moscow recounts his return to Moscow after being banned from the concert halls and a heartfelt reunion with his parents. He has also been seen on such national television programs as 60 Minutes, CBS This Morning, the Today Show, PBS' Live from Lincoln Center and The McLaughlin Group.
Since his arrival in the United States, Vladimir Feltsman has performed with all the major American orchestras as well as the London Symphony Orchestra and the NHK of Japan. During the 1996-97 season, he performed with the New York Philharmonic under the direction of conductor Kurt Masur. He also worked with conductors Dennis Russell Davies, Andre Previn and Zubin Mehta. Aside from doing live concerts and recitals, Feltsman has also made several recordings. On the MusicMasters label, he has made five CDs of the music of Johann Sebastian Bach, including the Art of Fugue, and a disc of the final Beethoven sonatas, Op. 109, 110 and 111. His recordings also include a live 1991 performance at the Moscow Conservatory of the Goldberg Variations and a release in April 1996 titled The Well Tempered Clavier Book II. Feltsman's repertoire concentrates on music from the but does not fail to include other new genres. Particularly, Feltsman has performed some works of modern Russian composers as Alfred Schnittke (who dedicated his first piano sonata to Feltsman) and Nikolai Karentnikov.

''Vladimir Feltsman is clearly one of the supreme Bach keyboard exponents of our time.'' - Lawrence A. Johnson. / Chicago Tribune, May 19, 1999


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