Valentina Igoshina Explained

Valentina Igoshina
Background:non_vocal_instrumentalist
Birth Date:4 November 1978
Birth Place:Bryansk, Bryansk Oblast, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Origin:Russia
Instrument:piano
Genre:classical
Occupation:classical pianist
Label:Warner Classics International

Valentina Igoshina (born 4 November 1978 in Bryansk, Bryansk Oblast) is a Russian classical pianist. She has won several international piano competitions.

Biography

Valentina Igoshina began studying piano with her mother,[1] and first took lessons at home at the age of four. At the age of twelve she began attending the Moscow Central School of Music for gifted students and became a pupil of Sergei Dorensky and Larissa Dedova at the Moscow Tchaikovsky Conservatory.[2]

Igoshina has also served as a teacher of piano at the Moscow Tchaikovsky Conservatory in Moscow. Currently she is a professor at the Royal Conservatory of Brussels and at the Conservatoire Maurice Ravel in Paris. She has lived in France for the past two decades, and travels extensively for concerts and recitals.[3]

Professional accomplishments

In 1993, at age 14, she won first prize at the Arthur Rubinstein Piano Competition in Bydgoszcz, Poland.[4] In 1997, at age 18, she won first prize and a special award at the famed Rachmaninov International Piano Competition in Moscow.[5] In 2000, she was given an honorable mention at the XIV International Chopin Piano Competition.

Igoshina has also competed in four other worldwide piano competitions:

Igoshina appears on the list of great women pianists as compiled at forte-piano-pianissimo.com.[8]

Festival and major orchestral appearances

Igoshina has been invited to play with many notable orchestras, among them:

Igoshina has appeared on multiple occasions with several of the foregoing orchestras. Additionally, she worked both in Russia and Italy with Alexander Vedernikov during his tenure at the Bolshoi Theatre. She has performed in the Great Hall of Moscow Conservatory. Igoshina has also appeared with orchestras in Kraków, Poland; Sacramento, California; Gdansk, Poland; St. Louis, Missouri (Robert Hart Baker conducting); Saint-Etienne, France; Tokyo, Japan; Moscow, St Petersburg, and Bryansk in Russia; Sofia, Bulgaria; Budapest, Hungary (Izaki Masahiro conducting); and many other venues. She has often served as a judge of piano competitions at venues throughout Europe and elsewhere.

She has also participated in numerous recitals and musical festivals; a few are listed as follows:

Recordings

Igoshina has made live recordings on BBC Radio 3, ABC Classic FM, and BBC Scotland, as well as the sound tracks for Tony Palmer's movies The Harvest of Sorrow (also working on the project were Valery Gergiev and Mikhail Pletnev)[9] and The Strange Case of Delphina Potocka. She played one of the leading roles in the latter film.[10]

In 2006 Warner Classics International produced an album entitled Valentina Igoshina, wherein she played works by Modest Mussorgsky and Robert Schumann. Included on the album were Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition and Schumann's Carnaval.

In 2008 Igoshina recorded a work of the waltzes of Frédéric Chopin. The album, entitled was chosen by Classic FM Magazine as its November 2008 "Disc of the Month". It was produced by Lontano Music and distributed by Warner Classics International.[11]

In October 2010 Igoshina recorded Dmitri Shostakovich's First and Second Piano Concertos with the Deutsche Kammerakademie Neuss-am-Rhein (near Düsseldorf), and the work is distributed by Warner Classics International. Also in 2010, she appeared in another of Tony Palmer's productions, entitled Valentina Igoshina Plays Chopin. A review by the Los Angeles Times stated, "After this you will never be able to hear the music of Chopin in the same way again."

In 2013 RS Real Sound Productions' 'EXcellence' Series recorded Igoshina playing "Corelli Variations" and "Preludes" by Sergei Rachmaninov and Frédéric Chopin respectively.

In 2018 Antes Edition released Kammermusik für Flöte und Klavier with Igoshina and Junko Ukigaya, which featured music of Antonín Dvořák, Sergei Prokofiev and César Franck.

Many of Igoshina's performances can be seen on YouTube, including Chopin's Fantaisie Impromptu and Liszt's Liebesträume. Her performances have exceeded a million views on that medium. Igoshina speaks fluent English, French and Russian.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Piano 2003: Laureats . Queen Elisabeth Piano Competition . cypres-records.com . 2009-12-27.
  2. Web site: Valentina Igoshina biography . 10 February 2008 . Valentina Igoshina . 2009-12-27.
  3. Web site: Academic Staff: Valentina Igoshina . Moscow P. I. Tchaikovsky Conservatory . 2009-12-27 . December 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090614004625/http://www.mosconsv.ru/english/teachers/about.phtml?140 . 2009-06-14 . dead .
  4. Web site: Laureaci konkursu. International Competition for Young Pianists Authur Rubinstein in Memoriam. The Arthur Rubinstein State Music Schools. 29 January 2009. 2012-12-19.
  5. Web site: Biography. Valentina Igoshina. 2012-12-19.
  6. Web site: Barili's Legacy: Atlanta's International Piano Competition welcome, despite questionable outcome . Brown . Keely . 22 May 2002 . Creative Loafing . 2009-12-27 . Atlanta, Georgia .
  7. Web site: Artist biography: Valentina Igoshina . 2008 . Warner Classics . 2009-12-27 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090125082217/http://warnerclassicsandjazz.com/artistbiography.php?artist=8017 . 2009-01-25 . dead.
  8. Web site: Great Women Pianists. forte-piano-pianissimo.com. 2012-12-19.
  9. Web site: Skandynawskie melodie . 19 February 2004 . Polish Gazeta . pl . 2009-12-27.
  10. Web site: Women Pianists on Video . 29 April 2003 . Women at the Piano . 2021-05-04 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180815202832/http://www.pianowomen.com/video.html . 2018-08-15 . dead.
  11. Record Box. A Lovely Recital. Valentina Igoshina Plays Chopin . Anderson . Robert . 10 September 2008 . Music and Vision Magazine . 2009-12-27.