Premieres


b i o g r a p h y
p r e s s
r e p e r t o i r e

p h o t o s
r e c o r d i n g s

p r e m i e r e s
c o n t a c t s



 

Although Julia Zilberquit performs a wide range of works that includes some of the most beloved masterpieces of the piano concerto repertoire, she has developed something of a specialty in presenting rarities: works that have not been performed much. By creating her own arrangements of glorious works by J.S. Bach and Antonio Vivaldi as well as Dmitri Shostakovich, she has enriched the piano repertoire. She even recently rediscovered a neglected wonder: an early and almost forgotten piano concerto by the great Ludwig van Beethoven.

The following works--by Bach-Vivaldi,Beethoven,Shostakovich, Slonimsky, and various composers of bagatelles--could present the opportunity of being a premiere in your country or at least city.

 

 

 

 

Reborn Treasures

Vivaldi-Bach

Concerto in A minor, Op. 3, No. 8
Concerto in D minor, Op. 3, No.11

In the vast legacy of Antonio Vivaldi, the genre of the instrumental concerto, of which he is considered one of the creators, holds a prominent place. Vivaldi composed over 400 concertos for solo instruments with an orchestra.  For some inexplicable reason, there is not a single concerto for solo clavier (cembalo) with orchestra among them. Julia Zilberquit has orchestrated two works—the Concerto Grosso in A minor for Two Violins and String Orchestra (RV 522) and the Concerto Grosso in D minor for Two Violins and Cello with String Orchestra (RV 565)—in 1999 which fill this gap.

For the orchestra employed in her arrangements, Ms. Zilberquit turned to Vivaldi’s own orchestrations by Vivaldi himself; for the solo piano part, she looked to arrangements of the two concertos prepared by J.S. Bach for an organ solo (currently known as the Concertos for Organ by Bach-Vivaldi in A minor and D minor (BWV 596 and BWV 593). The orchestrator/pianist points out such arrangements follow the common Baroque practice music of transcribing works for performance by different instruments. It is well known that Bach himself strongly believed in this practice; he arranged his own concertos for performance both by solo string instrument and orchestra as well as a keyboard instrument and orchestra: Bach's Violin Concertos in A Minor and E major were examples of this, also existing in his own transcriptions as the Keyboard Concertos in G Minor and D major. Both versions of these works have become treasures in both the violin and piano concerto repertoire.

Ms. Zilberquit’s transcriptions of these two works can be heard on a CD in which she performs them with the Moscow Virtuosi, issued in 2003 by the U.S.-based Musical Heritage Society.

 

Beethoven

Piano Concerto in E flat Major, WoO4

Beethoven composed his Piano Concerto in E-flat Major, WoO 4 during his early years in Bonn: he was only 14 when he wrote it, presumably for himself to play with the Bonn court orchestra. The work has survived only in a copyist’s manuscript of the solo piano part; however, this part also includes Beethoven’s own reduction of the orchestral passages, and an indication that the orchestral forces to be utilized (two flutes, two horns and strings). Based on this manuscript, the Swiss musicologist Willy Hess reconstructed of the piece. His version was published in 1939, first performed by the pianist Edwin Fischer in 1943, and issued in a revised edition in 1961 which includes a first-movement cadenza that reflects ideas by Edwin Fischer, and one in the second movement based on a passage which Beethoven cut from the manuscript.

This early concerto is of considerable historical interest in that it was written before any of Mozart’s piano concertos had been published—in fact, before the most famous ones were even written—and so in the early days of the development of the classical keyboard concerto. In his foreword to the Eulenburg edition of the work, Hess wrote that “the young composer must have been decisively influenced by Johann Christian Bach and the south German school, for it abounds in joyous melodies reminiscent of folk song and folk music.” The work also provides a glimpse into Beethoven’s considerable prowess as a child prodigy, not only as a composer but also as a pianist: the piano part is almost exclusively concerned with virtuoso figuration, much of it extremely demanding. 

Although the authenticity of this particular Concerto has never been doubted (unlike some of Beethoven’s other compositions), and despite the extraordinary value it holds in understanding the development of both Beethoven’s own work as well as the piano concerto as a genre, the Concerto in E-flat Major is all but unknown, not only to the lay public but also to most professional musicians. As it has never been performed on most of the world’s stages, it could provide a real sensation in enhancing the comprehension of Beethoven’s creative oeuvre. This early concerto deserves to assume a place of honor in the Viennese Classical concerto repertoire not due to its historical interest but, most importantly, its musical value.

 

DSCH JOURNAL LOGO

Shostakovich

Concertino in A minor, Op. 94

Shostakovich created his A-minor Concertino as a duet for two pianos (1953). In 1996 Julia Zilberquit transcribed it for piano and chamber orchestra, and composed her own cadenza for it. As she recalls

“A long time after I prepared my transcription of Shostakovich’s Concertino I met Maxim Shostakovich, the composer's son, a pianist and the work’s dedicatee. Maxim approved both the idea of an arrangement as well as my execution of it, adding that his father had first conceived of the work as a piano concerto, but for some reason changed his mind. I was happy to know that.”

Julia Zilberquit has performed as a soloist in the Concertino in France, Israel, Poland, Russia, Ukraine, Canada and the United States, including an appearance Carnegie Hall in New York: to countries and cities not on this tour the work would be a premiere. Her performance of it can be heard on Hommage a Shostakovich, a CD featuring the Moscow Virtuosi conducted by Vladimir Spivakov, released in 1997 on the MusicMasters Classics label.

To see the critical response to Julia Zilberquit's performance of Shostakovich Concertino, click here

 

New Piano Concerto

Sergei Slonimsky

The Jewish Rhapsody

Born in 1932, Sergei Slonimsky is the nephew of the well-known American composer and dictionary compiler Nicholas Slonimsky, and gained worldwide fame recently through the great success of Mstislav Rostropovich's  production of his opera, Ivan Grozny (“Ivan the Terrible”). Even before that, the New York public applauded his music when Yuri Temirkanov opened his program at Carnegie Hall with one of his symphonic works.

One of Russia's greatest modern-day composers, Slonimsky belongs to the generation of "out-of-favor" composers that include Alfred Schnittke, Sofia Gubaidullina, Aarvo Päart and Gia Kancheli, all of whom suffered under the Soviet regime for their desire to experiment and to use a modern style in their work. Slonimsky is extraordinarily versatile; there is probably not a single genre in which he has not written. The Soviet-born American pianist Julia Zilberquit approached him with the idea of writing a Concerto for Piano and Orchestra, a genre which had in recent years had fallen out of favor with today’s composers.

The result was The Jewish Rhapsody, a three-movement concerto for piano, flute, strings and percussion in 1997. While Slonimsky does not use authentic “Jewish” melodies, the work is permeated with Jewish inflections, ranging from ones reminiscent of ancient Hebrew chants to the characteristic twists of klezmer music. It contains equal measures of virtuoso fragments and philosophical, even tragic ones. Another of its distinguishing characteristics is its theatricality: it can be experienced as a kind of stage performance.

The Jewish Rhapsody was premiered in the Grand Hall of the Moscow Conservatory by the Moscow Chamber Orchestra, conducted by 2003 Grammy Award nominee Constantine Orbelian, and Julia Zilberquit as the piano soloist. Her performance of it can be heard on a CD released in January 2000 on the Harmonia Mundi/Le Chant du Mundi label.

To see the critical response to Julia Zilberquit's performance of Slonimsky The Jewish Rhapsody, click here

 

The Mystery of Bagatelles

A Recital Program

This innovative and unique program traces the development of the bagatelle from the 18th though the 20th centuries, featuring music by Couperin, Beethoven, Saint-Saëns, Liszt, and Bartók, as well as the Russian composers Anatoli Lyadov, Alexander Tcherepnin and Edison Denisov.

Although the definition of the word bagatelle is "trifle," this program reveals the remarkable character and drama that infuses these works, as much as those in other musical genres. While Beethoven’s bagatelles may be quite familiar, those by other composers are performed less frequently, to the point of almost being unknown. This recital program reflects the great diversity in which these very different composers treated them.

Beethoven’s bagatelles, among them Für Elise, are easily the most famous examples of this genre. Composed as cycles at three different stages of his career, these miniatures reflect many features of his style: the rich imagery, vivid and colorful melodies, and versatile texture. Saint-Saëns’ bagatelles were composed as two three-pieces cycles, and reflect influence of such giants of romanticism as Chopin, Schumann, Brahms, and Liszt, whose own Bagatelle is on the program. Taken together, the bagatelles by Lyadov, Tcherepnin, and Denisov trace the development of Russian musical languages as well as plumb that nation’s poetry and folklore.

This program offers these masterpieces and more, making a concert of “mere bagatelles” an evening of wonderful music and delightful surprise.

To see the critical response to Julia Zilberquit's performance of Bagatelles,click here