Artists
Performers
Feinberg, Alan [Piano]



Alan Feinberg [Piano] Alan Feinberg has achieved a remarkable reputation as a vanguard pianist and musician who has charted his own unique path in music. His intelligence, integrity and affinity for an unusually wide range of repertoire place him among those few artists who are able to build a bridge between music of the past and present. With repertoire that ranges from Bach to Babbitt, Mr. Feinberg's creative approach to programming places contemporary music within a broad framework as part of an ongoing, living tradition.
In October 1998, Mr. Feinberg performed the world premiere of the recently-discovered "Emerson" Piano Concerto by Charles Ives, with Christoph von Dohnanyi and the Cleveland Orchestra. He performed it again with them on tour in Paris. Recent concerts also included Amy Beach's Concerto at the Chautauqua Festival, Gershwin's Second Rhapsody with the American Symphony in Avery Fisher Hall in New York, Oscar Levant's Concerto with the American Composers Orchestra in Carnegie Hall, Messiaen's Oiseaux exotiques with the New World Symphony, and Ravel's G Major Concerto with the Syracuse Symphony. Other major collaborations have included a tour with the Cleveland Orchestra and Christoph von Dohnanyi, performing Shulamit Ran's Concert Piece for Piano and Orchestra and Brahms' Concerto No. 2 in New York, Boston, Cleveland, San Francisco and other cities. At Lincoln Center, with the American Symphony Orchestra, he performed Leo Ornstein's Piano Concerto, and has also performed the world premiere of Andrew Imbrie's Fourth Piano Concerto, and John Cage's Piano Concerto. He appeared with the New York Philharmonic performing Poulenc's Concerto for Two Pianos with Ursula Oppens; with the Los Angeles Philharmonic playing Gershwin's Concerto in F, and with Charles Dutoit and the Montreal Symphony performing Berg's Chamber Concerto. He was chosen by John Adams to perform the piano score of Nixon In China featured on a PBS special of the Opera. Abroad, where he enjoys an outstanding reputation, he has performed with the London Philharmonia, BBC, Scottish Symphony, BBC's Musica Nova Festival, the festivals of Edinburgh, Bath, Cambridge, Geneva, and Berlin, and at Italy's International Festival of Brescia and Bergamo, and the Budapest Autumn Festival.
In 1997, Alan Feinberg received his third Grammy Award nomination for his recording of Morton Feldman's Palais di Mari and Charles Wuorinen's Capriccio, Bagatelle and Third Sonata. Mr. Feinberg's Decca/Argo series, "Discover America," brings together works by George Gershwin, Louis Moreau Gottschalk, Henry Cowell, Conlon Nancarrow, Jelly Roll Morton, James B. Johnson, Percy Grainger, Fats Waller Artis Wodehouse, Scott Joplin, Charles Ives, Charles Wuorinen, Willie "The Lion" Smith, Duke Ellington, and others. Other recordings by Alan Feinberg are the Grammy-nominated Babbitt Piano Concerto (New World Records), Morton Feldman's Piano and Orchestra with Michael Tilson Thomas and the New World Symphony, and Amy Beach's Piano Concerto with John Nelson and the New World Symphony, Ligeti's Horn Trio (Bridge Records), works by Steve Reich and John Adams (EMI/Angel and Nonesuch), and Paul Bowles' Piano Concerto (Catalyst).
Mr. Feinberg has over 200 premieres to his credit, among them Mel Powell's Pulitzer Prize-winning Duplicates, as well as works by such composers as John Adams, Milton Babbitt, John Harbison, Steve Reich, and Charles Wuorinen. In 1985, he was chosen to premiere Milton Babbitt's Piano Concerto, which was commissioned to celebrate the American Composers Orchestra's first season at Carnegie Hall and was written for Mr. Feinberg. He is also the first pianist to have been invited by the Union of Soviet Composers to represent American contemporary music-an invitation that resulted in performances in both Moscow and Leningrad. Feinberg's recitals have stirred audiences form his native New York to Washington (Kennedy Center), Los Angeles, Cleveland, Chicago, Paris, Budapest and London, as well as the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival, the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, Gerard Schwarz's "Music Today" and the Schoenberg Institute. Mr. Feinberg is Visiting Professor at the Juilliard School in New York City.
Discography |
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
|
Advanced Search |
|
| Lost your Password? | |
|
No account yet?
Register
|
|
| Download Area |