James Dick, Piano
Performances by James Dick
Composer | Title | Date | Action |
---|---|---|---|
Dmitry Shostakovich | Piano Quintet in g minor, op. 57 | 05/21/2009 | |
Sergei Rachmaninov | Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini, Op.43 (Variation 18) | 08/20/2009 | |
Sergei Rachmaninov | Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini, in a minor, opus 43 | 05/21/2009 | |
Gabriel Fauré | Piano Quintet No. 1 in d minor, Op. 89 | 05/21/2009 | |
Camille Saint-Saëns | Piano Concerto No. 2 in g minor, Op. 22 | 05/21/2009 | |
Ludwig van Beethoven | Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 4, Op. 58 (Rondo Vivace) | 08/20/2009 | |
Ludwig van Beethoven | Piano Concerto No. 5 in E-flat major, Op. 73 | 05/21/2009 | |
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky | Piano Concerto No. 1 in b-flat minor, Op. 23 | 05/21/2009 | |
Samuel Barber | Concerto for Piano and Orchestra (Canzone) | 08/19/2009 |
James Dick, Piano
Biography
Recognized as one of the truly important pianists of his generation, pianist James Dick brings keyboard sonorities of captivating opulence and brilliance to performances that radiate intellectual insight and emotional authenticity. Dick's early triumphs as top prizewinner in the Tchaikovsky, Busoni and Leventritt International Competitions were a mere prelude to an eminent career highlighted by acclaimed recitals and concerto performances in the world's premier concert halls, including New York's Carnegie Hall, Alice Tully Hall, Town Hall and 92nd Street "Y", London's Queen Elizabeth Hall, Wigmore Hall and Purcell Room, le Theatre du Chatelet and Salle Gaveau in Paris, the Academy of Music in Philadelphia, the Kennedy Center and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC, Orchestra Hall in Chicago, Romanian Athenaeum in Bucharest, the Rudolphinum in Prague, Victoria Hall in Singapore...
Dick has performed with the Chicago Symphony, the Philadelphia Orchestra, the National Symphony and many other major orchestras, with such conductors as Eugene Ormandy, John Barbirolli, James Levine, Lorin Maazel, James de Preist, Lawrence Foster, Sergiu Commissiona, Alain Lombard, Jerzy Semkov, and more recently with Eiji Oue, Robert Spano, Christopher Hogwood, Stefan Sanderling, Pascal Verrot, JoAnn Falletta, Peter Bay, Andrey Boreyko, Grant Llewellyn, Charles Olivieri-Munroe, Lan Shui, Bohumil Kulinsky, Heiichiro Ohyama... In chamber music, he has been guest soloist with the Cleveland, Tokyo, Parisii, Colorado, Ravel, Debussy, Eusia and Cassatt Quartets and the Dorian and Moragues Wind Quintets, concertizing as well with Erick Friedman, Yo-Yo Ma, Regis Pasquier, Young Uck Kim, Raphael Hillyer, Rostislav Dubinsky, Martin Lovett, Guy Deplus, Håkan Rosengren and Carol Wincenc. In England where he studied extensively with Sir Clifford Curzon, Dick was elected an Honorary Associate of London's Royal Academy of Music; in 1994 he received the signal honor of being named a Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres by the French Minister of Culture. Mr. Dick is the 2003 Texas State Musician. Other honors include: International Sterling Patron of the Mu Phi Epsilon Fraternity, 2007 Arts Champion of the Arts Council of the Brazos Valley and Texas Lyceum 2007 Stewardship of Texas Value Award. James Dick received the Texas Medal of Arts on April 7, 2009 at the Long
Center for the Performing Arts, Austin, TX. On October 9, 2009, he will
be honored as 2009 Distinguished Alumnus of the University of Texas at
Austin.
James Dick is a fervent supporter of new music. He commissioned Benjamin Lees, Dan Welcher, Malcolm Hawkins and Chinary Ung to write respectively "Etudes", "Shiva's Drum", "Rasmandala" and "Rising Light"
for piano and orchestra. In February 1998, James Dick premiered "Flights of Passage: From Silent Sun to Starry Night" by Claude Baker. This piece is inspired by poems by Walt Whitman. It was performed in New York (Alice Tully Hall), Paris (Salle Gaveau) and London (Purcell Room). On October 31, 1999, in Washington, DC, he premiered "The Birth of Shiva" by Dan Welcher, a fantasy for piano solo after "Shiva's Drum." More recently, he premiered a quintet for piano and guitar quartet of Brazilian born Sergio Molina during the third International Guitar Festival at Round Top on February 10, 2007 with the Quaternaglia Guitar Quartet. In 2008, he premiered "Shadowbox", a trio for guitar, piano and percussion by Stephen Barber. In 2009, James Dick will premiere another work by Sergio Molina, "Down the Black River into the Dark Night" for piano, guitar quartet and string octet. He recently performed in St. Petersburg, Russia, both Beethoven's Piano Concerti #4 and #5 with the Baltica Chamber Orchestra conducted by Emmanuel Leducq-Barome at the Academic Capelle and subsequently recorded these two works. More performances in Czech Republic early June 2009.
James Dick remains committed to music education. In 1971, he established The International Festival-Institute at Round Top. This educational project, one of the most distinguished in the United States, welcomes Young Artists looking for developing their skills in solo, chamber music and orchestral repertoire.