Andrei Ivanovitch

Andrei Ivanovitch

Portrait Andrei Ivanovitch
Background information
Born 1968
Bucharest, Romania
Genres Classical
Instruments Piano
Website http://ivanovitch.ru/

Andrei Ivanovitch (born 1968 in Bucharest, Romania)[1] is an international classical pianist and winner of a number of international competitions.

Biography and career

Andrei Ivanovitch, great-grandson of the Romanian composer Ion Ivanovici (The Waves of the Danube), studied at the Central Music School, at the Leningrad Conservatory, at the Music Academy in Moscow and at the Musical College in Karlsruhe.[2] He won several prizes in international competitions, amongst others he won the gold medal at the World Piano Competition in Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S..[3] The specialised press compares him to Dinu Lipatti and Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli[1]. Since 2003, he is honorary member of the Chopin Society. His numerous concerts in Europe earned him the reputation of being one of the great Interpreters of Russian piano music. The Canadian film Glen Gould: The Russian Journey[4] with Ivanovitch interpreting The Art of Fugue[5] by Johann Sebastian Bach was awarded with the Grand at the International Festival of Films on Art in Montreal[6]. During his Germany tours he always gave guest performances at Hummer's Culture Parlour in Soßmar (whose owner, Gerhard Hummer, he's been friends with for several years), which made him a great following in this region. During his tour in 2007, he met the classical pianist Eyran Katsenelenbogen in the Hummer's Culture Parlour in Soßmar, in order to create a new kind of piano concerts.[7]

Press

Discography

References

  1. 1 2 "pianist Andrei Ivanovitch". Official site. Retrieved 2007-10-20.
  2. List of winners of College in Karlsruhe (PDF) (German)
  3. See also on Rules, Regulations and Applications of The World Piano Competition Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S. (PDF)
  4. Awards - Glenn Gould: The Russian Journey. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved on 2007-10-20.
  5. Interview with Andrei at time-index 03:15
  6. Montréal International Festival of Films on Art: 2003. Retrieved on 2007-10-26
  7. Michael Schröder (October 6, 2007). "Pianisten verschmelzen die Welt der Musik". Peiner Allgemeine Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 2007-10-20.

External links

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