[Notice of postponement of recital] Krystian Zimerman Piano Recital

[Notice of postponement of recital] Krystian Zimerman Piano Recital

Postponed

Date
2013/11/26(Tue) 19:00
Venue
Suntory Hall
Artists
Krystian Zimerman, Piano

New Date

Date
2014/1/20(Mon) 19:00
Venue
Suntory Hall
Artists
Krystian Zimerman, Piano

Pick Up

We have been informed that the pianist Krystian Zimerman, who was to perform a recital presented by Japan Arts at Suntory Hall on November 26, is unable to perform in November due to medical reasons.

At present, Mr. Zimerman is working on his recovery at his home in Switzerland. As he has expressed a strong wish to carry out the Japan tour, we have decided after discussion to carry out the recitals on and after December 6, when he is expected to have recovered. Concerning the recital scheduled before then, we have decided to postpone it until January 2014. We ask for your kind understanding.
Postponed recital: Tuesday, November 26, 2013, 7 p.m., at Suntory Hall
Rescheduled recital: Monday, January 20, 2014, 7 p.m., at Suntory Hall
Contact:
Tel: Japan Arts Pia 03-5774-3040
E-mail: ticket@japanarts.co.jp

Those who have purchased tickets for the recital on November 26 will be able to attend the rescheduled recital on January 20, 2014 with these tickets and receive the same seats. We would like to extend our sincere apologies to those who were looking forward to the recital but will not be able to attend the rescheduled recital.

Ticket InformationTicket Information

[Ticket price]
S:16,000 A:13,000 B:10,000 C:8,000 D:5,000 (YEN)

 

[How to purchase tickets]
1. Telephone orders
Japan Arts Pia Call Center: 03-5774-3040
(Open 10:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. daily, except in the New Year holiday period)
*To order from the call center, you must be able to provide a mailing address in Japan or pick up the tickets at a convenience store in Japan.
*Operators speak English.

 

2. E-mail Order
*Anyone can order by e-mail by filling in the required items on the specified form.
*Credit card payment is required. Tickets will be picked up at the venue on the day of the performance. The same-day pick-up counter opens 45 minutes prior to the start of the performance.
*Your personal information will not be used for any purpose other than processing this ticket order.
Notes:
*Please be aware that the requested tickets may no longer be available.
*Inquiries made on Saturday, Sunday, holidays, or during the summer or
winter business holidays, will be answered on or after the next business day.

チケット購入はこちら

 

[Group tickets sales]
Please inquire about group sales if you are ordering 10 or more tickets.

 

[Students]
Reservations for student tickets at half price each rank can be made from Sep. 2 (10a.m.) if seats are available the day before.
Qualified Students: Students below age 25 only.
Please present your student ID at the door on the day of the concert.
(Those without a student ID may be asked to pay the balance of the regular ticket price.)

 

[Please read the following information before purchasing tickets.]
1. Programs etc. are subject to change in case of unavoidable circumstances.
2. Purchased tickets may not be canceled or changed, except when the performance is canceled.
3. Tickets will not be reissued under any circumstances. Please take care not to lose your tickets.
4. Preschool children will not be admitted. In the case of ballet performances, children 4 years old and over will be admitted.
5. One ticket per person is required for admission to the venue.
6. All seats are reserved. Please be seated in your designated seat.
7. Photography, sound and video recording, use of mobile phones etc. in the venue are strictly prohibited.
8. Resale of tickets through internet auction sites etc. is not permitted, as problems can result.

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ProgramProgram

Beethoven The Last Three Sonatas

Piano Sonata NO.30 E major Op.109

Piano Sonata No.31 A flat major Op.110

Piano Sonata No.32 C minor Op.111

ProfileProfile

Krystian Zimerman, Piano

Krystian Zimerman comes from a family with rich music-making traditions. Musicians would meet almost daily in his home to play various works, mostly chamber music. These performances afforded Mr. Zimerman a most intimate, natural, everyday contact with live music and provided an early impetus to his musical career. He made his first steps in music under his father’s supervision, and at the age of 7 started working with Andrzej Jasinski, a senior lecturer at the music conservatory in Katowice, Poland. This tutorship was crowned by Mr. Zimerman’s graduation, 14 years later, from the conservatory there. Mr. Zimerman had no zest for contests, but he followed the common way of musical development for concert pianists, which brought him the highest prizes at several prestigious competitions devoted to Russian and Polish music and to the works of particular composers (Prokofiev and Beethoven). There followed the Grand Prix at the Chopin Competition of 1975, which paved the way for performances in concert halls worldwide.

The 25 years of Mr. Zimerman’s artistic activity have been marked by regular meetings with his own dedicated audiences, which ardently look forward to every concert. Wherever his concert tours take him, in the music centers of Europe, Asia and America, he always recognizes familiar faces. During the last 10 seasons, since he has resolved to travel with his own concert piano, he has managed to accustom his audience and concert organizers to this unusual and only seemingly inconvenient gear. Mr. Zimerman has applied several technical inventions of his own which have made it possible for him, as for other musicians, to take his instrument along on tours. The confidence afforded by his own thoroughly familiar instrument, combined with his piano-building expertise–first acquired in Katowice and developed through permanent cooperation with the Steinway Company in Hamburg–allows him to eliminate, or reduce to the absolute minimum, everything that might distract him from purely musical issues.

Mr. Zimerman’s comparatively early acquaintance with the main developments of European music–German, Russian, French and others–precluded him from becoming a ‘Chopin specialist.’ Instead, it stirred in him the ambition, which he has achieved in the last 10 years, of performing music in the place and culture of its origin: French works in Paris; Beethoven, Mozart and Schubert in Vienna; Brahms in Hamburg; American music played in New York and, in one notable instance, conducted by the composer himself–Leonard Bernstein. ‘If I were an actor,’ he argues, ‘I would also set myself the aim of performing Shakespeare in London and Chekhov in Russia.’

Witold Lutoslawski’s honorable dedication of his Piano Concerto to Krystian Zimerman inspired the pianist to a similar treatment of that work: it was self-evident that it should be performed in Warsaw during the Warsaw Autumn Festival of Contemporary Music, with the composer as conductor. During each of his New York recitals, he has taken care to perform a Polish composition as part of the program or as an encore. For several consecutive seasons he performed Karol Szymanowski’s works in principal music centers on three continents. His encounters with pre-eminent musicians–performers of chamber music and conductors–have been, he claims, his greatest luck. He has repeatedly performed with Kaja Danczowska, Kyung-Wha Chung, Gidon Kremer and about 40 other celebrities of the musical world..

The piano is not Mr. Zimerman’s only musical passion: he has always remained an exceedingly keen organist. Playing the organ also allowed him to grasp and fashion the musical form in its horizontal dimension. He has also enriched his knowledge of conducting due to collaboration with the most illustrious conductors of his time: Leonard Bernstein, Herbert von Karajan, Seiji Ozawa, Riccardo Muti, Lorin Maazel, Andre Previn, Pierre Boulez, Zubin Mehta, Bernard Haitink, Stanislaw Skrowaczewski, Sir Simon Rattle and numerous others. In some instances (with Bernstein, Boulez, Karajan, Kondrashin and Ozawa), the cooperation was particularly close and sustained by friendship. Mr. Zimerman and Leonard Bernstein worked together for 13 years: Mr. Zimerman was the last–for some time also the only–pianist who performed under Bernstein, both during recording sessions and at concerts in many European countries and the United States. Working frequently and closely with an outstanding musical personality, a master of orchestral sound, was a formative experience for him. The same could be said about his close and long-time contacts with Herbert von Karajan. Mr. Zimerman also embraced the opportunity to meet and make a closer acquaintance of the older-generation masters: Claudio Arrau, Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli, Arthur Rubinstein and Sviatoslav Richter–all of whom exerted a powerful influence on his musical development.

During his 24-year collaboration with Deutsche Grammophon, Mr. Zimerman has made 22 records, for which he has frequently received the most prestigious record awards.

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Presented by Japan Arts
Supported by Emgassy of the Republic of Poland / Emgassy of Schweiz / Universal Music K.K

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