Female conductor opens flagship series
Media Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
14 January
2005
Female conductor opens flagship series
“[Xian
Zhang] generates electricity… Here’s this tiny little thing
who becomes a giant on the podium.”
[feature article,
Cincinnati Enquirer]
Chinese conductor, Xian Zhang, made her début guest conducting appearance with the Auckland Philharmonia last year and was immediately re-engaged, to open the orchestra’s 2005 Vero Premier Series on Thursday 10 February. She also conducts the second concert in the series, on Thursday 17 February.
Xian Zhang’s energetic podium presence and superb conducting technique resulted in her winning (in 2002 at the age of just 29) the prestigious Maazel/Vilar Conductors’ Competition in New York. Competition judge Lorin Maazel travelled the world evaluating more than 250 conductors before the jury and he agreed on her as the clear winner. He later said, “Never before have I been so reluctant to see a musician leave the stage.” Recently Xian Zhang has been appointed Assistant Conductor of the New York Philharmonic. In May 2005 she makes her London Symphony début.
In the first 2005 Vero Premier Series concert, Xian Zhang conducts the Auckland Philharmonia and dynamic French-Cypriot pianist, Cyprien Katsaris. This colourful programme features Mussorgsky’s Night on a Bare Mountain, Liszt’s Hungarian Rhapsody No.5, Liszt’s Piano Concerto No.2, and Berlioz’s Symphonie fantastique.
The following week, New Zealand’s golden voiced soprano, Patricia Wright, is the soloist in Canteloube’s bewitching Songs of the Auvergne. Also on the programme are Brahms’ monumental Tragic Overture, and Tchaikovsky’s most-loved symphony, the Pathétique.
Telecom “Let’s Talk Music” at 7pm in the stalls of the concert venue (free to concert ticket holders).
AUCKLAND PHILHARMONIA
VERO PREMIER SERIES, concerts #1 and #2
Thursday 10 and
Thursday 17 February – 8pm, Auckland Town Hall
Adult tickets from $23; concessions available (service fees apply). Phone the Ticketek Orchestra Hotline on 307 5139.
The Auckland Philharmonia receives major funding from Creative New Zealand and a major grant from Auckland City. END
(Full artist biographies follow.)
ARTIST BIOGRAPHIES
Xian Zhang, Conductor
First prize winner of
the 2002 Maazel/Vilar International Conductors’ Competition,
Xian Zhang has recently been appointed Assistant Conductor
of the New York Philharmonic. Her duties will include summer
concerts, family concerts, Young People’s Concerts, and
several collaborations with Maestro Maazel conducting works
by Stravinsky, Britten and Turnage.
Xian Zhang has been
Music Director of the Concert Orchestra at the Cincinnati
Conservatory of Music, Assistant Professor of Conducting at
the Central Conservatory of Music, Conductor-in-Residence of
the China Opera House and conductor of the Jin Fan Symphony
Orchestra (all in Beijing), as well as Music Director of the
Lucca Festival Orchestra at the Opera Theatre of Lucca
during the summer of 2000.
Xian Zhang’s début guest
conducting appearance with the Auckland Philharmonia last
year resulted in an immediate re-engagement. In the words of
the New Zealand Herald, “Zhang’s dashing baton illuminated
this most translucent of Mozart’s scores [Symphony No.40]
…”. Following her triumph with La Traviata at the Cincinnati
Opera, she was invited to conduct Don Giovanni in 2004, then
La Bohème in 2005, as well as several other productions to
be determined. She made her début with the China
Philharmonic in October 2004 and will début with the London
Symphony in May 2005.
Born in Dandong, China, Xian Zhang
started playing the piano at the age of four. After
graduating with a major in piano from the High School
Affiliate of the Central Conservatory of Music, her superior
talent for conducting convinced the faculty to admit her to
the conducting programme at the Central Conservatory. She
subsequently received both the Bachelor and Master of Music
degrees from that conservatory and served one year on the
conducting faculty before moving to the United States in
1998. At the age of 20, Xian Zhang made her professional
conducting début directing performances of Mozart’s Le Nozze
di Figaro at the Central Opera House in Beijing.
Cyprien
Katsaris, Piano
Cyprien Katsaris, the French-Cypriot
pianist and composer, was born in Marseilles in 1951. He
spent his childhood in Cameroon where, at the age of four,
he first began to play the piano with Marie-Gabrielle
Louwerse.
A graduate of the Paris Conservatoire where he
studied piano with Aline van Barentzen, Monique de la
Bruchollerie and Jean Hubeau, Cyprien won the International
Young Interpreters Rostrum-Unesco (Bratislava 1977), first
prize in the International Cziffra Competition (Versailles
1974) and he was the only western-European prize winner at
the 1972 Queen Elisabeth of Belgium International
Competition.
Cyprien’s major international career
includes performances with the world’s greatest orchestras
(such as the Berlin Philharmonic), conductors (such as
Leonard Bernstein), and an extensive discography (Grand Prix
du Disque Frédéric Chopin, Warsaw 1985; Grand Prix du Disque
Franz Liszt, Budapest 1984 and 1989; British Music
Retailers’ Association’s Award 1986).
In addition to the
standard repertory, such as the Complete Concertos by
Mozart, recorded live and performed in Salzburg and Vienna
with Yoon K. Lee and the Salzburger Kammerphilharmonie,
Cyprien has rediscovered long lost works such as the
Liszt/Tchaikovsky Concerto in the Hungarian Style which he
has recorded with Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia
Orchestra.
In 1992, Japanese NHK TV produced with
Cyprien a 13 programme series on Frédéric Chopin which
included master classes and performances. On 17 October
1999, the New York concertgoers offered Cyprien a standing
ovation in Carnegie Hall for his recital dedicated to
Chopin, performed on the day of the 150th anniversary of his
death.
Cyprien has been a member of the jury of the
following International Competitions: Chopin (Warsaw 1990),
Liszt (Utrecht 1996), Vendôme Prize (Paris 2000), and
Marguerite Long-Jacques Thibaud-Ville de Paris
(2001).
Appointed Artistic Director of the International
Festival of Echternach in Luxembourg in 1977, Cyprien is
Knight of Merit of Cameroon (1975), Artist of Unesco for
Peace (1997), and Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters
(France 2000). In 2001 he received the Vermeil Medal of the
City of Paris.
Cyprien is making his début with the
Auckland Philharmonia.
Patricia Wright,
Soprano
Patricia Wright began her vocal training in New
Zealand with Dame Sister Mary Leo, and a QEII Arts Council
Grant enabled her to further her studies in Australia with
Dame Joan Hammond. She then gained further awards to study
in London and Germany. While in the United Kingdom she won
second prize in the Benson & Hedges Gold Award for Singers,
and represented New Zealand in the Cardiff Singer of the
World competition. Her critically acclaimed performances in
lieder and oratorio led her to every major concert hall in
Britain, and she made numerous BBC Radio 3
recordings.
Patricia has performed regularly with major
orchestras, opera companies, festivals and choral societies
in New Zealand, Australia, Britain and Ireland. Concert
highlights include Beethoven’s Ninth, Mahler’s Fourth,
Richard Strauss’s Four Last Songs, Capriccio, Die ägyptische
Helena, Carmina Burana, Knoxville: Summer of 1915,
Pulcinella, Verdi’s Requiem, Bach’s Wedding Cantata and
Cantata 51. Choral performances include The Messiah, Solemn
Vespers, Sea Symphony, Nelson Mass, Child of Our Time,
German Requiem, Mozart Requiem, St John’s and St Matthew’s
Passions and Pergolesi’s Stabat Mater.
Opera repertoire
includes the title role of Madama Butterfly, Countess
Almaviva in The Marriage of Figaro, Norina in Don Pasquale,
Gilda in Rigoletto, Pamina in The Magic Flute, Mimi in La
Bohème, Nedda in Pagliacci, Alice Ford in Falstaff; Liù in
Turandot, Nella in Gianni Schicchi, Clorinda in La
Cenerentola, Despina in Così fan tutte, Micaela in Carmen,
Oscar in Un Ballo in Maschera, First Lady in The Magic
Flute, and Magda in the concert performance of La
Rondine.
Patricia’s recordings are Verdi Requiem with
the NBR New Zealand Opera and the Auckland Philharmonia,
Serenata (Atoll), Frank Bridge Songs (Pearl), Jane Austen
Songs (Pearl), The Early Bridge (Pearl), Frank Bridge
(Pearl), Rebecca Clarke (Guild), Arnold Bax (Continuum),
Kenneth Young Symphony No.1 with the NZSO (Trust), and
Hummel Missa Solemnis/Te Deum with the NZSO
(Naxos).
Future public engagements include, in addition
to Songs of the Auvergne with the Auckland Philharmonia,
Golijov Songs with the Christchurch Symphony, Beethoven’s
Missa Solemnis with the Auckland Choral Society, a Lieder
Recital tour, Nelson Chamber Music Festival, three recording
projects, and the role of Donna Anna in NBR New Zealand
Opera’s 2005 production of Don Giovanni (Wellington and
Auckland).
Patricia has been performing regularly with
the Auckland Philharmonia since
1993.