Maestro Mikhail Pletnev (Conductor)
Mikhail Pletnev is an artist whose genius as pianist, conductor and composer
enchants and amazes audiences around the globe. His musicianship encompasses a
dazzling technical power and provocative emotional range, and a searching
interpretation that fuses instinct with intellect. At the keyboard and podium
alike, Pletnev is recognized as one of the finest artists of our time. Pletnev
was Gold Medal and First Prize winner of the 1978 Tchaikovsky International
Piano Competition when he was only 21, a prize that earned him early recognition
worldwide. An invitation to perform at the 1988 superpower summit in Washington
led to a friendship with Mikhail Gorbachev and the historic opportunity to make
music in artistic freedom.
In 1990 Pletnev formed the first independent orchestra in Russia's history.
The risks of this step, even with Gorbachev's endorsement, were enormous and it
was Pletnev's reputation and commitment that made his long-held dream a reality.
Sharing his vision for a new model for the performing arts, many of the
country's finest musicians joined Pletnev in launching the Russian National
Orchestra. Under his leadership, the RNO achieved in a few short years a
towering stature among the world's orchestras. Pletnev describes the RNO as his
greatest joy and today serves as its Artistic Director and Principal Conductor.
In 2006, he launched the Mikhail Pletnev Fund for the Support of National
Culture, a non-profit organization that supports major cultural initiatives and
projects, including the RNO's annual Volga Tour and, in collaboration with
Deutsche Grammophon, the Mikhail Pletnev Beethoven Project.
As a guest conductor, Pletnev appears regularly with leading orchestras such
as London’s Philharmonia Orchestra, Mahler Chamber Orchestra, Tokyo
Philharmonic, Concertgebouw Orchestra, London Symphony Orchestra, Los Angeles
Philharmonic and City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. In 2008 he was named
first guest conductor of the Orchestra della Svizzera Italiana in Lugano,
Switzerland.
As a solo pianist and recitalist, Pletnev appears regularly in the world's
music capitals. His recordings and live performances have proved him to be an
outstanding interpreter of an extensive repertoire. The London Telegraph
remarked, "from Pletnev's fingers and brain come ideas that vitalise the music
and make it teem with freshness and wit. [He] made the music positively leap for
joy." The Times describes his playing as "born of a prodigious virtuosity of
imagination outrageous in its beauty."
Pletnev’s recordings have earned numerous prizes, including a 2005 Grammy
Award for the CD of his own arrangement, for two pianos, of Prokofiev’s
Cinderella, recorded with Martha Argerich and Pletnev at the keyboards. He
received Grammy nominations for a CD of Schumann Symphonic Etudes (2004) and for
his recording of Rachmaninov and Prokofiev Piano Concertos No. 3 with the RNO
and conductor Mstislav Rostropovich (2003). His album of Scarlatti’s Keyboard
Sonatas (Virgin/EMI) received a Gramophone Award in 1996. BBC Music Magazine
called the recording "piano playing at its greatest... this performance alone
would be enough to secure Pletnev a place among the greatest pianists ever
known." In 2007 he recorded all of Beethoven's piano concertos with Deutsche
Grammophon, and the recording of concertos 2 and 4 was named "The Best Concerto
Recording of 2007" by the Tokyo Record Academy.
As a composer, Pletnev's works include Classical Symphony, Triptych for
Symphony Orchestra, Fantasy on Kazakh Themes and Capriccio for Piano and
Orchestra. His unrivalled transcriptions for piano of Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker
Suite and Sleeping Beauty were selected, along with his performance of
Tchaikovsky's Second Piano Concerto and The Seasons, for the 1998 anthology
"Great Pianists of the 20th Century" (Philips Classics).
The son of musician parents, Pletnev was conducting and learning multiple
instruments as a young child and entered the Moscow Conservatory as a teenager.
Today he is one of Russia's most respected and influential artists. An advisor
on Russia’s Cultural Council, in 2007 Pletnev was awarded a Presidential Prize
for his contributions to the artistic life of the country. Pianist, conductor,
composer and cultural leader — all are significant facets of Mikhail Pletnev's
life as an artist. Yet he considers himself, simply, a musician.

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