Alexandre Tharaud

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Tharaud performing in 2018

Alexandre Tharaud (born 9 December 1968) is a French pianist. He is active on the concert stage and has released a large and diverse discography.[1]

Life and career

Born in Paris, Tharaud discovered the music scene through his mother who was a dance teacher at the

Opéra de Paris, and his father, an amateur director and singer of operettas. Tharaud thus appeared as a child in theatres around northern France, where the family spent many weekends.[2] His grandfather was a violinist in Paris in the 1920s and 1930s.[3]
At the initiative of his parents, Alexandre started his piano studies at the age of five, and he entered Conservatory of the 14th Arrondissement, where his teacher was Carmen Taccon-Devenat, a student of Marguerite Long.[2]

He entered the Conservatoire de Paris at the age of 14 where he won first prize for piano in the class of Germaine Mounier when he was 17 years old. With Theodor Paraskivesco, he mastered the piano, and he sought and received advice from Claude Helffer, Leon Fleisher and Nikita Magaloff. In 1987, he won third prize at the Maria Canals International Competition in Barcelona[1] and, a year later, the Senigallia Competition in Italy. In 1989, he was awarded 2nd prize at the ARD International Music Competition in Munich. His career developed quickly in Europe as well as in North America and Japan.

In 2009, he took part in a show devoted to

Cité de la musique, recorded for France Télévisions. He has also worked with the French composer Thierry Pécou, performing the première of his first piano concerto in October 2006 at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées and later recording it.[5]

In 2012, Tharaud took part in the French film Amour by Michael Haneke where he played himself, alongside Jean-Louis Trintignant, Emmanuelle Riva and Isabelle Huppert, although he said that it would not be the start of a film career for him.[3]

The New York Times described his Bach playing at a recital in 2005 as "crisply articulated and vividly etched".[6]

In 2015 Tharaud starred as the central performer at the Prinsengrachtconcert in Amsterdam.

Following Piano intime: conversations avec Nicolas Southon (Philippe Rey, 2013), in 2017 Tharaud published a second book entitled Montrez-moi vos mains (Show me your hands) (Grasset, 2017), in which he recounts his career, methods of working, relationships with colleagues, variations in audiences around the world, and his personal feelings about a musician's life.

Method of work

Tharaud refuses to keep a piano in his residence[5][7] because he believes he would begin to prefer the pleasure of improvisation to the necessity of rigorous work. He practices on different instruments at friends' residences. He composes, but usually privately.[8] Before each recording he lays flowers at the tomb of Emmanuel Chabrier at Montparnasse Cemetery.[1] When asked what a camera would record at his recording sessions, he replied that he sings, shouts, dances, and argues with the piano ("absurd behaviour"—comportements ridicules).[1]

Awards

Discography

Filmography

  • 2012: Amour - Himself
  • 2015 : Bach Goldberg Variations directed by
    Erato

Books

  • Piano intime: conversations avec Nicolas Southon (Philippe Rey, 2013) [10]
  • Montrez-moi vos mains (Grasset, 2017) [11]

References

  1. ^ a b c d En couverture: Alexandre Tharaud – Le métier de vivre. Interview with Nicolas Baron. Diapason 589, March 2011, p24-28.
  2. ^ a b Télérama, n° 3083 du 11 février 2009, p. 14. Propos recueillis par Bernard Mérigaud
  3. ^ a b Interview with Alexandre Tharaud by Elizabeth Davis, 2012, on Classical Music . com website, accessed 4 December 2013.
  4. ^ Une collaboration avait déjà réuni les deux artistes en 2001 lors d'une journée « Satie » dans le cadre du festival de l'Epau [1]
  5. ^ a b En couverture: Alexandre Tharaud. Interview with Vincent Agrech. Diapason, no 556, March 2008, p26-29.
  6. ^ Interpreting Bach's Interpretation of Contemporaries by Allan Kozinn Published: March 25, 2005, accessed 4 December 2013.
  7. ^ Alexandre Tharaud : l'étoile solaire, entretien avec Franck Mallet, Classica Repertoire, mars 2007, p 44-47
  8. ^ Lire interview Archived 2011-06-16 at the Wayback Machine sur Ramifications.be
  9. ^ "Nomination dans l'ordre des Arts et des Lettres janvier 2016 - Ministère de la Culture". culturecommunication.gouv.fr. Archived from the original on 5 June 2016. Retrieved 18 May 2018.
  10. ^ WorldCat entry for Piano intime: conversations avec Nicolas Southon, accessed 21 July 2018.
  11. ^ WorldCat entry for Montrez-moi vos mains by Alexandre Tharaud, accessed 21 July 2018.

Sources

  • Interview dans Télérama, Number 3083: 11 February 2009, pp. 14 to 16. [2]

External links