Vladimir Viardo

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Vladimir Viardo (born 1949 in Krasnaya Polyana, Soviet Union), is a Russian pianist.

Career

The first steps in music were taken with his mother, the classical singer, voice teacher and pianist Nathalia Viardo.

Viardo studied with

Van Cliburn International Competition. He had already launched an impressive world career when his travel visa was mysteriously revoked. For nearly thirteen years, Viardo was a virtual prisoner behind the Iron Curtain. During this period, he developed new horizons, vastly enlarging his repertoire, eventually including 37 concertos. Only when Mikhail Gorbachev rose to power in the Soviet Union the freedom to travel was restored, and in 1987 Viardo was permitted to accept engagements in Germany and in the United States
.

He joined the University of North Texas College of Music faculty as artist-in-residence in 1989. His international roster of students includes young artists from Eastern Europe, as well as Portugal, Spain, Mexico, South Africa and the United States. Viardo's master classes are much in demand throughout the world and his name appears in the book The Most Wanted Piano Teachers in the USA.[2][3]

Since returning to the West where his international career resumed with several concerts at

Kennedy Centers, Salle Pleyel and the Concertgebouw, Viardo's tours have taken him to American, Canadian and European cities, Asia and South Africa as well as to Israel, Central and South America, appearing as soloist with conductors such as Lorin Maazel, Zubin Mehta, Vladimir Spivakov, Dmitri Kitayenko, Eduardo Mata, Anatoly Zatin, Kirill Kondrashin, and Krzysztof Penderecki. He has made numerous recordings for Melodiya, Pro Arte, Nonesuch, and Sony
.

Audio samples

Sources

References

  1. ^ "Recherche des lauréats - Concours Long Thibaud". www.concours-long-thibaud.org. Archived from the original on 25 July 2011. Retrieved 30 June 2022.
  2. ^ "Van Cliburn Prize Winner, Pianist Vladimir Viardo, at DePauw April 6 & 7".
  3. ^ The most wanted piano teachers in the USA. Xin Hua Ma Pub. 1993.

External links