Michael Lewin is internationally
applauded as one of America’s most abundantly gifted and
charismatic concert pianists, performing to acclaim in over 30
countries with orchestras, in recital and as a chamber musician.
Commanding a repertoire of 40 piano concertos, Lewin’s international
orchestral engagements include the Netherlands Philharmonic Orchestra,
Moscow Chamber Orchestra, Cairo Symphony, Bucharest ‘Enescu’ Philharmonic,
China National Radio and Film Orchestra, Filharmónica de
Guadalajara, State Symphony of Greece, Youth Orchestra of the Americas,
Orquesta Sinfónica de Puerto Rico, the Boston Pops, the
Symphonies of Phoenix, Indianapolis, Miami, Colorado, Nevada, West
Virginia, Illinois, North Carolina, Sinfonia da Camera, and the
Jupiter Symphony, He has given world premieres of two piano concertos
by David Kocsis, and performed Gershwin’s "Rhapsody
in Blue" over 50 times. He has collaborated with conductors
including Carlos Miguel Prieto, Keith Lockhart, Constantine Orbellian,
Anton Kersjes, Seymour Lipkin, Theo Alcantara, Ian Hobson, Sergei
Babayan, Maximiano Valdés and Hugh Wolff.
The New York Times hailed his New York recital debut in Lincoln
Center in 1984, writing that “his immense technique and ability
qualify him eminently for success”. Since then, his tours
have taken him to New York’s major concert halls, Boston's
Symphony Hall, Pasadena's Ambassador Auditorium, the Library of
Congress and National Gallery of Art in Washington, Moscow’s
Great Hall, Hong Kong's City Hall Theater, Taipei's National Concert
Hall, the Opera Houses of Cairo and Wilmington, the Athens Megaron,
Holland’s Muziekcentrum Vredenburg, and London’s Wigmore
Hall. Festival appearances include Spoleto, the International Keyboard
Festival in NY, Peter the Great in Holland, MusicFest Perugia in
Italy, Euro Arts in Germany and Vivace Vilnius in Lithuania. His
popular PBS Television recital with Schubert’s “Wanderer
Fantasy” and Chopin works hosted by Victor Borge was widely
rebroadcast. He has been the featured interview in Clavier and
Piano & Keyboard Magazines, and edited piano music of Griffes
for C.F.Peters. A Steinway Artist, he was Artistic Director of
the Steinway & Sons 150th Anniversary Gala Concert held in
2003 in Boston’s Symphony Hall. His dedication to contemporary
music has led to premiere performances of compositions by Joel
Hoffman, David Kocsis, Sylvia Rabinof, Robert Chumbley, Andy Vores
and John Harbison. Among the composers with whom Mr. Lewin is particularly
associated are Beethoven, Schubert, Debussy, Chopin, Liszt and
Griffes.
Michael Lewin’s career was launched with victories in the
Liszt International Competition in the Netherlands, the William
Kapell International Competition, and the American Pianists Association
Fellowship. He has been awarded major career grants from the Martha
Baird Rockefeller Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts Solo
Recitalists Fund and the Aaron Copland Recording Fund.
Lewin’s extensive discography has received extraordinary
critical praise, and reflects the great scope of his musical interests.
He now records exclusively for Sono Luminus. His third CD for Sono
Luminus (2014) is an all-Debussy disc entitled "Beau Soir," consisting
of the Préludes Book II and eight other works. It will be
followed in Jan. 2015 by another Debussy disc which will include
the Préludes Book I and Estampes. His first release for
Sono Luminus, “If I Were a Bird,” a diverse collection
of bird-themed pieces, received a Grammy nomination in the "Producer
of the Year" category. It was followed by "Piano Phantoms" (2013),
music inspired by ghosts, goblins, phantoms and the spirit world. “Bamboula!," piano
music of Louis Moreau Gottschalk, earned a Boston Herald “Year’s
Top 10 Pick”, while the Boston Globe enthused that “Lewin
has the chops and the charm for these pieces.” For Naxos
he has recorded a best-selling collection of 20 Scarlatti Sonatas
and the first-ever complete piano music of American composer Charles
Tomlinson Griffes in two volumes. Mr. Lewin's earlier recordings
on Centaur include “Michael Lewin plays Liszt," “A
Russian Piano Recital,” featuring music of Scriabin, Glazunov
and Balakirev, and the four Violin and Piano Sonatas of William
Bolcom with violinist Irina Muresanu.
One of America’s most sought-after teachers, he has mentored
many prize-winning pianists and is a frequent judge at International
Piano Competitions. He is currently a member of the Piano Faculty
at The Boston Conservatory, where he also directs the Piano Masters
Series. Born in New York, he is a graduate of the Juilliard School.
His own teachers included Leon Fleisher, Irwin Freundlich, Adele
Marcus, and Yvonne Lefébure.
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| photo: Lucy Cobos |
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