„La
dernière grande Dame de l´École Soviétique"
is how a French journalist describes her, and a Spanish critic
calls her the "Anti-Diva". Both are correct.
For decades now,
Elisabeth Leonskaja has been
among the most celebrated pianists of our time. In a world dominated
by the media, Elisabeth Leonskaja has remained true to herself
and to her music, and in doing so, is following in the footsteps
of the great Russian musicians of the Soviet era, such as David
Oistrakh, Sviatoslav Richter and Emil Gilels, who never wavered
in their focus on the quintessence of music despite working in
a very difficult political environment. Her almost legendary modesty
still makes her somewhat media-shy today. Yet as soon as she walks
out on the stage, audiences can sense the force behind the fact
that music is and always has been her life’s work.
Born in Tbilisi, Georgia, to a Russian family, she was regarded
as a child prodigy and gave her first concerts as early as age
11. Her exceptional talent soon brought her to study at the Moscow
Conservatory. While still a student at the Conservatory, she won
prizes in the prestigious Enescu, Marguerite Long and Queen Elizabeth
international piano competitions.
Elisabeth Leonskaja’s musical development
was shaped or influenced to a decisive degree by her collaboration
with Sviatoslav Richter. The master recognized her exceptional
talent and fostered her development not only through teaching
and giving her advice, but also by inviting her to play numerous
duets with him. A memorable musical event! The musical partnership
and personal friendship between Sviatoslav Richter and
Elisabeth
Leonskaja endured until Richter’s death in the
year 1997. In 1978
Elisabeth Leonskaja left the
Soviet Union and made her new home in Vienna. Her sensational
performance at the Salzburg Festival in 1979 marked the beginning
of her steadily blossoming career as a concert pianist in the
west.
Elisabeth Leonskaja has appeared as a soloist
with virtually all the leading orchestras in the world, such as
the New York Philharmonic, the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra,
the Cleveland Orchestra, the London Philharmonic Orchestra, the
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, the BBC Symphony Orchestr London,
the Zurich Tonhalle Orchestra, the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra,
the Gewandhausorchester Leipzig, the radio orchestras of Hamburg,
Cologne and Munich, the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra and many
others, under the baton of such leading conductors as: Kurt Masur,
Sir Colin Davis, Christoph Eschenbach, Christoph von Dohnanyi,
Kurt Sanderling, Maris Jansons, Yuri Temirkanov and many others.
Elisabeth Leonskaja is a frequent and welcomed guest at prestigious
summer music festivals, such as the Salzburg Festival, the Vienna
and Lucerne Festivals, the Schleswig-Holstein Festival, the Schubertiade
in Hohenems and Schwarzenberg, and she also gives recitals in
the Piano Series in the world's major musical centers, such as
Paris, Madrid, Barcelona, London, Edinburgh, Munich, Zurich and
Vienna.
Despite her busy schedule as a soloist, chamber music has always
played a prominent role in her creative work, and she frequently
appears with the Alban Berg, Borodin, Guarneri and Artemis Quartets.
Numerous recordings bear testimony to the outstanding artistic
achievements of this pianist and she has been awarded prizes such
as the Caecilia Prize for her Brahms piano sonatas, or the Diapason
d´Or for her recordings of works by Liszt. Other significant
recordings include the Tchaikovsky Piano Concertos with the New
York Philharmonic Orchestra under Kurt Masur, the Chopin Piano
Concertos with the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra under Vladimir
Ashkenazy, and the Shostakovich Piano Concertos with the Saint
Paul Chamber Orchestra.
In her adopted home, the Republic of Austria,
Elisabeth
Leonskaja’s outstanding achievements have also
gained her great recognition. She has been made an Honorary Member
of the Konzerthaus of Vienna. In 2006, she was awarded the Austrian
Cross of Honor, First Class, for her services to the cultural
life of the country – the highest award of its kind in Austria.
Today the "Lioness of the Keyboard" has matured into
an exceptional pianist, one who is above emphasizing her virtuosity
and who enjoys the warmest of receptions wherever she appears.
A quote from the music magazine
"Diapason"
by
Andre Boucourechliev (
Paris):
„Le chemin de Leonskaja est un chemin de cimes. Par
le dépassement de soi, l´exigence, la passion et
l´intelligence, elle se place au rang des plus grands, non
seulement d’aujourd´hui mais de l´époque:
au rang d´une Clara Haskil, d’un Lipatti, la modernité
en plus".
„Elisabeth Leonskaja’s journey leads from one
pinnacle to another. By constantly excelling herself, driven by
her own personal demands, by her passion and her intelligence
she has scaled the heights achieved only by the greatest, not
just of today, but of an entire epoch: those of a Clara Haskil,
a Lipatti, and of modernity to boot ".