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Sayaka Shoji

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Name
  
Sayaka Shoji


Role
  
Violinist

Sayaka Shoji wwwharrisonparrottcomsitesdefaultfilesstyles

Education
  
Hochschule fur Musik und Tanz Koln

Albums
  
Bach & Reger: Works for violin solo

Similar People
  
Gianluca Cascioli, Midori Goto, Max Reger, Myung‑whun Chung, Zubin Mehta

Sayaka shoji plays brahms violin concerto in d major op 77 3rd


Sayaka Shoji (庄司 紗矢香, Shōji Sayaka, born 30 January 1983) is a Japanese classical violinist. She was the first Japanese and youngest winner at the Paganini Competition in Genoa in 1999.

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Sayaka Shoji wwwbachcantatascomPicBioSBIGShojiSayaka0

Shoji was born in Tokyo into an artistic family (her mother is a painter; her grandmother, a poet) and spent her early childhood in Siena, Italy. When she was 5 years old her family moved back to Japan, where she started studying the violin. At the age of 15 she moved to Germany to study at Hochschule für Musik Köln under Zakhar Bron and graduated in 2004. Her other teachers have included Saschko Gawriloff, Uto Ughi and Shlomo Mintz.

Sayaka Shoji Sayaka Shoji harrisonparrottcom

In 1997, she made her debut at Lucerne Festival and Musikverein in Vienna with Rudolf Baumgartner. Two years later, she took the First Prize at the 1999 Paganini Competition. Zubin Mehta has been her strong supporter. When Shoji auditioned for him in 2000, he immediately changed his schedule in order to make her first recording with the Israel Philharmonic possible in the following month, then invited her to perform with Bavarian State Opera and Los Angeles Philharmonic.

Since then many prominent orchestras have invited Shoji, including the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, Berlin Philharmonic, London Symphony Orchestra, Baltimore Symphony, St. Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra, Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia and WDR Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Lorin Maazel, Yuri Temirkanov, Myung-whun Chung and Semyon Bychkov.

Shoji records with Deutsche Grammophon. Until 2009 she used the 1715 Joachim Stradivarius on loan from the Nippon Music Foundation; today she plays the 1729 Recamier Stradivarius on loan from Ryuzo Ueno, Honorary Chairman, Ueno Fine Chemicals Industry, Ltd.

Sayaka Shoji Sayaka Shoji plays Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto in D major Op35

Sayaka shoji plays tchaikovsky violin concerto in d major op 35



Sayaka Shoji Sayaka Shoji violinYu Kosuge piano Japan

References

Sayaka Shoji Wikipedia


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