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Zoltán Kocsis

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Name
  
Zoltan Kocsis

Role
  
Pianist

Awards
  
Kossuth Prize


Zoltan Kocsis wwwbachcantatascomPicBioKBIGKocsisZoltan

Education
  
Franz Liszt Academy of Music, Budapest

Movies
  
Zoltan Kocsis: Piano Recital

Albums
  
Zoltan Kocsis Plays Bartok, Kocsis Plays Bartok

Similar People
  
Péter Eötvös, Miklós Erdélyi, János Ferencsik

Mozart concierto para piano n 23 k488 zolt n kocsis piano


Zoltán Kocsis ([ˈzoltaːn ˈkot͡ʃiʃ]; 30 May 1952 – 6 November 2016) was a Hungarian virtuoso pianist, conductor, and composer.

Contents

Zolt n kocsis plays rachmaninov


Studies

Zoltán Kocsis Zoltn Kocsis Concerts Biography amp News BBC Music

Born in Budapest, he began his musical studies at the age of five and continued them at the Béla Bartók Conservatory in 1963, studying piano and composition. In 1968 he was admitted to the Franz Liszt Academy of Music, where he was a pupil of Pál Kadosa, Ferenc Rados and György Kurtág, graduating in 1973.

Career

Zoltán Kocsis slippedisccomwpcontentuploads201611zoltank

He won the Hungarian Radio Beethoven Competition in 1970, and made his first concert tour of the United States in the following year. He received the Liszt Prize in 1973, and the Kossuth Prize in 1978.

Zoltán Kocsis Zoltan Kocsis Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

Considered a great pianist, Kocsis performed with the Berlin Philharmonic, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra, the New York Philharmonic, the Staatskapelle Dresden, the Philharmonia of London, and the Vienna Philharmonic. Kocsis recorded the complete solo piano works and works with piano and orchestra of Béla Bartók. In 1990, his recording of Debussy's Images won "The Gramophone" Instrumental Award for that year. He won another with the violinist Barnabás Kelemen in 2013 in the chamber category for the recording of Bartók's Violin Sonatas Nos 1 & 2.

Zoltán Kocsis Zoltn Kocsis Medici

American critic Harold C. Schonberg praised Kocsis' extraordinary technique and fine piano tone. According to Grove Music Online, he had "an impressive technique, and his forthright, strongly rhythmic playing is nevertheless deeply felt and never mechanical. Kocsis has a natural affinity for Bach, but is also a fine exponent of contemporary music and has given the first performances of works by Kurtág."

Conductor

Kocsis co-founded with Iván Fischer the Budapest Festival Orchestra in 1983, thus opening a new epoch in the history of Hungarian orchestral playing. Kocsis played a determining role in the direction and the development of the program policy of the orchestra from its founding, and from 1987 also appeared as a conductor at their concerts.

He became the musical director of the Hungarian National Philharmonic in 1997 and held the title until his death in 2016. Kocsis died on 6 November 2016, aged 64 in his native Budapest.

Opera

  • Kopogtatások (1984-85)
  • A vacsora (1984-85)
  • Kiállítás (1984-85)
  • Orchestral and Chamber music

  • Premiere, for string orchetra (1976)
  • Fészek (1975-76)
  • The last but one encounter, for piano, harpsichord (1981)
  • 33. December, for chamber ensemble (1983)
  • Memento, for string orchestra (Csernobil) (1986)
  • Utolsó találkozás (1990)
  • References

    Zoltán Kocsis Wikipedia