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Frank Wakelkamp   Frank Wakelkamp
Cellist
Ibrahim Yazici   İbrahim Yazıcı
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IZDSO   İzmir Devlet Senfoni Orkestrası
Christine Wolff   Christine Wolff
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Zeynep Tanbay   Zeynep Tanbay Modern Dance Group
Gulsin Onay   Gülsin Onay
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Misha Dacic   Misha Dacic
Pianist
Julian Gorus   Julian Gorus
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Ilya Itin   Ilya Itin
Pianist
Peter Katin   Peter Katin
Pianist
Burcu Uyar   Burcu Uyar
Soprano
Gulsen Tatu   Gülşen Tatu
Flutist
Eren Levendoglu   Eren Levendoğlu
Jaekyung Yoo   Jaekyung Yoo
Pianist
Alexander Baillie   Alexander Baillie
Cellist
Umit Isgorur   Ümit İşgörür
Cellist
Burhan Ocal   Burhan Öçal
Escher Quartet   Escher Quartet
  Frank Wakelkamp
Cellist
  İbrahim Yazıcı
Conductor
  İzmir State Symphony Orchestra
  Christine Wolff
Soprano
  Zeynep Tanbay Modern Dance Group
  Gülsin Onay
Pianist
  Misha Dacic
Pianist
  Julian Gorus
Pianist
  Ilya Itin
Pianist
  Peter Katin
Pianist
  Burcu Uyar
Soprano
  Gülşen Tatu
Falutist
  Emin Fındıkoğlu 4tet
  Jaekyung Yoo
Pianist
Alexander Baillie   Alexander Baillie
Cellist
  Ümit İşgörür
Cellist
  Burhan Öçal
  Escher Quartet
 

ibrahim yazici

Peter Katin


Born in London, Peter Katin's musical talent was evident at the age of four, and he was admitted to the senior department of the Royal Academy of Music when he was twelve, four years before the official age of entry. The success of his Wigmore Hall début in 1948 started him on a career that has taken him throughout the world (he was the first British artist to give a post-war solo tour of the then USSR), and in those earlier years he was greatly influenced by his meetings with Clifford Curzon, Claudio Arrau and Myra Hess, who gave him much advice for which he has always been deeply grateful.

His early successes seemed centred round the classical composers; he was greatly in demand for Mozart concerto performances in particular and he also developed a rare talent for chamber music. However, a performance of Rachmaninov's D minor Concerto in 1953 changed his image almost overnight, and hailed as a virtuoso of the first order he was constantly in demand for the most taxing of romantic concertos until the late sixties, but by that time he decided that he needed to make a more in-depth study of the composers who had almost escaped him when he was immersed in the big major works.

The first composer in this specialised study was Chopin, and since that time he has become regarded as one of the finest interpreters of this composer's music. He was sufficiently encouraged to make similar studies of Schubert, Schumann, Debussy and Liszt, and as a result has given a number of one-composer recitals. His repertoire now is very flexible and he is happy about performing concertos by Mozart, Beethoven and Brahms in one week, while keeping a very wide variety of styles in his recital programmes.

His constant encouragement of the preserving of individuality in young artists has been one factor in the conferral during 1994 of an Honorary Doctorate by De Montfort University, and as a teacher, he has had highly successful years at the Royal Academy of Music, The University of Western Ontario, the Royal College of Music and Thames Valley University.

He has now almost forty recordings, more than at any other time in his career, which have been received with critical superlatives. These include the complete Chopin Nocturnes and Impromptus, Grieg Lyric Pieces, Chopin Waltzes and Polonaises and the Rachmaninov Preludes. A live performance of a recital including the Liszt Sonata was released to a rave review in Classic CD. His interest in period pianos has resulted in three such recordings, as well as an all-Chopin programme on his own Collard & Collard 1836, and another on a Broadwood grand that was used by Chopin on the occasion of his last visit to London.

Peter Katin gave an anniversary recital at Wigmore Hall on 13 December 1998, exactly fifty years from the date of his début, celebrated his seventieth birthday in November 2000, and his seventy-fifth birthday in 2005. His acclaimed recording of the complete Mozart sonatas were reissued by Altara Music in July 2008, and a new CD of four Haydn sonatas await release; a Chopin recital (originally for Olympia) from Somm Recordings has been very favourably received. Peter Katin has supported several charities in the past, and he has given no less than fourteen recitals which have raised vital funds for the Chernobyl Children's Project (UK).

 
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