The International Piano Competition J. S. Bach, Würzburg is a triennial piano competition that is held in Würzburg, Germany. It was founded by Walter Blankenheim, with the inaugural competition being held in 1992. With 825 competitors from 59 countries (as of the 10th competition in 2019), it is the largest Bach piano competition in the world, and the only international Bach piano competition where the repertoire consists of only the works of J. S. Bach.[1]

The competition is open to pianists of all nationalities who are not older than 36 at the time of the competition.[2] The program consists exclusively of the original keyboard works of J. S. Bach.[3] The competition aims to encourage competitors to demonstrate stylistically well-developed Bach interpretations on the piano, study Bach’s works, and to encounter different interpretations of those works.[4]

Walter Blankenheim was the director of the competition for the first 5 editions (1992, 1995, 1998, 2001, and 2004). The competition was held at the Hochschule für Musik Saar in Saarbrücken, where Blankenheim was a professor of piano. After Blankenheim's death in 2007, Inge Rosar succeeded him as the director of the competition and moved the competition to Würzburg (where she is a professor of piano at the Hochschule für Musik Würzburg) for the 6th edition of the competition that same year, where it has remained ever since.[5] Traditionally, the competition is held between March 11 and March 21, culminating in the awards ceremony and final concert of the prizewinners on March 21 (J. S. Bach's birthday). The preliminary, quarter-final, and the semi-final rounds are typically held in the Hochschule für Musik Würzburg,[6] while the final round is played at the theater on the Bibrastrasse in Würzburg.[7] Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the 11th competition, originally scheduled for 2022, was held online from September 2021 to March 2022.[8]

Structure edit

The competition consists of four stages or rounds. All works are to be performed by memory and with all repeats (the only exceptions are the repeats of the Goldberg Variations, and repeats in the preludes of the Well-Tempered Clavier). The program is as follows:[9]

Preliminary Round: One French Suite BWV 812–817 + one other obligatory work. These works differ with each competition, but have included Toccatas BWV 910–916, Fantasias, Aria variata alla maniera italiana in A minor BWV 989, and the three-part Ricercar from The Musical Offering.

Quarter-final Round: One English Suite BWV 806–811 or one Partita BWV 825-830 (alternates each competition) + Preludes and Fugues from The Well-Tempered Clavier

Semi-final Round: The program for the semi-final round varies, with a duration between a minimum of 30 minutes to maximum of 40 minutes (with the only exception being the Goldberg Variations):

One Partita or one English Suite (alternates each competition) + one or more original works by J. S. Bach chosen by the performer; or the French Overture B minor BWV 831 + one or more original works by J. S. Bach chosen by the performer; or the Goldberg Variations BWV 988 (without repeats); or a set of Preludes and Fugues from the Well-Tempered Clavier (excluding those of the quarter-final round)

Final Round: One of the four Keyboard Concertos BWV 1053-1056

Typically, there are 40 pianists who participate in the preliminary round, 16 who advance to the quarter-final round, 8 who advance to the semi-final round, and 4 who advance to the final round.

Honorary Committee and Jury edit

The Honorary Committee consists of a number of notable musicians, including: Julius Berger, Dr. Kurt Bohr, Aldo Ciccolini, Ekaterina Dershavina, Karl Engel, Bernd Glemser, Adam Harasiewicz, Dr. Ryuichi Higuchi, Ulf Hoelscher, Dr. Klaus Hofmann, Zoltán Kocsis, Emanuel Krivine, Robert Leonardy, Jean Micault, Siegmund Nimsgern, Vera Nossina, Gerhard Oppitz, Siegfried Palm, Günter Philipp, Dr. Helmuth Rilling, Klaus Schilde, H.-P. und V. Stenzl, Fanny Waterman, Bruno Weil, Dr. Markus Brändle.[10]

Members of the jury have included Prof. Walter Blankenheim, Prof. Inge Rosar, Prof. Arne Torger, Vera Nosina, Amadeus Webersinke, Monique Duphil. Several former prize-winners have since been invited into the jury, including Chih-Yu Chen and Andrea Padova.

Prize winners edit

The competition allows for a number of finalists. However, only four prizes are awarded. Prizes may be shared without diminishing the monetary award to each contestant. Diplomas and special prizes for best interpretation are also awarded. A number pianists that have won prizes in this competition have gone on to have international careers as performers or educators, such as Andrea Padova, Christopher Hinterhuber, Gerold Huber, Gianluca Luisi, Maria Perrotta, Esther Birringer, and Hilda Huang, who is currently the only pianist that has received top prizes in all Bach competitions (Leipzig 2014, Würzburg 2010, and Tureck 2010).

Prize-winners of the International Piano Competition “Johann Sebastian Bach” Würzburg / Germany[11]
Year 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Diplomas Special Prizes and Acknowledgements
1992   Ekaterina Dershavina   Nana Mamaeva   Nataliya Kislenko and

  Elena Metelskaya

  Andrea Padova and

  Kalvis Jordans

not awarded not awarded
1995   Andrea Padova   Nataliya Kislenko   Andreas Woyke and

  Anton Boldyrev

not awarded   Julia Schirinova   Marina Ivanova and

  Mariya Massycheva

1998 not awarded   Yorck Kronenberg   Inga Kazanteva   Marrett Popp and

  Christopher Hinterhuber

  Marina Ivanova   Ludmilla Hallaeva and

  Thomas Walczak

2001   Gianluca Luisi   Keiko Ishitobi and

  Maria K.-Westerman

  Marina Ivanova and

  Gerold Huber

  Eri Nakamura   Chih-Yu Chen and

  Ave Kruup

  Jorge García Herranz and

  Young-Sook Cho and   Natalia Kaiser and   Naoya Seino

2004   Chih-Yu Chen not awarded   Maria Perrotta not awarded   Esther Birringer and

  Myoung-Joon Cho and   Eun-Jung Kim and   Se hwa Yoon

  Oleksandra Pershyna and

  Anne Salie and   Jorge Garcia Herranz and   Adam Szvoren

2007   Esther Birringer   Yukiko Nakai   Kirill Zwegintsow   Rie Kawata   Sholpan Barlykova and

  Rosamaria Bene and   Andreas Hecker

  Olga Witthauer
2010 not awarded not awarded   Hilda Huang   Ágnes Juhász and

  Rosamaria Bene

  Kirill Monorosi and

  Elizaveta Ivanova

not awarded
2013 not awarded   Daniel van der Hoeven   Rosamaria Bene   Ai Kayukawa and

  Naoya Fujiwara

not awarded   Victoria Young
2016 not awarded   Maciej Słapiński not awarded   Laurens de Man   Max Nyberg and

  Georgi Boykin

  Maciej Słapiński and

  Max Nyberg and   Daae JEON

2019 not awarded not awarded   Mattia Fusi   Alexander Koryakin   Iuchi Saori and

  Joanna Krauze

  Mattia Fusi and

  Alexander Koryakin and   Joanna Krauze and   Georgi Boykin and   Philipp Adrian Voepel and   Victoria Frances Young and  /  Sergey Korolev

2021-2022 (online)   Hongyi Sophia Cai   Julien Cohen   Mai Higuchi not awarded   Chung Hon Michael Cheng and   Shion Ota not awarded

References edit

  1. ^ "Walter Blankenheim | International Piano Competition "Johann Sebastian Bach"".
  2. ^ "Rules and regulations | International Piano Competition "Johann Sebastian Bach"".
  3. ^ "Repertoire | International Piano Competition "Johann Sebastian Bach"".
  4. ^ "Competition | International Piano Competition "Johann Sebastian Bach"".
  5. ^ "Winners | International Piano Competition "Johann Sebastian Bach"".
  6. ^ "Shuntaro Sugie". YouTube.
  7. ^ "Saori Iuchi". YouTube.
  8. ^ "Rules and regulations | International Piano Competition "Johann Sebastian Bach"".
  9. ^ "Repertoire | International Piano Competition "Johann Sebastian Bach"".
  10. ^ Rosar, Inge. "Jury and Honorary Committee". Bach Competition. Retrieved 28 March 2022.
  11. ^ Rosar, Inge. "Prize-winners". Bach Competition. Retrieved 27 March 2022.

External links edit