This is a list of musicians who have been awarded in the International Johann Sebastian Bach Competition in Leipzig since its foundation in 1950.
Competition by year edit
1950 edit
Piano
Organ
- 1 Amadeus Webersinke, Karl Richter
- 2 Ludwig Dörr, Gerhard Tipp
- 3 Walter Schönheit, Diethard Hellmann
Harpsichord
Voice
Violin
1964 edit
Piano
- 1 Ilse Graubin
- 2 Wolfgang Wappler, Melita Dukowa-Kolin
- 3 Igor Lazko, Gerhard Erber, Brunhild Partsch
Organ
Voice
1968 edit
Piano
Organ
Voice
Violin
1972 edit
Piano
Organ
Harpsichord
Voice – female
Voice – male
Violin
1976 edit
Piano
Organ
Voice – female
Voice – male
Violin
Cello
1980 edit
Piano
Organ
Voice – female
Voice – male
Violin
Cello
1984 edit
Piano
Organ
Voice – female
Voice – male
Violin
Flute
- 1 Wolfgang Ritter
- 2 Monika Hegedüs
- 3 Matthias Rust
- 4 Alison Mitchell
- 5 Karin Beck
1988 edit
Piano
- 1 Gerald Fauth
- 2 Nikolai Lugansky
- 3 Alexej Botowinow
- 4 Albrecht Hartmann
- 5 Megumi Hashiba
- 6 Dana Sasinowa
Organ
- 1 Martin Sander
- 2 Stefan Kircheis
- 3 Wolfgang Kläsener
- 4 Valter Savant-Levet
- 5 Andreas Strobelt
- 6 Markus Lang
Voice – female
Voice – male
Violin
- 1 Antje Weithaas
- 2 Katrin Scholz
- 3 Kazimierz Olechowski
- 4 Hiroko Suzuki
- 5 Marat Bisengaliew
- 6 Denitza Kazakova
Cello
- 1 Marc Coppey
- 2 Michael Sanderling
- 3 Raphaël Pidoux
- 4 Anton Istomin
- 5 Sybille Hesselbarth
- 6 Friedemann Ludwig
1992 edit
Piano
Organ
Harpsichord
Violin
Voice – female
- 1 Bogna Bartosz
- 2 Yvonne Albes
- 3 Alla Simonichvili
- 4 Antje Perscholka
- 5 Bettine Eismann
- 6 Irina Potapenko
Voice – male
1996 edit
Piano
Organ
- No prize awarded
Harpsichord
Violin
Voice – female
Voice – male
1998 edit
Piano
Cello
Voice – female
Voice – male
2000 edit
Harpsichord
Organ
2002 edit
Piano
Violin and Baroque violin
Voice – female
Voice – male
2004 edit
Cello and Baroque cello
Voice
Organ
2006 edit
Harpsichord
Piano
Violin and Baroque violin
2008 edit
Organ
Voice
Cello and Baroque cello
2010 edit
Piano
Harpsichord
Violin and Baroque violin
2012 edit
Organ
Voice
Cello and Baroque cello
- 1. Beiliang Zhu
- 2. Ditta Rohmann
- 3. Clara Pouvreau
2014 edit
Piano[1]
- 1. Hilda Huang, United States
- 2. Schaghajegh Nosrati, Germany
- 3. Georg Kjurdian, Latvia
Harpsichord
- 1. Jean-Christophe Dijoux, France
- 2. Olga Pashchenko, Russia
- 3. Alexandra Nepomnyashchaya, Russia
Violin and Baroque violin
- 1. Seiji Okamoto, Japan
- 2. Marie Radauer-Plank, Austria
- 3. Niek Baar, Netherlands
2016 edit
Organ[2]
- 1. Kazuki Tomita, Japan
- 2. Pavel Svoboda, Czech Republic
- 3. Alina Nikitina, Russia
Voice
- 1. Patrick Grahl, Tenor, Germany
- 2. Raphael Höhn, Tenor, Switzerland
- 3. Geneviève Tschumi, Contralto, Switzerland
Cello and Baroque cello
- 1. Paolo Bonomini, Cello, Italy
- 2. Ursina Braun, Cello, Switzerland
- 3. Vladimir Waltham, Baroque cello, France/United Kingdom
2018 edit
Piano[3]
- 1. Rachel Naomi Kudo (US)
- 2. Arash Rokni (Iran)
- 3. Jonathan Ferrucci (Australia/Italy)
Harpsichord
- 1. Avinoam Shalev (Israel)
- 2. Andrew Rosenblum (US)
- 3. Anastasia Antonova (Russia)
Violin
- 1. Maria Włoszczowska (Poland)
- 2. Maia Cabeza (US/Canada)
- 3. Hed Yaron Meyerson (Germany/Israel) Baroque violin
2020 edit
The 2020 Competition in Leipzig has been canceled due to the Corona crisis.
2022
Piano
- 1. Olga Davnis (Russia)
- 2. Mattia Fusi (Italy)
- 3. Eden Agranat Meged (Israel)
Harpsichord
- 1. Alexander von Heißen (Germany)
- 2. Irene González Roldán (Spain)
- 3. Dmytro Kokoshynskyy (Ukraine)
Violin/Baroque Violin
- 1. Charlotte Spruit (Netherlands)
- 2. Qingzhu Weng (China)
- 3. Sophia Prodanova (Bulgaria)
References edit
- ^ "Die Teilnehmer des Bach-Wettbewerbs 2014". Bach Archiv Leipzig. Archived from the original on 8 August 2014.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ^ "The Prize Winners of the Bach Competition 2016". Bach Archiv Leipzig. Archived from the original on 28 April 2018. Retrieved 27 April 2018.
- ^ "Preisträger im Internationalen Bach-Wettbewerb geehrt". Leipziger Volkszeitung (in German). 21 July 2018. Retrieved 23 July 2018.