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| Olga Kern |
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The University of Alabama’s School
of Music welcomes celebrated pianist Olga Kern to perform a
concert as part of the 2003-04 Celebrity Series on Tuesday, Nov.
18 at 7:30 p.m. in the Concert Hall of the Moody Music Building.
The concert is sponsored by the Gloria Narramore Moody Foundation.
Kern has been captivating fans and critics alike with her passionately
confident musicianship and vivid stage presence for years. She has
performed in many of the world’s most important venues, including
the Great Hall of the Moscow Conservatory, Symphony Hall in Osaka,
La Scala in Milan and the Salle Cortot in Paris.
A Russian native, Kern was born into a family of musicians (her
great-great-grandmother was a friend of Tchaikovsky and her great-grandmother
sang with Rachmaninoff) and began studying piano at age 5. She won
the first Rachmaninoff International Piano Competition when she
was 17, is a laureate of 11 international competitions and has toured
throughout her native Russia, Europe, and the United States, as
well as in Japan, South Africa and South Korea.
In June of 2001 Kern was awarded the Nancy Lee and Perry R. Bass
Gold Medal at the 11th Van Cliburn International Piano Competition
– the first woman to have achieved this distinction in more
than 30 years. She was featured in “Playing on the Edge,”
the Peabody Award-winning documentary about the 11th Van Cliburn
Competition, which has aired on PBS stations across the United States.
Her final round Cliburn Competition performances with the Fort
Worth Symphony Orchestra and Maestro James Conlon are showcased
in the PBS series “Concerto.” Kern recently recorded
the Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No. 1 with the Rochester Philharmonic
Orchestra and Christopher Seaman, which was just released by harmonia
mundi usa.
About the Gloria Narramore Moody Foundation: The
Moody Foundation was founded in 1990 by Gloria Moody and her husband,
the late Tuscaloosa businessman Frank McCorkle Moody, to support
the arts and music. In addition to bringing world-class performers
to Alabama, the Moody Foundation has endowed scholarships at UA
and has supported arts organizations elsewhere in the United States.
This is the 15th year the Moody Foundation has brought an internationally
acclaimed talent to Alabama. Previous Moody Foundation sponsored
artists have included bass Samuel Ramey, New York Metropolitan Opera
soprano Benita Valente, cellist Yo-Yo Ma and pianist Emanuel Ax
in a joint recital, violinists Itzhak Perlman, Gil Shaham and Leila
Josefowicz and flutist Ransom Wilson.
Single ticket prices are $22 and $15 for general audiences and
$7 for students with valid IDs. For ticket information or an immediate
credit card purchase call the School of Music Box Office at 205/348-7111.
The School of Music is
a department of the College of
Arts and Sciences, UA’s largest division and the largest
public liberal arts college in the state, with approximately 5,500
undergraduates and 1,000 graduate students. The College has received
national recognition for academic excellence, and the College’s
students have been selected for many of the nation’s top academic
honors, including 13 Rhodes Scholarships, 14 Goldwater Scholarships,
seven Truman Scholarships, and 15 memberships on USA Today’s
Academic All-American teams.
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