Korea Music Foundation presents
KMF Benefit Concert
Jung-Ja Kim, piano
Tuesday April 15, 2014 8:00pm
Alice Tully Hall, Lincoln Center
Tickets $60, $50, $30 (Student & Senior discounts available)
Alice Tully Hall Box Office: (212) 875-5050
Korea Music Foundation: (212) 942-5978
*Limited seats available, so please make sure to call the box office.
PROGRAM
Ravel Sonatine, Miroirs, Valse nobles et sentimentales
Copland Piano Variation
MEET THE ARTIST
“...a discriminating and
thoughtful musician...Ms. Kim's reading [Ravel’s Miroirs] was so
remarkable not only for its vivid coloring, but for insights which were
deeper than mere pictorialism and made a real intellectual span of a
work seldom even considered in those terms." —The Times, London
Korean-born pianist Jung-ja Kim
has won extraordinary critical acclaim for her pianistic brilliance and
rare insight. Early in Ms. Kim's career, she received national
recognition in her native land and became a top prizewinner of major
competitions. A scholarship to The Juilliard School brought her to the
U.S., where her principal teachers were Irwin Freundlich and Ilona
Kabos. During her studies at Juilliard, Leonard Bernstein selected
Jung-Ja Kim for a televised concerto performance of the New York
Philharmonic Young People’s Concerts. She also added First Prize in the
Kosciuszko Chopin Competition to her long list of accomplishments.
Following this were numerous appearances throughout the U.S. as well as a
highly successful New York recital debut at Carnegie Recital Hall as a
winer of Young Concert Artists; the New York Times stated: “A discerning
thoughtful, musician. Her phrasing was graceful, her technique fluent.
Best of all, her piano sound was consistently beautiful. Brilliant
playing…a vibrant, compelling performance.” Since that time, she was
awarded a Martha Baird Rockefeller Grant, which sponsored a series of
debut performances in major cities throughout Europe. Ms. Kim has
appeared as a soloist with many orchestras including the Baltimore
Symphony and the St. Louis Chamber Symphony, and as a recitalist at New
York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, Boston's Gardner Museum and the
Phillips Gallery in Washington, D.C. She currently serves on the piano
faculty at the Boston Conservatory.
"She is a lovely artist, with a beautiful quality of tone, a nimble technique, and real musical imagination." —The Boston Globe
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