Fazil Say (Piano)
With his extraordinary pianistic talents, Fazэl Say has been touching audiences
and critics alike for more twenty-five years in a way that has become rare in
the increasingly materialistic and elaborately organised classical music world.
Concerts with this artist are something else. They are more direct, more open,
more exciting; in short, they go straight to the heart. Which is exactly what
the composer Aribert Reimann thought in 1987 when, during a visit to Ankara, he
had the opportunity, more or less by chance, to appreciate the playing of the
seventeen-year-old pianist. He immediately asked the American pianist David
Levine, who was accompanying him on the trip, to come to the city’s
conservatory, using the now much-quoted words: ‘You absolutely must hear him,
this boy plays like a devil.’
Fazэl Say had his first piano lessons from
Mithat Fenmen, who had himself studied with Alfred Cortot in Paris. Perhaps
sensing just how talented his pupil was, Fenmen asked the boy to improvise every
day on themes to do with his daily life before he went on to the essential piano
exercises and studies. This contact with free creative processes and forms was
the source of the immense improvisatory talent and the aesthetic outlook that
make Fazэl Say the pianist and composer he is today. He has been commissioned to
write music for the Salzburg Festival, the WDR, the Dortmund Konzerthaus and the
Schleswig-Holstein and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern festivals, among others. His
output includes compositions for solo Keyboard and chamber music as well as solo
concertos and large-scale orchestral works.
From 1987 onwards, Fazэl Say
fine-tuned his skills as a classical pianist with David Levine, first at the
Musikhochschule Robert Schumann in Dьsseldorf and later in Berlin; this formed
the aesthetic basis for his Mozart and Schubert interpretations in particular.
His outstanding technique very quickly enabled him to master the so-called
warhorses of the repertoire with sovereign ease. And it is precisely this blend
of refinement (in Bach, Haydn, and Mozart) and virtuoso brilliance in the works
of Liszt, Mussorgsky and Beethoven that gained him victory at the Young Concert
Artists international competition in New York in 1994. Since then he has played
with all the famous American and European orchestras and numerous leading
conductors and has built up a multifaceted repertoire ranging from Bach, through
the Viennese Classics (Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven) and the Romantics, right up
to contemporary music, including his own piano compositions.
Guest
appearances have taken Fazэl Say to countless countries on all five continents;
the French newspaper Le Figaro called him ‘a genius’. In addition, he also
appears regularly in chamber music: for many years he formed a fantastic duo
with the violinist Patricia Kopatchinskaja, and among his other notable partners
are the Argentinian cellist Sol Gabetta, the Borusan Quartet of Istanbul, and
other Turkish instrumental soloists.
From 2005 to 2010 he was an
exclusive artist at the Dortmund Konzerthaus; during the 2010/11 season he was
artist in residence at the Berlin Konzerthaus; and he was a focal point of the
programme of the Schleswig-Holstein Festival in the summer of 2011. There have
been further residencies and Fazэl Say festivals in Paris, Tokyo, Meran,
Hamburg, and Istanbul. During the 2012/13 season Fazil Say was artist in
residence at the Hessischer Rundfunk in Frankfurt/ Main and at the Rheingau
Musik Festival 2013 where he was honoured with the Rheingau Musik Preis.
His recordings of works by Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Gershwin and
Stravinsky have been highly praised by the critics and won several prizes, among
them three ECHO Klassik. Since 2003 Fazэl Say has been under exclusive contract
to the Naive label. He lives in Istanbul and has a daughter.
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