Igor Levit rarely does anything small. The acclaimed Russian-Jewish-German pianist raised eyebrows as a 26-year-old when, for his Sony Classical debut in 2013, he tackled Beethoven’s last five piano ...
Igor Levit seemed to come out of nowhere. Largely unknown at the time of his 2013 debut recording of the last five Beethoven sonatas, the pianist has racked up a nearly unbroken string of accolades ...
The Russian-German pianist Igor Levit, perhaps the most formidable virtuoso of the younger generation (fans of Daniil Trifonov will beg to differ), designed his two-CD album “Life” as a tribute to a ...
NEW YORK - Igor Levit arrived at John F. Kennedy International Airport's Terminal 1 ahead of his first concert at Carnegie Hall's main Stern Auditorium. It was the last day of February and his entry ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Critic’s Pick For his latest Carnegie Hall appearance, Levit played solo piano transcriptions of symphonic works by Mahler and Beethoven. By Oussama ...
'All I can do is help the pain of my people through music': Igor Levit - Felix Broede/ Sony Classical On October 7, the renowned German-Jewish pianist Igor Levit – who at 36 has just become the ...
Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click. Pianist Igor Levit, the San Francisco Symphony's Artist-in-Residence for the ...
Igor Levit plays piano for an audience that includes critic Alex Ross, in the black mask, and Frido Mann, Thomas Mann's grandson, wearing the blue mask, in the first performance on Thomas Mann's piano ...
Igor Levit has become one of the “one of the essential artists of his generation” (The New York Times). Nine years after his Princeton University Concerts debut, he returns at long last with a program ...
The 30-year-old Russian-born, Berlin-based pianist Igor Levit last Wednesday received the 2018 Gilmore Artist Award. Like the MacArthur “genius” awards, the $300,000 prize (given every four years) ...
Among the disappointments of Colm Toíbín’s new novel, “The Magician,” which imagines the life of Thomas Mann, is any real sense of the richly extravagant artistic life of the émigré community in 1940s ...
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