November 8, 2013
Friday-8:00pm | University of North Carolina School of Music, Theatre and Dance - Recital Hall
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Julia Zilberquit, piano
Dmitry Sitkovetsky, violin
Greensboro Symphony String Quartet

Program
"Free, But Lonely"
Vivaldi – Bach Concerto Grosso in D minor, op. 3 no 11
Arranged for piano and string quartet by Julia Zilberquit
Vivaldi - Bach Concerto Grosso in A minor, op. 3 no 8
Arranged for piano and string quartet by Julia Zilberquit
F.A.E. Sonata for violin & piano
Dmitry Sitkovetsky, violin & Julia Zilberquit, piano
About the Guest Artist
Russian-born American pianist Julia Zilberquit has earned critical
acclaim as a recitalist, orchestral soloist, chamber musician and
recording artist. The highlight of the current season includes Ms.
Zilberquit's return to Carnegie Hall in February 2012. She will perform
a rare Cesar Franck's symphonic poem "Les Djinns" for piano and
orchestra with Leon Botstein and American Symphony Orchestra.
In 2004 Ms. Zilberquit found and premiered a virtually unknown early
piano concerto by Beethoven in Moscow with Yuri Bashmet and the “Young
Russia” orchestra, and performed it again in Montreal with Yuli Turovsky
and “I Musici de Montréal” in 2006. She has performed with the
Brooklyn Philharmonic, Vienna Chamber Orchestra, New European Strings,
Deutsche Symphony, Moscow Soloists, Cairo Symphony, Moscow Virtuosi,
Russian State Orchestra, Bolshoi Orchestra, Musica Viva, St. Petersburg
Camerata, St. Petersburg’s Capella, the Russian Philharmonia, Moscow
Chamber Orchestra, Sinfonietta Cracovia, Sinfonia Varsovia.
Ms. Zilberquit has given recitals at the world's major halls including
New York's Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center’s
Alice Tully Hall. Her engagements at major international music
festivals include appearances in Seattle, Colmar (France), Klangbogen
(Vienna), Valery Gergiev's “White Nights” (St. Petersburg), Richter's
“December Nights” (Moscow), “The Palaces of St. Petersburg,” and the
Penderecki Festival (Poland). She has also performed under the baton of
Sir Yehudi Menuhin at the Beethoven Festival in Vienna.
Ms. Zilberquit’s first solo recording, The Mystery of Bagatelles, was released on Naxos in 2007 and was praised as a “superb performance” by The Washington Post, and described as an “adventurous program, sparkl[ing] with unusual clarity and pointalistic luminescence” in London’s Piano Magazine. Ms. Zilberquit has also recorded Jewish Music from Russia,
featuring works by Prokofiev, Shostakovich and Slonimsky (Harmonia
Mundi), and Shostakovich's Concertino with the Moscow Virtuosi and
Vladimir Spivakov (BMG). She has been a featured artist on WQXR (New
York), RadioFrance and DeutschlandRadio.
In 2008, Ms. Zilberquit premiered Slonimsky’s Jewish Rhapsody for Piano and Orchestra, which was commissioned by and dedicated to
her, with Leon Botstein and Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra, in
commemoration of the 60th Anniversary of the State of Israel in
Jerusalem. Ms. Zilberquit performed recently at the opening concert of
the 2008 Bard Music Festival, “Prokofiev and His World,” as well as at
the 92nd Street Y in New York.
A native of Moscow, Julia Zilberquit was born into a family of
musicians. She graduated from Moscow Gnessin School of Music and later
received her Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees from The Juilliard School
(class of Bella Davidovich). She lives in New York City with her
husband, son, and daughter. For more information, please visit www.juliazilberquit.com.
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