Thursday, February 23, 2012

Breinton Recital Society

presents
a solo piano recital by

Christopher Atzinger

Saturday 14
April 2012
at 7:30 pm

Tickets are priced at £18 each and include annual season membership to the Society and snacks and drinks during the interval. Tickets will go on sale on 1 March.  If you are not on our email mailing list, please subscribe now to be notified when tickets are available

A native of Michigan, Christopher Atzinger is a medalist of the Cincinnati, New Orleans, San Antonio, Shreveport and Seattle international piano competitions. He was also a winner of the National Federation of Music Clubs, the Simone Belsky Piano Competition, and at the IBLA Grand Prize Competition in Italy.

Programme

to be announced

About Christopher

A native of Michigan, Christopher Atzinger enjoys an expanding career and reputation for excellence throughout the United States, Canada, Austria, England, France, Germany, Italy and Spain. He is a medalist of the Cincinnati, New Orleans, San Antonio, Shreveport and Seattle international piano competitions. He was also a winner of the National Federation of Music Clubs, the Simone Belsky Piano Competition, and at the IBLA Grand Prize Competition in Italy.

Additionally, he is the recipient of grants and fellowships from the Theodore Presser Foundation, Foundation La Gesse, American Composers Forum and Joyce Dutka Arts Foundation. As a collaborative artist, he also won First Prize at the Sydney Wright Memorial Accompaniment Competition.

As guest soloist, Christopher Atzinger has appeared with the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra, North Carolina’s Brevard Repertory Orchestra and the symphony orchestras of Jackson (MI), Shreveport and St. Olaf, under the batons of Klauspeter Seibel, Steven Smith, Stephen Osmond, Dennis Simons and Steven Amundson, while recital performances have been heard at New York City’s Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall, New York University and St. Paul’s Chapel, Chicago’s Dame Myra Hess Series and The Phillips Collection in Washington, DC. Festival appearances include the Banff International Keyboard Festival, Brevard Music Festival, Bridge Chamber Music Festival and the Chautauqua Institution.

Christopher Atzinger’s live performances have aired on radio stations WFMT-Chicago, WJR-Detroit, WXEL-South Florida, KPAC-San Antonio and WGTE-Toledo, while his artistry has also been heard on WGBH-Boston, KING-Seattle and Minnesota and Wisconsin Public Radio, as well as on television stations in Chicago and Cincinnati.

On CD, Christopher Atzinger has two albums released on MSR Classics - a debut solo recording of Bach, Beethoven, Barber and Fritze, followed by an all-Brahms album. He has also recorded music of Amy Beach for Centaur, and, in the fall of 2010, he records works of Judith Lang Zaimont for Naxos.

Christopher Atzinger holds degrees from the University of Texas at Austin and University of Michigan, and earned the Doctor of Musical Arts degree in piano performance from the Peabody Conservatory of Johns Hopkins University. Among his principal teachers he counts Julian Martin, Robert McDonald, Anton Nel, David Renner and Carolyn Lipp. Additional keyboard studies were undertaken with Timothy Lovelace, Edward Parmentier and Penelope Crawford. A dedicated teacher and coach, himself, Dr. Atzinger served on the faculty of Pennsylvania’s Dickinson College, prior to his current appointment at St. Olaf College in Minnesota. He has also lectured at The Juilliard School and Berklee College of Music and conducted masterclasses throughout the United States.

Reviews

“Atzinger is blessed with abundant energy, powerful fingers, a big sound and natural musicality. He makes the best possible case for Gregory Fritze’s well made 1989 Sonata, moulding the jagged, proclamatory unison motifs and full-throated chords in contrary motion with immense authority, taking great care with the slow movement’s inside-the-piano strumming and plucking. Atzinger more than holds his own against the Barber Sonata’s finest recorded practitioners (Horowitz, Cliburn, Browning and Wild) and benefits from MSR’s warm, roomy and most attractive engineering.”
GRAMOPHONE

"Soloist Christopher Atzinger gave the work [Barber Piano Concerto] a marvelous ride. He projected a thorough mastery of its numerous Himalayan hurdles, his hands blurring over the keyboard, churning out fusillades of octaves and parallel sixths in the craggy ‘Allegro appassionato’ and galloping ‘Allegro molto’ movements, caressing the ivories in the melancholy traceries of the central ‘Canzone.’"
THE REPUBLICAN (Springfield, MA)

"Atzinger proves himself to be a master of the fugue in his debut recital. Beginning with Bach, the original and supreme master of the fugue, then progressing through late Beethoven to arrive at the brilliant final movement of the Barber sonata, we are treated to a great overview of this form. There are no weak movements, only wonderful music-making. Christopher Atzinger is surely a pianist to keep a watch for."
AMERICAN RECORD GUIDE

"The Barber Sonata seems to be an Atzinger calling-card, with its high-flown, percussive lyricism. Atzinger bestows upon the opening Allegro energico the same taut, hard-edged patina we know from the Horowitz and Browning versions. The second movement Scherzo might be Barber’s equivalent of a Liszt etude, according to Atzinger’s playful fingers. The Adagio brings out Barber’s concession to ‘modernism’ and Schoenberg, but it retains a bluesy, American character. The fugal last movement has Atzinger in molten form, providing ardent, scintillating evidence of his technical and sympathetic commitment to this music."
AUDIOPHILE AUDITION

"[Schubert’s Sonata in B-flat major] is beloved less for its technical arrangement than for the festive, gently hymn-like feeling it projects. This was brought across masterfully by Christopher Atzinger with an aesthetically rich performance. He unlocked the thematic richness of the first movement, gave the andante sostenuto an introverted, song-like treatment, and lent ‘delicacy’ to the scherzo. The rondo of the final movement was charged, stirring."
SCHWARZWÄLDER-BOTE (Germany)

"The first is an uncommonly fine release. Late Brahms piano pieces are intricate, sometimes difficult works, so I like to follow them with a score. With the music in front of me I was doubly aware of the hundreds, no thousands of little rhythmic adjustments–agogic accents, rubato, and the like–that Atzinger brings to the music. He has fantastic control of rhythm in his shaping of phrases, and his ability to bring a hidden melody to the foreground is exemplary. All the pieces are paced very well, and the piano sound is excellent. Atzinger is a pianist to watch."
AMERICAN RECORD GUIDE

Announcing our 2011/12 Artists

Saturday 24 September 2011

Australian pianist Piers Lane has a flourishing international career, which has taken him to more than 40 countries. Highlights of past years have included performances with the London Philharmonic Orchestra at the Royal Festival Hall, and recitals at Avery Fisher Hall and Wigmore Hall. Read Piers' full biography

Saturday 12 November 2011

Valerie Tryon’s career as a concert pianist began while she was still a child. Before she was twelve years old, she had broadcast for the BBC and was appearing regularly before the public on the concert platform. She was one of the youngest students ever to be admitted to the Royal Academy of Music. Read Valerie's full biography.  

Saturday 3 December 2011

Katya Apekisheva has been described by Gramophone as 'a profoundly gifted artist' who has 'already achieved artistic greatness' and was a prize-winner at the Leeds Piano Competition and the Scottish Piano Competition. Read Katya's full biography

Saturday 21 January 2012

Callum Smart came to wide public attention when at the age of thirteen he won the string section of the 2010 BBC Young Musicians Competition. Read Callum's full biography Gordon Back's international reputation was established in 1978 when he played with Dong-Suk Kang in Alice Tully Hall, New York. Read Gordon's full biography

Saturday 14 April 2012

A native of Michigan, Christopher Atzinger is a medalist of the Cincinnati, New Orleans, San Antonio, Shreveport and Seattle international piano competitions. He was also a winner of the National Federation of Music Clubs, the Simone Belsky Piano Competition, and at the IBLA Grand Prize Competition in Italy. Read Christopher's full biography

Saturday 26 May 2012

Madeleine Mitchell was a finalist in both the European Women of Achievement and the Creative Briton Awards; "a pioneering figure in the violin world" according to BBC Music Magazine Read Madeleine's full biography Andrew Ball made his Proms debut playing Messiaen and studied Tippett’s sonatas with the composer. Read Andrew's full biography  

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