Russian-born American pianist Julia
Zilberquit has earned critical acclaim as a recitalist, orchestral soloist,
chamber musician, and recording artist. She was praised by The
New York Times as "an outstanding soloist" after her
Carnegie Hall performance of Cesar Franck's symphonic poem Les
Djinns for piano and orchestra with Leon Botstein and the American
Symphony Orchestra in 2012. <<cut>>
Highlights of the 2013-14 season include the release of her CD,Bach:
Complete Solo Keyboard Concertos; Bach-Vivaldi and features the
premiere of two Bach-Vivaldi Concerti Grossi arranged by Ms. Zilberquit for
piano and orchestra. This recording was released on the Warner Classics label
and was hailed as a “gorgeous rendition” by the prestigious Gramophone
Magazine.
Ms. Zilberquit made an arrangement of Shostakovich’s Concertinofor
piano and orchestra and premiered it at Carnegie Hall in 1997.
She performed it worldwide to critical acclaim and recorded theConcertino with
Vladimir Spivakov and the Moscow Virtuosi.
Julia Zilberquit’s other recordings include a solo recording, The
Mystery of Bagatelles, released by Naxos in 2007. The CD was praised as a
“superb performance” by The Washington Post, and described as an
“adventurous program, sparkling 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 on the Harmonia Mundi label.
In 2008, Ms. Zilberquit premiered Slonimsky’s, The Jewish
Rhapsody for Piano and Orchestra, which she commissioned. Slonimsky
dedicated the piece to Julia Zilberquit and she performed it with the Jerusalem
Symphony Orchestra, in commemoration of the 60th Anniversary of the State of
Israel.
Julia Zilberquit has performed under the baton of Sir Yehudi Menuhin at the
Beethoven Festival in Vienna. In 2004 Ms. Zilberquit discovered a
virtually unknown early piano concerto by Beethoven and performed it in Moscow
with Yuri Bashmet and the “Young Russia” orchestra. She has been a guest
soloist with numerous orchestras, including The Brooklyn Philharmonic, Russian
State Orchestra, Vienna Chamber Orchestra, Deutsche Symphony, Moscow Soloists,
Cairo Symphony, Moscow Virtuosi, Bolshoi Orchestra, Musica Viva, “I Musici de
Montréal”, The Russian Philharmonia, Moscow Chamber Orchestra, Sinfonietta
Cracovia, and Sinfonia Varsovia.
Ms. Zilberquit has given recitals at the world's major halls including New
York's Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall, 92nd Street Y, and the Alice Tully
Hall at Lincoln Center. 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,” Bard Music Festival in New York, and
the Penderecki Festival (Poland).
A native of Moscow, Julia Zilberquit was born into a family of musicians.
She graduated from Moscow Gnessin School of Music and The Juilliard School
(class of Bella Davidovich). She lives in New York City with her husband, son,
and daughter.