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John Kersey

John Kersey

  • Avg user rating: 3h stars Out of 11 votes
  • Your rating:  Write your review
  • Similar Artists: Raymond Lewenthal, Malcolm Binns, Michael Ponti, Ronald Smith

Playlist

Mendelssohn transc. Sydney Smith: Violin Concerto (first movt) (4:21) Date added: 03/27/07 | Total listens: 1,723
Schumann transc. Kirchner: 'Mondnacht' from 'Liederkreis' op 39 (2:54) Date added: 03/27/07 | Total listens: 1,062
Schubert transc. Stark: String Quintet (excerpt from Finale) (4:22) Date added: 03/27/07 | Total listens: 795
Rosenfeld - no 13 from 'Lyriske fantasistykker' op 47 (3:03) Date added: 03/27/07 | Total listens: 654
Leybach - Fantaisie brilliante on 'Norma' op 65 (excerpt) (5:51) Date added: 03/27/07 | Total listens: 743
Kirchner - 'Freundliche Erinnern', no 8 from 'In stillen Stunden' op 56 (3:30) Date added: 03/27/07 | Total listens: 549
Hofmann - 'Confession' no 3 from 'The Trumpeter of Sackingen' op 52 (5:38) Date added: 03/27/07 | Total listens: 587
Sir Frederic Cowen - Columbine from 'The Language of Flowers' (2:10) Date added: 03/27/07 | Total listens: 598
Robert transc. Clara Schumann - Der Nussbaum (2:56) Date added: 03/27/07 | Total listens: 653
Pauer - 'Dump' from Pieces in the style of Ancient Dances, op 75 (1:54) Date added: 03/27/07 | Total listens: 521
Jadassohn - Mouvement de valse tres anime, no 3 from Phantasiestucke op 31 (2:27) Date added: 03/27/07 | Total listens: 605
Brahms transc. Stark - Haydn Variations (nos 4,5,6) (5:04) Date added: 03/27/07 | Total listens: 637
Beethoven - Sonata in E flat major Biamonti 98 (0:52) Date added: 03/27/07 | Total listens: 1,010
Godard - Guitarella - serenade op 55 (3:30) Date added: 03/27/07 | Total listens: 620
Anon. transc. Alkan - Rigaudons des petits violons de Louis XIV (2:49) Date added: 03/26/07 | Total listens: 705
Medtner: Novelle in E major op 17 no 3 (6:53) Date added: 11/13/05 | Total listens: 2,092

User reviews for John Kersey

Average rating3h starsOut of 11 votes

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Editor's review

Here's a quiz: between Medtner and Leybach, who's your favorite? Never heard of them? You're not alone. This British pianist has devoted his career to unearthing great lost composers, and he plays them with genuine reverence. And if nothing else, he can namedrop Cziffra at cocktail parties.

Biography

John Kersey is the winner of many international awards for his work in music and is particularly known for his pioneering work in researching and bringing unknown nineteenth-century piano music to a wider public through concerts and recordings. He is author of a major series of premiere recordings called 'Romantic Discoveries', consisting of over one hundred nineteenth-century works which are available on compact disc via his website. He has given the British concert and recorded premieres of works by Beethoven, Alkan and S.S. Wesley, among others, and his work has been featured on American and Dutch radio. In 2002, he was the first individual British winner of the Medal of Honour for Science and Art of the Austrian Albert Schweitzer Society, which counts among its past recipients the distinguished American composer Richard Nanes. In the same year, John Kersey became the first non-German to win the Friedrich Silcher Medal in Bronze of the Friedrich Silcher Vocalists' Foundation, Hessen, Germany. He has received several international chivalric honours, is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts and a Liveryman of the Worshipful Company of Musicians. He has received honorary fellowships from music colleges and societies of musicians in the UK, as well as several honorary doctorates from universities around the world. His professional Purcell Room debut at the age of seventeen led to invitations to give concerts in both the UK and continental Europe, and he has since performed not only as piano soloist and collaborative artist, but also as an organist and continuo harpsichordist. His current performing schedule includes both solo recitals in the UK and a series of concerts with the mezzo-soprano Sarah Tyler. In June 2005, the duo gave the public premiere of Jonathan Dove's new song-cycle 'All the Future Days' to poems by Ursula Vaughan Williams, and in 2006 premiered the song-cycle 'Bathsheba' with music by John Kersey and words by Sarah Tyler. John Kersey graduated with a dozen prizes as the top pianist of his year from the Royal College of Music, where he studied with Yu Chun-Yee and was later elected a Junior Fellow. As well as his work as a performer, he is also active as a music critic and educational consultant. For more information, please visit his website at http://www.johnkersey.org

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