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The shopping channel virtuoso

Acclaimed pianist Katya Apekisheva played Brahms on QVC.

September 7, 2010 12:25
Apekisheva says the life of a young musician is never truly secure

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

2 min read

Devotees of the Leeds International Piano Competition may remember Katya Apekisheva in the final in 1996, playing Rachmaninov's second piano concerto. She was just 20 and her performance earned her a top prize, even if not the number one slot some thought she deserved.

Looking back at Leeds now, at the age of 34, Apekisheva admits that that concerto was "on the edge". "I didn't expect to reach the final," she recalls, "so I hadn't even taken along the music of the concerto. I had to track down a copy at a day's notice. It was a very high-pressure event, broadcast live on TV and radio, and Simon Rattle was conducting. My teacher nearly killed me!"

The incident has not hurt her in the long term, though. Apekisheva, who plays at the Wigmore Hall next week, has won plenty more prizes, the prestigious London Philharmonic Orchestra's Soloist of the Year among them. Her most recent CD, Brahms's complete violin sonatas with the violinist Jack Liebeck has brought the pair's well-established musical collaboration to prominence. Critics praised her as "outstanding".

Apekisheva's piano playing is grounded firmly in the Russian tradition that underpins her musical and family backgrounds. Her parents are both pianists, and as a child in Moscow she shared a teacher with fellow Jewish pianist Evgeny Kissin. Members of Apekisheva's family was allowed by the Soviet regime to be in the first wave of Russian Jews to move to Israel. She first visited the country when she was 14. "I'll never forget the scenes at the airport," she says. "So many families were being reunited - people were in tears everywhere."