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University of Cincinnati - Piano 교수진 정보

 
 
 
Michael Chertock        - Assistant Professor of Piano; Chair in Piano
 
513-556-9531 / Michael.Chertock@UC.edu  
 
BM, MM, College-Conservatory of Music
 
Biography:  Michael Chertock received bachelor and master of music degrees from CCM where he studied piano with Clifford Herzer, Robert Weirich, Frank Weinstock and James Tocco. As an orchestral soloist, he has worked with James Conlon, Jaime Laredo, Keith Lockhart, Erich Kunzel and Andrew Litton. Solo performances include the Philadelphia Orchestra, Boston Pops, l'Orchestre Symphonique du Montreal, Toronto Symphony, Baltimore Symphony, Naples Philharmonic, Detroit Symphony, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, Chattanooga Symphony, Utah Symphony, Oregon Symphony, Indianapolis Symphony and the Dayton Philharmonic. He has presented recitals and made chamber appearances at the Linton Chamber Music Series, Mayor's 801 Plum Series, Steans Institute of the Ravinia Festival and Grand Tetons Music Festival. For radio and TV, he has given recitals with Mark Oswald, Alyssa Park, Larry Combs, Eddie Daniels and Ricardo Morales-Matos. His recordings include Cinematic Piano, Chamber Music of Frank Proto, Palace of the Winds, Christmas at the Movies, Love at the Movies and CSO's Festival Prelude for Organ and Orchestra, on which he was the organ soloist.
 
In 2005 Chertock gave the world premiere fo Tod Machover's Concerto for Piano and Orchestra with the Boston Pops, which he repeated at the Boston Music Awards, at MIT and in Portugal. In 1991 he was awarded the silver medal at the World Piano Competition of the American Music Scholarship Association. Other awards include the 1989 Joanna Hodges International Piano Competition prize, 1993 St. Charles International Piano Competition grand prize, the 1988 and '90 winner of the CCM Concerto Competition and first prize in the 1990 Rildia Bee O'Bryan Cliburn Competition. Before coming to CCM, he was a visiting professor at Miami University.
 
 
 
Caroline Hong

Title: Visiting Adjunct Professor of Piano
Tel: 513-556-4041
Email: caroline.hong@uc.edu

Caroline Hong holds degrees from the Peabody Institute, the Juilliard School, and Indiana University. She is internationally active as a soloist, chamber musician, lecturer, adjudicator, and master class teacher at universities, institutions, and competitions. Dr. Hong was the first female appointed to the Piano at Peabody Summer Program, and has also served as faculty for the Vianden International Chamber Music Festival, Longwood University, and Indiana University as a graduate assistant in both theory and secondary piano.
 
Hong has received critical acclaim as soloist with symphonies in the nation including Utah, Richmond, and Columbus Symphonies. As winner of the Chicago Civic Orchestra Soloist Competition, she made her debut in Orchestra Hall in a performance of Sergei Prokofiev's Third Piano Concerto under the baton of Michael Morgan. She is a Laureate of the Van Cliburn International Audition, the Robert Casadesus International Competition, William Kapell International Piano Competition, UNISA International Piano Competition, Beethoven Foundation, and was also selected to compete in the Montréal International Piano Competition. She made her debut at Carnegie Hall's Weill Recital Hall as the winner of the Frinna Awerbuch International Piano Competition (NY), and has won other prizes, including Distinguished Performer of the Palm Beach International Piano Competition, first prize in both Society of American Musicians (Chicago, IL) and Music Academy of the West Competition (Santa Barbara, CA). In her pre-college days, she was named Orange County's Best Pianist, and was a top winner in the Bach Festival of Southern California. She has been a featured performer on Robert Sherman's "Young Artists Showcase" (New York Times Radio) and numerous other radio broadcasts throughout the nation as well as abroad in Pretoria, South Africa.
 
Caroline Hong was recognized as "one of the greatest pianists I have ever heard" by the Pulitzer Prize and Academy award-winning composer John Corigliano after her performance of his Etude Fantasy (1976). The Columbus Dispatch wrote of the same performance that it was "breathtaking" and "hard to imagine a better performance." She has also been praised by critics for her "expressive and powerful playing," "formidable technique" (Richmond Times Dispatch), as well as her "keen sense of lyricism and the classical style." As a chamber musician and collaborator, she has performed with well-known groups such as the Vermeer String Quartet and the Dorian Wind Quintet. She is an associate musician functioning as the principal keyboardist of the Columbus Symphony. She is a Steinway Artist and member of the American Liszt Society, and has recorded for Mark Records and Fleur de Son which was reviewed favorably by American Record Guide.
 
 
Hitomi Koyama

Title: Adjunct Instructor of Piano
Email: koyamahi@mail.uc.edu

Hitomi Koyama has won prizes in consecutive years at Dichler Competition held in Vienna, Austria, and also has received Leni Fe Bland Music Awards. She has performed at Wiener Musikseminar, International Sommer Akademie Tokushima, Mannes Beethoven Institute and Eastern Music Festival. She has played in master classes with world-renowned pianists such as Mitsuko Uchida and Robert Levin.
 
As a recitalist and a chamber musician, she has appeared in venues are such as Corbett Auditorium, the Robert J. Werner Recital Hall and Watson Hall in Cincinnati; Snyder Recital Hall at Ohio Northern University; Javitz Center, the Lincoln Center, Spanish Institute, Steinway Hall and Yamaha Salon in New York; Flickinger Center in New Mexico; Bösendorfer Hall, Liszt Hall and Konzerthaus Wien in Austria; Jan Deyl Conservatory Concert Hall in Czech Republic; Murasaki Hall, Aimu Hall and Amyu Tachikawa Hall in Japan.
 
Koyama has earned degrees from the Juilliard School, Mannes College and University for Music and Performing Arts Vienna. Currently, she is pursuing her doctoral degree
at the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music. Her significant mentors include Martin Canin, Victor Rosenbaum, Peter Efler and Eugene Pridonoff.
 
Along with her passion for performance, she is an active teacher at both collegiate and preparatory institutions. Her students have won scholarships and competitions around country. She currently serves as Adjunct Professor of Piano at CCM and Wittenberg University.
 
This season, she will be giving solo recitals and master classes at Western Kentucky University, Providence College and Salon 21 Concert Series.
 
 
Soyeon Kate Lee

Title: Assistant Professor of Music in Piano
Office: 442 Memorial Hall
Tel: 513-556-4041
Email: soyeon.lee@uc.edu
Web: www.soyeonkatelee.com

First prize winner of the prestigious 2010 Naumburg International Piano Competition, Korean- American pianist Soyeon Kate Lee has already been hailed by the New York Times as a pianist with "a huge, richly varied sound, a lively imagination and a firm sense of style," while the Washington Post has lauded her for her "stunning command of the keyboard."
 
Lee’s 2013-2014 season highlights include performances at the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival, New York’s Alice Tully Hall, Rose Studio, Kaplan Penthouse, as well as recitals in Boston’s Gardner Museum, Weill Recital Hall and Steinway Society of the Bay Area. She tours as a member of the Lincoln Center Chamber Music Society Two with pianists Anne-Marie McDermott, Wu Han and Jean-Efflam Bavouzet at La Jolla, Music@Menlo, Columbus Chamber Music Society and Drew University. An active Naxos recording artist, her third CD featuring Liszt opera transcriptions will be released this season and records two albums featuring the music of Scriabin.
 
Lee has been rapturously received as guest soloist with the Cleveland Orchestra and the London Symphony Orchestra, as well as the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra, San Diego Symphony, symphony orchestras of Columbus, Bangor, Bozeman, Boca Raton, Wyoming, Bozeman, Cheyenne, Napa Valley, Scottsdale, Abilene, Naples, Santa Fe and Shreveport in the United States; the Daejeon Philharmonic Orchestra (South Korea), Ulsan Symphony Orchestra (South Korea), Orquesta de Valencia (Spain) and the Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional (Dominican Republic), including performances under the batons of Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos, Jahja Ling, Jorge Mester and Otto-Werner Mueller.
 
Recent recital appearances include New York City programs at Carnegie Hall's Zankel Hall and Weill Recital Hall, Merkin Concert Hall, Lincoln Center for the Performing Art's Alice Tully Hall, Washington's John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Cleveland's Severance Hall, the Ravinia Festival's "Rising Stars" series, Auditorio de Musica de Nacional in Madrid - part of a 13-city tour of Spain, tour of the Hawaiian Islands, Krannert Center and Finland’s Maanta Music Festival.
 
Lee was featured on the January 2006 cover of SYMPHONY magazine's annual "Emerging Artists" issue and in the 2008 edition of Musical America's "More Thrills of Discovery." Her debut CD on the Naxos label, featuring sonatas of Scarlatti, was released in February 2007 to critical acclaim. KOCH International Classics (E1) released her second album in April 2009, for which she was awarded the 2009 Young Artist Award from the Classical Recording Foundation.
 
Lee earned her Bachelor's and Master's degrees, and the Artist Diploma from the Juilliard School. While at Juilliard, she won every award granted to a pianist including the Rachmaninoff Concerto Competition, two consecutive Gina Bachauer Scholarship Competitions, Arthur Rubinstein Prize, Susan Rose Career Grant and the William Petschek Piano Debut Award.
 
Winner of the 2004 Concert Artists Guild International Competition, as well as the Second and Mozart prizes of the Cleveland International Piano Competition and the Bronze Medal of the Paloma O'Shea Santander International Piano Competition in Spain, she has worked with Ursula Oppens, Richard Goode, Robert McDonald and Jerome Lowenthal. A Steinway Artist, Lee previously served on the faculty of City College of New York, residing in New York City with her husband, pianist Ran Dank. She is the co-founder and artistic director of Music by the Glass, a concert series dedicated to bringing together young professionals in New York City.
 
Education
BM, MM and AD, The Julliard School, New York, NY.
 
 
Jackson Yi-Shun Leung

Title: Visiting Adjunct Professor of Piano
Office: Memorial Hall
Tel: 513-556-4041
Email: jackson.leung@uc.edu

Jackson Leung is Coordinator of Keyboard Studies and Director of the Chamber Orchestra at Wright State University. He is the recipient of the 2010 Robert J. Kegerreis Distinguished Professor of Teaching Award at WSU and the 2011 Southwest Ohio Council for Higher Education Award for Excellence in Teaching. In addition to attaining the L.R.S.M. performance diploma from the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music, Dr. Leung received his degrees in piano performance from Hong Kong Baptist University, Temple University, and the College-Conservatory of Music, University of Cincinnati. Leung was the first-prize winner in the Missouri Southern International Piano Competition, the second-prize winner in the Young Keyboard Artists Association International Piano Competition, the "Albert Roussel" Prize at the École Normale de Musique, Paris, the "Excellence in Piano Teaching" Award at the Carmel Debut International Piano Competition in Indiana, the "Conductor of Exceptional Merit" Award at the International Repertoire Workshop for Orchestral Conductors in the Czech Republic, as well as the Outstanding Conductor Award at the Advanced Conducting Academy in Romania.
 
As a pianist, Jackson Leung has performed in France, Spain, Japan, Hong Kong, and throughout the United States and Canada. With his wife, Dr. Benita Tse-Leung, Leung had performed duo recitals and made concerto appearances throughout the U.S. and abroad, including the United Kingdom, France, Spain, Japan, Canada, Bermuda, Singapore, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Macau, and numerous other cities in mainland China (Beijing, Shanghai, Nanjing, Tienjin, etc.). In Hong Kong, he has performed in all the major venues including Hong Kong Cultural Center Concert Hall and Theatre, City Hall Concert Hall and Theatre, Yuen Long Theater Auditorium, and the Governor's House. The Leung-Tse duo was awarded first prize in the Teacher Duo Division at the Ohio Music Teachers Association Graves Competition in Columbus in 1996 and 1998. Their CD, entitled Danzas, was released in the summer of 2001. As a teacher he has produced student winners at numerous state, regional, national, and international competitions, including The Stravinsky Awards International Competition, Bartók-Kabalevsky International Competition, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, and the Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra among others.
 
As a conductor, Leung has been featured as guest conductor with ensembles including the Pan Asia Symphony (Hong Kong), Hrádec Králove Philharmonic, Bohuslav Martinu Philharmonic (Czech Republic), the Macao Orchestra, the Westsächsisches Symphonieorchester (Germany), and Bourgas State Philharmonic Orchestra (Bulgaria). He has led Wright State University Orchestras in performances throughout the Miami Valley, including performances at the Schuster Performing Arts Center, Dayton Arts Institute, Corbett Auditorium at CCM, and at numerous Ohio Music Education Association Professional Conferences.
A sought-after adjudicator, Leung has judged numerous competitions including the World Piano Pedagogy Conference Competition, Music Teachers National Association Regional Auditions, World Piano International Competition in Cincinnati, Chamber Music Yellow Springs, Columbus Symphony Orchestra, Macau-Asia Pacific Piano Competition, Hong Kong Music Festival, and Macao Youth Music Competition among others. Jackson Leung has written articles for various music journals and periodicals including The Instrumentalist, Clavier, Keyboard Companion, American Music Teachers, The Pianist, and Triad. He has also presented papers and workshops at international, nationals, and regional conferences including the World Piano Pedagogy Conference, the Hawaii International Conference on Arts and Humanities, College Music Society National and Regional Conferences, and the OMEA Conference.
 
 
 
 
 
Elaine S Leung-Wolf

Title: Adjunct Instructor of Keyboard Studies
Office: 307 Memorial Hall
Tel: 513-520-8212
Email: elaineshukuan.leung@uc.edu

Elaine Leung-Wolf, adjunct assistant professor, has been a member of the CCM keyboard faculty since 2010. Teachers have included Frank Weinstock, Dorothy Taubman, Hans Graf (Mozarteum), and Josef Raeiff. Based upon her studies with Dorothy Taubman, Elaine specializes in the retraining and development of healthy piano technique with students of all ages. She has conducted presentations about technique and wellness for the International Institute for Young Musicians held at CCM and was the keynote speaker for the Southwest Ohio Music Teachers Association 1999 Fall Conference.
 
Prof. Leung-Wolf's DMA Document, Women, Music and the Salon Tradition: Its Cultural and Historical Significance in Parisian Musical Society, is listed in Women in Music: A Research and Information Guide, 2nd ed. (2010) by Karin Pendle and Melinda Boyd (New York:  Routledge); it is also listed in Chamber Music:  A Research and Information Guide, 2nd ed. (2002) by John. H. Baron (New York:  Routledge) and has served as a reference source for many academic papers and publications including French Music Since Berlioz, (2006) Richard Langham Smith and Caroline Potter, eds.
 
She also maintains a private piano studio and has served as chair and faculty member of the CCM Preparatory Piano Department, the Advanced Piano Summer Institute at CCM, and vice-president of SWOMTA as director of student activities.
 
Education
BM and MM, The Julliard School, New York, NY.
DMA, CCM, 1997.
 
 

Awadagin K.A. Pratt

Title: Professor of Piano and Artist-in-Residence
Office: Emery Hall
Tel: 513-556-2063
Email: awadagin.pratt@uc.edu
Web: http://www.awadagin.com

Born in Pittsburgh, Awadagin Pratt began studying piano at the age of six. Three years later, having moved to Normal, Illinois with his family, he also began studying violin. At the age of 16 he entered the University of Illinois where he studied piano, violin and conducting. He subsequently enrolled at the Peabody Conservatory of Music where he became the first student in the school's history to receive diplomas in three performance areas – piano, violin and conducting. In recognition of this achievement and for his work in the field of classical music, Pratt recently received the Distinguished Alumni Award from Johns Hopkins.
In 1992 Pratt won the Naumburg International Piano Competition and two years later was awarded an Avery Fisher Career Grant. Since then, he has played numerous recitals throughout the US including performances at Lincoln Center, Kennedy Center, Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles and Chicago’s Orchestra Hall. His many orchestral performances include appearances with the New York Philharmonic, Minnesota Orchestra and the Pittsburgh, Atlanta, Baltimore, St. Louis, National, Detroit and New Jersey symphonies among many others. Summer festival engagements include Ravinia, Blossom, Wolftrap, Caramoor and Aspen, the Hollywood Bowl and the Mostly Mozart Festival in Tokyo.
 
As a conductor, Pratt participated in the American Symphony Orchestra League and Conductor's Guild workshops and the National Conducting Institute, where he worked closely with Leonard Slatkin and conducted the National Symphony at the Kennedy Center. He has also conducted the Toledo, New Mexico, Vancouver WA, Winston-Salem, Santa Fe and Prince George County symphonies, the Northwest Sinfonietta, the Concertante di Chicago and several orchestras in Japan.
 
A great favorite on college and university performing arts series and a strong advocate of music education, Pratt participates in numerous residency and outreach activities wherever he appears; these activities may include master classes, children's recitals, play/talk demonstrations and question/answer sessions for students of all ages.
 
Pratt has been the subject of numerous articles in the national press, including Newsweek, People Magazine and New York Newsday. He was named one of the 50 Leaders of Tomorrow in Ebony Magazine's special 50th anniversary issue and has been featured on National Public Radio's Performance Today, St. Paul Sunday Morning and Weekend Edition. On television, Pratt has performed on the Today Show, Good Morning America and Sesame Street, been profiled on CBS Sunday Morning and was one of the featured soloists on PBS's Live from the Kennedy Center - A Salute to Slava. In November 2009, Pratt was one of four artists selected to perform at a White House classical music event that included student workshops hosted by First Lady Michelle Obama and performed in concert for guests including President Obama. He has performed two other times at the White House, both at the invitation of President and Mrs. Clinton.
 
Pratt’s recordings for Angel/EMI include A Long Way From Normal, an all Beethoven Sonata CD, Live From South Africa, Transformations and an all Bach disc with the St. Lawrence String Quartet. His most recent recordings are the Brahms Sonatas for Cello and Piano with Zuill Bailey for Telarc and a recording of the music of Judith Lang Zaimont with the Harlem Quartet for Navona Records.
Pratt is currently Professor of Piano and Artist in Residence at CCM. He was recently named the Artistic Director of the Cincinnati World Piano Competition and is also the Artistic Director of the Art of the Piano Festival at CCM.
 
Education
Performance Certificate and Graduate Performance Diploma, The Peabody Institute.
 
 
 

James V. Tocco

Title: Eminent Scholar in Chamber Music
Office: 426 Memorial Hall
Tel: 513-556-6963
Email: james.tocco@uc.edu

James Tocco has a worldwide career as a soloist with orchestra, recitalist, chamber music performer and pedagogue. His repertoire of over fifty works with orchestra includes virtually the entire standard piano concerto repertoire, as well as more rarely performed works such as the Symphonie Concertante of Szymanowski, the Kammerkonzert of Alban Berg and The Age of Anxiety of Leonard Bernstein. Hailed in solo recitals for his interpretations of Beethoven, Chopin and Liszt, as well as composers of the 20th century, he is one of the few pianists in the world to regularly program the keyboard works of Handel.
 
In 1973, Tocco won the International ARD Competition in Munich and appeared in 1975 at the Vienna Festival. Since then he has toured the globe with performances in the U.S., Canada, most of the countries of Europe and South America, the Soviet Union, Japan, Australia, South Africa and the Middle East. Solo appearances with the major orchestras of the world have been given in Berlin, Munich, London, Chicago and Los Angeles, as well as festival participation in Salzburg, Vienna, Lockenhaus, Holland, Schleswig-Holstein, Wolf Trap, Ravinia, Mostly Mozart, Santa Fe and the Hollywood Bowl. His Pro Arte releases include the world premiere recording of Bernstein's complete solo piano music and the first recorded performance of the piano solo version of the Suite from Copland's Rodeo.
 
He recorded the complete four piano sonatas of Edward MacDowell for Gasparo. ECM Records released his live performance of Erwin Schulhof's Cinq Etudes de Jazz and Deutsche Harmonia Mundi released his recording of the complete Bach-Liszt organ transcriptions as well as a second disc of Bach-inspired piano compositions by Franck, Liszt and Busoni.
 
 
 
 
Andrew C Villemez

Title: Adjunct Instructor of Piano
Email: villemaw@mail.uc.edu

Praised as a quintessential well-rounded musician, Andy Villemez is an active performer, composer, and educator currently based in Cincinnati, OH. His performances and compositions display a wide range of styles and musical understanding. As a composer and arranger, his works have amazing variety in style, affect, and level. Recently, He has been commissioned to write works by several concert pianists, Cincinnati Public Radio, and the Tri-state Piano Competition. His most notable pieces come from a set of preludes for solo piano based on everything from contemporary R&B to everyday emotions. Entitled Book of Odes, pianists both young and professional have performed these pieces in major cities across the United States and Canada.
 
In addition to composing and performing, Villemez has a strong passion for music education. His presentations, classes, and clinics continue to cover a wide range of topics including curriculum development for undergraduate music majors, constructivism in music teaching, and how to foster artistic integrity at an early age. His most recent clinic is entitled, "Brownie Points and Grand Larceny: How To Arrange and Compose for Your Students."
 
Villemez also maintains a studio through the CCM Preperatory Division. When Andy is not at the front of a classroom or near a piano, you can find him reading, cooking, hiking, or visiting with family and friends.
 
Education
BM, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, 2010.
MM, CCM, 2012.
 
 
 

Dror Biran
 
Title: Visiting Adjunct Professor of Piano
Tel: 513-556-4041
Email: dror.biran@uc.edu

Dror Biran’s playing has been described in Die Bleed as “powerful, but also beautiful sensitive, brilliant but full of artistry, seductively lyrical but intensely dramatic at the climaxes”. The Plain Dealer added “his fortissimos crashed and roared, but next to them came pianissimos that whispered seductively…he has technique to burn and uses it effectively…” The WCF Currier described Biran’s playing as “although not a flashy performer, was mesmerizing in the intensity and emotionalism of his playing. His fingering in the fast passages was breathtaking, and the loving care he gave to the sweetly lyrical passages was riveting.”
His superb tonal control combined with interesting phrasing and voicing has won him consistent critical acclaim and enthusiastic audience.
 
Born in Israel, Biran is a top prize winner of several national and international piano competitions. He is a graduate of the Givataim Conservatory where he studied with Mrs. Lily Dorfman and the Rubin Academy of Music at Tel-Aviv University where he studied with Prof. Arie Vardi. Dr. Biran received his Doctoral degree from the Cleveland Institute of Music where he studied with Mr. Paul Schenly and Dr. Daniel Shapiro.
Dror Biran won top prizes at the M.K Ciurlionis International Piano Competition (1995), and the Cleveland International Piano Competition (1997) where he also received a special prize for the best performance of works by Chopin. His honors include the first prize at the “Pilar Bayona International Piano Competition” in Zaragoza, Spain (1998), first prize at the Israeli Rubin Academy Piano Competition (1998), and the Rafi Goralnik prize for pianists, in the Aviv Competition 2000. Biran has been a recipient of multiple the scholarships from the America-Israel Cultural Foundation for distinguished musicians.
 
Biran has performed widely as a soloist with major orchestras including the Lithuanian Philharmonic Orchestra, RTVE Symphony Orchestra of Spain, Johannesburg Philharmonic Orchestra, Louisville Orchestra, and the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra. He has played under the batons of Etinger, Rodan, Gueller, Gacia Asensio, Mester, Lane and others. His concert tours have taken him to the United States, Eastern and Western Europe, Israel and South Africa.
 
As a chamber musician Biran has appeared on a regular basis with different music ensembles such as Carmel and Aviv String Quartets, he has also performed with members of The Cleveland Orchestra in different venues. His concerts have been broadcast by WUOL, WCLV, WQXR, The Voice of Music – Israel, Classic FM South Africa among others. Dr. Biran can be heard on the JMC (Jerusalem Music Centre) labels featuring ballades by Brahms and Chopin.
 
Biran taught at Youngstown State University and Case Western Reserve University.
Dr. Biran serves as Associate Professor of Piano at the University of Louisville School of Music and serves as an adjunct piano faculty at University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music.
 

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