Daniil Trifonov

Piano
Management: Spain - Portugal
Artist

Russian pianist Daniil Trifonov (dan-EEL TREE-fon-ov) – winner of Gramophone’s 2016 Artist of the Year award – has made a spectacular ascent in the world of classical music as a solo artist, a champion of the concerto repertoire, a collaborator at the keyboard in chamber music and song, and a composer. Combining consummate technique with rare sensitivity and depth, his performances are a perpetual source of awe. The Times (UK) calls Trifonov “without question the most astounding pianist of our age.”

Focusing on Chopin in the 2017-18 season, Trifonov releases Chopin: Evocation, his fourth album as an exclusive Deutsche Grammophon artist, which includes both works by Chopin himself and, marking Trifonov’s first foray into a new repertoire, works of 20th-century composers who were greatly influenced by the Polish master, including Samuel Barber, Federico Mompou and others.

The pianist gives over 20 recitals on the same theme across the U.S., Europe and Asia this season, including one in Carnegie Hall as part of a seven-concert, season-long Perspectives series which he curates. Three of the seven concerts are devoted to Chopin and his influence: the solo recital and two all-Chopin programs with cellist Gautier Capuçon and the Kremerata Baltica chamber orchestra. Further concerts in the series include collaborations with baritone Matthias Goerne and Trifonov’s teacher and mentor Sergei Babayan, the latter capping a U.S. tour that includes the world premiere of a Carnegie-commissioned work for two pianos by Mauro Lanza; a performance of his own piano concerto with Valery Gergiev leading the Mariinsky Orchestra, again culminating a U.S. tour; and a solo recital in Zankel Hall that includes a seminal piece from each decade of the 20th century. Trifonov curates a similar series this season at the Vienna Konzerthaus, where he gives five performances, and in San Francisco, concluding with a season-closing Rachmaninoff performance with the San Francisco Symphony and Michael Tilson-Thomas.

Other season highlights include an Asian tour in the fall, and European tours with violinist Gidon Kremer and Kremerata Baltica, the London Philharmonic, the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, and the Teatro alla Scala Orchestra. Further orchestral appearances include Strauss’s Burleske with the Spanish National Orchestra and Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra; the Schumann Concerto with Lisbon’s Gulbenkian Orchestra and the Berlin Philharmonic; Prokofiev with the Mariinsky Orchestra led by Gergiev, and the Cleveland Orchestra led by Michael Tilson Thomas; Scriabin’s Piano Concerto with the Seattle Symphony and Ludovic Morlot; a performance of his own piano concerto with the Detroit Symphony; and Rachmaninoff performances with Gergiev and the Munich Philharmonic, the Toronto Symphony led by Peter Oundjian, and the Philadelphia Orchestra under the baton of Yannick Nézet-Séguin.

It was during the 2010-11 season that Trifonov won medals at three of the music world’s most prestigious competitions, taking Third Prize in Warsaw’s Chopin Competition, First Prize in Tel Aviv’s Rubinstein Competition, and both First Prize and Grand Prix – an additional honor bestowed on the best overall competitor in any category – in Moscow’s Tchaikovsky Competition. In 2013 he was also awarded the prestigious Franco Abbiati Prize for Best Instrumental Soloist by Italy’s foremost music critics.

Born in Nizhny Novgorod in 1991, Trifonov began his musical training at the age of five and went on to attend Moscow’s Gnessin School of Music as a student of Tatiana Zelikman, before pursuing his piano studies with Sergei Babayan at the Cleveland Institute of Music. He has also studied composition, and continues to write for piano, chamber ensemble, and orchestra. When he premiered his own piano concerto in 2013, the Cleveland Plain Dealer marveled: “Even having seen it, one cannot quite believe it. Such is the artistry of pianist-composer Daniil Trifonov”.

© Dario Acosta - Deutsche Grammophon

© Dario Acosta - Deutsche Grammophon

© Dario Acosta - Deutsche Grammophon

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© Dario Acosta - Deutsche Grammophon

© Dario Acosta - Deutsche Grammophon

© Dario Acosta - Deutsche Grammophon

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© Dario Acosta - Deutsche Grammophon

© Dario Acosta - Deutsche Grammophon

© Dario Acosta - Deutsche Grammophon

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© Dario Acosta - Deutsche Grammophon

© Dario Acosta - Deutsche Grammophon

© Dario Acosta - Deutsche Grammophon

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Reviews
The Australian

"You soon realised that his timbre was remarkable. It’s an astonishing mix of penetrating clarity and subtly coloured warmth. At times, he barely seemed to caress the piano’s keys, yet his sound always rang forth clear and true."

Sunday Times

"A staggering display of unbounded virtuosity and vision."

Gramophone

"A triumph… This is unquestionably one of the greatest recorded performances of the Transcendental Studies."

BBC Music Magazine

"Dazzling… Trifonov responds to the music's extreme technical demands with, seemingly, huge resources still in reserve. Sonically, he's able to astonish: the ultra-tricky "La Campanella" is delivered with a mesmerising blend of gorgeousness and needlepoint precision. His way with the "Transcendental Studies" is strikingly introspective and memorable."

Bachtrack

“[Here was] a complete identification with the Russian heart that beats in this piece... The helter-skelter coda of the concerto brought the house down, and many of the audience to their feet, but there was nothing superficial or crowd-pleasing about this playing for all its astonishing diablerie, but rather a complete trust in the composer’s innovative genius."

The Guardian

“Trifonov's performance was a marvel, a mixture of exuberance and fabulous subtlety, as remarkable for the delicate precision of his wispy pianissimos as for the irrepressible energy of its grandstanding rhetoric.”

Daily Telegraph

"Staggering humility and imagination."

Discography
Schubert: Forellenquintett (Trout Quintet)
Composer
Franz Schubert
Label
Deutsche Grammophon
Year
2017

Performers Anne-Sophie Mutter, Daniil Trifonov, Hwayoon Lee, Maximilian Hornung & Roman Patkoló