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ANDRES DIAZ
(cello)
Andrés Díaz is a 1998 awardee of the prestigious Avery Fisher
Career Grant as well as a generous grant from the Susan W. Rose
Fund for Music. Since winning the First Prize in the 1986
Naumburg International Cello Competition, Mr. Díaz has
exhilarated both critics and audiences with his intense and
charismatic performances. He has earned exceptional reviews for
his "strongly personal interpretive vision" (The New York Times)
and his "bold and imaginative" playing (The Boston Globe) and is
currently Artist in Residence at Brevard Music Center in Brevard,
North Carolina.
Andrés Díaz's
numerous orchestral appearances have included return engagements
with the Atlanta Symphony under the late conductor Robert Shaw;
performances with the American Symphony at Carnegie Hall, the
symphony orchestras of Milwaukee, Seattle, Rochester under
Christopher Seaman, the Boston Pops and Esplanade Orchestras, the
Chicago Symphony at the Ravinia Festival with Edo de Waart
conducting, and the National Symphony Orchestra. Among the
highlights of Mr. Díaz's recent seasons are tours of Taiwan, Hong
Kong, Korea, Japan, Hawaii, and Canada performing in recital and
with orchestra; appearances in Chile, Venezuela, Argentina, the
Dominican Republic; a series of concerts in the Soviet Union where
he performed as soloist with Russia's Saratov Symphony in the
cities of Saratov and Moscow; and a tour of the major cities in
New Zealand with the New Zealand Chamber Orchestra.
The young
virtuoso is a sought-after recitalist and made his Alice Tully
Hall debut in 1987 after winning the Naumburg International Cello
Competition. He received critical praise for his second appearance
at Lincoln Center's Alice Tully Hall in 1989 when The New York
Times remarked that his musical views "always seemed deeply
considered rather than superficial or manufactured." His recital
appearances have included the Library of Congress in Washington,
D.C., Jordan Hall and the Gardner Museum in Boston, the Ambassador
Auditorium in Pasadena, and the highly regarded San Francisco
Performances Series.
Andrés Díaz
frequently performed with the late pianist Samuel Sanders. The
Díaz/Sanders Duo performed at Carnegie Hall's Weill Recital Hall,
Merkin Hall in New York, the Philadelphia Arts Museum, Atlanta's
Spivey Hall and other venues across the U.S. and abroad. They
appeared in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Colorado Springs, Detroit,
and Japan, where they appeared at Tokyo's Suntory Hall. Among
other renowned pianists with whom Mr. Díaz has collaborated are
Judith Gordon, Margo Garrett, Richard Goode, Mischa Dichter, and
Anne-Marie McDermott.
During the summer
of 2001, Mr. Díaz gave the world premiere of Gunther Schuller’s
Concerto for Cello and Orchestra at the Brevard Music Center with
the Brevard Festival Orchestra. In February 2001, Mr. Díaz
performed the American premiere of Frank Bridge’s Oration for
cello and orchestra at Boston University. Mr. Díaz has also
premiered Thomas Oboe Lee's Cello Concerto (written expressly for
Díaz) with the Boston Civic Symphony, and he gave the Boston and
Washington, D.C. premieres of Leon Kirchner's Music for Cello and
Orchestra. In that Boston performance, the composer conducted the
work. Díaz later performed the piece with the National Symphony
Orchestra, James Paul conducting, where it received the First
Prize Friedham Award.
Andrés Díaz's
debut solo recording on MusicMasters of works by Manuel de Falla
and Robert Schumann with pianist Samuel Sanders was acclaimed by
The Boston Globe as "strong and subtle; everything Díaz does has
personality and, better than that, character." On the Dorian
label, the two artists have also released Brahms's Sonatas for
Piano and Cello; Russian Romantics, a compilation of short Russian
works; and most recently American Visions, featuring works of
Barber, Bernstein and Foote. Mr. Díaz's current orchestral solo
release (also on the Dorian label) features the Villas-Lobos Cello
Concerto No. 2 with the Simon Bolivar Symphony Orchestra and
conductor Enrique Diemecke. This recording won a 1996 Allegro
Music Award for Best Orchestral Release. His latest recording, in
memory of his collaborator pianist Samuel Sanders -- featuring the
works of Martinu, Lutoslawski, and Rachmaninoff-- won The
Classical Recording Foundation 2003 Award.
Mr. Díaz's summer
festival appearances (including frequent return engagements)
include the Santa Fe, La Jolla, Marlboro, Ravinia, Bravo!
Colorado, Spoleto, Saratoga and Tanglewood festivals. His
appearances at Tanglewood earned him the Pierre Mayer Memorial
Award for Outstanding String Player. He has toured nationally with
the Santa Fe and Spoleto festivals. Other festival appearances
include the Victoria (B.C.), Steamboat (Steamboat Springs, CO),
Musicorda (MA), Rockport (MA) and Cape & Islands festivals.
Andrés Díaz is
very active with the Díaz String Trio, featuring violinist Andres
Cardenes and violist Roberto Díaz. At Carnegie Hall in April 2003,
the trio performed the world premiere of a string trio written for
them by Guther Schuller. The trio has performed in the cities of
Pittsburgh, Washington, Boston, Los Angeles, Miami; at the Kuhmo
Festival in Finland and the International Festival of St. Cypriene
in France; and they have toured extensively in South America,
Mexico and Canada. The trio was invited by Isaac Stern to play at
Carnegie Hall's Centennial Celebration, and from 1994-96 it served
as Trio in Residence at the Florida International University. They
released its first recording featuring the music of Paganini on
the Dorian label. A second recording was released in 2003
featuring music by Penderecki, Dohnanyi and Beethoven.
Andrés Díaz was
born in Santiago, Chile in 1964, and began studying the cello at
the age of five. Three years later he moved to Atlanta, Georgia
and studied at the Georgia Academy of Music with Martha Gerchefski.
Mr. Díaz graduated from the New England Conservatory where he
worked with Laurence Lesser and Colin Carr, and currently plays an
active role in chamber music performances with the Conservatory's
faculty. He served for five years as Associate Professor of Cello
at the Boston University and Co-Director of the Boston University
Tanglewood Institute Quartet Program, resigning in September 2001.
Mr. Díaz now lives in a suburb of Philadelphia with his wife,
Julie, and sons Peter Manuel and Gabriel Andrés. He plays a 1698
Matteo Goffriller Cello and a bow made by his father, Manuel Díaz.
For more
information about Andrés Díaz,
please visit his web site at
www.andresdiaz.com.
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